Daily hansan 59th Year, No. 34 LAWRENCE. KANSAS Wednesday, November 1, 1961 AWS and ASC Clash Over Appropriations By Karl Koch The All Student Council hesitantly doled out a little over $3000 to seven campus organizations last night. Cuts in appropriation requests caused resolutions, points of order, questions of the motion, etc., and just plain debate to fly fast and furiously. The ASC budget is $174.78. Recommended appropriations exactly equalled this amount. When the combined pep clubs were allowed $373, instead of the recommended $0, the ASC's figurative fist snapped shut. With their effort to gain back the $373 from other appropriations came the loud cry, "you can't do that to us." The largest appropriation of the night—$1,905 for People-to-People—took the least time to discuss. People-to-People received the full amount of its request 10 minutes after it came up. THE APPROPRIATION FOR AWS, as mentioned earlier, was tabled. It had requested $2,590. The ASC Finance and Auditing committee recommended $1,800 on the grounds that the AWS gave away $1,000 in scholarships each year, and the ASC is forbidden by their Constitution to provide funds for education or public relations. The organization must be primarily a social organization to receive ASC funds. Representatives from the AWS took exception. They said the AWS is allowed only one money-making function each year, and that money from this must go for the scholarships. Therefore, they said, they would have no funds to operate if the ASC did not grant their appropriation request. DEBATE RAGED UNTIL Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior and chairman of the ASC, tabled the bill. He said it would come up at a special meeting this week or early next week. The $2,395 budget for ASC expenses was also set back until that meeting. The requests for either ASC or AWS will have to be cut down. At present, granting these appropriations in full would put the ASC's $7,000 plus budget $293 in the red. The ASC is set up now to expend $7,164.78, including a $208.45 contingency fund. PALMER MENTIONED the possibility that the ASC may be able to obtain more funds from the University, since the "AWS budget was not fully understood when the appropriation recommendation was made." In other appropriation grants, the request of the combined club clubs—KuKus, Jay Janes, and Froshawks—was cut from $823 to $373. The Finance and Auditing committee had recommended that they should receive nothing. MICHAEL THOMAS, Kansas City, Mo. senior, and treasurer of the ASC, said the combined pep clubs had spent $672 on parties, and $120 Battle Rages Locally As Gas Prices Drop The local gas war has entered its second month with still another decrease in price. Regular gasoline in Lawrence service stations ranges from 21.9 to 22.9 cents per gallon. Asked the reason for the latest drop, one attendant said. "Just competition, I guess." Operators see no let-up in the war, saying it can go back to regular prices most any day. Prices in Kansas City and Topeka have gone back to normal. on gifts and flowers last year. He said he saw no reason why the ASC should pay for the pep club's supplies while they spend their own money on parties. Pep Club representatives countered with statements that the supply expense was much greater than indicated because of a mix-up in itemizing their expenses. They said pep clubs benefited the whole student body and there was no reason why the members should pay for student spirit out of their own pockets. IN THE END, they were cut down to $180 for Jayhawker displays instead of $250. Expenses of $75 for the planned K-State migration was deleted from the appropriation. Mortar Board, national honor society for junior and senior women, was granted $103.82. The amount was questioned by some ASC members who wanted to know what Mortar Board did for students at KU. CAROLYN ONTJES, Hutchinson senior, representing Mortar Board replied: "We wear our uniforms once a week. Every time we wear our uniforms, we perform a service for the University." Also, she said that Mortar Board talked to girls in the freshman dormitories about scholarship, and that they sponsored a "Smarty Party" each year for students with a certain grade point average. "WE DO NOT HAVE any little fun parties," she said. Another Mortar Board member said anything that encourages good scholarship is good for the University. Referring to the Smarty Party, she said, "It may have an undignified title, but it's worthwhile." The pleas were evidently successful. The Mortar Board budget was passed without any cuts. With somewhat less debate, the rest of the appropriations were granted as follows: THE STUDENT BAR ASSOCIATION of the School of Law was given $220. They had requested $350. The Business School Council was granted $155, the amount they requested. The Pharmaceutical Association was given $165. They requested $350. The Engineering Student Council was given $55. They asked for $150. ALPHA PHI OMEGA, a service fraternity, was given $47.51. They asked for $100. The Mathematics Club request for $40 was denied. Line World University Service, a long inactive committee of the ASC, was also denied its $40 request. West Berlin Starts Soviet Checks BERLIN — (UPI) — West Berlin police today began checking identity papers of all Soviet and other Communist Diplomats crossing from East to West Berlin in non-military cars. Passengers in official Soviet vehicles, whether in civilian dress or uniform, were exempt from the new regulations and were waved through border checkpoints without delay. It was learned West Berlin police took the action because they believe Communist diplomats have used private cars to bring undesirable East Germans into West Berlin. Fog this morning. Partly cloudy this afternoon through tomorrow. Highs today and tomorrow in the 60s. Lows tonight around 50. Scattered showers and a few thunderstorms tomorrow. NewPoliticalGroup Ridicules Platforms Weather Bv Scott Pavne Eight members of the now defunct National Student Association attacked the campaign platforms of Vox Populi and University Party yesterday while forming a new "committee for effective government." THOUGH THEIR ORIGINAL organization may be down and out, several members of the late committee seem determined to stay in campus politics, though not through any formal party association. "Both the Vox and UP platforms appalled me when I read them," said Arthur C. Miller, Pittsburgh junior and temporary chairman of the group. "They are nothing. UP's platform has nothing in it concerning civil rights and Vox's might as well not have anything." he added. "I THINK THE KU STUDENT body should be informed of the situation," Miller said. "I propose that we form a sort of league for better student government to bring this matter to the direct attention of people here. "If the new All Student Council's actions are to be based on platforms such as these," he said, "it will make student government at KU ridiculous." "Such a group could be a real, actual evaluating force," he added. Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, said, "Neither of these platforms takes a definite stand on anything of real importance. They are the worst platforms I've seen since I've been at KU and I've seen some bad ones. "I think forming this committee or league is an excellent idea," he said. CHARLES PATTERSON. Rock-ford, Ill., junior, said, "I think it took real nerve to publish these programs—real nerve! Wasting all of that paper." He also said: "I like the idea but I think it might hurt the chances for reaffiliation with NSA if the committee members are active privately trying to improve KU student government." "I don't want it to look like the NSA committee is an underground organization furtively slipping around the campus. "I don't particularly want to be investigated for subversive activities by the ASC Committee on Un-American Activities," he said. "Nord do I want to be on the list of the Jay Deane society," he added, referring to the ASC member who introduced the bill calling for disaffiliation of KU from NSA. Miller broke into laughter saying, "This committee is not necessarily composed of NSA committee members. Anybody is welcome and urged to join." he added. "WHAT ABOUT PLANS for an attempt at reaffiliation with NSA?" asked one of the group. "Shall we," he asked, "as former NSA committee members, work together as a private group? Shall we start a political party of our own or wait and do nothing until the new ASC meets on the matter of reaffiliation with NSA?" "All of this ties into why this meeting was called," Miller said. "The purpose of the committee I am proposing," said Miller, "will be merely to investigate. There is a lot of campus concern as to how effective ASC is and how dedicated its members are. "I DON'T THINK it's either one, personally," Miller said. "A group like the one I'm proposing could shed some light on the matter," he added. "FOR THAT MATTER," Miller said, "this group could support the party platform and candidates that it feels are the best suited for the job." There was no objection to the proposal. He asked Judy Gail Harman, Kansas City senior, Thomas Heitz, and Sandra Moore, Saskatchewan, Canada, sophomore, to draft a constitution and name the committee. ASKED ABOUT THE REAFFILIation issue, Miller said. "We of the NSA committee have received word from the national headquarters of NSA that they will stay in touch with us and help us if possible. They will be sending us their regular information all the time." Miller pointed out that the national office would send mail to them unofficially and that the committee members actually are not members of NSA since KU is disaffiliated. Levine Thumps Through Miller Novel By Dennis-Farney More than 50 coffee-sipping KU students yesterday listened enthusiastically as a lecturn-thumping KU professor of English guided them through the intricacies of Henry Miller's controversial novel, "Tropic of Cancer." At the Current Book Review Forum they heard the book—which had been banned from the United States until only recently—described as "not pornographic" by Stuart Levine, assistant professor of English. THE FORUM WAS HELD at 4 p.m. in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. Quoting selected passages from the novel to "give you (the audience) an idea of what this book is actually like." Prof. Levine skirted ticklish four-letter words by utilizing a lectern-thumping device. "I was wondering what to do about these four letter words," he told his audience. "I finally decided to fall back upon the old method of thumping the lectern every time I come to one. You'll be able to fill in for yourselves." HE THEN READ A passage which averaged better than a thump a line, much to the delight of his audience. "There was nothing (to do) but to make love to Elsa. She wanted it. And yet I felt a little sorry for her. She had only written the first line to her lover—I read it out of the corner of my eye as I bent over her. But it couldn't be helped. That damned German music, so melancholy, so sentimental. It un- He read another passage to show how little explicit description of the sex act there is in the book: derminded me. And then her beady little eyes, so hot and sorrowful at the same time. After it was over..." He looked up. "YOU'VE ALL READ worse than that," he said. "This kind of passage isn't going to incite anyone to anything. 'Tropic of Cancer' contains less in the way of sexual athleticism than do Miller's other books. In fact, there is practically nothing in the way of explicit description of the sexual act here. The run-of-the-mill drugstore novel contains more. "If this work lives," he continued, "it won't be because of its sexual side alone—it will be because the insights, the connections, and the wry juxtapositions remain always purgative and entertaining. "THIS BOOK IS NOT as great as its enthusiastic supporters maintain, but it's a lot better than their 'correctors' will admit. Miller's gusto does come across, and his acceptance of life is refreshing." In his talk, Prof. Levine examined the current definition of pornography. "We find," he said, "that the judges are basing their decisions on two tests: (1) Is the book in question serious in artistic intention? (2) Does the book tend to arouse libidinous impulses?" HE QUESTIONED the usefulness of these two tests. "How do we distinguish between a worthwhile book and one produced by a bad writer who honestly believes he is producing serious art?" he asked. "And before we can utilize the second test,we first have to find out more about the social effects of pornography. Suppose we allowed publishers to print anything: what would happen? Nobody knows. Perhaps pornography would serve as a social safety valve, giving people who otherwise might commit social offenses that artificial stimulation which they are sick enough to need, and thus prevent them from hurting others. "ON THE OTHER HAND, perhaps the crime rate and the incidence of sexual offenses would go away up. We need an answer to this question, but right now, we don't know." JEAN LEFEBREUX Stuart Levine Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 1. 1961 Party Platforms Weak Campus political party platforms have been published, but no one really knows where Vox Populi or University Party stands on any issue. Both platforms avoid firm stands on civil rights and NSA. UP completely ignores both issues, hiding its head in the sand, hoping someone else will clean up this so-called "discrimination mess," and "do something to take care of NSA." VOX MERELY CONTINUES its "faithful support of the Human Rights Commission, the ASC and the administration in their investigation and action on discriminatory practices which the KU student might encounter." But what are they really saying? What does the Human Rights Commission in Lawrence believe? By what policies does it operate? DOES VOX POPULI actually say what the plank on Civil Rights means, or is Vox filling space with platitudes that sound good and make no one in particular angry? Reaffiliation with NSA will be an issue on the campus again, whether the writers of the platforms realize it or not. Each party says it is concerned with campus issues, but fails to recognize an important issue now. BUT VOX IS NOT ALONE in writing empty planks. One plank in UP's platform is concerned with the KU-MU dispute, yet they are aware, or should be aware, that a committee has met with MU delegates, a considerable amount of correspondence has been done, by both the student committee and the administration, and that more meetings are scheduled before the KU-MU football game. If necessary, this committee will be continued in future years, so the UP plank has little bearing on the present situation. BOTH PARTIES FAVOR a pre-enrollment plan, but neither suggests such a plan. Are we to assume that ASC members, if elected, will immediately begin work on a pre-enrollment program, and if so, how? UP also reaffirms the need for a stop day, a day between the final day of classes and the first day of final examinations. Stop day has been taken for granted by many professors and students when finals begin on any day except Monday. BOTH PLATFORMS ARE the result of long hours of consideration and the ideas of many people. Perhaps fewer people, with more definite ideas are needed on the platform committees. Vox and UP are not criticized here for what they have done. The party members feel it is a good platform, but many students do not think so. These students do not want to be in a party whose platform is filled with pretty phrases, designed to get the votes during election. They want a platform they can understand, one that is clear on every subject and one they can quote accurately and concisely when they are asked: "How does your party stand on Civil Rights or NSA?" Carrie Merryfield Other Schools Handle Housing By A. C. Miller The problem of housing discrimination at KU is not unique, nor is the solution to that problem a reality. In a telephone interview with Polly Parrish, the dean of women at the University of Colorado, it was learned that the problem of listing renters who discriminate on the Housing Office list has been solved. SHE EXPLAINED, "The Colorado Board of Regents and the State both have regulations concerning housing discrimination. "These regulations," she continued, "say that in any kind of student housing there shall be no discrimination on the basis of color, race, religion, or national origin. This applies to both campus and off-campus housing." She said, "If students report instances of discrimination, we investigate, and if the report is true the renters are removed from the housing list." WHEN ASKED IF removing names from the list had created a housing shortage, she replied, "No, for we have found very few cases of discrimination. In those cases where we do investigate discrimination, the people involved are usually willing to comply with the regulations." Dean Parrish added that the Board of Regents has also mandated social houses (fraternities and sororites) to comply with its anti-discrimination regulations by 1962. Other information received from the National Student Association's Student Government Information Service points out that many universities have experienced the same problem. SCHOOLS SUCH AS Cornell, Columbia, the Universities of New Mexico and Illinois, and many others have found effective means of solving the discrimination problem in off-campus housing. For example, Cornell University has taken a strong stand against discrimination practices. The Guide for Landlords presented by the university to Ithaca, New York, landlords carries the following statement: "The University expects approved residences to take in students without discrimination. Residences which discriminate against students because of race, religion, color or land of origin will not be listed in the Off-Campus Housing Office." Daily Hansan UNIT BRITISH University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 376, business office Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room 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. **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 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. - Obtain statements from the house owners about their policies regarding the selection of members. - AT THE UNIVERSITY of Illinois off-campus housing discrimination aroused the student government into passing a resolution calling for the University Housing Office to; - Create an additional criterion of approval, that renters who discriminate be kept from the housing list. IN APRIL 1961 the New York Times published a study made by Edward Rutledge, housing director of the New York State Commission Against Discrimination, which disclosed that some of the most prominent educational institutions in the United States have broadened their efforts toward bias prohibition. Such colleges as Yale, Harvard, Radcliffe, the Universities of Washington, California, and Minnesota, San Jose State College, Marquette University and Ohio State University have developed non-discrimination policy requirements for listing off-campus renters. The youth gets together his materials to build a bridge to the moon, or perchance a palace or temple on the earth, and, at length, the middle-aged man concludes to build a woodshed with them.—Henry David Thoreau Short Ones The ruling ideas of each age have ever been the ideas of the ruling class.-Karl Marx *** To be discontented with the divine discontent, and to be ashamed with the noble shame, is the very germ and first upgrowth of all virtue—Charles Kingsley - * * --shou thing fully Progress, therefore, is not an accident, but a necessity. . . It is a part of nature.-Herbert Spencer *** All beauteous things for which we live by laws of time and space decay.-William Johnson Cory --shou thing fully VOT UP EAGON KJ DAVILI KANSAN "I'll stand on mine if you'll stand on yours!" International Jayhawker Arab's View of Algeria Ali Mouhsine, Morocco senior As the Algerian Revolution enters its eighth year progress towards a solution to the problem has been essentially nil. The paratroopers and the Foreign Legion still carry out their daily arrests and executions. Jails are filled up, concentration camps are crowded, and yet the cry of Algeria is heard by the peoples and nations all over the world. THE OCCUPATION OF THIS NORTH AFRICAN nation started in 1830 and since then Algeria has lost her identity as a free nation. The Algerian people have been denied their inalienable rights. Moreover, the French authorities claim that Algeria is an integral part of France. However, the Algerian people have a culture of their own, of which they are proud and to which they hold strongly. The French tried to destroy it by different methods including assimilation; Arabic schools have been closed down and the Mosques transformed into churches or gambling centers as in Algiers and Oran. But the most important thing, the consciousness of the people and their determination to live as a free people rather than suffer an eternal foreign rule, has survived. The people of the United States had a similar situation that brought about the well known American Revolution. More recently the French people themselves went through the same experience during the German occupation: NO ONE ANYWHERE LIKES TO BE DOMINATED BY ANY FOREIGN POWER. IT IS UNFORTUNATE THAT THE exports of France to Algeria are not by any means the teachings of the 1789 French revolution. The war of Algeria is a plague to France and the future relations between Algerians and Frenchmen are becoming more and more troubled for friendship does not grow on bloodshed. The Algerian people represented by the F.L.N. (Front of National Liberation) are determined to fight a war they hate. They want an end to the present police state government, the release of all political prisoners and the restoration of all civil liberties, in short their independence. The Algerian problem is not the concern of France alone but of the whole world and particularly of the people who stand for the abolition of colonialism EVERYWHERE. There is probably no more shameful part in the history of American religion than its complete abdication from any effort to help American slaves — it only undertook activity when asked by the slavemasters, who thought religion might help keep the slaves docile.—Nathan Glazer Worth Repeating Poetry is a part of you. You don't create it. You listen to it, and you give it form . . . It is a lonely art that must be self-taught. — David McCord Who — aside from certain big children who are found in the natural sciences — still believes that the finding of astronomy, biology, physics or chemistry can teach us anything about the meaning of the world?—Wax Weber Tir T M I s to be Hi of rej Tl with Univ M grad Negr and I A Negr whic. "We a can l "S just 1 "T nom to g "fact Wednesday, November 1, 1961 University Daily Kansan 'Tired of Waiting' Page 3 The Voice of KU's Militant Negroes By Fred Zimmerman I sat down with a Negro yesterday and asked him how it feels to be a black man in America. His answers took me inside a world I had never seen—the world of rejection and bitterness where Negroes live. This conclusion is buttressed by several interviews I have had with Negro students since their recent protest march against the University's housing policy. AT THE END of the conversation I had one strong impression: Negroes are tired of waiting. They are sick of the social ghetto in which they live and they are determined to break out of it. "WELL THAT IS A BIG LIE—or a fantastic misunderstanding. We are not satisfied. Until we are part of the main stream of American life, we will never be satisfied." "Some of the white people are saying that if the Negroes were just left alone, they would be content," one of the marchers told me. My longest conversation was with Moses Gunn, St. Louis, Mo., graduate student, who organized the march. Gunn told me a "new" Negro is emerging. This Negro is determined to end discrimination, and he is opposed to those who advocate patience and conciliation. "The idea of 'moral suasion' is repugnant to us," Gunn said. "It should have been started earlier. Now it's too late for that sort of thing. We're tired of waiting around for what we know is rightfully ours." Another of the marchers said: "THE SOUTH IS CHANGING, and it is not because of any 'fact-finding committees' that get together and scratch their heads. "The change is occurring because of the Freedom Rides, the economic boycotts, the sit-ins—Negroes are finding that this is the way to get things done." During a conversation with Gunn, I asked him to try to describe the effect discrimination has on him. The tall, bearded drama student answered slowly. "I ALWAYS FEEL this racial stigma," he began. "I can't get away from it. "For instance, I'll be out with a couple of white friends and they'll say, 'Let's all go down to (a Lawrence restaurant) and get a beer.' "When I hear that, I get quiet, real quiet. Because I've never been there. Maybe I could get in. I don't know. But there are just certain places I stay away from." Gunn stood up and continued. "BUT WE'RE NOT LOOKING for sympathy from white people. Don't think that. We're just sick of being reminded that we are Negroes. "I accept the fact that I am a Negro—but I'm tired of feeling this prejudice, of being constantly reminded that I am supposed to be inferior." After a pause, I asked the obvious question: Do you feel inferior around white people? "It's hard to admit this," Gunn said. "But yes, I do." He smiled, and his deep voice quavered. "I THINK ALL NEGROES must feel this way, to an extent. Everyday, in many different ways, whites tell us we are different. We start believing them, unfortunately. "We're not envious of white people." Gunn continued. "We have no wish to 'become white,' or anything like that. We just want to be friends, to associate freely, to be treated as equals." All the marchers I talked to emphasized that the march was more than a protest of the policy that allows the housing office to list landlords who discriminate. "Of course, we're against the policy," one student said. "But we're against much more. "Maybe the white students could get more accomplished. Maybe the Civil Rights Council is more effective. But this is our battle. We have to do something for ourselves." "ABOVE EVERYTHING ELSE, this march means we are going to fight for what is ours. We are going to stop sitting on the side-lines and watching a few white students take up for us. "We feel that what we did was right. In fact, we probably would have been justified in doing a lot more. "IT IS HARD TO MARCH quietly. Why should we have to be so unobtrusive about it? As I marched that day, I thought to myself: 'Why must we be so peaceful? Why don't we tear things apart?' Gunn says he knows of no marcher who regrets his part in the demonstration. "What we were doing was right-so completely right that stronger action would have been justified." BUT THERE ARE INDICATIONS that the "peaceful, unobtrusive" march had its effect—and the Negroes know this. "We've started," Gunn said. "And now we are going to fight like hell to get what we want. It is ours and we intend to have it." letters to the editor Kansan Criticized Editor: I think it's about time the Daily Kansan set up some principles and at least make an attempt at following them. The front page stories on the UP and VOX platforms in Friday's Kansan is without a doubt biased and partisan journalism. A college newspaper must teach its editors responsibility to the public to report an accurate picture of events or I pity the future of communications. It was a fairly good job of covering UP's eight point platform, but the VOX story can only mislead readers. You owe it to the public as a University paper to fully publish the platform of VOX POPULI. You seemed to have left it out of the story even though the head claims to include it. isn't it enough that you favored UP in your make-up, your coverage, and your editorializing of news material? If you really want to help student government, give the students a portrayal of the opportunities and alternatives the two parties offer. At least present adequate news coverage. Hours and weeks have gone into setting up a platform worthy of VOX and years of experience in campus politics and government are behind that party and its platform. Tell your readers that! And before you criticize us further about unfulfilled platform planks, publish a comparison of the two parties and VOX will proudly stand on its record! We certainly have nothing to hide, we are still striving for achievement of everything we've set out to do. It certainly wasn't necessary to write a whole article on ten minutes of the meeting when a great platform for student government was developed as your reporter slept. Pat Piggott Kansas City, Mo., senior Gunn, Mullins Slammed Editor: I am both amazed and dismayed by the conservative attitude shown by some of the residents of the University of Kansas. I cite by way of example, two articles which appeared in the "University Daily Kansan" of Monday, October 30—the article reporting on the administration's stand (or lack thereof) on housing discrimination, and the editorial on the "Ban the bomb" marchers in Britain. The view of a few members of the administration and of assistant editor William H. Mullins seems to be, "See no evil, Hear no evil, Speak no evil." How can such people ever hope to solve problems by turning their backs on them Granted an individual often feels that his voice as an individual will not be heard, but both the editors of the KU paper and the members of the KU administration are fortunate enough to be in positions where their voices will be attended. Chancellor Wescoe and others seems to be fearful of incurring the wrath of those bigots who discriminate against a man because of the color of his skin. It is obvious that an administration stand against housing discrimination will not "Solve" the situation per se. However, they are naive to think that such a stand. "Might do more harm than good." Contrary to the beliefs of Abraham Lincoln, the administration seems to think that it can please all of the people all of the time by refusing to take a decisive stand on discrimination. Administrative assistant Gunn tells us that, "Much improvement has been made in the racial situation since he was a student." My immediate reaction to this observation was, "So What!" There has been much improvement in the "Racial situation" since Uncle Tom's day, but I doubt that those who thought along the lines of Mr. Gunn contributed much to the improvement. As for the "Ban the bomb" marchers, Mr. Mullins seems to think that their "Futile" efforts are unworthy of our attention. Perhaps if he would bomb the ban marchers his conscience would not be troubled by their outcries. Mr. Mullins so astutely observes that the members of this group are fute if they "Think that they can influence Soviet policy by enlightened persuasion." How naive can one be? Does he really think that the sole purpose of this group is to influence Soviet policy? The Soviet Union is but one of the countries of the world possessing nuclear weapons. It is just possible that Bertrand Russell and his cohorts are attempting to influence the "Free World" as well as the Soviet Union. I presume Mr. Mullins would regard the efforts of the United States to achieve an atom-bomb-test moratorium as futile also. In view of the opinions of Mr. Gunn, Mr. Mullins, and others, I get the impression that we should ignore our responsibilities to humanity and hide our heads in the sand like a nation of ostriches. Surely there must be some members of the faculty who are not too cowed to protest the spineless attitude of the administration on off-campus housing discrimination. As for the editors of the "Daily Kansas" — we must forgive (but not condone) them, for they know not what they do. Radelyffe B. Roberts Bryn Mawr, Pa. graduate student Short Ones There can be no freedom or beauty about a Home life that depends on borrowing and debt. — Henrik Ibsen S.U.A. Ping Pong Tourney Wednesday Big 8 Room Nov. 1, 1961 Kansas Union 6:30 p.m. Register in Union Trophies and Refreshments Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. November 1, 1961 Split on Gunn-Taylor Stand Several student leaders have varied reactions to statements made on housing discrimination by James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, and Emily Taylor, dean of women. In a meeting Sunday night before members of the Canterbury Association, the Episcopal organization for students at the University, Dean Taylor and Mr. Gunn said they believe that off-campus housing discrimination will not be solved by administrative refusal to list discriminatory renters. IN A STATEMENT last night, Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior and a co-chairman of the Civil Rights Council, said that he has information that non-listing of renters seems to be working at other schools. "Recent information from the National Student Association in Philadelphia reveals that many other colleges and universities have taken this step (non-listing of discriminatory renters). It seems to be successful." When questioned about Menghini's statements, Dean Taylor stated that if such information exists, it should be presented to groups which are studying the problem. "WE WOULD LIKE TO SEE objective evidence such as this. So far we have had none." Nolen Ellison, Kansas City junior, and one of the Negro students who marched across campus Oct. 13 in protest of KU housing policies, said Forests May Have Heavy Fire Losses WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The western region of the United States may experience one of its worst fire seasons in history, according to the American Forest Products Industries, Inc. The organization reported that the 12-state area embracing Oregon, Washington, California, Colorado, Wyoming, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Montana, Idaho, and Utah, is virtually a forest tinderbox. A combination of sub-normal winter precipitation, continued long periods of drought, high temperatures and low humidity already have caused a number of forest fires, it said. Pointing out that even the smallest brush fire might erupt into a major holocaust, the organization said private and government agencies were standing by with the most advanced fire detection apparatus and firefighting equipment. In readiness are thousands of tractors, bulldozers, tankers, and trucks, in addition to shovels, pumpers, hose and other necessary tools. he was in favor of the Gunn-Taylor stand; "Everyone is blowing this situation up. The basis of the problem is the University of Kansas. I am not concerned whether or not Lawrence people accept Negroes into their homes. My concern is that the University should make a stand on the problem. Then, by using moral sasion, influence these people." HE EXPLAINED THAT IF the University makes a stand against discrimination, others will be influenced because of the stature of the school. George Buford, Kansas City senior and a chairman of the CRC, expressed his doubts as to the practicality of not listing discriminatory renters. "It is possible that someone could sign such a list and then refuse to act. I don't discard the plan . . . it has some merit. But there are other ways to arrive at a solution. It would be impossible for the chancellor or the housing office to enforce such a program." Similar feelings were expressed by'Mr. Gunn: "WHAT WOULD YOU DO to enforce such a plan? You would have to set up mechanisms to check violations, and these mechanisms would create hard feelings between town-speople and students and the University." Expectation for recovery of two Rembrandt etchings stolen from the KU Art Museum last year has dwindled. Marilyn Stokstad, assistant professor of art history, and acting director of the art museum, says she is "sure we'll never hear anything more of them." Recovery of Stolen Etchings Doubtful MORE AND MORE Kennedy has been holding important meetings in the living quarters of the mansion instead of in his office in the executive wing. She said each of the etchings was valued at several hundred dollars. A more exact figure was impossible because of constant changes in the market, she said. "It's a pity that the etchings have been lost," she said, adding that one Rembrandt etching on loan is back and now on display at the museum. It was in this room that President McKinley signed the peace treaty ending the Spanish-American war. 365 Excuses 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Anniv, of the Illinois Cornhuswick Contest Many of his late afternoon sessions have been held "over at the house." He met with aides in his oval study when he made the decision to send Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson to Berlin. He also conferred with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko in the study. The room is located between the Abraham Lincoln bedroom and President Kennedy's oval room combination library and study. 365 Excuses She said Lawrence and campus police had made every effort to recover the etchings. PRESIDENTS FROM Lincoln's time until the Theodore Roosevelt in 1902 held their hush-hush conferences in the salon which was formerly Mrs. James Monroe's sitting room. OTHER FURNITURE is being moved into the room which was Kennedy Uses Historic Room for Conferences A long mahogany leather-covered table has been moved from the Gold room on the ground floor to the Monroe room which faces the Washington Monument, south of the White House. The room on the second floor of the family quarters at the head of the grand staircase is rich in history. Known as the Monroe room, it was used as President Lincoln's cabinet room. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — A White House room used by 19th century presidents for secret conferences is being refurbished for use as President Kennedy's private meeting place. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Member FDIC Just Drive In--Only Takes a Minute At the Foot of The Hill Open: Mon.-Thurs. 9:30-3:00 p.m. Fri. 9:30-3:00 p.m. 4:00-6:00 p.m. 1ST NATIONAL MOTOR BANK Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Kansan Want Ads Get Results FIRST NATIONAL MOTOR BANK restored by Mrs. Herbert Hoover. Mrs. Hoover gathered authentic Monroe furniture and some good copies of the Monroe-period furniture for the room. After Mrs. Hoover left, Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt took over the Monroe room as a combination office and press conference room for her regular meetings with newswomen. Ninth and Tennessee Streets Freshmen Elected To AWS Offices Main Office, 8th & Mass. Four University of Kansas freshman women have been elected to serve on the Associated Women Students Senate and House of Representatives. Men are generally more careful of the breed of their horses and dogs than of their children. -William Penn Freshman women may run for senate and house offices during the fall semester. Other AWS officers are elected in the spring semester. They are Judith Anne Watson of Corbin Hall and Nancy P. Kellogg of Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall, both of Wichita and both elected to the AWS House of Representatives. A. Joan Felt of Prairie Village and Janice E. Moore of Kansas City, Kan., were both elected to the AWS Senate. SPECIAL COMPLIMENTARY OFFER FOR COLLEGE MEN Learn the Pleasures of Fine Tobacco... Enjoy the Original Extra-Mild Cavendish in the Handy "Poly" Pocket Pouch OFFER D.E. AMPHORA DE D·E EST. 1920 Blended in Holland by Douwe Egberts Royal Factories AMPHORA, is cool, even-burning, long-lasting. Its pleasurable smoking qualities have won loyal friends—it outsells all DOUWEBGER IS AMPHORA Cinnamon Caramel gentle smoke other tobacco in its class! 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From left to right, front row are, Suzie Fisher, Prairie Village sophomore; Patricia Wilson, Kansas City junior; Marsha Wertzberger, Kansas City, Mo., senior; second row, Lawalta Dean Heyde, Shawnee Mission junior; Sharon Stark, Leawood sophomore; Mary Sheppeard, Clay Center junior; Leila Val Larson, Merriam freshman; top row, Janet McIntosh, Chapman senior; Leslie Gail Coover, Junction City senior; Mary Nan Scamman, Tarkio, Mo., junior; and Sue Ann Weston, Overland Park senior. Puerto Ricans Denied Voting Rights WASHINGTON — (UPI)—A minority group of about 200,000 US citizens has been deprived of voting rights in New York state by legislation held now to be constitutional. Ev Lyle C. Wilson Wednesday. November 1. 1961 University Daily Kansan These are Spanish-speaking citizens. They are Puerto Ricans who fled their island to establish a Spanish language ghetto in New York City. New York state confronted these Puerto Ricans with a law establishing an English-language literacy test for voters. A three-judge federal court last week upheld the law. The court found that the literacy test did not violate the constitutional rights of any person by reason of race, color or creed. THERE HAS BEEN little public interest in this New York statute nor in the 200,000 or so US citizens who are deprived by it of one of the top privileges of citizenship. It is reasonable to believe, however, that if such a statute in any state, including New York state, deprived 200,000 members of any other minority group of voting rights there would be a great public outcry. If a Southern state barred 200,000 Negroes from the polls by tests held to be constitutional by all the lower courts concerned, the outey still would be very large indeed. AND THE SPOKESMEN for the afflicted minority would book time in higher courts to challenge such harassment. And they would carry their challenge to the supreme court in much anticipation that a ruling favorable to their minority could be had. No such appeal is reported so far in behalf of the transplanted Puerto Ricans. There is in this incident a lesson for these US citizens who find themselves barred from the polls. EDUCATED? To what standard and who is to be the judge? Literate in letters; precisely what does it mean and would a grade school It is not alleged that all of them, or any, are illiterate. They are literate only in their native tongue, Spanish. The dictionary definition of literate is that one must be: Literate in letters; educated; specifically able to read and to write." or a high school diploma attest it? Able to read and to write? Read and write what and must the words be properly spelled? Those are fair questions because the election officials could ease up or crack down in their interpretations of the law to admit or to exclude citizens from the polls. The lesson for the New York colony of Puerto Ricans is that they need an organizer. They also need a lawyer, and a public relations expert. The organizer could mold them into a voting bloc; a potential voting bloc, of course. The public relations expert could stir up a great public outcry against the dischfranchisement of these citizens. Of all those arts in which the wise excel, Nature's chief masterpiece is writing well. —John Sheffield, Duke of Buckinghamshire And the lawyer could get to work appealing their case toward the Supreme Court. Policemen Have Extraordinary Motivation LAREDO, Tex. — (UPI) — Police- mener Raimo Riosos and Sam Brewer drew special praise from Detective Chief A. H. Jimenez arresting three burglars in a junk yard. Jimenee owns the junk yard. "The nerve of some burglar," he said. PENNSYLVANIA Pat Weaver, National College Queen What makes Artcarved Diamonds the favorite of America's College Queens? Actually there are many reasons. 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ULTRA MODERN Evening Star DIAMOND RINGS by Artcarved As seen in SEVENTEEN - WESTSTEEL JEWELRY AMERICAN GIRL SOCIETY Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 1. 1961 Khrushchev Reign Supreme; Stalin's Greatness Gone MOSCOW — (UPI)— Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev emerged from the 22nd Soviet Communist Party Congress today with a sweeping triumph over the memory of Josef Stalin and the men who tried to carry on the former dictator's traditions. Stalin's body was removed to the Kremlin wall from its place of honor in the Red Square Mausoleum it shared with the remains of Lenin. Such members of the Stalinist "Anti-Party" group as former Premier Nikolai Bulganin, former Foreign Minister Dimitri Shepiil and former President Kilent Voroshilov were dropped from the Central Committee of the Communist Party. Other "Anti-Party" men such as former Premiers Vyacheslav M. Molotov and Georgi Malenkov and former economic czar Lazar Kaganovich were in disgrace. More than half of the expanded new Central Committee of 175 members and 156 candidates were new, young men of the type Khrushchev is bringing along as future Soviet leaders. Among the new names was that of his son-in-law, Alexei Azhubei, editor of Izvestia, the government newspaper. The old Central Committee, elected by the 20th Congress five years ago, had only 133 full members and 122 candidates. The general public still had not been told of the explosion of the Soviet nuclear superbomb Monday, although Khrushchev announced it to the Congress yesterday. He joked that the scientists had made a mistake and the explosion was bigger than anticipated but said they would not be punished. The Communist party newspaper Dying Rayburn Returns Home PONHAM, Tex. — (UPI)— House Speaker Sam Rayburn, 79, has made his final trip home. It was his wish to spend the last days of his life among friends and neighbors in his home town. He had wanted to return to the white colonial house he built on the fringe of Bonham. A bulletin issued at 9:30 a.m., today, said Rayburn rested well last night and had no trouble breathing. His basic condition is unchanged. He had beef broth, milk and toast for breakfast, and, at last report was talking a little. BE IS ONLY A MILE or so from the house but he may never see it again. His family and his physician felt it would be easier to make the cancer-stricken congressman more comfortable in the town's small hospital. Mr. Rayburn was brought back to Bonham yesterday afternoon by ambulance from Dallas. The decision to take him out of Baylor University Medical Center was made by his sisters in deference to his expressed wish to spend his last days among, in his words, "those friends and neighbors who for so long have given a love and loyalty unsurpassed in any annals." DR. JOE RISSER, his physician in Bonham who owns the hospital where Rayburn is staying, said the speaker made the 90-mile trip "comfortably" and "seemed pleased to be home." Mr. Rayburn was put in the hospital because he requires oxygen, a breathing apparatus and other medical facilities which would be difficult to provide in his home. Mr. Rayburn's sisters, Mrs. R. E Bartley of Bonham and Mrs. W. A. Thomas of Dallas, said a second factor in their decision to bring him home was that the treatment he had been receiving to slow his cancer did not produce desired results. 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 Pravda reported last night that Stalin's body had been removed from the Red Square tomb. It was placed in a freshly dug grave at the Kremlin wall. The mausoleum had been "closed for repairs" for several days. At first light this morning Soviet workmen had completed placing a new name plate on the tomb. Stalin's name was missing from it and Lenin's name was half again as big as before. After the change was completed, the Red Square tomb was reopened. the Red Square tomb was reopened Khrushchev, his personal power enhanced by the Congress which ended its two-week session yesterday, turned his attention today to Communist bloc affairs. He was expected to hold a series of informal talks with top leaders of the bloc on common economic, political and military problems. The talks probably will continue through the Nov. 7 celebrations of the anniversary of the Russian Revolution. As their final act, the more than 4.000 delegates to the Congress passed a unanimous resolution affirming complete support of Khrushchev's foreign and domestic policies including a break with the abuses of the Stalin era. For Soviet citizens personally the de-Stalinization campaign was the biggest event of the Congress, overriding even the announcement yesterday of the election of a new ruling party Presidium, headed, as before, by Khrushchev. Demonstrations Cause Bloodshed in Algeria Bv Alan Raymond ALGIERS (UPI) - Moslem crowds poured into the streets and battled French police across Algeria today in demonstrations marking the seventh anniversary of the start of the Algerian war. An official French communique issued here said 30 Moslems were killed and 70 persons wounded in clashes throughout the country this morning. In France itself, the only major incident came when a small plastic bomb exploded near a crowd of 500 "Peace in Algeria" demonstrators in the left bank student quarter of Paris. Police said about 25 persons were slightly injured, most of them by flying glass. The violence in Algeria was more widespread. THE COMMUNIQUE SAID the casualties occurred when Moslem rebel commandos mixed with crowds of slogan - shouting, flag - waving demonstrators and opened fire on French forces. It added this forced the French to shoot back. A spokesman for the French Civil Headquarters here said 11 Moslem were killed when rebels in a crowd of demonstrators attacked a French army post in the village of Ras-El-Ajoun in the Batna Department. Seven others were killed in gun fights between French forces and demonstrators in the Dar-El-Kef and Climat De France quarters of Algiers, he said. Nine others were wounded when conscript French soldiers fired back at balconies where hidden Algerians were sniping at them. The spokesman added that the other Moslems were killed in incidents scattered throughout the territory. OTHER demonstrations were reported in villages across the plain of Mitidjia, south of Algiers; at Attatba, Castiglione, Kles and elsewhere. French forces did not intervene in most cases. But at Tipaza several Moslems were injured when police wrested banners and flags of the Algerian National Liberation Front (FLN) from the demonstrations. U.S. Launches New Satellite CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) — The United States rocketed a radio beacon satellite toward space today to test a worldwide network which will track the flight of America's first orbiting astronaut. Today's shot left but one more test in the Mercury Program—an orbital flight of a chimpanzee now planned for Nov. 14—before one of the nation's seven astronauts can take a trip into orbit aboard a two-ton space capsule. The manned orbital flight is expected early in 1962. A four-stage "Scout" rocket took off at 9:32 a.m. Lawrence time with a bullet-like dash characteristic of solid-propellant rockets. The 150-pound payload was aimed at an orbit ranging up to 400 miles above the earth. The slender 66-foot rocket almost veered off course three times, but apparently managed to correct itself. About 400 engineers and technicians manned elaborate instrument consoles in the globe-spanning belt of tracking stations, to listen and look for the package of radio receivers and transmitters as it passed their "checkpoints." It was a bloody day in Algeria despite the fact that the Tunis-based Algerian rebel government had ordered Moslems to celebrate it with "peaceful" demonstrations for independence through serious negotiations with President Charles de Gaulle's representatives. Since this was All Saints' Day, a Roman Catholic holy day, most of Algeria's 1.1 million European settlers marked it quietly by staying in their homes. Terrill's 815 Mass. Open Thursday Evening Till 8:30 MACSHORE CLASSICS THE PRICELESS LOOK $4.00 MACSHORE brings out the best, in you with feminine touches of lace on three quarter sleeves, mandarin collar and shirred horse-shoe bib. And you get the best, too, in fashion, fit and fabric . . . like this lovely little or no iron cotton batiste. White only. Sizes 30 to 38. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers 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. 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 I will not provide the content of the image as it is not clearly visible. Please refer to the provided image or a different source that contains the text. - Page 7 H-Bomb Will Not Destroy Mankind, Teller Asserts "And we must prepare to defend ourselves by technical means and by obtaining the cooperation of all free nations because we could not expect Russia to cooperate. WACO, Tex. — (UPI) — Edward Teller, the man called "father of the H-bomb," said the idea that an all-out nuclear war will wipe mankind off the face of the earth is "complete nonsense." He also warned the United States must win the space race with Russia to preserve and defend freedom in space. If we lose, he said Russia may declare space a Soviet province and shoot down our satellites. "We should get together and organize as a free world to preserve freedom of space by the gentlest means possible—but by any means necessary," he said. "IT IS NOW as important to defend the freedom of space as it once was to insist on freedom of the oceans." Teller said. "If the Russians shoot down our satellites, we should be ready to defend ourselves. TELLER, 53, IS A professor of physics at the University of California and associate director of the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory. Teller said the fact that Russia exploded a 50-megaton bomb does not mean much in itself. He said it is a "piece of progress, but by no means the most important part." He also charged that it proves Russia violated the three-year agreement on atomic experiments by conducting nuclear tests because it would have required as much as a year to get ready for the big blast. Nixon Blasts JFK On China Stand CORONADO, Calif. — (UPI) — Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon has lashed out at the Kennedy administration and predicted "that unless President Kennedy puts some backbone into Adlai Stevenson we are going to have Red China in the United Nations." Nixon also called for the reappraisal of America's whole attitude towards Communism: "The great danger is not war, but losing freedom without war. The United States must reappraise its whole attitude towards Communism. We should take the offensive and every time Khrushchev makes a demand we should make a demand to free part of the slave world." Nixon accused Kennedy of talking "big on Cuba and Laos and now we are talking big on Berlin." He said the "great lesson to learn from the first months of the Kennedy administration that we talk bigger than we are prepared to act." Nixon made the remarks at a dinner during which he said that California's fallout shelter program was a shocking example of the weak and indecisive leadership of Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown. Truth often suffers more by the heat of its defenders, than from the arguments of its opposers. —William Penn Homecoming Decorations Fabrics for MORE IMPORTANT, he said, "It is possible they have tried out new principles developed in previous undetected experiments." - 52" Burlap Teller said these new principles made it "highly likely" the Soviets have developed an anti-missile missile. 36" Muslins "Such a development is particularly dangerous for us because it deprives us of the power to retaliate and exposes us to blackmail." he said. - 81" Muslins - 72" Cheesecloth UNDER THE CURRENT Civil Defense program, which he called "confused and useless," the physicist said, "one half or more" of the people in the United States would be killed. 36" Cottons But should a nuclear war develop it by no means would destroy all mankind, he said. Teller urged increased spending for civil defense as an immediate answer. For All Your Fabric Needs "We need to spend 10 per cent of the money on civil defense that we now spend on weapons and this program (then) could save 90 per Terrill's 803 Mass. Wednesday. November 1, 1961 University Daily Kansan cent of our population and let us stay in existence as a government," he said. "Then we shouldn't retaliate until we are actually hit. We should fire in return not because we see weapons coming, but because we are attacked." HE EXPLAINED he meant that we should build a system so the United States could survive a nuclear attack and "make no doubt about it" and then if the bombs or rockets did fall fire ours back in return. He said "really reliable" weather forecasting is just around the corner and this will result in world wide weather modification techniques that should be established on an international cooperative basis. Teller said the use of the Echo satellites has a "great potential" in extending worldwide communications. He said the time has come to "look not only for the technical, but the political means of making such international communications possible in the easing of tensions." Rocky May Attend KU-Mizzou Game New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller may come to the University of Kansas Nov. 25 for the KU-Missouri football game. Gov. Rockefeller, a prospective 1964 Republican presidential nominee, will speak in Topeka that night. Rockefeller's address in Topeka will be at a $25-per-plate fund-raising dinner. In a telephone interview, a spokesman at the state GOP headquarters in Topeka said it is not definite that Rockefeller will come to Lawrence. The spokesman said that he was "expected" to accept Anderson's invitation, though. KANSAS GOV. John Anderson has invited Rockefeller and his wife to the KU-MU game. KU YOUNG REPUBLICANS' president, Jerry Dickson, Newton senior, said if Rockefeller attends the Nov. 25 game here, "The Young Republicans will stage a welcoming party and an appropriate display at the game." Kansan Want Ads Get Results Exchange Theater Takes Step Forward Exchange theater in the Big Eight took a major step forward at the Mid-America Universities' Conference of theater directors here Saturday. Lewin Goff, associate professor of speech and drama and director of the University Theatre, said yesterday. In addition to the exchange program, the theater directors discussed the idea of establishing a resident theater company composed of postgraduate students from the Big Eight schools. They also agreed to establish a closer relationship with community theaters and agreed to hold an April audition at KU to look over students for community theater and semi-professional work. Population Explosion SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) California is expected to be the No.1 state in population by the latter part of 1963, according to estimates of the State Department of Finance. The state's population was estimated at 16,445,000 on July 1. If the present trend continues, the department said, it will top 17,665,000 by July 1,1963. [Emblem with an eagle holding a shield, olive branch, and arrows] "the wardrobe touch". . . Many college men today pick up a shirt here, a tie there, the suit somewhere else and then pick up an extra pair of slacks when time permits. They leave co-ordination to chance. Investigate the newest service at Diebolt's, the "wardrobe touch." Let us help you co-ordinate your wardrobe from our wide selection of quality clothing. diebolt's 843 Mass. FASHION WEEKLY diebolt's Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 1. 1961 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Hawkers Invade Nebraska Saturday A football rivalry which extends back to 1892 between Kansas and Nebraska will be renewed in Lincoln Saturday. Saturday It will be Homecoming for the Cornhuskers and a crowd of between 32,000 and 33,000 is expected. ALTHOUGH NEBRASKA holds a big edge in this series which has seen only one interruption—the two not meeting in 1904 nor 1905—it has been four years since the Huskers have been able to win from the Jayhawks. The series now shows Nebraska winning 46, losing 17 and tying 3. An early-week check indicated that Nebraska will be at full strength for the Jayhawkers. AFTER A STUTTERING start this season, the Kansans caught fire of- fensively against Oklahoma State to down what had appeared to be one of the top defensive teams in the league. 42-8. The Jayhawks previously had mowed down Iowa State and Oklahoma after blowing a 19-point fourth quarter lead to Colorado. In John Haddl, senior quarterback, Kansas has what Nebraska scout Cletus Fischer called a "true triple-threat All America." It was Haddl's running and passing that stamped the Cowpokes Saturday at Lawrence. CURTIS McCLINTON, senior halfback, hasn't lost the touch, either. McClinton has a 4.5 average to rank fourth among the Big Eight ball toters with 314 yards on 69 carries. The Cornhuskers will be driving to develop a scoring punch this week. Against both Oklahoma State and Missouri, Nebraska had its opportunities but blew them as pay dirt approached. Eill (Thunder) Thornton, playing on a pair of bruised legs that would have benched many football players, accounted for 55 of the 74 rushing yards which Nebraska collected against Missouri. Thornton is the second top ground gainer in the Big Eight with the league's top average of 5.6 with 453 yards on 81 carries. DENNIS CLARIDGE'S talented toe may get another thorough work-out against the Javahaws. Claridge now leads in the Big Eight in punting with 23 boots for 975 yards and an average of 42.3. Two Cornhusker interior linemen, Dwain Carlson and sophomore John Kirby, drew plaudits from the coaches for their fiery play against the Tigers. Bob Brown, 251-pound sophomore tackle, also appeared to be coming of football age in the Tiger fray. He has fully healed from the hurts that kept him at home when Nebraska played Oklahoma State. BILL COMSTOCK, junior fullback, played well defensively. New York Knicks Beat Royals By United Press International Apparently a winning habit is harder to break than a losing one. When Eddie Donovan joined the New York Knickerbockers as coach this season after a highly successful collegiate career, cynics warned him to prepare for the worst. The Knicks had finished at the bottom of the National Basketball Association's Eastern Division two straight years and more of the same was predicted for this season. But rather than fall to their level, Donovan has introduced a winning combination to New York and last night the Knicks presented him with his fourth victory in six pro starts, a 131-127 decision over the Cincinnati Royals. Among other moves he came back from a linebacker spot to snare one of the Missouri forward passes. Dick McDaniel, senior end, who did not play high school football, had his finest defensive day against the Tigers. Detter-Smith Capture IM Tennis Doubles Title "We have been able to move the ball fairly well with the exception of the Missouri game," Coach Bill Jennings said. "But we have been missing too many scoring opportunities." Carl Detter, Hutchinson freshman, and Terry Smith, Larned junior, nabbed the intramural tennis doubles title yesterday. The Detter-Smith duo beat Lee Gaston, Kansas City senior, and Charles Boomer, Kansas City junior, 6-0. 6-3. Detter and Smith represented Templin. Gaston and Boomer represented Phi Kappa Tau. The Templin duo held the Phi Kappa Tau twosome to two points in the first set. In IM singles competition, Smith, Detter, and Ron Glotta, Lawrence Wichitan Leads MVC KANSAS CITY — (UPI) — Wichita quarterback Alex Zyskowski leads the Missouri Valley Conference in passing and total offense with the 1961 season better than half gone. Zyskowski has completed 34 of 68 passes for 594 yards, two touchdowns and three conversions. His closest competitor is Ronnie Sine, Tulsa, with 349 yards and three touchdowns. G junior, will battle in the semifinals. The fourth man is vet to be chosen. Last summer, Smith took first place in the National Junior College Athletic Association's singles tournament. Two summers ago, Smith was the second place singles finisher. Smith is a transfer from Pratt Junior College. AN ALL AMERICA REFLECTS—John Hadl ponders a decision during the Oklahoma game. Glotta took third in the NJCAA singles tourney in 1960 and second place in doubles last summer. SUMMER JOBS IN EUROPE WRITE TO: AMERICAN STUDENT INFORMATION SERVICE, 22, AVE. DE LA LIBERTE, LUXEMBOURG Kansan: Want Ads Get Results Jay SHOPPE 12th & G. and 835 Mass. 3.98 the "fine line" Ship'n Shore shirt newly narrowed collar and placket to smarten your fashion outlook. 65% Dacron polyester, 35% cotton White, tints, tangy tones.28 to 38. 2-for-1 NIGHT at the CATACOMBS (cellar of the Pizza Hut) WEDNESDAY NIGHT 7:00-9:00 Buy 1 beverage — Get the second one free! It's 2-for-1 Night!! Catacombs Open Every Week Night 5:00-11:00 Friday & Saturday Night 5:00-1:00 Open 4-11 Monday-Thursday 646 Mass. Ka OI Featuring the FINEST PIZZA in the Midwest PIZZA B The Leag the s come 4-1 Friday & Saturday Th 99-9 will HUT VI 3-9760 19 Page 9 Wednesday, November 1. 1961 University Daily Kansan Kansas City Steers Open Tonight By United Press International The fledgling American Basketball League presents its third game of the season tonight when Kansas City comes calling on San Francisco. The Saints nosed out Los Angeles, 99-96, in the opener while the Steers will be making their debut. THE STEERS are led by NBA veterans Win Wilfong and Larry Staverman, both of whom caved for Cincinnati of the National Basketball Association last season. A variety of stars from service and AAU ball round out the lineup. San Francisco's Ken Sears, who suffered a charley horse in the opener, will be ready for action although Iowa ace Dave Gunther will start in his stead. Although the ABL has played only two official games, the new rule changes it offers appears to have caught on with the fans. Jayhawker Notes "THIS PROBABLY was our best offensive game," remarked Coach Jack Mitchell following Kansas' 42-8 victory over Oklahoma State. "When we can pass well (John Hadl hit 10 of 15 for 102 yards and two touchdowns) our offense is all right. We need the forward pass because we can't break the long one from scrimmage." IN NEBRASKA at Lincoln Saturday Kansas will be meeting the Big Eight's biggest team. "They are huge in the line and play that defense tough," says scout Tom Triplett, who charted the Cornhuskers' 10-0 loss to Missouri, "Thornton (halfback Bill) is one of the best backs in our conference. Not only is he fast, but powerful and reckless too. In the line I particularly like their ends, Purcell (Don), Huge (Jim), and McDaniel (Dick)." LEE FLACHBARTH, Kansas' starting defensive left half, may miss the 68th Kansas-Nebraska game with a bruised knee. The Jayhawkers hope to have starting tackles Dick Davis and Stan Kirshman ready, along with veteran end Mike Deer. Davis missed the 42-8 victory over Oklahoma State with an elbow injury. Deer_with a pulled muscle. Kirshman played one down after fighting a severe throat and fever all week. - * KANSAS WILL BE riding an unprecedented four game winning streak over Nebraska when it invades Lincoln Saturday. The last two at Lincoln have been tight fits, the Jayhawkers winning 14-12, in '75, on a Wally Straight pass to end Jim Leatevits, and 10-3 in '79, on a similar toss from John Hadl to Dale Remsberg. Both ends made shoestring catches in the south end zone. Kansan Want Ads Get Results YES Check your opinions against L&M's Campus Opinion Poll #9 $\textcircled{1}$ Has the Berlin crisis increased the likelihood of military service for you? □ YES □ NO $\textcircled{2}$ With an exam coming up... $\textcircled{3}$ How long have you been smoking your present brand? □ would you study and get a B □ or keep a big date and settle for C? □ less than 1 month □ less than 1 year □ more than 1 year Here's how 1029 students at 100 colleges voted! Expect more... get more from L&M The rich-flavor leaf among L&M's choice tobaccos gives you more body in the blend more flavor in the smoke more taste through the $\textcircled{4}$ Less than 1 month... 9% Less than 1 year... 21% More than 1 year... 70% $\textcircled{5}$ Study... 60% Keep date... 40% $\textcircled{6}$ No... 30% A TOM'S BOOKS JAN FEB MAR APR NE 62 Expect more... get more from L&M The rich-flavor leaf among L&M's choice tobaccos gives you more body in the blend ...more flavor in the smoke...more taste through the filter. Get lots more—L&M! L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO THE MIRACLE TIP L&M FILTER LIGGOTT & WINS TOBacco CO L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO $\textcircled{3}$ 2 Yes...70% No...30% 0 JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Try best-tasting L&M today . . . in pack or box JACK ZINN for Freshmon President A On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) HUSBANDS, ANYONE? It has been alleged that coeds go to college for the sole purpose of finding husbands. This is, of course, an infamous canard, and I give fair warning that, small and spongy as I am, anybody who says such a dastardly thing when I am around had better be prepared for a sound thrashing! Girls go to college for precisely the same reasons as men do; to broaden their horizons, to lengthen their vistas, to drink at the fount of wisdom. But, if, by pure chance, while a girl is engaged in these meritorious pursuits, a likely looking husband should pop into view, why, what's wrong with that? Eh? What's wrong with that? The question now arises, what should a girl look for in a husband. A great deal has been written on this subject. Some say character is most important, some say background, some say appearance, some say education. All are wrong. The most important thing—bar none—in a husband is health. Though he be handsome as Apollo and rich as Midas, what good is he if he just lays around all day accumulating bedsores? The very first thing to do upon meeting a man is to make sure he is sound of wind and limb. Before he has a chance to sweet-talk you, slap a thermometer in his mouth, roll back his cyclids, yank out his tongue, rap his patella, palpate his thorax, ask him to straighten out a horseshoe with his teeth. If he fails these simple tests, phone for an ambulance and go on to the next prospect. If, however, he turns out to be physically fit, proceed to the second most important requirement in a husband. I refer to a sense of humor. After each of these good-natured pranks, laugh gaily and shout "April Food! If he replies, "But this is February nineteenth," or something equally churlish, cross him off your list and give thanks you found out in time. A man who can't take a joke is a man to be avoided. There are several simple tests to find out whether your prospect can take a joke or not. You can, for example, slash his tires. Or burn his "Mad" comics. Or steal his switchblade. Or turn loose his pet raccoon. Or shave his head. But if he laughs silvery and calls you "Little Minx!" put him to the next test. Find out whether he is kindly. What should a girl look for in a husband? The quickest way to ascertain his kindness is, of course, to look at the cigarette he smokes. Is it mild? Is it element? Is it humane? Does it minister tenderly to the psyche? Does it cuddle the sympses? Is it a good companion? Is it genial? Is it bright and friendly and filtered and full of dulce pleasure from cockerow till the heart of darkness? Is it, in short, Marlboro? If Mariboro it be, then clasp the man to your bosom with hoops of steel, for you may be sure that he is kindly as a summer breeze, kindly as a mother's kiss, kindly to his very marrow. And now, having found a man who is kindly and healthy and blessed with a sense of humor, the only thing that remains is to make sure he will always earn a handsome living. That, fortunately, is easy. Just enroll him in engineering. . . . $ \textcircled{2} $ 1961 Max Shulman Joining Marlboro in bringing you this column throughout the school year is another fine product from the same makers—the king-size, unfiltered Philip Morris Commander. Here is pure, clean smoking pleasure. Try a pack. You'll be welcome aboard! Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 1, 1961 Little Effect From Japanese Riots By Scott Payne The Japanese riots in the summer of 1960, preventing former President Eisenhower from visiting Japan, have had little lasting effect in Japanese society or politics, a history professor said yesterday. "By the time last fall's elections were held, the influence of the riots on the electorate on the whole had worn off," George Beckmann, professor of history and chairman of East Asian studies said, speaking at the Faculty Forum. "Many people were interested in whether there would be any connections between the riots and the voter's decision," he said. "THE CONSERVATIVES, (the liberal democrats) who were in power at the time of the rioting, won 296 of 465 seats in the government. Now they hold over 300 seats. "The socialist party gained 23 seats to hold a total of 145," he said. The Socialist-Democrats, "a party trying to combine the views of the other two," he said, lost 22 seats in this election. "I am inclined to believe that the conservatives will remain in power for some time," Prof. Beckmann said. "The conservatives are taking advantage of the post-war changes in Japan to build a Utopian welfare future. They have promised the Japanese people a 10-year plan in which they will double the gross national product and raise the standard of living," he added. PROF. BECKMANN SAID he did not see why this could not be done, though it would be difficult. "Japan has the greatest natural resource—people who can do things. They may well achieve their goal," he said. "A political factor in the favor of the conservatives is that the socialists in Japan are deeply divided. German visitors have called them 'archaic 19th century Marxists.'" TURNING TO A DISCUSSION of the riots, Prof. Beckmann said he felt the riots had been misinterpreted by American newspapers. He was supported in this statement by Leon Zolbrod, instructor of oriental languages, who was in Japan during the riots. "I believe the Japanese you would talk to on this subject would insist you use the word 'demonstrations'—not riots," Mr. Zolbrod said. "IN ONE INSTANCE, I know that the students involved were demonstrating merely for the right to demonstrate which they felt Prime Minister Kishi was going to deny them," he added. Prof. Beckmann said the main causes of the riots were: - The shooting down of the spy-plane over Russia. - The resultant failure of the Paris summit conference. - The work of professional left wing organizations. - Prime Minister Kishi's attempted forcing of the U.S.-Japanese treaty. "THE RIOTS WERE spent by July," he said. "There were counter ripples from both right and left wings such as the attempted assassination of Prime Minister Kishi and the assassination of the socialist leader Asanumu. "The Japanese may demonstrate against the United States but they realize their ties with this country," he said. Little Symphony Season Starts The 42-piece Little Symphony orchestra of the University of Kansas will begin its 12th concert season at 8 p.m. Nov. 15 at Swarthout Recital Hall. Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will conduct the orchestra in works by Beethoven, Milhaud and Coopland. The group is made up of selected student musicians and Lawrence residents, 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 NOW SHOWING! At 7:00 & 9:00 ROSS HUNTER CARRUTTON Susan Hayward John Gavin FANNIE HURST'S 'Back Street' IN EASTMAN COLOR! Vera Miles CHARLES DRAKE-VIRGINIA GREY-REGINA DARDNER A Universal International Release ROSS HUNTER CARROLTON Susan Hayward John Gavin FANNIE HURST'S 'Back Street' IN EASTMAN COLOR! Vera Miles ROSS HUNTER CAROLLTON Susan Hayward John Gavin CHARLES DRAKE-VIRGINIA GREY-REGINALD GARDINER FANNIE HURST'S "Back Street" IN EASTMAN COLOR! Vera Miles A Universal International Release THE GREATEST HIGH ADVENTURE EVER FILMED! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN IN CARL FOREMAN'S THE GUNS OF NAVARONE STANLEY BAKER • ANTHONY QUAYLE • IRENE PAPAS • GIA SCALA JAMES DARREN CARL FOREMAN COLOR and CINEMASCOPE TO SUSTAIN THE TREMENDOUS SUSPENSE, SEE IT FROM THE BEGINNING. OUR NEXT ATTRACTION! GRANADA COLUMBIA PICTURES presents GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN by CARL FOREMAN'S GRANADA Official Bulletin SUA Bridge Lessons. 7 p.m. 306, Kansas Union, Instructor, Larry Bodle. KU Amateur Radio Club. 7:30 p.m., 201 E.E. Labs. Election of officers. Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch: 12 noon, Canterbury House. University Women's Club. 7:30 p.m. Washington, Boone, Kansas Union. He is Michael Thomas, Fort Riley junior. Only one Young Democrat has announced his candidacy for the vacant office of vice president of the Young Democrats organization at KU. Young Democrat Announces Candidacy Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Another candidate, Susan Cross, Topeka senior, withdrew her name from the race after she talked to Verne Gauby, Grand Island, Neb., third year law student and president of the group. She said that after finding out the amount of work entailed, she realized she could not run. Elections for the vice presidency will be held at a Young Democrats meeting Nov. 14. The featured speaker at the meeting will be George Hart, former Democratic treasurer for Kansas and currently a candidate for governor in 1962. For Women Only NEW HOLSTEIN, Wis. —(UPI)—A company here has produced a lawn mower engine which it claims will be a boon to women. Called a "wife startable" engine by the manufacturer (Tecumseh Products Co.), it takes only half the muscular tug of older engines to start. Thur. Fri. Sat. Special Matinees At 2 p.m. NIKKI—half-dog, half-wolf, his courage and cunning a legend in an untamed land! Walt Disney's Walt Disney's NIKKI WILD DOG OF THE NORTH TECHNICOLOR* NOMADS of the NORTH* NIKKI WILD DOG OF THE NORTH TECHNICOLOR* NOMADS OF THE NORTH based on exciting adventure novel by JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD Released by BUENA VISTA Distribution Co. Inc. © WALT DISNEY Productions — Plus Co-feature — "Touching and Beautiful" Newsweek Mag. HAND IN HAND A COLUMBA RELEASE Ends Tonite—At 7:30 Only "Economically, the religion school is a non-integral part of the University," he said. "The principle of the separation of church and state has been extended here to KU," he added. "FOR EXAMPLE," he said, "many people don't realize that the economic and academic functions of the School of Religion are not related at all. Ends Tonite—At 7:30 Only "SPARTACUS" VARSITY LIEATRE ... Information VARSITY 2-1941 For example, he said, the religion school is not supported by the state tax revenues, but by individual donations and church budgets. The Rev. Mr. Moore was installed Oct. 9, 1960, as dean, replacing the Rev. Harold G. Barr. The Rev. Mr. Moore came from the New Testament department of the Drake University School of Religion. Less is known about the school of religion than any of the other schools here on the campus, says the Rev. William J. Moore, dean of the School of Religion. However, he continued, the School of Religion is academically related to the University. Little Known About KU School of Religion By Ben Marshall "TEACHERS AND courses must all be endorsed by the School of Religion Board, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and the chancellor. "In addition we gear the religion school courses to the courses of the rest of the university," he said. "There is a clear understanding between the University and the School of Religion that there be no sectarian methods of teaching—there is no propagandizing of religions. We want to offer a scholarly, objective study of religion," he said. THERE ARE SEVERAL other unknown facts about the School of Religion that may be of interest to the students, he added. For instance, students may take up to 25 hours of courses in the School of Religion as electives in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, but the University offers no majors or minors in the School of Religion. "In the past," the Rev. Mr. Moore continued, "all courses were made available on a 'non-prerequisite' basis so the students could fit religion courses into schedules at their convenience. But this year there are additional courses with prerequisites so that the students may obtain depth in their studies of religions." Artists Receive Cash In Design Show Here 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. Prizes totaling more than $800 were awarded Sunday at the opening of the eighth annual Kansas Designer Craftsman Show in the Kansas Union for work in ceramics, sculpture, silversmithing, furniture, and textiles. The winning pieces done by Kansans will be on display until Nov. 26. 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." 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. Airlines Say "No" To Student Discounts Reservations for flights during the holiday vacations are already nearly fully booked with long wait-lists existing for some of the more popular schedules. Effective November 19th the nation's airlines have served notice to discontinue the "youth" fare discounts. For AIRLINE RESERVATIONS and TICKETS, Phone or see: MAUPINTOUR Travel Agency Phone VIking 3-1211 New at WOUI green. tween Camp Tun a THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 711 West 23rd Street "Maupintour's 11th Year Serving KU and Lawrence" CLASSIFIED ADS LOST BROWN BILLFOLD. Wednesday, near Flint Hall. Reward. Call VI 3-784. 1-7 Page 11 WOULD THE PERSON who took my green, German, overcoat by mistake, be taken to the campus of Campus Barber Shop, please call Than at Tun V1 3-3944. I have yours. 11-3 TAN RAINCOAT — Underground read- ing tape COMBI VI 3-3944; Reward: 11-2 RAINCOAT taken by mistake from bar- bary. A party that has mined. Call Vi 6-241 11-2 KAPPA KEY Sorority pin lost between 11-300 Kappa House. Reward - 11-11 Vi 3-5600 FOR SALE 1951 HARLEY-DAVIDSON good condition $250. Call 21-3550. Dick Littler ATTENTION PLEDGES: Light your actives' cigarettes with a butane lighter. Ideal for gifts, suitable for framing. Complete with lifetime guarantee for only $3.75. Retail $5.00. Order from VI 2-3682 or see sample at B16 Miss. 11-7 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. Clean. good. Ures. evenings, evensdays 3-92885 11-6 STEVENS .22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like new. Call VI 3-2906 at 6 p.m. tu 1950 Blue Mercury, Fordor. White sidewall tires, heater, $60. Call $9 I-2153 after 5 m.p. or see Charles Bondurant at Apt. 5, Bldg. 3. Stouffer Apts. 11-1 SACRIFICE—Must sell second car. Old Car Valve running condition $$$ Calibr V1 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. excellent cond. Call Mike Guth, V 1-7211 1958-- 88 Olds, in excellent condition Power steering and brakes, air conditioned, 4 new tires, 4 doors. Perfect interior. 1 owner. VI 3-5665. 11-1 GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New & used guns & ammo. Special this week: 45 ACP revolver. See at 1304 Tenn. I-3-7001. 11-1 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 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 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright typewriter sales, service, reception at Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. Residency 31-6461 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. WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised, 100 pages, mimeophed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. FOR RENT NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Available at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th Phone VI 3- 0151 today. SAPCIUS 4 room duplex. Private bath, basement, garage. $60 a month. Call Holmes, Peck & Brown Realtors. VI 3- 0220, VII 3-3789, VI or VII 3-6171. 11-2 ROOMS FOR RENT for men. Linens furnished. Call VI 2-3322 or see at 1117 Sunset Dr. 11-3 10 x 35 ft. trailer. Call VI 3-5193. W. D. Lansdow. 11-2 FURNISHED apt: large living room, large bedroom, study room, kitchen, bath, screen porch, garage. First floor, modern furn. and carpeting. Very convenient to KU and downtown. $65 per month. For appointment call VI 3-6896. 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 2 bedroom home, att. garage. Completely turn. Auto. wash-dryer, air cond. air conditioning, yard Vard. $100 month. 221 Moundview Dr. Phone I 3-5882 after 5 for appt. tf BUSINESS SERVICES Vacancy available for 2 men in com- munity center (Khel Res. Cal. 3-9653 for appointment). if ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- cation of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LARGE FURNISHED apartment e a s t side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6234. ft I WOULD LIKE IO DO babyssitting my house, afternoons and evenings. EX perienced mother. References. Cal VI 3-9159. 11- WIFE OF EXCHANGE STUDENT will welcome students from Rhode Island, upstate, all 11-6 TUTOR FOR GERMAN. Austrian graduate student. Write to Horst Hasselmann, 1338 Ohio or call VI 3-4711, 6-11 p.m. 11.0 ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. tf Dixie Carmel Shop Taffy Apples—Popcorn Assorted Chocolates Carmel Corn—Mixed Nuts Stuffed Toys 1033 Mass. VI 3-6311 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 10224 and 10226, 10234 and 10235 Lawrence Ave. & 10212% TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI -3644. 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 EXCELENT SETUP FOR STUDENT with small capital. $1800 total to buy local franchise of business that require a week to operate. Phl. 1-11 VI. 3-911 DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- more information, Ola Snipe 2019]; *Mass. Call: VIYI 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- selt. Phone VI 3-2921 — Modern. Service — open weeks 7 to 8 at 6:30 pm. 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 2-0050. 11-6 HELP WANTED MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES -- All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent ed paper bags. Plain, party supplies Plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 0250 LADIES AID of the E.U.B. Church is having homemade chicken & noodle dinner. Hot biscuits & pie included. $1.00. 5:30 to 7. Wed., Nov. 1. 11-1 Kansan Want Ads Get Results WANTED -GIRL to share nice apartment. Call Shirley, I 2-3407. 11-6 A PRE-1857 Volkwagen Sedan, any com- pany. Ronald E. Smith, Pennsylvania. 11-3 WANTED Wednesday. November 1, 1961 University Daily Kansar TYPING TYPING: Accurate, neat typing by ex- pressions, after 5 calls. Pm Call V-3-1060, 11-1 ports after 5 calls. Pm Call V-3-1060, 11-1 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattii, VI 3-8379. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonablen rates. Barry, Bariow. 408 W. 13W. VI 2-1648. M. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mr. Fulcher, VI 3-0558 1031 Miss. tt TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 8-4409. tt Experienced Typtip; Electric typewriter Interested in thesis, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker, Call VI 3-2001. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Dialect: English Model: sell_1311 W. 21 St. Cust. VI 5-6440 rr EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to themes, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. tf PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, dissertations, Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. tt GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression among standard rates, call Miss. Excellence Pope, VI 3-1097. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, journals. Send neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 RI, VI 3-7435 HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher. Must report accurately & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. **tf** FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Excursion Service. $917 B Woods, Mission, HE 2-7118. Evers or Sat. 2-2186. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, resumes. Accurate work. reasonable Mrs. Elec. Electrician. Mrs. Keil Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing home call VI 3-1516. Moiss Loy Gehibsen Selling - Buying Need Help For best results, use the University Daily Kansan Classified Page Phone Ext. 376 SPECIAL SALE Wool Skirts 790 and 890 - Regularly 11.98 to 17.98 - Straight Styles - Pleated Styles - Assorted Colors - Sizes 8-16 - Plaids COACH HOUSE Clothes For Town and Country K. U. Campus - 1237 Oread Sir Knight FORMAL WEAR 1342 Ohio SPECIAL SALE 3 Days Only New Black Tux Reg. 49.95 Value 39^95 Thurs.- Sat. Only Don't miss this outstanding value. Formal wear will soon be a must, cash in now. 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 1. 196 Page 12 Red Party Summit Plans Canceled MOSCOW — (UFI) — Plans for a Communist Party summit meeting have been canceled because of the absence of the Communist Chinese delegation, it was disclosed today. The government newspaper Izvestia announced the Chinese delegation to the concluded 22nd Soviet Party Congress left for Peiping yesterday. Their departure confirmed reports that a planned summit meeting has been called off. Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai, who headed the delegation, returned to China earlier while the Congress was still in session after publicly questioning Premier Nikita Khrushchev's open denunciation of Albania. Chou said it only helped Communist opponents to air family quarrels in public. However, Khrushchev and most other foreign and Soviet spokesmen disregarded Chou's admonition. Khrushchev and other Congress orators also obliquely criticized the Chinese by denouncing the so-called dogmatists in the Communist Party. It was understood the Chinese objected to the harsh public castigation of the Molotov "anti-party" group and the violent campaign against Stalinism. While in Moscow, Chou laid a wreath on the Lenin-Stalin mausoleum with an inscribed "to the great Marxist-Leninist, Joseph Stalin." After his departure Chou could not have gained much comfort from hearing Stalin denounced for committing mass crimes and having his body removed from the mausoleum Other foreign Communist delegations will remain in Moscow for the Nov. 7 celebration of the 44th anniversary of the Russian Revolution The Chinese delegation, ieed by acting head Pyn Chen, secretary of the Chinese Party Central Committee, was seen off at the airport by Soviet Central Committee Secretary Frol Kozlov and other medium level party leaders yesterday. Khrushchev emerged from the Party Congress with a sweeping triumph over the memory of Stalin and the men who tried to carry on the late dictator's traditions. Assistant Secretary of State Brooks Hays will be the key speaker tomorrow at the 98th annual meeting of the Kansas State Teachers Association. Kansas Teachers to Hear Brooks Hays Mr. Hays will speak on "Compiette and Generous Education." Also speaking to the more than 4,000 expected teachers will be John H. Furbay of the TWA Global Education Program. His topic will be "Countdown for Tomorrow." Other speakers who will precede Sec. Hays at the 10 a.m. session will be Ted Kennedy, mayor of Lawrence, Baxter Smith, dean of the University and W. D. Wolfe, superintendent of Lawrence schools. Lawrence is one of the eight locations in Kansas that will host this year's KSTA meetings. The conference is coordinated by the University Extension Service. Housing Discussed The Canterbury Association discussed a stand on the University of Kansas' housing policy in a meeting yesterday noon. After lengthy discussion, the matter was tabled. The association will discuss the problem again at its regular meeting next Tuesday noon. NEW YORK - (UPI) The Methodist Church has launched a "crash" program to train African Christians for leadership in their own countries. Phog to Help Celebrate Basketball Anniversary Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen, retired Kansas basketball coach, will attend cornerstone - laying ceremonies for the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass., the game's birthplace, Nov. 6, on the 100th anniversary of the birth of the game's founder. Allen is now a practicing osteopath in Lawrence. The careers of Allen and Naismith were intertwined many years. Naismith joined the University of Kansas faculty in 1898, seven years after founding the game at Springfield, first as director of chapel, then as professor of physical education. He retired from active teaching in 1937. As KU's first basketball coach, he served from 1899 thru 1907. Allen succeeded him in the latter post for 1908 and 1909, then returned in 1920 to complete a 39-year hitch. During his 43-year career, which included seven seasons at Warrens- Quality Watch Repairing DANIELS JEWELRY 914 Mass., Ph. VI 3-2572 burg,Teachers, two at Baker and one at Haskell, in addition to his Mt. Oread stint, Allen's teams won 771 games, still the all-time collegiate high. KU-Y Group Meets The KU-Y "Foreign Student Speaks" discussion group will meet from 7-8 this evening in Alcove C at the Kansas Union. The speaker will be Ana Marie King, Buenos Aires, Argentina, graduate. The public is welcome. Hems which are flat and even in width look 'and hang best. Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass VI 3-0330 FOOTBALL CONTEST Lawrence Tire & Oil Co. 1000 Mass. VI 2-0247 HEADQUARTERS FOR: US Royal Tires Conoco Oil Products Alignment - Wheel Balance Electrical System Repair & Rebuilding Complete Mechanical Service OPEN EVERY DAY UNTIL 1 am Missouri vs Colorado diebolt's men's wear 843 massachusetts - Iowa State vs Boston College Open Evenings Till 8 Kansas vs Nebraska regardless, you will be 'suited' to a T' at diebolt's the 'flying wedge'? the 'single wing'? STEVE LENNARD Kief's Record & HiFi On the Mall Downtown 835 Mass. This Week's Gift A BOBBIE BROOKS BLOUSE Of Your Choice Visit our stores each week and register for drawing on Saturday. (No purchase necessary to register.) Jay SHOPPE TWO STORES TO SERVE YOU Kansas State vs Oklahoma - On Campus 12th and Oread CAMPUS FASHIONS For EVERY OCCASION "Brilliant" says Marilyn King of the King Sisters The New Roberts "990" 4-Track Stereo Tape Recorder is your best buy --see "Quality Guaranteed" Lawrence Laundry 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. 3. Return to Daily Kansan Adv. Dept., 111 Flint Hall, no later than midnight Friday, 11-3. In case of ties the $10 will be split. 2. Fill out & clip coupon. Name ___ Address ___ Ph. ___ One entry per student. LAST WEEK'S WINNER: My prediction is ___ points. Ray Ricketts ... 298 Pts. Actual Total ... 295 Pts. --see "Quality Guaranteed" Lawrence Laundry For the Finest in Laundry and Dry Cleaning 59th "Specialists in fabric care " VI 3-3711 10th & N.H. P for test W dent the clea are the U T — Oklahoma State vs Wichita — Daily hansan 59th Year, No. 35 LAWRENCE, KANSAS U.S. Will Resume Tests if Necessary By Merriman Smith WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Kennedy announced today that the United States will resume nuclear tests in the atmosphere if they are necessary for U.S. security and the protection of the free world. Preparations are underway now for a resumption of above-ground tests, the President told reporters, if UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — (UPI) — Russia joined the United States and Britain today in rejecting demands for renewal of a moratorium on nuclear weapons testing. Russian delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin, in a rocket-rattling speech, told the General Assembly's main political committee that "only the overwhelming might of the Soviet Union can cool the passions of the adventurers" of the West — "those warlike maniacs." an evaluation of the Soviet Union's big testing series shows they are necessary. Fallout will be held to an "absolute minimum" if the tests actually get underway, he said. The United States, Kennedy declared, has no intention of exploding enormous fallout producing weapons like Russia's multi-megaton bombs. The President did not spell out details. It is known, however, that scientists and military experts want to conduct atmospheric tests to perfect warheads for intercontinental rockets, anti-missile missiles and tactical nuclear weapons. Thursday, November 2, 1961 In addition, some Congressmen have urged that atmospheric tests are necessary to develop a neutron bomb—a weapon that can kill troops on a battlefield but leave property and cities intact. Kennedy accused the Soviet Union of showing "complete disregard for the welfare of mankind" by its current series of atmospheric shots. He also said Russia prepared for them in secret while discussing a test ban with this country. In emphasizing that U.S. security might necessitate resumption of atmospheric tests, Kennedy said the Soviet series could not be dismissed as mere bluff and bluster. The Russian shots—at least 28 in number so far—probably have proved of some value to Russian scientists and military men, he said. Speaking with emphasis as U.N. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson watched from a corner of Kennedy's camera-cluttered office, the President said this country also never would undertake an atomic test as part of psychological warfare. He said such tests would be held only when essential to the defense of the nation, the protection of the free world and in the interest of necessary scientific and military development. The President's statement was made to reporters following a lengthy meeting with members of the National Security Council. Kennedy also said the United States still was ready to sign a test ban agreement with Russia provided it carries provisions for effective inspection and control. ASC Gets New Funds Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe might also be used to review approgranted the All Student Council prations that were cut or denied at $1,100 in additional funds yesterday. the Tuesday-meeting. Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior, president of the student body, said the money will probably be used to raise the Associated Women Student's appropriation to about $2,300, approximately the amount they received last year. BECAUSE OF an unbudgeted appropriation of $373 to the combined pep clubs at the ASC appropriation meeting Tuesday night, the ASC started on their way to operating in the red, or cutting the AWS appropriation. The extra $1,100 will correct this. The AWS appropriation was tabled Tuesday until a meeting later this week or early next week. Eberhart said the added money HE ADDED that the extra grant by the chancellor will be a "one-shot proposition" because the People-to-People appropriation will be "nearly cut in half" from now on. The $1,905 appropriation to People-to-People was extra large this semester so that the organization could get a firm start. The ASC budget is tighter than usual this year because the planned appropriations exactly equalled the funds they had, $7.164.78. They withheld $208.45 in a contingency fund to be used if an enrollment drop next semester cuts into their funds. The ASC is given money by the University based on the number of students enrolled. ★★★ Budget Breakdown The present budget appropriations stand as follows: (The ASC Finance and Auditing committee made the recommendations after reviews of records of organizations requesting money.) Organization Requested Recommended Approprated ASC expenses $2395.00 $2395.00 * Alpha Phi Omega 100.00 47.51 47.51 Associated Women Students 2590.00 1800.00 * Business School Council 155.00 155.00 155.00 Combined Pep Clubs 823.00 00.00 373.00 Engineering Student Council 150.00 85.00 85.00 Mathematics Club 40.00 40.00 00.00 Mortar Board 130.00 103.82 103.82 Pharmaceutical Association 350.00 165.00 165.00 Student Bar Association 350.00 220.00 220.00 World University Service 40.00 40.00 00.00 People - to - People 1905.00 1905.00 1905.00 $6295.00 $9955.33 $2954.33 Funds left to appropriate before $1100 grant: $4110.45 Funds left to appropriate after $1100 grant: $5210.45 *Appropriations yet to be made: Associated Women Students $1800.00 ASC expense 2395.00 Total $4195.00 Excess (amount which can be distributed among AWS, ASC expense reserve, or organizations cut at the Wednesday meeting) $1015.45 Events of Note Pep Rally There will be a football rally Friday at 11:50 a.m. in front of Strong Hall. Cheerleaders, pep-clubs, the pep band and the team participants will be there to send the team off to Nebraska. Following the rally, the Homecoming Queen and her two attendants will be announced. Sophomores who lived in Corbin Hall last year and earned at least a 2.0 grade average for the Spring, 1961, semester will be honored at the hall's scholarship banquet tonight at 5:30 p.m. Corbin Scholarship Approximately 75 are expected to attend the dinner, and the name of the girl with the highest of those grade averages will be inscribed on the scholarship plaque for Corbin Hall's trophy case. The Ski Club will sponsor films shown by a representative of the Crested Butte ski area at its second meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Ski Club Meeting International Club International Club will meet tomorrow night in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union following the University Film Series movie "Room at the Top" which will be at 7:30 in Hoch Auditorium. There will be dancing and refreshments. Nuclear Colloquium Poetry Hour Walter J. Meserve, associate professor of English, will read poetry of Robert Frost at the Poetry Hour today at 4 p.m. in the Music Room of the Kansas Union. Coffee will be served during the program. Saadia Amiel, head of the nuclear chemistry department of the Israel Atomic Energy Commission, Rhovoth, Israel, will address a special colloquium at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 233 Malott. His speech will be entitled "Activation Analysis Based on Delayed Neutron Emission." Dr. Amiel is now on a two-week tour in the United States visiting Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, Ill., Brookhaven National Laboratory, Long Island, N.Y., and Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tenn. At the Forum, to be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Music Room of the Kansas Union, William J. York, assistant professor of education, will be a featured speaker. The topic of this week's Current Events Forum will be "Federal Aid to Education." Current Events Prof. York said he will give a 10-minute resume of principal thoughts on the problem, then open the meeting to questions. Coffee will be served at the Forum, and the public is invited. Weather Rain and occasional thunderstorm today. Northwesterly winds and turning much colder this afternoon and evening. Partly cloudy and much colder tonight and Friday. Hard freeze tonight. Highs today 60s. Lows tonight 25 to 30. Highs Friday 40s. HRC to Conduct Housing Survey By Richard Currie A committee to talk to certain Lawrence landlords who rent to KU students was established by the Lawrence Human Relations Commission last night. The move was designated a beginning in HRC's efforts to ascertain why and how much discrimination exists in Lawrence. KU students were picked because they represent a group who, generally, make good renters. HOW THE COMMITTEE would establish what landlords to speak to was not specifically determined. The University does not keep a list of discriminatory renters. It was assumed, however, that the committee would contact real estate agents and the Lawrence League for Political Democracy. The latter has conducted a survey of University housing. The motion, made by Mrs. Raymond Cerf, wife of a KU professor, creating the committee reads: "That the chairman appoint a committee to talk to certain landlords who rent to KU students and ascertain their attitudes." Passed by a 5-3 vote, it was amended to read "as many landlords as deemed necessary by the committee." APPOINTED TO THE committee by William Binns, HRC chairman, are the Rev. Max Thomas, associate professor of the Plymouth Congregational Church, the Rev. Frank Brown, minister of the Ninth Street Baptist Church, and Mrs. Helen Gillis, pediatrician. The committee will attempt to secure Roy Laird, assistant professor of political science, as the chairman and Mrs. Rachel VanderWerf, wife of Calvin VanderWerf, professor of chemistry, as a member. In establishing the committee, HRC asserted there should be no difference between discrimination at KU and discrimination in Lawrence. "There should be no division between the hill and the city." James Titus, assistant professor of political science, said. "They are one and part of the same thing." "WE SHOULD STATE our opinion on the housing situation at the University," Mrs. Cerf said. "Is KU right or wrong in its position?" Two Commission members attacked KU's housing policy saying it did not further tolerance or fair play in Lawrence. "It is not amicable relations," Mrs. Cerf said. "KU is not privileged." "The policy is not furthering tolerance," Mrs. Gillis said Prof. Titus, however, said that if the chancellor's position is moral suasion the Commission should try to help him in this direction. MRS. FRANK BURGE, wife of the director of the Kansas Union, questioned the wisdom of dropping discriminatory landlords from the University housing list. "Would it further amicable relations to drop them?," she asked. "No it would be a punitive action and would not help us at all," she said. Mr. Binns asserted that the committee and the Commission had to conduct its work in a friendly fashion. conduct its work in a friendly manner. "It's terribly important that we demonstrate good will," he said. Consequently, the wording of the motion, which originally read (Continued on page 8) Nikita K's Sick Joke Hits Closer to Plague By Dick West United Press International WASHINGTON - (UPI) - Here of late I seem to be having occasional flashes of extra sensory perception, although it may just be mental indigestion. At any rate, I keep bumping into coincidences which appear to have been brought about by mental telepathy. There is no way to explain it except to say that it is inexplicable. One day this week, for example, I was idly leafing through a copy of a British magazine that someone had left in the office. All at once I heard a voice telling me to stop and read a certain article. THIS, HOWEVER, was not telepathy. The voice belonged to the owner of the magazine, who had been looking over my shoulder. Heeding his suggestion, I turned my attention to what proved to be a learned analysis of the current crop of American comedians who specialize in "sick" jokes. Only the British could be learned about sick jokes. jokes. Satire and other serious humor, the author said, can have the valid object "of burning away the layers of humbug and chicanery with which the verities are enwrapped." But the sickniks, he wrote, work on the policy "that a rattled and edgy populace can be stamped" into laughing at unfunny subjects. NOW HERE IS where the "ESP" comes in. At the very moment I was reading this article, give or take a few hours, Soviet Premier Krushchev was uncorking one of the most monumental sick jokes of all times. I refer, of course, to his jocular report to the Communist Party Congress that Russian scientists in seeking to explode a 50-megaton bomb had accidentally exceeded that level. Brushing the fallout from his eyebrows, the jolly little dictator laughed off the miscue, explaining to the comrades that where nuclear scientists are concerned, boys will be boys. THIS NATURALLY gave the comrades a big chuckle, although the gag didn't go over so big in other parts of the world. Possibly it lost something in translation. Considered in conjunction with the magazine article, Khruschev's sally set me to wondering whether, having already vowed to overtake America in other fields, he is now trying to challenge us in telling sick jokes. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday. November 2, 1961 The ASC Budget Trouble The All Student Council encountered one of its greatest problems of the year when it tackled the problem of organizational appropriations Tuesday. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler At no time in recent years has it been necessary for the council to chop requests as it did at the meeting the other night. But when requests exceed resources this becomes necessary. No more than the normal number of organizations requested appropriations this year. However, the total amount requested was somewhat more than has been requested in previous years. THE $1905 REQUESTED BY PEOPLE-TO-People is the largest factor involved in upsetting the balance of previous years. This is the first year of People-to-People's existence on the campus and thus the first year it has requested an appropriation. The ASC granted the People-to-People request after a short period of debate and made no attempt to trim it. The recent disaffiliation with the U.S. National Student Association relieved part of the budgeting problem. NSA has in past years received the second largest ASC appropriation. People-toPeople replaces NSA in this position. AWS has long received more funds from the council than any other organization. Efforts to trim the $2,590 AWS request ended in tabling the request at the Tuesday meeting. When the ASC meeting adjourned Tuesday evening it appeared that it would be necessary to severely cut the AWS request and further trim the requests of some of the other organizations. BUT YESTERDAY THE FINANCIAL DIFFICulties of the ASC and the organizations it sponsors were solved with a whisk of the check writing hand of the University. The assistance was offered after Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior and president of the student body, met with Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and explained the financial bind the ASC was in. The chancellor, after checking the requests of all the organizations applying for ASC funds, agreed that student government and the organizations involved could not be effective under the limitations of the present budget. He agreed to allow the ASC an extra $1,100 to meet the financial needs of the council and other groups. Without the chancellor's concern for student government the ASC would still be pondering the solution to a budgeting problem that threatened the activities of the ASC and several other campus organizations. HOWEVER, THE PROBLEM MAY POSSIBLY be a continuing one and may very well appear again in future years. Chancellor Wescoe made it clear that the extra help given the ASC this year will not be available in the future. If the activities and sponsorships of the council are to be properly financed in future years it might be necessary to increase the amount now taken from the student activity fund. The council now receives 40c from the activity fund for each person fully enrolled at the University. INFLATION ALONE WILL SOMEDAY necessitate an increase in the amount the ASC receives. The ever expanding activities of the council will also make it necessary to either seek a permanent increase in the amount of money received from the activity fund or from another source. The ASC should investigate ways in which a revenue increase can be made to avoid a reocurrence of what happened this fall. Ron Gallagher The Bone in Nikita's Throat The conflict over the right of free and unrestricted access by American military personnel to East Berlin has filled the news columns recently and great attention has been given to just what the United States and her European allies should do to enforce those rights. All this tends to obscure the basic fact that this right is really a secondary issue. It merely represents the continued pressure of the Soviet Union on the Western position in Berlin. IF YOU THINK BACK, YOU WILL remember that Khrushchev once called West Berlin a bone in his throat. There were specific reasons for that attitude. The most important one was that millions of East Germans had fled through West Berlin to West Germany. This both condemned the communist government of East Germany and drained it of valuable manpower. Another reason was the propaganda effect of West Berlin; it embarrassed the East German regime by providing a contrast that showed the greater material wealth and freedom of West Germany. Khrushchev's method of removing the bone in his throat was to build a wall to separate East and West Berlin and cut off both the refugee flow and any communication between the two parts of the city that might embarrass the East German government. THIS ACTION SOLVED HIS BASIC PROBLEM. He will continue to apply pressure on West Berlin, but the bone in his throat has been removed. The bottling up of East Germans' discontent may result in internal difficulties for the East German regime. But as Khrushchev has demonstrated in Hungary, he has the brute force to suppress any violent eruptions his East German puppets cannot handle. —William H. Mullins letters to the editor An article that appeared in the UDK Oct. 25 announced the formation of a NEW, non-politically aligned student group that is trying to find ways to stimulate student interest and concern in today's very complex and confusing world political situation. I should like to clarify several points that were mentioned in this article. Student Group Explained Editor: 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 rooms Extension 276, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Tom Turner ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor I AM DEFINITELY NOT the organizer of the group. I am merely a participant. The problem of student indifference to the troubles besetting the United States and the entire free world was introduced to the Human Relations class by a member of the class as a passing comment. However, discussion was spontaneous for a definite problem was recognized in this subject by the group. The group is not organized in any specific manner nor is there any recognized leader of the group. There is no general policy for action as such but merely a roundtable discussion of various types of action that could be pursued to create student interest. OUR GROUP URGES K.U. students to become actively concerned about the future of our nation. There are many active and enlightening forums and organizations here at the university which deal with national and international problems that are available to students. We are trying to stimulate student interest in any or all of these groups by increasing our comprehension of the world events which affect each of us. We feel that with an attitude of indifference we offer to the Communists an advantage which our massive military defenses cannot hope to deal with. WE OFFER NO organization with set beliefs or goals; we offer only an attempt to stimulate the awareness and concern of the college student in the area which sovitally concerns us all. The preservation of our rights and privileges. Bob Williams Wichita Senior B. B. C. "ARE TH' BOYS TAKING US TO SEE THIS PICTURE IN A THEATRE OR A `DRIVE-IN`?" From the Magazine Rack KU The Control of War By I. Yermashov The new American doctrine of "limited" or "acceptable" war is designed to "safeguard American metropolitan territory from a nuclear counterblow, yet, simultaneously, enable the United States to use war as an instrument of its policy." It would aggravate world tension, "thereby driving upwards the curve of military appropriations and arms deliveries." It would restore the balance between the Air Force and Rockefeller interests on one side, and the Army and Navy and "the House of Morgan and its allies from the DuPont empire, which jointly control the key centers of the steel industry and the manufacture of the latest types of 'conventional' arms," on the other. It also appeals to the German tycoons. Vain apprehensions, say the authors of the "new doctrine." They have taken care of everything. To begin with, diplomatic relations between the belligerents must be left intact! No one had ever thought of this "wonder" before... But that is not all. In order that both sides shall play the game fairly the belligerents submit to inspection. The inspectors see to it that the adversaries do not shower each other's rear with nuclear bombs and that they do not apply any of the "forbidden holds" just as the referee does in the boxing ring... Last but not least, the rules and regulations provide for breaks in the hostilities at regular intervals for establishing "political contacts," meant evidently for the purpose of sounding out possible cease-fire and peace terms... This doctrine, an attempt to escape the theory of "the nuclear blind alley" or balance of terror, would rule out all "strategic weapons" but not short-range rockets and "tactical" atomic weapons. "Other restrictions rule out the bombardment of cities, industrial plants, and communication arteries, and the use of airfields for raids deep into the enemy rear... Just one thing is unclear. How to secure observance of these rules and regulations, even if we assume that all states put their signatures to them? W It is a specious doctrine, based on the false assumption that so complex and cruel a phenomenon as war may be governed by a set of rules and regulations and that it can be placed within a legal framework similar to that governing, say, commerce. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee, in its recent report, "Developments in Military Technology and Their Impact on United States Strategy and Foreign Policy," had not the slightest intention of refuting the "new doctrine." Their purpose was different. What they wanted was to emphasize the importance of nuclear weapons and so back up the interests of the major monopolies. But by putting forward the sound idea that there is no distinct line between tactical and strategic nuclear weapons, and by stating that a "small" nuclear war may rapidly become a "big" one, they invalidated the whole theory of rule-making, which is really nothing more than pure bluff... What the learned flunkeys of the American and German imperialists call "small" or "limited" wars are actually . . . "worldwide nuclear wars only camouflaged by means of a different, less 'terrifying' label." Wherever the nuclear explosion occurs—in the "local" tactical or "universal" strategic theatre of operations—it will be the starting signal for a worldwide nuclear holocaust... The only real way to secure lasting peace on earth is to destroy all armaments, scrap all existing stockpiles of atomic and hydrogen weapons, and bury the concept of war once and for all. KU-Y Discussion Session Page 3 War, Religion, Race Are Topics The American Negro is a marginal man who is something more than a sociology term, in that he is caught between two ends with no place to fall back on, said Nolen Ellison. Kansas City junior. By Doug Farmer Ellison was one of the speakers at the all-membership meeting of the KU-Y this week. The meeting consisted of three discussion groups which were: "Why Should I Believe About What?" "Facing Barriers in Everyday Life," and "Lemmings or Men?" be embarrassed about nor is there anything for religion to be embarrassed about. He feels they are both on equal terms and it would be unfortunate if everyone came to the same decision, in that this would stop intellectual vitality. THE NEGRO IS LIVING in a false position—which is a position that he doesn't know, Ellison told the group concerned with facing barriers. He said in a land that is free and a land that tries to influence other countries to be free, "it makes me stop and read the constitution over again." The main problem the American Negro faces, he said, is to fight this thing of being different. USSR AND USA, the arms race, was the topic for discussion in the group "Lemmings or Men?" Roy Laird, assistant professor of political science; Oswald Backus, professor of history, and Sam Anderson, instructor of German were the panel for the discussion. awaken and stop being lemmings. If this doesn't happen, I don't think there will be a person in this room alive in five to ten years." He said there doesn't seem to be a chance of a revolution in the Soviet Union, so we (the U.S.) had better wake up. A short all member meeting was held at the close of the discussion groups. Jane Dunlap, Lawrence senior, made the announcement urging all interested people to participate in the International Club which will be working with the theme of facing barriers. In the same group, Betsy Breidenthal, Kansas City senior, told of her experiences while studying in Madrid. She said that by trying to conform and working herself into the dominant culture of Spain the people expected her to be interested in Madrid, the history of Spain and Madrid, and in the social life. The result of these expectations she said was the conforming of herself from a minority group into the majority group. She said she wasn't herself but at least she was acceptable to the people by conforming to their standards. This she said was the biggest problem everywhere. Prof. Laird said, "We must "WHY SHOULD I BELIEVE About What?" was discussed by Charles Landesman Jr., assistant professor of philosophy, and the Rev. Don Hull, director of the Wesley Foundation. The question of the definition of religion was discussed by both men. Prof. Landesman said it was supernaturalism in its common sense. Rev. Mr. Hull disagreed and said there was a definite distinction between religion and faith as supernaturalism was found in the medieval period and not today. Prof. Landesman suggested that there is nothing for philosophy to A straw vote only shows which way the hot air blows.—O. Henry Featuring a Tantalizing Display of Fish Foods Friday, Nov. 3, 1961 - 5 p.m.-8 p.m. Special Fish Fry Buffet Dinner All You Can Eat Adults $1.25 Children 10 & under $.75 If winter comes — You'll want Jack Winter Pants and a Hunter Ski Jacket — From the Coach House, of course KAREN WELLER Delta Gamma Holiday Inn Restaurant Junction Highways 59 & 10 (23rd & Iowa) Thursday, November 2, 1961 University Daily Kansar 1980 COACH HOUSE Clothes For Town and Country K.C. Lawrence K.C. Blue Ridge KU Campus Plaza COACH HOUSE Cookies For Trees and Counselling Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 32 AUTOMATIC LANES BOWLING is FUN! This may be a when you buy to you,but you will get the BIG GALLON GASOLENE (Cities Service — of course) NEW TWIST BIG PAY-OFF TRY A TANK-FULL — YOU'LL BE THANKFUL CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. 8th at New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE Visiting KU Professor Is Monsanto Chemist Visiting lecturer in chemistry for the fall semester is Marvin D. Rausch, an assistant professor, who has taken leave from his position as senior chemist with the Monsanto Chemical Company's research and engineering division to teach here. Prof. Rausch, an authority on organometallic chemistry, holds B.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Kansas, acquired in 1952 and 1955. Since graduation, Prof. Rausch has been on the Monsanto research staff except for two years of Air Force service and the 1957-58 year when he was a research associate at the Institute for Inorganic Chemistry, University of Munich, Germany His research areas include organometallic chemistry (especially the chemistry of organic derivatives of transition metals), organic reductions involving lower valent metals, and mechanisms of organic and inorganic reactions and polymer chemistry. Record Output NEW DELHI — (UPI) — Food grain production in India during the first six months of 1961 totaled 78.5 million tons, 7 million tons more than in the same period a year ago and a record high. AUGUSTA J. MORRISON complete your wardrobe ... NEW ZERO KING AMERICAN WARMER Come in and look at the coat carefully, and tell us if you think it's completely washable. Well, it is! That furry collar and lining is Darvan Nitryl Pile, the shell is of Kodiak Cloth, the wind and water resistant 100% combed cotton. Notice the double set of pockets; the slash pockets for hand-warming, two hacking flapped pockets huge enough to carry textbooks. This is the coat you'll live in, from fall to spring . . . our Zero King American Warmer. $45.00 ZERO KING SPORTSWEAR ... the mark of a complete wardrobe THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN THE University Shop Al Hack ON THE HILL Ken Whitenight University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 2. 1961 Page 4 Press Promotion Topic of School Circulation promotion will be the theme of the eighth annual Newspaper Circulation Managers' School to be held here Nov. 11-12. All meetings will be held in the Kansas Union. Representatives from six states, Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Colorado, Oklahoma, and Arkansas, are expected to attend. It will be sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, the Educational Committee for Circulation Managers, and the Institutes and Conferences division of University Extension, Lawrence, Kansas. AFTER REGISTRATION in the Kansas Union, the first general session will convene with Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism presiding. A talk on "Promoting in an Unpopular Atmosphere," will be given by Leon S. Reed, circulation director of the Arkansas Gazette, Little Rock, Ark. Mr. Reed is capable of talking on this subject as his paper carried on a successful subscription campaign after the Gazette had become unpopular by supporting integration in Little Rock schools. After lunch, through the Jayhawk football buffet line, the managers will attend the Kansas-Kansas State football game. THE DINNER MEETING, starting at 6 P.M., will be presided over by Helge Holm, circulation director of The Daily Oklahoman and Times. Oklahoma City, Okla. This evening session will be concerned mainly with youth readership. The talk will be given by E. T. McClanahan, promotion director of the Denver Post. The second day activities will be held Sunday, Nov. 12. They will start with a general session presided over by Jack Mehaffey, circulation manager of the Lawrence Journal-World. The talk will be given by Lester Green, circulation manager of the Reflector-Chronical, Abilene, Kan. His speech will be concerned with raising subscription rates without hurting circulation. Discussion will follow the speech. 'Spectrum' Ends In Scrap Pile What finally happened to the Spectrum? Final action was taken recently when approximately 2,000 copies of the literary magazine's last issue were sold as waste to a Lawrence paper company, according to Mike Thomas, Kansas City, Mo., senior, treasurer of the All Student Council. The ASC took the last breath from the Spectrum, because the ASC constitution holds it responsible for all University publications. When Spectrum, the official literary-academic magazine of the University of Kansas, was first published in spring, 1959, it sold about 1,700 of 2,000 copies printed. In addition to the resultant $377.71 debt, Spectrum lost more money with its second and last edition in the fall of 1960. Although 2,500 had been printed, only 350 copies of the 50-cent magazine were sold. The KU business office brought Spectrum's unpaid bills to the attention of the ASC, which ordered Spectrum to stop all action. After an investigation, the ASC passed a new publications bill in March, 1961, which contained no provision for Spectrum. The rewritten bill established a system of reserve funds where each publication under ASC puts up to a certain amount of its income into its own reserve fund. Since the ASC had not budgeted for such an unanticipated expense, Spectrum's debt of approximately $1,200 was paid from the reserve fund of the Jayhawker. Then, individually built up funds go into the general publications reserve fund so losses will not have to be paid from the ASC budget. SUCH CIRCULATION promotion subjects as mail, carrier, and motor routes will be discussed by a panel consisting of Max Swearingen, circulation manager of The Southwest Times, Liberal, Kan.; Frank Piccoli, circulation manager of the Durango Herald, Durango, Colo., and Bill Neph, assistant to the secretary-manager of the International Circulation Managers' Association, Dallas, Texas. The "Everybody talks" session will be held at 11 a.m. In this meeting all subjects taken up during the school will be up for discussion. More than 90 high school women will attend KU Associated Women Students Leadership Day this Friday and Saturday. AWS Leaders' Day The purpose of the program is to acquaint leaders from surrounding high schools with life at KU. The program will include skits and entertainment provided by freshman hostesses, as well as talks and discussions by members of the faculty. Members of the program's steering committee are: Janice Agin, Kansas City junior; Kay Consolver, Wichita sophomore; Hollis Walters, Prairie Village junior; Susan Cole, St. John sophomore; Jerrie Trantum, Kansas City sophomore; Sandra Smith, Coffeyville junior, and Joanne Prim, Overbrook sophomore. It's smart to be pale. The "pale foot" is inside fashion's door this season. That means shoes in tones of soft beige, with Italian-inspired tapering lines. Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION FUN Jay Bowl Always open for your convenience Daily ------------ 8 A.M.–11:30 P.M. Sun. ------------ 1 P.M.–11:30 P.M. Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION FUN Jay Bowl Always open for your convenience Daily ------------ 8 A.M.-11:30 P.M. Sun. ------------ 1 P.M.-11:30 P.M. FERRANTE & TEICHER Play Music FROM "WEST" SIDE STORY TONIGHT, MARIE, Somewhere, and Others. On Mono & Stereo LP Records BELL MUSIC CO. 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 FERRANTE & TEICHER Play Music FERRANTE & TEICHER Play Music FROM "WEST ” SIDE STORY TONIGHT, MARIE, Somewhere, and Others. FROM "WEST ” SIDE STORY BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 908 - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers OPEN HOUSE Fri., Sat. & Sun. 1-8 p.m. 25th & Redbud The Luxurious REDBUD APARTMENTS with spacious open living owned, originated and built by the Builder's Investment Company, Inc. Furnished by Jack Harris Appliance and Furniture. Two bedroom, drapes, wall-to-wall carpet, built-in refrigerator, garbage disposal, air conditioned. THE FOLLOWING IS A LIST OF SUB-CONTRACTORS Pre-cut lumber materials by READY-MADE BUILDINGS INC. 708 Massachusetts VI2-1808 Westinghouse Appliances Furnished by JACK HARRIS APPLIANCES AND FURNITURE CO. 936 Massachusetts VI 3-2252 GOVER PLUMBING AND HEATING CO. 1945 Tennessee VI 3-8398 Heating by L. T. HARRIS CO., INC. 802 Massachusetts VI 3-2217 Electric wiring by BURKHART ELECTRIC CO. 3731 Oakwood, Topeka VI 3-8398 Sheetrock Application, Perfataping & Texturing M & F DRY-WALL 10106½ Independence Ave., Independence, Mo. CL 2-9185 Paintit Painting by FRANK ROGERS 1511 Lindenwood VI 2-2326 Masonry by PETER VON KNORRING CONSTRUCTION CO. 611 Illinois VI 3-4198 Masonry Products by PETE REEDY LUMBER CO. 1846 Massachusetts VI 3-1341 Ready-Mixed Concrete by LAWRENCE READY MIX VI3-1688 430 Maple and VI 3-1688 PENNY'S READY MIXED CONCRETE 730 Delaware VI 3-8100 Excavation by MONTZ EXCAVATING CO. 1403 W. 2nd St. Terr. VI 3-3858 Thursday. November 2.1961 University Daily Kansan Phi Gams Beat Phi Delts,13-12 Page 5 In the first of two big showdown games in intramural football, Phi Gamma Delta won yesterday by the margin of an extra point as it handed Phi Delta Theta its initial loss of the season in the final game before the play-offs, 13-12. The Phi Gams now stand alone atop the division II stands in the fraternity A section with five wins and no defeats. The loss dropped the Phi Delts to second with a 4-1 mark. IN THE OTHER DIVISION of A competition, undefeated Beta Theta Pi meets once beaten Delta Tau Delta today at 4 p.m. to decide the championship. In another division II game, Sigma Chi slaughtered Sigma Phi Epsilon, 42-0. The win gave the Sigma Chis a tie with the Phi Delts for second place. In fraternity B play, a victory by Alpha Tau Omega over Delta Tau Delta, 20-7 caused a tie for first place in division III. Both teams have 3-1 records. DELTA UPSILON FINISHED its season in B play with a 12-0 win over Phi Kappa Psi to place them second place in the division with a 3-1-1 posting. In another game, played in the independent A section, rain brought a halt to the 7-7 deadlock between the Quickies and JRP. JRP is presently leading the independents with a 4-0-1 mark. COLLEGE STATION, Tex. — (UPI) — Social tensions are just as important in a chicken flock as they are in a community, says Joe Wakefield, Texas A&M College poultry specialist. Neurotic Chickens Wakefield said poultrymen must observe the social order to keep down fighting that may lead to cannibalism that can cost as much as a major disease outbreak. 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 Available for private parties throughout the week Featuring the FINEST PIZZA in the Midwest Open 4-11 Monday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday 646 Mass. PIZZA HUT VI 3-9760 KU Bowling Team Picked John Member, Paul Hammar, Terrell Hays, Dave Rybolt, and Bill Miller will represent the University of Kansas when the Jayhawk varsity bowling team opens its season Saturday at Lincoln. The KU keglers will roll against the University of Nebraska's crew after the KU-NU football game. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers gifts for any occasion ACCORDING TO COACH Bascom Fearing, the Hawk quintet gained their team positions for Saturday's competition on the basis of averages. Hember, Kansas City junior, has compiled a 189 average for 15 games bowled in the Jay Bowl this fall. Hammar, Overland Park junior, is a notch behind with a 188 average for 20 games. In last Monday's try-out session, Hammar fired a 627 three-game series score. 924 Mass. VI 3-5160 Moving up from sixth to third place among twelve bowlers still out for the sport. Hays, Shawnee junior, also has a 188 average. Monday, Hays rolled a 269 game en route to a 627 series. Rybolt, Ottawa sophomore, has compiled a 181 average in 21 games. The squad is rounded out by Miller, Mission freshman. Miller has a 180 average after 19 games. COACH FEARING SAID, "I thought we had good material at the beginning of the season, but lately we haven't been rolling high enough." He added that "things are looking up now, though." Fearing said he was told by the Cornhusker coach that the Nebraska squad was "loaded." After Saturday's outing, the Hawks will host Kansas State November 11 at 11 a.m. in the Jay Bowl. Gifts for any occasion Elrings Gifts - Elegant hand-set Beveled crystal jewelry boxes; velvet inset. - Florence figurines - Capri candles in all colors - Clever zoo-line wooden animals "Anti–What?" CLYDE'S SENIOR PIX REPAIRS APPLES IN SEASON Make sure your car is winter-ready Here's what we will do... - Pressure Check Radiator - Check Hoses - Check Heater Operation - Tighten Connections Check Battery - Check Water Pump Check Thermostats - Check & Adjust Belts - Drain, Flush, and Fill Radiator with Required Amount of Fomoco Anti-freeze 6 CYL. $565 ONLY GUARANTEED V-8 $795 ONLY A written guarantee is given with the above service Ask for Bill Durr or Gabe Gabriel to explain it to you UNIVERSITY FORD SALES 714 Vermont FORD SALES VI 3-3500 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday. November 2,1961 Official Bulletin Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. TODAY Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 2. November, um fuenf uhr in 11 Fraser. Herr Foerster spricht ueber Reiburg, eine alte Univer- sität. Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW mobile, and Pontiac plant. Kansas City, Mo. provides roster to Thursday at Parker enquiries. American Society of Tool & Manufacturing Engineers Tour of Buck, Olds Epicopalic Hoty Communion and Breakfast: 7 a.m. Canterbury House. Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. SATURDAY Hillel Friday Evening Services: 6:45 Sheraton Community Center, 917 Highland Drive Hilile Autumn Dance: 8 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. Health Quacks Reap Over Billion Dollars NEW YORK — (UPI) — Health fakers are extracting more than a billion dollars a year from persons who want quick, secret or guaranteed cures for assorted ailments, according to Medicine at Work, publication of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association. The publication said about 25 million gullible Americans are making medical quacks as rich as gambling czars, vice kings and narcotics bosses. Medicine at Work said its estimates are based on reports from the Post Office Department, other federal agencies, state license examiners, national health organizations, Better Business Bureau and independent investigators. Donald Williams for FRESHMAN PRESIDENT Airlines Say "No" To Student Discounts 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. 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. 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." 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" Gunn Pens Fifth Book James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor, has signed a contract with Bantam Books for publication of "The Immortals." The book is based upon the potential problems of the search for immortality and increasing demands for better medical care. A Kansas University English in structurer has just completed writing his fifth book. Portions of the book have been previously published in science fiction magazines. Luncheon Canceled The Phi Delta Kappa luncheon meeting, scheduled for Friday, Nov. 3, has been canceled. Leonard's Standard Service As long as there are sovereign nations possessing great power, war is inevitable.—Albert Einstein 9th and Indiana What's the use? Yesterday an egg, tomorrow a feather duster. — Mark Fenderson Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Parents Are Coming Have you bought your tickets to Auntie Mame 8 p.m., Nov. 6-11, 1961 Our OUR MILK IS GOOD...and GOOD for YOU! IT'S A MIRACLE FOOD, A MARVELOUS DRINK . . . You get a double bonus of taste and health in every glass of milk. Rich, cream-in-every-drop flavor; extra helpings of body-building vitamins, minerals and complete proteins. Drink more milk; it's the tasty way to better health! TO YOUR DOOR OR STORE- DELIVERED FRESH DAILY! Don't Settle for Less! Get the Best! ALL STAR HOMOGENIZED MILK ALL STAR DAIRY Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co. 202 W. 6 D Fc "C Y duc the at. VI 3-5511 Page 7 Deferments Must For College Men "Greetings: You are hereby ordered for induction into the Armed Forces of the United States, and to report at. . .” A student may apply for the '2-S' classification at the beginning of his second year in college, and any time thereafter while he is an undergraduate. The deferment is issued on a year-to-year basis, with written requests submitted to the student's own local board along with SSS Form 109 from the registrar certifying his academic standing. Aspirant Jurists Apply to School Students wishing to take the Law School Admission test to be administered throughout the nation Nov. 18 must file their applications to reach the Educational Testing Service, Princeton, N. J., by Saturday. The above words have struck terror into the hearts of able bodied college men, yet due to the present world situation, these "greetings" are becoming more prevalent. Thursday, November 2. 1961 University Daily Kansan Draft authorities state that students should contact their local selective service boards to check on their status if the boards have not informed them already. The military obligation is a reality of the times. Each man must expect to serve eventually; however, if he desires to complete his education in one piece, a student deferment is now a must. The KU School of Law is among those requiring applicants for admission to take this test. The test will be given again on Feb. 10 and April 28, 1962. Because some law schools select their incoming classes in the spring preceding entrance, candidates should attempt to take the test in November or February. Defeats Former Teammates ST. LOUIS — (UPI) — Pitcher Curt Simmons, turned loose by the Philadelphia Phillies last year, has won eight straight decisions from his former teammates since catching on with the St. Louis Cardinals. Junk Hazard ROCHESTER, N. Y. — (UPI) A policeman lost his suspices in this city when he was caught in a junk slide. Patrolman Robert O. Bishop chased two youths through a junk yard and across a junk pile. As Bishop descended the junk pile, it descended on him. SAN MARCOS, Tex. — (UPI) Stamp collectors are being offered something new in the form of an underwater post mark by the Submarine Theater here. When he freed himself, the youths were gone. Underwater Mail Don Russell, manager of the water show, also operates a branch post office and is authorized to stamp mail with a printed notice that it was posted beneath the waters of the San Marcos River. VOLKSWAGEN SERVICE Now! You VW owners can receive complete VW service right in Lawrence from our certified factory-trained VW mechanic, Richard Bryan. (Porsche service, too!) And, of course, we still have Paul Morse, specialist on British made cars, who will give you the same high quality workmanship as always. So, whenever your foreign car needs service, be it a VW or any other make, take it where foreign cars are best understood. See British Motors Dress up tor THANKSGIVING SUPERELY CRAFTED BY FREEMAN $10.95 to $19.95 Black Cordovan Midnight Brown Dark Olive Here's an easy way to greater holiday enjoyment! Treat yourself to a handsome pair of shoes by Freeman. You'll feel your very best when you're dressed right for the occasion . . . comfortably right! Royal College Shop SUPERELY CRAFTED BY FREEMAN $10.95 to $19.95 Black Cordovan Midnight Brown Dark Olive Yc Here's an easy way to greater holiday enjoyment! Treat yourself to a handsome pair of shoes by Freeman. You'll feel your very best when you're dressed right for the occasion . . . comfortably right! Royal College Shop Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers KINSE PLAYER OF THE WEEK Ken Coleman For the job he did in rushing those O-State Cowboys and gaining the top rushing yardage of the O-State-KU game. For your rush cleaning, stop by and have your work done by experts. 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE X Acme Acme LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Downtown 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday. November 2,1961 HRC to Talk to Landlords- (Continued from page 1) "discriminatory landlords" was charged to "certain landlords who rent to KU students." Prof. Titus said there are many landlords who do not rent to minority group members but do not consider themselves prejudiced. "THEY ARE worried about what their other renters will think if they rent a house or an apartment to a minority group member," he explained. The Rev. Frank Brown agreed with Prof. Titus, saying he had run into that situation many times in a futile attempt to purchase a parsonage for the Ninth Street Baptist Church. Rev. Brown is a Negro. In other action at the meeting, Mr. Binns explained why he had signed a petition circulated by Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore, of the All Student Council. "I signed the petition because I did not wish to appear to be evading the issue or straddling the fence," he said. THE PETITION read in part: "It is the recommendation of we the undersigned that any further action . . . be curtailed until the organs duly organized by the city of Lawrence and the University of Kansas have had sufficient time to examine the situation and make recommendations..." The Commission requested that he be more careful about what he signs if the documents concern HRC. Only five people attended the meeting, causing several Commission members to express consternation. "I THOUGHT we'd be swamped with complaints," Mrs. Cerf said. Complaints may be registered with the Commission by letter or in person at the monthly Wednesday meetings at 8 p.m. Two KU Graduates in Top Orchestra The HRC has three courses of action open to it upon receipt of a complaint. After studying the complaint it can recommend action be taken by the City Commission, mediate between the two disputing persons or initiate action to solve the difference. Two recent University of Kansas graduates are among 87 members of the Eastman Philharmonia, rated finest of the three student orchestras in the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N. Y. The orchestra will give 50 performances in Europe from First Tax CHELSEA. Mass. —(UPI)—What may have been the first withholding tax in history has come to light here. Records show that when Chelsea Naval Hospital opened in 1836, U.S. sailors were paying 20 cents a month—withheld from their pay—to finance its operation. Nov. 26 to Feb. 24 under sponsorship of the U.S. State Department The KU members are Judy Gorton, violinist, who received the bachelor of music degree from KU last June, and who holds a graduate fellowship at Eastman; and Marlan G. Carlson, violist, who received bachelor of music and bachelor of music education degrees from KU in 1959. Concer's will be given in Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, Luxembourg, Belgium, Sweden, West Germany, West Berlin, Egypt, Lebanon, Turkey, Yugoslavia, and in Moscow and eight other cities of the U.S.S.R. Sale Ends CLIP THIS COUPON Nov. 4th Leather or Rubber HALF SOLES 199 pr. With Rubber HEELS $3 val. Men's—Boys' RUBBER HEELS 49 c pr. Ladies' Heel LIFTS 39 c pr. Leather or Composition Reg. to 95c Leather or Rubber FULL SOLES 299 pr. With Rubber HEELS $5 val. the word for quality cleaning and laundry DELUXE Drive In and Save — Open 7 A.M. to 7 P.M. Except Sunday 23rd St. & Naismith Dr. VI 2-0200 WE ABSOLUTELY DELIVER Mr. Pizza Anno Domini—that's the most fatal complaint of them all, in the end, James Hilton Historical Note: Mr. Pizza no longer uses the Pizza-Pony Express All deliveries now made in the Pizza Mobile CAMPUS 106 W. N. Park VI 3-9111 HIDEAWAY CAMPUS Pizza and Spaghetti Specialists Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Get with it, man! You belong in contemporary PIPER SLACKS Where can you find a pair of slacks that fit real tight—like a second skin? Easy! See yourself in sliver-slim Pipers, the best thing that ever happened to a guy! They ride down low on your hips, cuffs are out and belts are nowhere-hidden side tabs do the holdup job. In a host of wonderful, washable fabrics-$4.95 to $8.95–at campus stores that are “with it” h.i.s. SPORTSWEAR St Sc Don't envy H·I·$...wear them t fa- end. lacks skin? rslim hap in low belts do under 8.95-ith it' Students Oppose Schedule Change My Martin Dick 70° In view of Chancellor Wescoe's recent statement proposing a change in the class schedule, the Kansan interviewed twelve students on the subject of classes beginning at 7:30 in the morning and ending at 5:20 in the afternoon. Jacob Dyck, Topeka senior, said, "If it helps KU, it's fine with me." The students most against the proposal were generally freshmen. A freshman from Wichita, Kay Shrier, said, "I don't like it at all. I'm having trouble getting up as it is." Probably the most vehement attack against this proposal was set forth by S. T. Tan. Singapore, graduate student. Tan said, "I don't think it's good. I think it's crazy. It's ridiculous." When Tan was asked to support his argument he said, "The reasons are obvious." The view of another foreign student, S. K. Thakkar, was much more favorable. Thakkar, Bombay, India, sophomore, said, "From a personal standpoint it is better for me. My classes now start at 8, next year you'll start at 8:30." Of the twelve students interviewed, Al Gardner's statement was probably the most representative. Gardner, Liberal sophomore, said, "In a way it's necessary — kind of inconvenient. However, it is necessary." One of the most common complaints with the new class schedule was made by J. D. Moore, Olathe senior. He said, "If it is necessary to increase the day an extra hour, it would seem better to add it at the end." Moore's statement was in contradiction to a comment made by Mrs. Carlene Wagner, Lawrence junior: "As a student I don't mind it if it is necessary to alleviate the problem. I do prefer to get up a little earlier than to have my evening broken up." Mrs. Wagner works in the business office, and she noted some concern she has about how the new program will affect her work. She said, "It'll probably mean split shifts or longer hours." Although Harvey Edmonds, Leavenworth sophomore, and Clyde Kensinger, Dallas senior, disagree in attitude, there was one major point that they both made. "It's a loser," Edmonds said. "What if you've got classes throughout the day and night labs; when are you supposed to study?" "That schedule would be all right if you did away with night and Saturday classes." Kensinger said, At least 50 Africans will spend the 1961-62 academic year studying in high schools, colleges and universities in the United States, Europe and Asia. Most will be enrolled in Methodist schools, which will provide scholarships and room and board. Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 Going on a Picnic? "I think if you do that you should eliminate Saturday classes." But he added, "I feel if you can get up at 7, you can get up at 6:30." Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES When Jane Darrah, Wichita sophomore, was asked for her opinion, a frown crossed her face. "It's gonna' be awful in the snow. It's gonna' be dark in winter. What'll it do to the dinner hour? It's going to mean many more cuts," she said. LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Jerry Lusk, Lawrence freshman, said: "Having afternoon classes won't be as bad as having morning classes." One of the most interesting persons interviewed was a girl who changed her mind as she answered the question. Joanie Burger, Prairie Village freshman, said: "I don't like the idea. If the rooms are less crowded, then that's all right." She said that if the program would mean more students would be allowed to come to KU, then she would think it is a good idea. STANFORD, Calif. - (UPI). - Workers clearing out shrubbery near Encina Hall at Stanford University discovered the rusted works of an alarm clock enfolded in the crotch of a tree. Time Passes Thursday, November 2, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 9 The tree had grown around the clock after a sleepy student apparently had hurled it out a window of the men's dormitory many years ago. 365 Excuses 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Memorial Day in the Canal Zone Diamonds Gifts Jewelry DANIELS JEWELRY 914 Mass. VI 3-2572 JACK ZINN for Freshman Pres. (Paid For By The Jack Zinn For President Committee) LUCKY STRIKE presents: LUCKY PUFFERS LUCKY STRIKE presents: LUCKY PUFFERS "SATURDAY NIGHT" "Does he have to walk on his hands at every party?" "Let's step outside and have a smoke, baby!" "Does he have to walk on his hands at every party?" "Let's step outside and have a smoke, baby!" LUCKY STRIKE CIGARETTES "Why do you keep looking at me like that, George?" "Why do you keep looking at me like that, George?" "Never go down there alone, Gladys—that's Fraternity Row!" "Why do you keep looking at me like that, George?" LUCKY STRIKE CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. "Never go down there alone, Gladys—that's Fraternity Row!" CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE 12 CASETLES CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. WHAT HAPPENS ON CAMPUS SATURDAY NIGHT? If you could peek into an average campus on Saturday night you would see students planning a hunger strike and smoking Luckies, ironing their Sunday suits and smoking Luckies, playing dominoes and smoking Luckies. College students smoke Luckies all the time—and more of them than any other regular cigarette. If you go to college, you should smoke Luckies. It's expected of you. CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change! $ \textcircled{C} $ A. T. Cun Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 2, 1961 Roller Rink Test Without Incident M. D. Clifford Rye, shown left, owner of the Lawrence Roller Rink, admitted two KU Negroes without a word of protest in a segregation check on his establishment last night. The check was uneventful. In an interview, Mr. Rye said he had been admitting Negroes ever since he became owner of the roller rink. Last week, Negroes making a check were turned away. Mr. Rye explained that the rink has only two open nights each week, Wednesday and Saturday. The Negroes last week were given cards to fill out for club membership. The Negroes returned them, but had not yet received a reply. Failure to receive a reply resulted in the check last night. Grandfather used to say about a dish that had no particular taste or consistency: it tastes as if you were hanging your tongue out of the window.—Thomas Mann JAYHAWKERS Save on Gas at your JAYHAWK STATION 1030 N. 3rd — At East Turnpike Gate PHONE VI 3-9705 OPEN 24 HOURS ALL CIGARETTES 25c NOW SHOWING! At 7:00 & 9:00 ROSS HUNTER CARROLTON Susan Hayward John Gavin FANNIE HURST'S "Back Street" IN EASTMAN COLOR! Vera Miles CHARLES DRAPE-WINGINIA GREY-REGINAIDAL GARDINER A Universal International Release Starts Saturday! Mat. At 2 p.m. Eve. 6:30-9:15 THE GREATEST HIGH ADVENTURE EVER FILMED! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN CAPUL HIRDMAN'S POLICE STATION STANLEY BAKER·ANTHONY QUAYLE·IRENE PAPAS·GIA SCALA JAMES DARREN • MIKE & Posed by | BLANK MARK & LINCOLN | DIRECTOR • CARL FORDMAN | DIMIRT IOKOMIK | JEEE HUMPSON THE GUNS OF NAVARONE TO SUSTAIN THE TREMENDOUS SUSPENSE, SEE IT FROM THE BEGINNING. GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788 sales - service - rentals Typewriters Olympia Portables Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 NOW! Mat. Daily At 2 p.m. Adm. 85-35c Walt Disney's NIRKI WILD DOG OF THE NORTH TECHNICOLOR* Released by BUENA VERA Distribution Co. Inc. WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS PLUS CO-FEATURE "Hand in Hand" HOW A LUSTY, FIGHTING YOUNG ADVENTURER TURNED INTO A SAINTLY MAN OF GOD! Starts Sunday 20th Century-Fox presents FRANCIS OF ASSISI Reading Up A FRACTURE PRODUCTION STARRING BRAFDOP DILLMAN - DOLORES HART STUART WHITMAN + PEDRO ARMENDARZI Produced by PLATINO & SAINSUR - Directed by MICHAEL CURTIZ Screenplay by EUGENE VANE JAMES FORSTH and ACK THOMAS COLOR BY DE LUXE SCHEMESCOPE VARSITY THEATRE ... Telahmere VARSITY 5 - 1063 NEW YORK —(UPI)— American readers spent $1.2 billion last year for books of all kinds, up 13 per cent from 1959 and double the 1955 outlay. Sales of fiction and non-fiction hard cover books were up 60 per cent over 1955, sales of juvenile books doubled and paperback books rose by 45 per cent. Textbook sales increased by 70 per cent in the period The historian, essentially, wants more documents than he can really use; the dramatist only wants more liberties than he can really take. —Henry James JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Photography by 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 FRI. - SAT. - SUN. - Twin Hits TREE MAN IN A CABIN From 'the best-seller that makes Peyton Place read like a book of nursery rhymes!' Walter Winchell The Bramble Bush STARRING Richard Burton Barbara Rush Jack Carson Angie Dickinson James Dunn WB A WARNER BROS. PICTURE TECHNICOLOR* **HENRY JONES** - Screenplay by MILTON SPERLING and PHILIP YORDAN. Produced by MILTON SPERLING Music Composed and Conducted by LEONARD ROSEMAN. Directed by DANIEL PETRIE — AND — MANIAC WITH A MACHINE -GUN! MAD DOG COLL HE LIVED! A THAUA FILM • A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE A THALIA FILM • A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE KAY BROOKE JOHN DOUBLEDAY·HAYWARD·CHANDLER KAY BROOKE JOHN DOUBLEDAY-HAYWARD-GHANDLER SCREENPLAY BY EDWARD SCHRIBER- PRODUCES BY EDWARD SCHRIBER - DIRECTED BY BURT BALABAN AS VINCENT DILL ADULTS ONLY 75c KIDDIES FREE! ★★★★★★★★★★★★★ SUNSET --- DRIVE IN THEATRE - - - West on Highway 40 HEAVY F sweater. L and hunt value to n turn. Call BROWN Flint Hal GLASS C Gym Ann please call p.m., M-V Tl WOULD green. Go tween 4:1 Campus Tun at V GIRL W. Thanksgi RAINCOA bershop party tha TAN RAI ing_room Comb. V GUNS: I New & bought 7001. BARGAI 135 mn pack adp case, SI5 Canon le Opera gl 5850. 1951 HA tion - § ATTENT ives' ci Ideal fc Complet only $3.5 $682 or SMALL import installat ranty. F STEVEN new. Ca PRINTED pages, c. prehensible edition; Notes; O livery. '54 CHE Motor e days, ev HOUSE bedding Maple, Coreus, Some VI 3-42 OLYMP cision n Typewr Lawren 3644. GENER complet definiti Handy $3.50, 1 Dodge Call V WESTE new a graphe prehen VI 2-1 livery. NEW, $225. F Service adding mimeo ness M 0151 to Page 11 CLASSIFIED ADS LOST HEAVY BROWN & WHITE wool knit sweater. Large pheasant on the back, dog grey value to me only. Received offered 11-18 return. CV I 3-5834 GLASS CASE and glasses in Robinson Gym Annex. Whover picked them up please call Herb, VI 3-1034 between 5-6:30 p.m., M-W-F. 11-8 BROWN BILLFOLD, Wednesday, near Flint Hall. Respond. VC 3-7874. 11-7 WOULD THE PERSON who took my green, German, overcost by mistake, be able to work at the Campus Barber Shop, please call Then tum at VI i-3-3944. I have yours. 11-3 RAINCOAT taken by mistake from bar- bershop on 14th St. I have rainoat of party that has mine. Call VI 2-0416. 11-6 TAN RAINCOAT - Undergraduate read- comb. VI 3-2444. Reward: 11-2 COMBI. VI 3-2444. Reward: 11-2 TRANSPORTATION GIRL WANTS RIDE to New York for Thanksgiving. Call Gail at VI 2-0022 FOR SALE Thursday, November 2. 1961 University Daily Kansan GUNS: ROEBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New & used guns, & ammo. Used guns bought — liberal trade-ins given. VI 3-7001. 11-8 BARGAINS — 4x5 Speed Graphic, F4.7 155 mm Optar lens, Graphmatic, Film pack adpt, film holders, film & ace, plus pase, $130 and $180, Ace, Bac, $60, Bustnell 6x15 gold finish Opera glasses, $20; New, Call Bob, VI 3-1550. 1951 HARLEY-DAVIDSON. good condition. $259. Call: 021-3350. Dick Liberty. ATTENTION PLEDGES: Light your actives' cigarettes with a butane lighter. Ideal for gifts, suitable for framing. Complete with lifetime guarantee for only $3.75. Retail $5.00. Order from VI 2-3682 or see sample at 816 Miss. 11-7 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 STEVENS 22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like new. Call VI 3-2806 after 8 p.m. tl '54 CHEW 4 DOOR, Clean, good tires. evenings, evenings Y3-3285... 11-6 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, Begonia, Collus, night blooming Cercus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4201 or IV 3-4201. tt OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriter, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. linenence Typewriter, 735 Mast, VI 3-1644. GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. cross out pages 25-30 for delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, Vi Dodge in good running condition. $80. Call Vi 3-4291. 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 typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Printing and printing at reasonable prices. Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-051 today FOR RENT JNFURNISHED 2 BEDROOM house except refrigerator & stove. Attached garage & utility room. Newly re-decorated. Would leave教室 University. Fenced in back yard. Possession in 2 weeks. $85 per month. Call VI 3-4897 at 6 p.m. 11-3 2 LARGE ROOMS, (bedroom & study rooms), or will remain single. See at 1399 Temple SPACIOUS 4 room duplex: Private bath, basement, garage. $60 a month. Call Holmes, Peck & Brown Realtors. VI 5-2021, VI 3-3789, or VI 3-1711. 11-2 ROOBS FOR RENT for men. Linens fur- ture. Dr. Cllr V I 2-3243 or see at 11:1d - 11:30 10 x 25 ft. trailer. Call VI 3-5183. W. D. Lansdown. 11-2 furn. bedroom房, att. garage. Completely turn. Auto. washer-dryer. air cond. many extra. gas. yard. Fence. Exc. 221 Moundville Dr. Phone I 3-588 for 5 app. Vacancy available for 3 men in commi- sion at Rachel Rd. Carl Cifl & V-96535 for appointment. LARGE FURNISED apartment, e a s t i c l e, utilities paid. $50. Cali V 3-6249. WANTED A PR-157 Volkswagen Sedan, any con- pany. Ronald E. Slemens. 11-15. Pennsylvania. WANTED—GIRL to share nice apartment. Call Shriley, I 2-3407. 11-6 BUSINESS SERVICES I WOULD LIKE IO DO baby-sitting in my house, afternoons and evenings. Experienced mother. References. Call VI. 8-9159. 11-8 WIFE OF EXCHANGE STUDENT will! Rhode Island, upstate, anytime. 11-8 Rhode Island, upstate, anytime. 11-8 TUTOR FOR GERMAN. Austrian graduate student. Write to Horst Haselmann. 1338 Ohio or call VI 3-4711, 6-11 p.m. ALTERATIONS — Call Gaill Reed, VI 3-5751, or 921 Miss. tt Dixie Carmel Shop For Tops in Taffy Apples—Popcorn Assorted Chocolates Carmel Corn—Mixed Nuts Stuffed Toys 1033 Mass. VI 3-6311 OIL PORTRAITS painted. Lasting gift to loved ones. Perfect Christmas gift. $33 and up. Call VI 3-8207, ask for Robert. 11.2 MILLIKEN "S.O.S." - Now at two Lewisville Ave. & 1021% Mile. U. Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mile. U. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 10644. Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. — VI 3-0152 HELP WANTED U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, skirts, shoes, and clothing; everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center. Pet store sectionalized — save time on money — tf DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- more details, call Ola Smith 914.265.8301; Mass. Call VI 3-2823. U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- self-service — open weeks 8 to 6:30 p.m. ...since shopping at Hiqley's 935 Mass. she's had a date almost every nite! MISCELLANEOUS 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. BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Foam, party supplies Plastic, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI X500. 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 ADVERTISE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- cation of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN CA TYPING PROFESSIONAL SECRETARY wants German paper. Epikia Wiltshire 1-2-7436 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattie, VI 3-8379. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuals, and service neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.L. VI, $3-7452. GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting rate for every typing at standard rates, call Miss Laurel Pope. VI 3-1097. 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. teacher, Ms. Kearney. Reports & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Ms. Crompton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. tf FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execu- cation Service, 59th Floor, mission. Mission, HE 2-7718. Eves or sat. TR 2-2186. TYPING: Experientenced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, articles and reports. Notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes, notes. Mrs. McEldowney, Ph. VI 3-8568. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name= call VI 3-9136. Ms. Loe Gebihach Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mair. Barlow, 408 W. 19th, V21-2648. Mair. FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing in paper makers,oses dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. Mr EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, VI 3-0558 1031 Miss. tt NEED HELP? 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 CVI Call 31 0278 Typing: Will type reports, theses, etc. Invoice: Will type an invoice, theses, etc. 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440 t davis@mail.com Outline your requirements, and let us display it in type and style on this page. Display ads stand out and are more easily read than those in body Daily Kausar 11 Flint Hall, or call it in KU, 376. PUT A KILT IN YOUR CURRICULUM mind, like this trimly buckled style that's the favorite on every A kilted shoe is what we have in campus! $10.95 Black Bucks Cocoa Bucks Natural Wax Hide Black Leather AAAA to B to 10 NATURALLY, oldmaine trotters oldmaine trotters Royal College Shop WESTERN HOUND o fall Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday. November 2, 1961 Gala GrandOpening THURSDAY • FRIDAY • SATURDAY • NOVEMBER 2 • 3 • 4 Gala Grand Opening Smart steps to fall 587 to 647 Sizes 4½ to 10 Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES Harvey's Discount Shoes comes to Lawrence ... Our policy is to offer you a wide and varied selection of FIRST QUALITY shoes of every description and style. Compare the quality, compare the styling, compare the price ... you'll know why Harvey’s shoes are your biggest shoe value. Shop the relaxing, self-selection way and SAVE. favored by the Campus-crowd! Casuals, sport shoes, loafers, dress casuals 287 to 487 Sizes 4½ to 10 Self Selection smart steps to savings! The New Convenient Modern Way to Buy all your Shoes BMOC Pick Sizes 6½ to 12 Dress, Sport Shoes, Loafers 687 to 1087 So Suave GRAND OPENING SPECIAL Six Popular Colors Cords & Canvas Sizes 4½ to 10 287 FREE PARKING Smart steps... to fall 5$^{87}$ to 6$^{47}$ Sizes 4½ to 10 So Smart H. D Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES arvey's DISCOUNT SHOES favored by the Campus-crowd! favored by the Campus-crowd! Casuals, sport shoes, loafers, dress casuals 2$^{87}$ to 4$^{87}$ So Sharp Sizes 4½ to 10 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. Casuals, sport shoes, loafers, dress casuals 2$^{87}$ to 4$^{87}$ So Sharp Sizes 4½ to 10 Six Popular Colors Open 9 to 9 Daily Noon to 5 Sunday 2'87 Cords & Canvas Sizes 4½ to 10 smart steps to savings! BMOC Pick Sizes 6 1/2 to 12 Dress, Sport Shoes, Loafers 6$^87$ to $10^{87}$ So Suave Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No. 36 Friday, November 3, 1961 UN Security Council Gives U Thant Recommendation UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. — (UPI) —The Security Council today unanimously recommended U Thant of Burma for election as acting Secretary General of the United Nations. In a meeting this morning, the 11nation council recommended Thant's election by the General Assembly this afternoon to serve out the term of the late Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold, which expires April 10, 1963. HAMMARSKJOLD. A Swede, was killed in a plane crash in Rhodesia in September after having been secretary general since 1953, when he succeeded Trygve Lie of Norway. Thant arrived a few minutes before the council went into its closed session. He waited in a small office down the corridor while the council met. After the council meeting, he emerged from the office and posed briefly for news photographers. In answer to congratulations from newsmen and cameramen, he said simply: "Thank you." Vox Discusses Vote Getting Vox Populi devoted a 15 minute, sparsely attended meeting last night to committee reports and plans for "getting out the vote." "Be certain to emphasize to your people that the primary elections are important," Theodore L. Childers, Wamego senior and Vox president, said. "THEY'LL TELL YOU that primary elections don't mean anything—they don't as far as the general election results are concerned," he said. "They do mean something as indicators of student feeling and are very important to us for our campaign. "If you representatives feel that our candidates should come back to your houses to speak because they haven't made a good impression in their initial speeches, then get them to return." "I WANT TO MAKE a special plea to you," said Roger Wilson, Wichita junior. "The crucial hours of the general elections days—the 14th and 15th—are from 3 to 5 p.m. It is at this time of day we must get the vote out." he added. "I would like for a Vox member of each house to drive other house members up to the Hill to vote," he said. "I am thinking in particular of fraternities. It's very crucial that we do this," he added. TURNING TO ANOTHER matter, James Martin, Arkansas City sophomore, said, "We have purchased about 150 feet of pulp paper for posters for the motorcade we're planning. This is enough for 100 posters—two for each car." "We also have posters for the 1,200 inches of poster space in Strong Hall. This will be taken up by two 20 by 30 inch posters," he added, requesting that drivers for the motorcade provide him with their names for distribution of poster materials. THANT'S nomination was agreed upon after six weeks, bickering between Russia and the United States, speaking for the Western powers. Agreement was reached when U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson and British Minister of State Joseph B. Godber recommended last Wednesday that Thant be elected to the interim post with full freedom to choose his own deputies, within limitations of the U.N. charter. Childers returned to the subject of campaigning. "ON NOV. 9 WE'RE HAVING a house presidents' meeting. I want each of you representatives to bring your presidents to this meeting." he added, "It's extremely important. Changing the subject, John Stuckey, Pittsburgh sophomore, former Vox executive council member said he hoped the General Assembly would fill the two vacancies in the Executive Council. CHILDERS ASKED FOR nominations to be opened but Martin said that without a quorum the Assembly could not vote on this. Childlers agreed and said the elections would have to be postponed. University Theatre Will Present 'Auntie Mame' "Auntie Mame," adapted for the stage by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee from Patrick Dennis' book, will be presented as University Theatre's second major production of the season Monday through Saturday. Swirling set shifts, frenzied costume changes and a rambunctious social light will sweep into University Theatre next week. Mame whirls him through a school based upon Bertrand Russell's theory of progressive education, finally marrying him off to an East side youngster. Lavishly designed, "Auntie Mame" utilizes every staging technique at University Theatre's command. The turntable, a device which swings around carrying two different sets, will be full with Mame's Beekman Place apartment on one side and Jackson Beauregard's country estate on the other. SLATS ATTACHED TO OUTLINE BOARDS will enable the stage crew to make quick scene changes by unhooking the slats' hinges. Scenes will be flown in from the ceiling via cables controlled by a panel backstage. Props with wheels will be used extensively as the stage crew must make 23 scene changes, 16 major set switches and a host of costume changes. THE PLAY REVOLVES AROUND MAME DENNIS and her nephew. Patrick, whom she rears after his father's death. In addition to the set changes, two nylon-thin curtains will create two scenes at the lip of the stage. All the stage space is being used. Soviet Ambassador Valerian A. Zorin, in the face of the Anglo-American position, dropped his demand that the number of Thant'aides and the political groupings they should represent be fixed before the election. Thant gained the post on a "no strings attached" basis, Western sources said, and planned to make no statement until after his election by the assembly, which was summoned to meet for that purpose at 2 p.m. CST. UP Defends Platform Planks The University Party defended itself last night against accusations that its platform planks ducked the civil rights issue and the NSA controversy. A Daily Kansan editorial Wednesday had accused both campus political parties (UP and Vox Populi) of having weak platforms. At the UP meeting in the Kansas Union last night, the criticisms of the UP were answered. Why no plank on the civil rights issues on campus? Gene Gaines, Joopin, Mo., junior, a member of the UP platform committee answered: "VIEWS ON civil rights should be more or less an individual opinion. Our candidates should make the decision, not the party itself." He added that the party felt planks in the platform should be agreed upon by the entire assembly. He also said the civil rights issue may be "possibly out of proportion." The editorial also criticized the party for no plank on the NSA controversy. ROBERT CATHEY. Shawnee Mission sophomore, said the NSA was not put into the platform because UP was split on the issue. He said the ASC vote to disaffiliate from the NSA backed un this point. The UP vote in the ASC was six for disaffiliation, six against, and one abstention. "Obviously, how could we put a plank in our platform about the NSA when the party is split like this," he said. "A LOT OF PEOPLE don't understand what a platform means. The party has to be strongly behind each plank." He added that the UP did support a current events committee of the ASC to replace the NSA. A proposal to set up this committee has already been before the ASC. It was a part of the resolution to disaffiliate from the NSA, but was deleted from the bill. A resolution to set up the current events committee will probably come up soon before the ASC. A PARTY MEMBER came up with another question about the UP platform. He asked Cathey what the party was going to do about the new "off shoot of the NSA?" (He was probably referring to the newly created Committee for Effective Student Government. Eight members of this committee are former members of the NSA.) Cathey, a member of the NSA last year, replied: "These people need to be together. They probably deserve each other." He added, laughing, that this was not a part of the UP platform. Gen.Walker Resigns Due to Censorship WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Army was ready today to accept the resignation of Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker, who is ending a 30-year service career in protest against military "censorship." Gen. Walker said that as a civilian he would be able to continue his anti-communist fight which he had "found it no longer possible to do in uniform." "I must be free from the power of little men who, in the name of my country, punish loyal service to it," he said. The veteran officer, removed from command of the 24th Division in Germany over alleged political activities, which critics said were based on principles of the right wing John Birch society, said he would refuse the $1,012.50 a month retirement pay he is due. Gen. Walker, who is staying in San Antonio, said he had no further comment on his resignation because his statement to the sub committee speaks for itself. But he added that he agreed with Gen. Douglas MacArthur that executive power has become so strong that military men are being treated ruthlessly for speaking their minds. "It will be my purpose now, as a civilian, to attempt to do what I have found it no longer possible to do in uniform." Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara later testified that Walker had attempted to influence the votes of his troops in the 1960 election. He said the General made "inflammatory and derogatory statements" against former President Truman, former Secretary of State Dean Acheson and Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt. Nuclear Testing Could Begin in Three Months WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Atomic experts said today the United States could resume above-ground nuclear tests in two or three months if President Kennedy finds them necessary. The President said yesterday such tests would be ordered if a current study of Soviet testing showed more experiments were required to maintain a U.S. nuclear lead over Russia. SHORTLY AFTER his statement, Russia exploded two more nuclear devices, raising speculation that Soviet scientists might have stumbled on some new development and were proof-testing it. The blasts, 29th and 30th announced tests in the current series, were set off in the Arctic. The Atomic Energy Commission said they both were in the low-to-intermediate range, or less than a megaton. Authoritative sources have estimated it would cost more than $100 million to begin a new test program The continuation of the Soviet testing, expected to end with last Monday's 50-megaton-plus explosion, led experts here to speculate the Russians might have come across some new lead in their experiments and wanted to follow it up. Weather IF KENNEDY ORDERS a resumption of U.S. tests in the air, they presumably would be held at the Eniwetok-Bikini proving ground in the Pacific, which was used for the last series in 1958. Cold today and tonight with the highs in the upper 30s and lows tonight in the 20s. Generally fair through Saturday with the highs 45 to 50. there because of the necessity to replace and repair facilities. In the past it has taken about six months to prepare the proving ground and organize a task force to carry out an ambitious test program. But sources said it now could be done in two or three months if necessary. WEAPONS EXPERTS predicted that, if Kennedy gives the go-ahead, a test would be conducted next year of a Nike-Zeus anti-missile missile with powerful nuclear warhead. Other tests, they said, might include experiments to increase the power of the Polaris, Minuteman and other missile warheads without increasing their bulk and weight. These experts said this country also might proof-test battlefield weapons such as the Davy Crockett Atomic Bazooka, and conduct scientific tests aimed ultimately at producing the Neutron bomb. KENNEDY SAID in his statement that if tests are resumed, the United States would hold fallout to an "absolute minimum." He said this country had no intention of exploding anything like a 50-megaton bomb. The Chief Executive denounced Russia's "campaign of fear" but offered another to sign a nuclear test ban treaty so long as it provides for adequate inspection and control. "In the meantime, as a matter of prudence, we shall make necessary preparations for such tests so as to be ready in case it becomes necessary to conduct them," he said. A SPOKESMAN for the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) said: "We will proceed to get ready as fast as possible. If a decision is made to resume atmospheric testing, it should not take long to begin." Dear Mrs. Lester, I want to tell you that I am very proud of your dedication and hard work. You have been a great teacher and mentor to many students throughout your career. Your wisdom and knowledge are invaluable to our students. I would like to extend my best wishes for your continued success in the future. HOMECOMING QUEEN ANNOUNCED—This morning at a pep rally in front of Strong Hall the 1961 Homecoming queen and her attendants were announced. They are, from left to right, Leslie Gail Coover, Junction City senior, attendant; Mary Nan Scamman, Tarkio, Mo., junior, queen; and Lawalta Dean Heyde, Shawnee Mission junior, attendant. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday. November 3. 1961 P-T-P Goes Big Eight Growing pains are already menacing a recently organized KU group. The KU People-to-People organization, now in its first year as a campus organization, is already pondering the problem of regional then national expansion. IN A CONFERENCE LAST WEEKEND the executive committee of KU People-to-People introduced this idea for better foreign student relations to a group of leaders from other Big Eight schools. All were impressed and returned to their respective schools vowing to establish similar programs. But, as local People-to-People executives are finding out, it takes a lot more than enthusiastic approval to establish such a program on a regional basis. Now that the seeds of expansion have been sown the KU committee is faced with the problem of making sure the climate is right for development of People-to-People at the other Big Eight schools. This will involve an enormous amount of work for the KU group. IT WILL MEAN CONTINUAL COR-respondence, phone calls and many personal visits to make sure things are progressing well at the other seven campuses. To accomplish this it will be necessary to adapt the present structure of the group to handle this added responsibility. But KU's role in the expansion of People-to-People will require much more than just physical and mental effort. There is a great deal of expense involved in selling a program such as this. KU will have to finance transportation and expenses of sending people out to assist in establishing the program at the other universities. Postage and printing bills will also be sizable. THE ALL STUDENT COUNCIL'S $1.905 appropriation for People-to-People will certainly relieve much of the financial strain the committee was operating under. However, most of this money has been earmarked for People-to-People activity at KU and little will be left to promote regional expansion. But, the committee's financial situation is not impossible and no doubt some sort of solution will be worked out. Although the effort required may seem gigantic and the problems never ending, those active in the People-to-People program can be assured that their enthusiasm and success speak well for them and the University. People-to-People may well identify KU as a leading force in a movement that has real value in the relations between nations and their student representatives in America. —Ron Gallagher Nikita's Folly Khrushchev has joked about the 50 megaton bomb set off earlier this week. His hope that it would frighten the Western world has also been laughed off, but not by Mr.K. The super-blast, a propaganda device to exhibit Russian power to the world, is not to be taken lightly. But it is doubted if Khrushchev expected the reaction his bomb received. INSTEAD OF WESTERN POWERS FALLING to their knees in fright or reverence, severe censure of Russia's action was sent almost as soon as the blast was over. Housewives, teachers and students across the world are not worried about Russia's bomb, but are concerned with the radiation fallout which will soon be over the U.S. Man-in-the-street interviews have produced interesting results. Most people interviewed said they thought Russia had set the bomb off to frighten leaders in England, France and the United States, or as a warning to the U.N. if Red China were not admitted. THE MAJORITY OF THOSE INTERviewed said they have faith in the defense of the United States and are not particularly worried about war. Their main concern is the fallout and its effect on future generations. Many of those interviewed across the nation were participating in picket lines protesting the Russian superbomb. One woman was pushing a baby carriage and holding a "Ban the Bomb" poster. Her child, asleep in the carriage, was wearing a sign saying "I want to be a mommy someday. Stop nuclear testing." IF KHRUSHCHEV EXPECTED PRESIDENT Kennedy to discontinue all nuclear testing, including the underground explosions that cause no fallout, his joke on testing may not be as funny as he thinks-Kennedy announced yesterday that the United States will resume nuclear testing in the atmosphere if such tests are necessary for U.S. security and the protection of the free world. If the world takes a firm stand and refuses to be intimidated by the Russian power, Mr. K may have a joke he can't laugh off as easily as he expected. Carrie Merryfield Music Review By Stuart Levine Assistant Professor of English Wednesday's Faculty Recital was an invigorating mid-week recharging for a small battery of run-down music lovers in Swarthout Recital Hall. VIOLIST KAREL BLAAS and pianist Richard Angeliett opened . . . the program with the "Sonata in G" of Pietro Locatelli. Mr. Blaas plays a lot of viola. If the opening movements were a little stiff, it was probably because he was not yet thoroughly warmed up. I will never understand how a man can put in a full day teaching and meeting family and social obligations and then march on up stage, right after dinner, to play a full-scale concert, but our music faculty seems able to do it. At any rate, Mr. Elaas was thoroughly in the mood by the last movement, and played with taste, good tone and gusto. 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 Managing Editor Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Assistant Managing Editors; Kelly Smith, City Editor; Bill Sheldon, Sports Editor; Barbara Howell, Society Editor. Paul Hindemith's "Sonata" Opus 11 Number 4 came next. A surprisingly romantic work, this, and a good reminder that Hindemith has roots in the rich soil of nineteenth century German Music. Mr. Blaas showed his versatility here; he had a fine repetition of tone qualities available as they were needed. The piano part in this work is by no means just an accompaniment; it's very demanding. Mr. Angletti was up to it, and the result was an idiomatic and sympathetic performance. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Editorial Editor Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors. AFTER THE INTERMISSION, clarinetist L. Don Schied joined the others on stage to play the Darius Milhaud Suite for Violin, Clarinet and Piano. This is light- weight and bubbly work; if you didn't know about Milhaud's years in South America, you could have guessed. Or you might have missed the boat altogether and thought you were listening to something by Villa-Lebos. For all its lightness, the work is nicely put together. I could find nothing wrong with the performance. Darn nice concert. the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism PROLOGUE TO SUMTER, edited by Philip Van Doren Stern. Fawcett, 75 cents. HERNDON'S LIFE OF LINCOLN, edited by Paul M. Angle. Fawcett, 75 cents. OUR HOUSE DIVIDED, by John Bach McMaster. Fawcett, 75 cents. SOLDIER LIFE, edited by Philan Van Doren Stern. Fawcett, 75 cents. MEET GENERAL GRANT, by W. E. Woodward. Fawcett, 59 cents. GENERAL LEE, by Fitzhugh Lee. Fawcett, 75 cents. I RODE WITH STONEWALL, by Henry Kyd Douglas. Fawcett, 75 cents. Here, in seven volumes, is a paperback survey of the Civil War. It is recommended, with reservations, to persons who have done little reading in this area of such interest in this centennial year. Much of it is familiar and can be found in other works. Perhaps the most valuable of the volumes is that called "Prologue to Sumter," valuable because it contains critical primary documents. Stern begins with the John Brown raid on Harpers Ferry and carries the story up to, and a little past, the firing on Ft. Sumter. In these pages are such varied documents as the letter from a little girl advising Lincoln to grow a beard, a New York Herald diatribe against the Republican party, wild statements by Robert Barnwell Rhett, Garrison and Phillips. Beauregard at West Point, plans to get Lincoln to Washington through disloyal Baltimore, and many others. "Herndon's Life of Lincoln" may be the most controversial of all Lincoln biographies. It is a collection of facts and mythology, and is largely responsible for the Anne Rutledge and Mary Todd images that persist today in the Lincoln legend. But such a biography has particular merit in its very biases, for Herndon was extraordinarily close to Lincoln, and he did considerable spadework on the biography, despite its glaring faults. "Our House Divided" is better known to historians as "A History of the People of the United States During Lincoln's Administration." The special merit in this history is that John Bach McMaster pioneered in social history. By using numerous manuscripts, newspaper reports and heretofore unused documents, he did, in fact, tell a story of the people and not merely one of soldiers and statesmen. Not that the great are omitted, but that McMaster was writing like the social-minded historians of today, the Nevines and the Commagers and Hofstadters. "Soldier Life" contains numerous camp-life vignettes and has been extracted by Stern from "Hardtack and Coffee," Union documents, and "Detailed Minutiae of Soldier Life in the Army of Northern Virginia." It is engrossing, though this kind of thing has been incorporated into the books of Catton and Commager. Here the reader learns that Civil War soldiers were much like those of later wars. One fine touch is a soldier's eulogy to the Army mule, a parody of Tennyson's "Charge of the Light Brigade." In "Meet General Grant," the prime debunker of them all, W. E. Woodward, gives us a portrait of the victorious Union commander. We see not a giant among soldiers but a very ordinary man, of ordinary abilities, a soldier who hated the sight of blood but was called a butcher during the brutal battles of the Wilderness, an inept president, a lonely old man dying among his memories. Though Woodward's book was an expose of sorts, it tells little that cannot be learned about Grant from better books. "General Lee" also has its deficiencies, though they are of a different kind. Perhaps relatives should not be allowed to write biographies; Fitzhugh Lee was Lee's nephew, and he is overloving. It is difficult, however, to find writings about Lee that do not make the Virginian almost Olympian in size. But the nephew does tell a thorough and vivid story of the tragic leader of the Confederate armies. "I Rode with Stonewall," finally, is an engrossing account by a young man who hated slavery but loved his state and became an aide on the staff of General Thomas J. Jackson. He accompanies Jackson from Bull Run through Chancellorsville, where the general receives a mortal wound. Of particular interest is Douglas' description of the postwar trial of the persons in on the Lincoln assassination conspiracy. Stern, in his introduction to this volume, makes an eloquent statement about the war that sums up all these books and the feeling so many Americans have toward the war. Describing Douglas, he says: The Ve but th No Saturseats I. 40 an the e in sea game Peg gan t ticket "Who else could recount so well that memorable scene when the mortally wounded general, dying at the Chandler house in Guinea Station, spoke his last words: 'Let us cross over the river and rest under the shade of the trees.' "They are all gone there now, Gray and Blue alike, gone over the wide dark river to rest forever under the shade of the trees the dying Jackson had glimpsed. But here, in this book, written by one who lived with Stonewall's men, who rode with them and fought with them, the young, the gallant, and the brave come to life again. Of thou s still s of him "Here the bugle sounds across the fields, the crack of artillery echoes and re-echoes from wall to wall of the Valley, and the trump of marching men and the steady drumming of horses' hoofs on road and turf can be heard once more." Th "Pink in rec must gress The system dium Worth Repeating "T is rea W perfe rence B stadi The non-conformist sees what is right and has the courage to speak up. Then he must realize he has to take the consequences. Edwin Wilson. It aisles --- Friday, November 3, 1961 University Daily Kansan The Student Seating Plan It Looks This Way... Page 3 By Tom Turner Very rarely can you enjoy two amusements for the price of one, but the Athletic Seating Board has made it possible. Not only did some 27.000 fans enjoy a winning football game Saturday, but a beautifully executed round of musical reserved seats as well. I AM PERHAPS more personally acquainted with sections 39, 40 and 41. The flow of traffic up and down, back and forth during the entire first half of the game resembled a herd of water buffalo in search of a pond. I needed a portable radio to follow the ball game. Perhaps it was only coincidence, but each time the band began to play, one entire row somewhere shifted while determined ticket holders waltzed with those occupying their seats. ONE IRATE FELLOW IN SECTION 41 informed an older man in red baseball cap and sunglasses that he was in the wrong seat. "Oh, really?" he replied. "Well, I won't move." And no one could do anything about it. One Pinkerton investigator, one Pinkerton officer and several thousand spirited words later the man in the red baseball cap was still seated, the ticket holder permanently fixed—standing in front of him. CONSEQUENTLY, THE ONLY WAY to get your assigned seat must be by brute force. What a chance to vent suppressed aggression, practice Yogi or just get even with somebody. The founding reserve-seating-fathers said last year that the system was the panacea to the age-old question of crowded stadiumitis. WHAT IS NEEDED NOW, THEN, to make the seating system perfect is several dozen additional first aid stations, the entire Lawrence Police Department and several hundred referees. The Pinkerton officer admitted there was nothing he could do. "Pinkerton is only hired to seat, not unseat," he said. "There should be very few bugs to work out before perfection is reached," they said. It also may help to paint more numbers; on the steps, in the aisles, on the walls and maybe even on the track. Better yet, why don't we scrap the seating system, reserve the stadium by class sections and keep all gates open. Pinkerton "seaters" are expensive. Student Apathy Criticized Editor: In the first of your three part series on the People-to-People program at KU, you stated that, "The apathy on the KU campus was unbelievable in the eyes of a California student. As he looked around he saw students seemingly unconcerned with fellow students of other lands. If this student ever bothered to notice, this same indifferent attitude prevails toward fellow students of this land. The typical impression that one receives from the majority of students on this campus is that, as long as a certain action or situation is not affecting me or will not affect me in the immediate future, "I don't give a haoot." One only has to participate in a sociology or English class discussion along this line to see just how deeply instilled this attitude is. I have heard several foreign students say that in their countries one does not find this lack of unity or unconcern among students. But here while fellow American students are being jailed, beaten, and denied their rights as citizens; we can be found spending our spare time in the local Pubs repleting that "beer gut" and picking up the latest odds on the next football game; while behaving like a group of addlepated beetleheads. It is high time that the KU students and their apathetic counterparts across America awaken to the fact that the time is near when we will be the leaders of this country. It will be up to us to formulate and carry out the internal and foreign policies of these United States. If we are to be competent leaders of tomorrow, we must be concerned students of today. As students we should have an awareness of our local, national, and international responsibilities. Locally ASC elections will be held sometime soon. Make an effort to find out who the candidates are. Query them on issues that you consider vital to you and compare their answers. If they have been on the council before check into their voting records where possible, and find out how they voted on key issues affecting you and the student body. Try this time to weed out the quislings before they are elected. Thus it will not be so likely that the campaign promises will be broken. ... Letters ... PIZZA by Roberto's 1241 OREAD North Of The Union Now Introducing FREE DELIVERY ON CAMPUS Save by taking advantage of our free campus delivery. Through our prompt delivery service you eat piping hot pizza — not just warm. COME IN AND TRY OUR SPICY SPAGHETTI For Fast, Free Delivery Call VI 3-1086 1241 Oread — ½ block North of the Union It is our responsibility to be aware of and express our opinions on U.S. internal problems and policy. We must not be afraid to stand up and be counted or to stand alone if necessary. W. Danny Johnson, Jr. New York City Sophomore * * * * Reasonable Platforms 365 Excuses Wants Responsible Platforms Editor: by Roberto's FAST PIZZA year both Vox and UP heartily endorse People-to-People. It seems that both groups have to jump on the old bandwagon and support whatever seems to be popular at the moment. This, to me, is spineless government. As the threat of Communist dominance and subversion spread throughout the world our international responsibilities increase. We must not lightly dismiss the impact that the International Union of Students has on the student leaders of the underdeveloped countries. This organization like the Communist Youth Movement IS on the move. Wake-up. KU students, let's face our responsibilities and start showing more concern locally, nationally, and internationally. 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Secession from Columbia Day in the Canal Zone Last spring I ran on the Vox ticket for ASC, and my living group is Vox-affiliated. I can't deny that Vox helped me in my campaign, but in all conscience, I cannot support a group that thinks of nothing but such matters as keeping University buildings open 24 hours a day (how would that help undergraduate women, anyway?) It is my earnest desire to see responsible student government at this University before I graduate. You must expect an apathetic student body when its student government leaders refuse to concern themselves with, or commit themselves to, issues other than campus parking problems. When I hear a candidate speak, I want to know where he stands on such issues as NSA (reaffiliation will be an issue), civil rights, off-campus housing, etc. I urge everyone who plans to vote in the coming elections to vote for the candidates on the basis of their individual qualifications and on what they themselves stand for, and not merely to vote by a straight party ticket. Let's DEMAND responsible student government. Carol McMillen Coldwater senior When I read the UP and Vox party platforms for the coming elections I was appalled. Some parts of the UP platform sounded like faint copies of last year's Vox platform. And Vox itself merely repeated parts of the platform it used last spring. It is also rather interesting — and almost humorous — to note that last spring, both Vox and UP heartily endorsed NSA. In fact, they couldn't say enough nice things about it. This time, however, both parties have carefully avoided any mention of their stand (if any) on NSA. This BUDGET GOT BUDGET TROUBLES? Make ends meet more easily with ThriftiCheck . . . the low-cost personal checking account service that helps make budgets behave. Let us tell you all about it. Douglas County State Bank 900 Mass. University Daily Kansan Friday. November 3, 1961 Brooks Stresses Teachers' Role Teachers play a vital role in the execution of America's mission in the world — "to point to justice, peace and decency" — a high-ranking State Department official said here yesterday. Brooks Hays, assistant secretary of state for congressional affairs, was speaking at the Lawrence section of the 98th annual meeting of the Kansas State Teachers Association. He gave the talk to an audience which filled the main floor of Hoch Auditorium. "THE COMPLETE and generous education is one that fits the individual to perform all the offices of life — public or private — justly, skillfully and magnanimously," he said. He listed three ways in which teachers can prepare American youth for their "mission in the world." - They should make each student "aware of the basic qualities of compassion and justice." - They should "help young people find their place in governmental life." - They should teach their students more than merely how to "attain the physical and material aspects of life" Speaking on his first point, Mr Hays emphasized that men of all nations must learn to live together in an increasingly inter-dependent world. American schools, he said, must prepare students for this role by stressing the elements of "simple justice." "THE CLASSROOM which fails in the instruction of simple justice is a failure to both the school and the community," he said. Humphrey Urges Adenauer Meet WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Senate Democratic whip Hubert H. Humphrey has urged President Kennedy to arrange an early meeting with Chancellor Konrad Adenauer as the first step toward a Berlin solution and ultimate U.S. association in an Atlantic economic community. The Minnesota Democrat, who returns tonight from a month-long European tour, recommended stepped-up American support of the European common market in a lengthy report to the President. Humphrey, it was learned today, voiced confidence in the West over the "long pull" of a "generation of struggle" with the communists. But he predicated this feeling on vigorous U.S. leadership to initiate a "unified allied position on Berlin" and to move toward economic and political integration of the entire Atlantic community. Humphrey said "close agreement" between the two heads of state is the key to allied unity in any negotiations with the Soviet Union on Berlin. THE SENATOR'S REPORT was submitted to Kennedy last week. Humphrey advised Kennedy that he should meet with Adenauer as soon as the Chancellor has overcome his problems in forming a new government. He felt an American-British-French-West German position could be quickly forged and be followed by agreement in the full 15-nation NATO alliance once Kennedy and Adenauer have a meeting of minds. IN HIS 60-ODD PAGE MEMO to Kennedy, Humphrey emphasized that Europe's economic development is aiming a major strategic blow at Soviet plans for world domination. He urged that the U.S. capitalize on this by pressing for eventual association in an Atlantic economic community. Such a successful operation, he said, would provide a decisive "pull from the West" on Soviet satellite countries. Kansan Want Ads Get Results "The world's greatest need is improved implementation of the basic qualities of compassion. "Attaining this feeling of compassion involves balancing the interests of the individual and the society of which he is a part." MR. HAYS, who served as a congressman from Arkansas for 17 years before being appointed to his State Department post under the Kennedy administration, told the convention that teachers should encourage interested students to enter political life. "You can help young people find their place in governmental life as either a citizen or a politician," he said. "You can make them aware of the challenge in our political life today." IN HIS TALK, Mr. Hays contrasted education in America and the Soviet Union. America should not try to imitate the Soviet educational system, he said, because the Soviet system places too much stress upon the material aspects of life. "We must not make the same mistake Russia made—endowing science with all the authority deprived from religion," he said. "Congress will continue to place great emphasis upon the physical sciences," he continued, "because of the great necessity for them in today's world. But we must not exclude the social sciences from our curriculum. "Brotherhood has requirements that can't be met by physical science alone." he concluded. The Netherlands String Quartet will present a recital at 8 p.m. Nov. 10 in Swarthout Recital Hall. Tickets are $1.79 and can be obtained at the Fine Arts office, 444 Murphy. Netherlands Quartet to Recite Here The program includes Quartet in D major by Haydn, Quartet No. 1 by Bartok, and Quartet in D minor by Schubert. The quartet is presently on a 10-week tour of the United States, the first in three seasons. It was formed in 1952 and made its debut at the Concertgebouw, in Amsterdam. It has appeared in Switzerland, England and Germany, and has toured South America. Members of the group are Nap de Klijn and Jaap Schroeder, violinists; Paul Godwin, violist; and Carrel Van Leeuwen Boomkamp, cellist. It's the Law OLYMPIA, Wash. — (UPI) — The state of Washington must believe it's more seemly to drink beer than to drink hard liquor. Taverns, which are limited to the sale of beer, must be open to the street so passersby can see in, but cocktail bars, which may serve mixed drinks, must be shielded from the street so nobody can view the proceedings. Portraits of Distinction A man with a camera on his shoulder HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass V I 3-0380 Kansan Want Ads Get Results THE CATACOMBS (cellar of the Pizza Hut) is featuring H Friday 9-12:30 -- The Hi-Phi's Saturday 9-12:30 - The Tornados Catacombs Open: 4-11 Monday~Thursday 4-11 Friday & Saturday Available for private parties throughout the week Featuring the FINEST PIZZA in the Midwest Open 4-11 Monday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday 646 Mass. 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The tournament was played on seven tables, with 14 playing at a time. The remainder of those present watched the matches with much spirit and interest. With matches being decided by the best two out of three games, the top two players of the night were decided: Breon Mitchell, Salina sophomore, and Stephen Peters, Merriam sophomore. They played three games to decide who was champion. Peters took the first game, 21-19; Mitchell, the second, 21-8. The deciding game saw Peters triumph. 21-19. Two close runners-up were Chuk- kwok Lo, Hong Kong freshman, and Norman Sobiesk, Lawrence graduate student. SOUTH AFRICA PRESIDENT ALBERT MICHAEL GAMBOA K. S. Balgopal, New Delhi, India, sophomore, participates in the ping pong tourney. Library Find to Be 'Sensation' The Anglo-Saxon fragments found in a KU book by the library will cause a sensation in scholarship, Thomas R. Buckman, director of libraries says. The library reported final identification of the fragments from a 14th century manuscript Friday. The fragments are valued from $8,000 to $10,000. Mr. Buckman said Bertram Colgrave, visiting professor of English, had told him before he left for Durham, England, in September that Froshawks Choose Officers for Year Froshawks, freshman women's pep organization, recently elected officers for the 1961-62 school year. Officers elected were Georgia Lonnecker, Kansas City, Mo., president; Mary Weston, Overland Park, vice president; Pat Wyles, Ft Leavenworth, secretary; Judy Watson, Wichita, treasurer; Elaine Borel, Falls Church, Va., and Chris Wolf, Wichita, songleaders; Anne Garlinghouse, Topeka, social chairman; and Susan Kidwell, Garden City, publicity chairman. Candidates for the various offices were selected by personal interviews with more than 70 freshman women who applied. Elections were then held to choose among the candidates selected. Official Bulletin TODAY Hillel Friday Night Services: 6:45 p.m. Jewish Community Center, 917 High- way Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, Union, Film on Urbana Conference. International Club: Directly following the International Club's rules and susan Union. Dancing and refreshments. SATURDAY Hiliel Autumn Dance: 8 p.m. Jewish Community Center. 917 Highland Drive. SUNDAY Lutheran Church Services: 8:30 and 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., Immmanuel Lutheran Church, 17th & Vermont, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Donofrio Chapel. Catholic Mass: 9 and 11 a.m., Fraser Hall. (Newman Club). Lutheran Church Services: 9:15 and 11 and 12 Lutheran Church, 13th and 14 New Hampshire Oread Friends Meeting: 10:30 a.m. Dionfof paper bags are welcome to this club. Lutheran Student Association Evening Vespers: 5:15 p.m. Dunbridge Chapel. Dinner will follow in the Cottonwood Room, Union, at 5:30 with the program following. Faith of Life Seminar: 8:45-10:30 a.m. Westminster Center, 204 Oread Break- Room Morning Worship: 11 a.m. Westminster Center, 1204 Oread, Rev. E. G. Froyd, Synod Executive of the Synod of Kansas, "Christian Perspective." Sunday Evening Fellowship: 5:15-7.30. Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. Speaker and speaker. Dr. Dance of the speech present who will speak on "Brain Washing." MONDAY Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch: 12 noon, Contenbury House Kuku Pep Club: 6:30 p.m., Oread Boom, Kansas Union Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TUESDAY the announcement of the discovery would receive great acclaim. Prof. Colgrave identified the fragments fully and will publish an article on the discovery in Speculum, a medieval journal published in Cambridge, Mass., in January, 1962. One of the manuscripts is a religious text and the fragments contain part of a sermon, "The Confessor." Their value is that of filling in holes in history caused by the destruction of Anglo-Saxon documents by 16th century Protestants who regarded them as "papist heresies," Mr. Buckmann said. Nurses's Club Meeting: 7 to 8 p.m. Fraser Hall Dining Room. Rita Peters will speak on her trip to Australia where she helped the International Council of Nursing. WEDNESDAY Student National Education Association: 4 p.m., 30? Barley, Speaker, Dr. A. J. Edwards: "Educational Procedures for Children Who Are Different." The library discovered the fragments in a Latin book of poetry which the library was urged to buy by Kenneth Rothwell, professor of English. The fragments were noticed upon purchase and Alexandra Mason, then assistant head of special collections, realized their worth. Miss Mason began study on them but the library called Prof. Colgrave, an expert in Anglo-Saxon literature, to make the final estimate. He completed the study in four months after correspondence with colleagues at Oxford and Cambridge, England. WASHINGTON — (UPI) The government's nuclear survival plan calls for a temporary freeze on all prices, wage, salaries and rents in the event of widespread attack on the United States. U.S. Survival Plans Readied Under study are details of how the government could indemnify firms for property losses. Officials said such payments would have to be gradual, lest the economy be flooded with money at the very time that goods were in shortest supply. That could cause runaway inflation. The plan also anticipates national sharing of losses, with undamaged areas taking on the burden of keeping the economy running. AN INTER-AGENCY STUDY group has been working on postattack survival for more than two years. It is under the chairmanship of Edward F. Phelps, director for economic stabilization of the Office of Emergency Planning. Phelps hopes the group will develop in the next few months additional machinery for alleviating the most acute post-attack economic stress. One novel aspect of the survival plan is that the job of enforcing the rent and price freeze and of rationing goods would fall on local governments. In past wars Washington has directed these programs. The Labor Department's extensive Page - Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil network of field offices would administer the wage-salary freeze. Reg. 16.95 Now 1395 ACME COWBOY BOOTS Reg. 19.95 ------ Now 1695 ACME BOOTS REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. THE OFFICE OF EMERGENCY planning is working with state governments on post-attack state and local responsibility. The states, in turn, are to instruct local authorities. To date 30 governors have appointed officials to take charge of emergency planning. Four federal-state-local conferences have been held since April—in New York, Chicago, San Francisco and Los Angeles. From 350 to 700 businessmen, bankers and professional people have attended these meetings. A fifth is scheduled for Dec. 5-6 in Atlanta and a sixth for mid-January, probably in Dallas. plan was only a temporary expedition to keep the economy from falling apart. It would continue in force, Fhelps said, "until the federal government could crawl out from the rubble, assess the damage and decide what must be done." Flags Aplenty PHIELS EMPHASIZED in an interview that the economic survival SAN FRANCISCO - (UPI) Thirteen flags have flown over California in its recorded history. They include the Spanish Empire, England, the Spanish National Ensign, Russia, the Russian-American Company, pirates from Argentina, the Mexican Empire, the Mexican Republic, explorer John Fremont's flag, the original Bear Flag, the American Flag in 1846, the state's present official Bear Flag and the Stars and Stripes of the U.S.A. WeaverS Weaver's Our 105th Year of Service Rain or Shine . . . $10.95 a two-in-one reversible all-weather coat A fashionable knockout for handling all kinds of weather. Fine water repellent poplin . . . beige on one side, orange and tan print on the other. --- Trench Coat A fashionable knockout for handling all kinds of weather. Fine water repellent poplin . . . beige on one side, orange and tan print on the other. Stain, crease resistant. Sizes 4-14. Second Floor University Daily Kansan Friday, November 3, 1961 Housing Committee,CRC To Give Support to HRC Leaders of two student anti-discrimination groups said their committees would work with the Human Relations Commission in its investigation of Lawrence landlords. Another said it was up to the Commission whether his group worked with HRC. THOMAS HARDY, Hoisington junior, and chairman of the Housing Committee of the All Student Council, said his committee had every intention of working with the Commission. "We will probably be in contact with Mr. Binns in a few days." Hardy said. William Binns is chairman of HRC. Brian Grace, Lawrence sophmore, and chairman of ASC's Human Rights Committee said his group will definitely work with the HRC committee. "We will cooperate with them in any way we can," Grace said. CHARLES MENGHINI, Pittsburgh senior, and co-chairman of the Civil Rights Council, said his group would probably aid HRC if they were asked. "It's up to them to determine how they wish to go about this," Menghini explained. "I'm sure we could give them some background." The Civil Rights Council has recently completed a survey of Lawrence landlords to determine who and how many discriminators there are. THE HUMAN RELATIONS Commission established a committee Wednesday night to talk to certain landlords who rent to KU students and ascertain their views. The move was praised by the KU chairmen as a move in the right direction to ending discrimination in Lawrence. "I think it's tremendous," Menghini exclaimed. "I have nothing but praise for the Commission at this moment. "They have realized the problem and are going to work on it," he added. GRACE WHO CIRCULATED a petition last week urging curtailment of protests against discrimination until the HRC could function, Students Say No to Idea Of Starting Tests Again Only two of 12 students interviewed in Strong basement recently felt that the United States should resume atmospheric nuclear tests in view of the recent Russian superbomb explosion. Those who opposed the resumption of such tests by the United States had various reasons, but both those in favor of resumption were afraid that the United States would fall behind Russia JIM KIRKHAM, Independence, Mo., sophomore, opposed the resumption of atmospheric tests because "the United States has enough power right now to retaliate against any aggressor." He also felt that Russia is getting bad publicity abroad as a result of her giant nuclear explosion. Judy Myers, Brooking, S.D. freshman, opposed resumption saying, "Just because they do it is no reason for us to do it." She said that increasing atmospheric radioactivity might prove harmful. Jack Harper, Wichita freshman, said, "If we would go ahead, it would justify their move." He thought that underground tests are all right, but too much fall-out danger results from atmospheric tests. JACOB DYCK, Topeka senior, stated, "I don't think anybody should be testing at the present time." He did, however, approve of underground tests. Dale Gaeddert, Newton graduate student, said that "United States testing policy should not be determined by Russia." He felt that sufficient reasons could justify underground testing only. Steve Heller, Merriam sophomore, commented simply that "two wrongs never make a right." LEF ELLIOTT, Waterville freshman, said. "What we need most is some way to get them (nuclear bombs) over there." He felt that the United States has adequately developed her atomic bombs already. Ron Walters, Salina sophomore, believed that the "warheads we have now will completely annihilate the largest military installation." He also felt that the United States should concentrate on vehicles. Darrell Sligar, Kansas City, Kan senior, said that we have "enough air pollution to last us for a while." He thought that a resumption of tests by the United States would only result in an upward spiral of the size and number of atomic tests in the atmosphere. SCOTT BEIMS, Atwood senior, also opposed resumption on the basis that "two wrongs don't make a right." He felt that more tests are unnecessary. Dick Ailor, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, was one of the two who favored the resumption of atmospheric tests by the United States. He felt that "we will fall behind otherwise." He did not favor testing in itself but viewed it as the lesser of two evils. Charles Looney, Iola freshman, also favored testing because he believed that "we are forced" to resume testing in order to keep up with Russia. said he was pleased with the action. "It's a good move, an effective one," he said. Thomas Hardy said the Commission would probably accomplish more by working in this fashion than the two ASC groups. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT "The committee is composed of townspeople and we're student groups," he added. "People will respect them more because of that." ... MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." Now offers: "We found we lacked adequate grounds for making a statement and had nothing concrete with which to work," he explained. 1015 Lawrence VI 3-5947 Coulson said Canterbury was "very much in favor of doing everything as a group or as individuals to help lessen discrimination. The sentiment at Tuesday's meeting was "considerably divergent," Gish added. "Exactly how this is done is another question; this is what we are debating at the present time," he said. - EXPERT TYPING — fast, accurate. - COMPLETE SECRETARIAL SERVICE (Minimum of 4 hr. in your office; no minimum in ours.) - THERMO-FAX COPIES — 25c maximum - COMPLETE TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE. At last Tuesday's meeting, however, the group questioned whether a public stand would be the most effective way to proceed, Gish said. Glen Gish, Harper graduate student and member of the vestry, said the original plans were for Canterbury to vote either to reject or approve the administration's policy as explained Sunday by James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor, and Emily Taylor, dean of women. He repeated Mr. Gunn's statement that a point is reached where the publicity ends and the work begins, and said he believed that point had been reached. He said several members of the vestry, Canterbury's ruling body, were drawing up possible statements to be voted upon Tuesday. Canterbury Association's stand on University housing policy probably will take the form of a private letter to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, Mike Coulson, Glouchester, England, graduate student and senior warden of Canterbury, said yesterday. VI 3-5920 Housing Stand Is Purported - ONLY EXPERIENCED QUALIFIED PERSONNEL EMPLOYMENT. 1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. When You Need Help - Remember SOS --- DELUXE SHIRTS 12c Business Shirts, Reg. 22c WASH PANTS . . . 29c pr. WHEN INCLUDED IN THE DELUXE FAMILY BUNDLE, 5 LBS. ONLY 79c (Additional pounds only 14c each) the word for quality cleaning and laundry DELUXE Drive In and Save — Open 7 A.M. to 7 P.M. 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Based on an analysis of persons injured by the two bombs dropped on Japan, he said it was found that clothing and other covering can protect to some degree against the flash. The safest level of radiation exposure for humans is "0," a KU radiation biophysics professor said last night, but practical steps can be taken to protect against harmful effects of radiation and radioactive fallout. Prof. Shaw pointed out that food subject to radiation does not become radioactive. However, radioactive material deposited on the food can be taken into the body. OTHER DAMAGE TO human life results from "prompt" radiation, or the direct absorption of rays from the explosion, and "residual" radiation, that produced from radioactive particles, he said. Nuclear Weapons Effect Explained PROF. SHAW explained some of the technical aspects of radiation and its measurement and also touched on other effects of nuclear weapons. ALPHA AND BETA RAYS,which can cause external radiation poison unless the body is shielded by clothing or other means, will cause internal poison only when absorbed into the body with food, water or air. Prof. Shaw explained. Edward I. Shaw, associate professor of radiation biophysics, spoke to about 75 persons at the Lawrence High School on the biological effects of nuclear weapons. Thus eating and drinking food with radioactive particles becomes the greatest long range problem following a nuclear explosion, ne said. He said the safest procedure is to eat food that has been in a tight container after making sure the container has been washed. Food with a hard natural covering is also safe if the covering is washed or pared off, he said. Since different radiation rays have different intensities, generally only the Gamma and neutron rays cause internal body damage from exposure. the body, and particularly the hair and folds in the skin, should be washed to protect against radiation poison, he added. In a brief question period, Prof. Shaw was asked about the genetic effects of radiation. PROF. SHAW said even contaminated water could be used in the cleaning process since the poison material would be highly diluted and less concentrated than on the material that is being washed. YAF May Schedule Anti-Communist Film He said the area was one in which there is great disagreement. Tentative plans to sponsor an anti-Communist film and a conservative speaker were made by the KU chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom Wednesday night. The film, "Red China — Outlaw" sponsored by the Committee-of-One-Million, an organization working for the continued withholding of United Nations membership to Red China, may be shown here Nov. 14. "NEARLY ALL AGREE that Much of the discussion was "off the record." Leonard E. Read, president of the Foundation for Economic Education, may visit KU on Nov. 9 or Nov. 13 to speak to the group. Tough Turf Recipe Sought UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa — (UPI) —Pennsylvania State University agronomists are seeking a "recipe" for artificially combined soils best suited to grow athletic field turfs and withstand the battering of football, tennis and golf enthusiasts. Fifteen students joined YAF at its organizational meeting held three weeks ago. About 25 students attended the meeting last night. there would be some genetic effects," he said. But he added questions of how much effect would result from what amount of radiation or what effect the dose rates might have was an area of controversy. To another question of what can be done for a person exposed to radiation, Prof. Shaw said there is almost nothing that could be done short of professional medical care. Short of that, he recommended protection against further exposure and the providing of maximum comfort to the victim. The lecture was the third of five being sponsored by the University Extension Division and the Lawrence Adult Education Department on fallout and survival. FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY WHEEL ALIGNMENT BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP 229 Elm VI 3-2250 CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE For the Latest in FALL HAIR STYLINGS Come in and Get Acquainted 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 I. H. S. Our shop is only a few minutes walk from the heart of the campus FOR APPOINTMENTS call VI 3-3034 1144 Indiana - 1 block north of Student Union Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers KING SIZE It's what's up front that counts FILTER-BLEND is yours in Winston and only Winston Up front you get rich golden tobaccos specially selected and specially processed for filter smoking. Smoke Winston. Winston FILTER · CIGARETTES Winston FINER FILTER FOR FINER FLAVOR B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N.C. WINSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should! Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 3,1961 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Top Teams Meet Throughout Nation Miami is a 13-point favorite to defeat Georgia in the Orange Bowl tonight in a game that marks the start of a weekend schedule in which three of the country's top five teams take on formidable opponents. A crowd of about 45,000 is expected despite threatening weather at Miami, Fla., in the most important game of a light Friday night program. Each team reached the .500-mark last week—Miami with a 10-0 victory over North Carolina and Georgia with a 16-15 win over Kentucky. THE GAME PITS TWO of the country's most talented sophomore quarterbacks against each other in Miami's George Mira and Georgia's Larry Rakesstraw. Mira has thrown a touchdown pass in four of Miami's six games this season while Rakesstraw blossomed into a dangerous Okie Players Lead NAIA KANSAS CITY—(UPI) —Football teams and players from Oklahoma dominated the offensive statistics for the second consecutive week today in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) report. Fanhandle A&M of Goodwell, Okla., leads in rushing and total offense, primarily because of the running of Jerry Linton, and Langston University is tops in passing offense—and also pass defense. Langston quarterback Don Smith leads in individual total offense with 220.8 yards per game, and the team leads in pass offense with a 224.8-yard game average. Langton has allowed its opponents but 21 yards per game through the air. Panhandle A&M is averaging 408.2 yards per game rushing, with Linton pacing individual rushers in NAIA competition with a game average of 160.6 yards. The team has a total offense average of 430 yards. For total defense, however, it's hard to beat Florida A&M. The team has given up but 61.4 yards per game, on the average, and allowed its opponents only 18 yards per game rushing—tops in both defensive departments. Tom Cryzwinski of Defiance (Ohio) is the leading passer with 37 completions in 187 attempts for a 202.5-yard average. John Nachtheism of the University of Minnesota at Duluth continues to lead the scorers with 17 touchdowns, five conversion points and 112 total points. The leading punter is Grover Perkins of Southern Louisiana, who has averaged 50.5 yards on 15 kicks. KU-Nebraska Tilt On Network Radio The Kansas-Nebraska game to morrow in Lincoln will be carried along the KU Sports Network, this week composed of 32 area stations, starting at 1:45 p.m. New Work Tom Hedrick, network director will do the play-by-play broadcast which can be heard on these area stations: KLWN, KANU, KJAY, KCKN, KMBC, KVOE, KOFO. passer in the last few games after playing defense in Georgia's early contests. NEW YORK — (UFI) — "Chiaroscuro," the newest symphonic work by American composer Henry Cowell, will be premiered Oct. 13 in Guatemala City under the direction of conductor Jose Maria France Gill. With the Friday night game out of the way, the decks will be cleared Saturday for three big games that could have important repercussions in the national rankings. THESE SEND UNBEATEN Michigan State, the nation's top-ranked team, against once-beaten, 10th-ranked Minnesota; second-ranked Mississippi against seventh-ranked Louisiana State and fifth-ranked Ohio State against ninth-ranked Iowa. Michigan State is favored by seven points over Minnesota (4-1), Mississippi is a six-point choice over LSU (5-1), and Ohio State (4-0-1) is a three-point pick over Iowa (4-1). Michigan State is putting its five-game winning streak on the line while Mississippi is placing its perfect 6-0 slate in jeopardy. The work was commissioned especially for the National Symphony Orchestra of Guatemala by Broadcast Music, Inc., at the request of the President's Music Committee of the People-to-People Program. Texas, the country's third-ranked power, is a 22-point favorite over Southern Methodist, fourth-ranked Alabama is a 14-point choice over Mississippi State, sixth-ranked Georgia Tech is a 13-point pick over Florida and eighth-ranked Colorado is rated even with Missouri, in other games involving the top 10. Bad Weather Hampers Play By United Press International Rain curtailed the practice of most Big Eight Conference football teams yesterday, and Missouri, Iowa State and Nebraska worked out indoors. Coaches of six of the teams were happy anyway, however, because their squads are in top physical condition for Saturday's games. Kansas State and Missouri were the only teams with regulars on the disabled list. KANSAS STATE COACH DOUG Weaver said backs Jack Richardson and Joe Searles probably would see only limited, if any, action against Oklahoma because they haven't recovered from injuries suffered last week. They will be replaced in the starting lineup by Bill Gallagher and Glen Isernhagen. Missouri halfback Norm Beal, suffering from a pulled leg muscle, was counted out for the Colorado game by Coach Dan Devine. The coach said sophomore Vince Turner would start in Beal's place for the conference championship showdown at Boulder. At Kansas, Tackle Stan Kirshman rejoined the squad yesterday after being sidelined with a sore throat and high fever for more than a week. Coach Jack Mitchell drilled the squad on its offense in preparation for its meeting with Nebraska, although most of the session was canceled because of rain. SENIORS If you're not planning to be in Lawrence next semester, but still want your pictures in the senior section of the Jayhawker, make your appointment now Call Estes Studio at 924 Vt., VI 3-1171 OKLAHOMA COACH BUD Wilkinson, in the throes of the school's worst season, said starting fullback Phil Lohmann would be ready by Saturday for the Kansas State game. Lohmann was sidelined most of the week with a bruised shoulder. Colorado Coach Sonny Grandelius said his team was in top physical condition for its meeting with Missouri. The same report came from Oklahoma State Coach Cliff Speegle, preparing his team for a game with Wichita, and Coach Clay Stapleton, whose Iowa State Cyclones will play Boston College. Come in Today TO Margaret's Cafe and Try some of our homemade pie So delicious, it'll melt in your mouth Open 6:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Closed Sunday @ Serving Breakfast, Lunch, & Dinner 1104 W.23rd VI 3-9663 IBM WILL INTERVIEW NOVEMBER 8-9 IBM Candidates for Bachelor's or Master's Degrees are invited to discuss opportunities in: Engineering and Science This is a unique opportunity to find out about the many career opportunities at IBM. The IBM representative can discuss with you typical jobs, various training programs, chances for advanced education, financial rewards, and company benefits—all important factors that affect your future. SOME FACTS ABOUT IBM An Unusual Growth Story: IBM has had one of the exceptional growth rates in industry. It has been a planned growth, based on ideas and products having an almost infinite application in our modern economy. Diverse and Important Products: IBM develops, manufactures and markets a wide range of products in the data processing field. IBM computers and allied products play a vital role in the operations of business, industry, science, and government. Across-the-Country Operations: Laboratory and manufacturing facilities are located in Endicott, Kingston, Owego, Poughkeepsie, Vestal, Yorktown, N. Y.; Burlington, Vermont; Lexington, Ky.; San Jose, Calif.; Bethesda, Md.; and Rochester, Minn. Headquarters is located in New York City with sales and service offices in 180 major cities throughout the United States. The Accent is on the Individual: No matter what type of work a person does at IBM, he is given all the responsibility he is able to handle, and all the support he needs to do his job. Advancement is by merit. The areas in which IBM is engaged have an unlimited future. This is your opportunity to find out what that future has to offer you. All qualified applicants will be considered for employment without regard to race, creed, color or national origin. Your placement officer can help you to learn more about IBM. He can give you literature describing the many career fields at IBM. He will arrange an appointment for you with the IBM representative. If you cannot attend an interview, write or call the manager of the nearest IBM office: W. H. Jennings, Branch Manager IBM Corporation, Dept. 882 1400 Baltimore Ave. Kansas City 41, Mo. Phone: BA 1-0575 A BI Stat milli throstrat the A conv four cide Hei wer M P IBM 72 You naturally have a better chance to grow with a growth company. delius viscal Mis- from eagle, with eton, play Page 9 Friday. November 3. 1961 University Daily Kansan Army Convoys Into Berlin BERLIN — (UPI) The United States today ordered three more military convoys into West Berlin through the Soviet zone to demonstrate Western rights of access to the divided city. An Army spokesman said the first convoy of 40 soldiers, one jeep and four trucks arrived here without incident after a 110-mile trip from Helmstedt. Two others the same size were due later today. Meserve Reads Poetry of Frost Robert Frost is concerned with nature and humanity in nature Walter J. Meserve, associate professor of English, said yesterday. "Robert Frost invites you to enjoy his poetry," he said. "He invites you to enjoy something that he enjoys. But he wants you to appreciate what is written and also to learn something from it." PROF. MESERVE READ POETRY of Robert Frost for 45 minutes yesterday at the Poetry Hour with about 70 students listening. He explained that he was reading Frost because he enjoyed his poetry. He said that some of his favorite poems were the dramatic poetic monologues. Two roads diverged in a yellow wood. Some of Frost's poems suggest a philosophical tone with a surprise, Prof. Meserve said. He read one of these, "The Road Not Taken." And sorry I could not travel both And be one traveler, long I stood And looked down one as far as I could I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the different To where it bent in the undergrowth; Prof. Meserve said Frost had a sense of humor as well as philosophy. He read a poem with a lighter touch, "Two Witches." "FROST LIKED WITCHES and ghosts and they appear quite often in his poetry," he said. ... But the bones didn't try The door; they halted helpless on the landing. Waiting for things to happen in their favor. The faintest restless rustling ran all through them. I never could have done the thing I did If the wish hadn't been too strong in me To see how they were mounted for this walk. The students laughed. Prof. Mereserve continued, leaning on the podium. I struck the hand off brittle on the floor. And fell back from his on the floor myself. The finger-pieces slid in all direction. Hand me my button-box — it must be there. (Where did I see one of those pieces lately? At the end of the poem, the students smiled, shifted, stirred, and settled back. "Here is a poem." Prof. Meserve said, "that perhaps could have been written to the college audience." THE POEM WAS "THE RUNaway" a poem about a Morgan colt, alone and frightened by a snowfall. I think the little fellow's afraid of the snow. He isn't winter-broken. It isn't play With the little fellow at all. He's running away. Where is his mother? He can't be out alone. Whoever it is that leaves him out so late. Ought to be told to come and take him in. When other creatures have gone to stall and bin. Prof. Meserve paused, then, looking up at his audience, said, "That's the way we sometimes feel about you." THE AMERICAN convoy passe through Soviet checkpoints at each end of the Helmstedt-Berlin highway without trouble. The Communist guards made no move to control it. His audience laughed. The spokesman said three more convvoys carrying replacements for the 6,500-man garrison here will be sent tomorrow. He said helicopter flights would continue to supply and relieve the three-man military police garrison in the tiny U.S.-controlled enclave of Steinstuecken, isolated one mile inside Communist East Germany. The official Communist Party newspaper Neues Deutschland charged in an editorial that the four-power status of Berlin had been broken by the Western allies. It said the agreement has not existed "for a long time." ment which guarantees Western rights in Berlin is dead. The newspaper was commenting on the Allied order for West Berlin police to check the papers of Russian civilians entering West Berlin in unofficial vehicles. Neues Deutschland said the Russians had no objection to the new procedure. SANDY'S THRIFT & SWIFT DRIVE-IN 2120 West 9th Across from Hillcrest EARLIER, THE Communists reiterated that the four-power agree- There Is No Waiting at Sandy's MENU HILLSIDE 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 Still Little Fallout In Lawrence Area Fallout here was virtually negligible yesterday as rain washed out the atmosphere. Wednesday's reading was 0.8 micro-curieres per cubic foot of air, Edward L. Shaw, associate professor of radiation biophysics said. However, Prof Shaw said the low count was somewhat misleading. "The heavy rain we've had has washed out the atmosphere," he said. "We have to sample the rain water before we can get an accurate measurement for the last few days." Rain water samples were taken but the amount of fallout present cannot be determined for a few days. JACK ZINN for Freshman Pres. ( Paid For By The Jack Zinn For President Committee) Tareyton delivers the flavor... DVAL FILTER DOES IT! "Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!" says Publius (Boom-Boom) Aurelius, Coliseum crowdpleaser. Says Boom-Boom, "Tareyton is one filter cigarette that really delivers de gustibus. Legions of smokers are switching. Try a couple of packs of Tareytons. They're the packs Romana!" ACTIVATED CHARCOAL INNER FILTER PURE WHITE OUTER FILTER DUAL FILTER Tareyton Product of The American Tobacco Company-"Tobacco is our middle name" Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 3, 1967 Birchers Uncertain About KU Organizational Meeting An organizer of the John Birch Society said last night that he cannot give a definite date for the organization of a Lawrence-KU chapter of the Society. In a telephone interview, Kent Steffgen, national coordinator, said from Kansas City the Society will eventually try to hit every city and town in the country. IN THE SEPT. 14 KANSAN, Mr. Steffgen said he would be coming to Lawrence to form a chapter of the Society. Questioned about names of interested persons in Lawrence, he said there were a few. Clarifying his Author-Humorist Thurber Dies NEW YORK — (UPI) — In death, the boy who roamed the streets of Columbus, Ohio, as Jamie Thurber will return to that midwestern well spring of his humor — his talent now compared with that of Mark Twain. James Thurber died late yesterday at 66. The author-humorist cartoonist-playwright had entered Doctors Hospital a month ago for surgery for a blood clot on the brain. Pneumonia set in this week. BURIAL WAS SCHEDULED in the Thurber family plot in Columbus, the town where he was born "on a night of wild portent and high wind in the year 1894" and grew up amid a family of glorious eccentricity, which had a passion for the Civil War and dogs — one of which bit the lieutenant-governor of Ohio but was immediately, according to his mother, sorry. A modest, even self-deprecatory, man. Thurber once noted that his birthplace at 147 Parsons Ave. had no plaque and was never pointed out to visitors. Kansan Want Ads Get Results FRI.-SAT.-SUN. The Bramble Bush A WARNER BROS PICTURE Richard Burton • Barbara Rush Angie Dickinson TECHNICOLOR® Excited by MILTON SPERING and PHILIP YORLAN Encrypted by MILTON SPERING® - Directed by DANIEL PETRIE — AND — - PLUS - COLUMBIA PICTURES presents MAD DOG COLL A THALIA FILM He added that the society tries to choose their members. TWO BONUS HITS! SATURDAY ONLY! answer, he said there are patriots in every city. "We try to make people read and make up their own minds," he said. "If the President had given the Society an endorsement, we would be stamped with memberships, and it would take several years to weed out the people we couldn't use." He said there would be no advance notice of a meeting in Lawrence. ADMISSION ONLY 75c HE ADDED THAT the Society was out for the conservative-minded person. The more liberals the Society could keep out of the first meeting, the better, he said. Mr. Steffgen said he is now setting up chapters of the Society in Kansas City and the surrounding area. SUNSET WORK IN THEATRE West on McKinney He said the John Birch Society did not want publicity from either a favorable or unfavorable press. He said most papers have received a bad impression of the Society because of radicals on the fringe calling the papers giving false information. LONDON—(UPI)—Princess Margaret, Britain's 31-year-old "little sister," safely gave birth today to her first child—a healthy boy—at the Clarence House residence of Queen Mother Elizabeth. Margaret Has Son Early This Morning The baby will be known as Viscount Linley and automatically becomes fifth in line to the British Throne. 'Her royal highness the Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon, was safely delivered of a son at 10:45 a.m. (4:45 Lawrence time) today. An official Clarence House announcement tacked on the gate of the residence shortly before noon orclaimed to happy Britons; "Both mother and baby are well." Japanese Laundry Priest HOKKAIDO, Japan — (UPI) — Father Christopher K. Maino, a Maryknoll missionary from Detroit, sometimes confuses his Japanese parishioners. Maino drives a jeep once the property of an American news correspondent. The vehicle still has a large red sticker on the windshield bearing the word PRESS. The Japanese who can read English often mistake Maino for a laundry operator. TONITE AND SATURDAY! Walt Disney's "Nikki" and "Hand In Hand" STARTS SUNDAY! Adults 85c Kids 35c 20 Century Fox presents francis of assisi HOW A LUSTY, FIGHTING YOUNG ADVENTURER TURNED INTO A SAINTLY MAN OF GOD! MAN OF starring BRADFORD DILLMAN DOLORES HART STUART WHITMAN and PEDRO ARMENDARIZ on the Solitaire Produced by PLATO A. SKOURAS Directed by MICHAEL CURTIZ Screenplay by EUGENE VALE, JAMES FORSYTH and JACK THOMAS A Pictures Production COLOR BY DE LUXE CINEMASCOPE CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 2:30 VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-1065 Faculty Gives $7,400 to UF KU faculty members have contributed more than $7,400 to the Lawrence United Fund drive, only $400 short of the KU goal. Dick Wintermote, associate secretary of the KU Alumni Association and chairman of the University division of the Lawrence United Fund Campaign, said he expects the University's quota of $7,800 to be met by Monday, when the drive officially ends. All KU faculty and staff members have been asked to contribute, he said. The combined quota for Lawrence and the University is $58,000. So far, a total of $33,566 has been contributed. This amount includes the KU contribution. Contributions to the United Fund go to 10 local, state and national organizations. Kansan Want Ads Get Results The Greatest High Adventure Ever Filmed! EVER THERE NAVARONE COLUMBIA PICTURES presents GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN in CARL FOREMAN'S This, we promise, is probably the most exciting motion picture you will ever see! THE GUNS OF NAVARONE STANLEY BAKER· ANTHONY QUAYLE· IRENE PAPAS· GIA SCALA JAMES DARREN JAMES DARREN Written & Produced by **Broadway** based on the movie "CARLE FOREMAN" by **MUSIC MANIA MUSICAL** Music Composed & Conducted by JEEE HIPPONSON Directed by JEEE HIPPONSON COLOR and CINEMASCOPE To sustain the tremendous suspense and to give you the utmost enjoyment, we urge you to "The Guns of Nixonwe" from the beginning. No one will be seated during the last 20 minutes. STARTS TOMORROW! Mat. Sat. 2 p.m. Sat. Eve. 6:30 & 9:15 Sunday Shows At 2:00-4:35 and 7:20 ADULTS $1.00 KIDDIES 50c ENDS TONITE — 7 and 9 — "BACK STREET" --- LOST: O'Leary Long. VI ☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆ LOST: B Strong, T money, I Kansan B GLASS C Gym Ani please call p.m., M-V GRANADA HEAVY I swenter. I and hunt value to return. Call WOULD green, between 4:11 Campus ] Tun at U BL RAINCOA bershop party tha Tom's 14 St. ½b full-time $1.25 — 1 will do 2467, pick THEATRE . . . . . Telephone VIKING 3-5788 I WOULI my house perienced VI 3-9159 1033 M Taf As Carmel German dent — 1121 Rho TUTOR I ate stude 1338 Ohio ALTERA 7551, or TYPEWI Office su Typewrit 3-3644. U. A UUT Supplies etc., aqi everythi Chamele Grant's Conn., and mo DRESSmals, w939 $ \frac{1}{2} $Ma RENT a machine rented Sewing OIL PO loved o and up. U. R. Pet Cen west. P self-ser p.m. MILLIK location Lawren Kans CLASSIFIED ADS LOST LOST: GLASSES between Carruth- ton, Summerfield. Call Gail LONG, VI 3-9:444 11-7-17 LOST: Bone colored purse. 2nd door. Strong. Tuesday afternoon. Finder keep money, return purse and contents to Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint Hall. HEAVY BROWN & WHITE wool knit sweater. Large pheasant on the back, dog collar. Large pheasant on front. Of great value to me only. Reward offered for calf. Calf V-3-8544. 11-8 GLASS CASE and glasses in Robinson Gym Annex. Whoever picked them up please call Herb, VI 3-1034 between 5-6:30 p.m., M-W-F. 11-8 WOULD THE PERSON who took my green, German, overcoat by mistake, the Campus Barber Shop, please call Tum at VI T-3-3944. I have yours. 11-2 RAINCOAT taken by mistake from barr- party that has mine. Call Vi 2-0416. 11-6 BUSINESS SERVICES Tom's 14th St. Berber Shop, W 5, 14th St. 14th block off Mass. Free parking, 3 full-time barbers — All HAIRCUTS $1.25 — Hours 8:00-5:30 Mon.-Sat. 11-9 1 will do Ironing in my home. Call VI 2- 2657, pickup and delivery. 11-9 I WOULD LIKE IO DO baby sitting in my house, afternoons and evenings. Experienced mother. References. Call VI 3-9159. 11-6 Dixie Carmel Shop For Tops in Taffy Apples—Popcorn Assorted Chocolates Carmel Corn—Mixed Nuts Dixie Carmel Shop also 1033 Mass. VI 3-6311 Stuffed Toys German teacher, wife of exchange student — will tutor students in German 112I Rhode Island, upstairs, any time. 11-6 TUTOR FOR GERMAN. Austrian graduate. 1358 Ohio or call vii 3-4711, 6-11 p.m. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. tt DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- more details, call Ola Smith 9639‰ m35%. Call VI 3-5263. U. AUTO C.-Our complete lines of Pet Supplies - beds - harness - sweaters, gloves, etc., 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 RENT a new electric portable sewing machine. $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. More Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V 3-1267. tf OIL PORTRATTS painted. Lasting gift to oiled ones. Perfect Christmas gift, $35 and up. Call VI 3-8207, ask for Robert. 11-3 MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." Now at two MILLIKEN'S 102% of 320 lb. of Lawrence Ave. + 1021% of 320 lb. ft U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- morning. Phone VI 3-2921 — Modern selfservice — open weeks 8 to 6; 30 pm. Kansan Classifieds Get Results FOR SALE One National NC-188 Communications receiver. Call Dale Puckett, VI 2-1200. For Sale: Genuine Raccoon Coat. Call John Hooper. VI 7-6455. 11-7 '54 Ford Convertible, clean. Owner leaving town. $255. phone VI 3-801-8 MEN'S ENGLISH BICYCLE, new tires, tubes, bucket. $13. Call VI 2-381. 11-d Used Remington Quiet-riter, 1958 model. Good condition. Reasonable price. Call Karen Jennison, VI 2-1340 after 5 p.m. 11-8 Short Wave $ Transistor Radio with antenna-scope. Regular $9.95, now $5.00 complete. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass, 11.9 GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New & used guns, & ammo. Used guns bought — liberal trade-ins given. VI 3-7001. 11-8 BARGAINS — 4x5 Speed Graphic, f4.7 135 mm Optar Lamp, Graphmatic, Film pack adapt, film holders, film & acc. case, $130. For Leica, L16, G, 19-50 mm lens, $20. Bushnell, F4-18mm Opera glasses, $20. New: Call Bob, VI 3850. 1951 HARLEY-DAVIDSON good condition- $250. Carl VI 2-3356 Dick Libby, Jim L. Sutcliffe ATTENTION PLEDGES: Light your actives' cigarettes with a butane lighter. Ideal for gifts, suitable for framing. Complete with lifetime guarantee for only $3.75. Retail $5.00. Order from VI 2-3682 or see sample at B16 Miss. 11-7 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 CHEV. 4 DOOR. Clean, good tires. 54 CHEV. 4 DOOR. Call VI. 11-6 days, evening VI. 3-9285. STEVENS 22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like new. Call VI 3-2906 by 6 p.m. 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 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriter, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, service, rental. Printed typewriter, T75 Mass. IV 8-264. 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 S-4207 or VI S-4201. tt GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive lefinitions, and time saving charts. Hardy cross index for quick reference. Kerns, perv. V11, W24. Dodge in good condition. $80. Call VI 3-4911. 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 $25. Portable typewriters, $45.00 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and graphing tablets with minigraph at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3- 151 today. tf Kansan Want Ads Get Results 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 2-0659. 11-6 HELP WANTED A PRE-1957 Volkswagen Sedan, any com- pany. Ronald E. Smith Pennsylvania. 11-8 WANTED WANTED—GIRL to share nice apartment. Call Shirley, I 2-3407. 11-6 JAYHAWKERS Save on Gas at your OPEN 24 HOURS JAYHAWK STATION 1030 N. 3rd At East Turnpike Gate PHONE VI 3-9705 FOR RENT Vacancy available for 2 men in comfortable home at 2006 Mitchell Rd. Call 3-9653 for appointment. tf New 2 Bedroom Apartment, furnished or unfurnished. All modern conveniences. Off the side parking. Call VI 3-5187 sitter or call VI 3-2549. If no answer call VI 2-2560. LARGE FURNISHED apartment, e a east side, utilities paid; $50. Cali VI 3-6294. 2 LARGE ROOMS. (Bedroom & study identities, or will rent single bed at 330 $99) UNFURNISHED 2 BEDROOM house except refrigerator & stove. Attached garage & utility room. Newly re-decorated, lease for or more years, blocks adjacent to bedroom back yard. Possession in 2 weeks. $85 per month. Call VI 3-4897 at 6 p.m. 11-3 ROOMS FOR RENT for men. Linens fur- stretch. Culv I7-2-3522 or see at l11-3 Dr. D. ALL CIGARETTES 25c Would like to share 3 bedroom house House in Hillside area. Call VI 7-2605. TRANSPORTATION GIRL WANTS RIDE to New York for Thanksgiving, Call Gail at VI 2-0022. MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies ant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 3250 0350 DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. Friday, November 3, 1961 PROFESSIONAL SECRETARY wants typing. Specializes in German and Medical papers. Erika Williamson, VI 2-7376 11.9 Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2641 any time. TYPING EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Barlow, 408 W. 18th, VI T1 1648. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, I3-0558 1031 Miss. ti TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mellinger, VI 4-490. Experienced Tyspist; Electric typewriter interested in thesis, term papers, etc Student dates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001 tt "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting of the artworks. For excellent typing at standard rates, call Liss Loveo. Pope, VI 3-1697. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers thesis, dissertations, reports, manuscripts and books. Requires neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Received: 1511, 81 st. St. Call VI 5-6440; taxi: 1511, 81 st. St. Call VI 5-6440; 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. EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. Airlines Say "No" To Student Discounts Effective November 19th the nation's airlines have served notice to discontinue the "youth" fare discounts. Reservations for flights during the holiday vacations are already nearly fully booked with long wait-lists existing for some of the more popular schedules. 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. 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." For AIRLINE RESERVATIONS and TICKETS, Phone or see: MAUPINTOUR Travel Agency Phone VIking 3-1211 Now at THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER University Daily Kansan Page 11 711 West 23rd Street "Maupintour's 11th Year Serving KU and Lawrence" FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, papers, these dissertations. Reason is papers. Rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Excursion Service, 5137 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7718. Evers or Sat, 2-2186. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher, Dr. Pamela these, & reports accurately. Standard tests. Sr. Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. TYPING: Experientenced typist. Former secretary will use type theses, term papers, dissertations, research articles, rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEdlowney, Ph. VI 3-8568. **tf** PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do try experience — call VI 3-9126. Mrs Lo Gebhac GRAND OPENING SELF-SELECTION Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 1302 W. 23rd St. (23rd and Naismith) Come In and Browse . . . . OPEN Noon To 5 Sunday 9 to 9 Daily GRAND OPENING SELF-SELECTION Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 1302 W. 23rd St. (23rd & Naismith) JAY GALS Sizes 4½ To 10 387 OPEN 9 to 9 Daily Noon to 5 Sundays Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 3, 1961 THE PRAIRIE ROOM Will Be Open Again for Lunches Beginning Monday-November 6 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Daily Sundays- Open from 12 noon till 9 p.m. Closed All Day Tuesday C "Try Our Delicious Charcoal Luncheon Steaks and Other Tasty Lunches" PORK At Your KANSAS UNION Daily Hansan 59th Year No.37 LAWRENCE. KANSAS Monday, November 6, 1961 U.S. Must Support Berlin To Keep Europe Respect By Martha Moser A KU instructor who left Berlin a week before East Berlin was sealed off said yesterday that the United States would lose the respect and support of all Europe if it backed down on its agreement to protect Berlin. He said Russia had deliberately drawn up the agreements giving the U.S. access routes into Berlin, thinking we would back down from using them when threatened. When the U.S. backed down, he said, we would "lose face." ECKHARDT WESSLING, instructor of German, spoke yesterday at a coffee hour sponsored by the KU-Y. Twenty-two students met in the Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity house to hear him speak. Mr. Wessling talked about the history of Germany, the German people and East Berlin and East Germany under Communism. Early in his speech he asked if he might sit down to make the hour more informal. Mr. Wessling stressed the fact that there are three agreements that guarantee access to Berlin. "I was surprised," he said, "to learn that some professors have said there are no signed agreements guaranteeing this. The basis of free access is absolutely legal in three treaties." MR. WESSLING COMPARED conditions in East Germany today to those in George Orwell's novel, "1984." "Orwell forsees," he said, "In '1894' what happens is exactly what happens in East Germany. If a youth resists the government, the Communist party starts brainwashing him. Then he either escapes or is broken down until he joins the Communist Youth." A student asked if Radio Free Europe had any effect on thinking in East Germany. Mr. Wessling said that a radio in the American sector of Berlin broadcasts to East Germany but most people were afraid to listen to it for fear some neighbor might overhear it and report them. "THE COMMUNISTS DISLKE the radio transmitter and ask America to get rid of it," he said. "That's one of the reasons they would like to have West Berlin—to get rid of the station." Mr. Wessling did not express much hope for East Germany retaining recollections of freedom. He said that students are being indoctrinated to communism and the older people who remember the old system do not dare to talk. "In East Germany," he said, "the problem is individual freedom, not getting more food or more clothing. Although they scarcely have enough to keep alive, they would prefer getting less and being free. "IN EAST GERMANY since everything is government owned, there is no competition among people in their work, no price competition and no pride. "The farmers in Germany had owned their ground for a century. They considered their soil holy, the backbone of their life. The Communists took away everything and Homecoming Dance Tickets Now on Sale Tickets for the SUA Homecoming Dance may be purchased for $2.50 at the campus information booth and the Kansas Union ticket counter. The dance will feature Ralph Marterie and his band will play from 9-12 Saturday night. turned it into community property. They work their own land now as slaves. They obey their master Communist who tells them what to do." He described Berlin as a city island in a Red Sea. He said it Russians would not try to take West Berlin as long as American soldiers are there. The difference with the U.S. is not a military question, he said, but one of diplomacy. HE SAID THE COMMUNISTS put up the barbed wire fence dividing Berlin to keep the people in. "There was a great refugee problem with 2,000 people escaping a day. In five more years at this rate everyone would have been gone. They kept the people in because they wanted them to work. Those who try to get through are arrested or shot." The German instructor said that when he walked up to the barbed wire fence, the Communists called him an American slave, an American spy and a slave of the capitalists. "In theory," he said, "communism is appealing. But what they practice has nothing at all to do with their theory." MR. WESSLING SAID he had an aunt in East Germany that he hadn't seen for 15 years. She lived not far from him. "Just down the hill," he said pointing to the floor as if pointing to her house. "The Communists would not let me go to see her. When she died I asked for permission to go to her funeral. They would not let me. "Some people return to East Germany from West Germany to see the family they left behind. Sometimes a person is not allowed to see his family. That is the most cruel punishment imaginable — not being able to see one's mother." HE SAID THAT most other people who return to East Germany were those too lazy to work, the antisocial and criminals. "At first," he said, "those leaving West Germany are given everything. They are used for propaganda purposes, hailed as escaping from capitalism." Mr. Wessling is teaching at KU this year on a Fulbright scholarship. Scholarships Seen As Aid Solution Two KU faculty members say that federal scholarships are possibly the answer to the question of federal aid to education. Speaking at the Current Events Forum Friday, William York, assistant professor of education, and Darwin Dioff, assistant professor of economics, explained the reason for federal scholarships. PROF, DA1COFF said the fear of a central authority, or fear of federal encroachment on educational freedom, or even fear of racial integration hindered the development of a federal school aid program. With the use of federal scholarships, a student could attend the school of his choice. Prof. Daicoe said. The government would then circumvent the problem of private vs. public schools, the problem of racial integration, and the fear of federal authority over education. "There are six generalizations which can be given in support of federal aid," Prof. York added. They are: "MANY PEOPLE operate on the premise that there is something inherently bad about the federal government and something inherently good about local government." Prof. Daicoff said. - The national interest demands the best education for our children. - There is demonstrable information that where more money is spent the quality of education is better. "Actually, the national government has been less guilty than local government in inhibiting intellectual freedom." There are education deprivation in some areas of the United States. In the past, people favored financial help for constructing buildings rather than in paying teachers' salaries because they feel paying salaries will lead to control over teachers, he explained. - Educationally - deprived areas exert more effort to get money for education than wealthier areas. - Education is a commodity in inter-state commerce and thus cannot be considered as solely a local problem or concern. - The financial ability of States and local governments to finance education is less than the ability of the federal government. "THE IDEA of gimmicking up the tax structure is not the way to get around this bias," he said. Perhaps the best way to solve this problem, he added, would be the use of federal scholarships. Kennedy - Nehru In Conference NEWPORT, R. I. — (UPI) — President Kennedy personally greeted Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru today to begin a round of formal and informal talks on world problems between the two leaders of the West and the uncommitted bloc. As they walked from the plane, Nehru spotted about a dozen Indian students attending Brown University and the University of Rhode Island. He walked over to greet them and to accept the bouquets of flowers they brought him. Wearing a long brown tunic with his white cap and a rose in the button hole. Nehru disembarked from the plane at Quonset Point Nava! Air Station to shake hands with Kennedy. Nehru then walked to an open convertible for the short drive to the dock to board the presidential yacht, the Honey Fitz, for the trip to Hammersmith Farm, where the President and Prime Minister were to hold a private lunch. John Kenneth Galbraith, U. S. ambassador to India, also was in the welcoming party. During the Kennedy-Nehru lunch he was to lunch separately with Mrs. Kennedy and Mrs. Indira Gandhi, Nehru's daughter. Nehru, prior to his departure from New York, told newsmen he would discuss world affairs, particularly "maintenance of peace" with Kennedy. ABSORBED—Julietta Papadoponlon, Salonica, Greece, graduate student, studies the "Field Sculpture No. 2" by James Wenkle, Lawrence graduate student. The sculpture is on display at the 8th annual Kansas Designer Craftsman Show in the Music and Browsing Room in the Kansas Union. Frosh Football Player Dies After Operation John Reid Puppin, 18-year-old freshman from Oklahoma City, died early this morning from complications arising after an emergency appendectomy Oct.28. His death came at 1:10 a.m. after a series of ups and downs in his condition. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the University Health Service, I I I I I John Reid Pippin reported that on at least three occasions. Pippin was not expected to live through the night. During the day, however, Dr. Canuteson said, Pippin would show signs of rallying. Pippin was a football player for the University, and started as a defensive back in the KU freshman win over Kansas State. He was also a pledge of Sigma Chi fraternity at KU, and was to move into the Sigma Chi house the weekend the appendicitis developed. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Pippin Sr., a sister, Mrs. Joan Howell, and a brother, B. C. Pippin Jr., all of Oklahoma City. Funeral services will be from the M. O. Baggery Funeral Home in Edmond, Oklahoma. He will be buried Wednesday in Oklahoma City. Chest Drive to Feature Band A concert by the Dukes of Dixie-land Dec. 3 and a contest among living groups will be highlights of this year's campus chest drive. THE ONE-WEEK DRIVE WILL start December 2 with a breakfast at which Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoer will speak. In addition, a representative of the World University Service, which will receive the largest portion of the funds collected, may be able to appear. Charles Hess, Kansas City, Mo, senior and chairman of the campus chest committee, said a goal of $5,900 has been set for this year's drive. He said donations will be solicited from living groups and that each group will be asked to provide an estimate of the amount it can give. TROPHIES WILL BE AWARDED the fraternity, sorority, men's dormitory, and women's dormitory which gives the largest donation, he said. Last year, Delta Gamma won the sorority division; Tau Kappa Epsilon, fraternity; Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall, women's dormitory; and Battenfeld Hall, men's dormitory. The campus chest drive is conducted each year to give KU students the opportunity to make one contribution instead of being asked to donate to many drives during the year. The committee will divide the proceeds among a number of organizations, to be announced before the drive begins. 2. 32 Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday. November 6. 1961 U.S. Nuclear Testing President Kennedy announced recently that the United States will resume nuclear testing in the atmosphere if it is found to be necessary for maintaining strong national defenses and preserving the superiority of U.S. nuclear weapons over those of the Soviet Union. U. S. officials have said that if atmospheric tests are resumed, the much discussed neutron bomb, an anti-missile missile and improved types of nuclear warheads would probably be among the weapons tested. President Kennedy emphasized that radioactive fallout from any new U.S. testing would be held to an absolute minimum. THE RESUMPTION OF NUCLEAR TESTING by the United States is probably unavoidable. Despite the dangers of radioactive fallout, the effective defense of the NATO countries in particular and the West in general depends on the continued superiority of U.S. nuclear weapons. If we examine the balance of military power between the Communist bloc and the West, it quickly becomes clear that the advantage is with the Communists in the area of conventional forces. The standing army of the Soviet Union is larger than the combined armies of the NATO countries. It also has at its disposal the conventional armies of its satellites, although they are probably not reliable in view of the example the Hungarian Revolt furnished, when the Hungarian Army fought for the rebels. But Red China maintains a large standing army which is probably loyal to the Communist rulers of that country. THE RESUMPTION OF NUCLEAR TEST- THESE HUGE CONVENTIONAL FORCES of the Communist bloc have access to Europe and Asia by land. In a conventional war they would overrun all of Western Europe and much of the Middle East and Asia. It would be possible for the Western nations to create large conventional forces, but this would involve great expense and the disruption of many people's lives and would undoubtedly meet with public opposition. And unless the nations of Western Europe supplied the bulk of any enlarged conventional forces, the United States would have to shoulder the burden. This would place the United States at a great disadvantage in trying to maintain large conventional armies at extended distances from its own territory. It is unfortunate that the Soviet Union chose to break the test moratorium. But judging from the number of tests—over 30—and the length of time needed to prepare for such a series of tests, it is obvious that the Kremlin had long meant to break the moratorium, even while it was loudly supporting it. Viewed from a realistic standpoint, the Soviet action has really left the United States no choice. Tests to develop its own nuclear arsenal further became necessary and will undoubtedly take place. TO COUNTER THIS IMBALANCE OF CONVENTIONAL forces, the West has relied heavily on nuclear weapons. It is for this reason that the U.S. lead in the development of nuclear weapons must be maintained. It is definitely necessary in view of the unilateral resumption of nuclear testing by the Soviet Union. The U.S. tests, as has been pointed out, are necessary for the development of new and improved types of defensive and offensive nuclear weapons. The West cannot afford to allow the Soviet Union to gain a superiority in nuclear armament. And the tests the Soviet Union has been conducting have contained, aside from the massive and pointless terror bombs, many other tests that probably resulted in a considerable improvement in its nuclear arsenal. —William H. Mullins Lord Home on the Congo The House will remember why the United Nations went into the Congo. They went in because it was necessary to forestall external intervention, which was designed according to the Communist pattern to bring the Congo right into the cold war. And it was according to the Communist pattern for this reason: that the Russians took immediate advantage of a condition of civil war to try to establish a Communist presence in that country. If the United Nations had not gone in, the alternatives were either a Korea situation or an open door to the Communists. THE FIRST OBJECTIVE, to prevent a clash between the big powers in the Congo and the cold war from being imported into the country, was successful. The second objective, to bring the civil war to an end, so that the Congo leaders might settle their own affairs without distraction, was only partly successful — but, of course, it was a much more difficult task. Because private armies were milling around the Congo and making the chances of a constitutional settlement almost impossible, we agreed, on February 21, that in the last resort force might be used by the United Nations to preserve order WE THOUGHT THAT that was wrong, for these reasons, and I have thought nout them a great deal. Whatever the merits of the United Nations in its present state of organization, it would greatly exceed its strength if it tried to do anything of that kind; and, if it did get involved and opened itself to the accusation that it was interfering in internal politics, it would excite passions in Africa which would get completely out of control. This was particularly true of the Congo. Lastly, it was true that the role of the United Nations in the Congo was to help to keep order; but its first and most important role of all was to reconcile interests and there- I cannot say that at the time I was happy about voting for that resolution, but we did it because we believed that the authority of the United Nations must be sustained. That was the over-riding interest. But we made a public reservation, through our permanent representative at the United Nations, which said that while it was proper to use force in the last resort to prevent the spread of civil war, we could not support the use of that force by the United Nations to impose a particular political pattern on the Congo. posing political solutions by force. I do not deny that this was an extremely difficult resolution for Mr. Hammarskjold to interpret, but so certain was I that the advice which we were giving was right—from my own knowledge of Africans I know that you cannot hurry them in their constitutional developments — that I repeated this advice to the Secretary General at regular intervals between February and August of this year. IN MY OPINION, mistakes were made: mistakes in interpretation of the resolutions and mistakes in their applications on the ground; but I hope that the lessons have been learned. The main lesson is not that the United Nations should leave the Congo or that the United Nations should leave Katanga, but that the United Nations should apply all its talents, and they are very great, to helping a reconciliation between Mr. Tshombe and Mr. Aduola. fore not to get involved in imposing political solutions by force. Let me make clear the United Kingdom's objectives beyond doubt, because I do not want any ambiguity about this whatsoever. We want to see a unified Congo and we have worked hard all the time and have supported the United Nations in that objective. We have never seen a future for an independent Katanga and we see no future for it now. Daily Hansan LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler 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 Managing Editor 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 ALL OUR INFLUENCE, therefore, has been and will be exerted to help the Congolese to work out their own constitutional future and arrive at a united federal constitution or whatever their own decision may be, and to help the United Nations to help them to do so. Now, the thing that is necessary is to assist Leopoldville and Elisabethville to get together. This is no time for pride or prejudice, and I sincerely trust that after all the treasure and blood that has been expended Mr. Adoula and Mr. Tshombe will agree to meet and settle their troubles in their own way. (From a speech by the Earl of Home. British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, before the House of Lords on Oct. 17.) THRU HISTORY WITH PROF SNARF 5-35 "AT LEAST HE'S TRYIN' TO HOLD OUR INTEREST." Is Peace Inevitable? By Art Buchwald People who have been upset over the way things have been going in the world lately will be happy to know there is now an organization concerned with peace and its consequences. It's called "Ban the Peace," and its major appeal is to people who would like to go to war immediately and "get it over with." WE HAD THE good fortune to talk to the Secretary of B.T.P. and he told us there was more interest in his organization than ever before. "After all the hysterical peace mongering in the United Nations for the past fifteen years" he said "people are starting to come around to our point of view that peace is not the answer to the problems facing the world and some other solution will have to be found. For years we worked alone, just a few dedicated souls stoking the fires of world conflagration while every one else sat around talking, talking, talking. But now we're receiving support from every corner of the globe and people are finally becoming frightened of all-out peace." "But what exactly does your organization do?" we asked the secretary. PICKING UP A hand grenade and tossing it up and down, he replied, "Our organization works on the theory that people basically hate each other and their leaders are standing in the way of a universal war. We try to point out provocations which will lay the groundwork for hostilities. For a short time people were deaf to provocations and wouldn't recognize one if it was thrown in their faces. But things are changing fast. Now people are willing to be provoked on any issue. One of our biggest successes was in Cuba, and now the Tunisian crisis shows what you can do with the slightest of provocations. This came as a bonus to us as we were concentrating all our efforts on Berlin, and we never counted on the French losing their sangfroid in North Africa. "Our organization tries to find intolerable situations such as Kasmir, South Tyrol, and the Congo, and we help people to work our warlike solutions to problems that otherwise might be solved by peaceful means. We promote nationalism and encourage people to pay more attention to race, creed, and color. We favor rearmament conferences and military aid to underdeveloped countries." "WE HAVE A PACKAGE plan for 'Atoms for War,' and we are anxious to get nuclear tests started again. We also have a missile-to-missile program which, when put into effect, will discourage room for negotiation. We believe in getting people into a corner and forcing them to fight their way out." "This must be a very expensive thing." "Yes," the secretary said, "but it's not half as expensive as what peace costs. Do you know that people still spend more money on peace than they do preparing for war?" "It's hard to believe," we said. "WELL, IT'S TRUE," he said, jabbing a bayonet into his desk. "Look at all these international exchanges, trade fairs, and good will tours. Just think what you could do with that money if there wasn't a peace? Do you know you could build ten hydrogen bombs for what it costs to build ten universities in Africa? Do you realize you could have constructed an aircraft carrier for the same amount of money thrown away on the Olympics last summer? When I think of all the money wasted on technical aid to underdeveloped countries that could have been invested in jet fighters, where it would have done the most good, my blood boils. "But I shouldn't complain," the secretary said, lighting his cigar with a flame-thrower. "People are finally starting to come around to our way of thinking. "We thought 1956 with Hungary and Suez was the greatest year for 'Ban the Peace,' but 1961 is shaping up even better. People everywhere are finally getting tired of being pushed around." (—New York Herald Tribune, August 8) --- Monday, November 6, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 2 the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MARK TWAIN, edited, with introduction, notes and essay by Charles Neider. Washington Square Press, 90 cents. In his introduction, Charles Neider suggests that Mark Twain's Autobiography should be ranked with the autobiographies of Benjamin Franklin and Henry Adams. I don't think so. I'm not sure it's really an autobiography, and it takes too much careless license with facts and history. It is warm and winning, however, and pure Mark Twain. The penchant for exaggerated humor that distinguished Twain and others in the local color tradition is present here. Reminiscences and even diatribes are worth reading. THE FORGETFULNESS OF MARK TWAIN is a puzzling thing. He has difficulty recalling whether he put certain episodes in "Tom Sawyer" or "Huckleberry Finn." He recalls with difficulty when certain things happened. He is especially derelict in respect to "Innocents Abroad." He tells that he used 10 or 12 of the Quaker City letters in assembling the final book. This is not so. Careful collation of the book and the letters reveals that Twain used almost all of the newspaper-slanted letters, and in their entirety at that. He has a fixation on Bret Harte. Harte "hadn't a sincere fiber in him," Twain writes. "I think he was incapable of emotion, for I think he had nothing to feel with." He is harsh with Mrs. Thomas Bailey Aldrich, though kindly toward Aldrich himself. IT IS THE EARLIER PART OF THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY that most enchants the reader. This is young Same Clemens growing up in Florida, Mo., and later in Hannibal, terrorizing his brother Henry, mystifying his mother, observing slavery and emigrants bound for California, being the hero of the town for allowing himself to be mesmerized (though he was faking everything throughout). Then he becomes a printer and learns about life on the Mississippi, goes to Nevada with his brother Orion, mines silver, works on the Territorial Enterprise, goes to San Francisco and the Sandwich Islands and the Holy Land, writes "The Jumping Frog" and "Innocents Abroad" and "Roughing It," meets Oliva Langdon, marries and becomes a solid citizen of Hartford. NEIDER'S EDITION OF THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY differs from that of Albert Bigelow Paine and from Bernard DeVoto's later "Mark Twain in Eruption." The edition, in fact, occasioned an international controversy that Neider includes as a kind of appendix—his dispute with the Moscow Literary Gazette, which had said that America has an "official line" on Mark Twain, "that the nation tries to suppress or forget him, that his editors have followed the line carefully and that I have been the worst offender in this respect." He doesn't tell much about becoming a solid citizen. The latter part of the autobiography falls apart, with long chapters on his family and long moods of depression and bitterness. The interchange of Neider and the Gazette are in this volume, and they are of interest. The Autobiography remains of value chiefly not as an autobiography but as one more book full of Twain ideas, language, comments and philosophy. ★ ★ ★ THE FLOWERING OF NEW ENGLAND, by Van Wyck Brooks. Dutton Everyman, $1.85. Van Wyck Brooks gives us a panorama of American life in his "Makers and Finders" series. Some literary critics and some literature majors have intense contempt for Brooks. Too often their case is based on his early interpretations of Mark Twain, which Bernard DeVoto made an effort to refute several years later. POSSIBLY BROOKS IS NOT A DEEP CRITIC of American literature. But he offers a picture of literary America that is difficult to argue with. This is the first-published of his monumental series, though it follows "The World of Washington Irving" chronologically. It won him the Pulitzer prize and helped to make his popular reputation. BROOKS UNFOLDS HERE A PICTURE OF LITERARY New England from early in the 19th century to the era of the Civil War. This was the time of New England's greatness. Giants appeared elsewhere, but most of them came later, like Melville and Whitman and Henry James and Mark Twain. NEW ENGLAND IN ITS DAY OF FLOWERING was a region where Harvard College dominated thought, where Boston was the intellectual center. Boston and Cambridge. Bancroft was writing his historical epic that glowed with praises for democracy. Long-fellow was translating Latin in Cambridge, Emerson was building his circle of Transcendentalists, Thoreau was seeking solitude in the woods. Hawthorne was brooding at the custom-house in Salem. Transcendentalist dreamers who had been touched with Fourierism were at work at Brook Farm. Dana was writing about two years before the mast and Holmes was dominating his circle. Garrison was writing wild diatribes in the Liberator. Channing was stirring up Unitarian excitement, and Allston and Stuart were creating memorable paintings. Liberal Victory In NSA Seen Despite a well-financed assault from a highly vocal but surprisingly small group on the far Right, the United States National Student Association's Fourteenth Annual Congress, which recently ended ten days of deliberations at the University of Wisconsin, was clearly a victory for student liberalism. LACKING the strength to launch a frontal attack on NSA, the conservatives struck at the flank of liberal positions and, in some instances, managed minor victories in weakening position statements. The Association's attitude on Cuba in recent years has mirrored, but to a lesser degree, the position of the adult community as Fidel Castro moved steadily leftward and adopted an increasingly belligerent anti-United States posture. In making such an evaluation one should add that there are signs that the battle between the Right and Left in NSA may have only just begun. The liberal-oriented leadership of NFA faces a threat from both the College Young Republicans and the right-wing Young Americans for Freedom, the former controlled lock, stock and barrel by supporters of Senator Goldwater, Arizona Republican, and the latter heavily oriented toward the lunatic fringe that finds its home in the John Birch Society. Both groups, with interlocking leadership, have threatened to conduct a nationwide campaign, beginning this fall, against NSA. In 1959, NSA denounced the Bastista regime and supported the revolt that was centered in the Sierra Maestra. In 1960, NSA adopted a resolution which said, in part, "NSA views the implementation of the concept of university reform in Cuba with interest and, in some respects, concern." This year NSA delegates denounced Castro's suppression of academic freedom and democratic student unions. At one point in their deliberations the delegates wired the heads of South and Central American governments to appeal to Castro to urge clemency for a group of Cuban student leaders who faced death as a result of anti-Castro activities. Significantly, the delegates denounced both Soviet shipment of arms to Havana and this country's role in the ill-fated April invasion. Conservative forces, aided by Fulton Lewis III, a former HUAC aide and technical director of the controversial film, "Operation Abolition," sought to reverse a 1960 NSA stand calling for "reform or abolition" of the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Instead, this year's delegates urged abolition straight out, apparently convinced reform of HUAC is no longer possible. The students also petitioned the House of Representatives to "disclaim the film 'Operation Abolition' as an official and accurate documentation of the San Francisco demonstrations against HUAC. THE CONSERVATIVES, who had hoped to prove that a conservative tide is running on the campuses of American colleges and universities, were outmeuered and outvoted most of the way. The results of the ten-day gathering seemed to confirm the judgment on the political coloration of present day youth expressed by Governor Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin in his speech welcoming the NSA. "I have heard it said on occasion," said Governor Nelson, "that your generation is turning conservative. I find this hard to believe, although conservative youth today may be better organized and financed by their elders. "It is your generation that has given us the stirring sit-ins in the South and militant support for them in the North. Surely this is not conservative. It is your generation that has participated so much in the Freedom Rides dedicated to smashing interstate segregation. Surely this is not conservative. And it is your generation that has answered the call of the Peace Corps with such enthusiasm." (From the October 1961 issue of The Progressive.) Campus Traffic It Looks This Way... By Ervin H. Schmidt Lawrence graduate student The announcement that the campus would be open only to restricted traffic next year came with a sonic boom. One wonders why the announcement was so sudden, bold and irretrievable. The auto is now a green-eyed monster and the immediate forthwith cessation of tomorrow's traffic is today's fact. NOT A SOUL WOULD TRADE PLACES with the traffic cop at the Sunflower Road and Jayhawk Boulevard intersection. An object subject to pity and scorn, he needs the arms of an octopus and the patience of a one-armed paperhanger. No one has anything against him, but everyone is in a hurry and the intersection serves entirely too many purposes. When the cop stops to bawl out a victim or give a ticket, frustration is supreme. This one intersection is, of course, the main problem. The second problem is that Jayhawk Boulevard is used as a crosswalk almost anywhere and any time. Making this thoroughfare wider would help some in that there would be more dodging room. Next year's solution calls for five turn-arounds and five manned stations—at five points that will shut off traffic at the Jayhawk-Sunflower intersection. THE TURN-AROUNDS WILL HELP SOME. Many a car now must go through the intersection when the driver devoutly wishes he did not have to. But the five manned stations is a rather peculiar solution. Iron curtain check points, gendarmes, inspections and questioning. My, isn't education getting more European all the time. And what is so bad about owning and driving a car anyway? Virtually everyone drives a car, and for good purpose. How else can you be in more widely separated places in a given amount of time and actually accomplish more? The auto is here to stay. It is an American institution. Notice how the state equates highway maintenance costs with costs of education. KANSAS HAS FANTASTIC BYPASSES, overpasses, underpasses and four leaf clovers almost everywhere and anywhere. What is to hinder traffic count data from establishing the need on the campus? Look at the experience of the American city—look even at Lawrence. The simple problem of parking, fairly successfully solved with municipal parking lots, brings some customers to town. As many, however, prefer to shop elsewhere because highway access and parking are available. Why restrict traffic as a matter of privilege to the white license plate holder and the faculty poll tax payer? Another solution at KU (other than the one already announced) would be simply to employ or make use of one fairly good civil engineer to lay out more permanent solutions. For example, Sunflower Road could easily underpass Jayhawk. A short 50 to 75 yard underpass would leave Jayhawk and landscaping as it is now. The underpass would eliminate turns at the intersection, provide pedestrian crossings for Jayhawk and increase the value of X parking lot. SURELY MANY OTHER GOOD STUDENT IDEAS are floating around the campus such as putting a Holland Tunnel through at Fourteenth with a way station at the Student Union. It would soon pay for itself. There isn't a single street on the campus that could not be widened. Let's knock out some curbs—release old restraints and pentup frustrations—make room. Why pile all the buildings on top of an Arkansas Razorback and then declare it off limits except for the fleet of foot? Places will be made for traffic eventually anyway. Why try to hold the flood back with ten whistle tooters at five lonely checkpoints? Worth Repeating Some schools are friendly, others are cold. In some the intellectual life flourishes; in others the intellectual life has to fight for its existence. There are fraternity schools and Bohemian schools, rural and urban, religious and militantly secular. And there are those colleges—more interesting than most—in which many of these tendencies are complexly intertwined, and the student must define himself as he unravels the twisted strands.David Boroff ★ ★ ★ The trick is not simply to match the college and the student a dull, gray, compatible marriage. There is a lot to be said for conflict, polarity, opposition. Out of rugged encounter comes intellectual and moral muscle. A certain kind of rural boy or girl may well profit from a sophisticated urban college. And a New York City provincial can achieve undreamed of breakthroughs by living in a small town or rural school.-David Boroff ★★ One can nardy resist the fantasy of shuffling the elements of some of the schools. Birmingham-Southern could learn from some of Brooklyn College's intellectually bellicose kids, just as Brooklyn could profit from BSC's relaxed rhythms. Wisconsin's hurly-burly of farmer's sons and storekeeper's daughters might dilute Harvard's tendency toward preciousness. There should be an infusion of Claremont's rugged optimism about higher education in boards of trustees all around the country.-David Boroff oR Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday. November 6, 1961 KU Generally for Peace Corps Idea KU students generally support the Peace Corps, but they are split in their opinions as to why University students in particular are apathetic toward the organization. Beverly Browne, Kansas City, Mo., junior, feels that KU students are apathetic because "they don't want to give up the luxuries of the United States for the squalid conditions of a less fortunate country." JAMES DUKELOW, Prairie Village graduate student, is "in favor of the Peace Corps," but will not go into it because of the "vague relationship between the Peace Corps and the military service. I don't want to do both," he said. Jean Hardy, Norman, Okla., senior, said that KU students are unable to see themselves as Peace Corpsmen because "they are soft and don't want to be tied down for any length of time." Harold Corwin, Kansas City, Mo. freshman, said "I don't feel that I know enough about the Peace Corps to even comment." OTHERS PLEADED LACK of knowledge concerning the subject. Patrick Quigley, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said "Nobody knows what it is." He said he is not interested in joining because "it doesn't take care of my military service." Barry Molineux, Sabetha freshman, also blamed Peace Corps apathy on the lack of information available concerning the movement. Suzanne Bird, Topeka senior, thinks that the apathy toward the Peace Corps has to do with "Kansas' isolatism tendencies." She thinks that "the intellectual climates on either of the coasts would be more conducive to an active interest in world affairs." Ursula Lipowsky, German instructor from Germany, said that "one should try everything one can." And she does not know why KU students aren't interested in it. JUDY KUNKLER, Kansas City sophomore, said, "I would be interested in the Peace Corps if I weren't interested in doing something else with my life. Most college students come to a university with a definite idea as to what they want out of life, and it's too late to change after they get here." Terry Murphy, Lawrence junior, said that the Peace Corps "in theory is a good idea, but because it's a Franklin D. Murphy, former KU chancellor and now chancellor of UCLA, said recently that the United States must offer other countries aid in education as well as financial aid. F. D. Murphy Speaks At Oregon University Dr. Murphy made the statement in the keynote address at Charter Day at the University of Oregon. His speech was reported by the Oregon Daily Emerald. The United States is failing in its job to aid others in the field, he said, because many U.S. Congressmen still believe dollars to advance education is "boondoggle." This lack of awareness hurts our national security, he added. Dr. Murphy said the world's people understand that the success of the American Revolution turned an underdeveloped continent into the present United States. "They seek from us the kind of tools to permit them to become mature, dignified members of God's community," he said. Katanga Urged To Rejoin Congo EVANSTON, III—(UPI)—Mennen Williams, assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, has called on Katanga leader Moise Tshombe to begin negotiations to join Katanga with the rest of the Congo. cram course it does not give students enough background to prepare them for their job overseas." "We hope Tshombe and his people will quickly rejoin the Congo and not determinedly insist on bringing down on themselves the wrath of their brother Congolese," said Williams. Judi Scroggin, Kansas City, Mo. junior, feels that KU students are apathetic toward the Corps because "KU students can't think beyond the next exam or the immediate future." RUTH JAMES, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said that KU students lack interest in the Peace Corps movement because they are "more interested in marriage than a career after college, and because they do not realize the seriousness of the world situation—it doesn't hit close enough to home to impress them." SENIORS If you're not planning to be in Lawrence next semester, but still want your pictures in the senior section of the Jayhawker, make your appointment now Call Estes Studio at 924 Vt., VI 3-1171 Soft Sell ITHACA, N.Y. - (UFI) - Supermarket customers spend more money to the strains of soft music, than to loud music, according to a study made by Cornell University psychology students. Retirement Haven SAN JOSE, Costa Rica — (UPI) — A total of 5,444 U.S. citizens, most of them persons living in retirement, had received certificates of residence in Costa Rica as of last Oct. 1, according to government figures. Fight Crop Disease BERKELEY, Calif. — (UPI) A study is under way at the University of California to combat banana wilt, a virulent disease that causes hundreds of millions of dollars in damage annually. SAVE TIME, SAVE MONEY! ON ALL YOUR CLEANING at 9TH and MISSISSIPPI ST. 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Dolores Marti de Cid, assistant professor of Spanish literature and grammar, and her husband Jose de Cid Perez are collaborating on "A History of Latin American Theatre." The first volume, "Pre-Columbian Theatre," will be published in Madrid, Spain, early next year. IN ADDITION, Mrs. de Cid is working on an elementary Spanish grammar with Agnes Brady, professor of Spanish. She is also working on a book based on her tour of Latin America in 1946-49 for her advanced conversation course in Spanish. Mrs. de Cid, daughter of a Cuban diplomat, was born in Madrid but, under Cuban laws regarding the diplomatic service, she is considered a Cuban. Mrs. de Cid did her doctoral work at the University of Havana, leading up to it with schooling in Madrid, Lisbon Portugal, and Hong Kong. She speaks Spanish, Italian, French and reads Portuguese. Mr. de Cid, a noted Cuban playwright and critic of Latin American theater, is in charge of Latin American theater for an Italian encyclopedia to which Mrs. de Cid has contributed several articles. THE DE CIDS WERE married in 1839 and have one daughter who is now married to a New York businessman. The de Cids keep an up-to-date set of scrapbooks in which they record their travels. It is from one of these scrapbooks that Mrs. de Cid is adapting the book for her advanced Spanish conversation course. Mr. and Mrs. de Cid have written about 50 articles for a Cuban magazine describing the experiences they have had with the people of South America. MRS. DE CID PRAISED KU's Spanish department. "They have good methods here" she said. "I thoroughly enjoy teaching the students. They are so bright." "It's the best department in the United States," he said. MES. DE CID WILL TEACH her specially next spring—Latin American literature. In 1958-57 she taught this course for the first time at Rome University in Italy. For her work she was awarded a plaque with the wolf Romulus, mythical founder of Rome, imprinted on it. Film Banned KARACHI — (UFI) — The Allied Artists' motion picture "Operation Eichmann" has been banned by the Central Board of Film Censors at Rawalpindi as "unsuitable for public exhibition in Pakistan." Airlines Say "No" To Student Discounts 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. 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. 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 dueing Thanksgiving and Christmas. The situation is really critical." For AIRLINE RESERVATIONS and TICKETS, Phone or see: MAUPINTOUR Travel Agency Phone VIking 3-1211 THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 711 West 23rd Street "Maupintour's 11th Year Serving KU and Lawrence" HAKONE, Japan — (UPI) — The United States has told Jason in planned to increase imports $2 billion within the next year. U.S. Will Increase Japanese Imports It was the first clearcut sign to come out of the three-day joint cabinet level meeting that the United States is pulling out of its recession and that officials are confident recovery will continue. Monday, November 6, 1961 University Daily Kansan The United States also said Japan would obtain a sizable share of the increase in imports. The statements came at a session of the meeting of delegations headed by U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Japanese Foreign Minister Zentaro Kosaka. During the conference, the Japanese had complained of the growing deficit in its trade with the U.S. and criticized such save-the-dollar policies as the "buy American" and "ship American." U.S. Youth Labeled As Conformist NEW YORK — (UPI) — The nation's college and high school youth are "conformists and conservatives" in the opinion of a Jewish leader. Morris B. Abram, who served as counsel to the Peace Corps during its formative stages, said last week "More than half of our teen-agers believe that censorship of books, magazines, newspapers, radio and TV is all right." He said today's college student tends to accept things as they are and lacks the rebellious spirit. "He is likely to look inward seeking personal happiness and adjustment because the economic world outside is a fairly satisfactory place, and the political world he often regards as too complicated to be worth his individual interest and exertions," Abram said. Quarterback Club Meeting Exciting films of the KU-Nebraska game Narrated by a top player. Forum Room Student Union Tuesday, Nov. 7 7 p.m. Free Admission & Cokes Kansan Want Ads Get Results Check your opinions against L&M's Campus Opinion Poll #10 $\textcircled{1}$ Which would you choose upon graduation ... □ a $4,500-a-year job in the U. S. □ or a Peace Corps job in Africa? $\textcircled{2}$ Are Greek-letter sororities and fraternities good for American Colleges YES NO $\textcircled{3}$ Do men expect their dates to furnish their own cigarettes? ABTΔ GO HOME! YES NO Here's how 1029 students at 100 colleges voted! Expect more... get more from L&M The rich-flavor leaf among L&M's choice tobaccos gives you more body in the blend more flavor in the smoke more taste through the Pack or box—L&M's the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke. $\textcircled{1}$ Job in U. S. 59% $\textcircled{2}$ Peace Corps 41% $\textcircled{3}$ Yes 73% $\textcircled{4}$ No 41% A man is cleaning up the street. He is carrying a bag full of trash. HOT 2 ABΓΔ GO HOME! YES NO □ YES □ NO L&M L&M FILTERS LUGGETT & MIVERS TOBACCO CO. L&M FILTERS LUGGETT & MIVERS TOBACCO CO. THE MIRACLE TEA L&M FILTERS LUGGET & WINDS TOBacco CO. 3 2 1 Try best tasting L&M today...in pack or box Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, November 6.1961 Experience, All-around Play Contribute to Kansas' Win By Bill Sheldon A thoroughly out-coached and overpowered Nebraska Cornhusker team was run through and around, passed over and defensed tenaciously Saturday as the Kansas Jayhawkers methodically moved to their fourth consecutive win of the season. 28-6. The decisive experience of the winners was apparent to the 33,000 chilled Husker Homecoming fans from the first as KU used its superior ability to its best advantage, employing the pass, trap, backback counter, and varying defenses to thwart their hosts and advance their own record to 4-2-1 and 4-1 in The Big Eight which leaves them in a second place tie with Missouri and still in contention for a championship and bowl bid. WITH THE LOSERS ENTRENCHED in Coach Bill Jennings' unchangeable six man defensive line for the entire game, the Jayhawkers took advantage of the easy-to-clear holes over center, off tackle and around end. Eight ball carriers churned for 274 rushing yards, a new season high that surpasses the 253 aggregate of the previous week's manhandling of Oklahoma State, 42-8. Coach Jack Mitchell called upon fullbacks Ken Coleman and Jim Jarrett to sever the Husker defensive center consistently on a well executed counterplay behind precise blocking from a quick striking forward wall. Coleman totaled 61 yards on 14 carries to follow teammate Tony Leiker as the leading rusher for the game. ALTOUGH QUARTERBACK John Hadl carried for only 36 yards, all off the option, his play consistently befuddled the less experienced Nebraska forwards. This enabled the brilliant Hawk leader to throw seven completions in 10 passing attempts for 113 yards. This offensive show was two yards better than against O-State, Hadl's best game of the season to that point Mitchell mentioned, following the win, that the greater experience of his linemen was a major factor. Frequently Kansas caught the larger Nebraska linemen out of position; but the reverse was almost unnoticeable. Proof of this is the mere 90 yards rushing which the losers were able to get. THE COMBINED PASSING and throwing of the Jays proved to be their best offensive show of the campaign. Mixing these two weapons with care and timeliness, the Hawkers got results to the tune of 387 yards. This surpassed the 255 season ceiling amassed against O-State. The Kansas defense was more than equal to the task of thwarting the Husker offensive jabs and feints but there remained the problem of pass defense. Nebraska, due mainly to inept throwing, completed only nine of 23 passes. BECAUSE OF THE KANSAS defense, a 6-1-4 designed to prevent the long pass which wrote the KU epitaph in the loss to Colorado but allows for the shorter completion. Nebraska's aerial effectiveness was limited to only occasional success. Nebraska made gains of more than 20 yards on only two instances. One of the two longer passes, from Ron Meade to Jim Hueg, was good for 30 yards and set up Bill Thornton's 6-yard right end sweep for the first ground score against the KU's starters in 10 games. The score came early in the final period. This was the only genuine thrill for the fans, who sat under leaden skies in 36 degree weather facing a 20 mile per hour northwesterly wind. The only harmful Hawker mistake offensively was the loss of three fumbles. Twice scoring marches were halted by KU losing possession inside the Nebraska 20. NOT A HINDERANCE thus far in the season, Coach Mitchell discounted the fumble problem to the cold weather, the first for the Hawkers in two seasons. The elusive Leiker again provided one of the big thrills of the game as he shook loose for an untouched score with 1:16 remaining to play. Leiker, a speedy sophomore who has come to the fore in the last two games with long scoring runs off identical plays late in the game—an inside double reverse executed to perfection—scampered for 74 yards on six tries. IT WAS LEIKER'S 35-yard flight down the east sideline (last week he went for 53 yards) which Coach Mitchell said "iced the game." Leiker had another sure score literally slip from his grasp. On KU's second possession of the game he took the lateral on the option right and Nebraska's Daler Dyer slapped the oval from his arm on the Husker eight with open field ahead. Kansas' methods in its first two scores were very similar. Both featured a well-balanced offensive Coleman opened the scoring on a one-yard dive after KU had pounded 80 vards in fourteen plaus. display which out-manned the Huskers with no apparent trouble. Ken Tiger pounced on a Dennis Claridge fumble late in the second stanza to give the Jayhawkers possession on the Husker 22. From there, Kansas rolled in seven plays to a tally by Hadl on a two yard keep. The third touchdown came midway in the third quarter on one of the more exciting plays of the afternoon. Hadl rolled left, got a key block from Curtis McClinton and threw a running pass to Rodger McFarland who was closely defensed. The nimble junior out-fought a Husker back and pranced into the end zone for the score. The play went 29 yards with McFarland covering the final eight. Wichita U. a Bowl Possible Dean Barnes kicked all four of the extra point attempts for Kansas. By United Press International Wichita's Wheatshockers are being mentioned prominently as a possible post-season bowl team. Coach Hank Foldberg's crew reportedly is being sought by the Aviation Bowl at Dayton, Ohio, and the Sun Bowl at El Paso, Tex. The Shockers are two-time Missouri Valley Conference champions. They turned in one of their most impressive showings of the season last week in beating Oklahoma State of the Big Eight Conference, 25-13. The 25-point outburst was one of the biggest of the season against Oklahoma State. The defensive-minded Cowboys have won only two games, but never were beaten badly—other than a 42-8 lacing by Kansas a week ago. Wichita, which has been hot and cold offensively all year, streaked to its seventh win in eight outings. Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Bill Sheldon To walk up to Coach Jack Mitchell after KU's one-sided win Saturday, one might expect him to be happy, if not over-joyed. But, the first thing the affable Jayhawker mentor did was to complain. It was not with the play of his charges that the easy-to-smile, hard-to-please coach was in a rage over, but a decision of the officials which actually had no effect upon the outcome of the game. Late in the game the officials claimed "coaching from the sidelines" on reserve quarterback Brian Palmer. PALMER IS FREQUENTLY USED ON THE SIDELINES BY Mitchell to relay plays and defensive formation from the coaches in the press box to the players on the field. On the situation in question, Palmer was using a card to tell the Kansas defenders how to line-up, which is what, according to Mitchell, the officials complained about. "I've never heard of such a call." raged Mitchell. "We use signals all the time. And, I can't see how a player can be accused of 'coaching.'" "THEY (NEBRASKA) ARE GOING TO BE TOUGH. They have a lot of young players who need experience. Our guys just reacted better in the line which was a factor. After calming down, Mitchell had high praise for the Nebraska team. Mitchell said he had visions of another Colorado game, when the Buffs opened up with a torrid passing attack in the final 13 minutes to erase a 19-point Kansas lead, as the Huskers began throwing with some success in the final period. Mitchell said he didn't feel Nebraska was really out of the game until Tony Leiker sprinted 35 yards for the final score. "NEBRASKA'S LOOSE DEFENSE HELPED OUR OFF tackle and counter. Also, this eight man front (two linebackers playing virtually in a 6-man line) made our option play effective. But, they had to play that way to stop our wide stuff," said Mitchell. 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On heavi this visit swee and men ONE HOUR MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING New Study Reveals Russia Has More Men Than Women By Louis Cassels WASHINGTON —(UPI) — Russia "probably has the largest proportion of widows of any country in the world." It also has one of the world's most "polyglot" populations, with more than 100 separate nationalities. These and many other facts about the Russian population are disclosed in a new study by the Population Reference Bureau, a private non-profit research organization whose headquarters are here. "Not a single generation of the Soviet people, except those who are under 12 years of age, has escaped the repercussions of war, revolution, forced labor or famine," the Bureau reports. "These misfortunes have left many scars on the Russian population." One of the scars is an unusually heavy proportion of widows. And this is turn helps to explain why visitors to Russia see older women sweeping streets, shoveling snow, and performing other jobs which men would do in this country. Up to age 32, Russia has a normal sex ratio—that is, the number of men and women is approximately equal. Above that age, "the sex structure is very lopsided since women outnumber men by 20 million." Most of the "surplus" women are widows. Three-fourths of Russia's population (1959 census) of 209 million is made up of Slavic peoples—the Great Russians, Ukrainians and Belorussians (sometimes called White Russians). Other major nationality groups include 22 million "mid-Asians", including Uzbekes, Turkmen, Azerbaidzhani. Armenians and Georgians. Russia, like the United States, has experienced a substantial population shift from rural to urban areas during the past 20 years. The rural population declined by 21 million, while the urban population grew by 40 million. It also has had a major geographic shift in population concentration. But whereas America's population has historically moved westward, Russia's great migration has been in the opposite direction—eastward toward the Urals and Siberia. Russia's birth rate (25 births per 1,000 population per year) and its overall population growth rate (about 1.7 per cent annually at present) closely approximate those of the United States. The Bureau reports that the Soviet government seems to follow "contradictory" policies towards population control. On one hand, it permits contraception, abortion and sterilization for health and other reasons. On the other hand, the government provides financial subsidies for large families, maternity leaves for employed urban women, and medals to "heroine mothers" who have 10 or more children. With a population density of 24 people per square mile—quite low by Western European or Asian standards—Russia "does not have a population problem in the general sense of undue pressure of people upon living space"—at present. But the Bureau says "it is possible that in the long run food production will prove to be the Achilles' heel of the Soviet Union." Russia has much poor land (47 per cent of its area has permanently frozen subsol, 14 per cent is desert) and its agricultural output also is handicapped by "harsh" climatic conditions. Climber HOUSTON, Tex. — (UPI) — Charles Sikes, Jr., of Houston, claims the "climbing-up-and-down steps" championship. Page 7 An architect's representative. Sikes made his mark in the world of sports when he climbed to the top of the new 44-story Humble Building and then wearly trudged back down. The round trip is 2,046 steps. It is bound to be a record west of the Mississippi, because the Humble Building is the tallest structure west of the river. Official Bulletin **Foreign Students:** Don't forget to turn in the Thanksgiving vacation hospitality forms to 228 Boone Ave. and organized at The Metropolitan Inn, available during the holiday; Qlata and Burns, Kansas. TODAY Kuku Pep Club. 6:30 p.m.. O read Room, Kansas Union. TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion and Breakfast: 7 a.m. Canterbury House. Celtic Cross, 12 noon, Westminster Central University, study of Westminster confession of faith. Committee on Research and Resolution Pine Room. Aid-to-education resolution United Presbyterian Women: 5:30 p.m. Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. Annua Thanksgiving dinner and panel discussion of the meaning of Thanksgiving. Nurse's Club Meeting: 7 to 8 p.m. Fraser Hall Dining Room. Rita Peters will speak on her trip to Australia where she works, the International Council of Nursing. Presidential Forum: 7 p.m., Big Eleg John Bisch, and American Democracy." Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Student National Education Association: 4 p.m., 302 Bailey, Speaker, Dr. A. J. Edwards: "Educational Procedures for Children Who Are Different." WEDNESDAY Le Corce Franceis se réunira mercredi à quatre heures dans la salle 11 de Fraser. Louis Fouladeil, étudiant francais, fera une causeerie illustre sur quelqu'un de ses français. Toute ceux qui'interessent au français sont cordialement invités. Celtic Cross; 12 noon, Westminster Cent- ral Station of the Westminster confession of faith. Parents Are Coming Have you bought your tickets to Auntie Mame 8 p.m., Nov. 6-11, 1961 Monday, November 6. 1961 University Daily Kansan BOSTON — (UPI) — Pharmaceutical records show that a common prescription written by doctors in the 1899s called for "monoacetic acidester of salicylic acid." What the doctors meant in layman's language was plain aspirin. Fancy Name STANFORD, Calif. — (UPI) — San Francisco and Los Angeles consider themselves rivals, but they may get together someday. Earthquakes May End San Francisco, Los Angeles Rivalry Prof. George A. Thompson, Jr., of Stanford University says distortion of land surfaces by earthquakes in California is bringing Los Angeles closer to San Francisco every day. However, it will be about 10 million years before a merger takes place Pizza Hut & The Catacombs Announce !!New Pizza Delivery!! H Just Call VI 3-9760 to place your order Delivery Is Fast,Fast,Fast! Catacombs Open: 4-11 Monday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday Available for private parties throughout the week Featuring the FINEST PIZZA in the Midwest Open 4-11 Monday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday 646 Mass. PIZZA HUT VI 3-9760 "YOUR AFTER-SHAVE LOTION, SIR" "Jason, you do! You know I use only Mennen skin Bracer after shave lotion." "Of course, sir. And this..." 3 "Tonight I need Skin Bracer. I'm going to the Prom. So take that stuff away and get me some Skin Bracer!" "Indeed so, sir. And..." "I've told you that Skin Bracer cools rather than burns. Because it's made with Menthol Ice." "Quite, sir. And this..." "Besides, that crisp, long-lasting Bracer aroma has a fantastic effect on girls." "But sir, this is Skin Bracer. They've just changed the bottle. Shall I open it now, sir?" MENNEN skin bracer AFTER CIRCUIT MENNEN M QUALITY - ACTUALLY, YOU DON'T NEED A VALET TO APPRECIATE MENNEN SKIN BRACER. ALL YOU NEED IS A FACE! Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, November 6. 1961 Auntie Mame Opens Tonight By Mark Dull Tonight, "Auntie Mame" that "grande dame" of Beekman Place, makes her debut on the University of Kansas campus. Auntie Mame is the creation of Edward Everett Tanner III, better known to the public as Patrick Dennis. Tanner is a man of many aliases that were originally devised to keep his private life sheltered from the omniscient public eye. HIS IDENTITY was revealed after the 1955 publication of his novel "Auntie Mame, An Irreverent Escapade in Biography" began selling 20,000 copies a week. Tanner spent several years developing the plot of "Auntie Mane." He then wrote the novel in 90 days. It is interesting to note, however, that this work which sold over 2,000,000 copies in the original, translations, and paperbacks, and for than two years led the best selling lists, was not readily accepted by a publisher. It took him three years to market the book. THE BROADWAY production, which his novel inspired enwined equal success, running from October 2,1956 through June 28,1958, at the Broadhurst Theatre. "Auntie Mame" was adapted for the stage by playwrights Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee and the leading role for this one-woman show was originated by the matchless Rosalind Russell, who was also chosen to play the role in the film version which was released December 4, 1958. Beatrice Lillie starred in a London production of this popular comedy hit. Author Tanner, in a foreword to a printed edition of the play, refers to "Rosalind Russell . . . who is Mame," and dedicates his sequel "Around the World with Auntie Mame." "To the one and only Rosalind Russell." Shirley Rea, Lawrence graduate student, will appear in tonight's production in the title role which is certain to be haunted by the indomitable image of Miss Russell, whom the critics lauded without exception. The role of Patrick Dennis as a child will be played on alternate nights by Tim Gilles and Tom Baumgartel, Lawrence school students, and as a young man, by Bob Smykle, Sioux Falls, S.D., senior. This production is no little undertaking by the University Theatre staff, as it consists of a series of 21 skits, covers a period of 18 years, and most of the world. It tanner put a message in his rbald novel, he utilized Shakespeare's offering, "Jesters do oft prove prophets," in Mame's elaborations on the abundance of life which so many cannot learn to appreciate. At any rate, tonight's stage production promises to be a gag-fest of flamboyant jocosity in a three-ring burlesque with that dazzling madwoman of Beekman Place setting the pace with antics and quips that even if they are a bit indecorous, are — "really top-hole!" To Study Communism NEW YORK — (UPI) — An evening course on "Theory and Practice of Soviet Communism" will be offered at New York University this fall, open to the general public. Lecturer will be Albert L. Weeks Jr., historian who was formerly a researcher in soviet affairs with the Department of State. Adenauer Seeks 4th Term As Chancellor BONN — (UPI) — President Heinrich Luebke today nominated 85-year-old Konrad Adenauer for re-election as West German chancellor. Parliament was called on to meet at 5 p.m. tomorrow (10 a.m. CST) to vote on the nomination. If elected, Adenauer will begin his fourth term as Chancellor. Luebke made his nomination in a letter to Parliamentary Speaker Eugene Gerstenmaier. The contents were not made public, but authoritative Parliamentary officials made it plain that Adenauer is the president's choice. Oregon Builds Own Maniac CORVALLIS, Ore. — (UPI) — Oregon State University engineers and mathematicians are building their own "MANIAC" to head up a research center for the state. MANIAC are the initials of "mathematical analyzer, numerical integrator and calculator." The electronic brain is expected to cost about $500,000 on a do-it-yourself basis and to do better than similar machines that sell commercially for about $3 million. Laws are like cobwebs, which may catch small flies, but let wasps and hornets break through. — Jonathan Swift THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE:BILL PIGOT Six years ago Bill Pigot graduated from college with an engineering degree. Today he is responsible for the performance of 12 microwave relay stations, numerous communications cables, and other equipment. He also supervises the work of some sixty transmission specialists. Bill Pigot of Pacific Northwest Bell Telephone Company, and the other young engineers like him in Bell Telephone Companies throughout the country, help bring the finest communications service in the world to the homes and businesses of a growing America. MILK SYSTEMS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES TELEPHONE MAN OF THE MONTH Portraits of Distinction Photography HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Kansan Want Ads Get Results EVERY COLLEGE STUDENT needs this book SCIENCE IN HEALTH WITH KEY TO THE SCRIPTURES MARY BAKER EDDY to increase his ability to learn An understanding of the truth contained in Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy can remove the pressure which concerns today's college student upon whom increasing demands are being made for academic excellence. Christian Science calms fear and gives to the student the full assurance he needs in order to learn easily and to evaluate what he has learned. It teaches that God is man's Mind—his only Mind—from which emanates all the intelligence he needs, when and as he needs it. Science and Health, the textbook of Christian Science, may be read or examined, together with the Bible, in an atmosphere of quiet and peace, at any Christian Science Reading Room. Information about Science and Health may also be obtained on campus through the Christian Science Organization at Kansas University Danforth Chapel 20 BY LONDON from the center of fur coats new wor "I can could exi is everyo why does Meeting time 7:30 p.m. Thursdays The m he had j space and home or "loneliest is slowly cano. Repett Tristania last wee their Sc They 24 days erupted, England For m first glim or "hout their is polite ei But the trouble Meeting place Danforth Chapel Toba Subj NEW and the of a tw York U tion. Publici and sch represen the me groups ing. Phone HAM Bermu popular world. It ha every i latie Hat Bermu Profeft charge studies of tobao one state smokes recognize State I noticee educate courses ways o on teen Phone The phones 35, M Harme four pl Shelte Shelter HOU ugees recent emerge they f The sl Deep FRA £0 FA AT to FA AT to DA Monday. November 6, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 9 20th Century World Shocks Islanders By Richard Longworth LONDON — (UPI) — The mar from the 19th century stood in the center of London. Cars, neon lights, fur coats—all trappings of a brand-new world—whirled around him. They were rescued from Tristan 24 days ago when the volcano erupted, and brought by ship to England to start a new life. "I can hardly believe a place could exist," he whispered. "But why is everyone in such a hurry? And why doesn't anyone seem to smile?" The man was Willy Repetto and he had just spanned 6,000 miles in space and a century in time from his home on Tristan Da Cunha, the "loneliest island in the world" which is slowly being destroyed by a volcano. For most of them, it was their first glimpse of the outside world, or "houtside world," as they said in their island dialect. They were polite enough to say they liked it. But their remarks betrayed their trouble in facing up to a world far Repette, 59, is the leader of 262 Tristanians who arrived in England last week on the long exodus from their South Atlantic Island home. Tobacco Problem Subject of Course NEW YORK —(UPI)— "Smoking and the Adolescent" is the subject of a two-week course at the New York University School of Education. Public health workers, teachers and school administrators will meet representatives of health agencies, the medical profession and other groups and discuss teen-aged smoking. Professor Roosec C. Brown, Jr., in charge of the course, said: "Medical studies have shown that the effects of tobacco are cumulative. The later one starts to smoke, or the less one smokes, the better—a fact that was recognized last winter by the Empire State Health Council when it announced a statewide campaign to educate teen-age smokers. This course will explore the most effective ways of impressing this information on teen-agers." Phone Numbers HAMILTON, Bermuda — (UPI)—Bermuda has the fifth most talkative population — per person — in the world. It has 14,000 telephones, or 30 for every 160 persons, according to Leslie Harmer, general manager of the Bermuda Telephone Company. The United States has 39 telephones per 100 persons, Sweden has 35, Monaco 34, and Canada 31. Harmer said. The world average is four phones per 100 persons, he said. Shelter? HOUSTON, Tex. — (UPI) — Refugees fleeing from hurricane Carla recently looked questionably at one emergency shelter set up here, but they figured any port in a storm. The shelter had been set up at the Deep Water Elementary School. 365 EXCUSES: TO ENJOY YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE AT THE JAY HAWK to Cafe DAYS excuse is:: The Anniv. of the NATIONAL Roller Derby more modern than the one they left. Like Repetto, they weren't sure it was an improvement. Most of them had never left the island. They had never seen a car, a horse, a locomotive, a telephone, a television set or money. They had never seen high heels or nylon stockings—"All our women at home wear white ankle socks." Repetto said—or a pool table, or traffic lights, or police, or newspapers. "It's very pretty," Caroline Swain, 16, said in the slangless, Dickensian Cockney of the island. "But I'd rather see Tristan again. I'm homesick." Her fiance, 19-year-old Anthony Rodgers, summed up the difference—"Life on Tristan was so simple." "It's very big," Repetto said, "But I would not like to live here." At home, they were farmers or fishermen. They lived in a small and simple, inbred community. Most of them said they wanted to stay together. And that brought up a new problem facing British authorities—where the islanders will live. From Southampton, where they docked Friday, the refugees were taken to an old army camp in Surrey County. They will stay there until it is decided what to do with them. Museum Fashion Show NEW YORK — (UPI) The Brooklyn Museum of New York has the largest collection of fashion pictures in the world. Its costume exhibits include several thousand examples of wearing apparel from America, Europe and Asia. Repetto, who has warned his flock about being "corrupted by outsiders," admitted that "if the young men and ladies want to go, we will try to meet their wishes." New Field HOUSTON, Tex. — (UPI) — Publishers and magazine printers soon may be advertising for press room men under the heading, "Engineers Wanted," according to Hy Safran, a leading Detroit printer. Safran told a meeting of the Magazine Publishers Association here recently that increasing automation of giant color presses will require supervision by graduate engineers. "Engineers will be needed by 1970 because electronic controls will supply human judgment in quality control and high speed press production," he said. Sewage Survey CORVALLIS, Ore. - (UPI) Oregon State University is beginning a long-range study into the best means of disposing of sewage and industrial waste at sea without danger of coastal contamination. A U.S. Public Health Service grant of $38,356 has been made to help support the project. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Girl Watcher's Guide Presented by Pall Mall Famous Cigarettes WATER SKIING The nudge is permitted when a beautiful girl is sighted in an unusual place or at an unusual time. LESSON 3 - Concerning self-control Although we believe that girl watching has it all over bird watching, we feel that these two hobbies do share one important characteristic. They are both genteel. They both respect the rights of the watched. A girl watcher who asks a beautiful stranger for her name and phone number is like a bird watcher who steals eggs. (If the WHY BE AN AMATEUR? JOIN THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF GIRL WATCHERS NOW! FREE MEMBERSHIP CARD. Visit the editorial office of this publication for a free membership card in the world's only society devoted to discreet, but relentless, girl watching. Constitution of the society on reverse side of card. This ad based on the book, "The Girl Watcher's Guide." Text: Copyright by Donald J. Saters. Drawings: Copyright by Eldon Dedini. Reprinted by permission of Harper & Brothers. 4. 1 C Go Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" stranger happens to have a pack of Pall Mall Famous Cigarettes, and you're dying for a good, natural smoke, you may break this rule.) Normally, the girl watcher's pleasure is warm, quiet and internal. However, there are cases when a discovery is so dazzling it must be shared. Such a case is illustrated above. PALL MALL FAMOUS CIGARETTES IN NEW YORK STREET WHEREVER PARTICULAR PEOPLE CONGREGATE Pall Mall's natural mildness is so good to your taste! So smooth, so satisfying, so downright smokeable! Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday, November 6. 1961 Politicos Hit Hard As Elections Near The large dining hall seemed to dwarf the handful of students scattered about the room. At a table near the far end of the hall sat two students, one a candidate for the All Student Council. As he began to address the group, a few more students shuffled in. FOUR OF HIS FELLOW party members were seated randomly about the room. The candidate explained why his party should be supported. The candidate opened the meeting to questions. Several hands instantly shot into the air. "WHAT'S MORE," he continued, "independents have more representation in my party than in the other party. In the other party the Greeks have two representatives and the dorms have two. In our party, each dorm has 3 representations and each Greek house has only one. This is three times the representation of the other party." One student asked, "Why are these other guys from your party here? I thought this was going to be a debate between yourself and the other candidate living here." He said, "My party has more to offer independents than the other party. I discovered that the other party hasn't done much in line with its very flowery platform." THE CANDIDATE REPLied, "Well I'm here. Since the other candidate isn't I guess you can see his interest." Another student asked, "Why hasn't your party taken a stand on the NSA issue?" "Well, my vote on this issue will depend on the desire of the majority of the people in my district," he answered. Interrupting the candidate a third student remarked, "We don't want to know what you might do after being elected. We want to know how you feel now, then we'll decide if we want to elect you." HE CONFESSED, "Personally I can't see that the committee has done much for KU and its liberal policies certainly don't reflect the KU students' attitude." "Student apathy is what destroyed NSA as far as I'm concerned," one student said. A number of students laughed. "Yes, that's probably true," the candidate said. "But there's not much you can do about student apathy." A number of students plugged. Turning to one of the planks his party supports, the candidate commented, "Our proposal to investigate the elimination of fees for scholarship hall and residence hall parking lots will directly affect you." A STUDENT BROKE IN, "But the $4 we pay for parking fees will be difficult to eliminate since this money is going to pay off the debt on the paving of the parking lot. At least this is what Mr. Wilson of the Housing Office told us." The candidate said that they (his party) had also talked with Mr. Wilson and apparently they had been given different information. 34th Discoverer Up in A-OK Shot VANDENBURG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. — (UFI) The 34th Discoverer satellite hurled into space around the earth's poles was in "near nominal orbit" today according to Air Force tracking devices. The 25-foot long satellite, the space-research workhorse for the United States, was launched yesterday in what the Air Force termed "a real clean shot." EACH ROCKET STAGE functioned as expected in clear, summerlike weather. The nose of the 1,700-pound satellite carried an instrument capsule which scientists hoped to retrieve over the Pacific Ocean within a maximum of four days. Nine Discoverer capsules have been recovered, including six that were snatched in flight by snare-trailing airplanes. Three others were fished from the sea. THE AIR FORCE DID not disclose the contents of the 300 pound, gold plated capsule launched yesterday. Twenty-two of the 34 Discoverers launched have orbited. THE GREATEST HIGH ADVENTURE EVER FILMED! THE GREATEST HIGH ADVENTURE EVER FILMED! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN in CARL FOREMAN'S THE GUNS OF NAVARONE starring STANLEY BAKER • ANTHONY QUINN IRENE PAPAS • GIA SULLA THE GREATEST HIGH ADVENTURE EVER FILMED! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN in CARL FOREMAN'S THE GUNS OF NAVARONE co starring STANLEY BAKER • ANTHONY QUAYLE and IRENE PAPAS • GIA SCALA • JAMES DARREN COLOR and CINEMASCOPE Writers and Produced by CARL FOREMAN Music Compiled & Conducted by DIMITRI TIOMKIN NOW! At 7:15 only (Out at 10) Adm. $1.00 GRANADA THEATRE... Telephone VIKING 3-1065 HOW A LUSTY, FIGHTING YOUNG ADVENTURER TURNED INTO A SAINTLY MAN OF GOD! 20th Century Fox presents francis of assisi A PERIUS PRODUCTION, STARRING BRADFORD DILLMAN • DOLORES HART STUART WHITMAN • PEDRO ARMENDARIZ Produced by PLATO & SOQUAS - Directed by MICHAEL CURTIZ Screenplay by EUGENE VALE, JAMES FORSYTH & JACK THOMAS COLOR by DE LUXE CINEMASCOPE Now Showing! At 7 & 9 Adm. 85c VARSITY THEATRE... Telephone VIKING 3-1065 NOW! At 7:15 only (Out at 10) Admn. $1.00 GRANADA THEATRE ... Nuremberg, West Berlin The cruellest lies are often told in silence—Robert Lewis Stevenson 20th Century-Fox presents FRANCIS OF ASSISI GRANADA THEATRE... Theatre Wings 350 HOW A LUSTY, FIGHTING YOUNG ADVENTURER TURNED INTO A SAINTLY MAN OF GOD! 20th anniversary-four presents FRANCIS OF ASSISI A PEREUS PRODUCTION STARRING BRADFORD DILLMAN - DOLORES HART STUART WHITMAN & PEDRO ARMENDARIZ Produced by FLATO A SNOURAS - Directed by MICHAEL CURTIZ Screenplay by EUGENE VALE, JAMES FORSITH & JACK THOMAS COLOR by DE LUXE CINEMASCOPE Now Showing! At 7 & 9 Adm. 85c VARSITY THEATRE... Tel: 0123456789 Auto Crash Involves 35 Cars. No Deaths That was the plea of the patrolman who first arrived on the scene yesterday of a 35-car pileup on the Riverside freeway. RIVERSIDE, Calif. — (UPI) — "Send all the ambulances you've got; everywhere I look there are injured." Now Showing! At 7 & 9 Adm. 85c VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-1065 A total of 8 tow trucks, 26 police and California Highway Patrol units and 8 ambulances answered the call. VARSITY TREATRE ... telephone VINDS 3-1065 Officers said a November heat wave which caused a churning sand storm apparently caused the giant crackup. It was estimated at least 40 persons were injured—six of them seriously. No fatalities were reported. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Diamonds Gifts Jewelry DANIELS JEWELRY 914 Mass. VI 3-2572 Heads Will Turn Your Way, Too -- SANITONE IS THE ONLY DRY CLEANING METHOD RECOMMENDED BY CLOTHING MANUFACTURERS. COME IN OR CALL TODAY. . . . . when your clothes are cleaned the quality Sanitone way. QUALITY Guaranteed LAWRENCE launders and dry cleaners 10th & N. H. VI 3-3711 "Specialists in Fabric Care" Monday. November 6, 1961 University Daily Kansan told nson 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 as desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. LOST LOBST: GLASSES between Carruth- mount Amusementfield, Cali Stove Long, VI 3-244. LOST: Bone colored purse. 2nd. floor. Strong, Tuesday afternoon. Finder keep money, return purse and contents to Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint Hall. HEAVY BROWN & WHITE wool knit sweater. Large pheasant on the back, dog value to him on front. Of great value to him. Reward offered for return. Call VI 3-8343. 11-8 GLASS CASE and glasses in Robinson Gym Annex. Whoever picked them up please call Herb, VI 3-1024 between 5-6:30 p.m., M-W-F. 11-8 RAINCOAT taken by mistake from barr party that was mine. Call II 2-0416, 11-6 FOR SALE One National NC-188 Communications receiver. Call Dale Puckett, VI 2-1200 For Sale: Genuine Raccoon Coat. Call John Hooper. VI 3-8455. 11-7- '54 Ford Convertible, black. Clean, Owner leaving town $295. Phone VI 3-8801. MEN'S ENGLISH BICYCLE, new tires, tubes, basket. $15. Call VI 2-3817. 11-9 Used Remington Quiet-riter, 1958 model. Good condition. Reasonable price. Call Karen Jennison. VI 2-1340 after 5 p.m. 11-9 Short Wave 8 Transistor Radio with antenna-scope. Regular $59.95, now $35.00 complete. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 11.9 GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New & used guns, & ammo. Liberal trade-ins. VI S-7001. 1304 Tenn. 11-9 BARGAINS — 4x5 Speed Graphic, f4.7 135 mm Optar Tape, Graphmatic, Film pack adapt, film holders, film & acc. case, $130, lens & acc. lens, $20. Bushnell 6x15 gold finish Opera glasses; $20. New. Call Bob, VI 3- 3850. 1951 HARLEY-DAVIDSON good condition — $250. Call 2-3530. Dick Little 117-7 ATTENTION PLEDGES: Light your actives' cigarettes with a butane lighter. Ideal for gifts, suitable for framing. Complete with lifetime guarantee for only $3.75. Retail $5.00. Order from VI.2-3682 or see sample at MI.16 - Miss 17. SMALL TIRE SALE. Volkswagen & smail import stores all at 3% discount. Free installation. 2 year road hazard wa- ranty. Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 11-13 STEVENS .22 Automatic Rifle, $24. Like new. Call VI 3-2906 after 6 p.m. tf '54 CBEH 4 DOOR, Clean, good tires. '64 BEH 4 DOOR, Call Vi 3-9288 11-6 days, evenings I 3-9288 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 HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collius, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Meter, Vi 3-4207 or IV 3-4201. tt OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Lawrence sales, services, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-3644. GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. handy cross section for delivery. Ph VI 3-7553. Vi Dodge in good running condition. $80. Call VI 3-4291. tt 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, $9.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Offset printing and at resting at regular rate. Phone Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th Phone VI-3- 0151 today. tf 5 BOOKCASE SHELVES. 6 ' with risers; bookake, 5' x 1', with glass doors; 15' books, 5' x 2', with spigot. Rubbed cottonwood log with gliders; 12 gudge shotgun, single shot; aquarium and submibles; 3006 Springer See. See at 1016 Hill Drive Drive 1 p.m. 11-8 JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT WANTED WANTED—GIRL to share nice apartment. Call Shriley, I 2-3407. 11- HELP WANTED NEW! NEW! NEW! If you have ever branded new item which everyone needs. Wonderful opportunity for part-time peo- vil no barrier. For interviews call WT 2-0059 FOR RENT Would like to share 3 house in Hillel area. Call VI 2-2005. 11-7 New 2 Bedroom Apartment, furnished or unfurnished. All modern conveniences, all parking. Call VI 3-249 after 4 or in call VI 2-239. If answer call VI 2-2950. 11-9 Vacancy available for 2 men in com- munity (city/count) Rd Cf Cil- lery 3-9635 for appointment. 2 LARGE ROOMS, (bedroom & study rooms), or will provide single, see at 1399 Tenn. 11-8 LARGE FURNISHED apartment. e a s t side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. NEW 5 ROOM DUPLLEX: has living room, dining area, lovely kitchen. 2 bedrooms, bath, & finished garage. Has air-conditioning, new electric stove & refrigerator. Call VI 3-7120 or KU 385 for appointment. 11-13 ROOM FOR RENT: Libraries furnished, comfortable, quiet and close to campus $30 per month. 407 W. 13th. VI 2-1357. BUSINESS SERVICES Tom's 14th St. Barber Shop, 5 W. 14th St. 1/2 block off Mass. Freeway, parking, full-time barbers — All HAIRCUTS $1.25 — Hours 8:00-5:30 Mon.-Sat. 11-9 I WOULD LIKE IO DO babysitting in my house, afternoons and evenings. Experienced mother. References. Call VI 3-9158. 11-6 German teacher, wife of exchange student — will tutor students in German. 1121 Rhode Island, upstairs, any time. 11-6 I will do ironing in my home. Call VI 51-2467, pickup and delivery. 11-9 TUTOR FOR GERMAN. Austrian graduate student. Write to Horst Hasemann. 1328 Ohio or call VI 3-4711, 6-11 p.m. 11.6 AUTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-1531, or 921 Miss. u YPEWRIERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies, Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI >3644. U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, everything in pet field plus Turtles Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center 600 South sectionalized to save time money. tf DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mer copies only. Gla Smith. 12934 Mass. Call: 800-735-3264. 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. MILLIKEN "S O S" . . . New at tw 10 to 12 Lawrence Ave. &, 1021%4 Ma. 10 U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid-osm. Phone VI 3-2921 — Modern service — open weeks 7 to 8:30 pm. --revolutionary new spin-dry cotton broadcloth shirt TRANSPORTATION GIRL WANTS RIDE to New York for Thanksgiving. Call Gall at VI 2-0022 BEERAGES — All kinds of six-packs. ICE crud. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies Plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 0350 MISCELLANEOUS Sale Ends CLIP THIS COUPON Nov. 11th LADIES' SLACKS ● SLIM JIMS Reg ● TOREADORS 58c ● BERMUDAS ea. ● CAPRI PANTS ● PEDAL PUSHERS Beautifully Dry Cleaned. Hand Finished. No Limit. NOTE: No Limit - but y 29 € Hand Finished. No Limit. NOTE: No Limit — but you must bring coupon in WITH your order. ANY CLOTH Men's-Child's-Ladies' COAT ANY MATCHED SUIT OR ANY PLAIN 1-PC DRESS 69℃ Deluxe Cleaned, Beautifully Pressed TYPING Note: No Limit. But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Order 25e SHIRTS 19℃ NOW ONLY DeLuxe Laundered to perfection! Starched as you like! LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FINGS Dress Shirts SAME DAY SERVICE Fri. & Sat. In by 9 a.m. Out by 5 p.m. Experienced typist would like typing in experimental mode, reasonable rates. Call VI 3-8615 or email: Drive In and Save — Open 7 A.M. to 7 P.M. Except Sunday 23rd St. & Naismith Dr. VI 2-0200 PROFESSIONAL SECRETARY wants typing. Specializes in German and Medical papers. Erika Williamson. VI 2-3736. EXPIRIENCE INC TYPISI: Immediata tation etamination to tarm paper, reports, tissues. cte. Naf. accommodate service to reasonable Cail. Caricase Charity vi R曼状率 3-37.9% Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow, 408 W. 15th VI, 21-1648. TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-440. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher. VI 3-0558 1031 Miss. t Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in the thesis, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impi pertinent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise POpe, VI 3-1997. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, research projects, neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. Fyping: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Southern call: 1511 W. 21 St. Cali VI 3-6440. tlf southern call: 1511 W. 21 St. Cali VI 3-6440. tlf --- revolutionary FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution. Special Services. 5917 H.C. Mission. Mission. H.2-7178. Evers or Sat. RA 2-2186. FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, uses these researches. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. EXPERT TYPIST. Personal attention to theses, term papers, dissertations, reports, etc. Call VI 2-1795 anytime after 5 p.m. tt TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, resumes. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mc-Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name - call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lo- gehbach HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. grad. in speech therapy. Does he & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. **tf** J.M.C. Manhattan. Manhattan. Spinsmooth Plus with exclusive W-A-4 Belfast $ ^{\textcircled{2}} $ self-ironing 100% cotton Golden Needle $ ^{\textcircled{2}} $ tailoring Manhattan's unprecedented breakthrough brings you the most remarkable wash 'n wear shirt ever... takes the drip out of drying. - keeps its fit for life - can be washed any way - at home or commercially - stays white . . . can be fully bleached - has a Grip-Tab fashion collar with snap-closet tab - convertible cuffs - exclusive W-A-4...for moisture absorbency - longer wearing collar and cuffs There is much to Spinsmooth Plus you've got to try it to appreciate it! $5.00 $5.00 As seen in Life Town Shop DOWNTOWN University ON THE HILL Al Hack Shop Ken Whitenight Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday, November 6, 1961 Around the Campus Republican Candidate Fallout and Shelters in Campus Tomorrow Discussion Set The Republican congressional candidate from the Kansas 1st district, Robert Dole, will attend several political science classes here during an all day stay at KU tomorrow. He will also speak to a Young Republicans meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. 500 Tickets Available For Next 2 Games All students who do not have season tickets for the football games and desire single game tickets for the remaining two games must follow this procedure: Present identification cards and 50 cents at the south ticket window in Allen Field House on Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday of the week preceding the game. There are 500 tickets that will be sold to the students on these three days. Authority to Discuss European Churches G. E. Kidder Smith, a U.S. authority on religious architecture, will discuss "The New Churches of Europe" in two illustrated lectures at 4:00 p.m. today and tomorrow in 303 Bailey. Frank E. Hoecker, professor of radiation biophysics, will speak on "Fallout and Shelter" at noon tomorrow at the Faculty Forum in the Old English Room of the Kansas Union. Prof. Hoecker his talk would include a general discussion of the significance of fallout and what is required for adequate protection. John Ise to Review John Birch Society John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, will speak at the Presidential Forum at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Prof. Ise, known as "KU's good natured pessimist," will speak on the John Birch Society. This will be the first lecture about the John Birch Society since Robert D. Love, leading member of the group, spoke here Sept. 29. Weather An extended forecast issued today predicts that temperatures during the next five days will range near normal for early November, which means afternoon readings in the 50s. There Is No Waiting at Sandy's MENU SANDY'S THRIFT & SWIFT DRIVE-IN 2120 West 9th Across from Hillcrest 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 Govt inspected beef Café Café 25%Off on Cord Suits and Cord Sport Coats Limited Stock! diebolt's 843 massachusetts st. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers X JACK ZINN For Freshman Pres. Pres. Vote at Strong Hall 8-5:30 TUESDAY or WEDNESDAY THE COURT OF LAW IS THE ORIGINAL HEALTH CARE SYSTEM IN THE UNITED STATES. IT IS A NATIONAL SYSTEM THAT PROVIDES MEDICAL SERVICES TO ALL USERS, INCLUDING PEDIATRICIANS AND EMPLOYEES. THE COURT IS ALSO LIABLE FOR DAMAGES ARISING FROM ANY ACTION BY USERS. EXERTING HIS RIGHTS—Robert Guffin, Lawrence freshman, drops in his ballot during the primary election today. 'Closed Primary Voting Underway At noon today, students with University Party cards were leading Vox Populi Party card holders by a slim margin of 25 votes in the closed primary campus election. A "closed primary" is an election where only party members may vote. The only exception in the KU election is the freshman vote for class officers. The purpose of the election is to determine candidates for each party from 10 voting districts. These districts are: social fraternities, social sororites, women's dorms with more than 75 members, men's dorms with more than 75, women's dorms with less than 75, men's dorms with less than 75, freshman women's dormitories, professional fraternities and cooperatives, unmarried-unorganized housing and married unorganized housing. At noon the breakdown of voting was: Districts Vox UP Total Fraternities 30 34 64 Sororities 26 48 74 Large men's dorms 11 10 21 Large women's dorms 4 5 9 Small men's dorms 3 5 8 Small women's dorms 3 1 4 Freshman women's dorms 9 2 11 Professional fraternities and cooperatives 1 0 1 Unmarried, unorganized 3 10 13 Married unorganized 0 0 0 Total votes cast—233 THIS TABULATION represents 205 votes cast with party preference and 28 without. The latter represents the votes of the freshman students. Richard Harper, Prairie Village senior and elections chairman, said that voting was still light but he expected more votes to be cast this afternoon. He also complained about the poll workers' turnout. "It was horrible. You can quote me . . . I'm mad." He said that about 23 workers were needed and that only 16 had arrived to help New Yorkers Go to Polls; Wagner Favored to Win NEW YORK — (UPI) — New York City voters cast their ballots today in an election in which Democratic Mayor Robert F. Wagner was favored to win an almost-unprecedented third term. A light drizzle fell on the city through most of the morning, but by 9 a.m. about 15 per cent of an expected 2.5 million voter turnout had cast their ballots. By the same time in the last off year election, in 1959, less than 15 per cent of the vote had been cast. In last year's presidential election, however, more than 20 per cent of the vote had been cast by 9 a.m. The skies cleared at mid-morning and the voting was expected to accelerate through a sunny afternoon. If Wagner wins, as is generally predicted, he will be the second mayor in New York history to win three terms. The late Fiorello La Guardia was elected mayor in 1933, 1937 and 1941 on a fusion ticket. Weather Generally fair this afternoon, tonight and Wednesday. Warmer east and south central this afternoon and northwest Wednesday. Low tonight generally in 20s. High Wednesday in 50s. Daily hansan 59th Year, No. 38 LAWRENCE. KANSAS Tuesday, November 7, 1961 Ford Foundation to Study Kansas Higher Education An experimental survey to learn how facilities for higher education in Kansas can most effectively provide quality education and handle expected increases in enrollment has been started by the Ford Foundation. This is the first study of its type the foundation has ever done. Alvin C. Eurich, executive director of the education division of the Ford Foundation, said the study is being made because problems in higher education in Kansas are similar to those in other states and the foundation's purpose is to improve American education. The study will be completed in about a year. A report will be made to the Board of Regents late in 1962 before the next regular session of the Kansas Legislature. Whitley Austin, chairman of the Board of Regents, said the budget session of the legislature will be asked for another $15,000 for consultants. the foundation's own work will be done without charge. The study grew out of an invitation by the Board of Regents to the Ford Foundation to work with them on the future development of Kansas schools. A $15,000 fund provided to the Board of Regents for research by the legislature will be used to pay foundation consultants MR. EURICH SAID SEVEN MAJOR areas would be covered. They are; finding enough faculty members to staff the university's increased enrollment; the best use of classroom, library and laboratory facilities; the co-operative arrangements between institutions in the area and over the state to avoid duplication (this arrangement would be similar to the one between Kansas State University and KU—K-State has a school of veterinary medicine, KU's school deals with human medicine); the entire student personnel and job cluding guidance, counseling and job placement, and the allocation of responsibility between state and private colleges. Young Rep. Hear Dole At Meeting Tonight The time and place for Rober Dole's speech to the Young Republicans has been changed. Mr. Dole, the Republican candidate for congressman from the Kansas 1st district, will speak to the group at 7:30 tonight in Room 306 of the Kansas Union. The public is invited and all members of the Young Republicans are urged to attend. MR. EURICH had several criticisms of the types of education offered in American colleges at present. He said; "Basically a college curriculum is set up to prepare students to be college professors. We need a wide range of education." He also criticised the quality of medical students. There are fewer applicants and the number of failures has doubled in the last five years. He said this was due to competition for the potential medical student by other sciences, the lack of scholarships or fellowships in medicine and the greater number of years it takes to get a degree. Turning to faculty members, Mr. Eurich said one proof of the deterioration in education was that the percentage of faculty members with doctorate degrees had dropped eight per cent in a five-year period. - News Briefs - MOSCOW—(UPI)—Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev acknowledged today that radioactive fallout from nuclear bomb tests harms world health. But he said Soviet testing is carried out for the sake of "world peace." He added that "the use of nuclear weapons in war is a million times more dangerous." This was the first time Khrushchev has publicly noted the world outcry of protest against fallout dangers caused by the explosion of at least 31 nuclear blasts since the Soviet Union resumed testing last Sept. 1. *** BONN—(UPI)一Konrad Adenauer, 85, was elected to a fourth term as Chancellor of West Germany by a majority of nine votes today. The vote in the Bundestag—or lower house of Parliament—was 259 for Adenauer, 205 for and 26 abstentions. He needed 250 votes—an absolute majority—to win on the first ballot, and he got them. Adenauer picked up his winning edge from his own Christian Democrats and members of his coalition partners, the Free Democrats. **** LONDON—(UPI)Increasing British concern over home-front precautions brought a demand in Parliament today for appointment of a Civil Defense Minister. Laborite Emrys Hughes said there was "growing" worry in the nation about what the government would do to defend the civil population in the event of a nuclear war. Home Secretary R. A. Butler was asked in Parliament yesterday what plans the government had for the construction of public fallout shelters. He said there were no immediate plans for such construction but that "much could be done by the average householder to provide protection in or near his home." Butler said two official publications already have been issued on the subject. "More advice," he added, "will be issued to the public in an emergency." Students Question Peace Pact Most of the students interviewed about the impending "summit meeting" between KU and MU student body leaders doubt that any agreement reached will affect students at the football game Nov. 25. They seem to think the meeting will be a waste of time. However, some students did agree that a peace pact was good because the rivalry between KU and MU should stop. The KU-MU meeting will be held Sunday at Columbia. A committee of seven students, including Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior and president of the student body, will go to Columbia early Sunday morning and will return Sunday evening. Bruce Brient, Leawood first-year medical student, said: "I don't think a bunch of Missouri drunks, like I saw at the football game last year, are going to care very much whether their student body president signed a peace treaty or not. "Like most of the ventures of KU student government, it's going to be pretty ineffective." JAY COOK, Webster Groves, Mo, sophomore, said: "It definitely won't accomplish anything, because most of the students ignore the dealings of the student body representatives in all other matters. This won't be any exception. "I think the people who thought up this idea are either pretty idealistic or just want publicity for themselves or their organization." Joan Willey, Salina sophomore, said: Stan Andeel, Wichita junior, said: "The damage has already been done, and the people who might be causing the trouble aren't going to have much impact until a summit conference are going to say. We'll just have to wait and see what kind of spirit the student body has." "I think the peace pact is worthwhile because rivalry to this extent is ridiculous. We aren't rival countries, we're just rival schools." Phil Harrison, Lawrence freshman said: "Show me a need and show me that the pact will meet the need and I'll go for it. There must be a need due to last year's game but I have seen no evidence that the pact will be effective. I can see no way that it will change the status quo." Bob Super, Hill City junior, said: "I think it's a good idea because rivalry to this extent is silly and childish." Sonja Hampton, Oskaloosa sophmore, said: "The peace pact is a good idea because poor sportsmanship gives the University a bad name. We should act like college students." Willard Hiebart, Whitewater junior, said: "I think it would be a good idea if it could come about because if violence does break out we might have to drop the competition between the two schools just as in the case of Army and Notre Dame who no longer play each other because the rivalry became too strong. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, November 7, 1961 The Passing Week The past two weeks are probably not weeks that will go down as extremely important. Students of history will read in a few hundred years, if man exists on earth at that time, probably not about the Russian superbomb, but perhaps about the death of James Thurber or the birth of Viscount Linley. How much of the present era will be included in a history, when it is written? EXPERTS SAY VERY LITTLE. True, the history of science will record some major discoveries, such as the Salk vaccine and the orbital space flights. But will students read about U Thant's appointment as interim Secretary General of the U.N.? Thant is a mild-mannered man who believes firmly in equality of men. He wanted no strings attached to his post and got it that way. ONE THING ABOUT THE BOMB TESTS historians might find interesting is the fact that millions of people behind the Iron Curtain did not know their own government was setting off blasts so dangerous to mankind. To inform these millions, the Voice of America massed all its possible strength to beam a program to them called "Did You Know?" The Kremlin was prepared for the broadcast, however, and 2,000 jamming transmitters were called to use. And during some of the blasts, England, particularly Londoners, turned their attention to a royal birth. As one newspaper headline said, simply, "The Jones Boy," was born. PAPERS DRAGGED OUT STATISTICS and found the baby's birth weight to be below the national average, but when Dr. Peel, one of Princess Margaret's attending physicians, said the baby was doing all right, Britons heartily accepted the newest and fifth in line for the throne. The baby is named Viscount Linley, taking the title of his father, but in a few years he will probably dislike it and ask why he was not called Butch. If Americans who were extremely depressed over "things in general" during the past decade and found any reason to laugh, that reason probably was James Thurber. HE MORE THAN ANYONE else understood what kind of a world we lived in, and decided the best way to make it better was to begin with people. Thurber showed us the American, lost in daydreams that come as a result of middle-age and lost hopes and frustration. Maybe those who write about what our nation went through during this time will not include Thurber's death, but if someone doesn't include his works in literary collections of this era, posterity will never know the real American as Thurber saw him. Carrie Merryfield Physical Education at KU What about a new gymnasium? Each year the student enrollment grows larger at KU and the small, antiquated gymnasium seems to grow smaller and smaller. University officials are aware that the gymnasium is inadequate for KU's intramural and physical education programs. They know that it stands on the site needed for a new classroom building. But nothing is being done, because it costs money to build a new gymnasium. RAYMOND NICHOLS, EXECUTIVE SECRETARY of the University, says that it is unlikely a new gymnasium can be constructed with state funds in the near future. A new gymnasium is not at the top of the priority list of the long-range building program at KU. One of the main reasons a new gymnasium does not have top priority on the building list is because of the need for new classrooms. Deciding which is more important is a debatable question. Although there are older buildings on campus than Robinson gymnasium, they have not received the wear and tear the gymnasium has. ASIDE FROM THIS, THE FACT STILL remains that KU needs a new gymnasium. The building program cannot be changed. Mr. Nichols has suggested that a monetary gift might pay for part of the new gymnasium. The only other alternative he suggested was a bond issue, to be paid off through student activity fees. In order to allow the sale of bonds for a new gymnasium the state legislature would have to change the law, but only upon the recommendation of the Board of Regents at the request of KU. YOU, THE STUDENTS MUST HELP KU decide this issue. The student activity fees helped to pay for the new wing of the Kansas Union. A new gymnasium would give the students who come to KU in the next few years the same opportunities you have had, plus many more, to develop physical fitness. Adequate classroom space is important but so is maintaining physical fitness. Right now the only remedy in sight for solving the gymnasium problem is an amendment to the law which would enable the University to finance a new gymnasium through the sale of bonds. —Linda Swander LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler BENELLI Q-25 "THAT'S A RIDICULOUS RUMOR, DEAN, I RUN HERE A VERY DEMOCRATIC CLASSROOM." FLINT HALL FREDDY noted that the Lawrence Journal-World reported that the KU effigy of Krushchev had a sign saying "Lady Deformer," and he thinks that Mrs. K. ought to check on what he does on "papa's night out." Short Ones Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1859, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news rooms Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East 50 St. New York 22234. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and weekends. Examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT KESSEN B. Tom Brown Business Manager Dennis Gernick, Advertising Manager; Bonnie McCullough, Circulation Manager; David Wiens, National Advertiser; Classified Advertising Manager; Hal Smith, Promotion Manager. From the Magazine Rack Execute the Nazis? "... the reader today must constantly remind himself that Paul Blobel whose face was that of a storekeeper or a teacher, had led an SS unit which was involved in sixteen instances of mass murder, including the slaughter of 30,000 Jews in Kiev alone; that Georg Schallermair had beaten prisoners to death with his own hands at Dachau; that Otto Ohlendorf had been responsible for the massacre of 60,000 Jews and Gypsies. "WHY IS THIS reminder necessary? Would it not be nobler to surrender to our spontaneous outrage and repulsion at the executions, to honor our impulses of charity and compassion above our wish to see vengeance done — especially now that so many years have passed and the desire for vengeance that would have been flaming and powerful in 1945 has lost its original sharpness and purity? This is not a question that can be answered lightly or dogmatically: in trying to answer it, we are carried straight to the limits of our moral capacity. My own view is that to a Jew the possibility that anything short of death should have been meted out to these men ought to be no less (and perhaps no more) outrageous than the spectacle of the hangings themselves. I believe that any Jew who so far permits himself to forget what the Nazis were and did as to condemn the executions altogether is committing a kind of violence against his own humanity that may be more deeply barbaric than the events described by Mr. Settel — barbaric in the way that the young father in Philadelphia was last year when he publicly trotted out all the cliches of liberal enlightenment to plead for 'understanding' of the boy who had assaulted and murdered his four-year-old daughter the day before. The Nazis dehumanized themselves in carrying out their mass slaughters; and any Jew who indulges the inclination to forgive and forget is countering that dehumanization with a species of his own — a species not at all comparable in kind or degree or quality, but one that can be called dehumanization nevertheless. K "YET CAPITAL PUNISHMENT is surely wrong, and one can argue that even where a man like Oswald Pohl is concerned, it achieves nothing — not even the satisfaction of the primitive desire for vengeance. But perhaps the same reasoning by which Camus has demonstrated the immorality of capital punishment — that society is employing absolute and irrevocable means in order to implement what can only in the nature of things be a relative and fallible judgment — justifies the hanging of the worst Nazis war criminals. Because the crimes they committed were on a scale that defies all our moral categories, and because no conceivable punishment could possibly have been adequate to these crimes, a cold-blooded execution performed years later by professionals who were not themselves personally involved somehow seems the one form or retribution that even begins to approach adequacy. The cold-bloodedness, the professionalism, the impersonality — these are the very factors that in ordinary criminal cases make capital punishment particularly repulsive and inhuman..." (Excerpted from an editorial in the May, 1960, Commentary by its editor, Nathan Podhoretz) Worth Repeating On the impact of World War II: It all seemed such a pity. Just at the time when thoughtful educators were beginning to bring some order into American universities, and even the public was beginning to see the point; when life was returning to the teaching of the liberal arts and an appetite for something beyond facts was developing in American students, when hard-headed employers were beginning to take an interest in the intangibles of a cultured boy—along came a war and shifted all the emphasis back to machines again.—Robert I. Gannon Copeland's scholarship as an undergraduate was no more distinguished than it was when he became a college teacher. His colleagues were to say of him that he was an extremely well-read man, but not truly a scholar. He was impatient with the burrowing of candidates for the Ph.D. degree in English, which he was never tempted to try for. He liked to speak of the "Ph.D. death rattle," and when the president of Byrn Mawr, Miss Carey Thomas, asked him to suggest some promising young man whom he thought eligible for her English staff, making the proviso that they have their doctorates, Copeland sarcastically replied that it was unfortunate she could not avail herself of the services of such men as George Lyman Kittredge, Barrett Wendell, Bliss Perry, and "your humble servant," none of whom had slaved over a thesis on the use of the conjunction "and" in Chaucer. The outburst was typical of a man who, although always an inveterate reader, was proud of having once remarked, "A man is always better than a book...”—J. Donald Adams "Huckleberry Finn" is essentially a book about a marginal American type, who only wants to stay alive; but who does not find this very easy to do, being assailed on one side by forces of violence, which begrudge him the little he asks, and on the other by forces of benevolence, which insist that he ask for more. Against the modesty and singleness of his purpose, everything else is measured and weighed: religion, the social order, other men. — Leslie Fiedler Culture is like a match burning in infinite darkness.—Bernard Berenson Tuesday, November 7. 1961 University Daily Kansan KU Not a Diploma Mill Page 3 It Looks This Way... College and university enrollment showed a large increase throughout the United States this fall, and indications are that an even larger increase will be registered next year. Because of the large number of students attending colleges, many people may be lulled into a false sense of security. The next generation, they think, will be an educated generation which won't be taken in by rabble-rousers, cure-alls, and crackpot theories. Unfortunately, however, many colleges are not doing their job. Not only are they failing to teach students to think; they are discouraging students from thinking. AT MANY COLLEGES. all controversy is discouraged. Organizations which threaten to become controversial are harassed by the administration. Speakers with ideas which have not been accepted by most of society are not allowed to speak to students. The student newspaper is not allowed to support unpopular ideas or criticize administration policy; it is merely a publicity sheet for the institution. Many colleges have become, in effect, corporations. They exist to turn out students on an assembly-line basis with a piece of paper called a "degree." which supposedly will help the students on their way to "the top." All students are expected to fall into line to present the best possible "public image." Don't let the public get the idea everything isn't functioning smoothly, because the public doesn't like controversy. THE REASON FOR THIS CHANGE from college to corporation was suggested in a recent editorial in Editor & Publisher Magazine: "College administrators naturally want to present a good face to the public and are extremely unhappy when something happens to dirty that face." Many college administrators live in horror that their "image" will be tarnished. They see a reduction in funds for new buildings when appropriation time comes around in the next legislature. They see horrified parents vowing not to send their children to that "hotbed of radicalism." Buildings are important to take care of increasing enrollments. Funds are needed to maintain the physical plant and pay salaries. But if new buildings and bigger enrollments become an end in themselves, colleges are destroying their basis for existence. COLLEGES DO NOT EXIST merely to give degrees. A college education includes meeting new people from different backgrounds and with different ideas. A college education is supposed to make a student evaluate his old ideas and recognize his prejudices.. Complete outward harmony does not necessarily mean that students are satisfied with everything and that everything is running smoothly in the institution. It only means that students have been kept too lazy or indifferent—or afraid—to do anything about the wrongs they see about them. Whether these wrongs concern a national problem or a school policy it is important that students are alert enough to try to find a solution to the problem. THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, for the most part, does not fit the "corporation" category discussed above. Such events as the Minority Opinion Forum bring representatives of such contrasting organizations as the "Fair Play for Cuba" Committee and the John Birch Society to speak to students. The student newspaper has been free to comment on any issue it feels important—including college policies. When students go out of college lazy or indifferent to their surroundings they will in all probability remain that way for the rest of their life. They will keep their old prejudices, they will listen to people who have cure-alls for everything that frightens them, they will be content to let wrongs continue because it is too much trouble to "rock the boat." Unfortunately, however, KU is an exception. KU's freedom is probably taken for granted by most of the "natives," but it is very noticeable to transfer students. This atmosphere should not be allowed to deteriorate so that KU becomes another "corporation." If KU is one of the top five state-supported universities, as some have claimed, it is partly because of this freedom. Students, faculty members, and especially administrators should stop any "corporation" trends at KU. —Clayton Keller Books in Review By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism THE ADVENTURES OF AUGIE MARCH, by Saul Bellow. Viking Compass. $1.95. When this great big book came out in 1953 there were huzzas and hosannas. Many thought it the No. 1 book of the year. Though Bellow won the National Book Award for fiction in 1954, the book failed to catch on. This is too bad, for it's one of the best books of the fifties. Augie March is a kind of Tom Jones, and his wanderings and adventures are in the mood of Tom. He is a boy out of Jewish Chicago, a young man going places, or at least any place. Always there are women for Augie, wherever he goes—college, Mexico, high society. IT IS A VITAL AND FUNNY BOOK, ONE THAT RANGES all over the map. Augie March is a natural man, a man of few inhibitions. He tells his own story and it is a fantastic one—life as a thief, a gigolo, a sailor, a businessman, a flophouse bum, and always a lover. Though the novel rambles and is inconclusive, it does these because of Augie himself, his inconclusive nature, and the way that his life itself never really falls into any sensible pattern. MAD letters to the editor Kennedy and Doublethink Editor: It is too bad that the English satirist Eric Blair, better known as George Orwell, is not alive today to see how President Kennedy is using his concept of doublethink as developed in the novel "1894." Last September when the Soviet Union began their recent series of atomic tests in the atmosphere announcements from the White House said that this was a crime against humanity and that we (the United States) believed that such tests were not necessary because it was possible to gain the necessary knowledge to develop better atomic weapons from underground tests and from experimentation in laboratories. We were led to believe that the main reason that the Soviet Union was conducting atmospheric tests was to create feelings of fear in the people of the world—in other words for psychological reasons. Recently President Kennedy announced that the United States was preparing to resume atmospheric tests if it was necessary for us to do so. This is where I believe that the concept of doublethink is used by the President. The apparent reason for the September statements was to get the world to look down on the Soviet Union for resuming atmospheric testing, because our government said that such tests were unnecessary for the further development of nuclear weapons. To some extent this was accomplished. In his announcement that the United States may be forced to resume atmospheric tests the President is using doublethink by saying that such tests may be necessary — apparently this is to gain world approval of the United States plans to perform atmospheric tests, which Great Britain has recently approved. Please do not misunderstand me, I am not saying that we should or should not resume atmospheric tests, nor that they are either necessary or unnecessary to our defense. I am just pointing out that our government leaders are using Orwell's concept of totalitarian doublethink in getting the people of the world to think one thing at one time and something quite different at another time. Edbert Wayne Miller Valley Center graduate student P-T-P and the American Negro Editor: However, one question (whether a logical after- thought or not I do not know) followed the pleasant parade of images of international friendship into the door of my mind and continued to march steadily back and forth in my consciousness long after the pleasantries had passed into the silent corridors of my sub-conscious. Do our fellow Americans, the Negroes, feel at home at KU? I must admit that I could not possibly state that I have talked to enough people nor made observations leading to a conclusive conception of the sentiments of our own native-born minority group. I am merely able to say that it appears to me that the preceding question would in most cases necessarily be answered After reading the article entitled "Why Foreign Students Feel at Home at KU" in the October 15 edition of The Kansas City Star I was very much impressed with the insight and consequent positive actions of students like Bill Dawson, originator of People-to-People. Dawson and others, who realized that pursuit of education in this country created many problems for the international student, have exhibited an eagerness to help their fellow men which is not only a tribute to KU but to the spirit of the country as a whole. It was very gratifying to learn that every possible effort is being made to remove the obstacles in the path of the happiness and self-confidence of our foreign visitors and that at present it can be said that they feel at home at KU. negatively. It is not my intention to attempt to prove anything but only to propose this question: Granted that a great deal of progress is being made in our relations with foreign students here; nevertheless, what kind of progress is being made in our relations among ourselves? Am I alone in considering the concern for the foreign student and the apparent lack of interest in the problems of the Negro as distastefully paradoxical? It was pointed out in the feature article of The Star that "A People-to-People council was established on the campus to help foreign students to become better integrated into American college and social life" Are our own Negro brothers and sisters made to feel comfortable at the social functions in our home as our guests are reportedly made to feel? Or do we prefer that our own students who belong to minority groups organize and engage in their own separate social functions while we play host to our foreign visitors in order to make them feel at home? It seems to me that the practice of approaching problems in their order of importance should be exercised in this regard. But then, perhaps I am erroneous in holding the opinion that we should be equally zealous in striving to help our own Negro students before attempting to demonstrate our warm-hearted consideration for foreign students. Bill Morrow Kansas City * * * Against NSA Disaffiliation Editor; Being a former member of the ASC, and having attended a regional conference of the NSA, I was very interested in the former's decision to disaffiliate from the latter. The relationship between ASC and NSA in recent times reminds one of a classic sibling rivalry. THE RIVALRY WAS BASED on the much greater capability of the NSA compared to that of the ASC. No level of discussion could sink lower than that which passes for such on the ASC. It has the sort of aroma of a glorified Sunday school — or of a meeting of girls high-school prefects. In between munched donuts is wafted the latest inside information on the probable number of down-slips... to present study anxiety over the Christmas vacation: then a peep-talk from the president on how to combat apathy. THE ARGUMENTS PUT FORWARD for the disaffiliation with the NSA are mostly silly nonsense. The American tradition is one of "no taxation without representation." However, the YAF outlook on student government would seem to be "no taxation and no representation"; probably their and the ASC's definition of limited government. If they are serious about it, I suggest, that they promote the expansion of the Peace Corps, and ship all the liberals to Africa. If we are concerned about the costs of argument, let us examine what we receive from the ASC compared to the NSA—for our money. From the ASC a series of "prestige" committees which rarely meet: quote "activities" unquote. From the NSA a travel organization; exact information on how other schools have handled campus problems like traffic, seating, integration, etc.; protection against overly parental tendencies of some schools; the establishment of contact with the students of other countries; the discussion of important national issues — particularly those affecting students. IT IS OBVIOUS WHICH ORGANIZATION is more valuable. Finally, in conclusion, what should we think of the integrity of the campus politicians — who ran for office on a pro-NSA platform—and are now afraid to discuss the issue in public — after having voted against it. Denis Kennedy Lawrence graduate student E.D. Student Elections and Apathy Editor: Recent articles in the Kansan concerning student apathy, the campus political parties and the coming election lead me to comment upon the interrelationship of these factors in the campus political process. The point, I believe, that has been overlooked in the recent controversies is the relationship of the student to his party. The student as a member of the electorate and more important as a member of a political paty must become active in both. Political parties depend upon support for growth and effectiveness. Their platforms are written with a view toward pleasing the individual members of the party and obtaining their support. SOAP SOAP JNYPKER The most obvious and most basic way for the student to express his support is to vote. A party is the creation of the students who compose it. It can formulate a universal party policy only if this policy is an expression of the collective ideas of all party members. If a student is dissatisfied with the campus political parties or with campus politics in general, I would ask that he look first at his relationship to his party. I would ask that he make his views known to his party representatives or at party meetings. I would further suggest that the student should follow his party's activities and participate in them as much as possible. The political party is organized for winning elections and carrying out policy. It needs the support of the student to accomplish these ends. Let us not desert it. Charles Patterson Rockford, Ill., junior Going on a Picnic ? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Quarterback Club Meeting —Exciting films of the KU-Nebraska game Narrated by a top player. Forum Room Student Union Tuesday, Nov. 7 7 p.m. Free Admission & Cokes Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, November 7, 1961 BALMORAN SAXOPHONES "NIGHT TRAIN"—Members of the Ralph at the KU Homecoming Dance Saturday. Marterie orchestra tune up for their appearance SUA Group Lauds Homecoming Dance The Homecoming Dance this Saturday is being lauded by its perpetrators as the best to date. According to David White, Prairie Village sophomore, publicity chairman for the group, and Robert Swan, Topeka sophomore, general chairman of the SUA dance committee, the dance will offer more this year than has ever been offered in years past. They point to the following: Two bands, one operating in the ballroom, the other in the cafeteria of the Kansas Union. Four entrances to the dance, to aid in avoiding congestion. at no charge and refreshment delivery provided. Private rooms available for groups The highlight of the night will be the nationally-known orchestra of Ralph Marterie. The Marterie band has been chosen as the number one college favorite in both Down Beat and Cash Box magazines. In addition, the band has had more hit records than any other group. It will be in the Union Ballroom. Another band from Kansas City, will provide music and entertainment in the cafeteria. The dance is scheduled from 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Saturday with closing hours extended until 1:30 a.m. Tickets are available at $2.50 per couple. Education Research Council Plans Study of Crucial Issues The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The interdisciplinary approach will be used in the conferences, Dean Anderson said. So that they can contribute their unique specialties to the reinforcement of educational research, conferees will come from such fields as sociology, statistics, and many other academic areas outside of education. Judge Elmo Hunter of the Kansas City, Mo., Court of Appeals will be guest speaker at the Nov. 14 meeting of the KU Chancery Club. Dean Anderson said the proceedings of the conference would be published. The Council for Research in Education, a coordinating group organized in 1960 by 20 national associations, will seek financing from philanthropic foundations. The decision was reached at a two-day meeting of the directors last week in Washington, D.C. Judge Will Speak to Law Club A coffee and grill session will follow the meeting. All interested prelaw students are invited to attend. The Council for Research in Education, of which Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, is chairman, is planning a series of conferences on the crucial issues in American education most in need of research. No race can prosper till it learns that there is as much dignity in tilling a field as in writing a poem. —Booker T. Washington "We hope these proceedings can be a catalytic agent to stir up the educational world to focus better its research efforts on the significant problems that bar the American educational system from greatness." Dean Anderson explained. PARIS — (UPI) — Paris' first American-style "key club" has announced it will try to impose the Chicago no-pinching rule on the Frenchman. Frankly, the odds are not good. They will dance on customers' tables, cast languid glances, laugh, smile, caijole, and—in what will seem an outrageous breach of logic to the Frenchman—discourage all pinching. Burton Browne, who opened his "Gaslight" club Saturday night, is adamant about this point. They can look all they want, he said, but they must observe the American rules on pinching: don't. Between us, "Millie" is not the perfect American model—she's eminently more pinchable. The five other imported girls, including three Americans, a Briton and a Canadian, have the same qualifications. THE CLUB'S DECOR will follow the American style throughout. HIS HOSTESS, "MILLIE," described as "a perfect American model from Chicago," said there would be "no pinching" signs up all over the club, located off the Avenue Des Champs-Elysees. "We imported typical American girls and wild west and roaring twenties atmosphere because we believe Frenchmen will like them as much as true Americans do," Browne said. Paris Club Wants No-Pinching Rule And at least one of the girls, green-eyed Robin Fitzgerald of Chicago, is all ready to prove it. "I would love to meet Frenchmen," she said, adding, with a glance at Browne "although I understand I will have to do this out of the club." BROWNE SAID 110 U.S. "Gaslight Club" customers have flown over to introduce Frenchmen to the secret door key and the delights within on Saturday night. Then, the best guess is, the Frenchmen will show the Americans that there's nothing more against human nature than a stifled pinch. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 First Readings of English Pro Papers Stop 285 JACK ZINN for Freshman President Last spring, approximately 20 per Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 This type of English proficiency examination has been given for the past three years. Two hundred and eighty-five English proficiency examination papers have been questioned or failed on the first reading, according to James E. Seaver, associate professor of Western Civilization and chairman of the committee in charge of the English proficiency examination. On Oct. 12 approximately 930 students took the examination. The students were given two hours to write a theme on one of 18 different topics. Of these 930 students, 285 have not passed on the first reading. The second group of papers has been given to the graders, Prof. Seaver said. Since each grader only has about five papers to grade, the exams should be completely graded by this weekend or early next week. cent of the students did not pass the examination. However, the percentage of failures usually runs between 30 and 40 per cent. LONDON — (UPI) — Pop Singer Don Fox, who became chairman of a "marriage without sex," society last weekend, resigned yesterday when his wife told him she was expecting a baby. No Sex Chairman Resigns Even though this particular examination had more topics than the others, Prof. Seaver said he expects the same ratio of students passing and failing. HAVE OUR TEACHERS COLLEGES FAILED ? Students training to be teachers often showless academic ability than other college students. Yet many of them go on to become licensed teachers. Why don't teachers colleges crack down on unfit students? You'll find out in this week's Post. The Saturday Evening POST FAILED Photography by Studio de Portra 912 Mass. — Lawrence, Kan. VI2-2300 Sororities & Fraternities Contact us for your House Photography - Portraits Color or Black & White - Application - Creative RECORDS STEREO Up to 75% OFF HI-FI 45s (15c EACH) RCA Victor, Dott, Mercury, Kapp Columbia, London, & Capitol labels Large Selection of Party Records VINCENTS-904 Mass. Tuesday, November 7. 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 5 University Daily Kansan University Daily Kansan SPORTS Unbeaten Texas First; KU 16th NEW YORK—(UPI)—The powerful Texas Longhorns, who have stamped seven straight opponents by margins of three touchdowns or more, moved into first place in the United Press International college football ratings with Alabama No. 2. Texas, which has outscored its opponents by 233 points to 46, was the first-place choice this week of 21 of the 35 leading coaches who rate the teams weekly for UPI. IN AN ODDITY IN THIS week's ratings, Missouri moved up one notch in the No. 10 spot although defeated by Colorado, 7-6. And Colorado dropped back one place to No. 9 despite the important Big Eight Conference victory which ran its record to 6-0. The upsets which claimed Michigan State and Mississippi, last week's two leading teams, caused a big shakeup in the top 10. Michigan State, ranked No. 1 for two straight weeks, dropped to seventh place and Mississippi fell from second to eighth. Alabama, also with a 7-0 record, received four first-place votes; Ohio State, ranked No.3, had seven ballots for the top spot; Michigan State had two and Colorado one. TEXAS, ALABAMA AND OHIO State each advanced two places from last week. Louisiana State, which defeated Mississippi, 10-7, jumped from seventh place to fourth, and Minnesota, 13-0 conquerer of Michigan State, vaulted from 10th to fifth. Georgia Tech, Michigan State, Mississippi, Colorado and Missouri rounded out the top 10 in that order. Texas had a substantial lead in points over Alabama, 330 to 281. Ohio State's third-place total was 270. Missouri's total of 14 points was the smallest ever compiled by a team in the top 10 group. (Points are awarded on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis for votes from first to 10th place.) Iowa, rated ninth last week dropped back to a tie for 16th place. TEXAS PLAYS BAYLOR next while Alabama has a "breather" against Richmond and Ohio State takes on Indiana. Next week's three Phi Delts Close With 19-7 Victory Phi Delta Theta closed out its regular intramural football season last night with a 19-7 win over third place Sigma Chi to maintain a second place standing in division II of fraternity A competition. Phi Gamma Delta finished undefeated in the division to take the title. Both teams will enter the play-offs against the top two teams in the other fraternity division to determine the fraternity champion who will face the winner of the independent play-offs. In division A, Delta Tau Delta meets Beta Theta Pi today to determine first place. The Betas are undefeated while the Delts have lost once. In independent A action, ASCE sneaked past stubborn Stephenson, 6-0. Fraternity B play saw the Phi Delts crunch Alpha Kappa Lambda, 40-6, while the Phi Gams downed the Beta No. 2 squad, 13-6. 365 Excuses 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Anniv. of the meeting of the Kiwanis Club leading games pit Minnesota against Iowa, LSU vs. North Carolina, and Michigan State vs. 12th-ranked Purdue. Votes were so concentrated among the first nine teams this week that there was only a smattering of points to be distributed in the second 10 group. Utah State was ranked 11th with only 13 points, followed in order by Purdue and Maryland. There were two-team ties for 14th place between UCLA and Arkansas, and for 16th place between Iowa and Kansas. Michigan, Northwestern and Rice were deadlocked for the No. 18 rating. Devine Feels Colorado Will Take Big 8 Title Coach Sonny Grandelius' Buffs handed Missouri its first loss of the year last week 7-6 and all but sewed up the title. Only Nebraska and Iowa State stand in their path. Colorado's Buffs are the odds-on favorites to win the Big Eight Conference football championship and nail down an Orange Bowl berth. United Press International "They've got the momentum and the team and they're going to be hard to beat," said Missouri Coach Dan Devine. "I thought we played our best game of the year but it wasn't good enough to win." Kansas, gaining momentum each week, bowled over Nebraska 28-6 for its fourth straight victory. But the Jayhawks cannot win the championship unless Colorado is beaten. Coach Jack Mitchell's crew had one conference defeat — a 20-19 loss to Colorado. This week, Kansas State plays at Kansas, Oklahoma at Missouri, Nebraska at Iowa State, and Utah at Colorado. Nebraska Fans Vociferous In Gripe Against Jennings CONFERENCE STANDINGS CONFERENCE Team W L T Pts. Op. Colorado 5 0 0 86 39 Kansas 4 1 0 120 41 Missouri 3 1 0 39 14 Iowa State 3 2 0 80 63 Nebraska 1 3 0 36 52 Oklahoma 1 3 0 46 59 Okla. State 1 4 0 29 96 Kansas State 0 4 0 13 85 Although the Nebraska fans had little to cheer about Saturday as their Cornhuskers were completely hamstrung by Kansas, there was considerable crowd reaction late in MU For the first time this season the Lawrence senior has moved into the Big Eight scoring lead. He has totaled 30 points to beat Colorado's massive end, Jerry Hillebrand, by one length. Around the BIG 8 Kansas will again be led against K-State by John Hadl who continued to make a solid bid for a repeat on the All America scrolls as he fainted and flipped his way through Nebraska. HADL ALSO CONTINUES TO remain among the league's leaders in punting, punt returning, and rushing, ranking fifth, third and ninth respectively. By Bill Sheldon In Kansas State, the KU Jayhawkers will meet a team Saturday which pulled two of the bigger surprises in the area early in the season in downing Indiana and the Air Force. The Wildcats have gone slowly back to their accustomed position at the tail end of the Big Eight standings since then with losses to Nebraska, Colorado, Iowa State, Oklahoma, and Kentucky out of the league. ALTHOUGH THERE DOES NOT appear to be a very good chance for the Wildcats to upset the Jayhawkers, the added spice of the long-time rivalry and the increasing momentum of Coach Jack Mitchell's well-drilled squad should make for a very interesting tussle, regardless of the final outcome. But, despite this five game slump, the K-Staters have to be considered a pesky bunch which could bother Kansas—at least for awhile. But, where Hadl is making the biggest advancement has been in passing. Although Hadl has been close to the top all season, it wasn't until the last three games that he really began to make a threatening move to split the Gale Weidner-Dave Hoppmann leadership. Hadl now has completed 31 of 68 aerials for 451 yards, placing third behind Iowa State's Hopmann who has but 481. Colorado's Weidner leads with 545 yards on 40 for 90—both marks the best in the league. In adding to his throwing yardage, Hadl has carried KU to fifth place in the conference in this area. This is a great improvement over the previous last place position. The Kansas team passing percentage is tied for second best in the league, knotted at 46 per cent with Iowa State behind Missouri who has 45.3 per cent completions. the game to moves made by Coach Bill Jennings. The Lincoln rooters quickly voiced loud disapproval of Jennings on three occasions. THE BIGGEST GRIPE was the poor passing of quarterback Dennis Claridge. Claridge hit only six of 18 throwing attempts and with the home team almost hopelessly ineffective without a solid passing threat, the crowd screamed for Jennings to replace the sohomore. Meade, coming in late in the third period, immediately connected with Jim Huge for the longest Nebraska gain of the afternoon, a 30-yard aerial, to spirit the Husker's only scoring drive. After considerable vocal prompting from the stands, Jennings, to a considerable wave of approval, finally used senior Ron Meade. THEN, WHEN JENNINGS complained to the referee on a decision involving possible pass interference, the fans booed his unsportsmanlike conduct. Jennings was charged thusly and his team was penalized 15 yards. The third time was when Jennings sent Willie Ross back in a single safety to return a punt in the final minutes. Ross fumbled a punt which was instrumental in the Nebraska loss to Oklahoma State and the fans were wary of a repeat performance. Fraternity Jewelry With the evidence shown Saturday, there appears to be a basis for the rumor in Lincoln that Jennings will not have his contract, which expires after the season, renewed. Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W.14th VI3-1571 AL LAUTER PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED 1912 West 25th St. Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out t. e - central air conditioning Come Out to See - carpeted - garbage disposal - off street parking - laundry facilities $ \frac{1}{2} $ block - play area for children Phone VI 2-3416 office VI 3-8253 home Kansas Keglers Beaten by Nebraska The University of Kansas varsity bowling team opened the season Saturday at the University of Nebraska with a loss. The Cornhusker keglers amassed 2865 pins to the Hawks' 2778. Top honors in the match were snared by Nebraska's Ralph Holmstrom. Holmstrom rolled a 188-170-246-607. Paul Hammar, Overland Park junior, fired a 183-215-179-577 for the Jayhawk's best effort. The quintet's series scores were: Yesterday, Coach Bascom Fearing's squad rolled in their first Big Eight postal match. The results will not be known for at least a week. Hammar, 577; Terrell Hays, Shawnee junior, 573; Dave Rybelt, Ottawa junior, 556; John Hember, Kansas City junior, 554; and Bill Miller, Mission freshman, 518. BUSINESS MACHINES CO. BUSINESS MACHINES CO. 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up SALES SERVICE RENTALS Printing, Mimeographing and Duplicating Pick up — Delivery SIN CAPITAL OF THE WEST? A Vegas headline was: PASTOR HAILS STRIP SHOWS. And nobody blinked. In fact, when Vegas was dubbed a town of "sin, gin and din," local boosters were overjoyed. Is Las Vegas really as wild as they say? Read "How Wicked Is Vegas?" in this week's Post. The Saturday Evening POST LAS VEGAS ♦ Encourage AMERICAN EDUCATION WEEK· NOV. 5-11 Learning Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, November 7, 1961 Devine Feels Colorado Will Take Big 2 GOOD RECRUITERS, EH?-The officers of Angel Flight pose in their newly acquired uniforms. Left to right: Jeanne Howell, Tulsa, Okla., senior, information officer; Jonalou Heitman, Oxford senior, pledge trainer; Doris Miller, Alma junior, executive officer; Sharon Gale, Junction City, Colo., senior, commander; Sharon Moore, Leavenworth junior, administrative officer, and Margaret Pettit, Mission senior, comptroller. Newspapermen Avoid Public Scorn Unlike Most Authors By Dick West WASHINGTON—(UPI) One of the main advantages of being in the newspaper business is that you don't have to be around when people are reading what you write. If any complaints, or compliments, are forthcoming, you usually hear about them the next day from your boss. Getting the reaction second hand that way provides at least a modicum of insulation. This form of torture, which ought to be outlawed as cruel and inhuman punishment, is reserved for misguided souls who write books. A newspaperman is not obliged to station himself in a public place, while strangers pass by and inspect his handiwork, accepting or rejecting it right before his eyes. I HAVE JUST GONE through such an experience and it was enough to cure forever my mild attack of Scribendi Cacoethes, an affiliation which has been isolated and defined as "the itch for writing." Being innocent in the ways of the book trade, I embarked on my literary venture with a loosely bound set of notions which turned out to be a collection of misconceptions. For one thing, I harbored the impression that when an author submitted a manuscript for publication, his role in the enterprise was concluded. It is only the beginning. I will not attempt to relate here all of the agonies that the author undergoes before his precious words finally are compressed between covers. The publication day suffering alone is enough to chill your bones. Interfraternity Council Changes Rush Rules The changes are: The Interfraternity Council has made five changes in its rush rules, Paul Ingemanson, Topeka senior and president of the IFC, said in an interview. - Next year, there will be six rush dates on the first day of rush week instead of five, and there will be five dates instead of four on the second day. - "THE PURPOSE HERE," Ingemanson said, "is to get more boys through more houses." - There will be no group rush functions held from the Sunday before rush week until Wednesday night train-dates. - A house is no longer required to provide room and board for a rushee who does not pledge and who visits there on the last date. Ingemanson said this type of pretrain-date has been getting out of hand, and "some houses can't afford it." "UNIVERSITY HOUSING will be provided for these boys," he said. - Any boy who goes through rush week and does not pledge, must wait Diamonds three days before pledging. Any boy who does not go through rush week, must wait three weeks. In the past, it has been three weeks in both cases. "This saves the boys who do go through rush, but who can't make a decision then, the problem of finding housing for those three weeks," he said. Gifts Jewelry - All entering freshman men are eligible for rush. The IFC also elected four delegates to the National Interfraternity Council this year in Boston from Nov. 31 to Dec. 2. DANIELS JEWELRY 914 Mass. VI 3-2572 "The IFC decided to leave it up to the houses themselves whether or not these boys should be pledged." The delegates are: Neal McCoy, Cedar Vale senior, Roger Schanke, Ottawa junior, Lauren Ward, Ottawa junior, and Ingemansion. IN THE PAST, only those in the upper 3/4 of their high school class were eligible. Ingemanson said: Word comes down to the author that it might help the publisher recover part of the printing cost if he showed up at a book store and personally inscribed copies for the patrons of his art. Each person is born to one possession which outvalues all his others — his last breath.—Mark Twain The appointed hour finds the poor bloke seated at a table behind a stack of his books and feeling extremely foolish. Business is brisk, only the customers are buying the wrong volumes. SOON THE AUTHOR's friends and relatives start drifting in. A man never knows how thin, the supply of his friends and relatives is until he writes a book. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT I had the feeling that I was watching my own funeral and that they were my mourners and pall-bearers. What is worse is to watch the browsers saunter up and casually leaf through your heart's pride while your life's blood drains away. The callousness of book browsers is immense. Balanced against this shattering ordeal is the faint hope that you might eventually collect some royalties. Whatever the amount might be, it is not worth it. ___ Some return your book to the table as though it were radioactively contaminated. Others walk away with lips curled or noses wrinkled. Professor to Baylor Meeting John Willingham, assistant professor of English and editor of correspondence study at the University of Kansas, will serve as secretary of the American Literature I section at the annual meeting of the SouthCentral Modern Language Association at Baylor University on Friday and Saturday. Three new officers have been elected and 20 new members have been pledged to Angel Flight. Prof. Willingham, who joined the KU staff in July, has just completed a term of three years as associate editor of the South-Central Modern Language Association Bulletin. The new officers are Margaret Pettit, Mission senior, comptroller; Sharon Moore, Leavenworth junior, administrative officer, and Jonalou Heitman, Oxford senior, pledge trainer. Angel Flight Gets Officers, Pledges The new pledges are Judy Bartlett, Hutchinson sophomore; Carrie Bliss, Miami, Fla., sophomore; Judy Boyer, Wichita sophomore; Cynthia Cheesebrough, Overland Park junior; Karen Cowell, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; Jini Dick, Chicago, Ill., sophomore; Gayla Hastings, Topeka sophomore; Judy Hill, Denver, Colo., freshman; Virginia Hill, Lyons junior, and Joan McGregor, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Lauralea Milberg, Arlington, Va., sophomee; Lois Reynolds, Hays junior; Susan Sandberg, Sheppard Air Force Base, Tex., sophomeh; Christi Sleeker, Fordyce, Ark., sophomeh; Dorothy Stevens, Hutchinson junior; Dana Sullivan, Ulysses sophomeh; Mary Tatum, Osceola, Mo. sophomeh; Carolyn Toews, Imman junior; Janis Tomlinson, Prairie Village junior, and Bonnie Ward, Topeka sophomeh. Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiag Deadline for Loan Applications Is Dec. 1 Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups The deadline for applications for spring semester scholarships and National Defense Loans is Dec. 1. Completed applications must be on file in the Office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong Hall, by that date. No late applications will be considered. Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Funds for spring semester scholarships and Federal Loans are limited, so only a small percentage of those students who have applied or will apply for aids will be successful. Those students counting heavily on assistance from the program for the 1962 spring semester and summer session should be investigating other possible sources of financial aid. Students expecting difficulty meeting educational expenses should see Robert Billings, director of the Office of Aids and Awards. Wesley Foundation Will Host Workshop Forty students from colleges in Kansas and neighboring states will participate in a music and worship workshop Friday evening through Sunday noon at the Wesley Foundation. Roger Deschner, minister of music at the First Methodist Church of Houston, Tex., will lead the students in discussions of hymns, electronic music, theory and history of worship, concert music and jazz in worship. The group will form a choir for the weekend, and some of the students will participate in the Sunday morning service at First Methodist Church. The workshop is open to students of all denominations. Registrations may be made at Viking 3-7151. The cost for the entire weekend is $3, although part-time registrations will be accepted. Let sleeping dogs lie — who wants to rouse 'em?—Charles Dickens SHOULD WE CEN SOR Newton Minow of the FCC says the networks should clean up shows er get off the air. TV bigwigs call this censorship. Is it? Should our government blow the whistle on TV trash? Get the rarity in this week's Post. The Saturday Evening POST $200 Diamond Ring Missing from Lewis A diamond ring valued at $200 was reported missing and presumed stolen from Lewis Hall, according to a report made to campus security police over the weekend. Donna Brown, Wichita freshman, reported the ring missing from her room since Wednesday or Thursday. The diamond was mounted on a white gold band, the report said. Ecology Is Lecture Topic "Is Ecology a Science?" will be the topic of a speech given by L. B. Slobodkin of the University of Michigan at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 426 Lindley. THE GREATEST HIGH ADVENTURE EVER FILMED! THE GREATEST HIGH ADVENTURE EVER FILMED! COUMBIA PICTURES presents GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN by CARL FOREMAN'S THE GUNS OF NAVARONE co-starring STANLEY BAKER • ANTHONY QUAYLE AND IRENE PAPAS • GIA SCALA • JAMES DARREN COLOR and CINEMASCOPE Written & Produced by Bred & Played by CARL FOREMAN Written, Captivated & Conducted DIMUIR TIOМИКИ GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN COLUMBIA PICTURES presents GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN in CARL FOREMAN'S THE GUNS OF NAVARONE GRANADA THEATRE... Telephone VOICE 3-519 HOW A LUSTY, FIGHTING YOUNG ADVENTURER TURNED INTO A SAINTLY MAN OF GOD! 20 francis of assisi GRANADA THEATRE ... Telefonium VN081 3-21-00 HOW A LUSTY, FIGHTING YOUNG ADVENTURER TURNED INTO A SAINTLY MAN OF GOD! 20TH ANNIVERSARY. FOR PRESENTS FRANCIS OF ASSISI LOST: O'Leat Long. HEAV sweate and h value turn. GLAS: Gym please p.m.. ALTE 7551. BRADFORD DILLMAN - DOLORES HART STUART WHITMAN + PEDRO ARMENDARIZ Produced by PLATO & AROUNDUS - Directed by MICHAEL CURZIN Screenplay by BUSENE VALLE - AMERICA FORTH & JACK THOMAS COLOR BY DEUXE CINEMAŠOPE LOST watch call J 1 will 2467, 1 Tom's St., 1 full-th $1.25 TYPE Office Typev 3-3644 Now Showing! U. AU Suppl etc, every Cham Grant Conn. and r At 7 & 9 Adm. 85c DRES mals, 93912 RENT mach rente Sewin MILI locati Lawr VARSITY TREATURE...Telephone VIKING 3-1065 Expe thesis write rates 1648. U. R Pet west. self-s p.m. Expe her rates PROI typin cal p Tuesday, November 7. 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 7 ART ARIZ URIZARZ TOMAS PE ! 10-65 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $06; three days, $1.00; five days, $12.5. Terms cash: All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. LOST LOST GLASSES between Carruth- immerfield. Call Sewanee. LI, VI 2-3944. 11-7 HEAVY BROWN & WHITE wool knit sweater. Large pheasant on the back, dog value to me only. Award offered for turn. Call VI 3-8343. 11-8 GLASS CASE and glasses in Robinson Gym Annex. Whoever picked them up please call Herb, VI 3-1034 between 5-6:30 p.m. M-W-F. 11-8 LOST GOLD COLORED Hamilton call John Hooper, VI 3-6455 BUSINESS SERVICES Tom's 14th St. Barber Shop, 5 W, 14th St. 1/2 block off Mass. Free parking, full-time barbers — All HAIRCUTS $1.25 — Hours 8:00-5:30 Mon-Sat. 11-9 1 will do Ironing in my home. Call VI 2- 2467, pickup and delivery. 11-9 ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Mlss. tt TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3-3644. tf 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 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. Tee DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- more, call Ola Smith 9391's Mass. Call II 3-5263. MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." - 1029. Now at two 1029. 1029. 1029. 1029. Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass. U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- morning. Phone VI 3-2921 — McMorrow self-service — open weeks 8 to 6:30 fml. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. TYPING PROFESSIONAL SECRETARY wants typing. Specializes in German and Medical papers. Erika Williamson. VI 2-3736. 11-8 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Next, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow, 408 W. 13th. V1-2648. Mair, 408 W. 13th. V1-2648. EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558 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. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting ability. For excelle rtyping at standard rates, call Miss Loui Pope, VI 3-1097. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts in English and Spanish, neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook 2000. RI VI 3-7485. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Cases: 1511 W. 21 St. CALL VI 3-6440 t 1511 W. 21 St. CALL VI 3-6440 t FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, dissertations. Rates. dessertations. Reasonable. Mrs Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. Msf FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Service, Service 2-7718 B Woodson Mission, HE 2-7718 Eves or Ssf 2-2186 HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng shese these shese reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Complom, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. See tf TYFING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, résumés, Research Manuscripts. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEdlowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. **EXPERIENCED TYPIST** will do **typing** home — call VI 3-1316. Mrs Loe- Genibach FOR RENT Would like to share 3 bedroom house House in Hilleran area Cll VI 28055 11-7 New 2 Bedroom Apartment, furnished or unfurnished. All modern conveniences, including booking VI 3-124 after 4 p.m., or call VI 2-2349. If answer call VI 2-2590. 11-9 2 LARGE ROOMS. (bedroom & study room) for 2 men students, or will rent single. See at 1339 Teen. 11-8 Vacancy available for 2 men in comm- mission to Collchard Rd Cavil 3-9635 for appointment: LARGE FURNISHED apartment. e a st side, utilities paid. $50. Call V 3-6294. tfaw NEW 5 ROOM DUPLEX: has living room, dining area, lovely kitchen, 2 bedrooms, bath, & finished garage. Has air conditioning, new electric stove & refrigerator. Call VI 3-7120 or KU 385 for appointment. 11-13 ROOM FOR RENT: Linens furnished, comfortable, quiet and close to campus. $30 per month. 407 W. 13th, VI 2-1357. 6 ROOM HOUSE — newly decorated, fenced ward and garden spot. Partly furnished or unfurn. Call at 428 Elm or call VI 3-3602. 11-13 ONE BEDROOM HOUSE for rent, furn. or unfurn. except for kitchen range. Large utility room, clean. Call VI 3-0554 after 7 p.m. 11-13 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks. ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 9350 FOR SALE One National NC-188 Communications receiver. Call Dale Puckett, VI 2-1200. For Sale: Genuine Raccoon Coat. Call John Hooper. VI 3-6455. 11-7 '54 Ford Convertible, black. Clean. Owner leaving town. $295. Phone VI 3-117-8 Used Remington Quiet-riter, 1958 model. Good condition. Reasonable price. Call Karen Jennison, VI 2-1340 after 5 p.m. 11-9 Short Wave 8. Transistor with an amplifier, complete. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. GUNS; ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. Trade-ins: V 3-7001, 1304 Tenn. 11-9 Trade-ins: V 3-7001, 1304 Tenn. 11-9 BARGAINS — 4x5 Speed Graphic, f4.7 135 mm Optar lens, Graphmatic, Film pack adapt, film holders, & acc. plus case, $130, Leica I11G, 90 mm lens, glasses, $20, Leica M240, Opera lenses, $20, New. Call Bob, VI 3-850. I 1951 HARLEY-DAVIDSON good condition — WARC25. Call V1 2-3350. Dick Liberty. ATTENTION PLEDGES: Light your actives' cigarettes with a butane lighter. Ideal for gifts, suitable for framing. Complete with lifetime guarantee for only $3.75. Retail $5.00. Order from VI 2-3682 or see sample at 816 Miss. 12-7 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 753 Mass. VI 3-164a. 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 STEVENS 22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like new. Call VI 3-2906 after 6 p.m. like HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or oedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonia, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendron & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter. VI 3-4201 or IV 3-4201. tt GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. include CD-ROMs for $35.00, free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI Dodge in good running condition $80. Call VI 3-4291. tf NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and increasing in price. Micrographing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-151 today. tf EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS (Paid by the Donald Williams For President Committee) FRESHMEN 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. 5 BOOKCASE SHELVES. 6 'with risers; bookcase, 5' x 1' with glass doors; 15' books, 5' x 2' with spigot. Rubbed cottonwood log with gilders; 12 gugue shotgun, single shot; aquarium and supplies; 3006 Springfield Sea. See at 1016 Hill Drive 1 1 p.m. 11-8 Win With Willy VOTE Donald Williams 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 FRESHMAN PRESIDENT FOR SALE: 'S3 2 dr. Marc, Good cond. new battery. Garry Gillian V1-34153. 1961 TURQUOISE & WHITE Champion Lakewood mobile home for sale. One home, then 42 $ 0.00 daily from 6:30 p.m. on, at Dce's Trailer Court, 1417 East 15th. 11-13 NOW PIZZA HUT DELIVERY!! Call VI 3-9760 MISS JEANNE 2-FOR-1 NIGHT-WEDNESDAY AT THE CATACOMBS 646 Mass. 7-9 buy one beverage — get the second one free Catacombs Open: 4-11 Monday-Thursday Pizza Hut 4-1 Friday & Saturday PIZZA HUT VI 3-9760 Effective November 19th, the nation's airlines have served notice to discontinue the "youth" fare discounts. Airlines Say "No" To Student 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. 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. 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." 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" University Daily Kansan Tuesday, November 7,1961 Disappeared Friday Mother Stays Calm In Search for Son An anxious but calm mother waited today at her home in Olathe for word of her son, a KU chemical engineering student missing since Friday. "I just don't have any idea of what has happened to him," Mrs. conn W. Burns said this morning. John W. Burns Jr., a 20-year-old junior, was last seen friends with whom he had been on a double date. The local investigation has pieced together this information concerning the student's last known whereabouts: Burns, who moved this semester from the Phi Kappa Tau house to an apartment he shared with three other students, went on a double-date Friday to the Stables. LOCAL LAW enforcement officers have sent out a four state missing person bulletin for the KU student. The couples returned home shortly before midnight. Burns and his date were left at a home where she was staying. Burns left his date and apparently walked the short distance to his own apartment, where his car was parked. That was the last time he was seen. He was to drive his red and white 1955 station wagon home Saturday to trade it for another family car. He never arrived there. MRS. BURNS said she doubted that her son was worried or disturbed about anything. She said he complained earlier in the semester about not making good grades, but later told her his grades had picked up after he dropped three hours. "He was a real serious and quiet Speech, Hearing Group in Chicago Five faculty members, two research associates, and a research assistant presented papers at the annual meeting of the American Speech and Hearing Association in Chicago Saturday through today. They are Margaret Byrne, associate professor of speech and drama; R. L. Schiefelbusch, director of child research; Neil Goetzinger, professor of speech and hearing; James McLean, instructor in speech pathology; June Miller, educational director of the speech and hearing department; Ross Copeland, research associate; Harris Winitz, research associate; and Betty Bellerose, research assistant. An exhibit on processes in communication research was displayed as one of seven finalists in national competition. It was prepared by Joseph Spradlin, research associate, Copeland, Prof. Goetzinger and Winitz. WICKED LAS VEGAS: IS IT TRUE THAT ANYTHING GOES? "We've got bank vice presidents who come to gamble, people with women who are not their wives!" So says a Las Vegas businessman. Where do they draw the line? In this week's Post, you'll read the shocking story—"How Wicked is Veeas?" The Saturday Evening POST Several friends and relatives who live in the Lawrence and Topeka area have been contacted. They report not having seen the youth. Burns' bed appeared not to have been slept in over the weekend and as near as could be determined he took no extra clothes when he left. sort of person. I can't imagine where he is," the mother said. When last seen, he was wearing a brown suede jacket, brown sweater and cotton slacks. Burns is about 5' 7" tall and has blond curly hair. KU students planning to travel by air after Dec. 15 might have to use the train instead—the air lines are canceling their youth rates. Youth Travel Rates Canceled by Airlines American Airlines, which introduced a youth fare last summer notified the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) it will cancel its fare plan Dec. 15. Trans World Airlines and Delta Airlines filed their cancellation notices at the same time. All other trunk airlines already have canceled their youth fares. The youth-fare plan permitted persons between the ages of 13 and 22 to travel at half the regular first class fare on a no-reservation basis. At a recent meeting with CAB members, presidents of the airlines told of abuses of the fare by young people. They said youths gave their tickets to older persons and made multiple first class reservations, not intending to use them but to make certain plenty of space would be available for youth fare travelers. The All Student Council will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Meadowlark Room of the Kansas Union to continue the budget discussion and to take up new business. Official Bulletin ASC Meets Tonight Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m., St. John's Church, 13th, & Keptucky. TODAY Committee on Research and Resolutions-KU Young Democrats: 4 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union. Aid-to-education resolution. Foreign Students: Today is the deadline for turning in the Thanksgiving trip reservation forms to the office of the Foreign Student Advisor. 288 Strong Hall. Unified Presbyterian Women: 5:30 p.m. Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. Annual Thanksgiving dinner and panel discussion of the meaning of Thanksgiving. Presidential Forum; 7 p.m. Big Eight President; 7 p.m. John Birch Birch and American Democracy." Nurse's Club Meeting: 8 to 8 p.m. Fraser Hall Dining Room. Rita Peters spent on her trip to Australia where she attended the International Council of Nursing. Lawrence Stamp Club: 7 p.m., Community Center, 121 W. 11th St. All those interested in stamp collecting are invited to the Burgerberg president will discuss his exchange program with the exchange contacts. The second meeting is an auction. Social Work Club: 7 p.m., Room 305. Kansas University. Prof. Dale Johnson of the Sociology Department will speak on the "The Sociologist Looks at Welfare." Columbia Man to Lecture James L. Clifford, Columbia University, will talk on "Problems of a Biographer" at the University Lecture, at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Room 303 Bailey. WEDNESDAY Celtic Cross, 12 pno. Westminster Center, the "Westminster Confession of Faith," in Washington, D.C. Le Certe Francais se réunira mercredi à quatre heures dans la salle 11 de Fraser. Louis Fouillade, étudiant français, fera une causerie illustrée sur que les answers ne vie française. Tous ceux qui s'intéressent au francais sont cordiale-invente. Student National Education Association: 4 p.m., 303 Bailey, Speaker, Dr. A. J. Edwards: "Educational Procedures for Children Who Are Different." THURSDAY Episcopal Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Westminster Center Choir: 5:45 p.m. Washington Center, 1204 Oread. Practice and supper WHEEL ALIGNMENT BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP 229 Elm VI 3-2250 IS YOUR FUTURE WORTH A 20 MINUTE INTERVIEW? If you are about to decide on your future employment and are graduating with outstanding scholastic achievement in engineering or the physical sciences . . . the Sandia Corporation would like to arrange an interview with you. At Sandia, you would work in research, design and development, or engineering. Our scientists and engineers are engaged in projects in the fields of solid state physics, plasma physics, materials research, explosives technology, pulse phenomena and radiation damage. You would work in a modern well-equipped $100 million laboratory and be associated with some of this nation's outstanding technical personnel. You would receive liberal benefits which, in addition to insurance, retirement and vacation, include an opportunity for continuing your graduate studies. You would be employed in sunny, dry Albuquerque, a Southwestern cultural center of over 200,000, or in our laboratory at Livermore, California, with all the advantages of the San Francisco Bay area. At all Degree Levels Electrical and Mechanical Engineers OPENINGS AT SANDIA at MS and PhD Levels Chemical Engineers Inorganic Chemists Ceramic Engineers Physicists Physical Metallurgists Organic Chemists Industrial Engineers Mathematicians Statisticians Physical Chemists Engineering Physicists Aeronautical Engineers Sandia Corporation recruiters will be on your campus soon. * For appointment for interview, see your College Placement Officer now. All qualified applicants will receive consideration, regardless of regard to race, creed, color or national origin. SANDIA CORPORATION UNI ALBUQUERQUE. NEW MEXICO LIVERMORE. CALIFORNIA The Sandia representative will be on campus November 14-15 ASC to Check Watkins, Union Bv Karl Koch The All Student Council last night adopted a resolution to investigate the adequacy of Watkins Memorial Hospital and the policy of Lawrence Memorial Hospital on admitting KU students. The resolution to investigate Watkins spurred debate on whether students are qualified to investigate hospital operation. The ASC also decided to investigate the operation of the Kansas Union as it affects students. MICHAEL THOMAS. Kansas City, Mo., senior, introduced the resolution. He said its purpose was to answer questions in the students' minds. Hollace Cross, Kansas City, Mo. junior, said: To back Thomas' move, some council members brought up incidents which they said they had heard about Watkins. "We thought a boy who lives next door to me, Dennis Weiss (Franklin Square, N.Y., freshman) had appendicitis. We called Watkins but didn't get an answer. We tried again and finally got someone. Forty-five minutes later we got the guy over to Watkins in our own car." Phyllis Wertzberger, Lawrence senior, said in defense of the hospital that it was "in no way inadequate." ANOTHER COUNCIL member replied that this was not Watkins' fault since they do not have an ambulance. She said, "It's bad to stick our nose into something we know nothing about. Students don't know enough to investigate to the hospital." (Miss Wertzberger works at Watkins.) THOMAS SAID that he has "heard that Lawrence Memorial Hospital is reluctant to admit KU students. I've also heard students say "I wouldn't go to Watkins if I had a heart attack in front of it.' Students don't know about Watkins." Thomas said after the meeting that he thought "several members of the ASC misinterpreted my reasoning behind this resolution. This was by no means a condemnation of the hospital." THE ASC HEALTH committee will investigate Watkins Hospital for the (Continued on page 9) ★ ★ ★ In a telephone interview today, Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, head of the University Health service, said the only thing that can be criticized about Watkins is its lack of space. "This hospital has been accredited by the Joint Commission of Accredi-tations since that group's beginning in 1941. It is a United States Agency, and a hospital must meet very high requirements to be accredited by it." Dr. Canuteson said he is not too perturbed by the ASC's plan, and that "Watkins is not afraid of an investigation." AWS Gets $2400 The All Student Council last night appropriated the All Women Students $2,400, and raised the combined pep clubs' budget from $373 to $457. Considerable debate preceded both appropriations. THE ORIGINAL recommendation for the AWS was $1,800. Last night, the Finance and Auditing committee of the ASC recommended $2,400. The Chancellor's granting $1,100 in additional funds last week made the extra grant possible. After the $2,400 was appropriated to the AWS, another motion introduced by Jay Deane, Kansas City junior, asked that the combined pep clubs' appropriations be increased by $200 to give them a total of $573. A MOTION to grant a additional $84 to the pep clubs passed and the Council moved on to discuss its own budget. A total of $2,395 was approved for the ASC itself. The contingency fund, reduced by $84 taken out for the pep clubs, was left at $331.45. Daily Hansan 59th Year No.39 LAWRENCE. KANSAS Wednesday, November 8, 1961 KU Will Drop Renters Proved Discriminatory Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has announced that if students "acting in good faith," are refused off-campus housing, the University will remove discriminatory renters from KU's housing list. The Chancellor pointed out he was acting on a report made to him by the deans of students, men, and women, and the director of dormitories. THE REPORT, which was read to the University Senate yesterday, requests: - A permanent off-campus housing committee be appointed. The committee will consist of deans of students, men and women and the director of dormitories. THE CHANCELLOR said the committee plans to inform apartment owners of the new policies. Anyone who wishes listing in the future will "be made aware of this policy statement and their agreement to it will be obtained before a listing is made." The Chancellor said in a statement released today the University will act if it finds that a student has been treated unfairly in contacts with property owners or has been refused a room because of nationality, color or faith. (The complete text of the Chancellor's statement is on page 10.) The statement pointed out that a student seeking accommodation must be acting in good faith. - An executive secretary be selected and appointed by the Chan- - "The University is not interested in 'test cases, checks or traps,'" the Chancellor said. "Our responsibility as we see it is to the student who wants and needs housing." celler to carry out the policies of the committee. - The dean of women continue to approve all housing for undergraduate women. - The off-campus housing committee operate according to the procedures outlined in the Chancellor's statement. "AT THE PRESENT time," the Chancellor said, "the University does not have the resources to provide an executive secretary for this important group." He added that due to a lack of administrative personnel the "resources" would not be available in the near future. "I shall make every effort to develop the resources necessary within our present financing," he added. He said the University will assume that all apartment owners who do not notify the housing office cancelling the listing of their apartments will rent to any student "on the basis of individual merit." Because most students are settled for the school year, the statement said, "no University housing poll will be made at this time. The Chancellor said University News of Education Madison, Wis.—(UPI)—The Wisconsin General Assembly today considered a bill requiring all state high schools to teach a course called "Americanism vs. Communism." The course would emphasize the "danvers of communism, the ways to fight communism, the evils of communism, the fallacies of communism and the false doctrines of communism." officials will continue to direct students to vacate rooms if the students and their guests do not honor University regulations. "In these cases students may be asked to move to supervised housing where it will be possible to guide their activities," he said. Mayor To Speak At CRC Meeting Lawrence Mayor Ted Kennedy will speak to the Civil Rights Council at 8 p.m. today in the Kansas Union. The public is invited. UP Still Leading A check at 10 o'clock this morning by election committee members showed that the University Party is still maintaining a lead over Vox Populi in the closed primary election. Voting has picked up since yesterday. Richard Harper, Prairie Village senior and elections chairman, said he is expecting a total vote of about 1800 at the end of today's voting. The 10 a.m. totals were: 10 a.m. totals were: VOX UP 401 498 tal party votes cast: 889 Total party votes cast: 889. Total votes cast, including freshman ballots: 944. Weather Generally fair today, tonight and tomorrow. Little temperature change. Highs today and tomorrow 50 to 53. Lows tonight lower 30%. John Ise, in Fine Form, Flays John Birch Society By Martha Moser John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, says the John Birch Society is a hate group. In his characteristic tongue-in-cheek manner, Prof. Ise spent 45 minutes last night comparing the John Birch Society to totalitarian groups. His 150-person audience at the Presidential Forum laughed and applauded continuously. HE SAID THE John Birch Society resembles totalitarian groups in that "both are opposed to everything that is civilized." "You can't define fascism so I wouldn't want to say that is exactly what the Society is. "I think a good way to analyze the Birchers would be to note some of the things they hate and some of the things they love, if anything. "I GATHER THAT they don't like communism. And I agree with them here. This may be the last point of agreement. But the difference is that I think I know what communism is and they don't." "Then they hate many of the churches, especially those in which Christianity is taught. Prof. Ise continued: "I think they hate economics, too, but they can't hate that too much because economics, after all, is tied in with business a little." "And they hate liberalism. I gather from the Kansan. A liberal is one who has an open mind and is willing to accept most anything from any direction. Of course, the Birchers don't like that. They don't like people with open minds. The open mind, you understand, is hard to control. HE SAID THE BIRCH Society does not like democracy, education, civil rights, and collective bargaining. "They hate social security and I gather they don't like the income tax. "THEY DON'T LIKE the U.N. The U.N. was put in there by the Russians if I understand them correctly. It's changed since then, you know, cause the Russians don't like the U.N. anymore. "But," Prof. Ise went on, "they do love some things and we might note them. In the first place they love the memory of Sen. McCarthy. And they like Sen. "Miocene" Goldwater, although he isn't 100 per cent good, you understand. ("Miocene" refers to a geological age Rajiv Kumar John Ise approximately 50 million years ago.) "They like Trujillo of the Dominican Republic. I notice they like Batista. And if Hitler were here, I'm pretty sure they'd like him." He said that these loves and hates added up to the fact that the Birchers are a brand of Fascism. "HITLER ALSO HATED most of these things. He hated communism and socialism and education. He hated the churches, civil rights, labor unions and certainly had no use for the League of Nations, the U.N. of that time. "Hitler loved Mussolini and the other dictators." Prof. Ise explained that the Birchers want power. "THEY'D LIKE TO control this country," the retired professor said, "and they'll work hard to do it. They're unselfish, mind you. They're sincere. I think the Birchers are sincere in wanting to do something for the country—especially themselves." But Prof. Ise does not fear the John Birch Society. "One or two or three reactionary societies might not be too bad because they will remind us of how thankful we should be that we don't have them running the country. "IS OUR POLITICAL situation so poor to call for this Society's radical reaction? Now, there's no excuse for any such organization at the present time. It isn't like Hitler in Germany when the German economy just refused to operate. There is no such excuse here because, since Mr. Kennedy is in, we no longer have a depression." Speaking about the Birch Society, Prof. Ise said he did not know how such a mass of misinformation could get so far. "LET'S LOOK AT A few things," Prof. Ise said. He held up the booklet, "An American Businessman Looks at Communism." written by Fred C. Koch, a Wichita member of the John Birch Society. "There is communism everywhere," Prof. Ise read from the booklet. He slammed the desk with the book. "They say the greatest threat is from internal communism. "Well, we have figures on that," he said. "The last estimate I've seen is 20,000 Communists in the United States. Also in this country there are a million insane people. I don't know what proportion 20,000 is of one million—you can figure that out. "BUT IT ISN'T SO very many really. I think we should be proud (Continued on page 9) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 8, 1961 The Teaching Profession One of the most effective tranquilizers yet invented by man is the freshman-sophomore lecture class. It is easily comparable to a large shot of Novocain directly in the cerebrum and on a warm day it has no rival. Let us paint a composite picture of one of these classes. THE LECTURER ENTERS THE room, rears up on its hind legs and delivers itself of any emotions that recent events have excited. This is the only part of the lecture that is remotely stimulating to the students. Once the lecturer has relieved its emotional congestion, it begins a steady droning similar to what is heard in a sleepy country beehive. In the larger classes, this results in a number of students quietly dropping off to sleep. This definitely results in their missing information the lecturer presents during the lecture hour. But since it is duplicated in the student's textbook, this is not really very important. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler The standard excuse for this situation is that classes are too large to give individual instruction. This excuse is partially valid when applied to the large classes in many basic courses. But the same problem exists in smaller classes and even in many upper-class courses which have reasonably small enrollments. In these classes there is no excuse for this type of instruction. The result of this approach to the lecture period is that it bores the student (who is supposed to be stimulated mentally so that he learns something) and drastically lowers the effectiveness of the lecturer's efforts. and make them feel they are learning something interesting and worthwhile. THE LECTURERS THE STUDENTS RESpect and really learn from are those who can draw the students into the discussion of the topic The student is often in a course only because he needs a certain amount of credit in some field. He does not have the lecturer's professional interest in most of the subjects he is taking. Unless the lecturer can create interest in his students, he is wasting his time. The students will forget everything they learned in class four months after they are out of the course. THE COUNTER ARGUMENT to criticism of the prevailing methods of classroom lecture is that students are apathetic. They will not take part in class discussion and are too lazy to read the text and digest the material in it. So it all has to be done for them. Unfortunately for this argument, it does not explain why the instructors who do make the continuing effort to interest their students and have them participate in discussions on the course material are so often successful. Part of the trouble may lie in the lack of sufficient programs to instruct lecturers in classroom methods. This is a need that should be met. BUT THE BASIC PROBLEM REMAINS THE lack of effort by teachers to interest their students and draw them into active classroom participation. This may seem like too much to ask. But the definition of the teaching profession includes the assumption that, like the medical profession, it is more than just a job. It certainly demands that the teacher act as something more than a tape recorder. If that is his sole purpose, there are excellent machines that can do the job much better. —William H. Mullins A Good Autumn After All Well, it might be a good Autumn after all. Football fortunes are ever becoming better; and what plays a larger part in the success of the season than the record of the football team? The prospects of an exciting autumn were immediately darkened with KU's defeat in the initial game of the season. The picture became even blacker when the Jayhawks had failed to record a victory by their third game. BUT SPIRITS HAVE CLIMBED WITH THE victories amassed in the last month and it looks like the prospect for an exciting autumn may be fulfilled. The Jayhawkers have come to life and the campus has revived with them. Now the campus is involved in the activities of the supposed high point of the season—homecoming. Most of the 70 or 80 living groups on Mount Oread are in the midst of plans for decorations, parties or receptions for alums. All of the hundreds of man-hours that will go into the preparation of the pageant of homecoming are invested with the idea that they will produce dividends on the gridiron next Saturday afternoon. EACH HOUSE DECORATION IS ERECTED with the hope it will somehow influence the outcome of the battle between the two Kansas teams. Almost 40,000 people will jam Memorial Stadium hoping to see Coach Jack Mitchell spur his team to another conference victory. Again referring to the predictions of the sports experts, it should be a fine Autumn weekend. —Ron Gallagher The Theatre Scene A Look at Auntie Mame By Mark Dull Last night's University Theatre version of "Auntie Mame"—if you will permit the appropriation—had its "upson downs." After a rather slow start the audience warmed to Mame's bungling burlesque of a two-line bit in a scene of a stuffy play within-the play. The ice is broken in the next scene when Mame does a familiar comedy sketch as an harassed inexperienced operator at a very busy switchboard is bobbling the firm name of Widder-cembe, Gutterman, Applewhite, Elbberman, and Black. THE PLAY IS BASED on the ribald novel "Auntie Mame, An Irreverent Escapade in Biography" by Patrick Dennis (psuedonym for Edward Tanner III) and was adapted for the stage by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee. The action is centered around the escapades of a Bohemian dowager with a streak of gentleness that endears her to an off-beat set of friends and accomplices who illustrate Mame's own multi-personality through their wide diversity. Most of the action takes place in Auntie Mame's Beekman Place apartment and various other locales in which she becomes involved in a period of years from 1928 to 1946. SHIRLEY REA, Lawrence graduate student, working a little hard at times, cannot quite loosen herself up enough to capture the full flamboyant nature of the unprovincial society dame, Auntie Mame. At times she reaches pinnacles that reflect her obvious acting ability and certainly captivates the audience with a stirring closing scene that is complemented by an enchanting East Indian costume and clever staging. Agnes Gooch—"my puberty was bleak"—is interpreted by Sylvia Anderson. Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, with a good feeling for timing, exaggerated expression, duminess and uncompliness that makes ludicrous Agnes the most consistently humorous stimulation in the production. Vicki Loebsack, Topeka sophomore, portrays Vera Charles, svelte, statutesque British actress from Pittsburgh, with a delivery so natural and subtle that she very nearly steals several scenes. Beauregard Jackson Pickett Burnside, that charmin' gentleman from the old south, is played with calm demeanor by that able Phil Harris, Columbus senior. "AUNTIE MAME," with a cast of 36 characters several of whom play two parts, is an unconventional drama. It is a series of 23 scenes spliced together with blackout intervals. It is the kind of vehicle that can easily become mired down if it does not move rapidly, and such was the case last night. It is a bit too much to expect that college students produce the aura of sophistication that is written in "Auntie Mame." Many of the quips that crowd each other closely in the script were never received by the audience and there were times when limited response indicated limited reception of a choice comment. In spite of these detractions "Auntie Mame" is entertaining most of the time, especially to the individual who is becoming acquainted with Mame for the first time. 19.9 DIEKER "PHOTOGRAPHY MAGAZINES? SOME STUDENT IN HERE HAS THEM ALL CHECKED OUT." From the Magazine Rack The Control of War The conversion over some relatively short period of a tenth of the national economy to other forms of production would, it seems reasonable to infer, have to be managed by the development of more rational and perhaps more authoritarian agencies for the allocation of capital investment, material supplies, and manpower than we now possess. This would in turn raise presumably difficult problems of conflicts of interest and political power. One may well doubt the adequacy of our existing democratic political institutions and processes to deal with them; one must therefore contemplate the possibility of institutional changes in both the economic and the political field in directions which to many today would seem highly undesirable. About 10 per cent of American production and employment is generated directly by the requirements of the war system. The generation of this substantial fraction of total goods and services is an internal function of war which, in a warless world, would have to be fulfilled in some way... By Walter Millis Rv Harrison Brown and James Real ** ** It is difficult to visualize techniques of truly stabilizing limited wars in which nuclear weapons are used. Any limitation on-size of explosive would be quite arbitrary and difficult to monitor... We should recognize the likelihood that any future war that is of appreciable size will involve the use of nuclear weapons at some stage, no matter what disarmament controls have been in existence prior to the outbreak of war. Even were the nations of the world to carry out successfully a program of total nuclear disarmament, including the elimination of long-range missiles, the knowledge needed to manufacture such weapons would remain. Once a "conventional" war broke out, there would almost certainly be a frantic race upon the part of the participants to manufacture the weapons once again. Each of the antagonists would realize that the first nation to produce megaton nuclear weapons in quantity, together with the means of delivering them, would have the opposing side at its mercy. 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 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 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 Mullius and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Brown ... Business Manager Page 3 (Ed. Note: Life Erred) Next to dieting, more seems to be written about courage these days than about any other discipline necessary to our national survival. Even though in matters of courage (as in matters of diet) there is sometimes a considerable difference between what we should do and what we do do, it is helpful to be reminded of the need for bravery in troubled times. In this respect, we have always found the editorial page of Life magazine to be not merely helpful but positively exhilarating. Scarcely a week goes by in which either an individual or an entire population is not urged to reaffirm some ancient princeiple and, if need be, to march in its name over the edge of the nearest precipice. Sad to say, events of the past few weeks have raised some doubts in our mind as to whether Life is ready to take the plunge along with its loyal readers. Wednesday, November 8. 1961 University Daily Kansan LIFE HAS NEVER had much use for the John Birch Society, which Life characterized last May as "shot through with escapism and desperation defeatist." Even more recently, Life also ran a short paragraph on one of the Birch society's sympathetic fellow organizations called the Christian Anti-Communism Crusade. Life described the crusade's leader, Dr. Fred C. Schwarz, as a man who "praches doomsday by Communism in 1973 unless every American starts distrusting his neighbor as a possible Communist or "comsymp," and noted that "his local steering committees have often included known Birchers." The story was pegged on a planned revival meeting soon to be held "with full hullabaloo and political portent in Los Angeles." The Los Angeles revival took place as scheduled, but apparently there was something of a hullabalo in New York, too. According to a rather gloating report in Human Events, after the paragraph on the Schwarz group appeared, "... a strong reaction against Life arose in the Los Angeles area, with a write-in drive against the Luce magazine as one of the features; reportedly a rain of protest from readers and advertisers descended on Life headquarters in New York." Whether or not the write-in drive had anything to do with it, Life underwent a sudden change of heart on the subject of Dr. Schwarz. At another anti-Communist rally staged recently by the Crusade in the Hollywood Bowl— "Hollywood's Answer to Communism$^{3}$ —Dr. Schwarz shared his stage with C. D. Jackson, a vicepresident of Time, Inc. and the publisher of Life, who had flown in for the occasion from New York. "Regretfully," Jackson told the audience, "my magazine published an oversimplified misinterpretation. I believe we were wrong and I am profoundly sorry. You have in Dr. Schwarz a man who has dedicated his life to fighting Communism through knowledge of its techniques." THE SCHWARZIAN method of fighting Communism was set forth that same evening by W. Cleo Skounes, former chief of police in Salt Lake City and a regular lecturer for the Christian Anti-Communism Crusade. It included such steps as severing diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union, withdrawing from the U.N. unless its charter is revised, and demanding a full-scale investigation of the U.S. State Department. To the best of our recollection, Life has never seen fit to support any of these ideas, but we can't be sure. Maybe we missed the point of all those editorials about courage. (From The Reporter Magazine, Nov. 9.1961) --- the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism TOM JONES, by Henry Fielding. Vintage (Random House). $1.25 TOM JONES, by Henry Fielding. Vintage (Random House), $12.5. Some books, by their gith or reputations, scare off the reader. "Tom Jones" is one of these. Despite the urging of a friend, who actually read this book aloud to his wife over a period of several months, I refused to read "Tom Jones." I remembered the complaints of college friends who had been required to read it. Now I have read "Tom Jones" (this comment is in partial answer to faculty acquaintances who keep asking, "Do you actually read all those books?"). It took discipline and will-power, but I wish to report that it is one of the most enjoyable novels I have ever read. NOW I LEAVE ITS LITERARY IMPORTANCE to the specialists, after commenting briefly that for being perhaps the first modern novel it is still one of the best. I'll approach it as a vastly amusing, perceptive, engrossing story of a young man who's no better than he has to be. All along we know that things will turn out all right and that Tom finally will achieve social status and be allowed to wed his dear Sophia. But the fun is along the way, the torturous paths of 18th century England that Henry Fielding takes us down, the inns and the woods and the bedrooms. "Tom Jones," as novel or as central character, spends much of its time in bedrooms. Fielding came a century before Victorianism, and he is unblushing about the amorous exploits of his hero, and other folks as well. The book spends much of its time in country inns and taprooms. Worth Repeating LET ME CITE JUST BRIEFLY some of the enjoyable episodes and characters in the novel: Squire Western, looking for his runaway daughter but dissuaded by the sound of baying hounds; the same squire, convinced that the gurglings of his grandchild are almost as beautiful as the sound of dogs on the chase; Thwackum and Square, those semi-villainous types who indulge in endless arguments about the nature of man; the involved story of the Old Man of the Hill; Tom winning through and triumphing over the evil Blifil. On Jesuit colleges: Our students come to us conditioned by the postwar atmosphere they breathe, the only one they have ever known. For most of them that atmosphere creates a close association between a degree and a future salary. It is a far cry from the days when university graduates were expected to be teachers, statesmen, gentlemen of leisure, or clerics. The value of the classical tradition for such was always fairly obvious. Today it has to be sold to a resisting public—Robert I. Gannon **** On college presidents: Fifty years ago the presidents of our older institutions were dignified and scholarly men in immediate contact with their handful of pre-war students. Now we have to find the type that can stay out late and wake up cheerful on the alkaline side, eat rich food and keep the figure down, shake hands like a Rotarian, pass the tambourine and keep the peace among hundreds of faculty members—when and if he happens to meet them.—Robert I. Gannon Letters CRC on Housing We the members of the Civil Rights Council feel it necessary to reestablish our position in relation to off campus housing which is listed by the University housing office. We are heartened by the increased interest of the administration in relation to this problem. We sincerely hope that their efforts will result in a significant increase in the number of rooms and apartments available on a non-discriminatory basis. It is our belief that this problem involving discriminatory renters can be solved as it has on other major campuses of America. Among these are: Colorado University, Iowa State University, Illinois University, Cornell University and Ohio State University. These progressive Universities have taken a positive step in refusing to list renters who discriminate on the basis of race, religion or national origin. We believe that Kansas University should take an active stand toward discriminatory renters and all forms of discrimination that involves students. George Buford Chuck Menghini Co-Chairmen of CRC Poetry Corner Unimportance of Poetry O'Flaherty crashed and burned. They found him. Geyerman disappeared from the dark security. Of the landing pattern itself. Nor will they. Bequeath a greater occasion or paradigm. Formalities of old salutes and echelons Waver on intervening air. Their lines In patterns no longer traced by arms or planes Recur by chance in the artist's polygons. Old elements of the scenery which endure Where heroes died in memorable postures Are causes neither by attitude nor distance. It is language where these accidents occur. —Arvid Shulenberger Short Ones Familiarity breeds contempt -- and children. -- Mark Twain It Looks This Way... By Pam Christiansen Shawnee Mission junior A few weeks ago, President Kennedy was host to the president of a small country in Scandinavia which shares a common border with Russia. This country, Finland, has a population of four million and occupies an area smaller than the state of Texas. Yet, this small nation is one of the most respected countries in the world. FINNISH PEOPLE HAVE LIVED UNDER the threat of Russian domination for centuries, yet they remain today one of the most fiercely independent peoples on this earth. They have struggled and fought with their bare hands and an indomitable will to maintain their freedom. They have retained their spirit under the crushing demands made upon them by Russia and stand today as the only country that has ever paid off its war debts. No one reads very much about Finland these days. No one wonders much about what will happen to this tiny nation which has so successfully maintained peaceful relations with both the Communists and the West. We on the KU campus are too busy thinking about the MU game or mid-semester exams to think seriously about the tremendous threat to both Finland's freedom and our own. PERHAPS THE FOLLOWING LETTER from a Finnish college student will help to wake up some of the complacent people on this campus. She is typical of the Finnish youth of today. Read it and think about it: "Today has Russia done one of her 'good deeds' to mankind. They say that an explosion took place this morning and it might mean the 50 megaton bomb. "We have been warned against the radioactive rays and told what we have to do in case of emergency. All church bells will be rung as well as factory pipes and sirens. However, there is no great danger yet. But today we received a note from Russia telling us what we are expected to do. Be naturally on the side of the Russians against Germany. It is thought generally that it might not be long before the Russians invade our country. Well, this is only vague supposition. One never knows. "I feel studying is of no use now when the world situation is so serious, but one must do something." No, my Finnish friend, we do not know how awful it feels to fight on the wrong side. We do not know how it feels to fight at all. We scuttle around in our unimportant lives driving new cars, going to parties, complaining about the draft and hanging people in effigy. NO, MY FINNISH FRIEND, we don't know how you feel and we won't until every last one of us is annihilated because of our stupidity and complacency, or until EVERY LAST ONE OF US STARTS TO THINK AND ACT! From the Newsstand The Human Comedy Simply because it lacked sophistication in its humor, Princeton University's humor magazine, the Tiger, has bit the literary (such as 'twas) dust. The Jest Journal was eighty. It can be easily understood that humor, as much as panties and motor cars, should move in the changing tide of human fancy. American humor has had an unusually sharp transmutation, possibly because of the changing waves of immigrants bringing from various corners of the world their own native sense of wit, and the American's inherent passion for changing tastes. A SORT OF RECORD OF American humor was the subject of the DuPont Show of the Week on NBC-TV recently. The record was more in the speed and style of the old 78 records than the new $33^{1/2}$ type. As swiftly and lightly as a row of giggles it skipped over the years of American humor with as much emphasis on history as a cigarette commercial. While MC George Burns managed to throw in an ample portion of his old-time vaudeville bit with spouse Gracie Allen (typical bit: about the aunt who was a snake charmer in the family's backyard circus, but, since she was afraid of snakes, tied worms together) most of the great contributors to what has become typical of American humor were absent. Not even mentioned were performers like Jackie Gleason, Martha Raye, Olsen and Johnson, George M. Cohan, Robert Benchley, James Thurber, Imogene Coca and Sid Caesar, Lum 'n Abner, Amos and Andy, Ed Wynn, and numerous others. THAT THESE OVERSIGHTS were in tv's own field, and the other broadcast medium, radio, give some indication of the even broader oversight of humorists in the newspaper field such as Harry Golden, Bennet Cerf, Elbert Hubbard, and all the comic strips from Polly and her Pals, through Toots and Casper and Hambone, to Peanuts. resistant M material Whether frolicsome and corny or sophisticated and vague, the newspaper has been a contributor and a recorder of American humor, and in its pages can be noted the vastly changing taste of American laughter. It can be noted—even in the comics—that humor is a little slighter, a little more serious now than in the old days. Princeton's Tiger may be replaced with a serious and solemn magazine devoted to the more sophisticated student. Can this mean that the healthy ring of laughter, American or otherwise, grows more hollow daily? —Publishers' Auxiliary, Oct. 7, 1961 1234567890 113 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. November 8. 1961 Dole Serves Pineapple Juice Attacks JFK's New Frontier By Dennis Farney A Kansas congressman entertained a gleeful audience of Young Republicans last night with a mixture of free pineapple juice and a half-jesting, half-serious attack on New Frontier policies and practices. Robert Dole, United States Representative from Kansas' fifth district last year and presently a candidate for re-election in the newly formed first district (a combination of the old fifth and sixth districts), spoke to about 40 students in the Kansas Union. "I read two weeks ago that Jackie Kennedy was spending a weekend in Washington with friends and relatives," he quipped. MR. DOLE SERVED Dole pineapple juice (no relation) and then launched a laugh-punctuated attack on nepotism in the New Frontier. "Some people were glad to see her come back it certainly beats swimming in the Mediterranean with half the Greek navy guarding you. "I SUPPOSE YOU all know what JFK stands for," he continued. "Jobs for kinfolk. "And of course there's the New Frontier slogan: 'Go waste, young man, go waste.'" Members of his audience fortified themselves with deep draughts of the pineapple juice and applauded vigorously. MR. DOLE said he passed out Dole pineapple juice during his campaign last year as a device to make voters remember his name. "Some people thought the idea was childish," he said, "but we won the election." He then turned to a discussion of the Peace Corps. "I'M NOT opposed to the principles of the Peace Corps," he said, "but I am opposed to the way President Kennedy set it up. He by-passed Congress and created a brand new $40 million permanent agency by executive order." Mr. Dole called the Peace Corps a "political gimmick" and noted that the first 131 appointments to high-ranking offices within the organization were Democrats. "We must understand that once the Peace Corps or any other government agency is created, it tends to grow," he said. "And positions within the Peace Corps will continue to be held by Democrats." HE REFERRED to the "dynasty of the defeated," a group of unsuccessful Democratic candidates in past elections now holding administrative posts in the Kennedy Administration. He listed George Docking, who now heads the U.S. Export-Import Bank, as an example. Continuing his attack on the New Frontier, Mr. Dole described President Kennedy as "very good at agitating, but unable to carry through." "PRESIDENT KENNEDY is very articulate," he said. "He has fine speech writers and they write fine speeches, but nothing happens. "If it hadn't been for (Speaker of the House) Sam Rayburn, President Kennedy would have had a very poor legislative record. "When Mr. Rayburn would talk to Southern conservatives, they would suddenly decide that New Frontier legislative programs had very definite merit." SHIFTING TO other areas, Mr. Dole called the handling of Southern integration problems by the present administration a "political sideshow" and singled out the recent Interstate Commerce Commission order to desegregate all Southern transportation facilities as an example. "The administration waited until riots developed and then asked the ICC to give its ruling," he said. "The administration could have compiled all the necessary information about the situation before the riots ever occurred." Mr. Dole concluded his talk with a plea for Republican unity. "I THINK THERE'S a place in the Republican Party for both liberals and conservatives," he said. "We do a disservice to the party when we drive out those of a different philosophic outlook than ourselves." But he left little doubt as to his opposition to Nelson Rockefeller, the Governor of New York. "If we nominate Mr. Rockefeller for President," he said, "the Democrats won't know who to vote for. We'll have someone who can match President Kennedy dollar for dollar." FOLLOWING THE talk, Mr. Dole invited his audience to participate in a straw vote between the three leading Republican Presidential hopefuls: Richard Nixon, Barry Goldwater, and Mr. Rockefeller. Mr. Goldwater won the contest with 19 votes. Mr. Rockefeller received 13 and Mr. Nixon received 11. Ribicoff to Speak Here in December Abraham Ribicoff, secretary of health, education and welfare, will address the first annual Law and Society Institute Dec. 4 and 5. Mr. Ribicoff will speak at 3:45 p.m. Dec. 4 in the Kansas Union. Dan Hopson, associate professor of law, said the Institute chose Mr. Ribicow because he is the man most qualified to discuss the theme of this year's institute, "The Child and The Law," in relation to the problems of child welfare in the U.S. More than 300 members of the legal and non-legal profession are expected to attend. They will discuss the operation of the law as it affects children. PATRONIZE, YOUR ADVERTISERS Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass VI 3-0330 Psychology Club Meeting To Talk About Gifted Child The Psychology Club will meet at 7:30 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Bert Kaplan, associate professor of psychology, will discuss his research on mental illness among the Navajo, Apache, and Zuni Indians. Officers will be elected. A. J. Edwards, professor of educational psychology, will explain educational procedures for gifted children at 4 p.m. today at a meeting of the Student National Education Assn. All interested persons may attend. Nothing is so much to be feared as fear.—Henry David Thoreau Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Let thy speech be better than silence, or be silent.—Dionysius The Elder Sale Ends CLIP THIS COUPON Nov. 11th Leather or Rubber HALF SOLES 1'99 pr. $3 val. With Rubber HEELS Men's—Boys' RUBBER HEELS 49'c pr. Ladles' Heel LIFTS 39'c pr. Leather or Rubber FULL SOLES 2'99 pr. $5 val. the word for quality cleaning and laundry DELUXE Drive In and Save — Open 7 A.M. to 7 P.M. Except Sunday 23rd St. & Naismith Dr. V1 2-0200 CLIP THIS COUPON --- !! If You Hate Cold Weather BANK-BY-MAIL MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 746 Mass. If You Hate Cold Weather BANK-BY-MAIL MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 746 Mass. MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 746 Mass. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers SPECIAL SALE Wool Tapered PANTS - Regularly 11.98 to 17.98 - Plaids - Stripes - Solids - Sizes 8 to 16 COACH HOUSE Clothes For Town and Country K. U. Campus - 1237 Oread Page 5 Plan Dropped to Prosecute Chang TOKYO—(UFI)—The Republic of Korea Military regime probably will drop its plan to prosecute former premier John M. Chang and release him from house arrest before strongman Gen. Park Chung Hee leaves for the United States, according to well-informed sources in Seoul. Sources said the one reason Park is hesitating is he fears if he releases Chang before his trip to the United States, some quarters might charge he is attempting to curry favor in Washington. CHANG WAS TAKEN into custody shortly after the military seized power May 16 in a near-bloodless coup and has been held under house arrest ever since. Informed sources said the announcement most likely would be made before Park, 44-year-old leader of the military junta, leaves for the United States Nov. 11 for talks with president Kennedy and other high officials. There also was the possibility the junta could announce some form of leniency for three newspaperman sentenced to death after their conviction of pro-communist activities. There has been a great deal of international pressure brought to bear on the junta over the death sentences. IT IS KNOWN that the Junta is having second thoughts about its strict campaign against persons accused of "anti-state activities." Hundreds have been jailed and several death sentences handed out. The feeling was that this campaign was giving the new regime a black mark in the eyes of the rest of the world and that some softening of the policy was needed. Chang never was charged with specific crimes or indicted. The junta announced after his arrest that he would be investigated, and, if the investigation warranted it, would be prosecuted. PARK WAS KNOWN to be pondering the timing of Chang's release. He did not want to give the impression he was taking the action on the eve of his departure for the U.S. However, if he waited until his return from Washington to release Chang, he would give the impression that the release was made under U.S. pressure. Chang became premier after the students' revolution overthrew president Syngman Rhee in April 1960. FOR A WHILE there was great hope that the pro-Western premier could bring his troubled nation out of the economic and political chaos into which it had fallen. Chang's government never got off the ground, however, mainly because of inter-party bickering, and conditions grew worse in the country. This resulted in the military coup. Fencing Exhibition Tonight There will be an exhibition fencing match at 6 p.m. tonight in Robinson Gymnasium between the present varsity foil team and a group of graduates. Later Curfew Saturday The AWS Board of Standards has authorized a one-half hour extended closing time for women Saturday night because of the Homecoming Dance. The closing hour will be 1:30 a.m. JACK ZINN for Freshman President KU-Y Deadlocks On Civil Rights The KU-Y cabinet discussed its stand on civil rights last night, but came to no conclusion. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Tom Moore, KU-Y adviser, said the question in discussion is a matter of the cabinet's declaring how it feels about race relations and how far it is willing to go in achieving equal rights. The motion to vote on a stand was tabled. The cabinet then selected a committee headed by Carl Peck, Concordia sophomore, to draw up a proposal that will be a basis for further discussion. NEW YORK—(UPI) The older group in the population has had a very rapid growth, the Bureau of the Census reports. Aging Up Between 1850 and 1930, when the population of the nation increased by 18.5 per cent, the number of persons over 65 increased by nearly 35 per cent. Their rate of increase was only slightly below that for the persons at the other end of the age scale, children under 15. Wednesday, November 8. 1961 University Daily Kansan Varied Opinions Given On Fallout Shelters "Do you think it is a good idea for the American people to build bomb shelters? Why or why not?" In a recent opinion poll, KU students interviewed gave varying reactions. Jerry Work, Kansas City, Kan., senior, said, "No, they should concentrate their efforts on trying to save things instead of destroying them. If the world is going to be destroyed by nuclear warfare, I would rather not be around to see the results." Robert Van Norman, Muncie senior; "I think in view of the world situation as it is, with the future in doubt, that it is not unwise. I personally would not build one, but I certainly don't see why other people shouldn't." MARILYN MITCHELL. New Orleans. La., sophomore: "Yes, because I think it is a psychological factor. It gives the people a sense of being prepared even though they may not be. It makes the people more secure." ELAINE HAINEY, Kansas City senior: "Yes, with the experiments that the Russians are doing, it is necessary and the time will come when we will realize it. I hope we are not too late." 365 Excuses 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse; Anniv. of the election of Gov. Lehman of Gambodia Beautiful Mum Corsages For HOMECOMING Phone In Your Order VI 3-6111 Delivered Saturday Morning OWENS flower shop and greenhouse 15th & NEW YORK ST. VI 3-6111 GRAND OPENING Of Another Popular Ronnies fashion BEAUTY SALONS At The HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 9th & Iowa THURS., NOV. 9TH Thanks to the lovely ladies of Lawrence and our successful growth in the Malls Center, Ronnie's now opens a second attractive salon in the Hillcrest Shopping Center for your convenience. We pledge to continue our policy of expert hair-styling in an attractive atmosphere at moderate prices. Drop by and visit our new salon, receive a free gift and register for $200 in free door prizes. 1952 MR. RONNIE OPENING SPECIALS!! (Prices Good Till Nov. 19th) Noted stylist and makeup artist on the set of Meridian Productions latest full length movie. His knowledge of feminine beauty needs assures you of satisfaction. REG. $20 COLD WAVE ... $15 REG. $15 COLD WAVE ... $10 REG. $10 COLD WAVE ... $650 All Specials Complete With Haircut, Shampoo Lanolin Creme Rinse, Fashion Setting & Spray PRICES GOOD IN BOTH SALONS Ronnie's Salon — MALLS CENTER VI 2-1144 Ronnie's Salon — Ronnie's Salon — HILLCREST CENTER VI 2-1978 10 FREE COFFEE & Pastries From Our Espresso Cart. Free Gifts! Free Prizes! APPOINTMENT USUALLY NOT NEEDED OPEN TILL 9 P.M. WEEK NIGHTS Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 8, 1961 Prof. Hoecker Puts Minds at Ease Blast Bigger Worry Than Fallout A person has an excellent chance of surviving a nuclear attack if he has invested in a little insurance—a bomb shelter. This was the opinion of Frank Hoecker, professor of radiation biophysics, yesterday before the Faculty Forum in the Kansas Union. He said survival depends on where a person is at the time of the blast—the distance from ground zero and protection at the time of blast. "A 20 MEGATON bomb released above Forbes Air Force Base would set fire to almost all wooden structures in Lawrence," Prof. Hoecker said. "Therefore, a basement shelter in a frame house would be ineffective." A megaton is equal to one million tons of TNT. He said the lethal dose of radioactive material is between 600 to 700 roentgens. He added a shelter should have a protective factor of 7/100 roentgens per hour. curacy and is the equivalent of 1/600 of a lethal dosage of radioactive material. A roentgen is a measure of ac- "The walls of a shelter should be either eight inches of concrete, 12 to 15 inches of earth or 20 inches of sand." HE SAID fallout from nuclear attack is one thing while test fallout is another. He added he was not frightened by fallout from the Soviet nuclear tests. "The level of strontium 90 from the bomb tests is insignificant," he said. "It would take tons of nuclear bombs to raise the strontium 90 level to a point where adverse effect is detectable." Advocating resumption of nuclear test by the United States, Prof. Hoecker said the American people have succumbed to a campaign of nuclear blackmail, partly self-imposed and partly encouraged by outside forces. the Russians will "go at it again and set off some big ones. "We have become psychologically conditioned to react to nuclear blackmail. The Russians have us in a position where we cannot carry on tests," he said. HE ADDED the Russians have kept their capability by setting off nuclear bombs like a series of firecrackers. He said if we resume tests, At the end of his talk, he was questioned about the effect of fall-out on food and water. He said radioactive material would contaminate food left in the open, but food in an undamaged grocery store would be safe to eat. WATERWOULD be contaminated for only a short time, he said, because radiation decreases rapidly in water. Speaking of milk, he said, "If the cow eats contaminated feed, the milk would be contaminated." But if in several weeks the cow would eat uncontaminated feed, the milk would be no longer contaminated. "All strontium in the cow's blood would be filtered out by the bones. The strontium would be firmly fixed in the bone, leaving the flesh safe to eat." NOW PIZZA HUT DELIVERY!! Call VI 3-9760 2-FOR-1 NIGHT-WEDNESDAY AT THE CATACOMBS MISS THOMPSON THE MONARCHS WILL FURNISH ROCKIN' MUSIC 7-9 buy one beverage — get the second one free Catacombs Open: 4-11 Monday-Thursday Pizza Hut 4-1 Friday & Saturday Mock crime scenes will be part of the first annual Burglary and Larceny Seminar for Kansas Peace Officers here. About 60 Kansas peace officers will be staging burglary and larceny scenes on the KU campus this week. Mock Crimes to Be Staged Here After the "crimes" are acted out, the officers will gather evidence, make "arrests" and present their evidence in mock trials. Conviction or acquittal of the accused will depend on the efficiency with which the evidence is gathered and presented. PIZZA HUT JAY MEN Go For Harvey's Loafers 887 9 to 9 Daily Noon to 5 Sundays SELF-SELECTION Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 1302 W. 23rd St. (23rd and Naismith) JAY MEN Go For Harvey's Loafers 8'87 9 to 9 Daily Noon to 5 Sundays The seminar will also include classroom instruction on procedures of crime investigation involving burglary andlarceny. s The purpose of the seminar is to offer highly technical training to experienced peace officers to supplement the annual Peace Officers Training School in the summer. The training session was planned by the Kansas Peace Officers Association, Kansas Bureau of Investigation, Kansas State Highway Patrol, KU Governmental Research Center and University Extension. KU representatives who will work in the seminar are Ethan P. Allen, William H. Cape and B. L. Seruggs of the Governmental Research Center; Duane R. Nedrum and Paul Wilson, associate professor of law, and Karl Kappelman, University Extension. SELF-SELECTION Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers THE EAGLE "the wardrobe touch". ... The distinctive beginning of any wardrobe is the suit. Start your winter wardrobe now by selecting one of the smartly styled suits from Diebolt's. We offer the cord, trans American, natural, British, and conventional. Drop by today to look at your next suit, and investigate our latest service, the wardrobe touch. diebolt's 843 Mass. diebolt's PETER HAYES Page 7 Mitchell Says KU Is Going Downhill; Injury at KSU Kansas football Coach Jack Mitchell said yesterday his club may have reached its peak. By United Press International After watching the Jayhawks stumble through what he termed "the worst practice of the season" Mitchell said, "I'm afraid we're going downhill. Maybe we've reached a peak and have started down. You don't stand still. "YOU IMPROVE OR GO DOWN. You don't know what your peak is until you start down. We had no zip, no quickness, no speed," he said. "We'll just have to play a bad game before we find out that we've got to pick up." The Jayhawk's play Kansas State Saturday — the 59th meeting between the cross-state grid rivals. Kansas State developed a punting problem when specialist John Drew was knocked out of action with sprained muscles in his foot. His top two understudies, Harold Haun and Dave Laurie, also are on the shelf. That leaves the punting chores up to Jack Richardson and Dick Masters, who took their first cracks at the kicking game in yesterday's practice. MISSOURI STRESSED DEFENSE in its drill yesterday, as Coach Dan Devine prepared the Tigers for Saturday's game with once-mighty Oklahoma. "It's impossible to figure out how they lost five games." Devine said after viewing films of Oklahoma games thus far. "They're probably the best one-and-five team in the country." Oklahoma won its first game last week after five consecutive defeats. A crowd of 47,000 is expected for the Oklahoma-Missouri game. Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Bill Sheldon With the coming of the varsity-freshman basketball game as part of the Homecoming activities, the campus sports focus will swing from the fast recovering Jayhawker football squad to Allen Field House for a look at what is supposed to be one of the weakest Kansas basketball teams in recent years. Certainly, on paper, the KU roundballers are in no position to make any verbal challenge for the league crown. And, realistically, there apepats but a slim chance for the inexperienced Hawkers to sneak in among the elite—a position much frequented by Dick Harp coached teams. BUT, ALL IS NOT forlorn as practice for the season opener here against Arkansas Dec. 1 moves into its final weeks. Saturday the varsity had an abbreviated scrimmage with the frosh and showed to be a better team than they have been credited for to this point. Of course the team operates around its fantastic guard duo of senior Jerry Gardner and junior Nolen Ellison—both starters last season. GRANTED, ASIDE from these two, there is very little to discuss on the favorable side of the ledger But, even though there appears scant ability and experience both along the front wall and on the bench, there may be enough surprises in Harp's coaching valise and among the potpourri of unknown talent scrambling for the three front line positions to make a respectable season of things. Certainly, Messrs. Gardner and Ellison have enough spark, genius, trickery, and craftsmanship to surprise many a foe and provide a great many laughs and thrills for what is hoped to be throngs of fans. Against the frosh, these two flipped and flitted their way from boundary to boundary with finesse and luck to exhibit a fast break which may be as devastating as it was at times last season, like at Colorado and here against Iowa State—both easy KU wins. KU's capable backcourt tandem seems to have an amazing collection of maneuvers which they can employ to befuddle even the best. An explanation and description of the talents of the Jay wizards could go on for ever, so, in the interests of our advertisers, the subject will be left for the present, and brought up again when an outstanding first year team clashes with an interesting varsity Friday night. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers RECORDS STEREO Up to 75% OFF HI-FI 45s (15c EACH) RCA Victor, Dott, Mercury, Kapp, Columbia, London, & Capitol labels Large Selection of Party Records VINCENTS — 904 Mass. The Kansas-Missouri freshman football game Friday at Columbia may be a duel of halfbacks. The duel will be between KU's right half, Gale Sayers, and MU's left half, Johnny Roland, if the latter's back injury heals. Wednesday, November 8, 1961 University Daily Kansan KU-MU Freshman Gridders to Meet In the Jayhawker's first outing, Sayers scored all three touchdowns in a 21-6 win over Kansas State. Roland, 190-pound Corpus Christi all-stater, scored once and passed for the other touchdown in the Tiger's 21-12 loss to Iowa State. Leon Delassus, left end, 172; Billy Meadows, left tackle, 200; Steve Thimmesch, left guard, 220; Dave Holsinger, center, 180; Kent Rich, right guard, 190; Anthony Piskulich, right tackle, 200; Ron Snyder, right end, 196; Mike Jones, quarterback, 180; Roland or Bill Leistritz, left halfback, 200; Vince Tobin, right halfback, 177; and Gus Otto, fullback. 205. Probable starters for the baby Bengals are: The division I, fraternity A section, intramural football championship was decided last night as Beta Theta Pi took a 22-0 win from Delta Tau Delta in one of the most spirited games of the season. Betas Maintain Skein; Win 22-0 Kickoff time is 2:30 p.m. The winners scored in the first quarter on a 35-yard pass interception, over a wide-open covering 15 yards to move to the title with an undefeated record. The Delta, who may join the Betas, Phi Delta Theta, and Phi Gamma Delta in the play-offs, finished in a second place tie with Delta Upsilon. A coin toss between the two twice beaten squads (Delts-DU) will determine the team entering the playoffs. In another A game, the Phi Gams dropped another defeat on Sigma Phi Epsilon, winning 19-2. Also, Sigma Alpha Epsilon won by forfeit over Delta Upsilon. In fraternity B play the Betas pounded Phi Gam No. 2, 46-6 and Phi Delt No. 2 won by forfeit over Sigma Nu. SUA FILM SERIES PRESENTS: THE CLASSICAL VERSION OF "PHANTOM of the OPERA" - WED., NOV. 15 AT 7:30 - IN THE FORUM ROOM OF THE UNION - 60c ADMISSION PRICE Purchase Your Tickets At The Information Desk Of The Union A bouquet of chrysanthemums, roses and other flowers. Say "Welcome Back Alums" with flowers from Regnier's Flower Box VI 3-1701 marterie HOMECOMING DANCE NOVEMBER 11, 1961 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. November 8. 1961 22nd Communist Congress Dramatized Split in Party By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst The Communist Party wound up its 22nd Congress last week with a display of heavy-handed humor on the part of Secretary Nikita Krushchev and a split in party ranks whose effect on the future only could be guessed. Almost lost in the pyrotechnics of the world's mightiest bomb and Khrushchev's marathon attacks upon Albania, the "anti-party" members and the memory of Josef Stalin was the subject which had been billed as the most important on the congress agenda. THAT WAS THE new party program, the first since Lenin's time, charting the course of Communism for the next 20 years. In the Communist Utopia of 20 years hence, Khrushchev promised to multiply gross national product five times, industrial production six times and agricultural output three and a half times. He promised each Russian family its own rent-free apartment and each Russian "nearly three pairs of shoes per year." SOVIET SCIENTISTS had made a mistake, he said. The 50 megaton bomb they planned turned out to be even more powerful than expected. On Tuesday, after two weeks of oratory, the Congress closed on a jovial note from Khrushchev. "But," he said, "We won't punish them (the Russian scientists) for it." While the free world universally condemned Khrushchev for his nuclear terror tactics, perhaps of more far reaching effect was the revelation of the deep split within the party. After a long recitation of the sinfully murderous ways of Stalin and his struggle against the anti-party group which would have continued Talk on Costume Design Carolyn Kriesel will speak on costume designing at the SUA Art Forum at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the University Theatre. Costumes from the production "Auntie Mame" will be used to demonstrate costume design and special materials needed for special effects. Vacation Beains Nov. 21 KU's Thanksgiving recess will begin at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 21, and continue until classes resume at 8 a.m. Monday, Nov. 27. Many students will interrupt their vacation to attend the final football game of the season when KU meets Missouri in Lawrence, Nov. 25. the Stalin methods, he switched to small and of little value Albania. ALBANIAN LEADER Enver Hoxha, he said, remained Stalinist, and he added: "We cannot make a concession on that fundamental point, either to the Albanian leaders, or to anyone else." The "anyone else" soon became apparent. In the applause which followed Khrushchev's attack, Communist Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai sat on his hands. When his turn came, Chou arose to denounce Khrushchev's "public denunciation" of Albania and to say that such an approach "can only distress friends and delight our enemies." NORTH VIET NAM'S Ho Chi Minh and North Korea's Kim II Sung also Wagner Wins Bv United Press International NEW YORK CITY — Democratic Mayor Robert F. Wagner was elected to a third term by a plurality of some 400,000 votes over Republican Louis J. Lefkowitz, who had the strong backing of Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. The victory established Wagner as the state's most powerful Democrat. Rockefeller called the GOP showing a victory of sorts, pointing out that Lefkowitz cut Wagner's victory margin of four years ago by a half-million votes. New Jersey — Democrat Richard J. Hughes, virtually a political unknown and the underdog, won the governorship in an upset defeat of James P. Mitchell, Secretary of Labor under President Eisenhower. Both President Kennedy and Eisenhower had campaigned in the state for their party's gubernatorial candidates. Tickets on Sale for Play Tickets are on sale for the next University Theater production. "Dark of the Moon," which will be presented Nov. 13-20. Prices are one dollar, or city cents with an identification card. Food Irradiation NEW YORK—(UPI)—Companies are stepping up activity in the field of irradiating food to prevent spoilage, sometimes for years. Curtiss-Wright Corp. is building a large food irradiation research facility for the Army. However, the government has not yet declared the process safe for commercial use. Encourage Learning AMERICAN EDUCATION WEEK·NOV. 5-11 refused to join in the general chorus of denunciation. At the root of Khrushchev's denunciation of Stalin, of the "anti-party" members and of Albania was an intra-party quarrel of nearly two years duration. It is the conflict over the Khrushchev policy of co-existence as a "creative" development of the Marxist-Leninist theory as opposed to Red China's insistence on the inevitability of war so long as opposition to socialism exists. INVOLVED ALSO is the Red Chinese challenge to Khrusnecv or leadership in the Communist world, particularly in Asia. When, if ever, Red China could challenge the Soviet Union in a power struggle, must be a matter of conjecture. But even now, it stands as a rallying point for Khrushchev's enemies at home and abroad. Official Bulletin Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. TODAY AMERICAN EDUCATION WEEK·NOV. 5-11 Foreign Students: interested in receiv- ing information on the concert of the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra in the Kansas City Music Hall Coan in 228 Strong by 5 p.m. tomorrow. Mathematics Colloquium: 4:15 p.m. 103 Strong Hall. "Transformation of Ault- iple Integrals." Prof. Robert D. Adams. Coffee. 3:50 p.m., 119 Strong Hall. Le Corée Francaise se reunit mercredi à quatre heures dans la salle 11 de Fraser. Louis Fouladeil, étudiant français, fera une enseurielle illustrée sur quelles essais du francais? Tous ces essais intéressent aux français sont cordialement invités. SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m., Room 368 Kansas Union, Instructor, Larry Bedie. Kansas Union Instructor, Larry Bodie Student National Education Association: 4 p.m., 203 Bailey, Speaker, Dr. Procedures for Children Who Are Different. Episcopal Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch 12 noon, Canterbury House. Westminster Center Choir: 5:45 p.m. Wheat and supper, 1264 Oredre. Practice and supper. Der Deutshe Verein verknüpf sich am Donnerstag, den 9. November, um fuert ihr in 11 Fraser. Schillers Geburtstag wird gefehlt. Singen und Tanzen. Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. 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3.47 3.48 3.49 3.50 3.51 3.52 3.53 3.54 3.55 3.56 3.57 3.58 3.59 3.60 3.61 3.62 3.63 3.64 3.65 3.66 3.67 3.68 3.69 3.70 3.71 3.72 3.73 3.74 3.75 3.76 3.77 3.78 3.79 3.80 3.81 3.82 3.83 3.84 3.85 3.86 3.87 3.88 3.89 3.90 3.91 3.92 3.93 3.94 3.95 3.96 3.97 3.98 3.99 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 4.14 4.15 4.16 4.17 4.18 4.19 4.20 4.21 4.22 4.23 4.24 4.25 4.26 4.27 4.28 4.29 4.30 4.31 4.32 4.33 4.34 4.35 4.36 4.37 4.38 4.39 4.40 4.41 4.42 4.43 4.44 4.45 4.46 4.47 4.48 4.49 4.50 4.51 4.52 4.53 4.54 4.55 4.56 4.57 4.58 4.59 4.60 4.61 4.62 4.63 4.64 4.65 4.66 4.67 4.68 4.69 4.70 4.71 4.72 4.73 4.74 4.75 4.76 4.77 4.78 4.79 4.80 4.81 4.82 4.83 4.84 4.85 4.86 4.87 4.88 4.89 4.90 4.91 4.92 4.93 4.94 4.95 4.96 4.97 4.98 4.99 5.00 5.01 5.02 5.03 5.04 5.05 5.06 5.07 5.08 5.09 5.10 5.11 5.12 5.13 5.14 5.15 5.16 5.17 5.18 5.19 5.20 5.21 5.22 5.23 5.24 5.25 5.26 5.27 5.28 5.29 5.30 5.31 5.32 5.33 5.34 5.35 5.36 5.37 5.38 5.39 5.40 5.41 5.42 5.43 5.44 5.45 5.46 5.47 5.48 5.49 5.50 5.51 5.52 5.53 5.54 5.55 5.56 5.57 5.58 5.59 5.60 5.61 5.62 5.63 5.64 5.65 5.66 5.67 5.68 5.69 5.70 5.71 5.72 5.73 5.74 5.75 5.76 5.77 5.78 5.79 5.80 5.81 5.82 5.83 5.84 5.85 5.86 5.87 5.88 5.89 5.90 5.91 5.92 5.93 5.94 5.95 5.96 5.97 5.98 5.99 6.00 6.01 6.02 6.03 6.04 6.05 6.06 6.07 6.08 6.09 6.10 6.11 6.12 6.13 6.14 6.15 6.16 6.17 6.18 6.19 6.20 6.21 6.22 6.23 6.24 6.25 6.26 6.27 6.28 6.29 6.30 6.31 6.32 6.33 6.34 6.35 6.36 6.37 6.38 6.39 6.40 6.41 6.42 6.43 6.44 6.45 6.46 6.47 6.48 6.49 6.50 6.51 6.52 6.53 6.54 6.55 6.56 6.57 6.58 6.59 6.60 6.61 6.62 6.63 6.64 6.65 6.66 6.67 6.68 6.69 6.70 6.71 6.72 6.73 6.74 6.75 6.76 6.77 6.78 6.79 6.80 6.81 6.82 6.83 6.84 6.85 6.86 6.87 6.88 6.89 6.90 6.91 6.92 6.93 6.94 6.95 6.96 6.97 6.98 6.99 7.00 7.01 7.02 7.03 7.04 7.05 7.06 7.07 7.08 7.09 7.10 7.11 7.12 7.13 7.14 7.15 7.16 7.17 7.18 7.19 7.20 7.21 7.22 7.23 7.24 7.25 7.26 7.27 7.28 7.29 7.30 7.31 7.32 7.33 7.34 7.35 7.36 7.37 7.38 7.39 7.40 7.41 7.42 7.43 7.44 7.45 7.46 7.47 7.48 7.49 7.50 7.51 7.52 7.53 7.54 7.55 7.56 7.57 7.58 7.59 7.60 7.61 7.62 7.63 7.64 7.65 7.66 7.67 7.68 7.69 7.70 7.71 7.72 7.73 7.74 7.75 7.76 7.77 7.78 7.79 7.80 7.81 7.82 7.83 7.84 7.85 7.86 7.87 7.88 7.89 7.90 7.91 7.92 7.93 7.94 7.95 7.96 7.97 7.98 7.99 8.00 8.01 8.02 8.03 8.04 8.05 8.06 8.07 8.08 8.09 8.10 8.11 8.12 8.13 8.14 8.15 8.16 8.17 8.18 8.19 8.20 8.21 8.22 8.23 8.24 8.25 8.26 8.27 8.28 8.29 8.30 8.31 8.32 8.33 8.34 8.35 8.36 8.37 8.38 8.39 8.40 8.41 8.42 8.43 8.44 8.45 8.46 8.47 8.48 8.49 8.50 8.51 8.52 8.53 8.54 8.55 8.56 8.57 8.58 8.59 8.60 8.61 8.62 8.63 8.64 8.65 8.66 8.67 8.68 8.69 8.70 8.71 8.72 8.73 8.74 8.75 8.76 8.77 8.78 8.79 8.80 8.81 8.82 8.83 8.84 8.85 8.86 8.87 8.88 8.89 8.90 8.91 8.92 8.93 8.94 8.95 8.96 8.97 8.98 8.99 9.00 9.01 9.02 9.03 9.04 9.05 9.06 9.07 9.08 9.09 9.10 9.11 9.12 9.13 9.14 9.15 9.16 9.17 9.18 9.19 9.20 9.21 9.22 9.23 9.24 9.25 9.26 9.27 9.28 9.29 9.30 9.31 9.32 9.33 9.34 9.35 9.36 9.37 9.38 9.39 9.40 9.41 9.42 9.43 9.44 9.45 9.46 9.47 9.48 9.49 9.50 9.51 9.52 9.53 9.54 9.55 9.56 9.57 9.58 9.59 9.60 9.61 9.62 9.63 9.64 9.65 9.66 9.67 9.68 9.69 9.70 9.71 9.72 9.73 9.74 9.75 9.76 9.77 9.78 9.79 9.80 9.81 9.82 9.83 9.84 9.85 9.86 9.87 9.88 9.89 9.90 9.91 9.92 9.93 9.94 9.95 9.96 9.97 9.98 9.99 10.00 10.01 10.02 10.03 10.04 10.05 10.06 10.07 10.08 10.09 10.10 10.11 10.12 10.13 10.14 10.15 10.16 10.17 10.18 10.19 10.20 10.21 10.22 10.23 10.24 10.25 10.26 10.27 10.28 10.29 10.30 10.31 10.32 10.33 10.34 10.35 10.36 10.37 10.38 10.39 10.40 10.41 10.42 10.43 10.44 10.45 10.46 10.47 10.48 10.49 10.50 10.51 10.52 10.53 10.54 10.55 10.56 10.57 10.58 10.59 10.60 10.61 10.62 10.63 10.64 10.65 10.66 10.67 10.68 10.69 10.70 10.71 10.72 10.73 10.74 10.75 10.76 10.77 10.78 10.79 10.80 10.81 10.82 10.83 10.84 10.85 10.86 10.87 10.88 10.89 10.90 10.91 10.92 10.93 10.94 10.95 10.96 10.97 10.98 10.99 11.00 11.01 11.02 11.03 11.04 11.05 11.06 11.07 11.08 11.09 11.10 11.11 11.12 11.13 11.14 11.15 11.16 11.17 11.18 11.19 11.20 11.21 11.22 11.23 11.24 11.25 11.26 11.27 11.28 11.29 11.30 11.31 11.32 11.33 11.34 11.35 11.36 11.37 11.38 11.39 11.40 11.41 11.42 11.43 11.44 11.45 11.46 11.47 11.48 11.49 11.50 11.51 11.52 11.53 11.54 11.55 11.56 11.57 11.58 11.59 11.60 11.61 11.62 11.63 11.64 11.65 11.66 11.67 11.68 11.69 11.70 11.71 11.72 11.73 11.74 11.75 11.76 11.77 11.78 11.79 11.80 11.81 11.82 11.83 11.84 11.85 11.86 11.87 11.88 11.89 11.90 11.91 11.92 11.93 11.94 11.95 11.96 11.97 11.98 11.99 20.00 20.01 20.02 20.03 20.04 20.05 20.06 20.07 20.08 20.09 20.10 20.11 20.12 20.13 20.14 20.15 20.16 20.17 20.18 20.19 20.20 20.21 20.22 20.23 20.24 20.25 20.26 20.27 20.28 20.29 20.30 20.31 20.32 20.33 20.34 20.35 20.36 20.37 20.38 20.39 20.40 20.41 20.42 20.43 20.44 20.45 20.46 20.47 20.48 20.49 20.50 20.51 20.52 20.53 20.54 20.55 20.56 20.57 20.58 20.59 20.60 20.61 20.62 20.63 20.64 20.65 20.66 20.67 20.68 20.69 20.70 20.71 20.72 20.73 20.74 20.75 20.76 20.77 20.78 20.79 20.80 20.81 20.82 20.83 20.84 20.85 20.86 20.87 20.88 20.89 20.90 20.91 20.92 20.93 20.94 20.95 20.96 20.97 20.98 20.99 30.00 30.01 30.02 30.03 30.04 30.05 30.06 30.07 30.08 30.09 30.10 30.11 30.12 30.13 30.14 30.15 30.16 30.17 30.18 30.19 30.20 30.21 30.22 30.23 30.24 30.25 30.26 30.27 30.28 30.29 30.30 30.31 30.32 30.33 30.34 30.35 30.36 30.37 30.38 30.39 30.40 30.41 30.42 30.43 30.44 30.45 30.46 30.47 30.48 30.49 30.50 30.51 30.52 30.53 30.54 30.55 30.56 30.57 30.58 30.59 30.60 30.61 30.62 30.63 30.64 30.65 30.66 30.67 30.68 30.69 30.70 30.71 30.72 30.73 30.74 30.75 30.76 30.77 30.78 30.79 30.80 30.81 30.82 30.83 30.84 30.85 30.86 30.87 30.88 30.89 30.90 30.91 30.92 30.93 30.94 30.95 30.96 30.97 30.98 30.99 40.00 40.01 40.02 40.03 40.04 40.05 40.06 40.07 40.08 40.09 40.10 40.11 40.12 40.13 40.14 40.15 40.16 40.17 40.18 40.19 40.20 40.21 40.22 40.23 40.24 40.25 40.26 40.27 40.28 40.29 40.30 40.31 40.32 40.33 40.34 40.35 40.36 40.37 40.38 40.39 40.40 40.41 40.42 40.43 40.44 40.45 40.46 40.47 40.48 40.49 40.50 40.51 40.52 40.53 40.54 40.55 40.56 40.57 40.58 40.59 40.60 40.61 40.62 40.63 40.64 40.65 40.66 40.67 40.68 40.69 40.70 40.71 40.72 40.73 40.74 40.75 40.76 40.77 40.78 40.79 40.80 40.81 40.82 40.83 40.84 40.85 40.86 40.87 40.88 40.89 40.90 40.91 40.92 40.93 40.94 40.95 40.96 40.97 40.98 40.99 50.00 50.01 50.02 50.03 50.04 50.05 50.06 50.07 50.08 50.09 50.10 50.11 50.12 50.13 50.14 50.15 50.16 50.17 50.18 50.19 50.20 50.21 50.22 50.23 50.24 50.25 50.26 50.27 50.28 50.29 50.30 50.31 50.32 50.33 50.34 50.35 50.36 50.37 50.38 50.39 50.40 50.41 50.42 50.43 50.44 50.45 50.46 50.47 50.48 50.49 50.50 50.51 50.52 50.53 50.54 50.55 50.56 50.57 50.58 50.59 50.60 50.61 50.62 50.63 50.64 50.65 50.66 50.67 50.68 50.69 50.70 50.71 50.72 50.73 50.74 50.75 50.76 50.77 50.78 50.79 50.80 50.81 50.82 50.83 50.84 50.85 50.86 50.87 50.88 50.89 50.90 50.91 50.92 50.93 50.94 50.95 50.96 50.97 50.98 50.99 60.00 60.01 60.02 60.03 60.04 60.05 60.06 60.07 60.08 60.09 60.10 60.11 60.12 60.13 60.14 60.15 60.16 60.17 60.18 60.19 60.20 60.21 60.22 60.23 60.24 60.25 60.26 60.27 60.28 60.29 60.30 60.31 60.32 60.33 60.34 60.35 60.36 60.37 60.38 60.39 60.40 60.41 60.42 60.43 60.44 60.45 60.46 60.47 60.48 60.49 60.50 60.51 60.52 60.53 60.54 60.55 60.56 60.57 60.58 60.59 60.60 60.61 60.62 60.63 60.64 60.65 60.66 60.67 60.68 60.69 60.70 60.71 60.72 60.73 60.74 60.75 60.76 60.77 60.78 60.79 60.80 60.81 60.82 60.83 60.84 60.85 60.86 60.87 60.88 60.89 60.90 60.91 60.92 60.93 60.94 60.95 60.96 60.97 60.98 60.99 70.00 70.01 70.02 70.03 70.04 70.05 70.06 70.07 70.08 70.09 70.10 70.11 70.12 70.13 70.14 70.15 70.16 70.17 70.18 70.19 70.20 70.21 70.22 70.23 70.24 70.25 70.26 70.27 70.28 70.29 70.30 70.31 70.32 70.33 70.34 70.35 70.36 70.37 70.38 70.39 70.40 70.41 70.42 70.43 70.44 70.45 70.46 70.47 70.48 70.49 70.50 70.51 70.52 70.53 70.54 70.55 70.56 70.57 70.58 70.59 70.60 70.61 70.62 70.63 70.64 70.65 70.66 70.67 70.68 70.69 70.70 70.71 70.72 70.73 70.74 70.75 70.76 70.77 70.78 70.79 70.80 70.81 70.82 70.83 70.84 70.85 70.86 70.87 70.88 70.89 70.90 70.91 70.92 70.93 70.94 70.95 70.96 70.97 70.98 70.99 80.00 80.01 80.02 80.03 80.04 80.05 80.06 80.07 80.08 80.09 80.10 80.11 80.12 80.13 80.14 80.15 80.16 80.17 80.18 80.19 80.20 80.21 80.22 80.23 80.24 80.25 80.26 80.27 80.28 80.29 80.30 80.31 80.32 80.33 80.34 80.35 80.36 80.37 80.38 80.39 80.40 80.41 80.42 80.43 80.44 80.45 80.46 80.47 80.48 80.49 80.50 80.51 80.52 80.53 80.54 80.55 80.56 80.57 80.58 80.59 80.60 80.61 80.62 80.63 80.64 80.65 80.66 80.67 80.68 80.69 80.70 80.71 80.72 80.73 80.74 80.75 80.76 80.77 80.78 80.79 80.80 80.81 80.82 80.83 80.84 80.85 80.86 80.87 80.88 80.89 80.90 80.91 80.92 80.93 80.94 80.95 80.96 80.97 80.98 80.99 70.00 70.01 70.02 70.03 70.04 70.05 70.06 70.07 70.08 70.09 70.10 70.11 70.12 70.13 70.14 70.15 70.16 70.17 70.18 70.19 70.20 70.21 70.22 70.23 70.24 70.25 70.26 70.27 70.28 70.29 70.30 70.31 70.32 70.33 70.34 70.35 70.36 70.37 70.38 70.39 70.40 70.41 70.42 70.43 70.44 70.45 70.46 70.47 70.48 70.49 70.50 70.51 70.52 70.53 70.54 70.55 70.56 70.57 70.58 70.59 70.60 70.61 70.62 70.63 70.64 70.65 70.66 70.67 70.68 70.69 70.70 70.71 70.72 70.73 70.74 70.75 70.76 70.77 70.78 70.79 70.80 70.81 70.82 70.83 70.84 70.85 70.86 70.87 70.88 70.89 70.90 70.91 70.92 70.93 70.94 70.95 70.96 70.97 70.98 70.99 80.00 80.01 80.02 80.03 80.04 80.05 80.06 80.07 80.08 80.09 80.10 80.11 80.12 80.13 80.14 80.15 80.16 80.17 80.18 80.19 80.20 80.21 80.22 80.23 80.24 80.25 80.26 80.27 80.28 80.29 80.30 80.31 80.32 80.33 80.34 80.35 80.36 80.37 80.38 80.39 80.40 80.41 80.42 80.43 80.44 80.45 80.46 80.47 80.48 80.49 80.50 80.51 80.52 80.53 80.54 80.55 80.56 80.57 80.58 80.59 80.60 80.61 80.62 80.63 80.64 80.65 80.66 80.67 80.68 80.69 80.70 80.71 80.72 80.73 80.74 80.75 80.76 80.77 80.78 80.79 80.80 80.81 80.82 80.83 80.84 80.85 80.86 80.87 80.88 80.89 80.90 80.91 80.92 80.93 80.94 80.95 80.96 80.97 80.98 80.99 70.00 70.01 70.02 70.03 70.04 70.05 70.06 70.07 70.08 70.09 70.10 70.11 70.12 70.13 70.14 70.15 70.16 70.17 70.18 70.19 70.20 70.21 70.22 70.23 70.24 70.25 70.26 70.27 70.28 70.29 70.30 70.31 70.32 70.33 70.34 70.35 70.36 70.37 70.38 70.39 70.40 70.41 70.42 70.43 70.44 70.45 70.46 70.47 70.48 70.49 70.50 70.51 70.52 70.53 70.54 70.55 70.56 70.57 70.58 70.59 70.60 70.61 70.62 70.63 70.64 70.65 70.66 70.67 70.68 70.69 70.70 70.71 70.72 70.73 70.74 70.75 70.76 70.77 70.78 70.79 70.80 70.81 70.82 70.83 70.84 70.85 70.86 70.87 70.88 70.89 70.90 70.91 70.92 70.93 70.94 70.95 70.96 70.97 70.98 70.99 80.00 80.01 80.02 80.03 80.04 80.05 80.06 80.07 80.08 80.09 80.10 80.11 80.12 80.13 80.14 80.15 80.16 80.17 80.18 80.19 80.20 80.21 80.22 80.23 80.24 80.25 80.26 80.27 80.28 80.29 80.30 80.31 80.32 80.33 80.34 80.35 80.36 80.37 80.38 80.39 80.40 80.41 80.42 80.43 80.44 80.45 80.46 80.47 80.48 80.49 80.50 80.51 80.52 80.53 80.54 80.55 80.56 80.57 80.58 80.59 80.60 80.61 80.62 80.63 80.64 80.65 80.66 80.67 80.68 80.69 80.70 80.71 80.72 80.73 80.74 80.75 80.76 80.77 80.78 80.79 80.80 80.81 80.82 80.83 80.84 80.85 80.86 80.87 80.88 80.89 80.90 80.91 80.92 80.93 80.94 80.95 80.96 80.97 80.98 80.99 80.10 80.11 80.12 80.13 80.14 80.15 80.16 80.17 80.18 80.19 80.20 80.21 80.22 80.23 80.24 80.25 80.26 80.27 80.28 80.29 80.30 80.31 80.32 80.33 80.34 80.35 80.36 80.37 80.38 80.39 80.40 80.41 80.42 80.43 80.44 80.45 80.46 80.47 80.48 80.49 80.50 80.51 80.52 80.53 80.54 80.55 80.56 80.57 80.58 80.59 80.60 80.61 80.62 80.63 80.64 80.65 80.66 80.67 80.68 80.69 80.70 80.71 80.72 80.73 80.74 80.75 80.76 80.77 80.78 80.79 80.80 80.81 80.82 80.83 80.84 80.85 80.86 80.87 80.88 80.89 80.90 80.91 80.9 Ise Flays Birchers— Page 9 (Continued from page 1) of our record, considering that we have so many more crazy people and only 20,000 Communists." The 76-year-old outspoken liberal did not poke fun only at the John Birch Society. He also jibed at the "un-American House Committee." He said the House Un-American Activities Committee was set up by Congress to undermine American democracy. HE SAID HE HAD information that two professors of one Kansas university were fired because of pressure from the Society. "We'll know more about this in a year or so. If it's true the American Association of University Professors will organize a committee to study it and make a report." PROF. ISE ASKED what should be done about the John Birch Society. "I don't know what to do about them," he said. "I'm not good at constructive measures of that kind. But they can't do much so they ought to be allowed to talk." Prof. Ise retired in 1955 after 30 years of teaching at KU. ASC. Members of the committee are Lauren Ward, Ottawa junior; Charles Allphin, Lawrence sophomore; James Andrews, Kansas City junior; R. Wayne Thompson, Medicine Lodge sophomore; and Christian Berneking, Lawrence senior. ASC- (Continued from page 1) Wednesday, November 8. 1961 University Daily Kansan The resolution to investigate the Kansas Union was introduced by Melvin Saferstein, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student. ITS PROPOSED END result is "better service to the student." The resolution provides for the investigating board which will be appointed by the ASC chairman, Jerry Palmer. El Dorado senior. After some discussion, this resolution allowing for investigation of the Kansas Union was also adopted. DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI) — Dr. Robert E. Stoltz, a Southern Methodist University psychologist, says car theft is emerging as an important status symbol among the young — including the well-to-do. Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED - central air conditioning - carpeted - off street parking - garbage disposal - laundry facilities $ \frac{1}{2} $ block - play area for children Phone V1 2-3416 office VI 3-8253 home Patronize Kansan Advertisers-They Are Loyal Supporters. AU MUMS FOR HOMECOMING Order Early from Jay Janes or Call for Delivery ALLISON Flower AT THOMAS 941 Mass. VI 3-3255 MUMS MARIGOLD Flower ALLISON AT THOMAS Flower Shop ALLISON AT THOMAS Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 8.1961 Wescoe's Statement (Story on page 1) On Monday, November 6, I received a report from the group whom I had asked earlier in the year to study our situation relative to off-campus housing. That report follows in full: Realizing the need to clarify our procedures on off-campus housing in these times of increasing demand for student housing, the Off-Campus Housing Committee makes the following recommendations: 1. That a permanent off-campus housing committee be appointed by the Chancellor, made up of the dean of students, dean of men, dean of women, and director of dormitories, whose duties shall be to establish policy and review and act on cases involving student landlord or student neighborhood problems. 2. That a properly qualified executive secretary be selected by the committee and appointed by the Chancellor to carry out the policies of the committee. 4. That the University listing service for off-campus rooms and apartments for men and graduate students be continued. 3. That the policy regarding the responsibility of the Dean of Women for approving all housing of undergraduate women be continued. 5. That the Off-Campus Housing Committee operate within the framework described below for the present. Although we have great confidence in our student body and this University community, complaints are inevitable concerning such matters as the improper use of alcoholic beverages, refusal to show or rent a room, rates, delinquent rental payments, the condition of the physical accommodations, or standards of conduct. The University does not wish to place property owners who rent to KU students in a defensive and uncomfortable position. It is our hope that property owners can receive a fair return on their investments; that they can enjoy having students in their homes and thus feel a relationship to the University; and that student renters can find conditions in off-campus residences conducive to study. If, as a result of an investigation of a complaint involving a room or apartment on the University's housing list, the Off-Campus Housing Committee finds that a student has not been treated fairly in his contacts with the property owner or his agent; or that a student has, acting in good faith, been refused a room because of nationality, color, or faith, the address of that particular room or apartment will be removed from our housing list. Good faith is underlined to emphasize the point that the University is not interested in "test cases, checks, or traps." Our responsibility, as we see it, is to help the student who wants and needs housing. No listings will be altered until a University staff member has talked with the property owner about the matter in question. With most students settled for the school year, no University The University, through its appropriate officials, will continue to direct students to vacate rooms and apartments when, and again after careful investigation, it is clear that the student renters and/or their guests do not honor University standards and policies. In these types of cases students may be asked to move to supervised housing where it will be possible to guide their activities. housing poll will be made at this time. Unless property owners who now have accommodations listed on the University housing list wish to cancel them by writing or calling our Housing Office, we will assume that all addresses on the list are related to Lawrence citizens who will rent their accommodations to any student at the University on the basis of individual merit. SANDY'S THRIFT & SWIFT DRIVE-IN 21.20 West 9th Across from Hillcrest Through the years KU officials have turned to Lawrence citizens on many occasions to discuss special and local needs of the school. There will be many in the 1960s. Expanding enrollments in this decade will mean that all Lawrence businesses will feel the effect of the University. Our students will need housing. Some will be housed in fraternities and sororities; hundreds will be living in our scholarship and residence halls; and the rest, again numbered in hundreds, will live in rooms in private homes or in apartments. I have accepted the report of the committee and have asked them to implement the policies of the University of Kansas stated in this report. In the coming years we hope Lawrence residents and their neighbors will find it increasingly true that K.U. men and women, from every walk of life and from all over the world, can be good roomers, good neighbors, and good friends. POLYMER CITY CENTER These further comments should be made: At the present time the University does not have the resources to provide an executive secretary for this important group. Neither does it appear that the University will obtain the necessary resources in the near future. Here, as in many other areas, for lack of sufficient administrative personnel the University will have to "make do" for the moment. I shall make every effort to develop the resources necessary within our present financing. It should be pointed out that as Quality Watch Repairing DANIELS JEWELRY 914 Mass., Ph. VI 3-2572 KIEF'S RECORDS & HI-FI Available at: Malls Shopping Center 9 --- STEREO in the past the listing of rental opportunities, save in the instance of undergraduate women, will not imply University approval of the units. We cannot undertake the responsibility for inspection within our limited means. This point has always been made clear in our list and will continue to be made clear. CAMPAIGN TIME FURTHER OUT WITH REPLACEMENT THE DAVE BRUBECK QUARTET There Is No Waiting at Sandy's MENU Hamburgers 15c Cheeseburgers 19c Toasted Cheese 15c French Fries 10c Milk Shakes 20c Coke, Coffee, Orange 10c Milk, Root Beer 10c Sandy's only milk tea hand made tea Sandy's uses only Gov't inspected beef The committee plans immediately to circularize those whose names appear on our current list, thereby to inform them clearly of our policies. Anyone who wishes to withdraw a listing at that time will be free to do so. Those who desire to list accommodations in the future will, of course, be made aware of this policy statement and their agreement to it will be obtained before a listing is made. I trust that the University's posture and policy, as well as my own, are clarified by this statement. W. CLARKE WESCOE Chancellor University of Kansas Nov. 8, 1961 If you're not planning to be in Lawrence next semester, but still want your pictures in the senior section of the Jayhawker, make your appointment now SENIORS Call Estes Studio at 924 Vt., VI 3-1171 NOW! At 7:15 Only Adm. $1.00 HIGH ADVENTURE! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents COLUMBIA PICTURES presents GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN in CARL FOREMAN'S THE GUNS OF NAVARONE COLOR and CINEMASCOPE Big Change in Stalingrad SHOWS FRIDAY AT 6:30 AND 9:15 STANLEY BAKER - ANTHONY QUAYLE - IRENE PAPAS GIA SCALA - JAMES DARREN MOSCOW—(UPI) Stalingrad is virtually a city without a name today. STARTING SATURDAY! In the high-adventure tradition! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents SPENCER FRANK TRACY AND SINATRA in the MERVYN LEROY- FRED KOHLMAR production THE DEVIL ST. 40090 Many signs reading "Stalingrad" are missing, indicating that the name of the famous beleaguered city of World War II may be changed. Western tourists in Stalingrad told UPI in Moscow by telephone that the railway station sign bearing the name of the city was taken down yesterday. MERVYN LeROY · FRED KOHLMAR NEW CITY ON MONDAY letters spelling "Stalin" were removed from the Hotel Stalingrad sign. And today the last four letters disappeared. Various slogans in neon around the city that mentioned "Stalingrad" GRANADA CREATE ... Impreso VWN 31-278 have been altered. For example, one sign, "let us make our city a city of high culture" formerly read "Our City of Stalingrad." In place of the city's name now is a black space when the red sign flashes on at night. A large statue of the late dictator has vanished from the nearby Volga-Don Canal. Shortly after Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's denunciation of Stalin at the 22nd Party Congress his statue was taken from the main square of Stalingrad. EVEN A SMALL mosaic profile of Lenin and Stalin, over a display of honored workers, photographs in the center of town, now shows only Lenin. STARTS TOMORROW! 7L. So busy with her children... SHE DIDN'T HAVE TiME TO GET MARRIED! This is the story of Aesop. Is the story of Anna, schoolteacher by trade, single by choice and most things to most men from 5 to 551 METRO GOLDWYN MAYER SHIRLEY MAcLAINE LAURENCE HARVEY JACK HAWKINS A JULIAN BLAUSTEIN Production PETER HAWKINS Two Loves is the Paul who was terribly offended be- cause he told him to stand up the week-end! --- --- I This is W.W. J.w. who fell in the sandbox and in love—all at the same time! NOBU McCARTHY - Screenplay by BEN MADDOW - Music by CHARLES WALTERS In CinemaScope and METROCOLOR "TWO LOVES" AT 7:00 AND 10:30 — AND — One d ON-THE-SPOT REALISM THAT TAKES YOU ON A JOURNEY INTO TERROR! RICHARD WIDMARK THE SECRET WAYS CO SAMING SONJA ZIEMANN CHARLES REGNIER · WALTER RILLA · HOWARD VERNON · SENTA BERGER A Health University In-Picture Picture HEAV sweate and I value turn. "SECRET WAYS" SHOWN AT 8:30 ONLY BLAC Malpa Denni Rewai New unfur centr after swer Vacar fortal VI 3- Ends Tonite — 7 and 9 — "FRANCIS OF ASSISI" VARSITY THEATRE . . . Telephone VIKING 3-1065 LARG side. NEW room room condi friger appol ROO! comf $30 p ONE or u Large after FORI to re Than VI 3 one of off one ce at. it. ler aa ne of off of of oly Wednesday, November 8. 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 or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. LOSI BEAUV BROWN & WHITE wool knit sweater. Large sheepman on the back, dog coat. On front of great value to me only. Rare offered for call. CV I 3-8534 11-8 BLACK FOUNTAIN PEN with Dennis Malpass engraved on it. Please return to Dennis Malpass, 437 Joseph R. Pearson. Reward. 11-14 GLASS CASE and glasses in Robinson Gym Amex. Whoever picked them up please call HER, VI 3-1034 between 5-6:30 p.m.. M-W-F. 11-8 LOST GOLD COLORED Hamilton phone with voice call. Pound please call John Hooper, VI 3-6455 FOR RENT New 2 Bedroom Apartment, furnished or unfurnished. All modern conveniences, and room for marking. Call VI 3-2461, after 4 pms or call VI 2-2543. If answer call VI 2-2550. 11-9 2 LARGE ROOMS. (bedroom & study room) for 2 men students, or will rent single. See at 1339 Teen. 11-8 Vacancy available for 2 men in com- pany. Please email: edd. Kid. Ca. Vi 3-9653 for appointment. If LARGE FURNISHED apartment a east side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6234. fax VI 3-6234. NEW 5 ROOM DUPLEX: has living room, dining area, lovely kitchen. 2 bedrooms, bath, & finished garage. Has airconditioning, new electric stove & refrigerator. Call VI 3-7120 or KU 385 for appointment. 11-13 ROOM FOR RENT. Linenns furnished. $50 per month, 407 W. 131, VI 2-1397, 2-1408. 11-8 6 ROOM HOUSE — newly decorated, fenced yard and garden spot. Partly furnished or unfurn. Call at 428 Elm or call VI 3-3602. 11-13 ONE BEDROOM HOUSE for rent. furn. or uniform, except for kitchen range. Large utility room, clean. Call VI 3-0554 after 7 p.m. 11-13 TRANSPORTATION FOREIGN STUDENT WANTS RIDE or to rent car to go to New Orleans at Thanksgiving. Call Genevieve Delahaye VI 3-5660. 11-8 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks. ~ cold Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. ~ on or on Vermont. Phone VI 850 BUSINESS SERVICES Tom's 14th St. Barber Shop. W 5, 14th St. st. % block off Mass. Free parking. 3 full-time barbers . - All HAIRCUTS $1.25 · Hours 8:00 - 5:30 Mon.-Sept. 11-9 Save Money RALPH FREED Income Insurance I will do Ironing in my home. Call VI 2- 4647, pickup and delivery. 11-9 ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 35751. or 921 Mll. tf American United Life offers exclusive STUDENT LIFE PLAN GROUP INSURANCE Morris Kay 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 days 8 to 6:30 o.m. VI 3-7114 Save Money FRANK ALEXANDER Income Insurance 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. 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 TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI >3644. tf DRESS MAKING and alterations. Forma- mals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 3919 $^2$. Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tf MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S.:" — Now at two locations. Call VI 3-5920 or 3-5947. 1015 Lawrence Ave. & 1021th Mass. TYPING — THEMES AND PAPERS. Use electric typewriters. 15c per page, 5c per carbon. 10f3 Connecticut, VI 3-097. TYPING Experienced typist would like typing in her home. Accurate, neat, reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. tr PROFESSIONAL SECRETARY wants typing Specializes in German and Medical papers. Erika Williamson, VI 2-3736. 11S EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patty, VI 3-8379 Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow. 40 W. 18th VI. 2t-1684. Mrs. Bartow. 40 W. 18th VI. 2t-1684. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type sheets, term paper, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, U 3-0558 1031 Miss. tt TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 8-4409. tf Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter Interested in the thesis, term papers, etc Student notes: Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. ff "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression with architects. For excellent singing standards rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers thesis, dissertations, reports, manuscripts need accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. I will type reports for the following: sel1, 1511 Wr 21 St. Call VI 3-6440 tel 21 (1) 978-84-5234-6167 FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, papers, theses and dissertations. . . Reason rates. . . Marilyn Hay. Vi I-3218. . . Ms it FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service. 6917 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7718 Evers or Sat # 2-2186 HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. Eng. teacher who writes reports & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 139 Vt., apt. 3. TYPING: Experientenced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mt Eldowney, Ph. VI 3-8568. FOR SALE Used Remington Quiet-riter, 1958 model. Good condition. Reasonable price. Call Karen Jennison, VI 2-1340 after 5 p.m. 11:40 Short Wave 8 Transistor Radio with antenna-scope. Regular $59.95, now $35.00 complete. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. EXPERIENCEIED TYPIST will do typing home — call VI 3-0136 Mrs. Lulu Gebelhian GUNS: RODENT REDDING FIREARMS. Trade-ins. VI 3-7001 1304 Tenn 11-9 11-9 BARGAINS — 4x5 Speed Graphic, f4.7 135 mm Optar Light, Graphmatic, Film pack adapt, film holders, film & ace, pts. Flashback, film holders, Canon lens, $20, Buhnell 6x15 gold finish Opera glasses, $20, New. Call Bob, VI 3- 3850. SMALL TIRE SALE. Volkswagen & small import stores all at 3% discount. Free installation. 2 year road hazard warranty. Ray Stonebuck's, 929 Mass. 11-13 STEVENS 22 Automatic Rifle. $24 Like new. Call VI 3-2966 after 6 p.m. tt HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or oeding. 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. tt GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES, complete with diagrams, comprehensive leitnitions, and time saving charts. landy cross storage for delivery. Ph VI 3-7553, V Dodge in good running condition. $90. Call Vi 3-4291. tf NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. service on all makes typewriters and adding a new machine at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th, Phone VI 3- 1151 today. tt PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Cnll VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. 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 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an unright. typewriter service, service, rentals, at residence typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3644 5 BOOKCASE SHELVES 6' with risers; barkboard, 5' x 5'; with glass doors; 15 gallon stoneware crock with lid and spigot. Rubbed cottonwood log with gliders; 12 guage shotgun, single shot; aquarium and supplies; 3006 Springfield deer rifle. See at 1016 Hilltop Drive after 1 p.m. 11-8 FOR SALE: '53 2 dr. Merc. Good cond., new tires, new battery. Call Gary Dilley. VI 3-8153. 11-8 1961 TURQOISE & WHITE Champion Lakewood mobile home for sale. One room, then 48 x 10' D-10 show- daily from 6:30 p.m. at Dec 6's Trailer Court, 1417 East 15th. 11-13 '53 CHEVY, radio, beater, good tires, good condition. Call KU 203. 11-10 MORE JOBS BETTER PRODUCTS LOWER PRICES Advertising works for you! How many of these 12 new Spectrum Paperbacks have you read? w' Here are the newest titles in a distinguished list-youll find them all at your bookstore listed below. ARMS CONTROL: ISSUES FOR THE PUBLIC Edited by Louis Henkin (An American Assembly Book) $1.95 SCARCITY AND EVIL WHAT PRICE ECONOMIC GROWTH? Edited by Klaus Knorr and William J. Baumol $1.95 AND EVIL by Vivian Charles Walsh $1.95 JUSTICE AND SOCIAL POLICY by Frederick A. Olafson $1.95 CONSTRUCTIVE ETHICS by T. V. Smith and William Debbins $1.95 LONELINESS by Clark E. Moustakas $1.75 RELIGION IN AMERICA: PAST AND PRESENT KNOWLEDGE: ITS VALUES AND LIMITS by Gustave Weigel, S.J. and Arthur G. Madden $1.75 LITERATURE, POPULAR CULTURE, AND SOCIETY by Leo Lowenthal $1.5 THE EDUCATION OF TEACHERS: CONSENSUS AND CONFLICT by G.K. Hodenfield and T.M. Stinnett $1.95 PARADOX AND PROMISE: ESSAYS ON AMERICAN LIFE AND EDUCATION Symbol of Good Reading: Spectrum Books Published by Prentice-Hall by Harry S. Broudy $1.95 RELIGION AND THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD by Gustave Weigel, S.J., and Arthur G. Madden $1.95 For Those Study Breaks Relax for a few minutes With one of our Paperbacks OVER 5000 TITLES To Choose From KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. November 8, 1961 FOOTBALL CONTEST THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN'S "TOTAL POINT PREDICTION" CONTEST Lawrence Tire & Oil Co. 1000 Mass. VI 2-0247 HEADQUARTERS FOR: US Royal Tires Conoco Oil Products Alignment - Wheel Balance Electrical System Repair & Rebuilding Complete Mechanical Service OPEN EVERY DAY UNTIL 1 am Colorada vs Utah 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, 11-10. In case of ties the $10 will be split. Address ___ Ph. Name My prediction is ___ points. One answer is ___. LAST WEEK'S WINNER: LAST WEEK'S WINNER: McKee McClendon 132 pts. Actual Points 132 pts. --see CHUCK TAYLOR, All Star Basketball Shoes by CONVERSE Francis Sporting Goods For the Finest in Laundry and Dry Cleaning VI3-4191 731 Mass. - White Only CONVERSE High Top or Low Cuts - Team Price $7.95 Syracuse vs. Colgate ___ Missouri vs Oklahoma "Specialists in fabric care" VI 3-3711 10th & N.H. "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 Iowa State vs Nebraska --- For Women American Girl - Risque Summerettes - Glov-etts Smart-Aire - Red Ball Fabric Crosby Square — Randcraft Red Wing Work Shoes ACME BOOTS For Men Redman's Shoes 815 Mass. VI 3-9871 Arizona vs Idaho TWO STORES TO SERVE YOU Downtown 835 Mass. Jay SHOPPE 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.) Of Your Choice Kansas vs Kansas State A BOBBIE BROOKS BLOUSE This Week's Gift --- 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, 11-10. In case of ties the $10 will be split. Name ___ Address ___ Ph. ___ My prediction is ___ points. LAST WEEK'S WINNER: McKee McClendon 132 pts. Actual Points 132 pts. --- FONDO FOXI CITY 1968 "Brilliant" says Marilyn King of the King Sisters The New Roberts "990" 4-Track Stereo Tape Recorder is your best buy Kief's Record & Hi Fi On the Mall Open Evenings Till 8 Wake Forest vs V.P.I. - News Briefs - RICHMOND, Va.—A huge airliner transporting army recruits to an infantry training camp in South Carolina crashed during an emergency landing attempt last night, killing all but two of the 79 or 80 persons aboard. The exact number of the plane's occupants was still uncertain many hours after the crash. George Prill, director of flight standards for the Federal Aviation Agency, (FAA) said there were either 79 or 80 persons aboard the chartered Imperial Airlines Constellation—five crewman and "either 74 or 75 passengers. We haven't determined yet and it requires checking with the army." **** BERLIN—The U.S. Army announced today it plans to bring units from West Germany to this divided city for "routine training exercises." The army said the first unit, Rifle Company D of the 1st Battle Group, 15th Infantry, will arrive tomorrow for several days and then return to its base in West Germany. This is the first time an army unit stationed in West Germany has been ordered to the beleaguered city for training. It will also be a new display of the Western Allies' right to send troops to the isolated city by way of the 110-mile Berlin-Helmstedt autoban through East Germany. **** BONN—There was renewed speculation in Bonn today that a meeting may be in the offing between Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. The speculation followed an exchange of telegrams between the two men and the meeting in Moscow this morning between Khrushchev and German Ambassador Hans Kroll. Khrushchev congratulated Adenauer on his re-election as Chancellor in a telegram yesterday. Adenauer replied with a brief cable this morning, thanking Khrushchev. Soviet Ambassador to Bonn Andrei Smirnov was expected to ask for a meeting with Adenauer shortly. Smirnov returned Tuesday from the Communist Party Congress in Moscow. Two weeks ago, Soviet diplomats in Bonn made it known that Khrushchev would like to come to Bonn some time to see Adenauer. Smirnov, it was made known then, may well ask Adenauer if an invitation to visit Bonn made in 1955 still stands. At that time, Adenaauer invited former Premier Nikolai Bulganin and Khrushchev to come to Bonn, but no date was set. Daily hansan Thursday, November 9, 1961 59th Year No.40 LAWRENCE. KANSAS In the spring of 1961, with the help of Joyce C. Hall of the Hallmark Foundation, KU embarked on the first pioneering project of People-to-People. Now, a few months later, the P-T-P program is ready for national application. National P-T-P Begins Tomorrow in Kansas City The rededication to "international understanding" is in line with an idea conceived by Mr. Eisenhower in 1956. His idea was to set up a program of international awareness between American and foreign students called People-to-People. By Arthur Miller Former President Eisenhower, 68 ambassadors, and several state governors will meet in Kansas City toorrow for the National People-to-People kickoff and the rededication of the Liberty Memorial. Following the rededication of the memorial Mr. Eisenhower, serving as chairman of National People-to-People Board of Directors, will christen the People-to-People project on a national scale. APPROXIMATELY 70 FOREIGN students attending KU will meet with the ambassadors of their respective countries during the rededication ceremonies. Vox Populi, using the closed primary, will send all 19 of its candidates into the general elections. The University Party will put up 11 candidates for ASC living district representatives. Using the open primary system, the UP dropped 13 candidates after the primaries last night. Campus Primary Elections Bring Large Vote Turnout Three candidates will move into the general elections for each freshman class office. There were 17 hopefuls; 12 will run in the general election. THE FIRST DAY OF THE NEW YORK JOURNAL OF MUSIC IN A WEB-CARED ENVIRONMENT ELECTION COMMITTEE WAITS—Electronic card-counting sorter in Bailey Hall statistics Aspirants to the All Student Council and freshman class offices moved a step closer to their goal last night or learned their efforts were in vain. There were 1,189 votes cast this year, including 190 that were turned in blank, or were voided. Last year, there were 1,648 votes. Figures on number voided were not available. The voting turnout was termed "surprising" by Richard Harper, Prairie Village senior and head of the ASC elections committee. room swiftly figured primary election results last night. Harper said the elections committee had ordered about 5,600 ballots for the general election. The UP pulled 908 votes; Vox, 791. The largest turnout was in the sorority district, 543 votes. Fraternities were second with 489. See page three for the complete election results THE NEED FOR SUCH a program was expressed by Chester Bowles, undersecretary of the State Department, in a recent letter to William Dawson, Kansas City senior and chairman of People-to-People at KU. Mr. Bowles wrote, "If we could have similar programs developed in all our nation's major universities, we would make enormous strides toward better communication with the thousands of foreign students who come to the United States. Busses to KC Busses taking foreign students to the Liberty Memorial in Kansas City Friday will leave at noon from the Kansas Union. All foreign students interested in going who have not yet signed up are requested to come to the People-to-People office before 11 a.m. tomorrow. Ike Requested To Head P-T-P Bv Leon Burnett WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Kennedy has called upon former President Dwight D. Eisenhower to head a reorganized "People-to-People" program. The former President has been a driving force in the private program which was started in September, 1956, to foster better relations between Americans and the rest of the world. EISENHOWER WILL BE chairman of a new board of trustees being set up to coordinate the wide range of People-to-People programs, which has recently been operating with 26 committees handling various phases of the work. In announcing the new organization at his press conference yesterday, President Kennedy said he was delighted that Gen. Eisenhower had agreed to serve. THE PURPOSE OF the renewed project, the President said, would be "to foster contacts between citizens of the United States in every way possible. "The new organization will provide a private centralized coordination and fund-raising leadership for the activities and projects of the People-to-People program, which has been a matter of great interest to Gen. Eisenhower," he said. IN A STATEMENT issued at Gettysburg, Pa., Gen. Eisenhower said: "The announcement by the President . . . is gratifying because it indicates his approval of this worthy civilian effort. I will be delighted if I can do anything to further the work of the many thousands who are engaged in this program." GEN. EISENHOWER SAID he would make a speech concerning the program in Kansas City, Mo., to morrow. Following President Kennedy's announcement, the U.S. Information Agency announced that "100 outstanding Americans" will serve with Gen. Eisenhower on the board of trustees. Gen. Eisenhower also will be an ex officio member of the group's executive committee. "I cannot overemphasize the vital significance of these present-day students as tomorrow's leaders in their own countries, and everything we can do towards creating bonds of understanding with them can produce very substantial results in the future." The rededication to "international understanding" comes 40 years after the first dedication. THE MEMORIAL WAS built after World War I as a "monument of such power that it would speak for the sorrow and aspiration of all mankind." Military leaders of several nations assembled in Kansas City 40 years ago to dedicate the memorial. Among them were men such as Jacques of Belgium, Diaz of Italy, Foch of France, Pershing of the United States and Beaty of Great Britain. The activities at the memorial will last from 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. Tomorrow evening there will be a reception at the Hallmark Cards building near the monument. Four Schools Contact P-T-P On the eve of the National People-to-People kickoff, four universities outside the Big Eight have contacted People-to-People at KU. The Universities of Indiana, Iowa Alabama, and Ohio State University have written for information concerning the pilot People-to-People project here. RICHART BARNES, Lawrence graduate student and Big Eight People-to-People coordinator said last night that the four schools would be sent limited information and a questionnaire. "When the questionnaire is returned," he said, "we will have a better understanding of what problems and needs these universities "Then we'll be able to send them more material," he added. Several changes have been made in the organization since the meeting of Big Eight schools Oct. 29. THE P-T-P PROGRAM is no longer limited to the KU campus. A Big Eight organization has been set up which will direct the People-to-People activities between the eight schools. This organization will also handle inquiries about the P-t-P programs from other schools. William Dawson, Kansas City senior and P-t-P chairman, said that each committee chairman (there are six committees: Hospitality, Job Placement, American Student Abroad, Forum, Brother-Sister, and Public Relations) will work in coordination with chairmen of corresponding committees on other campuses. "These chairmen or their assistants will travel to the other schools to help them set up their programs." Dawson added. He said that two persons from each committee would also work with Barnes in handling requests for information from schools outside the Big Eight. Vox Populi to Meet The Vox Populi General Assembly will meet at 7 p.m. tonight in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union. According to a Vox official, discussion will be held on the outcome of the primary elections. Weather Considerable cloudiness tonight and Friday with widely scattered light rains tonight. Warmer this afternoon and tonight. Low tonight 35 to 40. High tomorrow in the 60s. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 9, 1961 New Housing Policy The announcement of the new University policy on off-campus housing is the most significant advancement in human rights the administration has made since W. Clarke Wescoe assumed the Chancellorship. The revised University policy concerning the housing list is a barometer of the desire of the University and student body for progress in the field of civil rights. However, the new housing list policy is but a small step in a long march toward complete racial equality. THE DECISIONS THAT can trigger the greatest advancement in civil rights lie within the individual. These advancements cannot be legislated, nor will they be achieved through the policy decisions of a university or any other institution. They represent the attitude of each individual toward other humans who might be of a different faith or color. When each individual resolves to allow others their rights, regardless of minority group affiliation, then this march will be well on its way. THE UNIVERSITY HOUSING LIST first appeared after World War II as an aid for students who were having trouble finding housing during the period of the record post war enrollment boom. As the housing situation improved with the erection of University housing facilities the housing list was becoming more of a convenience for renters. This same advice was the source of many embarrassing moments for Negroes and dark skinned foreigners who found they did not meet the color requirement of some landlords. Thanks to the efforts of the University and interested students the racial situation in Lawrence has improved considerably in the last few years. The new housing list policy is another milestone in this road to better race relations. The administration chose the best solution to this problem in revising the housing list policy. There are other ways the University could have acted in regard to this situation. Some students and faculty members have contended that separate lists for members of minority group would solve the problem without the possible loss of off-campus housing facilities. But this would put the University in the delicate position of condoning the separation of the races. The new housing list policy allows the University to assume a role of leadership in civil rights. It establishes a uniform set of racial beliefs that each landlord must adhere to. The adoption of the new housing policy will possibly pressure discriminating landlords into adopting more liberal attitudes toward civil rights. —The Editors The Watkins Investigation A landslide gathers volume as it rolls downhill. Incidents, like landslides, gather volume and grow into investigations. One unforseen and unfortunate incident (the death of John Pippin) at the Watkins Memorial Hospital has, in the opinion of several ASC members, led to an investigation of the adequacy of the institution. THE INTENT BEHIND the investigation is not meant as a condemnation of the hospital. Council members said the check would be made and a report published on the findings to "inform the student." Each student entering KU for the first time receives information on Watkins and its services and facilities. True, most students do not read the information carefully. If they did there would not be as many misconceptions about the staff members and the hospital policies. THE WORD INVESTIGATION carries with it an aura of condemnation, not by definition, but by common usage. Webster defines investigation as "an examination in detail." Citizens have come to understand investigation as a search of policies to weed out people or things causing discontent or attempting to undermine an organization. Certainly Webster's definition applies to the ASC's action. The ASC appointed the Student Health Committee to make the investigation. EXPERTS IN THE MEDICAL, pharmaceutical, administrative and operative fields are necessary to make a complete check on Watkins. Students who do not study or do research in these fields cannot make decisions with any validity, without the aid of experts. The investigation must be made without expert advice; the ASC budget does not include an allotment to pay for counsel. WHEN THE REPORT IS PUBLISHED, it will be a report of student opinion, perhaps backed by facts and probably with personal prejudices. If an examination in detail is to be made, it should be made by those qualified, not by those who have little knowledge of what they are examining. —Carrie Merryfield LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler R.28 PAUL KENDER "WE DECIDED TO MAKE AN EXCEPTION—YOU FLEDGE US AN IT'LL BE OK FOR YOUR VALET TO TAKE YOUR FLEEDGE TRAINING!" Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1898, became biweekly 1904, trieweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news rooms Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East Soprano Street, New York, United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday and Sunday. Mail to Lawrence, Kansas, emailed periodic. Second class postage, paid at Lawrence, Kansas. 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 McCulough, Circulation Manager; David Wiers, Nationals Office; Martin Harbottle, Martina Classified Advertising Manager; Hal Smith, Promotion Manager NEWS DEPARTMENT Tom Turner Managing Editor Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Assoc. Vice-President City Editor; Bill Sheldon, Sports Editor; Barbara Howell, Society Editor. Short Ones From the Magazine Rack The more things a man is ashamed of, the more respectable he is—George B. Shaw The Control of War By Harrison Brown and James Real It would appear that the United States is entering a period of several years during which our strategic force will not in itself be an effective deterrent to a first strike by the Soviet Union. During this period, if war does not break out, factors other than relative deterrence capabilities will have played a major role in its prevention. These factors may range from the strong desires of both East and West for peace to a conviction on the part of Soviet leaders that the U.S.S.R. can attain its political and economic objectives without recourse to violence... The spread of nuclear military capabilities will almost certainly decrease the stability of deterrent systems. The greater the number of nations that possess the capability of launching a nuclear strike, the greater the probability that there will be a strike. If the expenditure on weapons systems increased during the next five years at the same rate as it has during the last five, even allowing the 5 per cent annual GNP increase, the use of the Keynesian multiplier would indicate that close to 50 per cent of the total U.S. production and business in 1965 may be directly or indirectly war goods and services. By Harrison Brown and James Real The elements and conditions reinforcing the war economy are many. Real, justified fear of the mysterious Soviet juggernaut is held by most of the people in one way or another. Substantial disarmament now, or at any foreseeable time ahead, seems emotionally (and, therefore, practically) impossible. On the contrary, the psychology of fear promises to increase to the point where substantial personal economic sacrifices could be asked of the people—and given willingly, if the alternative parades as military vulnerability. Even a full-scale depression would undoubtedly be largely blamed on Soviet actions and pressures. It is conceivable that the public reaction would be similar to that displayed after Pearl Harbor. The butter is more likely to disappear than the guns. At what point will this kind of economic dependence become so crucial that it cannot be substantially reduced without grave harm to the basic economic structure? It may well be that the time has already come. Dis The Poetry Corner Sometimes at parties he observes the Dean; He giggles, coughs, and turns aquamarine. Yet some day we will hear of "Dr. Fatt, Vice-President in Charge of This or That." I heard the Dean observe, at tea and cakes, Face stuffed and sneering, "Fatt has what it takes." (Reprinted from the May 1960 Harper's Magazine.) By Donald Hall Dr. Fatt, Instructor And why does Fatt teach English? Why, because A law school felt he could not learn the laws. He waddles brilliantly from class to class, Smiling at everyone, and at the grass. Are there more questions now?" But one can tell That all his will, brains, and imagination Are concentrated on a higher station: He wants to be in the Administration. "Hamlet," he tells his students, "you will find, Concerns a man who can't make up his mind. The Tempest? . . . It's the one with Ariel. A group of conservative students at the University who believe in the American way modestly refer to themselves as the minority opinion group. When they get away from the influence of the so-called "liberal" professors and out into the big wide world they will find they are in the majority opinion group even though many of the conservatives do not speak in defense of their idea. They have long since become disgusted with the double-dealing politicians and have quit voting.—Edwin F. Abels Worth Repeating One of the reasons why the New York Times Magazine is so deadly dull is because the innumerable assistant editors up there are obliged to read and express opinions on almost every manuscript. They're all so scared of the autocratic Lester Markel, Sunday editor, that they make suggestions that cause contributors to rewrite, rewrite, rewrite. The legend is that Markel, addressing the Times' Washington staff, once remarked: "You people shouldn't complain so much about rewriting. Why, we had a piece from Barbara Ward recently and made her rewrite it five times." Whereupon an anonymous voice from the back of the room replied: "Yes, and you ran all of them."—(Village Voice, Oct. 12, 1960) Page 3 Election Results The following is a breakdown of the vote total: | District | Vox | UP | Total | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Fraternity | 269 | 220 | 489 | | Sorority | 259 | 284 | 543 | | Men's Large Dormitories | 63 | 94 | 157 | | Women's Large Dormitories | 21 | 32 | 53 | | Men's Small Dormitories | 44 | 111 | 155 | | Women's Small Dormitories | 20 | 64 | 84 | | Freshman Women's Dormitories | 96 | 46 | 142 | | Professional Fraternities | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Unmarried-unorganized | 16 | 56 | 72 | | Married | 3 | 1 | 4 | | Void or blank ballots | | | 190 | | Totals | 791 | 908 | 1889 | *—Candidate dropped for general elections WI—Write-in candidates Thursday, November 9. 1961 University Daily Kansan Fraternity Jerry Dickson (Vox) 113 Lee Ayres (UP) 83 David Gough (UP) 81 Robert Cash (Vox) 74 John Jones* (UP) 56 Dean Salter (Vox) 42 David Knudson (Vox) 40 Sorority Trudy Meserve (Vox) ... 119 Jo Snyder (Vox) ... 71 Rebecca Shier (Vox) ... 69 Martha Smith (UP) ... 61 Nancy DeFever (UP) ... 60 Janice Wise* (UP) ... 59 Nancy Jasperson* (UP) ... 57 Jeanne Maxwell* (UP) ... 47 Men's Large Dormitories William (Goby) Johnson (UP) ... 39 Hollace Cross (UP) ... 38 Jeffrey Hubrig (Vox) ... 38 William Brier (Vox) ... 18 Kenny Kahmann* (UP) ... 17 Gary Grazda (Vox) ... 7 Women's Large Dormitories Patricia Wilson (UP) ... 31 Karen Cowell (Vox) ... 21 Elizabeth Stoddard* (UP) WI ... 1 Women's Small Dormitories Nancy Ray (UP) 64 Carolyn Kanzler (Vox) 20 Men's Small Dormitories Freshman Women's Dormitories Unmarried-unorganized Married Professional Fraternities and Co-op Houses (No candidates or qualified write-ins) Mr. Rayburn, stricken with cancer, has been growing stronger during Michael Miner (UP) ... 36 Michael Thomas* (UP) ... 18 Charles Allphin (Vox) ... 16 Roger Poppe* (UP) WI ... 1 Charles Mengini* (UP) WI ... 1 President Douglas Reed (Vox) Nancy Jasperson* (UP) Candidates for freshman class offices (first three run in the general elections): Robert Stewart ... 247 Rodney Kuehn ... 210 Henry (Jack) Zinn ... 132 Ray Dorsett ... 88 Leanna Koehn ... 60 Donald Williams ... 22 Vice President BONHAM, Tex. — (UPI) — House Speaker Sam Rayburn grew weaker yesterday and his doctor expressed concern about his appetite. Secretary Sal Alessandro 239 Michael Fisher 196 Fred Slicker 172 James Cavin (write-in) 143 Dr. Joe A. Risser said, however, that the breathing trouble the 79-year-old speaker had during the night was "minor" and was easily cleared up. Mr. Rayburn was still mentally alert. Marilyn Huff ... 303 Mary Ann McConahey ... 225 Arthur Spears ... 138 S. J. Baker ... 93 Ravburn Is Weaker But Not Yet Critical Treasurer Betty Ann Bennett 284 Jon Alexiou 274 Carolyn (Kelly) Anderson 193 the past few days and eating relatively well. But Dr. Risser said that he had a "poor appetite" yesterday and weakened. He stressed that although Mr. Rayburn is still seriously ill, he is not considered in critical condition. Business? It's quite simple. It's other people's money. — Alexandre Dumas The Younger Dependence NEW YORK—(UPI)—The Rockefeller Brothers Fund estimates that at least 4.5 million Americans are directly dependent upon foreign trade for their livelihoods while another 15 million U.S. jobs depend on raw materials imported from other countries. This means one of every four Americans depends wholly or in part upon foreign trade for his job, the Fund concludes. For Lazy fireside Lounging ... Nite-Aires® LEISURE LOVELIES FIRESIDE SNUGGLERS As Seen in MADEMOISELLE You'll love this fluffy ball of fur that encircles your foot...promising,you a warm winter. In 'luscious colors: Beige, gold, blue, pink, red, orange and lilac. $4^{95} 813 Mass. St. McCoy's Phone VI 3-2091 365 Excuses 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Mt. Holyo College Alumni Effy Hanging Diamonds Gifts Jewelry DANIELS JEWELRY 914 Mass. VI 3-2572 STUDENT DIRECTORY ON SALE MONDAY Photography by Studio de Portra 912 Mass. Lawrence, Kan. VI 2-2300 Sororities & Fraternities Contact us for your House Photography - Portraits - Application - Creative Color or Black & White sale Students' Paper Supplies at Giveaway Prices 500 Sheets TYPING PAPER Pink 75c Green $1.00 White $1.40 Scratch and Sketch ALL SIZES PADS...35c lb. BOXED STATIONERY Imprinted with Your Name ONLY $7.50 per box LAWRENCE OUTLOOK 1005 Massachusetts Open 'til 5:30 Monday thru Saturday University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 9,1961 Page 4 Unusual Techniques Featured In Theatre's 'Dark of the Moon' Unusual techniques will be used in Experimental Theatre's production of "Dark of the Moon," to be presented Monday through Friday next week. By Richard Currie A turntable will be used for the first time in the Experimental Theatre, and Karen Pyles, Wichita graduate and director of the play, will use dancers for several key parts. While the use of dancers is not new, the turntable is usually reserved for major theater productions, Miss Pyles, said. Constructed by the stage crew, the turntable will allow for major scene changes and speed the play's progress. THIS PROCEDURE is typical of experimental theater. In the past, the Experimental Theatre utilized a church setting for background to its production of T. S. Eliot's "Murder in the Cathedral." The idea of an experimental theater came from the complacency which enveloped the state theaters in the 1840s. The big theaters scorned new approaches and methods, but new ideas, attitudes and thinking were being expressed by young playwrights and directors. DISSATISFIED BY the complacent attitudes of the state theaters, these young playwrights sought the garrets and made-over restaurants to produce their plays. The make-shift theaters were built by aspiring directors, disgusted at the lack of initiative in the established theaters. "DARK OF THE MOON" belongs to this class because of its theme and stage techniques. The play, based on the folktale "Barbara Allen," deals with a witch-boy who falls in love with Barbara Allen. A conjurer woman—a witch of sorts—transforms the boy, John, into a human being with the proviso that Barbara will be true to him for one year. She is unfaithful near the end of the play after participating in a revival. 'Sandbox' to Run Here Next Week Death and its ogre will dominate a church next week in the Kansas premiere of Edward Albee's "The Sandbox," a one act play. "The Sandbox," a shocking play, deals with contemporary American society and its outlook towards death and old people. Directed by Robert Phillips, Chanute senior, Westminster Center will offer it Nov. 18 and 19 at 8 p.m. with no admission charged. Mr. Albee is a young American playwright whose work has received critical acclaim for its daring examination of modern society. "The Sandbox" is a selection from Mr. Albee's current hit "The American Dream" running at an off-Broadway theater in New York. Columbia Professor Talks On Problems of a Biographer Biography has never had a definite place in literature. Novelists and poets refuse to look upon it as a part of literary art, and historians don't consider it a division of history, James L. Clifford, professor of English at Columbia, told KU students and faculty members Wednesday afternoon. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT - Should the biographer attempt to use symbols, patterns and myths, such as the novelist uses? There are certain patterns and themes in actual persons' lives similar to those in the lives of fictional characters. Biographers tend to ignore these. - The title of the lecture was, "The Problems of a Biographer." Prof. Clifford cited some major problems of the modern biographer: - How should the biographer choose his material? Biographers often try to pick material which reinforces their own preconceived ideas about the person. - How does the relationship of Kansan Want Ads Get Results New & Used Parts and Tires Auto Wrecking & Junk East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 Open Stock means that you can get matching paper or envelopes whenever you wish... they're sold separately and are always available at EATON'S OPEN STOCK LETTER PAPERS "No embarrassing mismatched writing paper for me!" Carter's Stationery 1025 Mass. VI 3-6133 You, too, can have your paper and envelopes "come out even." Just choose your favorite tint and texture among Typewriters sales - service - rentals Olympia Portables the biographer and the subject affect the work? Objective biographers too often use subjective reasoning, because of personal feelings toward the subject. Biography has been called "the psychological intersection of both the biographer and the subject." Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 Brighten Your Future A modest investment now in life insurance can assure funds for your retirement. See DWIGHT L. SICKLES Insurance Building (opposite Post Office) www.wesleyan.edu Phone VI 3-5454 or VI 3-2150 NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Life Insurance • Group Insurance • Annuities • Health Insurance • Pension Plans Take a Pizza Break from Homecoming Headaches MR. PIZZA Campus Hideaway . . . always first-place in the Pizzalarity Contest . . . LES GERIG'S CAMPUS HIDEAWAY 106 W. N. Park Pizza and Spaghetti Specialists Phone VI 3-9111 P The night power comm simil mittt (T repre not ASC ers.) Tu the sent estal form NO mad with The defin omn tion acts Page 5 Peace Pact Committees to Meet The All Student Council Tuesday night officially recognized and empowered a University peace pact committee which is to meet with a similar University of Missouri committee. (The committee met with MU representatives last year, but was not officially recognized by the ASC nor did it have official powers.) Tuesday's resolution empowers the peace pact committee to represent the KU student body and to establish rules of conduct in the form of a pact with MU. NO DEFINITE PACT can be made until the meeting Sunday with the Missouri group. The joint MU-KU committee will define "illegal acts" and make recommendations for disciplinary action for those who commit these acts. The rules in the pact which the KU group will suggest are the prohibition of property destruction, fights and riots, and inciting fights and riots by actions such as displaying defamatory badges, flags or buttons. (Last year at Missouri, MU students wore AHAB badges: "All Hawkers are B___". KU students later retaliated with ATAP badges: "All Tigers Are P___" badges. Jay Deane, Kansas City junior, moved to amend the resolution forming the committee. ___ NSF Speaker To Give Talk Harry H. Sisler, head of the University of Florida chemistry department and former KU professor, will speak at the meeting of the KU section of the American Chemical Society at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 122 Malott. Prof. Sisler is a visiting scientist in the National Science Foundation Program coordinated by the ASC. His topic will be "Reaction of Liquid Dinitrogen Tetroxide with Metals and Metal Compounds." PROF. SISLER TAUGHT at KU from 1941 to 1946. He began as an instructor in the chemistry department in September, 1941, and became an assistant professor in 1942 and an associate professor in 1945. Before coming to KU he taught at Wright Junior College, Chicago, from 1939 to 1941. After leaving KU Prof. Sisler was on the Ohio State University faculty until he accepted his present position in 1956. Prof. Sisler is a co-author of "General Chemistry: A Systematic Approach" and "A Systematic Laboratory Course in General Chemistry," the text and laboratory manual, respectively, used in Chemistry 2, 2a and 3 at KU. He is also the author or co-author of five other texts and laboratory manuals. He is consulting editor for the Reinhold Publishing Corporation's textbook division in analytical, inorganic and physical chemistry. His newest book, "Chemistry in Non-Aqueous Solvents," one of the titles of Reinhold's new series, "Selected Topics in Modern Chemistry," will come off the press at about the time of Prof. Sisler's visit here. PROF. SISLER'S principal research interests are in the fields of inorganic nitrogen compounds, oxides of nitrogen, chloramine and hydrazine, liquid ammonia chemistry, molecular addition compounds, boron hydrides and nitrogen-phosphorus compounds. Prof. Sisler received his B.S. degree at Ohio State University in 1936 and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees at the University of Illinois in 1937 and 1939, respectively. "I know several students who have made ATAP buttons, meaning in this case. All Tigers Are Pushovers. Should we as a council tell these guys they can't sell and distribute these buttons? I move to amend the motion by striking out the words 'defamatory badges, buttons and flags.'" WHEEL ALIGNMENT BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP Mike Thomas, Kansas City, Mo. senior agreed. "IF A STUDENT causes no damage, he should be able to wear a badge saying anything he wants it to say. I don't see how a badge could start a riot." Deane spoke again. "What about the 'Beat Mizzo' yells and pennants, then? Couldn't they be the cause of a riot, too?" MAX EBERHART. Great Bend senior, explained the difference between the defamatory badges and the yells and pennants. He said the pennant and cheers are traditional, the badges are not, nor are they signs of friendly rivalry. Carrie Merryfield, Minneapolis senior and member of the KU peace pact committee, spoke to the council: "If the riots between KU and MU continue, all athletic events between the two universities could be stopped. At one time, it was the feeling of several officials from both Universities that this might be the best thing to do. Students on the committee do not feel it would be worth the adverse publicity to break athletic relations. The ASC is quibbling over details. The question is not one of badges, but actually of what could happen if riots continue." VI 3-2250 DEANE'S AMENDMENT was defeated by a voice vote. Carol McMillen, Coldwater senior, asked how the resolution would be enforced. 229 Elm Eberhart said it would be handled by the administration. "The administration will back anything within reason we try to do to obtain a peace pact with MU," he said. "They'll use whatever authority they feel is necessary to enforce this on Nov. 25." The resolution passed unanimously. Eberhart; Miss Merryfield; Ron Gallagher, Ft. Scott senior; Jerry Palmer, ElDorado senior; Phyllus Wertzberger, Lawrence senior; Larry Moore, Topeka senior and Bruce Bee, Mission senior are members of the committee. Student Group Ask For Demonstration A nationwide demonstration against atmospheric nuclear tests has been called for Friday and Saturday by the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy at Brandeis University. The committee is urging students in all United States colleges and universities to have a vigil, a march, a public meeting, or to distribute leaflets. The committee sponsored a "strike for peace" Nov. 1, requesting all faculty members and students to refrain from attending classes to protest nuclear testing. Thursday, November 9, 1961 University Daily Kansan "The 'strike for peace' method, should it spread to other campuses, can provide a dramatic demonstration to the powers that be that the educated community of America is opposed to resumption of nuclear tests by our government," a spokesman for the committee said. The Student Council at Brandeis backed the "strike for peace" movement, and sent telegrams to President Kennedy and Soviet Premier Khrushchev urging them to work through the United Nations for a permanent test ban. Birds on a branch BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. CAR RADIO - Expert Service - Quality Parts - Guaranteed "TONIGHT" FROM "WEST " SIDE STORY Played by FERRANTE TEICHER On Mono & Stereo LP Records BELL MUSIC CO. 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 Official Bulletin Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 a.m., St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 9. November, um fuenführ uhr in Fraser. Schillers Geburtstag wird gefeiliert. Singen und Tanzen. TODAY Westminster Center Choir: 5:45 p.m. Workshop: Center, 1204 Oread. Practice and supper. Christian Science Organization: 7:3a. p.m. Danforth Chapel. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion and Break- feest; 7 a.m. Canterbury House Westminster Center Mariners: 6 p.m. westminster.org warm-up Snoeaker. Prof Arnageh. International Club: 7:30 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union "A Night of Nations-Chinese Night." Followed by events and dancing in Jayhawk Room. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. SATURDAY Chemistry Alumil Coffee: 9-12 a.m. Boom, 234 Malott. Varsity Soccer Team vs. KSU: 9:30 a.m. Intramural Fields. Don't Forget Dancing Lessons Kansas Union Ballroom 7 p.m.-9 p.m. $2.50 per person Thursday, Nov. 9 $5.00 per couple Four Lessons Left ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. V1 3-3470 Ravishing Ravishing Accent Interpretations in petal-light Suede Svelte silhouettes elegantly executed by Accent in a softer, lighter than ever suede. But for all their delicacy of look and feel... we challenge you to find a more enduring shoe than our Accent Suedes. Colors are keyed to the varying light and dark moods of Fall costumes. Romance Romance A. Black Peau De Soie $12.95 B. Black Suce $13.95 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 9, 1961 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Play in Individual Intramurals Closes Competition in intramural handball, horseshoes, badminton, and tennis has nearly been completed. John Hansan defeated Stan Patterson to gain the handball singles title. Hansan, Tonganoxie graduate student, and Patterson, Lawrence senior, teamed up to win the doubles championship in that sport. Karl Kreutziger, Wichita senior, meets Carl Detter, Hutchinson fresh- man, and Terry Smith, Arkansas City junior, faces Stan Werner, Law- rence graduate student, in the tennis semi-finals. In badminton action, K. S. Balogal, New Delhi, India, won, won the singles crown. Balogal and the singles runner-up, Peter Ling, Hong Kong senior, claimed the doubles title. Rodney Nitz, Goodland sophomore, and Ed Weidenbener, Junction City sophomore, will vie for the IM golf title. Horseshoe singles champ, Howard Swain, Chanute sophomore, teamed up with the runner-up in that department, Richard Puig, Laredo, Texas, junior, for the doubles crown. KU Varsity Bowlers Face K-State Here Tomorrow KU's varsity bowling team meets Kansas State in a homecoming event Saturday at 11 a.m. in the Jay Bowl. Kartsonis did not participate in the Hawk's opener. Coach Bascom Fearing will send the same bowlers, with one exception, against the Wildeats that lost to Nebraska in the season's opener last Saturday. The Jayhawk keeglers again will be John Member, Kansas City junior; Paul Hammar, Overland Park junior; Terrell Hays, Shawnee junior; Steve Rybolt, Ottawa sophomore; and Jim Kartsonis, Hutchinson senior. Member's 192 average for 18 games is tops. In last Monday's Big-Eight postal bowling, Member fired a 190-266-189-645, the highest Jayhawk effort. Hammer has a 188 average and Hays has a 185 average. Rybolt has a 183 average and compiled the second best score in the postal action. Rybolt had a 211-174-188-573. Kartsonis, qualified for this Saturday's match with a 181 average for 15 games. In the postal meet, Kartsonis was third high. Although Coach Fearing was pleased with the scores in the postal, Northern Michigan Hit by Ruling MARQUETTE, Mich., — (UPI)— National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics today ruled Northern Michigan College ineligible for the NAIA post-season football playoffs this year because the school used an ineligible player early this season. The NAIA said, however, that Northern's use of fullback Gene Valesano was "inadvertent." Insurance to Cover IM Participants Valesano, now in his fourth season at Northern, played briefly in 1955 at Superior State in Wisconsin before going into the army. Northern officials said they were "disappointed" at the ruling but would abide by it. They said Valesano's records from Superior State had not indicated that he had played 16 minutes of varsity football there as a freshman in 1955. He came to Northern as a freshman in 1958. Northern, with a 6-1 record, is one of the nation's top-rated small college teams. A Topeka insurance agency is offering an insurance policy for KU Sports Club and intramurals participants. According to Walter J. Mikols, director of men's intramurals, this is the first time such a policy has been available here. He urged all participants in either of the above categories to subscribe to the policy if they presently have no insurance. Although a broken nose and a head laceration reportedly occurred during Tuesday's IM football play, Mikols, with crossed fingers, said there have been few injuries in the club or IM program's history. Benefits are provided for injuries received during supervised travel, practice, and play. The policy covers volleyball, gymnastics, soccer, fencing, rifle team, and bowling sponsored by the KU Sports Club. tennis, badminton, handball, golf, and baseball. The plan is the most expensive for soccer with a $14 premium. Basketball ranks second on the list with a $7.00 cost. Touch football coverage is $5.60. Intramural activities covered by the insurance are as follows: Touch football, basketball, volleyball, swimming, softball, bowling. Baseball costs $4.40. Insurance for the remaining sports costs $1.50 to $2. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Announce Pizza Hut & The Catacombs !!New Pizza Delivery!! Just Call VI 3-9760 to place your order Corbin Hall will sponsor the "65 Jive" at 6:30 tonight at Corbin Hall. Freshman women n scholarship halls and men in pledge classes in men's dormitories are invited. In two duals with the 'Cats last year, KU won both. Delivery Is Fast, Fast, Fast ! Catacombs Open: 4-11 Monday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday MENAEL PICASSO Available for private parties throughout the week he said that the scores would have to be higher if KU retains its Big-Eight postal crown. 4-1 Friday & Saturday Featuring the FINEST PIZZA in the Midwest Open 4-11 Monday-Thursday PIZZA HUT New IM Champion 646 Mass. The ASCE intramural football team has forfeited all of its games and has been de-throned from its Independent "A" League championship. According to Walter J. Mikols, director of men's intramurals, the ASCE team had used ineligible players. VI 3-9760 The new loop champion is the Stephenson eleven. Corbin Hall Hosts Dance Going on a Picnic? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 BOWLING BOWLING is FUN! Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 32 AUTOMATIC LANES NOW SHOWING! A WOMAN APPREYS TO BE BLOVER M.G.M PRIMES SHIRLEY MacLAINE LAURENCHE / JACK HARVEY / HAWKINS A BILLIAM BLUETOWN Production Two Loves In CinemaScope And METRICCOLOR At 7:00 and 10:30 RICHARD WIDMARK THE SECRET WAYS CO-MASTERING SONJA ZIZEMAHN CHARLES REVERY * MILAN BELLA www.milanbella.com SINNA BELLA At 8:30 Only 20 Cinema-Film geneva It deives into the hungers that lie deep within us all! PAUL NEWMAN ROBERT ROSSENS' THE HUSTLER PIPER LAURIE·SCOTT JACKIE GLEASON MINNESOTA PARKS MYRON M-CORMICK ROBERT ROSSEN SIMONE CARROLT - ROBERT ROSSEN CINEMASCOPE Starts Sunday! VARSITY THEATRE . . . . . . . Telephone VIKING 3-1065 NOW! At 7:15 Only Adm. $1.00 HIGH ADVENTURE! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN * CARL FOREMAN'S THE GUNS OF NAVARONE COLOR and CINEMASCOPE COLUMBIA PICTURES presents GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN in CARL FOREMAN'S THE GUNS OF NAVARONE COLOR and CINEMASCOPE = STANLEY BAKER - ANTRONY QUAYLE - IRENE PAPAS GIA SCALA - JAMES DARREN SHOWS FRIDAY AT 6:30 AND 9:15 STARTING SATURDAY! BLACI Malpaa Dennis Rewar LOST watch call JJ SMAL impor install ranty. SCRA only call a want. tachus Used Good Karen In the high-adventure tradition! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents SPENDER FRANK TRACY AND SINATRA in the MERVYN LIGHTY- FRED KOHLMAR production CREATED BY MERVYN La ROY · FRED KOHLMAR PRODUCED BY In the MESVIN LAROF- FIELD KUHLMAS production Short tennacompl GUNS New trade- STEV new. HOUS bedded Maple Cereu Some VI 3- GRANADA THEATRE...Telephone VNUNG 3-5782 GENE compl defini Hand: $3.50, 2-5778 55 11. pn Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS LOST BLACK FOUNTAIN PEN with Dennis Malpass engraved on it. Please return to Dennis Malpass, 437 Joseph R. Pearson. Reward. 11-14 FOR SALE LOST GOLD COLORED Hamilton with shipwreck with John Hoover, VI 3-6455 11-9 SCRATCH AND SKETCH PADS only 35c lb. Standard sizes available. I don't know where you want. Lawrence Outlook, 1005 Massachusetts. VI 3-2666. 11-15 Used Remington Quiet-riter, 1958 model. Good condition. Reasonable price. Call Karen Jennison, VI 2-1340 after 5 p.m. 11-9 Short Wave 8 Transistor Radio with antenna-scope. Regular $59.95, now $25.00 complete. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New & used guns, & ammo. Liberal trade-ins. VI 3-7001. 1304 Tenn. 11-9 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 STEVENS 22 Automatic Rifle, $24. Like new. Call VI 3-2906 at 6 p.m. tf 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. tt 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. tt Dodge in good running condition. $80. Call VI 3-4291. tf NEW. FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machine, lighting at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI-3051 today. 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 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. OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. Longevity Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-1644. 1960 TURQUISE & WHITE Champion Lakewood mobile home for sale. One home on 45, on 45, daily from 6:30 p.m. on Dee's Trailer Court. 1417 Eight 15th. 11-13 '53 CHEVY, radio, heater, good tires, good condition. Call KU 203. 11-10 WANTED WANTED: A cheap violin to buy. Good condition. Call: Kojo. VI 3-5552. 11-9 Kansan Want Ads Get Results FOR RENT New 2 Bedroom Apartment, furnished or unfurnished. All modern conveniences, including working. VI 3-249. after 4 p.m., or call VI 2-2349. If answer call VI 2-2950. 11-9 Vacancy available for 2 men in com- munity baccalaureate Rochelle Rad Ca- Vi 3-9635 for appointment. **tt** LARGE FURNISHED apartment, e a s t e d, uillages paid, $50. Call VI 3-6294. NEW 5 ROOM DUPLEX: has living room, dining area, lovely kitchen. 2 bedrooms, bath, & finished garage. Has air conditioning, new electric stove, & refrigerator. Call VI 3-7120 or KU 385 for appointment. 11-13 6 ROOM HOUSE — newly decorated, fenced yard and garden spot. Partly furnished or unfurn. Call at 428 Elm or call VI 3-3602. 11-13 ONE BEDROOM HOUSE for rent, furn. or unfit, except for kitchen range. Large utility room, clean. Call VI 3-0554 after 7 p.m. 11-13 BUSINESS SERVICES Tom's 14th St. Barber Shop, W 5. 14th St. ½ block off Mass. Free parking, 3 full-time barbers — All HAIRCUTS $1.25 — Hours 8:00-5:30 Mon.-Seat. 11-9 Save Money RALPH FREED Income Insurance American United Life offers exclusive STUDENT LIFE PLAN GROUP INSURANCE Morris Kay VI 3-7114 U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- Palm VI 3-2921 Modern self-service — open weeks days 8 to 6:30 p.m. IYYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI -3644. tf Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. — VI 3-0152 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. **tf** Dari- King King BURGERS 6th & Florida V1 3-9033 Chocolate Ice Cream from Thursday 7:30 p.m. till Friday 11:00 p.m. Friday Is Chocolate Day See us for meal-time snacks & drinks DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- 9291% Mass. Call VI 3-5263. Ola Snitt 9291% Mass. Call VI 3-5263. We serve delicious broiled sandwiches I will do Ironing in my home. Call VI 2- 2467, pickup and delivery. 11-9 "Hamburgers with an Outdoor Flavor" ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3- 7515, or 921 Miss. tt Save Money FRANK ALEXANDER Income Insurance 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 Thursday, November 9. 1961 University Daily Kansan HELP WANTED ONE OF TOPEKA'S FINEST NIGHT- CLUBS. searching for talent, musical or comedy. single or group - audition Stake House, 3120 Harbor Street, day, 4 p.m. 11-10 MISCELLANEOUS TYPING BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. dirt, 6th and Vermont. Phone VI 34 9350 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pvi, VI 3-8799. TYPING — THEMES AND PAPERS. Use electric typewriters, 15e per page, 5c per carbon. 1013 Connecticut. VI 3-0397. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. Experienced typist 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Request rates. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. V1 - 2t EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, I3-0558 1031 Miss. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts for research on educational needs accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI. 3-7485. TYPING; Experimented typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, journals, and book reviews. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mc Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in the thesis, term papers, etc. Student rates; Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execu- sional Services. 9197 B Su- pson. Mission, HE 2-7715. Eyes or Sat. R-2-2186 Kansan Want Ads Get Results TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 2-4409. 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 plica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, typeset dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay, VI 3-2318. tt HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher of math, English & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Ms. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. **tf** EXPERIENCIED TYPIST will do typing home - call VI 3-i916. Ms.Lo Gebihac RECORDS STEREO Up to 75% OFF HI-FI 45s (15c EACH) Large Selection of Party Records RCA Victor, Dott, Mercury, Kapp Columbia, London, & Capitol labels VINCENTS-904 Mass. SIP TO THE SOUNDS OF THE FABULOUS SILVERTONES FRI., NOV. 10 - THE BIG BARN It's Guest Nite at SIP's Homecoming Pre-party Doors open at 8:30 to members and their guests at member price General admission after 9:00 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday. November 9. 1961 US Military Spending To Increase Next Year WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The Kennedy administration appeared to be preparing today to send military expenditures rocketing toward the $50 billion-a-year mark to insure continued supremacy over Russia. KENNEDY TOLD his news conference yesterday that "the Soviet Union tested while we were at the table negotiating with them. If they fooled us once, it is their fault; if they fool us twice, it is our fault." At the same time, the prospect of renewed U.S. nuclear testing in the atmosphere loomed larger as President Kennedy's advisers pressed their studies of the recent series of Soviet tests. The President, who claimed from 1958 through the 1960 campaign that U.S. might be deteriorating seriously, said yesterday on the basis of latest intelligence estimates that America "would not trade places" with any country. Poetry Hour Today Then he outlined steps his administration had taken and said, "we are going to ask for additional funds for defense next year." Harold Orel, associate professor of English, will read the parodies of Dwight McDonald at the Poetry Hour at 4 p.m. today in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. Officer Tells WUS Aims The primary purpose of the World University Service (WUS) on the KU campus is education, a regional executive of WUS said last night. He said that WUS needed to teach students of the needs of fellow students abroad. (WUS is an international organization to provide aid to underprivileged or disaster areas in world university communities. It has been a permanent committee of the All Student Council since 1956.) Peter Leppmann, regional executive of the KU WUS chapter, explained the WUS program at a meeting of the Student Religious Council. Mr. Leppmann is at KU to promote WUS before the Campus Chest Drive. "WE NEED TO UNDERSTAND what WUS does and what it needs," Mr. Leppmann said. "WUS has a program of mutual assistance rather than just doling out money." He went on to explain: "In many countries where there is a textbook shortage, we provide textbooks. We provide mimeograph machines. We hope with this kind of project they can establish cooperative printing processes and bookstores. "WE DEAL IN INDIGENOUS methods," he said. "We do not send people abroad to show others how we do things. We feel that there are people in their own country who are more qualified in providing this assistance." He said that WUS sends funds for assistance instead. Page - Creighton WUS is sponsored at KU by the B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation, Newman Club, the Student Religious Council and the KU-Y. FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil INFORMED SOURCES explained the reference to additional funds applied to the expanded defense budget that Kennedy will submit to Congress in January. Best estimates now, it was said, were that the new military blueprint would call for spending on the order of $50 billion in the year starting next July 1. Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Journalism Scholarships Given Pamela Christiansen, Shawnee Mission junior, and Sandra Shrout, Leawood junior, received $125 scholarships at the annual fall Kansas Press Women's dinner held here Oct. 27. Miss Christiansen received the Mamie Alexander Boyd Scholarship, and Miss Shrout was awarded the Press Women's scholarship. Internationals to Meet The International Club will meet Friday at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. A program "A Night in China" will be presented by Chinese students, followed by a dance and refreshments. The cruelest lies are often told in silence.-Robert Lewis Stevenson Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS 1912 West 25th St. FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED - central air conditioning - carpeted - off street parking - garbage disposal - laundry facilities 1/2 block - play area for children Phone VI 2-3416 office Available at VI 3-8253 home KIEF'S RECORDS & HI-FI Malls Shopping Center STEREO TIME FURTHER OUT WITH EXPIRATION THE DAVE BRUBECK QUARTET Kansan Want Ads Get Results Hey Joe! I Need a Couple More Gallons GLYDE'S ANTI-FREEZE 60¢ A GALLON GAS Make sure your car is winter-ready Here's what we will do... - Pressure Check Radiator - Check Hoses - Check Heater Operation - Check Battery - Tighten Connections - Check Water Pump - Check Thermostats - Check & Adjust Belts - Drain, Flush, and Fill Radiator with Required Amount of Fomoco Anti-freeze 6 CYL. $565 ONLY GUARANTEED V-8 $795 ONLY A written guarantee is given with the above service Ask for Bill Durr or Gabe Gabriel to explain it to you UNIVERSITY FORD SALES 714 Vermont VI 3-3500 Homecoming Daily hansan Edition 59th Year, No. 41 SECTION A 34,000 May Be Attending Game A near sellout crowd is expected for the homecoming game tomorrow. "IF WEATHER and sales hold," he said, "we may have a sellout crowd." Friday, November 10, 1961 A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg, director of athletics, said 34,000 persons are expected for the game. Memorial Stadium holds 36,400. Any of these 34,000 can expect a gourmet's delight if they plan to eat in the Kansas Union. Dwayne Hall, food director of the Union said about 2,500 to 2,700 persons are expected in the buffet, cefeteria and Hawk's Nest. MR. HALL said the cooks will prepare 800 pounds of roast beef, 360 pounds of ham, and 200 pounds of chicken. They will also prepare 60 gallons of baked beans, a 50 gallon barrel of tossed salad, 230 pies, 250 gallons of coffee and 5,000 yeast rolls. "The cooks started cooking the roast beef last night about 5 p.m. and will finish about 5 a.m. tomorrow." Mr.Hall said. ANOTHER ANTICPATED adjunct to the annual Homecoming event is campus traffic congestion. Campus police expect to use between 30 and 40 traffic officers on the campus during periods of peak activity Saturday. They expect about 13,000 to 15,000 cars. In addition to the 15-man campus traffic force, about 25 Lawrence auxiliary policemen as well as Sheriff's officers and Highway Patrolmen are expected to help with traffic control Saturday afternoon. Joe G. Skillman, chief of the campus security and traffic office, urged students not to drive their cars on the campus if at all possible. He suggested that those who had to drive on the campus and who wished to stay over for activities after the game should use either of the free parking lots—O, N or X. THE TRAFFIC problem will be further complicated because many persons will want to drive slowly to view the house decorations. A special problem in that respect is Edgehill Road because of its narrowness. Mr. Skillman recommended all traffic on that road enter from 16th St. during critical traffic periods. After alumni registration in the Kansas Union tomorrow morning, the alumni will follow the schedule arranged by the Alumni Committee. At 1:30 p.m. they will attend the KU-KSU football game and view a pre-game performance of the KU and KSU marching bands. AT HALFTIME, the 1961 homecoming queen. Mary Nan Scamman. Tarkio, Mo., junior, will be crowned, along with the presentation of homecoming queens of past years. After the game, cider and doughnuts will be served in the Kansas Union. LAWRENCE. KANSAS At 9 p.m., the alumni can attend the homecoming dance with Ralph Marterie and his band in the ballroom of the Union. Homecoming Today 4:00 p.m. Alumni Registration Opens, Kansas Union Lounge. Evening Night tour of Decorations at Organized Houses. 6:00 p.m. Class of '34 Reunion, Rally and Mixer, Hotel Jayhawk Topeka. 6:30-7:00 p.m. Carillon Recital, Memorial Campanile, Ronald Barnes, Carillonneur. 7:00 p.m. Varsity-Freshman Basketball Game, Allen Field House. $1.00. 9:00 p.m. "Auntie Mame" University Theatre Production Especially For Returning Alumni, Murphy Hall Theatre. (Student LD.s and Season Tickets DO NOT Admit to this Performance.) $1.50. We students of KU are happy that you could be with us for this, your 1961 Homecoming. You are invited to once again view the campus, see all the house decorations, participate in the activities on the Hill and at the Union, and, of course, watch the Jayhawks and the Wildcats at the football game in Memorial Stadium! Glad to Have You Back Welcome Alumni! We are grateful and proud that the University of Kansas is one of the few state universities with a tremendous record of active, day-by-day support from its alumni. This is evident everywhere in the lands, buildings, scholarships, and interest that you, the alumni, have contributed. It is this support that has made the University of Kansas great and will make it even greater in the future, a goal whose attainment we present students hope to help work for as we join you as alumni. Welcome back—we promise to be cordial hosts. Sincerely. Max E. Eberhart President of the Student Body. Political Fervor High on Campus Fervor for campus politics runs high in this season of the year. Primary elections were held this week and campaigns have started in earnest for the general election Tuesday and Wednesday. THE UNIVERSITY PARTY last night outlined a four-point plan for overcoming student apathy and winning the ASC general elections next Tuesday and Wednesday. - Talk to as many students as possible and urge them to vote. - In its general election campaign, the UP will: - Stage a campus car parade on Tuesday and Wednesday. - Post UP campaign material on the bulletin boards of all living groups. - Pass out lists of UP candidates to individual students. James Anderson. Lawrence senior and co-chairman of the UP, told about 30 party members present at the meeting that student apathy is the major factor the party must overcome if it is to win the election. In today's special Homecoming edition of the Daily Kansan, you will find: Inside the UDK Section C—Society, features and literature. Section A—News and features "THE PEOPLE WE ARE drawing our vote from are not in the habit of voting," he said. "The larger the vote turnout there is, the better chance we have of winning. "We're lacking support from the freshman women's dorms. Concentrate there," he said. Anderson then turned to an analysis of the primary election vote. (In the primary election, the two UP candidates in this district finished third and fourth in total votes behind the two Vox candidates. The two UP candidates polled 46 votes to 95 for the Vox candidates.) THOMAS HARDY. Hoisington junior and independent co-chairman of the UP, said the party had a good chance to win in the sorority district, where UP's five primary candidates polled 284 votes and Vox's three candidates polled 259. (Monday, University Daily Kansas editors will print recommendations of candidates for ASC posts. Parody Defined At Poetry Hour Parodies are an imitation of men and their manner of writing, Harold Orel, associate professor of English, said yesterday to a Poetry Hour audience in the Kansas Union. "A person being paradied usually does not realize how effective the parody really is," Prof. Orel told an audience of about 70 students. HE READ several parodies from an anthology by Dwight MacDonald. He said the book was the best collection of parodies he has read. Prof. Orel read a parody of the Gettysburg Address as former President Dwight D. Eisenhower would have given it which brought chuckles from the audience. "I haven't checked the figures, but 87 years ago, I think it was, a number of individuals organized a government set up here in this country, I believe it covered certain Eastern areas, with this idea they were following up based on a sort of national independence arrangement and the program that every individual is just as good as every other individual... "Well here we are at the scene where one of these disturbances between different sides got going... "WE HAVE TO MAKE up our minds right here and now, as I see it, that they didn't just make a dry run here, and that all of us here under God, that is, the God of your choice, shall beef up this idea about freedom and liberty and those kind of arrangements, and that government of all individuals, by all individuals and for all individuals, shall not pass out of the world picture." PROF. OREL said Oliver Jensen, the author, attended many of President Eisenhower's press conferences and knew the President's style when writing the parody. Another parody read by Prof. Orel was by an anonymous poet about Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's "Hiawatha." The parody is called "The Modern Hiawatha." Weather Clear to partly cloudy with no important temperature changes today and tomorrow. Low by morning 35 to 40. High today around 60. Deadline Nears—Work,You Fools By Jerry Musil Work you fools, work your fingers to the bone on the Thursday night before homecoming. Forsake sleep, forsake studies for tomorrow the judges will determine whether you consider the night a success or a total loss. How do the judges spend Thursday night before homecoming? They watch television, grade papers, help the children with homework or catch up on some back reading. And they go to bed early. And how do they determine who should scream with delight and expand chests with pride during the half time of the homecoming game? THEN ON Friday the judges sally forth to determine which group of students has the cleverest thinkers. the most talented artists and hardest workers. The Homecoming Decorations Committee has a standard list of points to look for—originality, appropriateness of theme and skill of execution. Mrs. Dorothy Graber, Lawrence businesswoman, said she would look for the points outlined by the committee. The judges are three Lawrence residents and three faculty members. "But imagination would rank high," she said. "Cleverness and humor will receive slight consideration, depending on the type of theme they chose." Dr. Richard L. Hermes, a Lawrence physician, said he would follow the standardized list. DR. HERMES said weather would not receive any special consideration. He said he would look at the decorations the way they are and not as they should be. "That's the way they do it in the Army," he added. So workers, glory rests in the hands of six people. Your questions can only be answered by the judges and they will not release those answers until the half-time. FINISHING TOUCHES?—Members of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity work feverishly to get their version of the K-State Wildcat ready. News Briefs LISBON, Portugal—(UPI)—Nine anti-government Portuguese rebels bijacked an airliner over Lisbon today, dropped leaflets supporting rebel leader Capt. Henrique Galvao on the city, and then forced the pilot at gunpoint to land at Tangier, Morocco. The hijacking and leaflet-dropping came just two days before Sunday's parliamentary elections in Portugal. It obviously was designed to dramatize the rebels' opposition to the regime of Premier Dr. Antonio De Oliveira Salazar. *** CAPE CANAVERAL—(UPI)—An Atlas rocket with a tiny monkey riding in its nose blew up today less than one minute after it was launched. The silvery, 82-foot intercontinental rocket, a veritable "flying laboratory" of scientific experiments inside its nose and hanging from its sides. blasted from its concrete launching pad at about 8:55 a.m. But about 30 seconds later, the giant missile suddenly leaned from its vertical position. A split-second after that, an explosion turned the Atlas into a ball of boiling red flame and black smoke above the Cape. ★★★ EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif.—(UPI)— Maj. Robert White, half his vision blocked due to a heat-shattered windshield, rocketed a record of 4,070 miles an hour yesterday in an X15 rocket plane. The Air Force officer's oft-delayed flight to six times the speed of sound bettered the speed goal set by the X15's designers by 70 m.p.h. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 What Is School Spirit? Tomorrow is Homecoming at KU and thousands of alumni will be returning to Lawrence to enjoy the pageantry that is part of the annual event. This is the weekend set aside for those returning to visit the institution that probably played a large part in placing them at their present station in life. CAMPUS SPIRIT WILL BE at its high point this weekend. Everyone will be attempting to demonstrate their school spirit in the traditional Homecoming manner. The KU-Kansas State football game tomorrow afternoon will highlight the weekend of festivity. A dance will be held at the Kansas Union to assist in the celebration of Homecoming. It will be a magnificent display of school spirit. But is this weekend of fun and frolic a true representation of the spirit of the University? We say nothing against football or dances, but the spirit of this University is much more than a show of exuberance displayed at an athletic contest on an autumn afternoon. School spirit goes to the very heart of the institution. And the heart of any university is the intellectual atmosphere it generates. THE DESIRE OF THE STUDENT to receive a liberal education is just as good an indication of his school spirit as his interest in the fortunes of the football team or his cheers at a basketball game. But the student does not have the real spirit of the institution if his interests only draw him to the classroom. The many extra-curricular educational activities available at a university the size of KU are too numerous for mention here. The measure of student activity in forum groups, professional societies, student government and other student activities is in many ways the more accurate barometer of school spirit. These activities provide an opportunity for the student to become intellectually involved in an exchange of ideas with others. THE EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION, of course, is founded on an academic, intellectual foundation. Thus the true spirit of the university would be its desire to further the ideals on which it was founded. Homecomings, athletic events and other social events should certainly be allowed a prominent place in the calendar of University affairs. But emphasis on these aspects of college life should not go to the extent that the real reason for the University's existence is lost in a parade of pageantry and spectacle. Ron Gallagher Educate the Educators Will educators never learn that suppression degrades their institutions of learning, exposes them to the contempt of their student bodies and almost invariably gives exaggerated dignity to the opinions of the victim? Rarely has all this been more clearly demonstrated than in the decision of the Administrative Council of the City University, which governs all the city colleges, that in effect bars Communist speakers from the campuses. THE ISSUE AROSE over a speaking invitation extended by a Queens College student group to Benjamin Davis, executive secretary of the Communist Party. In the ensuing furor, the question of such appearances was referred to the over-all administrative body. decreed that to "supply a place of assembly for known members of the Communist Party of the U.S." would be "acting contrary to law." In a document as distinguished for its lack of logic as for its smallness of spirit, the Council In fact the decision was a spine- less surrender to know-nothing political pressures. ITS ONLY REAL result has been to endow Davis with the mantle of martyrdom and win him well-attended speaking engagements in many other places, including Columbia University, where resoct for the Bill of Rights remains alive. Where Davis is permitted to speak, he must try to defend such indefensible madness as Khrushchev's program of nuclear blackmail and the U.S. Communist Party's unbroken record of subservience to Moscow. To ban him is to spare him such self-exposure and to create the illusion that he has something original and daring to say. EATON'S FRIDAY CARTOON 35 62 KING JIM EATON THE ADMINISTRATIVE Council's decree has given Davis a city-wide platform. It has converted a dreary Soviet apologist into a cause celebre. Undergraduates unable to subscribe to the timorous sophistries of college presidents have launched academic freedom protests and rallies; for this movement of protest the college digniaries can claim perverse credit. "Who are you?" We said recently that it was equally wrong for Hunter College to deny its stage to right-wing William Buckley Jr. as for Queens — and now the other city colleges — to exclude Davis or any other local commissars. We reiterate that stand. Ironically, both Davis and Buckley have argued that the ban on the other is justified; this mutual intolerance is the ailment of the authoritarian mind. THE REAL SPIRIT OF "free inquiry" — to which the Administrative Council pays hollow lip-service — regards no voice as too dangerous for the ears of youth; it recognizes that suppression is the weapon of a sick, seared society; it remains confident that reason can prevail over the "fanatics of frenzy" in any free atmosphere. Surely these are elementary principles; surely they should have long ago become the established credo and tradition of New York's city colleges. (From the New York Post, Nov. 5, 1961, an editorial, "Who Will Educate the Educators?") University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912. Dailu Hansan Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news rooms Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 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 weekends. Second class examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher...Editorial Editor Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Bridges, Advertising Manager Don Gerrick, Advertising Manager; Bonnie McCulloch, Circulation Manager; David Wiens, National Adver- tising Manager; Michele Mach, Classified Advertising Manager; Hal Smith, Promotion Manager. NEWS DEPARTMENT Tom Turner ... Managing Editor Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Asso- city City Editor; Bill Sheldon, Sports Editor Barbara Howell, Society Editor. On Other Campuses CLEVELAND—Two sociology students at Ursuline College, Cleveland, checked their northern city to learn what jobs were open to Negroes there. "The majority of $8,000 employed Negroes are manual laborers," reported QUILL. "Very few are to be found in such professions as law and medicine. And why so few professional people? The answer is simple—discrimination. "However, various degrees of discrimination are practiced by different Cleveland firms. Showing least discrimination are federal agencies. City and state government agencies also employ Negroes in high paying jobs without discrimination." In department stores and several industries they found an "intermediate policy." Negroes were employed as clerks, stock boys, elevator operators. Private banks, some local unions, real estate firms and private hospitals have the "worst discrimination policy," and "the 'ew Negro professional men are frequently denied office space. In Cleveland, Negroes cannot be orchestra conductors, airplane hostesses, pilots, or printers." QUILL adds an editorial note: "And yet the Declaration of Independence states that all men are created equal." YELLOW SPRINGS, Ohio—Two views on "Operation: Abolition," the House Un-American Activities Committee film on recent student demonstrations in San Francisco, were reported in RECORD, Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio. The Rev. Robert O'Brien, minister of Cincinnati First Unitarian Church and president of that city's American Civil Liberties Union chapter, said the film's message is "false" and relies on "gross distortions" to make its point. He felt that HUAC's permitting "disrespectful" student protests within the hearing room was calculated to be merely useful in later propaganda moves. In another auditorium, M. Stanton Evans, editor of Indianapolis NEWS, said an FBI report had clearly shown the riots were communist organized and inspired. $$ *** $$ "While he admitted there are two errors in the film (which HUAC concedes)," reported RECORD, "Evans said he believes the 'film is vindicated.'" ** ** ** GETTYSBURG, Pa.—Gettysburg College has instituted a new class schedule, effective with the present 1961-62 academic year. Uniformity now makes the new schedule easier for both students and faculty to follow. The first three morning classes of each cycle are held at the same hour every morning—7:50, 8:50, and 9:50. The period from 10:50 to 11:15 is open for chapel services on Monday, Wednesday and Friday while on Tuesday, the period will be free in order that various organizations may meet. At 11:25 on the Monday cycle a fourth class has been scheduled. The 11 o'clock Tuesday classes have been abolished. Instead, a worship service is now scheduled for Tuesday and the hour from 11-12 on Tuesday will be set aside for assembly programs. Saturday classes end at 10:40. The college's afternoon schedule is not affected by the new change. After campaigned to drive out the whites, subversive groups initiate tribal warfare, he said, reported the RAMBLER. To provide native agents, Russia annually pays for the education of approximately 500 African youths, he learned during a recent African trip. ROSEMOUNT, Pa.—Speaking at Rosemount College, Rosemount, Pa. His Excellency, Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, outlined the two-point program Communists employ in underprivileged areas of Africa. Edito *** Editor I bad least can torial public of the and the H inclu I've who one fesso stim cerne the s Congratulations are due the University Kansan, a few determined students and a very few valiant faculty members for their successful moral position on University housing. Despite the rationalizations, the criticisms and the attacks by the people who want to cover up this glaring weak spot in our society—race relations—I'm proud of what you have done, and I think I speak for many others. It's good to know that the University finally heard your pleas. WITHOUT YOUR CONSTANT ATTENTION on this weak spot, nothing would have been done. I know that this must have been a costly victory for some of those involved. One of the local newspaper editors has been unremitting in his personal attacks on those who believe in democracy, and I'm sure there were many on this campus who urged, begged and pleaded that the whole business be covered up. But as Moses Gunn put it, these fights for the right must be waged. Incidentally, it seems to me that there is one basic lesson in all this—that right does not win simply because it is right. This should be a lesson to all those who felt progress would be made if the issue was never opened up. Sound and Fury IN PAST LETTERS TO THE NEWSPAPER I have been critical of the timid ones on the campus here. I withdraw that criticism, now that I have seen what happens when battles are waged for the right, for the moral way of life. The obvious pressures on those who seek the right are so great perhaps only the tough-skinned should be doing the fighting.-GS Friday, November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Editorial Criticized Editor: I presume Mr. Mullins had a bad day in class last Tuesday; at least that's the only explanation I can find for his irresponsible editorial, "The Teaching Profession," published in Wednesday's edition of the UDK. I'm only a sophomore, and so shorter on experience with the KU teaching staff than he, but, including my present enrollment, I've only come across one lecturer who fits his description. With that one exception, I've found the professors here at the University to be stimulating, interesting and concerned about "getting across" to the students. It seems, indeed, a wonder to me that any of our lecturers are stimulating; facing a roomful of determinedly bored students two to five times a week must get to be an old, old story. And all the more so when the lecturer realizes that his students almost invariably equate an education with a respectable grade-point average and an academic union card passed out after four years of "study." THERE UNDOUBTEDLY IS sufficient cause to warrant a complaint about certain professors who try not to let their teaching responsibilities get in the way of their research interests, but I think Mr. Mullins' editorial was too generalized in its criticism. It seems, really, that he has expressed a common misconception indirectly taught in American high schools, that is, that it's the teacher's job alone to see that Johnny gets "ejected." If Johnny fails, it's not because of his own lack of interest and application, but because his teacher didn't spoon-feed him the requisite amount of information. MORE IMPORTANT, then, than turing our professors to stage inten- lectual side-shows, is the need for us students to recognize our responsibility to achieve an education even if old Stugglemsmuggel is an absolute bore. We can't just sit off on the side lines and say, "All right, teach", get me 'all shook up!" All the Dr. Ises in the world can't ... Letters ... make education exciting if we treat it as an onerous task we have to perform to get that meal ticket. And all the Stuggelsmuggel in the world can't drone the life out of education if we really think it's important enough to get personally involved in. Rodney B. Kaufman Augusta sophomore * * * Kansan Praised Editor: Three cheers for the Kansas. Full steam ahead on the next big area of discrimination on the campus, sororities and fraternities - Ed Abels, reluctant administrators and students notwithstanding. Ralph Marten Johnstone Wichita freshman student Editorial Supported Editor I agree completely with Wednesday's editorial by William H. Mullins in which he castigated the lecture system of teaching. Supposedly the advantage of lecturing to students is that they get knowledge in a form which they cannot get from reading a book, or several books. In most introductory courses, at least, this is not the case. THEERE ARE SOME justifications for lecturing. For example, if a teacher is in the process of writing a book, then he would be giving the students information which they would otherwise be unable to get. But for a teacher to give identical lectures for five or ten years is ridiculous. If the teacher Short Ones A married philosopher belongs to comedy.-Friedrich Nietzsche Faith may be defined briefly as an illogical belief in the occurrence of the improbable—H. L. Mencken Bore; a person who talks when you wish him to listen—Ambrose Bierce Labor: one of the processes by which A acquires property for B.—Ambrose Bierce thinks he has something important to say, why then does he not have it published, or at least mimeographed? The answer, of course, is that no one would listen to his lectures. Another justification for a teacher giving lectures is that he may argue with what the students have been assigned to read, and/or he may supplement or rearrange it for them. But I doubt it is necessary to spend three hours a week for 15 weeks doing this. THE LECTURE SYSTEM at its most mundane is a travesty on the teaching profession. I know of at least one course in which the lecturer has delivered identical, almost verbatim lectures for the past 10 years. And his tests are almost identical from year to year, which means, of course, that every organized house has copies of them. Now for the student who doesn't want to learn anything and merely wants to satisfy a division requirement and get three hours of credit in the easiest way possible, this is great. But for the student who wants to learn something, this is teaching—and learning—reduced to a sham. In another course, the lecturer has written the text which the class uses. As it may be reasonably assumed that the most important information in the course is in the text, what then is left for class lectures? Only one of two answers (or a combination of both) seems possible: either the less important information, or a boring recapitulation of what is in the text. I REALIZE THAT the above criticisms apply mainly to lecture courses in the humanities and social studies. I think that the way in which mathematics, the natural sciences and foreign languages are taught is very good. But I think the lecture method should be done away with, or at least modified, in many courses. It could be replaced by more independent study and research, and or by more class discussion type courses. Steve Long Prairie Village sophomore the took world By Charles E. Staley Assistant Professor of Economics A EUROPEAN EDUCATION, by Romain Gary. Giant Cardinal Edition. 50 cents. This is a novel about the Polish freedom fighters in the Second World War. The theme is that "Europe has always had the best and oldest universities. It has produced the world's greatest books and ideas: liberty, human dignity, fraternity. European universities are supposed to be the cradle of civilization. And yet the true European education we receive is gas chambers, rape, slavery and firing squads at dawn. But it's only a moment of darkness. It will pass." (p. 83). THE STORY IS THAT OF A fourteen-year-old Polish boy who joins the partisans early in the war to receive his European education. It details the German atrocities, the courage, loves, and battle techniques of the partisans, their sufferings as contrasted to the sufferings of the conquered people who remained in the villages. It ends with the conquering of the Germans, the feeling of the achievement of freedom—an ironic note for a country about to go behind the Iron Curtain. Romain Gary, a French writer of international reputation, infuses a powerful and fascinating novel with his usual writing skill. Worth Repeating On students: Educators in general do not realize the potentiality for work that exists in every pleasure-loving American boy with brains enough to deserve a college education. He may groan and weep and exercise ingenuity worthy of a better cause to avoid exerting himself. But if from the start he knows that the faculty means business . . . he ends up by "taking" twice as much education (nobody can "give" him an education) as one would expect.—Robert I. Gannon **** On the enrollment problem: It has been a normal condition of American colleges for years that one-third of the so-called students were in the way, cluttering up the place and interfering with other people's progress. If more room is needed to take care of the expected population boom from postwar babies, it can be created in good part by clearing out the useless lumber that is already on the campuses.-Robert I. Gannon HELPING TO BUILD A GREATER KU This women's residence hall will room 444 students when completed. It includes 220 student rooms plus lounges, study areas dining room, and kitchen. The total construction cost will be $1,535,000. The eight story concrete frame is completed and only the roof needs to be poured. B. A. GREEN CONSTRUCTION CO. INC. Cecil B. Green Patrick D. Green Ernest P. Haas Robert J. Green Basil A. Green 1207 IOWA, LAWRENCE, KANSAS - P. O. BOX 25 - TELEPHONE VI 3-5277 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10. 1961 A Kansan Profile: Youngberg, 26-Year KU Veteran By Joanne Zabornik Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the Kansas University Endowment Association, has been associated with KU as a student, instructor, and administrator for nearly 26 years. He has held his present position for 14 years. "The Endowment Association is responsible for education fund raising in behalf of the University and for the administration of the funds that are received from alumni and friends."Mr. Youngberg said. LAST YEAR ALUMNI, friends and business firms made nearly 11,000 contributions, ranging in amount from a dollar to a major bequest of several hundred thousand dollars, he said. "The bulk of my work," he said, "is administrative and concerned with all of the things that serve with private support at the University, such things as scholarships, loan funds, land acquisition and buildings. "Twelve buildings have been built in the past 10 years with private funds in whole or significant part," he added. Mr. Youngberg was born in Osage City, and entered KU as a freshman fn 1935. HIS FIRST POSITION with the University after graduation was that of economics instructor in the School of Business. During the early part of World War II he worked on military training programs at KU in an administrative capacity. "Then I put on the Navy blues for three years," said Mr. Youngberg. He was a Navy lieutenant until 1946 Portraits of Distinction A Photographer HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 FEDERAL ASSOCIATION OF HERITAGE LANDS JOLYNNE TALBOTT Chi Omega Winter Navy Just barely trimmed in red perfect for many occasions COACH HOUSE Clothes For Town and Country "Some people tell me that I have the prettiest roses in Lawrence," he said. when he returned to KU as director of dormitories. K.C. Lawrente K.C. Blue Ridge KU Campus Plaza MR. YOUNGBERG'S HOBBY is flower-growing. Mr. and Mrs. Youngberg live at 777 Sunset Drive. Their daughter Eleanor, who is known as Tudy, was graduated from KU in 1959. Tudy was president of Associated Women Students and was named the outstanding senior woman. Their son is currently a senior in high school and will enter KU next fall. Mr. Youngberg is a member of the Lawrence Kiwanis Club and of the American Alumni Council, a national organization of people in alumni and educational fund raising work. WELCOME ALUMS While you're in town, drop by and let us service your car See HARRELL TEXACO 9th & Mississippi NEW YORK—(UPD) —The average parent will spend about $500 on furnishings, clothing and other basic items for each of the 400,000 new babies to be born in 1961, according to Chain Store Age. And this figure excludes medicines, vitamins, food and medical expenses. Babies Costly It is only the dead who do not return.—Bertland Barere. Doubling Up NEW YORK—(UPI)—College and university fund raising campaigns totaling more than $3 billion now are in progress, the American Association of Fund Raising Counsel Inc. reports. The record campaigns are in response to the challenge of doubled enrollments by 1970. A good folly is worth what you pay for it. -George Ade 3 IN 1... ONE SNO-BOOT, THREE STYLES! and so light...so warm... so soft and cuddly! Glov-Ett by Dodson THREE-IN-ONE SNO-BOOTS WITH SNAPS For campus, shopping, after skiing and skating, all-around wear STYLE 1 STYLE 2 STYLE 3 Cozy 100% deep pile lining, soft Dynel fur collar, cushion crepe sole REDMAN'S SHOES OIL MASS. Pre-Homecoming Party at the CATACOMBS (cellar of the Pizza Hut) NOW PIZZA HUT DELIVERY A girl wearing a hat. Call VI 3-9760 The Catacombs Is Featuring: Jazz singer Friday 9-12:30 - The Hi-Phi's Saturday 9-12:30 - The Accents Catacombs Open: 4-11 Monday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday Available for private parties throughout the week 646 Mass. Featuring the FINEST PIZZA in the Midwest Open 4-11 Monday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday PIZZA HUT VI 3-9760 Friday. November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 5 VARSITY-FROSH BASKETBALL GAME TONIGHT - 7:00 P.M. ALLEN FIELD HOUSE (1961-62 ID Cards Will Admit Students to This Game) AN OUTSTANDING FROSH CROP COULD GIVE THE VARSITY A REAL SCARE IN THIS BASKETBALL 1961-62 PREVIEW. PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS VARSITY Ellison, Nolen, 6'1" ___Guard Gardner, Jerry, 5'11" ___Guard Matt, John, 6'6" ___Center Dumas, Jim, 6'1" ___Forward Sparks, Loye, 6'4" ___Forward Bolton, Kerry, 6'3" Guard Schichtle, Dave, 6'2" Guard Unseld, George, 6'7" Center Shanks, Ron, 6'3" Forward Brille, Dave, 6'5" Forward [Manhattan] ARTHUR C. "DUTCH" LONBORG Director of Athletics The University of Kansas A Visitors Welcome to Homecoming 1961 On behalf of the entire athletic department staff, I extend a heavy and cordial welcome to every Alumnus, Parent, Student, and Visitor who will be on our campus this weekend. We sincerely hope that your visit to our campus is an enjoyable one and that you will return again soon. HOMECOMING ATHLETIC EVENTS Varsity-Freshman Basketball Friday, Nov. 10-7:00 p.m. Allen Field House K. U.-K.State Football Game Saturday, Nov. 11-1:30 p.m. Memorial Stadium University Daily Kansan Friday. November 10, 1961 As Science Tests New Drugs Cancer Breakthrough Foreseen By Louis Cassels WASHINGTON—(UPI)—A medical scientist says it is highly likely that a major breakthrough in treatment of cancer will be achieved in the coming year. The prediction was made by Dr. I. S. Ravdin of the University of Pennsylvania at a National Cancer Conference. He heads a Clinical Studies Panel appointed by the National Cancer Institute to evaluate new drugs for control of cancer. Ravdin said real progress has been Princeton Man, Current Guest Of Humanities A Princeton philosopher who has published five books this year will give a Humanities Series Lecture on "A Critique of Existentialism," Tuesday, November 14. The lecture by Dr. Walter Kaufmann will be in Fraser Theater at 8 p.m., and the Faculty Club will give an informal reception for him afterward. DURING HIS three-day visit to the KU campus, he will also talk to classes in French literature, Russian literature, jurisprudence, and philosophy, and will speak on two other programs which are open to the public. The latter are a discussion of "Existentialism versus Positivism" sponsored by the Philosophy Club at 3 p.m., Monday, November 13, in the Forum Room, and a coffee program on "The Role of Belief in Religion" arranged by Student Union Activities at 4 p.m. the same afternoon in the Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. On Tuesday at 9 a.m. he will speak in Green Hall to law students on "Justice as a Problem." ALTHOUGH he is the youngest Humanities lecturer presented since the Series began in 1947, he is a prolific author and an effective lecturer. His five books published this year are "Goethe's Faust: A New Translation," "The Faith of a Heretic," "From Thales to Aquinas," "From Bacon to Kant," and "Religion from Tolstoi to Camus." He has been guest lecturer at Harvard, Yale, Vassar, Chicago, Duke, Frankfurt (Germany), American University, and other universities. Since he received the Ph.D. at Harvard in 1947, Dr. Kaufmann has been on the Princeton faculty teaching courses and giving seminars in contemporary thought, philosophy of religion, existentialism, and philosophy of politics, including seminars in the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. AS VISITING professor, he has taught at the New School in New York and at the University of Washington, Cornell, Columbia, and Michigan. In 1956, he was in Germany as a Fulbright research professor. During World War II, he served in the Air Force and in military intelligence. He was born in 1921 in Freiburg, Germany, and grew up in Berlin; his father was a lawyer. He received the B.A. in 1941 from Williams College and the M.A. in 1942 from Harvard. Portraits of Distinction MEDIA GROUP HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 made in cancer research in the past two years, and effective chemical agents already have been found for treatment of special types of cancer. "Matters have improved in the cancer fight, and we are beginning to see the light," Ravdin told the conference, attended by more than 1,000 physicians and medical researchers from all parts of the nation. He said it is now certain that "cancer will come under control, just as diabetes did." "It is important that we keep cancer patients alive as long as possible, because we never know when the answer will come, and we are likely to have improvements in therapy before we know the whole nature of the disease." "The answer could come next month, next year — or next week," he said. Ravdin said research to date strongly suggests that "most human cancers are probably due to viruses and the answer in treatment will probably be through a variety of chemical agents." Definite proof that certain common types of cancer are "viral in origin" may be obtained "before another year is passed," he said. "The best way to handle cancer that we know of, still is to remove the malignancy while it is local, and before it has grown or spread." "At the same time we may have information on the control of such lesions by chemical agents which have been under careful scrutiny." He said chemical therapy at present is an adjunct rather than a substitute for early surgery. But he said clinical tests during the past two years have demonstrated that chemical agents can produce dramatic results with some types of cancer. Ravdin said most researchers now are convinced that cancer is a family of diseases, and that a variety of chemical agents, rather than a single drug, will be necessary to cope with all of the viruses that may induce cancers. Delinquency Booked WASHINGTON—(UPI) —Twenty new publications about juvenile delinquency are available from the Superintendent of Public Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington 25, D.C. None of the booklets cost more than 35 cents. Subject matter ranges from "Camps for Delinquent Boys" to "Report to the Congress on Juvenile Delinquency." Needle in Time NEW YORK—(UPI) —Influenza vaccinations for high risk groups are urged by Dr. James W. Raleigh, medical director of the American Thoracic Society. The reason: an upswing in flu is predicted for fall. High risk groups include persons with lung disease, heart disease, diabetes and other chronic illnesses persons over 65 years of age and expectant mothers. Welcome Alums of the University of Kansas to 1961 Homecoming We are grateful for having had the privilege of serving the ever growing number of members of the faculty, the students and the grads during the past ninety-four years. THE BARTELDES SEED CO. Home of TNT Popcorn 904 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kansas how quiet is quiet? Cats are notoriously silent in their singularly feline way. But even the most stealthily treading tomcat could take lessons from the men at Ford Motor Company whose job it is to track down and suppress unwanted noise in vehicles. At our Ford Research and Engineering Center in Dearborn, engineers have created a unique room without echoes, virtually duplicating the perfect stillness that exists miles above the earth's surface. The "Silent Room", as we call it, is a chamber utilizing fiber-glass wedges as sonic "blotters" to soak up noise emanating from subjects undergoing developmental tests. In this acoustically sterile environment, electronic instruments seek out the source of vibrations, rattles, rumbles and squeaks so that they can be eliminated in production. This scientific approach to silence is but a tiny facet of the many-sided program of pure and applied research which goes on daily at Ford Motor Company. It is another example of Ford's leadership through scientific research and engineering. Ford MOTOR COMPANY The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan PRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD • THE FARM • INDUSTRY • AND THE AGE OF SPACE A cat is walking in a pair of decorated shoes. a e n, m m l. s s, d Friday. November 10, 1961 University Daily Kenson Page 7 Ness Loses Again, To Pagliacci, Yet By Zeke Wigglesworth The little old lady sitting in a box at the Metropolitan Opera does not like TV private eyes, cowboys who shoot one another, or Ehlot Ness spraying the air with lead and leaving 50 members of the Capone moblying in pools of blood on the pavement. SO IT IS WE FIND the little old lady sitting on the edge of her chair as the fourth scene of act one of "Don Giovanni" ensues. The little old lady feels gratified that she gave up Eliot Ness to go to the "Met" as she hears the lovely strains of "Batti, Batti": The little old lady does, however, like opera. She likes it because the costumes are lovely, the music is divine, and because Mrs. Schultz accused her of being a clod. Batti, batti o bel Massetto la tua povera Zerlina; Staro qui come agnellina Staro qui come agnellina le tue botte ad aspetar. le tue botte ad aspetar. Batti, batti la tua Zerlina; Batu, batu la tua Zerima staro qui, staro qui saro qu, saro qui Le tue botte ad aspetar. Lasciero straziarmi il crime. Frantically the little old lady looks through her Italian-English dictionary to keep up. She gives up and sits back, dreaming of true love in 17th century Spain. For you music lovers in the audience, a liberal translation of the little lady's favorite love song is: Beat me, beat me dear Massetto, beauty your poor Zerina. Beat me, beat me dear Mastoffe, beat your poor Zerlina; Here I am, a willing victim, beat me till I cannot stand. Beat me, beat me, your poor Zerlina, beat me till I cannot stand. Beat me till your fingers wear out. SEVERAL DAYS LATER the little old lady is invited to a tea and cup-cake party at a friend's house. The party ends as the hostess turns on the television set and the "Untouchables" comes on. Sniffing her nose in the air, the little old lady stalks out of the house, saying that she is going to "Faust." Sure enough, there she is next week in her usual seat, watching the curtain rise on act one, scene two of Faust. "Lovely lads" she says, as the students come out singing: Soit plein! Vin ou biere, Biere ou vin, Que mon verre Sans vergonne, Coup sur coup, Un ivrogne Boit tout! THE LITTLE OLD LADY doesn't like Eliot Ness—but she favors the destruction of alcoholic beverages. So she listens to the students singing (English translation): Beer or brandy, brandy or beer We're not particular, bring it here We have no prejudice, glass for glass We will drink anything you pass pass. By now, the old gal has all her friends interested in the non-violent musicals of the opera, so when Pagliacci opens, the whole Sunday afternoon Settin', Knittin', and Gossip group descends on the opera. They sit enthralled as some clown wanders around singing marvelous arias of love and devotion. They gasp with delight as the fol- (Continued on page 12) Harold Fearing, Lawrence senior, occupies a position most students can only dream about. He has the top grade point average—2.9809 in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. But Fearing, who earned his grade average in math and physics, maintains there are "more important things in life than grades" and tries not to lose sleep over his studies. "I LIKE to do a lot of my studying during the day," he explained. "In physics, you don't have too much day-to-day work. But every so often you run into a problem set that takes 30 hours to do." Fearing Ranks Top in Grades He is president of Sigma Phi Sigma, physics society, and a member of the editorial committee of Search, a magazine published annually by members of the KU Gifted Students Program. In addition, he is a member of the KU Math Club, Alba Phi Omega, service fraternity, and is active in the Wesley Foundation. FEARING IS carrying 17 hours of course study this year, eight of them in physics, a subject generally regarded by KU students as one of the most difficult at the University. But Fearing doesn't worry too much about his difficult curriculum or about maintaining his high grade point average. Upon completion of his studies at KU, Fearing hopes to do graduate work, perhaps at the University of California or Stanford. "Certainly there are easier subjects than physics," he acknowledged, "but I think that if you like physics, it's not too hard. A lot of students flunking physics are not the ones that intend to go on and major in the subject." "I SUPPSE the pressure increases a little when you're almost through college and are trying to maintain your grade point average. But on the whole, it isn't too bad." His final decision, he said, will depend upon the outcome of his scholarship applications to various schools. Why does he choose this over more lucrative offers by private business? Fearing's long-range goal is to enrage in university teaching and research. "I want to be free in deciding what kind of research to do," he said. "I might not have this freedom in private business. Besides, I've lived in Lawrence all my life and I like the atmosphere in an academic community." H for HOMECOMING SELF SELECTION Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 1302 W. 23rd (23rd & Naismith) The Pointed Toe Classic with the new look heel Priced From 587 to 647 Sizes 4½ to 10 Color Clues in ... FALL SHOES OPEN 9 to 9 Daily Noon to 5 Sunday Color Clues in .. FALL SHOES OPEN 9 to 9 Daily Noon to 5 Sunday Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS 1912 West 25th St. FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED - central air conditioning - carpeted - off street parking - garbage disposal - laundry facilities 1/2 block - play area for children Phone VI 2-3416 office VI 3-8253 home SPECIAL OFFER... For 2-Headed Pipe Collectors Genuine imported hand-carved cherrywood pipe... that really smokes! This unique two-headed pipe is a real conversation piece...a must for your collection! Hand-carved in the Italian Alps and finished in gay colors. Stands alone on its own tiny legs. Ideal for your desk, mantel, or bookshelf ...mighty good smoking, too! This is a wonderful value! Send for your two-headed pipe today! Only $100 and picture of Sir Walter Raleigh from new pouch pack SIR WALTER RALEIGH POUCH PACKED SIR WALTER RALEIGH POUCH PACKED NOW Sir Walter Raleigh in the new pouch pack keeps tobacco 44% fresher! Choice Kentucky Burley- Extra Aged! Smelts grand! Packer right! Smokes sweet! Can't bite! Shown Approximately ½ Actual Size Clip Coupon... Mail Today! Sir Walter Raleigh Box 303 Louisville 1, Kentucky Please send me prepaid 2-headed pipe(s). Enclosed is $1 (no stamps, please) and the picture of Sir Walter Raleigh ft. the box in which the pouch is pealed for each pipe ordered. 图 Shown Approximately ½ Actual Size Clip Coupon.. Only $100 Only $100 SUNSHINE NAME... ADDRESS... CITY... ZONE... STATE... COLLEGE ... This offer good only in U.S.A. Not valid in states where prohibited, taxed or otherwise restricted. Offer expires June 30, 1982. Allow four weeks for delivery. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 DINNER DINE OUT AT THESE BEFORE OR AFTER THI Enjoy the many varieties of food . . . everything Little Banquet Restaurant ON THE MALLS Smorgasbord SELF SERVICE OR TABLE SERVICE Choice Steaks — Sea Foods — Salads THE CAMPUS ROOM Available for private parties meetingst V13.9646 VI 3-9646 JAMES A. HUNT BOWLING JAMES A. HUNT BOWLING Sandy's SANDY'S THRIFT & SWIFT DRIVE-IN 2120 West 9th Across from Hillcrest There Is No Waiting at Sandy's 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 Meet Your Friends At Margaret's Cafe SERVING BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER Open 6:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. — Closed Sunday 104 W. 23rd VI 3-966 CHEESE HOUSE CHEMICAL FABRIC CO. The Chuck Wagon RESTAURANT An Informal Frontier Atmosphere Charcoal Broiled Steaks Bar-B-Que South on Highway 59 VI 3-9844 Delicious Barbecued Ribs All Good Foods & Beverages Southern Pit 1834 Mass. VI 3-9481 SOUTHERN PIT FI C fron Friday, November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 9 ing FINE RESTAURANTS GAME-OR ANY TIME from a quick snack to a most complete dinner MENU The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass. - VI 3-1151 THE MASTER HOUSE XAPPU NAC'S Happy Hal's Cafe East Highway No.10 - 23rd St. Home of the $1.50 Sirloin Fast Service - Excellent Food BIG BUY 23rd & Iowa Duck Charlie the Chicken Hawk says, "Follow me after the game to the best 'Finger Lickin"' Kentucky Fried Chicken in town." The Big Buy PENNAMON, N.J.—The 1930 annual meeting of the Pennammon Club was held in New York City on Wednesday evening. The event was attended by many members of the club and local dignitaries. 14 St. Hill Meet All the Old Gang at The Wheel After the Game VI 3-9603 Featuring Our Special BUFFET 23rd & Iowa Holiday Inn VI 3-7991 BUFFET Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday. November 10, 1961 A Kansan Profile: Prof. Beth Visited KU, and Stayed Ey Walt Blackledge Elmer Frederick Beth came to KU in 1940 as a visiting assistant professor in journalism. He never made it back to the University of Idaho, where he had taught since 1830. He stayed, and has made a lasting impression on KU. Just one year later he became acting chairman of the department of journalism and served in that position until the fall of 1948. During those seven years, he had a hand in bringing about sweeping changes in the journalism department and in the University. THE JOURNALISM department became a school during his acting chairmanship, the University developed the Western Civilization and Humanities programs under the direction of committees on which he served, and the Faculty Club was created through the activities of a committee of which he was chairman. Prof. Beth also made plans for the conversion of the Fowler Shops into Flint Hall, which now houses the Journalism School. He helped guide the University Daily Kansan through the difficult years of World War II. In 1942 a telephone news service from the International News Service Kansas City Bureau was brought to the UDK and in 1945 full leased-wire services from United Press were contracted. In 1942, the UDK showed a loss for September of $122.50 and the cash account was overdrawn $135-13. At the end of Prof. Beth's chairmanship in 1943 the paper was showing a profit of $1,355.40 and a cash balance of $1,200.63. Legacy Showing Opens Sunday Legacy of the Land, an exhibition starting Sunday at the University of Kansas Museum of Art, will feature a selection of American landscape paintings from the museum collection. The exhibition will be shown on the lower floor of the museum. There will be a special preview from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. Saturday. The exhibition will be in honor of the Conference of the American Association of Land Grant Colleges. It will be presented from Nov. 12, through Jan. 15. Gerald Bernstein, curator of the Museum of Art, stated: "The exhibition is an attempt to utilize the museum collection and place the paintings in their proper historical setting. I feel that it is one of the finest exhibitions ever presented at the museum and hope the students take advantage of the opportunity to view the paintings. "The history of American landscape painting is one of tradition and experiment," said Mr. Bernstein. "It developed from the American artist's desire to record the conquest of the wilderness. Although the first painters of the American landscape turned away from European tradition and sought an art form expressive of the new land, later generations of artists returned to Europe for inspiration and direction." He continued: "To the painters of the early Republic, the land was a national symbol to be expressed in poetic terms. America presented a seemingly endless variety of landscapes. They strove to record the grandeur of the virgin continent and to infuse their art with a sense of bounty and potential greatness. Each then interpreted what he saw, combining his training, experiences and personal feelings for this continent. These early landscapes were extremely popular and, by the nineteenth century, had replaced portraiture as the leading subject for American artists." Mr. Bernstein has been responsible for the organization of the exhibition and the editing of its catalogue. Marilyn Stokstad, acting director of the museum, also has contributed to the catalogue. There was also a reserve fund of $10,000 put aside for Daily Kansen equipment for the new journalism building. FROM 1942 TO 1948. Prof. Beth was editor of the Journalism Bulletin, quarterly publication of the American Association of Teachers of Journalism. Since 1948 he has served as secretary-treasurer of AATJ (now the Association for Education in Journalism) and the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism. He is also director of the teacher-placement bureau sponsored by AEJ. In 1941 he became the University press-box statistician for KU home football games. He has not missed a home game since. He compiles all the statistics of the game for the press and radio. While he watches the plays and keeps track of the figures, T. C. Rythe, assistant professor of journalism, and assistants set type. At half-time and the end of the game, statistical summaries are run off and sent to the press and radio. IN THE SUMMER of 1945, Prof. Beth served an internship at radio station KMBC in Kansas City. He spent most of his time in the news department of the station. In 1947 he spent the summer working in the business departments of the Kansas City Star. Prof. Beth was a visiting professor at Time, Inc., New York, during the summer of 1953. He studied and analyzed all the departments of Time, Life, and Fortune magazines. Since 1952, Prof. Beth has been chairman of the KU Humanities Committee. He has served on the committee since its beginning and considers it one of his most important jobs. HE ALSO HAS been a member of the Western Civilization committee from its beginning. He was chairman of the University Senate Advisory Committee for one year. Prof. Beth was born Dec. 8, 1902, in Chicago, and grew up in Two Rivers, Wis. He received his B.A. from the University of Wisconsin in 1927, where he also earned his master's degree the following year. He married Ella Dewey Aug. 13, 1928. The couple had two children, Lois and Roger. Lois married Leo M. Arms Jr. and is now living in Park Forest, Ill. Roger died in 1956. Prof. Beth was an instructor at Washington State College, in Fullman, 1928-1930. He was a one-man journalism department at the University of Idaho 1920-1940. IN EVERY FIELD THERE'S ONE STANDOUT IN WATCHES IT'S HAMILTON Bold, bright styling. Famed accuracy. A Hamilton has the look and the feel and dependability of a leader. It's one mark of distinction you can wear all the time, not just on special occasions. At Hamilton jewelers everywhere. HAMILTON BAYFIELD HAMILTON FRENCH LAUNDRY Correction Listed On UP Candidates Controversy to the election results published in the Kansan Thursday, the University Party has not dropped Kenny Kahmann as one of its candidates in the men's large dormitories district in the general election. Accumatic A-600, Self-winding $85 Stephanie $89.50 Also, the UP candidate polling the most votes in the men's large dermitories district was William (Joby) Jobson, not William (Goby) Johnson. After love, book collecting is the most exhilarating sport of all. A.W.S. Rosenbach Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-022 A First Photo-Finish NEW YORK-(UPI)—Horse racing's photo-finish camera was devised and first operated by John C. Hemment, who mounted a camera atop the stands at Brooklyn's old Sheepshead Bay track in 1890. Flavor Alums Flavor, Alums Want it? Go it! Spudnuts, that is! Flavor doesn't waver— you just s-a-v-o-r-! Good. Any time. You name it, Alums. Topping choice. Or just glazed. Smacky. Kids like, too. Buy 1.2 or more. Get 'em here. The Spudnut SHOP 1422 West 23rd PEW Pat Weaver, National College Queen What does this lovely College Queen want in her diamond ring? Miss Pat Weaver, America's National College Queen, revealed her feminine taste as well as her practical sense when asked about diamond rings. She selected as her favorite the lovely Artcarved Evening Star—one of Artcarved's award-winning designs. Why did she choose it? Because of its breathtaking beauty and guaranteed quality. You see, every Artcarved ring is guaranteed in writing for all the years to come by America's most respected ring maker. You buy it with confidence—wear it with pride. Visit your local Artecwar Jeweler and see why Artecwar diamond rings have been the choice of millions for more than a century. Perhaps you can start hinting for yours now! NATIONALLY ADVERTISED IN AMERICA'S LEADING MAGAZINES Artcarved DIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGS EVENING STAR First choice of America's College Queens J. R. Wood & Sons, Inc., Dept. CP-31 216 J. F. 48th St. New York, N. Y. Please send me more facts about diamond rings and "Wedding Guide (for Bride and Groom)." Also name of nearest or hometown) Artcaved Jeweler. I am enclosing 10f to cover handling and postage. Name_ Address. City___County or Zone___ State___ Page 11 Friday, November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Queen Mary Nan Bernice HOMECOMING QUEEN, 1961, is Mary Nan Scammon, Tarkio, Mo., junior. Her attendants are Leslie Gail Coover, Junction City senior, and LaWalta Dean Heyde, Shawnee Mission junior. The KU graduate school has a fall enrollment of approximately 2,000 students according to John H. Nelson, dean of the graduate school. Enrollment in Grad School Near 2,000 Robert Berveiler, who directs the Henry George School of Social Science in New York City, will speak on "Socialism—The Slave State," at the Minority Opinions Forum today. The forum will be held at 4 p.m. in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. It is open to the public. In the 1960-61 school year 490 graduate students held junior staff appointments and 347 held research assistantships. Enrollment statistics for the 1961-62 school year have not been compiled, but Dean Nelson feels that they will include only a slightly larger number of students. The Henry George School of Social Science is based on the writings of Henry George, an American economist who published most of his articles from 1870 to 1905. The graduate school is headed by Dean Nelson, and it supervises all graduate work conducted in the various departments of the University, establishes rules for graduate admission and recommends students to the Board of Regents for graduation. Admission to the graduate school is normally granted to KU graduates and those graduates of institutions whose requirements for graduation are equivalent to KU requirements. Minority Forum Will Host George Scholar In his writings, Mr. George advocated a minimum of government power and the substitution of a single tax on land for all other existing taxes. ONE-STOP SERVICE Ball The ny c am th Arrow Ban-Lou."PAR" 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 The pullover shirt with no handicap JKLOM Ban-Lou. knit for the college man This new knitted shirt of 100% nylon is magnificently tailored to conform to natural body lines. Its comfortable good looks and swing-free action brings out the best in you at work or play. Banlon comes in 12 colors. No campus wardrobe is complete without a selection of Arrow Banlon knits for active sports or just relaxing. Come in to see this new luxury collection of knits. Specially designed for the man of action. CARL'S $5.95 Short sleeves $5.95 Long sleeves $6.95 ARROW $ ^{\circ} $ From the "Cum Laude Collection" Sir Knight FORMAL WEAR 1342 Ohio FREE white formal dinner JACKETS. With every purchase of a new BLACK TUX at 49.95 we will GIVE you a white formal Dinner Jacket. Prepare for Winter & Spring Formals Now while the price is right. THIS WEEK ONLY Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10. 1961 School of Religion How Will It Look? By Marty Moser A building for a School of Religion should suggest religion to its community. It should not look like a science building. Yet, it should not look like a church either. These are the opinions of William J. Moore, dean of the School of Religion. He said this while discussing plans for the school's new building. "THESE WHO are planning the structure feel that it should be different to set it off," Dean Moore said. "We feel the structure should bear the story of a building that is here for the teaching of religion." The new building for the School of Religion is tentatively scheduled to be completed in 1965. Definite plans cannot be drawn up until enough funds are raised to begin construction. It has been estimated that the new building will cost approximately a half million dollars. The School of Religion is unique from the other schools in that it is economically and academically unrelated. It functions as a department of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Yet the property and building are owned and operated by the Christian Church. DEAN MOORE has expressed a real need for a building to replace Myers Hall, the present building housing the school. "The present building is in bad condition." he said. "It was not built well originally, and it is not fireproof. It is constructed in such a way that it does not serve the institution adequately. We need a library five times as large as the present one." The dean said that when the new building is completed, he hopes to enlarge the teaching staff to four full-time teachers. "WE NOW HAVE one full-time teacher, myself, and six part-time teachers." Dean Moore said the Christian Church was responsible for providing all building funds although all church denominations support the school. "We will ask the other churches to provide a library, full-time teachers and money for our program." THE CHRISTIAN Church will appeal for funds to churches, foundations, business and professional people, and certain individuals. Welcome Back Grads for Homecoming Visit Dixie Carmel Shop For the tastiest CARAMEL CORN – Carmel Corn Assorted Candies– – Candied Apples Popcorn– Give Your Tastebuds a Treat! Come See Us Soon Now open under new management 1033 Mass. — VI 3-6311 Ness Loses Again, to Pagliacci, Yet (Continued from page 7) lowing gem of love song styling is voiced: Mia giotta Colombina! Amabile beone! L'amore amagli effluvii del vin, de la cucina. THEY APPLAUD THE company, leave and go home completely enthralled by the purity of the plot. Translation of above love song? So the home of the little old lady knows no violence. She dreams of the opera and the love she saw there. When she thinks of Eliot Ness, her nose curls into the air. The opera produces a safe, warm feeling in her heart. Television. . . . Bah! Affection thrives on wining, And love does well on dining. My darling loves her dinner, She's a thirsty sinner. Labour to keep alive in your breast that little spark of celestial fire—conscience.—George Washington 365 Excuses 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Anniv. of the Completion of the New York Subway Outstanding VALUES Gibbs for GLOTHING CO. 811 Mass. FALL GREAT CASH SAVING IN ALL DEPARTMENTS Gibbs for CLOTHING CO. 811 Mass. FALL SportCoats Completely New for Fall '61 Now showing . . . complete stock of this season's newest colors and finest fabrics; scores of rich patterns and styles to choose from. 100% WOOL Get ready for cold weather now. Make your selection from complete stocks of this season's newest, most durable coats. $19.95 to $34.50 TOPCOATS $25.00 to $49.50 M. E. SMITH $19.95 MEN'S STORM COATS 44 tan colors. Zip-out pile lining, wind and water repellent. Wear in all kinds of weather. SPECIAL ONE GROUP Wrinkle resistant, water repellent, spot resistant, sysa finish. All popular sizes. $10.95 ONE GROUP ZIP-OUT LINING New Look IN MEN'S SUITS 100% wool fabrics, medium to dark shades, all popular sizes. NEW STYLES NEW SHADES NEW FABRICS STYLECRAFT GLENSHIRE SUITS The economy suit you would expect to pay much more for. Come in and see this altogether new fall suit collection. All sizes. $29.50 to $34.50 $39.50 To $55.00 $59,50 To $65.00 HYDE PARK SUITS The suit with 18 important hand-fashioned features. Styled for the man who wants a little bit more. NEW FABRICS SPORT SHIRTS Plenty of new smart patterns to choose from in either Ivy or conventional styling. $1.98 to $5.00 SWEATERS BULKY KNITS New fall styles and colors. Hi-Vs, Boat Necks and Cardigan styles. 100% lambs wool $6.98 to $13.95 Friday, November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 13 Catholics Awaiting First KU Center When they move into their newly purchased center — by Christmas, they hope — they will enter the first real Catholic center in KU's history. The chapel being constructed within the center will have a capacity of about 50. Since both the new chapel and Danforth Chapel have space for only a fraction of the Catholic students on the campus, Sunday Mass will continue to be held in Fraser Theater, as it has been since 1958. KU CATHOLIC STUDENTS have not always had it so lucky. Prior to 1958, when Rev. Gerald Goetz was assigned as student chaplain, they held all Newman Club meetings and religious activities at the local Church of St. John. In 1958, they purchased a three-room house at 1915 Stratford Road, just across the road from the new center. The house, used as a residence for Father Goetz, also housed classes in ethics and the New Testament. For 1140 KU Catholic students, a long period of "making do" without a student center is about over. Located at 1910 Stratford Road, it will include a 12 by 24-foot sanctuary (the area enclosing the altar) and a meeting hall with a capacity of 125. THE NEW CENTER, purchased last month, is a 70 by 24-foot ranch-type house. It is now being converted to include space for meetings, class discussions and religious services. Rev. Brenden Downey, appointed student chaplain this year when Father Goetz was re-assigned to the University of Colorado, arranged for the purchase of this year's new center. FATHER DOWNEY emphasized that the long-range goal of the Catholic students is the construction of a permanent student center with space adequate for the entire Catholic student body on the campus. But the price tag on the proposed permanent center is beyond reach for the students alone. Father Downey estimated that the center would cost about $325,000, meaning that outside sources of aid would be necessary to facilitate its construction. Finding a site for the center would post no problem. A four-acre plot at 1915 Stratford Road was purchased for this purpose in 1958. But for the moment, at least, KU Catholic students have almost forgotten about the permanent center. Their only concern is in moving into the new center. ONE OF THE MOST effective methods of financing the construction of a Newman Club center, which is now being used to help build a Catholic Student center at Kansas State University, is the parish assessment plan. Under this program, which must be initiated by the bishop of the diocese in which the center is desired, individual parishes, are assessed an annual amount for the support of the diocesan Newman club. The Most Rev. Edward J. Hunkeler, Archbishop of Kansas City in Kansas, has not yet initiated this plan for this diocese. Brooklyn has the proud distinction of having had more distinguished bibliophiles than any other city of its size in the world.—O. W. S. Rosenbach SIC FLICS Chesterfield "All I have to do is fly to St. Louis and back and then I'm initiated?" Chesterfield KING CIGARETTES LICENSE & MARKET TORRADO CO 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD -THEY SATISFY JANTZEN - MANHATTAN - McGREGOR - H-I-S SUPERBA - DAMON - HARTOG WELCOME GRADS! BEAT K-STATE! P. S. IN CASE YOU BET ON K-STATE AND LOST YOUR SHIRT, SEE US. ESQUIRE - CAMP - PENDLETON KNOX - EAGLE - COLLEGE HALL - CAPPS - ALLIGATOR men's diebolt's wear 843 mass. Page 14 University Daily Kansan ___ Friday, November 10, 1961 WELCOME GRADS! W To Homecoming! PLAN TO SEE THESE TOP HOLLYWOOD ATTRACTIONS WHILE YOU ARE HERE! GRANADA [THEATRE] Telephone VIKING 3-5720 STARTS SATURDAY! In the high-adventure tradition of "The Guns Of Navarone"! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents SPENCER FRANK TRACY AND SINATRA in the MERVYN LEODY-FRED KOHLMAR production THE DEVIL AT COCKOOK KERWIN MATHEWS • JEAN PIERRE AUMONT ORGANISM ALGERIE NAZARAN RURAL LIAM OBRIEN ASIAN SOURRY RIVER LIAM OBRIEN MASTER CATALOG MERVYN LeROY • FRED KOHLMAR EASIMAN COLOR ENDS TONITE — "GUNS OF NAVARONE" VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VARSITY 3-0561 STARTS SUNDAY! IT DELVES WITHOUT COMPROMISE INTO THE INNER LONELINESS AND HUNGERS THAT LIE DEEP WITHIN US ALL! THIN US ALL! PAUL NEWMAN in ROBERT ROSSEN'S THE HUSTLER featuring PIPER LAURIE • SCOTT and JACKIE GLEASON with MYRON M'CORMICK Produced and Directed by ROBERT ROSSEN Synchronized by SIDNEY CARROLL ROBERT ROSSEN CINEMASCOPE ) TONITE & SATURDAY Shirley MacLaine Richard Widmark "TWO LOVES" "SECRET WAYS" FRI - SAT - SUN TWO GREAT HITS! PLUS TWO BONUS FEATURES SAT. ONLY Adults . . . 75c DRIVE IN THEATRE ... West on Highway 40 SUNSET FROM WARNERBROS. CINEMASCOPE WARNERCOLOR "Mister Roberts" ON THE SCREEN! THE HAPPIEST PLAY THAT EVER PLAYED! HENRY JAMES WILLIAM JACK FONDA·CAGNEY·POWELL·LEMMON BETTY PALMER WARD BOND FILCARLEY Screen Play by FRANK NUGENT and JOHSUA LOGAN Based on the play by THOMAS HEGUNG and JOHSUA LOGAN PRODUCED BY Directed by JOHN FORD and MERVYN LEROY LELAND HAYWARD One da BLACI Malpas Dennis Rewar COLLI Wed. usual: 3374. ONE CLUB comed Keck'd day, 4 TWO Ledroc SCRA only : caill a want. sechu: 'UPPERSTOP' A STORY AS BIG AS THE SEAS! JAMES 'Maverick' GARNER EDMOND O'BRIEN new. HOUS bedding Maple Cereu Some VI 3- TECHNICOLOR* * from WARNER BROS. in WARNER SCOPE* GARNER EMOND O'BRIEN Friday, November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 15 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $12. Terms 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 Kannan Business Center on the day before publication is desired. LOST WANTED BLACK FOUNTAIN PEN with Demis Malpass engraved on I PLEASE return to Demis Malpass, 437 Joseph R. Pearson. Feward. 11-14 TWO MALE STUDENTS to share three bedroom house. VI 2-3301 at 5 p.m. COLLAGE GIRL to baby sit every Wed. from 1-3 p.m. Two children, will usually be asleep. 20-8 Stouffer pl. VI 2-3S74. 11-14 11-1G HELP WANTED ONE OF TOPEKA'S FINEST NIGHT-CLUBS, searching for talent, musical or single or group — audition Keek's Book House, 3120 Hammond Street, 4 p.m. 11-10 FOR SALE SCRATCH AND SKETCH PADS SCRATCH AND SKETCH PADS only 35c lb. Standard sizes available. Do you want to Outlook, 1005 Massachusetts, V2-366-2000. 11-15 SMALL TIRE SALE. Volkswagen & small import shops all at 3% discount. Free installation, 2 year road hazard warranty, Rocky Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 11-13 **STEVENS** .22 Automatic Rifle, $24. Like new. Call VI 3-2906 after 6 p.m. tt 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 GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive denotations, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $3.50. free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553. VI 3-5778. tf Dodge in good running condition. $80 Call VI 3-4291. tf NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and printers. Prismographing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-6151 today. FRINTED 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. WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised, 100 pages, minimegraphed and bound. Extremely com- prehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. tt OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lencence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-1644 1860 TURQOISE & WHITE Champion Lakewood mobile home for sale. One daily from 8:30 p.m. on, at Dee's Trailer Court, 1417 East 15th. 11-13 53 CHEVY, radio, heater, good tires, good condition. Call KU 203. 11-10 5 BOOKCASE SHELVES, 6' with risers; bookcase, 5', 5'' with glass dorses; bookcase, 5'' with spidot; Rubbed cottonwood log with gliders; 12 gudge shotgun, single shot; aquarium and supplies: 3006 Springs See. See at 1016 Hilp Drive Driver 1 p.m. 11-16 ARTLEY FLUTE, excellent condition - less than a year old, call VI 3-1718 GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New & used guns, and ammo. Liberal trade-alls. Special this week: 30 Springfield. See at 1304 Tenn. V I 3-7001. 11-16 BUSINESS SERVICES MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." 20 - Now it tn 170 Millykken's "S.O.S." 32 - 100 Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Away. U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-in Pet Center—most complete店 in mid- phone. Phone VI 3-2921 — Modern 店 — open weeks 7 to 8: 6:20 om. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI >3644. tf 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. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- more, call Ola Smith 319-7359; Mass. Call VI 3-5263. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3- 1551, or 921 Miss. 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 ttl JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. eth, eth & Vermont. Phone V1 3350 TYPING TYPING — THEMES AND PAPERS Use carbon 10. Connecticut, VI 3-0397. 11-14 Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Gaill VI 3-265 any time. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 2i-48 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. Term papers theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts need accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do tyring name — call VI 3-9136 Mr. Löebach Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter interested in thesis, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. tf "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- typing rate. Call for excellent typing at standard rates, for Miss Louise POE, VI 3-1097. FOR RENT FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needtyping. Special rates to students. Execuusion Service, $317 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7718. Or est or SAT 2-2186. TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-1409. tf Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. sell, 1511 W. 21 St. St. CLI V 3-6440 ttl = 1511 W. 21 St. St. CLI V 3-6440 tl FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2218. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type the sheets, term papers reports, Letterhead, Reasonable Electric typewriter, Mrs. M. Eldowney, Ph. VI 3-8588. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher Rachel Hammond these & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Ms. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. I WILL DO TYPING IN MY HOME in these dissectional clients. 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HOTEL HOTELELDRIDGE WELCOME Welcome Football Fans WHERE ALL FRIENDS MEET - Free Parking - T.V. - Coffee Shop - Seven Private Party Rooms POST GAMÉ BUFFET - Mike Getto, Manager All You Can Eat — Roast Beef, Baked Ham, Fried Chicken, Ribs with many tasty side dishes After Game-8 p.m. 7TH & MASSACHUSETTS — PHONE VI 3-0281 Page 16 University Daily Kansan Fridav. November 10, 1961 AUFS Visitor Mid-East Expert A varied selection of topics will feature the 8-day stay of E. A. Bayne, American Universities Field Staff representative, here next week. Mr. Bayne will lecture on Iran Italy, Israel, Nationalist China and Somalia in university classes and forums. A member of AUFS since 1953. Mr. Bayne has served as economic adviser to Nationalist China from 1945-48 and economic adviser to Iran in the early fifties. He lives in Florence, Italy, and spends his time in the Middle East observing and writing about the situation. Mr. Bayne has worked with the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development for the Middle East and Africa. Mr. Bayne describes the Iranian people as split between devotion to the Shah and a desire to be politically independent. This conflict is the critical problem in Iran. The society expects a strong leader and a liberal democracy at the same time. "The Shah must be at the same time a progressive social reform leader and a medieval monarch," Mr. Bayne said. Mr. Bayne will talk about Iran at the Current Events Forum Nov. 17 with Burton Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, on "Prospects for Iran." Tuesday, he will speak at the Faculty Forum on "American Policy in Iran," and Wednesday evening he will speak to the History Club on "Chiang Kaishek: Personal Reminiscences." Lutheran Banquet Sunday The Lutheran Student Association will hold its annual International Banquet at 6:30 p.m. Sunday at the Trinity Lutheran Church, 13th and Massachusetts. Foreign students will be guests at the banquet. Oswald Backus, professor of history will speak on "Clues to Understanding American Society." KU Won't Participate In 'Strike for Peace' KU apparently will not take part in the "strike for peace" called for today and tomorrow by the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy at Brandeis University. The committee had asked students at all United States colleges and universities to hold a public meeting, vigil, or march to protest the testing of nuclear weapons. Two KU students usually associated with liberal movements said they had heard of no plans for KU's participation in the "strike for peace." "I think it would be a real good idea," one student said, "but I'm afraid it's a little too radical for most KU students to accept." The Brandeis University committee sponsored a "strike for peace" Nov. 1, urging faculty members and students to protest nuclear testing by refraining from attending classes. Students at Brandeis, Harvard, and several other colleges participated. Show Case Features Unusual Production The University Theatre's Experimental Show Case at 4 p.m. today will feature excerpts from two plays by George Bernard Shaw and a mobile audience. The ground level, stairs and balcony of the University Theatre foyer will be used for the experimental presentation of scenes from "Devil's Disciple" and "Caesar and Cleopatra." Portraits of Distinction A HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Bob Blank Roberto's Roberto's North of Union 1241 Oread ● Pizza ● Spaghetti ● All Beverages Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers [Illustration of a musician playing the trumpet]. RALPH MARTERIE HOMECOMING DANCE november 11, 1961 9:00 - 1:00 $2.50 per couple semi-formal 50tl Sta mo Sports Daily Hansan Features 59th Year, No. 41 SECTION B Friday, November 10, 1961 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Kansas Faces Wildcats Here Kansas will be seeking its sixth consecutive win over Kansas State when the two ancient foes collide in Memorial Stadium tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. in their 59th football meeting. A record series crowd of 34,000 is expected to see if the rebuilding Wildcats of Coach Doug Weaver can post their first win since 1955 when the Purple and White stopped the Jayhawkers, 46-0, for their widest margin of the series. Kansas State, although still mired at the bottom of the Big Eight standings, has shown a somewhat revitalized team capable of surprising things. LAST SEASON THE HAWKERS ROLLED to an impressive 41-0 stomping of the Wildcats but the situation this season does not point to such a wide margin, if any. In winning their first two contests, over Indiana, 14-8, and Air KANSAS 71 KANSAS 11 KANSAS TRI-CAPTAINS—KU's three senior tri-captains pause before tomorrow's Homecoming game with intra-state rival, Kansas State. From left to right they are, Curtis McClinton, Wichita, Stan Kirshman, Jefferson City, Mo., and John Hadl, Lawrence. Force, 14-12. the K-Staters surprised everybody. Since then, however, it has all been downhill. THE CLOSEST THE 'CATS HAVE COME to winning during their present five game losing streak was a 13-0 loss to Colorado. In this game the 'Cats showed a capable defense, but, as has been the problem all season, no potency on offense. The Wildcats, who are last in every offensive department in the conference, lost to Oklahoma. 17-6 last Saturday. After an unexplainably poor start, the Jays have come on to sweep past four straight opponents with no trouble. For the Javhawkers, the story has been just the reverse. LEADING THE LEAGUE IN TOTAL FIRST downs, total rushing, and total offense, the Jayhawkers will be trying to improve their 38-17-3 all-time mark against Kansas State. After hitting the bottom in the 6-6 tie with Wyoming, the Hawkers bounced back with authority but Mitchell seems to feel the peak may have been reached and the only way to go is down. Added incentive for the Jayhawkers is that they must win the remainder of their games to stay in contention for the league title since Colorado, 20-19 master of KU, holds the upper hand with only two conference games to play. Although Kansas State's record isn't impressive, Mitchell is apparently especially wary of a defeat at this point. But, Mitchell said this week his squad has begun to go downhill after its fine showings against Iowa State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, and Nebraska. Frosh-Varsity Tilt Starts Weekend The sports activities for the Homecoming weekend begin with the traditional freshman-varsity basketball game in Allen Field House tonight at 7 p.m. Tomorrow on the sports schedule are the Big Eight Conference cross country championship at 10:30 a.m. at Lawrence Country Club and the KU-Kansas State football game at 1:30 p.m. in Memorial Stadium. Along the JAY HAWKER trail By Bill Sheldon Three Kansas Jayhawker gridders who are on the list compiled by the American Football Coaches Association for All America mention will lead the twice beaten, once tied Crimson and Blue in their Homecoming effort against rebuilding Kansas State tomorrow afternoon. The trio, quarterback John Hadl, halfback Curtis McClinton and guard Elvin Basham, have all played vital roles as the Jayhawkers continue their bid for the Big Eight title. This 194-bound guard easily deserves to be mentioned among the top 10 in the nation at that spot. First, a look at the least publicized of the three-Basham. HEAD COACH Jack Mitchell has maintained all season that the KU line has consistently out-played and physically beaten the opposing front (Continued on page 11) Cross Country Title Run Here By Steve Clark The Kansas Jayhawkers will be seeking revenge as they host the Big Eight Conference cross country meet tomorrow morning at the Lawrence Country Club. Starting time is 10:30. For the first time during Bill Easton's 15 year Kansas coaching career the Jayhawkers will not be defending champions. LAST YEAR AT STILLWATER, OKLA., Jayhawker Bill Mills capped the individual championship but KU lost the team title to a stronger and better balanced Oklahoma State crew. This year both teams go into the meet with undefeated records. What's more, both teams enter the competition with individual performers, KU's Bill Dotson and OSU's Danny Metcalf, who are unbeaten. Oklahoma, Missouri, and Nebraska are contenders to fight it out for the middle spots while Kansas State and Iowa State should battle to keep out of the cellar. A darkhorse candidate for the team title is Colorado. The Buffaloes are primarily a sophomore squad but nevertheless, they remain undefeated going into the title race. Two weeks ago Coach Frank Potts' crew won the Colorado AAU championships. NEBRASKA HAS AN OUT- standing individual in Ray Stevens who rounds out the conference's unbeaten runners. In a NU-KSU-Colorado triangular, Stevens copped the individual title while Colorado finished 2-34-6-8-9-10 to win. Stevens' best time is 15.07. In comparative times Kansas has (Continued on page 2) Grid Frosh Play Tonight Coach Tom Triplett's freshman football team goes into today's season finale with Missouri at Columbia riding high after their successful season's opener. Oct. 26 when they downed Kansas State, 21-6. Coach Triplett said the team did "pretty well" in the K-S game. "WE WOULD HAVE LIKED to have played more men," Triplett said, "but several just were not ready because of injuries." Most of the injured, however, have been taken off the disabled list and will be ready for the clash with the Little Tigers. In their first outing of the season, the Tigers were beaten, 20-12, by Iowa State. Last year, KU downed MU, 34-7. Triplett said the same starting lineup used in the opening game will probably open for Kansas today. That would be as follows: MIKE SHINN, TOPEKA, and Larry Ledford, Wichita, ends; Brian (Continued on page 14) KU Varsity Basketball Has Only Four Lettermen Back Guard Tandem Frosh Prospects To Lead Hawks Ready For Game This year the Kansas basketball varsity, long one of the most feared teams not only in the Big Eight and the area but in the nation, returns only four lettermen on a squad which lacks an outstanding big man for the first time since before the days of Clyde Lovellette in the early 1950s. Of the four "K" winners, only backcourt handy-men Jerry Gardner and Nolen Ellison possess sufficient experience to be qualified as players of Big Eight caliber. The other two lettermen, juniors John Matt and Jim Dumas, are scheduled to start tonight in the preview game against the freshmen. AFTER THEIR PERFORMANCES last season there is little doubt that Gardner, a 6-0 senior, and Ellison, a 6-0 junior, will be able to handle the job against all comers in the ball-handling, play-making departments. This tandem must be relied upon to provide the leadership and a scoring nucleus until the others acquire the under fire experience. Matt, who saw only limited action throughout last season is being called upon by head Coach Dick Harp to handle the pivot duties. The 6-7, 205 pounder from Minneapolis must fill the shoes of such great Jayhawker centers as Bill Bridges, Wayne Hightower, Wilt Chamberlain, B. H. Born, and Lovellette. (Continued on page 2) KANSAS 25 Nolen Ellison Comparing previous freshman crews with this year's prospects, Coach Owens said, "We think they will measure up to some of the better teams of the past." Owens said many of the yearlings have the potential and skill to become varsity standouts. Twenty-three freshman basketball prospects are presently working out under the direction of Coach Ted Owens in preparation for tonight's game with the varsity. THE TALLEST OF THE candidates are Jim Gough, Chanute, standing 6- $ 1 \frac{2}{3} $ , and George Unseld, Louisville, Ky., at 6-7. Seven other prospects are 6-5. Owens feels the squad has balance. "The backcourt is just as strong as the front court." Owens said. "The boys are looking forward to the game with the varsity." He said the tilt would break the monotony of practices since the first scheduled intercollegiate game is in February. OWENS IS IN HIS SECOND year as freshman mentor. Last year the KU quintet post a season's mark of 1-3. In the frush-varsity game, the freshman squad was defeated. The frosh will play intra-squad games at 6 p.m. this year before each home varsity game. The freshman candidates are CENTERS -Mike Shinn\**, To- (Continued on page 15) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday. November 10. 1961 League Cross Country- (Continued from page 1) the three fastest clockings in the conference. The Jayhawk captain, Bill Dotson, has a 14:34.4. His running mate Charlie Hayward, who has placed second to him in every meet this year, has recorded a 14:37 low. Senator Dan Ralston is the conference's third runner under 15 minutes with a 14:55. Oklahoma State's Metcalf is fourth with 15:09.9 while Nebraska's Stevens and Oklahoma's Lee Smith have each posted a 15:07. Smith against Kansas placed fourth. Here's a breakdown of the teams: 10 OKLAHOMA STATE: The Cowboys are an experienced crew sparked by a newcomer. Senior captain Harold Smith and fellow seniors Ray Graham, John Haraughty and Bill Stone give Coach Ralph Higgens the necessary experience to field a strong team. Newcomer Metcalf is the team's individual standout while sophomores Eddie Winn and Raymond Mitchell round out the lineup. OUT TO REGAIN TITLE—The KU varsity cross country, hoping to regain the Big Eight title it has held for 13 of the past 14 years is, in the back row left to right, Charlie Hayward, Bill Thornton, Coach Bill Easton, Tonni Coane, Mike Fulghum. In the front row, Manager Jim Clark, Dan Ralston, Captain Bill Dotson, Paul Acevedo, George Cabrera, Assistant Coach Bob Lawson. The Cowboys have won two big meets this year. In their opener they defeated Texas, Emporia, Fort Hays State, and Wichita on a windy day that held Metcalf's winning time to 15:17.2. Oklahoma State defeated Oklahoma and Air Force in their next outing. The Cowboys downed OU 21-36 and the Air Force 19-38. The Air Force had won four of their first five dual meets. They returned the same team which last year compiled an 8-1 dual record, defeated OSU and finished seventh in the nationals. In that meet Metcalf won in 15:009. Harauthy finished third in 15:33, Smith fourth with 15:39, and Graham fifth in 15:42. OKLAHOMA: Bill Carroll's Sooners have a 1-3 record going into the Big Eight meet. The Sooners' only win has come at the expense of the Arkansas Razorbacks, the same team that Kansas grand slammed. Against the Jayhawkers the Sooners were outdistanced 17-43. The Sooners have lost to Oklahoma State, Air Force, and the Jayhawkers. Oklahoma's outstanding individual is Lee Smith. Smith defeated all of the Oklahoma State runners with the exception of Metcalf. He ran 25 seconds behind the OSU ace but finished 7 seconds ahead of third place Haraughty. Running against the Jayhawkers Smith finished fourth behind Kansas Dotson, Hayward, and Ralston in 15:30 Walt Mizell was the only other Sooner to dent the first seven in the KU-OU dual, He finished seventh, 12 seconds behind George Cabrera and seven seconds ahead of Tonni Coane. Rounding out the Sooner squad are Paul Ebert who finished ninth against the Jayhawkers, Neville Soll, Buddy Stewart, and Tim Leonard, who finished 11-12-13. NEBRASKA: The Cornhuskers possess one man with outstanding ability, and two with fair ability. Stevens, North Platte, Neb., junior, is the one with outstanding ability. He is unbeaten thus far. Those of fair ability include John Portee and Jim Lewis. Portee finished fifth against Colorado and Kansas State in 15:35. Jim Lewis was seventh in 15:39. In that meet Stevens won with a 15:09 clocking. The remainder of the squad, Stuart Tucker, Clarence Scott, and Paul Nielsen, finished 11-12-13. Making up the middle of the Colorado lineup are three more sophomores with approximately seven seconds separating them. Mike McCoy posted a 15:34 against NU-KSU, Dick Faust ran 15:36 and Bruce Degan clocked a 15:41. COLORADO: The Buffaloes are another undefeated squad. They won the KSU-Nebraska triangular and a dual with the Cornhuskers. They also took top honors at the Rocky Mountain AAU meet at the Air Force Academy. The Buffs are headed by a sophomore front-line cast led by Robert Griffith. Against Nebraska and Kansas State the sohr ran close to Cornhusker ace Stevens, but was not able to beat him, falling six seconds short. He, however, outdistanced third place teammate Steve McBrian by 16 seconds. His second place time was 15:15. Rounding out the Buffalo crew are Tom Starr and Bill Sproat who ran 15.55 and 15.58 in the triangular. KANSAS STATE: Like the Wildcat gridders, the Wildcat harriers are having difficulties. Coach Ward Haylett's crew dropped their first two meets before defeating Drake. The Wildcats lost to Colorado and Nebraska in a triangular and duals to Missouri and Wichita. The Wildcats have four lettermen, two sophomores and a junior, who missed lettering last season. The lettermen are Pat McNeal, Wazata, Minn., junior, Robert Jadlow, Kansas City, Mo., senior, Mahoney, Council Grove junior, and Gene Mater, Olmitz junior. Other squad members are Dei Barbour, Greensburg junior, Jim Kientz, Wamego sophomore, and Al Hoffman, Salina sophomore. "We lack balance," Coach Haylett says. "Our too two men can compete on an even basis with most teams anywhere, but there is too much spread between them and our next best talent." MISSOURI: Kansas is the only team to defeat the Tigers thus far. Coach Tom Botts' crew has won over Iowa State, Kansas State and Nebraska. Jerry McFadden is the lone retuming letterman and he and Harold Teppar are leading the Tigers this season. Teppar's 15:36.6 is tops for the Titers. Running in the KU-Southern Illinois triangular the Tigers were not able to place a runner. IOWA STATE: The Cyclones have won over Minnesota and have been beaten by Nebraska and Missouri in a triangular and by Missouri in a dual. The top time individually was a 15:37 by Carl Brown. On Oct. 14 this ranked him 11th in the conference. The Cyclones do not look to be a contender. Rounding out their squad are Rodger Rice, Bill Lynn, Ed Eightmeyer, Roger Winegar, and Charles Darby. KANSAS: The only Jayhawker question mark concerns the performance of the harriers' middle men. Bill Thornton, Tonni Coane and George Cabrera have run close all year. With Dotson and Hayward almost assured of a 1-2 finish and Ralston, a probable finish in the first five, by how much the Jayhawkers win depends on the middle three. In the Oklahoma tuneup meet Thornton finished fifth, Cabrera sixth and Coane eighth. Kansas' seventh man, Mike Fulghum, has improved throughout the year. Fulghum will not, however, be in top form tomorrow because of illness. The Jayhawkers carry a perfect slate into the conference meet. They hold victories over Southern Illinois, the NAIA champion, Missouri, Chicago Track Club, Arkansas and Oklahoma. AN IMPRESSIVE LIST of Al. Americas such as this makes the task of the former all-stater seem awesome. HAPPY HOMECOMING (Continued from page 1) Dumas, standing only 6-1, will open at forward. Despite his lack of height, the Topeka hustler is strong and a fine jumper. At the other front line spot will be a transfer from Arkansas City Junior College. 6-5 Love Sparks. . . . here's to a wonderful weekend for all students and alums. Welcome Alumni BEAT K-STATE 'CATS Guard Duo Must Offset Lack Of Experience in Basketball Sparks, who was named to the junior college All America team last season, brings fine outside shooting and adequate rebounding to the Kansas line-up. the following is the 1961-62 varsity basketball schedule: 1ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence 27. 28, 29. 30 Big B Tourn... Kan. City DECEMBER: Fri. 4 Jackson Lawrence Mon. 4 St. Louis Lawrence Fri. 8 USC Los Angeles Sat. 9 UCLA Los Angeles Mon. 11 Arizona State Tempels Fri. 15 St. John Lawrence (S-K state vs. Marquette) Sat. 16 Marquette Manhattan (S-K state vs. St. John) JANUARY: Sat. 6 *Nebraska* Lawrence Wed. 7 *Kansas State* Manhattan Sat. 13 *Missouri* Columbia FEBRUARY: (2:30 p.m.) Mon. 5 *Missouri* Lawrence Wed. 7 *Kansas State* Lawrence Sat. 10 * Iowa State* Lawrence Mon. 12 *Okla State* Stillwater Sat. 17 *Colorado* Lawrence Wid. 19 *Oklahoma* Lawrence Wed. 24 *Nebraska* Lincoln Sat. 24 *Okla State* Lawrence Wed. 28 *Oklahoma* Norman IN RESERVE AT THE FORWARD spots Harp must rely upon sophomores Harry Gibson, 6-3, Lee Linhart, 6-6, senior Pete Woodward, 2-4 and after they have completed their duties on the gridiron, 6-5, 210-pound senior Lee Flachsbarth and 6-4, 205-pound rookie Jay Roberts. Mon. 5 *Iowa State* Ames Octauai *Columbus* Boulder Big Eight, game. Hawaii *Utica* Buddy Vance, 6-7, and Dave Baker, 6-8, are behind Matt. At center, the KU depth again depends upon first year men. ALONG THE BACKLINE, Carl Deane, 5-10 junior, has come up to push the starters with sophomores Dave Stinson, 6-2, Darrrell Gwinner, Jim Dumas 6-3, John Schmidt, 5-11, and junior John Williams, 6-1, providing manpower. Additional help may come second semester when the return of starting forward from last year, 6-2 Al Correll, is expected by Coach Harp. Also, top reserve guard Grover Marshall, 6-0, may return to school for second semester. K ZOOM!! in for Close-Ups WITH THE LATEST IN MOVIE CAMERA EQUIPMENT CINEMA FILM CORPORATION 8mm KODAK Zoom8 Automatic f/1.9 Now Available PHOTON At 21. INC. Als perso to be an a If a sur many meet, disco 1107 Mass. "Tl they much runn appe to se woul to be isn't Wh ment an i you write with simp way 1, 1 famili- ball, parti- that was the not, have wro I race Sout Miss cour Law main men Page 3 KU Around the BIG 8 By Steve Clark If I, as a reporter, were to take a survey of KU students to see how many had seen a cross country meet, the results would probably be discouraging. Also, if I were to ask what the person thought a cross country meet to be like, I would probably receive an answer like this: "There isn't much to them and they are really not exciting or too much fun. I suppose you see the runners start out and then they disappear for a while and then you get to see them cross the finish line. I wouldn't expect very many people to be there. After all, cross-country isn't a major sport." While this would be a typical comment it is, nevertheless, wrong and an injustice to the sport. I suppose you are asking yourself why this writer thinks he knows so much, with his typical comments. It is simple, because he once felt that way. 1. like many KU male students, was familiar with the major sports—football, basketball and track—having participated in all three. I realized that cross country distance running was a gruelling sport and I respected the participants for competing. I did not, however, believe the sport to have any appeal for spectators. I was wrong. I viewed my first cross country race this fall, a triangular between Southern Illinois, NAIA champion, Missouri. Big Eight rival, and of course Kansas. I arrived at the Lawrence Country Club at 10:15 mainly because it was an assignment for the UDK. WHEN I ARRIVED I saw the competitors in their sweat togs limbering up for the race. The coaches were hurriedly preparing their lineups for the event. The timers and judges were consulting with each other so that there would be no mixups or discrepancies once the meet got underway. Much to my surprise there was a sound truck. At the microphone was the "voice of KU" Doctor Edward Elbel, the public address announcer at KU football and basketball games. "I sure didn't expect him to be announcing at a cross country." I thought to myself. The crowd surprised me too. I expected to be the only person other than a coach, trainer, or participants to be there. Once more I was in for a surprise. Gathered there were 100 KU students and others. There were some girls there too which raised my estimation of the race as a spectator sport. AMONG THE KU STUDENTS were 35-40 members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon social fraternity. The Sig Alphas were out strong to support "brothers" Bill Dotson, Charlie Hayward and Tonni Coane who were running in 1-2-3 position for the Jayhawkers that day. The Sig Alphas were to provide a lot of support for Coach Bill Easton's crew. Wes Santee, former Kansas great cross-country runner, started the race. Much to my surprise I was able to see the entire course with the exception of three-eighths of a mile behind a short incline. AS THE RUNNERS reached the far turn I noticed that the Sig Alphs and co-eds had started running toward the hill. In order not to miss any of the race I did too. I reached the hill a minute before the runners did. I watched as the runners doggedly climbed the incline. Swat and signs of fatigue covered their faces. The Sig Alphs cheered and encouraged the KU runners to "move out." After this, a new sense of determination came over the distance men. I moved about 50 vards so that I would see the runners round the hill. It was a close race. Dotson, Hayward, Ralston and Coane were fighting it out with Joe Thomas, NAIA individual champion, and several other SIU runners. The runners rounded the far turn again (as the course is circled twice for the total three miles) and headed toward the hill. The front runners were still grouped together. As they fought up the incline the spectators shouted words of encouragement, "Come on Bill, Get 'em Charlie, Go Tonni." The runners responded to the pleas with a new spirit of determination. THE RUNNERS WENT over the hill. I headed back toward the finish line. It was going to be close, I couldn't miss the finish. I arrived at the line and waited anxiously for the runners to appear. "It's going to be close," said a KU student standing next to me. Just then, rounding the hill was the KU captain. Dotson, seconds lapsed and then appeared Hayward, about 10 yards behind the leader. The crowd started cheering and clapping. Dotson kicked into "high gear" for his finish. Both KU runners who were out in front of the two SIU runners, gunned down the final stretch. The crowd was aghast they couldn't believe it. WHAT HAD HAPPENED behind that hill? The spectator doesn't know for sure, because he missed that part. But, nevertheless, it made the finish twice as exciting. The race was over and KU won. Coaches Easton and Lawson (Bob) were patting their boys on the back and congratulating them. The spectators headed back to their cars. Many were discussing various phases of the race, others were asking, "When do we run next?" I glanced at my watch, from the time I had arrived, to the race's completion only 30 minutes had elapsed. "Sure doesn't take much time, I thought to myself. I can get back to the house and do some studying." ON MY WAY HOME. I couldn't help but think how wrong I had been about the sport. "More KU students should know about this," I thought to myself, "I'm going to write a column telling them about it." Tomorrow the Kansas Jayhawkers have another cross country race. This meet is going to be different from others, however. There is going to be a championship at stake, the Big Eight. Last year the Hawkers lost the title for the first time in 13 years. This year, they are determined to win it back. Revenge is in the minds of the KU runners. I KNOW, THAT THIS MEET is going to be the best of the year. The outstanding runners in the Big Eight are competing for a top prize, the conference individual and team championship. The race starts at 10:30 and is held at the Lawrence Country Club. Dotson Among Top In Nation "He is the ideal boy to coach," said cross-country Coach Bill Easton of his captain and star performer Bill Dotson, Jamestown senior. "Bill listens to instruction very well. He has the tendency to work very hard. "BILL HAS A GREAT DESIRE to perform and a terrific will to win against the best of opposition. He wants to be a great performer. He sets very high goals for himself and constantly strives to reach them. "It is because he sets and strives toward such high goals that he is such a great competitor," continued Easton. Dotson is in his second year of varsity cross country competition. Last year, after laying out his sophomore season, he finished fifth in the Big Eight. THIS YEAR EXPECTATIONS are high for the Jamestown lad. Area coaches and writers believe he can win both the Big Eight and the NCAA individual championships. If Dotson should become NCAA champion he will become the fourth Jayhawker during Easton's reign to accomplish this. He will join former Hawkers Herb Semper, who won the title twice, Wes Santee and Al Frame as NCAA cross country champions. Easton admits that the senior stalwart certainly ranks with these performers in ability and accomplishments, whether he wins the NCAA or not. BESIDES cross country. Dotson runs the half-mile and mile in varsity indoor and outdoor track. He is the Big Eight indoor and outdoor mile champion. Last year at the NCAA meet in Philadelphia Dotson squared off against the nation's top collegiate miler Daryl Burleson from Oregon and dueled the distance ace all the way before being defeated in a close finish. Dotson ran his fastest time in that meet, 4:02.9. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION PARENTS & GRADS Bowling and Billiards for your recreation this weekend enjoy at the modern and spacious Jay Bowl Always open for your convenience Friday. November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Daily ___ 8 A.M.-11:30 P.M. Sun. 1 P.M. -11:30 P.M. Paperwork WASHINGTON — (UPI) — In the last decade, the Federal government has disposed of 30 million cubic feet of records, but the Tax Foundation says officials recently told a congressional subcommittee new records and papers are being created almost as fast as they are done away with. It's Texas HOUSTON, Tex. — (UPI) — Neiman-Marcus, the Texas-style department store (his and hers airplanes, gift-wrapped steers on the hoof) recently came up with a new gimmick — box lunches for shoppers "sent right to your fitting room." Welcome Back Alums! We're Still Serving the Best Burgers in Town and Your Favorite Beverages With the Same Friendly Service. After the Jayhawkers make hash out of those Wildcats, come down to The Old Mission Inn 1904 Mass. SINCE 1867 CROSBY SQUARE for 94 years the makers of fine shoes for men $11.99 $19.99 for 94 years the makers of fine shoes for men $11.99 $19.99 CROSBY SQUARE Redman's Shoes 815 Mass. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 WRECK THE WILDCATS PLAZA CLUB BEAUTY SALON 2222 Iowa VI 2-2248 --- McGREW INVESTMENT CO. 806 Mass. VI 3-2055 --- FAST-ONE-HOUR DRY CLEANING 842 Mass. 1342 Ohio --- AUDIO HOUSE 909 N. Y. VI 3-4916 --- AUTO WRECKING & JUNK CO. 712 E. 9th VI 3-0956 THE CAT BELL MUSIC CO. 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 --- BEATRICE FOOD CO. Meadowgold Products VI 2-3425 --- TONY'S D-X SERVICE "See me after the game" 23rd & Iowa VI 2-0444 --- WEAVER'S DEPT. STORE 901 Mass. VI3-6360 --- Drink Coca-Cola Drink Coca-Cola LAWRENCE BOTLG. CO. 646 Conn. V13-7517 WELCOME HOME ALUMNI Friday. November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan 1 CURTAIL THOSE 'CATS HILLCREST STANDARD SERVICE 914 Iowa VI 3-9667 --- CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE George Corn, Owner 1144 Ind. VI 3-3034 --- FRIEND LUMBER COMPANY 1029 N.H. VI 3-0360 --- MEYER-JAYHAWK DAIRY 710 W. 6th VI 3-1911 --- MONTGOMERY WARD & COMPANY 825 Mass. VI 3-4596 KU BRIEN & BALES PLBG., WIRING & HTG. CO. 304 W. 6th VI 3-2575 --- THE ROUND CORNER DRUG COMPANY 801 Mass. VI 3-0200 --- MOTOR IN ONE STOP STATION 827 Vermont VI 3-4955 --- OWENS FLOWER SHOP 15th & N.Y. VI 3-6111 --- STUDIO DE PORTRA "Call us for your party photography" 912 Mass. VI 2-2300 HAPPY HOMECOMING JAYHAWKS Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 Kansas' Graduating Seniors Have Graduate School in Mind for Future KU seniors are responding to the growing demand for trained personnel in all fields by deciding in steadily increasing numbers to continue their education beyond the four-year level, a recent survey of senior post-graduate plans reveals. The survey, conducted at the beginning of this school year by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, found that 75.1 per cent of the 433 seniors enrolled in the College are preparing to continue their education after graduation. A SIMILAR SURVEY TAKEN of last year's senior class revealed that 70.3 per cent of the class planned to continue its studies after graduation. The percentages for two and three years ago, respectively, were 66.4 and 58.4. The most popular form of education beyond the four-year level for this year's class is graduate school, with 35.8 per cent of the class planning to enter this type of postgraduate schooling. Mathematics is the most popular graduate subject for this year's class, with 26 seniors planning to enroll in this field. Following mathematics in popularity is English, with 21 students; chemistry and history, each with 17 students; and political science, with 12. Following the graduate school in importance for KU seniors are four professional schools, which together will attract 29.4 per cent of this year's graduating class. MEDICINE IS THE MOST popular professional school this year with 15.3 per cent of the class planning to enter. Next in importance is law, with 11.2 per cent; medical technology, with 1.3 per cent; and dentistry, with .6 per cent. MR CATALINA MAN RELAXED ...the friendly comfort of a sweater is great companionship for your favorite pastime...or any time. Created by our celebrated designer, John Norman, who himself makes a study of the art in 'moments of relaxation! BROOKLYN-QUEEN CITY RELAX in "HOLIDAY V" bright and bold with contrast trim. In a blend of Shetland Wool, Mohair and Nylon. Terrific colors. $12.95. Catalina Los Angeles, California Catalina Campus Headquarters: What factors are behind this ever-increasing number of KU students' planning post-graduate schooling? George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, listed five. In contrast to the precedent set by the last three graduating classes, none of this year's seniors plan to enter theology. Carl's GOOD CLOTHES - "This is a reflection of the changing times in that advanced study is necessary today if one is to make a contribution to the field of liberal arts and sciences." - The KU honors program attracts students who are more disposed to graduate study than the average student. - Elegant hand-set Beveled crystal jewelry boxes - The various KU professional schools, such as education, business, engineering and architecture and journalism, are "to a greater extent than the College, terminal in nature." - Financial support for KU seniors desiring to continue their education is increasing every year. - KU students are becoming increasingly aware of the possibilities for study abroad through such KU foreign exchange programs as the Costa Rica junior year program, in which selected KU juniors and faculty members trade places with their counterparts in the University of Costa Rica. Each person is born to one pos- Let thy speech be better than session which outvalues all his oth- silence, or be silent.—Dionysius The ers—his last breath.—Mark Twain Elder Referring to this last factor, Dean Waggoner noted that last year's senior class received grants for postgraduate study totaling $229,923. - Smart leather-backed ash trays with colorful designs on ceramic Elring's Gifts - Florence figurines - Clever zoo-line wooden animals - Museum reproductions - Capri candles in all colors For initiations, pinnings, birthday gifts VI 3-5160 924 Mass. The Perfect Pick-Up delicious, refreshing ©X ILK Serving KU and the Lawrence Area with the BEST TASTING MILK for Over 41 Years Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co. ALL STAR DAIRY 202 West 6th VI 3-5511 L.S.M.F.P LAWRENCE Sanitary ALL STAR VITAMIN D HOMOGENIZED LAWRENCE Sanitary ALL STAR Grade A VITAMIN D PASTEURIZED HOMOGENIZED Milk FLAVON CONTROLLED BY كهرباء PROCESS 100 U S P BUNS OF VITAMIN D ACTIVATED LARGES (NO. ADDED PLR QUART) HOPPYS FAVORITE MILK LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK AND ICE CREAM ON 100 U S P BUNS OF VITAMIN D ACTIVATED LARGES (NO. ADDED PLR QUART) man The Friday. November 10. 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Name of Regionalist Room Causes Frequent Questions Gueses as to why the "Regionalist Room" in the Kansas Student Union is so called range from "named for the regents"; "decorated in midwest style (whatever that is);" to "some kind of a period, like Early American." Kansas Union Director Frank R Burge says more questions are asked about the Regionalist Room than any of the other rooms at the Union. THE WORKS OF THREE well-known artists not only decorate the room but give it its name, he explained. The artists are all of this region: Thomas Hart Benton, a Missouri; John Steuart Curry, a Kansas; and Grant Wood of Iowa. The works are signed lithographs: four by Benton and three each by Curry and Wood. The lithographs by these Regional artists were given to the University by one of its benefactors. "You'll probably be surprised to learn," said Mr. Burge, "that in planning the decor for the new rooms, the Union Operating Committee discovered the students' favorite was the Old English Room. Students love it. The definition of lithography given in Webster's ("the art or process of putting writing or design on stone with a greasy material and of producing printed impressions therefrom") does not do justice to the artistry of this medium, was the comment of one visitor. "THE COMMITTEE wanted to create a new room that would be similar to the popular Old English Room and yet be contemporary. We wanted the enduring solid quality of the traditional along with something equally beautiful but representative of this time and area." . Medusa was once heard to rave: "A new hair-do is just what I crave, With my Swingline I'll tack All these snakes front to back, And invent the first permanent wave!" Sustainable Future SWINGLINE STAPLER TABLING BOOKS 98¢ (including 1000 staples) no bigger than a pack of gum! Unconditionally Guaranteed Made in America! - Tot 50 refills always available! - Buy it at your stationery, variety or bookstore dealer! The traditional look was achieved by solid cherrywood paneling. The simple lines of the pewter and etched glass many-branched chandelier and wall brackets are reminiscent of the gaslight era. A circle of bronze star-shaped lights, recessed in the ceiling, sheds soft light over the room, which has a seating capacity of about twenty-five. Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters. Swingline INC. The contemporary touch is given by lithographs framed in the same cherrywood as the walls, and the limestone fireplace with a raised bench where students can sit around the hearth. WORLD'S LARGEST MANUFACTURER STAMPERS FOR HOME AND OFFICE Long Island City 1, New York Over the fireplace hangs an original Thomas Hart Benton bronze, "Indian and Explorer." Amazingly, this casting was retrieved from a scrap pile, where it had been discarded. Beenton used castings as models in order to get a third-dimensional quality into his work. The bronze, mounted on cherry-wood, is the focal point of the room. By any name, the Regionalist Room would be one of the showplaces of the Student Union. The filmy gold and beige glass curtains under embossed brocade drawdraperies in an egg-shell color with a federal eagle design (complete with e pluribus unum) are a perfect foil for the charcoal-colored rug and upholstered wood armchairs. Long wood tables of exquisite design and a low buffet complete the room's furnishings. Nothing is so much to be feared as fear—Henry David Thoreau MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." 1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. 1015 Lawrence VI 3-5920 VI 3-5947 Now offers: - COMPLETE SECRETARIAL SERVICE (Minimum of 4 hr. in your office; no minimum in ours.) - COMPLETE TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE. - EXPERT TYPING — fast, accurate. - THERMO-FAX COPIES — 25c maximum - ONLY EXPERIENCED QUALIFIED PERSONNEL EMPLOYMENT. When You Need Help – Remember SOS --- The "class" of '62 is in TOWN & COUNTRY SHOES MIDWAY $9.95 Black Leather $13.95 PAPOOSE $9.95 AAAA to B to 10 Black or Green Leather Royal College Shop MIDWAY $9.95 Black Leather $13.95 AAAA to B to 10 --- Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 KU KU --- GO YOU Welcome Be sure to drop in before the Game for Lunch at the "Jayhawk Buffet" in the Ballroom. After the Game, come on over for an After-the-Game Snack or Dinner. Any Time is a Good Time for Deli KANSAS FOOD S BEAT ious Friday, November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 9 HAWKERS Alumni HOURS Jayhawk Buffet 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Prairie Room 10:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Hawk's Nest 8:30 a.m. to 11:15 p.m. Union Cafeteria 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. UNION ERVICE -STATE ious Foods at Your Kansas Union KU --- Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10.1961 Injuries, Grades Dim KU Swimming Hopes m.q fo THE BIG FOUR—Kansas swimming Coach Jay Markley and his top three swimmers, from left to right, Dick Reamon, Bill Murdock, and Eldon "The survival of the fittest" This old adage may seem trite, but it is how swimming coach Jay Markley describes his team at present. The KU swimming team has lost eight members due to a wide variety of reasons and thus the squad has been depleted to the bare minimum of both talent and manpower. COACH MARKLEY WOEFULLY EX- explained the situation concerning these lost swimmers saying, "We started out the year with the attitude we were the best team in the conference and that we were going to take the title. But, except for the first week, we have gone steadily downhill. Right now, we are as low as possible." The first of the swimmers to drop was Karl Pfuetze, the number two breaststroker in the conference. He left because he received a research grant from the University in physiology—being a pre-medicine student, he took the grant and had to drop swimming. One of the top Jayhawker swimmers of a year ago, Dick Reamon, had been suffering from chlorine poisoning and hadn't swum since August until coming out last week, only to be delayed by doctor's advice not to start because of a cold. RICH MITTELSTADT HAS SPRAINED an ankle and won't be out for another month. Steve Sanneman received a brain concussion in an automobile accident and won't be back out for a week, two or three of the expected prospects have not come to practice at all, another pair have dropped for scholastic reasons—all examples of why Coach Markley is feeling glum about the chances of what could have been one of the outstanding teams in Kansas swimming history. Another reason for the dejected look on Markley's face as he described the condition of his squad was that the team has not been responding to the practice program which is being used. Markley, who is known to work his swimmers very hard in an effort to condition them for competition, has stepped up his program somewhat this fall. MARKLEY SAYS SEVERAL OF THE SWIM- mers are having arm trouble because of the addition of wall pulleys in the pool which have been used for the first time. "Everybody has got heavy arms and are really hurting," said Markley. "An example of this is Eldon Ward (selected as an All America last season). Eldon started practice lifting 210 pounds of weights but is down to 172 pounds now." Ward, pause during a practice as they prepare for their initial meet Dec. 8-9 at the Southern Illinois AAU. AS A RESULT OF THE CONDITION OF THE team now, Markley has scheduled a slacking off period in an effort to bring his team to reasonable form before the initial meet—the Southern Illinois AAU Dec. 8-9. A new innovation on the Kansas schedule this season will be an almost total absence of dual meets. The lone dual is with defending league champion, Oklahoma, here Feb. 10. "When you have to point for a meet every weekend, you lose two or three days of practice per week slacking off in preparation. We figure to get in considerably more practice having only seven competitive meets." Markley added that his team is shooting only for the Big Eight meet in March. Although the Jayhawker team prospects are not as good as were hoped, there are still three of the top swimmers in the area left for a nucleus. WARD, REAMON, AND BILL MURDOCK all went to the NCAA finals last March. Although this three man representation did not score, the individual performances of each was notable. Ward advanced his ninth place finish of the previous year to gain the seventh spot in the 50-yard freestyle. On the basis of the performance, Ward was named to the All America team. Reamon, also a senior this season, set two new varsity records in the nationals. HE PLACED TWELFTH IN THE 200-YARD butterfly and, in the 100-yard butterfly, he copped sixteenth in the nation. Murdock, a junior, placed twelfth in the 200-yard breaststroke. His time was two-tenths of a second off his own varsity record. In the Big Eight meet last March, Kansas placed third behind Oklahoma and Iowa State, only three points behind the latter. Ward finished first in the 50-yard freestyle, second in the 200-yard butterfly and third in the 220-yard freestyle. Ward and Murdock also participated in the 100-yard freestyle and breaststroke respectively but did not place among the leaders in the nation. REAMON BETTERED THREE VARSITY records as he took second place in the 220-yard individual medley, the 100-yard butterfly and 200-yard butterfly. Murdock also coped a pair of seconds and set a conference mark. In the preliminaries of the 200-yard breaststroke he broke the league mark but the time was bettered in the finals as he finished second. Can't Con U.S. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Internal Revenue Service has rejected 38 applications for tax refunds on the ground that the applicants were in an unlikely position to earn any income. The applicants: 38 convicts. Vacation Pay NEW YORK — (UPI) — If you think you spent a lot of money on your vacation this year you won't feel so bad when you learn that General Electric Co. shelled out $70 million in vacation pay for its quarter million employees in 1961. Read and Use Kansan Classifieds YOUNG MAN On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) POVERTY CAN BE FUN It is no disgrace to be poor. It is an error, but it is no disgrace. So if your purse is empty, do not skulk and brood and hide your head in shame. Stand tall. Admit your poverty. Admit it freely and frankly and all kinds of good things will happen to you. Take, for instance, the case of Blossom Sigafoos. Blossom, an impecunious freshman at an Eastern girls' college, was smart as a whip and round as a dumpling, and scarcely a day went by when she didn't get invited to a party weekend at one of the nearby men's schools. But Blossom never accepted. She did not have the rail fare; she did not have the clothes. Weekend after weekend, while her classmates went frolicking, Blossom sat alone, saved from utter despair only by her pack of Marlboros, for even an exchequer as slim as Blossom can afford the joys of Marlboro—joys far beyond their paltry price: rich, mellow tobacco, lovingly cured and carefully packed, and an exclusive selectate filter. Croesus himself could not buy a better cigarette! However, Marlboro's most passionate admirers—among whose number I am paid to count myself—would not claim that Marlboro can entirely replace love and romance, and Blossom grew steadily moroser. "Accept these gifts from too!" "Accept these Gifts from tom." Then one day came a phone call from an intelligent sophomore named Tom O'Shanter at a nearby men's college, "Blossom," said Tom, "I want you to come down next week for the barley festival, and I won't take no for an answer." "No," said Blossom. "Foolish girl," said Tom gently. "I know why you refuse me. It is because you are poor, isn't it?" "Yes." said Blossom. "I will send you a railroad ticket," said Tom. "Also a hardboiled egg in case you get hungry on the train." "But I have nothing to wear." said Blossom. Tom replied. "I will send you one suit of cashmere, two gowns of lace, three slacks of velvet, four shoes of calf, five socks of nylon, and a partridge in a pear tree." "That is most kind," said Blossom, "but I fear I cannot dance and enjoy myself while back home my poor lame brother Tiny Tim lies abed." Send him to Mayo Brothers and put him on my tab, said Tom. "You are terribly decent," said Blossom, "but I cannot come to your party because all the other girls at the party will be from rich, distinguished families, and my father is but a humble woodcutter." "Send him to Mavo Brothers and put it on my tab." said Tr "I will buy him Yosemite." said Tom. "You have a great heart," said Blossom. "Hold the phone while I ask our wise and kindly old Dean of Women whether it is proper for me to accept all these gifts." She went forthwith and asked the Dean of Women, and the Dean of Women haird her wise and kindly old hand on Blossom's cheek and said, "Child, let not false pride rob you of happiness. Accept these gifts from Tom." "Oh, bless you, Wise and Kindly," breathed Blossom, dropping grateful tears into the Dean's reticule. "I must run and tell Tom." "Yes, run, child," said the Dean, a smile wrinkling her wise and kindly old eyes. "And ask him has he got an older brother." --- © 1931 Max Shulman The makers of filter-tip Marlboro, who bring you this column, are also the makers of non-filter king-size Philip Morris Commanders, who also bring you this column. Have a Commander. Welcome aboard! Page 11 Improvements Continue In Union's Jay Bowl A center of bustling activity itself, the Kansas Union houses one of KU's busiest recreational facilities. Three levels down in the Union is the Jay Bowl—headquarters for the University of Kansas' bowlers. The Jay Bowl, once a six-lane house in the Union bookstore basement, is a 12-lane facility today in the opposite corner of the Union. THE PREVIOUS ALLEY, opened in 1953, cost an estimated $80,000. The present alley, first used in 1950, cost an estimated $180,000. Manager Bascom Fearing has supervised the Jay Bowl's activities since 1953. He is also the varsity bowling coach. According to Fearing, each automatic pin-spotter cost $8,100. The average supplementary cost per lane exceeded $5,000. IN COMPARISON TO BOWLING alleys in other student unions, Fearing said that KU's is "just as modern." Also located within the Jay Bowl is a billiards area. Each of the six tables there cost an estimated $1,000. Presently there are 15 men's and women's intramural leagues with 85 teams included. Fearing conducts five bowling classes each weekday morning. The 100 men and women in these classes receive one credit hour per semester. tournament action. KU snared the Big Eight Face-to-Face meet title in 1960. On that crew were Terrell Hays, Shawnee junior, and Paul Hammar, Overland Park junior, present varsity bowlers. THE OVER-ALL ACTIVITIES of the Jay Bowl are supervised by Student Union Activities. "The SUA organizes leagues and all," Fearing said. Chairman of the SUA sports committee is Chuck Moffet, Kansas City, Mo. senior. Committee members include Rex Romerise, Salina junior, men's bowling; Jackie Wash, Bartvilleesch, Okla., junior, women's bowling; and John Marsh, Leawood sonomore, billiards. Each year Coach Fearing schedules home-and-home matches with several other universities. Those included in this competition are Ottawa, Kansas State, Wichita, Nebraska Baker, Oklahoma State, and Oklahoma. Men's high game—Terrell Hays 290. KU has sported a varsity bowling team ever since 1953. Fearing said during the first year it was quite difficult to get a team started. KU'S VARSITY TEAM has won the Big Eight Postal League twice in its three years of competition. In THE ALL-TIME HIGH GAMES and series bowled in the Jay Bowl are as follows: The Jayhawkers have grabbed top honors in the Kansas Conference meet both years of its existence. Men's high series—Ted Diehl, 712. Women's high game—Carolyn Eliot, 257. Friday, November 10. 1961 University Daily Kansan Women's high series—Rosemary Steffins, 571. Pittsburg State Maintains Top Spot KANSAS CITY — (UPI) — The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics yesterday listed Pittsburgh (Kan.) State, Baldwin Wallace (Ohio) and Southeastern Louisiana the top three football teams in the nation, in that order, for the second consecutive week. The NAIA said Central Oklahoma State, fifth last week, moved up to the Fourth position vacated by Northern Michigan College because of an Association decision. Northern Michigan inadvertently played an ineligible competitor during this season, the NAIA said, and has been ruled ineligible for the rest of the Association's 1961 football program. The noblest motive is the public good.—Virgil Reason is only a tool. — F. W. Nietzsche SHIRTS 12c Business Shirts, Reg. 22c WASH PANTS . . . 29c pr. WHEN INCLUDED IN THE DELUXE FAMILY BUNDLE, 5 LBS. ONLY 79c (Additional pounds only 14c each) the word for quality cleaning and laundry DELUXE Drive In and Save — Open 7 A.M. to 7 P.M. Except Sunday 23rd St. & Naismith Dr. VI 2-0200 DELUXE --- the word for quality cleaning and laundry DELUXE Jayhawker Trail— (Continued from page 1) walls. Although this has been a group effort for the most part, Easham's part has possibly been the most outstanding and important. Although small compared to modern standards for a lineeman playing major college football, this solid senior is always at the right place at the right time and seldom, if ever, is caught out of position or on the ground without being latched onto an opponent's ball carrier or tackler. Basham, known for his fast strike from the three point stance, delivers one of the most punishing blows of anyone in the area because he uses what weight he has to the best possible advantage. This coupled with good speed, makes Basham a prime candidate for any honors. NEXT, McCLINTON'S performance thus far must be described as disappointing, but with apparent good reason. Touted by some of the top experts in the land as one of the top running backs in college play this fall, McClinton has been hamstrung by every defense the Hawks have faced. All the teams point their play to stop McClinton, thinking the remainder of the Kansas attack, with the exception of Hadl, won't be a big factor. But, with the revival of a potent, well-balanced attack, the attention given this 215-pounder has diminished and he has been able to show some of the ability which has made him an all-conference performer in the past. CERTAINLY McCLINTON may not have the total yardage of some of the other backs across the country, but his worth as a decoy, pass receiver, defender and mere presence make him among the more valuable players in the nation. The topic of the ability of Hadil has been thoroughly saturated in column after column but continual mention is necessitated by the outstanding performances which he comes up with every Saturday. Selected to the Look magazine first team backfield last year, Hadl's name should be among the elite again this year although there has proven to be an over-abundance of top notch quarterbacks directing leading teams everywhere. BUSINESS MACHINES CO. 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Prof. Wiley, who will be directing the KU marching band on the field at halftime of tomorrow's Homecoming football game with Kansas State, received his bachelor of music and arts degree from Phillips and also taught there for five years. At that time, the country was in the depth of the depression, but Prof. Wiley and his men got their 90 uniforms and instruments. WHEN PROF. WILEY ARRIVED on campus he assumed charge of the band, a group of 90 men. The group was badly in need of uniforms and instruments so they started a campaign to raise money for the needed equipment. After the equipment problem had been settled, the band met with another conflict. This time it was an impossible practice schedule allowing for rehearsal only Wednesday night, which was party night at that time, and Saturday afternoon, which always was considered free. 2. "It will impair their health", and 3. "It just won't work." 1. "You can't get the men out"; AFTER MUCH consideration, Prof. Wiley suggested 7 a.m. five days a week. Attempts were made to discourage him since the general opinion was: But it did work. There were many days when the band boasted a perfect attendance. The marching band met on the field for practice almost Catches Up NEW YORK — (UPI) — A woman in Montgomery, Ala., dropped in the mail this month a return postcard that was part of a Fairbanks, Morse & Co. mailing advertisement that had been sent out in-1929. The postcard, requesting literature on home water systems, bore an old Chicago address but was quickly forwarded to pump and hydraulic division headquarters in Kansas City. She was sent 1961 literature. before daylight and the concert band met in Hoch Auditorium. In addition to his responsibility with the bands. Prof. Wiley was required to teach private lessons for all instruments. In his own words, "We were starting from the ground to build a program of music education." GRADUALLY THE department expanded and private teachers were engaged for the various instrument training. Now, in 1961, the department of music has a private teacher for every band instrument used Prof. Wiley has felt that this was necessary in building better bands The KU band, as we know it today, has no season. It works all nine months from convocation in September to commencement in May. The rigid schedule which the marching and concert bands undergo also includes the football and basketball season, two annual campus concerts, and a spring tour covering the principal towns of Kansas. A varsity band has been established for those students not a part of the concert band. According to Prof. Wiley, this gives all students who have had experience a chance to continue their music through college. IN A RECENT INTERVIEW, Prof. Wiley made the comment, "I love to build. I particularly love to build something if it can be of benefit to others, always a service to others." Prof. Wiley was responsible for starting the first band program at Phillips University and also the TriState Music Festival in Enid, Okla. Besides building the band program at KU to its present status, he is also known for the Mid-Western Music and Art Camp founded in 1935. This camp has grown into an institution of national repute. In 1961, there were seven divisions in the camp, including music, art, theater, speech, science, and mathematics. It is hoped that two more divisions, engineering and journalism, can be added in 1962. FRIES Before the Game... After the Game Enjoy Your Favorite Foods at ALLEN'S "WHERE PARTICULAR PEOPLE EAT" 23rd and Naismith Drive WELCOME ALUMS HELP SUPPORT KU Sweat Shirts Navy with Seal . . . . $3.10 Grey with Seal . . . . $3.10 Black with 3-color Jayhawk... $3.50 Souvenirs Yeah, Yeah, Coach, Football Fella . $1.00 Scrapbooks and Photo Albums Playing Cards Lighters, Spoons, China Glassware, Bookends Stuffed Toys for the Kids Back Dated Class Rings are Available Kansas Union Book Store Page 13 Friday, November 10. 1961 University Daily Kansan Freshman Cross Country Wins Eight, Loses to Drake WARRINGTON DEFENDING CHAMPIONS—The KU freshman cross country team, defending national champions are, in the back row from left to right, Herald Hadley, Gary Ace, Gary Janzen, Bill Cottle, Jack Connell, Richard Farrell. In the front row, Coach Bill Easton, John Lindsay, John Garver, Jack Klinknett, Assistant Coach Bob Lawson. Drake University, Bill Easton's former "stomping grounds," turned the tables on the Jayhawk frosh and handed them their first loss, 26-29. As usual, Harold Hadley and Bill Cottie were 1-2 individually against the Bullpups. Hadley's best time, 9:30.8, has placed him first in the past four meets. Cottie's best, 9:35.5, which he ran at the first of the season gave him individual wins in the first five meets and has placed him second in the past four. The Freshman cross country squad, hopefully riding toward an unbeaten season, has had its apple-cart upset. DRAKE, SHUT OUT of the top two spots, compensated by copping the next four spots, J. Kragie, D. Prichard, J. Riepe and J. Henderson posted times of 9.36.7, 9.37.4, 9.38.2 and 9.44.2 to place ahead of Jack Connell who was seventh with a 9.54.1 clocking. Despite this loss, the KU frostboast an 8-1 record and are priming for repeating as NCAA champions. Other Kangas meet results are: KU 18-Oregon State 43; KU 15-Air Force 50; KU 18-Michigan State 40 KU 16-Nebraska 42; KU 16-Oh The Frosh have captured one grand slam thus far, against the Air Force Academy which has boasted outstanding varsity teams the past two years. A grand slam is when one school places the top seven finishers. All are postal meets. University 39; KU 15-Colgate 49; KU 20-Missouri 35; KU 15-Iowa State 43. Cottle, Hadley, Gary Janzen, Connell, Gary Ace, Jack Klinknett, and John Lindsay finished in that order to push past the Falcons. The Oregon State Rooks were able to place but one man in KU's top seven finishers that being Dellinger with a seven-second third place finish. Against Michigan State the Jayhawkers finished 1-2-4-5-6 but conceded 3-7 to the Spartans. Ohio University placed a man fifth and four men 7-8-9-10 to fare well against the lower half of the Jayhawk lineup. Colgate just barely missed being grand slammed as Hall edged into seventh place just three seconds ahead of Lindsay to prevent the shut out. Nebraska was also able to place men in fifth and seventh spots as Altizio and Toothacker were the Huskers to break up the Jayhawkers lineup. The Frosh have yet to get results back from Washington State, San Jose State, Kansas State, Occidental, Oklahoma State and the University of Houston. At the end of the season the top times are sent to Track and Field News which compiles them and decides the team championship. Last year Kansas was the national championship. NEW YORK — (UPI) — Mexico's economy currently has the highest growth rate in Latin America, with production up 5.7 per cent over last year. Mexico Moving But I wouldn't feel dressed without costume jewelry from Count Down House MALLS SHOPPING CENTER BEVERAGE NO, beautiful WIND-BLOWN EDNA, I didn't buy this rather large QUANTITY of beverage... I won it at the CHALK in their weekly DRAWING. Even you, classic featured creature of mine, can win. Simply obtain a ticket from the CHALK. Now smiley let's rapidly consume my prize so that we can journey to the Chalk and, yum, drool, CHALK CAFE EAT 618 WEST 12TH ROCK WIND-BLOWN didn't buy large QUANTITY I WON ALK 618 WEST 12TH yum, drool, CAFE EAT Kansas Union Has Variety Recreation-wise there is bowling, billiards, ping pong, chess tournaments, bridge lessons and dancing lessons; not to mention relaxing in the truest sense down in the Hawk's Nest with a cup of coffee and a cigarette. The dark rooms and the Craft and Hobby Room provide further recreational facilities. Seven thousand students pass through the doors of the Kansas Union every day, and each day 35 different student organizations meet within its walls. Dances and "big name" bands at the Union constitute a large part of campus social life, as well as football game receptions, carnivals and Trail Room dances. Why does the Union attract so many people? Frank R. Burge, Kansas Union director, believes the Union's popularity stems from the fact that it offers "something for everybody to do in their leisure time" whether it deals with the social, recreational or cultural aspects of campus life. Culturally the Kansas Union offers such opportunities as the Poetry Hour, the Current Events Forum, guest lectures, and the Music and Browsing Room which is equipped with a library of classical and semi-classical records. Mr. Burge describes a typical Saturday at the Kansas Union beginning with refreshments before the football game, followed by luncheons and class reunions, post-football game receptions, dinner in the cafeteria or dining room and climaxed by the Homecoming Dance or some other special event. (Continued on page 15) Safety fast! MGA 1600 Mk.II NEW FOR '62 See It Today! 704 Vermont British Motors VI. 3-8367 Safety fast! MGA 1600 Mk. II British Motors University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 Dorm Program On Schedule By John Macdonald KU's ambitious dormitory construction program is on schedule. J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories, has reported that the existing dormitories, the building now under construction and the three on the drawing board are expected to provide adequate housing for the anticipated increase in enrollment during the next eight years. THE CURRENT dormitory construction program is concentrated in the area along Iowa Street where Templin and Lewis dormitories now stand. A new dormitory is under construction now just south of Lewis Hall. Mr. Wilson said that if present plans are realized three more dormitories will be built in the same area. Completion date for the final building has been set for 1967. "The University of Kansas has been fortunate," Mr. Wilson said, "that housing has not been a limiting factor on student enrollment in the past and is expected to cause little serious worry until after 1963." THE 17 HOUSING UNITS, which include dormitories and scholarship halls, now hold 2,792 students. When completed the six dormitories on Iowa Street will house about 3,500 people, Mr. Wilson said. "The University is responsible, if administrative terms, for housing for all students but it provides housing for only one third. Fraternities and sororites take care of a third of the students and private housing in Lawrence accounts for the other third. "We don't have any serious trouble with student housing right now," he said, "and barring any unexpected change in the number of students during the next eight years, we should be able to continue to provide adequate housing." Mr. Wilson said the dormitory now under construction will be ready for use in September, 1962. It will house about 440 students. PLANS FOR THE fourth building in the Iowa Street area are progressing on schedule, Mr. Wilson said. The State Board of Regents has approved KU's making application for a loan for construction. If plans go according to schedule the structure, which is being designed to house 784 students, will be completed in 1963. He said the fifth dormitory for the area is expected to be completed by 1964 and the sixth in 1967. Mr. Wilson said the funds to build new dormitories come from the state one-fourth mill tax levy which provides KU about $375,000 per year. He added that the remaining money is obtained through the sale of 40-year bonds. Mr. Wilson said, "that it takes very little money and effort to change the dormitory facilities from men's dormitories to women's quarters." "WE'VE BEEN FORTUNATE. too, in having many persons and families interested in the University who have provided funds which help in the building of new dormitories. Their gifts reduce the amount of Grid Frosh- (Continued from page 1) Schweda, Lawrence, and Mike O'Brien; Liberal, tackles; Mike Patterson, Larned, and Ron Marsh, Kansas City; guards; Dick Pratt, Olathe, center; Charles Hess, Wellington, quarterback; Bob Liggett, Kansas City, Mo., fullback; and Gale Sayers, Omaha, Neb., and Wayne Loving, Kansas City, halfbacks. Triplette thought right halfback Sayers ran "real hard" in the opener. Sayers scored all three Jayhawk touchdowns. Triplette also praised Hess, Liggett, and Loving, the other hacks. Praise was given to the Hawk forward wall, averaging 206 pounds per man. Biggest man in the line is Pratt who weighs 250 pounds. Triplett said that the tackling was below par, but, in general, "We had a lot of poise for the first game of the season." ponds sold for a particular building and speed the entire construction program." Each building is financed separately with the income from it going toward the retirement of the bonds for that building. All dorms cost about the same per student and this money is used solely to pay the cost of the building. Templein and Lewis Halls, however, were combined into one project. Scholarship halls are not included in the dormitory construction plans, he said. These buildings are built solely with gifts. The steel and concrete house which will hold 72 men is to be constructed at West 19th St. south of Stouffer Place. The cost will be about $180,000, and the house will have 13,000 square feet of floor space. Lambda Chi Plans House A modern three-story structure is the plan for the proposed Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity house. One of the highlights of the house will be the living room which will be paneled in wood. It will contain a large stone fireplace and the floor will be carpeted. Other features of the house include a large patio with access through sliding glass doors, a trophy room, complete air conditioning, and a 65-car parking lot. Another unique feature will be a library on the third floor for the convenience of the men. Charity is injurious unless it helps the recipient to become independent of it.-John D. Rockefeller, Jr. No race can prosper till it learns that there is as much dignity in tilling a field as in writing a poem. —Booker T. Washington The first story of the house, which is split level, will include the living room, lounge, trophy room, chapter room, dining room, and the house-mother's living area. Laws are like cobwebs, which may catch small flies, but let wasps and hornets break through.—Jonathan Swift Immediate construction of the house is being held up by the sale of the present Lambda Chi house. Welcome Grads Joe's Bakery For That Pre-Game Snack or The After-the-Game Treat EAT DO-NUTS - long johns - hot cross buns - cookies - cakes 412 West 9th VI 3-4720 HAPPY HOMECOMING!! JAYHAWKS AND ALUMS Drop in over the weekend . . . look over our '62 line of Fords, Falcon, and Thunderbird. Make your Homecoming weekend really complete and drive one home. If you haven't already, let us winterize your car. New and Used Cars and Trucks Genuine Ford Parts and Service Fine Body and Paint Work Falcon C Ford Thunderbird UNIVERSITY FORD SALES 714 Vermont VI 3-3500 UNIVERSITY FORD SALES FORD SALES Fro Pre (C peka, 6- Louisvil FORW Ellis, 6-5, 6-5, 192 71, 192 que, N. Hutch O'Brien Rover, Shanks Pete T GUA pecka, I land F (sophon Gary) Jack C Wayne 157; Plh John I 油 Friday, November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 15 Frosh Basketball Candidates Prepare for Tonight's Game (Continued from page 1) peka, 6-5, 210; and George Unseld*; Louisville, Ky., 6-7, 210. FORWARDS — Richard Brown. Ellis, 6-2, 165; David Brill*., Lewis, 6-5, 190; Jim Gough*., Chanute, 6-7*, 192; Jim Harwi*, Albuquerque, N. M., 6-2, 175; Littero, Hutchinson, 6-5, 180; Mike O'Brien**, Liberal, 6-5, 220; Bill Rover, Lawrence, 6-2, 180; Ron Shanks, Kansas City, 6-3, 176; and Pete Townsend, Topeka, 6-5, 176. GUARDS — John Atkinson, Topeka, 6-2, 170; Kerry Bolton, Overland Park, 6-3, 175; Tom Black (sophomore), Lawrence, 5-11, 190; Gary Cassidy, Columbus, 6-1, 154; Jack Connell***, Fall River, 6-0, 160; Wayne Loving***, Kansas City, 5-11, 175; Phil Lujan, Lawrence, 6-1, 170; John McClain, Des Moines, Iowa. 6-0, 172; Tom Reed (sophomore transfer), Des Moines, Iowa, 6-0, 174; Richard Ruggles*. LaGrange, Ill. 5-11, 165; David Schichtel*. Coffeville, 6-2, 170; and Tom Trotter, Aurora, Ill. 6-1, 175. - All-state in high school. ** Presently participating in a fall sport. This year's four-game schedule i as follows: FEB. 14—K-State, There FEB. 22—K-State, Here FEB. 24—Coffeyville Juco, Here Who does not love wine, women, and song—Remains a fool his whole life long—Johann Heinrich Voss. MARCH 1—Missouri, There The tree of liberty only grows when watered by the blood of tyrans—Bertland Barere Bobbie Brooks $17.98 Welcome Grads! The jersey swing . . . this year's neatest blouson dress. It's a feather-light wool jersey . . . sleeveless, a soft belt and a swirl of a skirt with front pleats. Many colors . . light and luscious. Sizes 5 to 15. Jay SHOPPE On Campus 12th & Oread Downtown 835 Mass. Varied Union (Continued from page 13) Mr. Burge feels that "the Union plant, as it now exists, is adequate for the immediate future." The Union administration is also in charge of all University concessions — the Hawk's Nest, Union cafeteria, the Hawklet, basement of Strong and football and basketball games. "My administration and I are constantly trying to organize and plan the Union operation so efficiently that it will meet the satisfaction of the students." Mr. Burge said. For example, students complain about the overcrowded bookstore at enrollment time, but since enrollment is only temporary, so is the problem. Therefore we are trying to devise temporary measures to handle this problem. Mr. Burge said. By Spring enrollment the bookstore plans to install two new cash registers providing two additional checkout lines, and it may even start pre-packaging of books he said. Program Attracts Students Union was built in 1927 as a memorial to the KU men and women who died in World War I. Since then there have been three additions to the building. The latest was completed last year. Today the building contains 181,000 square feet of floor space. Student Union Activities, a university student organization, which works hand in hand with the Union administration, also strives to provide the student with a varied program of Union activities. The central section of the Kansas He said if the university should continue to grow at its present rate, however, it will be necessary to add onto the northwest corner of the present building. MARTIN MARSHALL To Look Sharp for that Homecoming Date . . . . . Why not try our personalized service.Have your suit cleaned and finished by our experts. SC 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE Acme LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Acme Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Downtown 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 Page 16 University Daily Kansan Friday. November 10, 1961 BE A SAFE DRIVER HAPPY MOTORING ALUMS OBEY ALL TRAFFIC RULES See One of These Fine Service Stations Before Starting Your Trip Home BUCHEIM SERVICE STATION 1901 Mass.- VI 3-9785 BILL'S APCO SERVICE 846 Iowa - VI 3-9808 McBETH CONOCO SERVICE 9th & Ind.-VI3-7322 SAWYER'S TEXACO SERVICE ELDON'S MOBIL SERVICE 900 Iowa - VI 3-9887 C & J CITIES SERVICE 6th & Wisc.-VI3-7377 23 & Barker - VI 1-9628 WALT'S SUPER OIL CO. 1826 Mass. - VI 3-9791 HILLCREST STANDARD SERVICE 914 Iowa - VI 3-9667 DRIVE A SAFE CAR POTTER'S 66 SERVICE 1401 W. 6th - VI 3-9891 HUNT'S DX SERVICE 545 Mich. - VI 2-3224 ART KIRBY MOBIL SERVICE 900 Ky. - VI 3-9608 DON'T SPEED Society Daily Hansan Features Literature 59th Year, No. 41 SECTION C Friday, November 10, 196 LAWRENCE, KANSAS A. S. PARKER A PROLIFIC WRITER—James Gunn is shown at his desk in Strong Hall. Gunn Describes Work And Literary Career James E. Gunn has an office on the second floor of Strong Hall, a cluttered desk in said office, and a long, imposing title: Administrative Assistant to the Chancellor for University Relations. By Zeke Wigglesworth What this means is that James E. Gunn is a public relations man for the University of Kansas; HOWEVER, HE LOOKS with less than favor on this designation. "I have never considered myself to be a public relations man. There is a bad Madison Avenue aura around that title. It used to be the same way for 'press agent.'" As administrative assistant to the chancellor, Mr. Gunn has a variety of duties. "Basically my job is to further communications between the University of Kansas and a variety of publics." HE EXPLAINS THAT a variety of publics includes interested parties who want to know about KU, such as students, alumni, persons taking extension courses from KU and the public in general. In his capacity as public relations man, he serves on many committees and advisory groups. One example of this is the Athletic Board. "I am a special adviser to the Board for such activities as promotion campaigns to increase attendance at University sporting events." Other activities in his busy schedule are: Chairman of the Faculty Quarterback Club, faculty to Battenfeld men's hall, and member of the faculty advising board to the athletic program. About his work, he says: "I write articles, produce pamphlets and in general communicate to those people who are interested in the University. Meaningful activities mentioned in one Gunn-produced pamphlet include scholarships administered by the University, student publications, research grants, research projects and articles written by KU faculty members. MR. GUNN BRINGS a rich writing background to his duties as public relations man. (Continued on page 16) Changeable "Shack" To Be Razed Soon "The Shack"—that little building between Fraser Hall and Watson Library—probably won't be missed by the majority of students when it is razed in the next few months. Today it stands anonymously, passed by hundreds of students each day who never give it a thought. But for forty years, as the home of the Kansan, it affected nearly every student on the campus. It was the place where students brought in notices of club meetings, engagements and fraternity activities. It was the place where professors came to complain about coverage of their speeches. It was the place where students heard the sound of the press and knew that soon the latest issue of the Daily Kansan would be distributed. "THE SHACK" is the second oldest building on the campus. It was built in 1883 to relieve crowded conditions, and it has always served as a temporary home for departments which expected someday to have a new home with adequate space. When "The Shack" was constructed, KU consisted of two buildings. North College Hall, the original structure, stood at the present (Continued on page 13) (Continued on page 13) House Decorations Mean Hectic Effort By Jim Williamson Thursday night and all's not going well! The deadline draws near and nobody knows just why that big Jayhawk is not in place. "It looks like another all-nighter — remember last year," someone says. THE SCENE IS in front of a fraternity house the day before the Homecoming decorations are to be assembled. All the committee heads are upstairs asleep, leaving the work to the pledges. Naturally this is a mess! “#$%!!#$**, oooh, my thumb.” Ah yes, Homecoming is here. When a fraternity undertakes a project like this, things just naturally deviate from the norm: It's not organized like you think. Oh sure, there are well-laid plans, but well, you know, things just DON'T go as planned. ABOUT A MONTH before Homecoming, someone gets up in chapter meeting and states: "Homecoming is just around the corner—how 'bout it?" Naturally he gets support from everyone who just happens to have tests that week or something else VERY important to do during that week. So it is decided to try again this year. Well, that's the last you hear of Homecoming until the night before the ideas are to be submitted to the KU Homecoming Committee. Then an 11 o'clock meeting is called of all the "brains" to get a theme. A happy boy flying through the clouds under a sunny sky. AUREN This leaves two weeks of preparation for the project. During this time, people could be working little by little, assembling all the parts—but that's right, everyone says, "Well, we've got time." MONDAY ARRIVES and chapter meeting again: "All those who signed up for the lighting committee will meet at 11 tonight." A sudden burst of energy explodes into hectic activity. "Davis, you get the nails, Larson, the cardboard—just bill the house," one of the chairmen says. Tuesday is here. "What did you get on that Philosophy exam?" we hear. Minds are back on school. "What did you hear from Bev?" WEDNESDAY: "PLEDGE: go around to all the rooms and get my committee down here." You can tell that someone is interested—the committee heads. After all, they're responsible. More plans are laid. Really they are conversions of the original ones: "We couldn't get the paint you wanted cause it costs too much." get the Tempera, the chairman says. Now it is Thursday, D-Day: "C'mon guys, get over here." The foundation is up, brothers are running off for more masking tape, the cardboard is now in place. "What do I do now?" Oooops, the lights just went out—now they're back on, the painters are at work, and so on, deeeeep into the night. "OK, OK, go out tomorrow and get the Tempera," the chairman says. DURING BREAKFAST Friday morning the project is discussed. During the day some attend classes and others don't—“We've got to get it done.” And you know, two minutes before the afternoon deadline, the last part is in place—it's done. Of course, it NEVER looks like it did on paper, but it sure looks good! The music plays, the whistle blows, the neighbors complain, the parts move around, and the pledges get tired—and it's done. Israel Develops As Aid Supplier JERUSALEM, Israel—(UPI)—Little Israel, only 13 years old, has quietly developed into a "foreign aid" supplier to some 57 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Mediterranean area. By Eliav Simon But unlike the United States, Israeli aid is not generally carried out on a financial basis. In Israel this aid program is known as "cooperation with developing countries." It is cooperation mainly in the field of science and technology. THE ORIGIN OF THIS TECHNICAL cooperation is obscure even to well-informed Israelis but it can be traced to international socialist conferences of the early 1950s attended by the Mapai Moderate Labor Party and the Histadrut Labor Federation. The actual initiative appears to have been taken by Afro-Asian visitors to Israel who suggested that under-developed areas had much to learn from the development struggle of the new Jewish state. The newly independent countries of Africa and Asia wish to take their examples from Israel's own short history. The countries of the Mediterranean area and of Latin America, especially Brazil, find the results of Israel's experimentation suitable or adaptable to some of their needs. THUS, IT IS DIFFICULT to say what is the exact purpose of Israel's program because it started without a definite purpose or motive except to extend a hand to those countries which—like Israel—had to start from scratch but which, unlike her, had no reservoir of established skills to fall back on. In proportion to its size and its population, Israel is well-endowed, especially in such fields as agriculture, construction, public health and other similar categories which new states find vital to their growth. Solid Research Shown by KU On Radiation Close links between Washington and Lawrence distinguish KU's department of radiation biophysics. The department is one of eight from universities in the United States who train students sent to it from the Atomic Energy Commission in radiation biophysics, with strong emphasis on health physics. In addition, the department trains Army, Navy, Air Force and U.S. Health Service personnel in health physics, a program which teaches proper methods for handling radioactive materials. It also conducts a summer program for high school teachers in radiation biophysics under AEC sponsorship. BUT GOVERNMENT contracts are the departments' feature. It has done work for the AEC on the metabolism of radium, strontium and other heavy atomic matter and work on the metabolism of iodine labeled products. With a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service the department has studied the minute distribution of radium and strontium in human beings. Last year Frank E. Hoecker, professor of radiation biophysics and chairman of the department, completed a 14 year study under AEC sponsorship on the metabolism of radium and strontium in the human bone. (Continued on page 16) TO CONDUCT THESE STUDIES the department simply uses geiger counters of various sorts. One, a spectrometer, is a specialized counter which analyzes radioactive material. This instrument tells what the material is and what it gives off. This operation may take several days, weeks or months to do, depending upon the material. The department will be closer to its largest piece of equipment, the nuclear reactor, by the end of the year when it moves into the Nuclear At present Israel cooperates with 57 countries and maintains "intensive" ties with 30 of these. Israel's technical aid activities fall into three categories. MORE THAN 2,000 PERSONS from these countries have done advanced study in Israel while more than 400 Israelis have gone abroad to carry out missions in those nations. The first—and smallest—is channeled through the United Nations. About 20 Israeli experts and 50 foreign trainees visit Israel annually for brief periods. The costs are borne entirely by the United Nations. The second category involves joint companies and ventures, both public and private. These take various forms, such as joint stock companies —usually on a 60-40 basis in favor of local governments. THE FIELDS COVERED are public construction, water supply and irrigation, agricultural planning and management contracts, especially in shipping. Israeli companies are incorporated in foreign countries to help advance these fields. Such countries now include Cyprus, Turkey, Iran, Nepal, Burma, Sierra Leone, Chana, Nigeria, Liberia, Togo and Ethiopia. In the near future it is hoped that such relations will be extended to the newer nations such as Tanganyika, Kenya and Uganda. On the Israeli side they are directed by such companies as Solel Boneh Constructions Corporation of the Histadrut Labor Federation, the Water Resources Development Company and private firms like Dizengoff West Africa Company and the Meyer Brothers Corporation. In the last three years these companies did a business totaling nearly $400 million. THE THIRD CATEGORY consists of bilateral technical assistance agreements on a government-to-government basis. This is by far the most important in bringing Israel into personal contact as it were with these nations. Three types of assistance are involved in this cycle of operation. They are: They are: - Training of students, both basic and advanced, in Israel. - The sending of experts and in- (Continued on page 16) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10. 1961 The Book World By Charles E. Staley Assistant Professor of Economics THE HORIZONTAL READER, edited by Mel Evans, Doubleday and Company, Inc. $4.95. "The Horizontal Reader" is the book you are looking for if you need a Christmas present for someone who enjoys light reading. It contains about fifty selections, mostly short stories, in a charming mixture of humor, mystery and suspense. The humorous selections, which outnumber the others slightly, come mostly from such old reliables as James Thurber, Dorothy Parker, Mark Twain, Damon Runyon and Ambrose Bierce. In this category I enjoyed particularly "The Superior Bostonian" by An Opera Goer, who is identified by the editor as a rankled and anonymous New Yorker of a century ago bent on ticking off the nature of man in the Hub of the Universe, and "We Just Came to See the Baby" by Shirley Jackson. The mystery and suspense tales are taken from Dorothy L. Sayers, Saki, W. W. Jacobs, and include a science fiction story by A. J. Deutsch. Several true accounts of murders, bank robberies, and medical detection are mixed in with the fiction. I had previously read about one-fifth of the stories in the book, not a bad ratio for an anthology mostly taken from standard authors. Most of these were worth re-reading except for the two which I believe should be prohibited from all future anthologies forever and ever: Woolcott's "Entrance Fee" and Stockton's "The Lady or the Tiger?" Surely these tales should be retired to their well-carned rest. ★ ★ ★ By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism SOUTH: MODERN SOUTHERN LITERATURE IN ITS CULTURAL SETTING, edited by Louis D. Rubin Jr. and Robert D. Jacobs. Doubleday Dolphin, $1.45. The uniqueness of the South is the theme of this collection. Louis Rubin and Robert Jacobs present an excellent, well-unified study of the literature of the South. And they make us see what has characterized the South in the years since Reconstruction ended and the New South began to emerge. Southern literature, we see here, has been a diverse thing. It has included the Mississippi saga of William Faulkner, the story of the decline of Virginian aristocracy of Ellen Glasgow, the fantasies of James Branch Cabell, the sharecropper smut of Erskine Caldwell, the tone poems of Carson McCullers, the decadent heroes and heroines of Tennessee Williams. Throughout run the twin themes—retrat and acceptance. In retreat we find, paradoxically, Thomas Wolfe, who left the South for Yankeeeland, and the Southern Agrarians who wrote their "I'll Take My Stand" manifesto in 1930 (and for whom Wolfe had nothing but contempt). The agrarians are especially important to the story of southern literature, for they have been both creators and critics—Tate, Warren, Ransom, Donald Davidson and so on. Some southern writers have accepted 20th century "progress," others have called for a return to antebellum values. Some have dealt with the crisis of the Negro. Some have confined themselves to criticism in little-read quarterly reviews. The literature has been of many kinds—the turnip-eating Lester clan of "Tobacco Road," the hero-venerating "Ode to the Confederacy Dead" of Allen Tate, the Gothic horror of Faulkner's "Absalom, Absalom!" and the wild humor of his "Spotted Ponies," the Gants of "Look, Homeward, Angel." Willie Stark of "All the King's Men," the bereft heroes of "Pale Horse, Pale Rider." Where is southern literature headed? One would gather that it continues to thrive, that in William Stryon and Eudora Welty and Carson McCullers and Flannery O'Connor there is hope. The authors, and those whose writings they anthologize, write off Richard Wright and Hamilton Basso, they are not too sure of James Agee, they scorn Truman Capote, they wonder what has happened to Ralph Ellison. ★★★ THE GOLDEN BOWL, by Henry James. Grove Press, $2.95. That extraordinary style which characterized the latter books of Henry James is the hallmark of "The Golden Bowl." This was his last completed novel, a monumental work that deals with a simple theme in considerable complexity. This is a story of adultery, but James never calls it by such a blunt term. Maggie Verver, an American heiress, marries an Italian prince. The prince's mistress, an old acquaintance of Maggie's, though Maggie does not know of the woman's relationship to the prince, arrives on the scene. And, with the connivance of a mutual friend, the woman becomes married to Maggie's father, for whom Maggie feels responsibility following her own marriage. Here is the Jamesian theme of an American innocent, unwittingly in the toils of sinister Europeans. Maggie is as innocent as Isabel Archer and Milly Thecale of earlier James Novels, and she is as ingenuous. But she also is contriving and self-sufficient, a good Emersonian heroine for Henry James, and she solves her marital problem. "The Golden Bowl" presents a set of polished people, speaking in epigrams, using the intricate language that James devised in his later years. These are polite and refined folks, but underneath the veneer of refinement lurks evil—the kind of evil that Henry James so brilliantly deals with. By Raymond G. O'Connor Assistant Professor of History PRESIDENTS OF THE U.S.A.: PROFILES AND PICTURES, by Cornel Lengyel, Bantam, $1.25; and THE CIVIL WAR AS THEY KNEW IT, Bantam, $1.25. The welcome deluge of paperbacks at modest prices is now enriched by these two offerings, which provide both text and pictures for the hurried reader: "Presidents of the U.S.A." contains brief biographies of the nation's chief executives from George Washington to John F. Kennedy, illustrated by contemporary drawings, paintings, or photographs. Though the brief treatment encourages a factual emphasis, the author has made an effort to portray the complexities and responsibilities of the office of the presidency, often in the words of the occupant himself. The illustrations are chosen with an eye for the dramatic, and though the reader might quarrel with the overadulatory approach in the text, the book does serve as a reasonably accurate introduction to the subject. "The Civil War As They Knew It" is an attempt to recreate the struggle for Southern independence through the words of Abraham Lincoln and the photographs of Mathew Brady. Arranged in chronological and topical order, each picture is accompanied by a short description and a pertinent quotation from the President's dispatches, letters, or addresses. Here, again, the emphasis is on the dramatic, and the effort appears reasonably successful. Civil War buffs may be disappointed by questionable interpretations or oversimplifications, but they can scarcely criticize this work for lack of enthusiasm. Of course the Brady photographs are well worth the price, and most of them are beautifully reproduced. One finds both the nobility and utter deprivacy of war interspersed with magnificent character studies of the protagonists. ★ ★ ★ By Doug Farmer Pratt Junior WHAT EVERY BACHELOR KNOWS, by Corey Ford, Doubleday. $2.95. An insight into the life of the common bachelor is given in a delightful manner by Corey Ford with a look into his own life of bachelorhood. Throughout the fast moving book all the wit and thoughts of a typical bachelor seem to be portrayed. A bachelor's life is depicted as a precarious existence and a life of one long pursuit by the female section of our society. How does a bachelor avoid togetherness, face the new-born child of a friend, react to his nonbachelor friends' comments, and how does he describe himself? These are all questions answered by the nation's number one bachelor-humorist. From the moment of birth to the moment the bachelor realizes he is a bachelor forever. Mr. Ford gives us his - experiences- and pointed advice on Bachelorscraft; the Lore of Staying Single, habits of bachelors, marriage and, as expected, definite views of the opposite sex. Corey Ford has written many articles and short stories as well as a group of books. Among these are "The Day Nothing Happened," "Has Anybody Seen Me Lately?" and "How to Guess Your Age." The important thing is that those who see an injustice do not remain silent—Edwin Wilson Worth Repeating The softest heads containing the murkiest thinking are found lodged between cap and gown—Fred Hale The minority must always be heard. There have to be avenues for them to express themselves, or their voices will go unheard. — Edwin Wilson By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism A FAREWELL TO ARMS, by Ernest Hemingway. Scribner's Modern Standard Authors. Most of the many appraisals of Hemingway that have appeared in newspapers and magazines since his death single out "A Farewell to Arms" as his best work. As a beautiful work of art, isolated from contemporary meanings, it is that. If I prefer "For Whom the Bell Tolls" it is merely that to me the later book is a work of art that takes what to me seems a more important position in terms of the time in which it is written. "A Farewell to Arms" is in the anti-war tradition and the lost generation tradition of the twenties. It is shot full of disillusionment; the mood permeates it. We are entirely with Frederic Henry when he deserts in the midst of the retreat from Caporetto, and in 1929 we would have backed his stand even more. National moods had changed by 1940, when Hemingway's great novel of the Spanish Civil War appeared, and Robert Jordan was fighting it out in Spain alongside the loyalists. Just why he was doing so had not been fully articulated, though Jordan had progressed a stage beyond Frederic Henry. "A FAREWELL TO ARMS" CONTAINS THE THEME AND stylistic devices that have come to be identified with Hemingway. There is little wasted here. The language is seldom ornate. The descriptions are superficially matter-of-fact, though the Hemingway trick was to present deep meanings that emerge from under that cold style. We can still believe in the plot. It has been 20 years since I first read the book, and my memories were mixed somewhat with recollections of the two generally unsuccessful films made from the novel. Though I grow impatient with the mess Frederic and Catherine have got themselves into (after all, they did have plenty of time to get married), it was their choice. There are beautiful passages and vivid characterizations. "A Farewell to Arms" remains convincing, to me, because I see why Frederic Henry was in Italy, I see why he hated war, I see why he loved Catherine Barkley, I see why he fled to Switzerland. The aimless wanderers of the author's "The Sun Also Rises" and Fitzgerald's various stories never really get to me with the impact of Frederic and Catherine. ★ ★ ★ BY LOVE POSSESSED, by James Gould Cozzens. Crest Giant (Fawcett), 75 cents. Some famous novels have a way of flashing across the literary sky like a meteor and then being forgotten. For a few weeks in 1957 one just wasn't in it unless he had read (or read about) "By Love Possessed." Somehow it doesn't matter much in 1961. In fact, "By Love Possessed" seems to be standing chiefly today as a title on lists of erotica and the source of a very bad film that extracted from the novel the "Peyton Place" elements and ignored the philosophy. (The film also ignored the style, which is just as well, for "By Love Possessed" never was easy going.) IN TELLING THE STORY OF ARTHUR WINNER, LAWYER, and 48 hours in his life (and other folks' lives, too), and of the varieties of love. Cozzens indulges in a style that frequently compares with both James and Faulkner for its obliqueness and opaqueness. It is a discursive and sometimes confusing story. Yet it is an important book, though Cozzens' characters never really do much for, or to, the reader. And in what ways are we "pessessed" by love, and what are the varieties of love? Many are here—parent for child, child for parent, sister for weak brother, married love, extramarital love, the love of friendships. ★ ★ ★ TWELVE SHORT NOVELS, selected by Thomas B. Costain. Doubleday, $7.50. My suggestion is that University students give serious thought to this book as a Christmas gift. It is a big, attractive volume that provides short novels of many kinds. Some (Hilton's "Goodbye, Mr. Chips") are almost too familiar. Others (Tolstoy's "Father Sergius") are not well known. One can always start by carping about books that weren't included. Probably rights to "The Old Man and the Sea" are hard to obtain. And "The Turn of the Screw" is almost too familiar, and is readily available elsewhere. My own tastes prefer Wharton's "Ethan Frome" over "The Old Maid." But this is Costain's collection. There is quite a range here, from the solemn Biblical tone of Mann's "Young Joseph" to the breezy suburban chatter of Streeter's "Father of the Bride." Wilder's "The Bridge of San Luis Rey" is balanced by Nathan's fragile "Portrait of Jennie." The other novels are Conrad's "The Duel," Saint-Exupery's "Prisoner of the Sand," de Hartog's "The Lost Sea" and Steinbeck's "The Short Reign of Pippin IV." Eighteenth century Peru, ancient Egypt, Napoleonic times, New York in the 1850s, Russia at the same time, an English country home of late 19th century, a Paris-to-Saigon airplane flight, an English boys' school, New York and the New England coast in depression days, the Dutch east country, suburban America, and an imaginary French court—these are settings and themes in this interesting anthology. Friday. November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Pictures in Review . . . The pictures on this page were taken by members of the KU chapter of Kappa Alpha Mu, national honorary photo-journalism organization, and are a part of the 1961 national award winning portfolio. The KU chapter has won the national award with pictures like these for the past two years. Last spring the KU chapter scored a double victory, winning the activities award, as well as entering the top picture of the national Kappa Alpha Mu contest. These pictures were not taken as a part of class projects, but rather as examples of the individual photographer's initiative. All students but one who contributed to last year's awardwinning portfolio are enrolled at KU this year. ...By Kappa Alpha Mu 11 "DETERMINATION" of a KU bandsman as the drums roll on the kick-off was captured by Doug Kilgore, Salina senior, at the KU-MU football game. NAMIBIA “LOOKING AHEAD” by Perry Riddle, Topeka ley. Riddle received first place in national Kappa senior, was taken just before daybreak at Ft Ri- Alpha Mu competition with this photograph. 13 "CONCERN" was taken by Dorlan DeWitt, at the KU-MU football game last year. DeWitt graduated from KU in June. FERRARI "VICTORY" by Tony Reed, Hutchinson senior, was taken at the 1960 Garnett Grand Prix. A worker is holding a horse in a field. "MUD," by Eric Jacobsen, Anthony senior, was taken at the races in Anthony. Jacobsen received honorable mention in national competition in the Sports Division with this picture. -- Picture page by Kappa Alpha Mu Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday. November 10, 1961 A snow-covered building is surrounded by a thick layer of trees. The roof has a snowy appearance, and the windows are covered in frost or snow. Chi Omega 中南大学建筑系 Alpha Phi Kappa Alpha Theta FURNISHED Kappa Kappa Gamma GREEKS GREEKS MARKETS Alpha Delta Pi Sigma Kappa THE MIDDLE SCHOOL 401 Alpha Omicron Pi Friday, November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 5 WELCOME ALUMS Delta Gamma Delta Gamma TEMPLE HISTORY Pi Beta Phi 106 THOMPSON'S MANSION Alpha Kappa Alpha Gamma Phi Beta Alpha Chi Omega Alpha Chi Omega Delta Delta Delta Delta Delta Delta Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday. November 10, 1964 Fashions Were Once Controversial Subjects Men's and women's fashions have always been a subject for criticism, humorous or otherwise. KU fashions pose no exception to this. It is interesting to note that through the years the objections tend to be the same. The following articles criticizing campus attire were both printed in the Kansan. The one on women's fashions was written in 1940 by Reginald Buxton, editor of the "Sour Owl." Men's trousers were criticized by John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, in November 1951. Men's Trousers "May I call attention to a problem which seems to me of serious importance to the University. I refer to the undersize overalls that some of our more unconventional Bohemians are wearing on the campus. "I am not criticizing the overalls 'per se,' . . . I object to the size of the overalls — uniformly much too small and too tight. They reveal too much of the generally poor architectural design of these young men... "Most of the spindle legs are bent two ways at the knees, outward and forward — bow-legged and buck-kneed. The latter infirmity arises, no doubt, from the fact that the tight pants make it impossible to straighten the legs entirely... "Finally, I notice that these spindle-Ieg ged, bow-legged, buck-kneed, stoop-shouldered devotees of unconventionality habitually wear a look of anxiety... this is because they are always wondering when a sudden vigorous movement may tear their skimpy swaddling from prow to stern, from belt to shoe tops. "Surely something ought to be done about this. ... I should think (the KU man) would not want to betray his structural inadequacies to the ladies, and destroy their illusions as to the 'big strong man.'" Women's Fashions "In the first place, you women of today are almost lacking in hips. When you put on a sweater, low to the hips—or where the hips were, back in grandmother's day—and button up the back you're just inviting trouble. Persons are liable to start talking about you to your face because they don't know whether you're coming or going. The fact that you don't know either has absolutely no bearing upon the case. Get straight with the world. "And these knee length stockings! Sure the girls at Stephens or Smith wear them. They'll wear anything that isn't nailed down. If you can't possibly afford a whole pair, don't wear anything... "What about these long, jungle-red fingernails? Every time a man sees a pair of those three-quarter inch stiletto-like nails painted up as though they had been drawn from the back of a beautiful blonde, he gets the shakes... "The next time the girl who really wants to be a flash steps out, let her look in the mirror and ask the question: 'Do I look like anything I've ever seen before?' If the answer is yes she may go ahead. The man may not be satisfied, but at least he won't be frightened to death." Homecoming Brings Alums To Scene of Many Memories By Pamela Christiansen November on the KU campus brings the first frost, trees losing their last splashes of color. Homecoming and many memories. The alumni come from all directions to revisit the place of their college memories. Members of the class of 1913 might well remember the night that 15 Sigma Nu's, dressed in bathrobes and slippers, rushed through the snow armed with an old rusty unloaded gun and five baseball bats to protect the Phil's from a burglar. The sports fans could hardly forget the first Big Eight basketball championship games in February when KU beat Missouri. IN 1925, KU'S ENROLLMENT reached an all-time high of 3,898. That was the year that John Philip Sousa gave a concert and Sinclair Lewis spoke on his latest book. Homecoming activities featured a "spectacular, physical education demonstration" and two dancing parties after KU once again trounced Missouri' House presidents ruled in November that no woman could attend a show in Kansas City with a date unless she was back by 11 1940 saw the 75th anniversary of the founding of KU. War was being raged in Europe and the draft hit 1,250 KU men. KU students attempted to divert themselves in a social whirl that year. Tommy Dorsey played in October with his featured vocalist: Frank Sinatra came, but received little notice. Saturday classes began second semester when the administration decided that "long and popular weekends (were) not educational adjuncts." p. m., and leaving the library with a date before 9:30 p.m. was an infraction of the rules. ONE OF THE BIG SOCIAL events of 1955 was the October concert of Dave Brubeck. That year KU students allegedly abducted Kansas State University's mascot, a cat named Touchdown IV. The Campanile had its sixth birthday, and Homecoming was highlighted by KU's victory over Missouri. The class of 1962 already has a stockpile of memories and will probably join in the wistfulness of the alumni at this year's Homecoming. This campus has seen many students and classes come and go, but Homecoming always renews KU's old friendships. Service Fraternity Pledges Eighteen KU Chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, has recently pledged eighteen men. They are Dale De Priest, Overland Park; John Frickson, North Kansas City, Mo.; Richard Griffin, Bartville季, Okla.; Mike Hibbard, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Krebbiel, Wichita; Craig McComb, Prairie Village; Thomas Maynard, Overland Park; Edward Hibbard, Eureka; Elbert Jones, Jr., Tallahassee, Fla.; William Moehle, Kansas City, Mo.; Thomas Moore, McAllen, Tex.; Calvin Myers, Wellington; Gary Northcott, Overland Park; Paul Ruff, Clay Center; Dale Schneider, Lawrence; James Spoon, Overland Park; William Thomas, Kansas City, Mo.; Thomas Ward, Concordia. All the men are freshmen except Moehle, who is a junior. Talented Women and College We don't know if women scientists are as competent as men. We've simply never bothered to find out. But it doesn't matter. We need all kinds of people today, not just the physicist who sends off the satellite. Of all the talented people who don't go to college today the majority are women.-Mary Ingraham Bunting Product Fills Fashion Need For that fashion zone between the sport jacket and the V-neck cashmere or lambswool sweater, the British have come up with something called the "coatigan" for men. A product of the Cox Moore Co., Nottingham, the coatigan can be worn with tie, ascot or open shirt. The front is ribbed; the pocket, patched. Product Fills Fashion Need A Difference in Attitude Adults ask little boys what they want to be when they grow up. They ask little girls where they got that pretty dress. We don't think it matters what women do with their education. Why, we don't even care if they learn to be good mothers. If we really cared, we would have developed good college courses to prepare them for motherhood.-Mary Ingraham Eunting A Difference in Attitude It's a HAPPY HOMECOMING with this HOT FUDGE To or from the Big Game . . . or at home afterwards, there's no treat like this Dairy Queen treat! It scores in every quarter! ©1957. DAIRY QUEEN NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CO. DAIRY QUEEN 1835 Mass. It's a HAPPY HOMECOMING with this HOT FUDGE To or from the Big Game ... or at home afterwards, there's no treat like this Dairy Queen treat! It scores in every quarter! ©1957, DAIRY QUEEN NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CO. DAIRY QUEEN 1835 Mass. OUR PROUD GUARANTEE of Quality! Griff's BURGER BARS THIS FEDERAL STAMP ASSURES OUR CUSTOMERS OF PURE, QUALITY BEEF, PROCESSED UNDER STRICTEST SANITARY CONDITIONS SERVE ONLY U.S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED Pure BEEF Top Quality HAMBURGERS Only 15¢ MORE THAN 40 MILLION HAVE BEEN SOLD STORAGE FREEZERS OPEN TO PUBLIC INSPECTION AT ANY TIME! 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GRiff's STANDARD MENU OF QUALITY FOODS Hamburger ... 15¢ Cheeseburger ... 19¢ French Fries ... 10¢ Malts & Shakes 15£ & 20¢ Coke ... 10£ & 15¢ Root Beer ... 10£ & 15¢ Orange ... 10£ & 15¢ Coffee ... 10£ Milk ... 10¢ LOOK FOR THE DRIVE-IN WITH "The Rainbow Colors" IN PRINCIPAL CITIES OF KANSAS - MISSOURI - TEXAS OKLAHOMA - LOUISIANA AND SOON IN SEVERAL MORE STATES THROUGHOUT THE U.S.A 1618 West 23rd Street Page 7 KU Pinnings Give Rise to Customs By Earbara Howell The wearing of a fraternity man's pin by his girl is a custom that has developed along with the fraternity system. An exploration of "getting pinned" at KU will bring to light some interesting local customs. First, let us decide what a pinning means. Most students say that it means "engaged-to-be engaged." In other words it is an intermediate step between casual dating and engagement. It is interesting to note that often a pinning is given more attention than an engagement. IN MOST FRATERNITIES a pinning is announced by a poem read at dinner or at a party. Many times the whole fraternity then presents a serenade at the girl's sorority house. A sorority girl can announce her pinning in a serious form or as is more the case, she can have a few of her friends present a humorous skit. Often the girls in the skit and the housemother receive flowers from the newly-pinned girl. MANY FRATERNITES "LAKE" the young man involved, in one of the two lakes near the campus. This involves taking him forcecably out of the house, and after throwing him in the lake, drive off and leave him to walk home. Usually there is a "pinning party" which can range in size from a small get-together to a large expensive party to which all sorority and fraternity members and their dates are invited. The cost of such parties can be as little as $10 or as much as $150. In some fraternities the men are not allowed to give away their own pins, so they must buy a "sweetheart pin." This is a miniature replica of the regular pin. The fraternity and sorority pins are attached by a slender chain. As one KU senior woman put it, "Pinnings are a social convenience for some, but for others a more serious step toward marriage." Miller Hall has elected the following officers for the year. They are president, Carolyn Houser, Howard junior; vice president, Kathleen Nelson, Beattie senior; secretary, Jeanne Nottingham, Hiawatha junior; treasurer, Gerry Gunther, Dighton sophomore; house manager, Pat Gibbs, Wichita senior. Miller Hall Officers Announced Social chairman, Karla Toothaker, Westmoreland sophomore; freshman counselor and music chairman, Carol Moore, Independence, Mo., junior; house co-ordinator, Mary Reeves, Oberlin sophomore; assistant house manager, Joanne Prim, Overbrook sophomore. WRA representative, Joyce Sayre, Southwest City, Mo., sophomore; historian, Karen Lienert, Denver; Colo. freshman; pianist, Patsy Goins Maryville freshman; Inter-Res- idence Council representative, Betty Reynolds, Wellington junior; alumni secretary, Nancy Ray, Kansas City senior. Publicity chairman, Marcia Morgan, Baldwin sophomore; scholarship chairman, Kathy Kochner, Fairview junior; parliamentarian, Pat Soft, Pretty Prairie freshman; house photographer, Ella Forrest, Kansas City, Mo. junior, and librarian, Saloma Salter, Wakefield junior. Phi Kappa Tau The pledge class of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity announces the following officers: president, Kent Yeagley, Leavenworth freshman; vice president, Charles Stockdale, Kansas City sophomore; secretary, Steve Ballard, Buffalo, N.Y., sophomore; treasurer, Robert Lyons, Kansas City junior; social chairman, Darryl Cohoon, Leavenworth freshman. Concordia Club Pledge Classes Initiated The officers of Concordia Club for the fall semester are: president, Art Traugott, Ellinwood senior; 1st vice president, J. David Smith, Kansas City senior; 2nd vice president, J. Douglas Wolfe, Garden City junior; treasurer, Jerry Forney, Falls City, Alpha Delta Pi Alpha Delta Pi sorority recently initiated the following pledges: Gloria Amershek, Pittsburgh; Elizabeth Barrett, Canton; Diane Barry, Paris, France; Constance Bishop, Leavenworth; Carol Bradley, Leavenworth; Marcia Dicks, Prairie Village; Lana Farabi, Pittsburg; Jeaneen Jones, Burton; Margaret Jones, Winona, Minn.; Judith Kampmeier, Bartlesville, Okla.; Victoria Kimbrough, Lawrence; Patricia Lee, Independence, Mo.; Joane Lula, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Mary Ann Luskow, St. Louis, Mo. Laureale Milberg, Arlington, Va.; Sandra Moore, Swift Current, Saskatchewan, Canada; Nancy Partin, Prairie Village; Norma Purvis, Topcica; Janice Sappenfield, Coffeyville; Sandra Shrout, Leawood; Sandra Lee Smith, Wichita; Jo Ann Snyder, Bethesda, Md.; Donna Vertrees, Overland Park; Rosalind Young, St. Joseph, Mo.; and honor initiate, Jennifer Tuley, Kirkwood, Mo. All are sophomores except Miss Shout, Miss Sappenfield, Miss Smith, and Miss Snyder, who are juniors, and Miss Vertrees and Miss Barrett who are seniors. Tri Delta Newly initiated members of Delta Delta Delta are Judy Anderson, Garden City; Sharon Black, Wichita; Janet Bryant, Arkansas City; Lois Busche, Glendale, Mo.; Junie Crouch, Bartiesville, Okla.: Betty Dwyer, Wichita; Charlene Edmondson, Lawrence; Susan Glenn, Princeton, Ill.; Janice Huffman, Junction City; Barbara Miles, Sedgwick; Susan Murphy, Kansas City; Susan Mustard, Wichita; Joyce Neaderhiser, Davenport, Iowa; Francia Pittman, Haven; Martha Ramsey, Kansas City; Martha Ryan, Manhattan; Sue Shelton, Minneapolis, Minn.; Luvena Smith, Russell; Michelle Steele, Wichita; Joy Stephen, Prairie Village; Judy Thompson, Arkansas City; Jerrick Trantum, Kansas City, and Mary Jane Truitt, Chanute. All are sophomores. * * Sigma Kappa Sigma Kappa recently initiated the following women; most active pledge, Nancy Best, Webster Groves, Mo.; Colleen Boggs, Denver, Colo.; Carol Burger, San Marino, Calif.; Janice Campbell, Roeland Park; Brooke Curran, Kansas City; Cynthia Childers, Merriam; Sally Ford, Tulsa, Okla.; Judy Fraser, Larned; Julia Jarvis, Winfield; Pat John, Olathe; Pat Lynch, Tulaa, Okla.; Mary Lou Maroff, Parkville, Mo.; Linda Maxey, Independence; Virginia Miller, Overland Park; Jean Peterson, Topka; Jean Scott, Kansas City; Jane Sipe, Prairie Village; outstanding pledge, Karen Stevenson, Wichita; Carol Walker, Peabody; Joan Wilde, Salina, and honor initiate, Joanne Zabornik, Kansas City. All are sophomores. Mademoiselle Board Chosen The AWS Mademoiselle College Board, beginning its second year at KU, has selected eight new members for the Board. The new members are Marcia Myers, Topeka junior; Dianne Turner, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Pamela Rice, Wichita sophomore; Judith Scroggin, Kansas City, Mo. junior; Melanie Chandler, Kansas City junior; Susan Olson, Topeka junior; Peggy Johnson, Hutchinson sophomore, and Lesley Hagood, Prairie Village sophomore. Friday. November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Other members are Joycelyn Cade, Quenemo junior; Norma Kelly, Kansas City senior; Marty Moser, Lyndon senior, and Jackie Wash, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, and College Board chairman. The purpose of the College Board is to offer training and experience in the fashion field to undergraduate women and to make college women more familiar with local clothing merchandise. The College Board is sponsored nationally by "Mademoiselle" magazine and locally by a Lawrence merchant. Neb, senior; rush chairman, Glen DeWerff, Ellinwood senior; commissary, Delton Masenthin, Vassarophomere; scholarship chairman, Larry Smith, Kansas City senior. It's no skin off the leopard's back but about 100,000 imitation leopard garments will have been sold this fall in stores across the country. The estimate is based on mill yardage figures and cutter reports. Fur coat makers say it takes five leopard skins to make a full coat. The mock garments have "saved" quite a few leopards from extinction. The Inter-fraternity Pledge Council has elected the following officers for the year. They are; president, Jerry Harper, Wichita, vice president, Gary Dickson, Hoisington, treasurer, Jay Strayer, Kansas City; all sophomores and corresponding secretary, Jon Spies, Leawood, and recording secretary, Ron Best, Leawood, both freshmen. I.F.P.C. Concordia Pledges Nine Paris designers went wild with seissors when turning out togs last fall. Watch for suits and coats with side vents — sometimes rising near the armpole. Concordia Club announces the pledging of the following men: Ron Hansen, Dodge City; Herb Hesser, Kansas City; Tom Schweitzer, Kansas City, and Roger Griesel, Mission, all junior们; Jerry Wudtke, Norton sophomore; Steve Schumann, Powiattain; Gary Anderson, Kansas City; John Benson, Mission, and Paul Adelgern, Kansas City, all freshmen. Needed-Better Ways To Spend the Evening Recent concern in some areas on the campus has brought out a number of questions concerning campus spirit, activities and social life. The Kansas conducted interviews with students to find out what they thought of one of these phases: campus dating habits When asked, "What would you like to see in Lawrence for the college dating set in the way of new terms of recreation," the typical remark was "better places to spend an evening." JACOB DYCK, Topeka senior, wants to see a decent nightclub established here, "not a 'podunk' one where you would be scared to take a date," he said. Paul Naylor, Kansas City sophomore, had a little different idea. "We need a place where we can go for refuge after studies." Another Kansas City sophomore, Mike Walker, thought that the facilities were fine but not adequate. "The dating facilities must expand with the University," he said. Some of the other ideas presented were a dating club to promote unusual activities for the "daters." "Have a club to go snow sledding in the Potter Lake area or go on picnic trips and things like that," said Grace Ferguson, Hutchinson sophomore. "We definitely need more class rivalry like they used to have," said Tom Bornholdt, Topeka sophomore. "Here on the Hill we could have class parties." Mary Jo Dickson, Overland Park sophomore, thought that KU needed another Tulagi's here. THE ONE ANSWER that topped off the whole set was the one from Marick Payton, Lawrence junior, "I think," he said "we need an extension of the Sycamore Hollow Nudist Club here on campus." The rounded look is more prevalent than gaunt, high fashion models would lead us to believe. Lane Bryant, specialist in styles for the fuller figure, claims that one out of five women in the United States wears a size 18 or larger. acd 0 7 & 8 9r Bright futures in data transmission at W. E. New engineers with initiative who can meet Western Electric's high standards are offered many exciting career opportunities with our company in data processing development work as it relates to communications. For example, Western's engineers—working closely with Bell Telephone Laboratories—have solved development and manufacturing problems connected with the Bell System's new DATA-PHONE Data set (made by Western Electric). DATA-PHONE service lets business machines, such as computers, "speak" to each other in a language of numbers and symbols over existing telephone communication networks. This represents a tremendous boon to business; and consequently, it is estimated that some day there may be more machine talk than people talk using telephone lines. Of course, data communications is only one of many rewarding career areas that await you at Western Electric. Here are just a few of the others: electronic switching . . . solid state electronic devices . . . microwave radio relay...computer-programmedproductionlines ...solar cells . . optical masers . . futuristic telephones. We need high-caliber, forward-thinking engineers now to help us transform these plans into realities or to work with us in scores of other key communications areas. Your future, the future of Western Electric, and the future of America's communications—could well depend on your first career connection. 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. Western Electric MANUFACTURING AND SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM. Principal manufacturing locations at Chicago, I.; Kearny, N. J.; Baltimore, Md.; Indianapolis, ind.; Allentown and Laurelidge, ra.; Winston-Salem, N. C.; Buffalo, N. Y.; North Andover, Mass.; Omaha, Neb.; Kansas City, Mo.; Columbia, Ohio; Oklahoma City, Okla.; Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J.; Teteley 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 N. J. Y. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 Rankin Drug Co. PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY Drug Sundries, Fountain Pens Up to date Fountain Service VI 3-5440 1101 Mass. --y of ING General Appliance Company Your Exclusive Full Line General Electric Dealer 1103 Mass. VI 3-0120 --y of ING Virginia Inn Motel Highway 40 West Edge of Lawrence 24 air-conditioned units - a telephone in every unit - free television - swimming pool AAA BEST WESTERN Grace Williams — Skipper Williams — Odd Williams Phone VI 3-6611 for reservations --y of ING Lawrence National Bank Save Your Time by Using Our Modern Motor Bank 7th & Mass. TAME WILDC WILD The Universit 1961 HOMECOM Friday, November 10, 1961 4:00 p.m. Alumni Registration Opens, Kansas Union Lunge. Evening Night Tour of Decorations at Organized Houses 6:00 p.m. Class of '34 Reunion, Rally and Mixer, Hotel Jayhawk, Topella 6:30-7:00 p.m. Carillon Recital, Memorial Campanile, Ronald Barnes, Carillonneur. 7:00 p.m. Varsity-Freshman Basketball Game, Allen Field House. $1.00. 9:00 p.m. "Auntie Mame" University Theatre Production Especially For Returning Alumni, Murphy Hall Theatre. (Student I.D.'s and Season Tickets DO NOT Admit to this Performance.) $1.50. Saturday, November 11, 1961 9:00 a.m. Alumni Registration Opens, Kansas Union Lounge. Morning View Homecoming Decorations at Organized Houses. 9:00-11:00 a.m. General Homecoming Reception, Union Lounge, Coffee. 9:00-11:00 a.m. Sixth Annual Engineering Alumni Reception, Coffee and Doughnuts, Music and Browsing Rooms, Union. C GO GO JAY JAY Norris Brothers, Inc. Heating Plumbing Air Conditioning Electrical 1515 W. 6th VI 3-6911 Friday, November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 9 ME THE OCATS ersity of Kansas OMING SCHEDULE OCATS CATS 9:00-11:00 a.m. Home Economics Open House, Home Economics Department Dining Room, Fraser Hall. 9:00-11:00 a.m. Free Sightseeing Bus Tours of Campus, Starting from Union. 9:00-11:00 a.m. Home Economics Open House, Home Economics Department Dining Room, Fraser Hall. 9:00-11:00 a.m. Free Sightseeing Bus Tours of Campus, Starting from Union. 9:30-11:00 a.m. School of Business Open House, Registration and Reception in Room #208, Summerfield Hall, Tours of Building, Refreshments. 10:00-1:00 p.m. Law School Open House and Informal Buffet, Green Hall Library. 10:45-1:00 p.m. Homecoming Buffet Luncheon, Ballroom, Union. Queen and Attendants Will Be Present. $1.55 Per Person. 12:00-12:30 p.m. Carillon Recital, Memorial Campanile. 1:30 p.m. Kansas vs. Kansas State Football Game, Memorial Stadium. $4.00. Pre-Game Performance: The University of Kansas and Kansas State University Marching Bands. Halftime: Crowning of 1961 Homecoming Queen and Her Two Attendants; Presentation of A Homecoming Queen Of Past Years. After the Game: Cider and Doughnuts, Main Floor, Union. 8:00 p.m. "Auntie Mame" University Theatre Production, Murphy Hall Theatre. (Student I.D.'s and Season Tickets DO Admit To This Performance.) 9:00-1:00 a.m. 1961 Homecoming Dance, Union Ballroom and Adjoining Rooms, Ralph Marterie Band. $2.50 Per Couple. 9:30-11:00 a.m. School of Business Open House, Registration and Reception in Room #208, Summerfield Hall. Tours of Building. Refreshments. 10:00-1:00 p.m. Law School Open House and Informal Buffet, Green Hall Library. 10:45-1:00 p.m. Homecoming Buffet Luncheon, Ballroom, Union. Queen and Attendants Will Be Present. $1.55 Per Person. 12:00-12:30 p.m. Carillon Recital, Memorial Campanile. 1:30 p.m. Kansas vs. Kansas State Football Game, Memorial Stadium. $4.00. Pre-Game Performance: The University of Kansas and Kansas State University Marching Bands. Halftime: Crowning of 1961 Homecoming Queen and Her Two Attendants; Presentation of A Homecoming Queen Of Past Years. After the Game: Cider and Doughnuts, Main Floor, Union. 8:00 p.m. "Auntie Mame" University Theatre Production, Murphy Hall Theatre. (Student I.D.'s and Season Tickets DO Admit To This Performance.) 9:00-1:00 a.m. 1961 Homecoming Dance, Union Ballroom and Adjoining Rooms, Ralph Marterie Band. $2.50 Per Couple. HAWKS Rumsey Funeral Home Ambulance Service Dial V13-5111 Fred Rumsey Oscar Rumsey Cole's - Hillcrest Rusty's IGA Food Center --- Western Auto Associate Stores Automobile Supplies Household Appliances Toys 910 Mass. Malls Shopping Center --- Frank's FOR THE BEST IN FURNITURE Exclusive Lines ETHAN ALLEN MAPLE LANE DANISH MODERN 808 Mass. Unusual Xmas Gifts John's Novelty Company Next to Granada Theatre Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday. November 10, 1961 WELCOME ALUMS! We hope you have a fine weekend in Lawrence. YouTube Mark Dull, Kansas City graduate student. FOR EVERY CAMPUS NEED WE PROUDLY OFFER SELECTIONS FROM SUCH BRANDS AS: Hart Shaffner & Marx Varsity Town Clothes Madisonaire Clothes Dobbs Hats Bostonian Shoes - Windbreaker Jackets - Wilson Athletic Equipment Enro Shirts Donegal Shirts Mayfair Slacks DRESS RIGHT-When You Look Your Best You Do Your Best For over 65 years, its has been our pleasure to serve the University family, traditionally setting the pace for students who care how they dress. We offer a complete wardrobe service for every occasion, from formal wear to TGIF attire. Won't you stop in for your clothing needs as generations of students have done in the past. This scene is looking at the shirt, sweater, and accessory departments. You'll Enjoy Shopping at Ober's 821 Mass. VI 3-1951 Friday. November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 11 CANADA IS THE LAND OF A NATION OF MAN APPRECIATING GREAT ART—Law students have long admired this statue. Observations on the Artistic Qualities of Law Students Uncle Jimmy Green in front of Green Hall is a much admired statue probably more so than any other. As every woman student who passes Green Hall knows, the male law students spend endless hours staring hungriy at the statue, and sometimes even hissing at it—"Pig, Pig." THE WOMEN CAN NOT help seeing this devout admiration. They walk between the steps of Green Hall where the law students congregate to admire Uncle Jimmy, and Uncle Jimmy himself, directly across the sidewalk. Small wonder though that the lawyers leer and grimace at Uncle Jimmy. He is a man to be admired. SINCE HIS appearance in 1924, he has withstood the ravages of time and paint, especially the latter. He has been decorated with enough colors to make the rainbow look sick. In the bygone history of KU, St. Patrick's day usually saw Uncle A SUSPICION in the past was that K-State students were often responsible for the art work. A past rivalry between the engineers and law students at KU was also suspect as a motivation for painting Uncle Jimmy. Jimmy gaily dressed for the occasion in a coat of green paint. Of course students were never too prone to wait for a holiday to celebrate, and Uncle Jimmy saw the paint cans flying many another time too. The sculptor was Daniel C. French, who was then one of the foremost in his field. He started work in 1920 by surveying the KU campus for the best site to erect the statue. Evidently he had a soft spot in his heart for the education of women students in selecting the site. Where else could they learn so much about appreciation of art than by walking by Green Hall and observing the KU law students ogling Uncle Jimmy. Best Dressed Legs on Campus Wear Slacks from Higley's PANTS Warm Comfortable Good Looking 935 Mass. An array of colors choose from Flannel, Cords, Plaids. Checks and Prints. See the Sweaters to Match Hialey's By United Press International THE CASE AGAINST COLONEL Books in Review THE ONE ON THE COURSE SUTTON, by Bruce Cameron (Coward-McCann, $4.95): A fictional exploration of one of the touchier areas in America's current garrison society — the security investigation, specifically in the instance of a suspected homosexual. The book presents what amounts to a duel between two men: Lt. Col. David Sutton, alleged homosexual and sex deviate, and Larry Adams, the man from G-2 who seems unnecessarily eager to find Sutton guilty. The evi- cence against the colonel is slight. His uncle and an artist whom he knows quite well are acknowledged homosexuals. Investigators, spurred on by a vengeful general, have uncovered a few possibly damaging episodes in his life, all somewhat magnified by spiteful gossip. This is a tense and suspenseful story, building toward a denouement that probably will not startle most readers. ... SINCLAIR LEWIS, by Mark Schorer (McGraw-Hill, $10). A [full length biography of one of America's greatest literary figures — the first American writer to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. Lewis was a lonely child and a lonely man who repelled the friends he so keenly needed. Immensely successful professionally, he was an outstanding failure in his personal life. Schorer's painstakingly detailed story relates and assesses the achievements and failures of Lewis the man and of Lewis the writer in this thoughtful and absorbing book. LAWRENCE LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS LAWRENCE LAUNDRY, home of Quality Sanitone Dry Cleaning, has proudly served KU and Lawrence for the past 65 years. Our goal has been, and will always be, to offer top grade cleaning at fair prices. See us soon and find out for yourself the value of Sanitone dry cleaning. "Quality Guaranteed" LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. VI 3-3711 "Specialists in Fabric Care" Pae 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 KU Librarian Tries to Help Lo Kwok-bong (Karl Lo to his local acquaintances) is an unassuming young man with an engrossing mission. He is trying to help chemical researchers "find the pepper." Mr. Lo, a 26-year-old native of mainland China, is a professional librarian on the permanent staff of Watson Memorial Library. LIKE MILLIONS of his American counterparts, he loves to dabble in cooking, but his mission has nothing to do with the culinary arts. Moreover, Mr. Lo isn't casting an asperation at the table manners or general intelligence of workers in chemical research. On the contrary, his early training, which includes an undergraduate degree in chemistry from Chung Chi College in Hong Kong, puts him in sympathy with their problems. HE USES THE "PEPPER" simile to make a vivid picture for the layman of his off-duty efforts to devise a highly technical system of library classification for chemical literature. The mild-mannered Mr. Lo, with patience and understanding for the uninitiated, puts it this way: "Suppose the pepper represents some literature on a very specialized phase of chemistry. . . . "That pepper is almost microscopic in the many ingredients that represent the whole field of chemical literature. "What I hope to do is make it easier for the researcher to find the pepper." IN A RECENT INTERVIEW which took place over 10 cups of coffee—in his three years in the U.S. he has come to enjoy it as well as his native tea—he explained how he came to take on a job, which to his knowledge, no one else has successfully accomplished. It started, more or less, when he was a library student assistant at Chung Chi in his junior and senior years. That began his move away from his original interest in chemistry to that of librarianship. WHEN HE WAS graduated from Chung Chi in 1958, a professor of physics helped arrange admission for Mr. Lo to do graduate work in Library science at Atlanta (Ga.) University, a graduate center for Southern Negro colleges. Traveling was no new experience to Mr. Lo. His family had fled their home in Chung-san, Kwangtung, near the south coast of China, in the early 1940s when China was invaded by the Japanese. The family—his father was a successful business man—settled first in Hong Kong and later, when that city was also invaded, sought refuge in the Portuguese colony of Macao. WHILE MR. LO HAD few trepidations about his first trip outside the Orient, he confessed to being "happy and surprised that in America the people have a sensitive awareness of foreign relations and go out of their way to help anyone with a foreign accent." He had several advantages in making the move, however. He had studied the English language from an early age at school and several of the professors at Chung Chi College were Americans. It was at Atlanta, where he eventually obtained his master's degree in librarianship, that Mr. Lo first began toying with the chemical literature classification scheme. He used it as the subject for his graduate thesis. IN ANY GIVEN FIELD, he explains, the volume of written material, books, pamphlets, and research papers eventually outgrows standard library classification systems. When that happens, an advanced researcher may have to spend a lot of frustrating time searching the stacks for some material he is seeking. Using the chemical abstracts as his starting point, Mr. Lo hopes to Dedication STANFORD, Calif — (UPI) — A water fountain has been dedicated to the memory of Glenn S. (Pop) Warner, Stanford University's colorful football coach from 1924 to 1932. The fountain stands near the entrance to a gate to Stanford stadium. It was dedicated by the school's "Block S" society. devise a system that enables the researcher to know exactly where to go for a specific work. HE STARTED ABOUT four months ago, using his thesis as a foundation, and estimates his project will take at least another year. The new system, he said, demands an entirely new code method and must be flexible enough to allow for expansion far into the future. COULD WATSON Library benefit from such a new plan? Not likely, Mr. Lo explains. For one thing, the university library is already committed to long established classification methods and the amount of work involved in a changeover would make it impracticable. But the large research centers and laboratories, most of which have their own specialized libraries, might profitably use a comprehensive classification system. His principal job is cataloguing Oriental material, but his knowledge of Chinese and Japanese makes him an asset to other departments of the library as well, particularly in acquisitions. Mr. Lo's particular work sanctum at Watson is two huge vault-like rooms on the main floor behind a massive Gothic wooden door labeled simply "Preparations Dept." SHORTLY AFTER he began working at the *KU Library two years ago, Mr. Lo tried to stimulate exchanges between KU and library and educational institutions in Red China. A common practice among libraries, the exchange system involves a trade of pamphlets, magazines and academic publications. But the results were discouraging. Most of his "feelers" to Red China libraries went unanswered, he explains. "The four basic classifications of the traditional system, which is not in use anymore, were Classics, History, Philosophy and Religion, and Miscellaneous. . . . WHAT WILL BE his next step if he succeeds in slaying the dragon of chemical literature? Nothing less than trying to classify the total product of literature from China's 4,000 year history. "The Harvard-Yenching system is a modification of the Imperial system, retaining the first, second and third classifications and expanding miscellaneous. . ." Since the interview started over several cups of coffee and shifted to pepper, it was perhaps natural that it ended on a gourmet's note with a general discussion of Chinese food. "Rice is basic to Chinese dishes, how do you spice it?" In some such foolish manner the question was posed. Mr. Lo, a bachelor who does most of his own food preparation, flashed a broad grin over a young but normally serious looking face. His answer was gentle, terse and condescending: "Don't spice the rice." [Image of a young man reading a book in a library. He is seated and appears to be focused on the text. The background features shelves filled with books.] FINDING THE PEPPER—Karl Lo, the KU librarian shown above, is working on an ambitious scheme to help chemists in their research. WELCOME PIZZA ALUMS!! PIZZA MR. PIZZA LES GERIG'S CAMPUS HIDEAWAY 106 W. N. Park Pizza and Spaghetti Specialists Phone VI 3-9111 Friday, November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 13 Changeable 'Shack'— (Continued from page 1) location of the women's dormitory area at 11th and Louisiana. University Hall—now Fraser—was the only other building on Mt. Oread. The enrollment had risen to 582, and many departments were in need of additional space. This was especially true of the chemistry department, which was crowded into an area of the Fraser Hall basement. To make the situation worse, the chemical odors frequently escaped into the upper stories of the building. IN 1880 THE STATE LEGISLATURE appropriated $4,000 and granted permission to use an unexpended interest fund of $8,000 for a new chemistry building. The following year, the chemistry department moved its equipment and odors into its new home. Within five years, however, the chemistry department and the pharmacy department. which shared the building, needed more room. To create additional space, a new basement was excavated. THIS DIDN'T HELP MUCH, for as Chancellor Snow told,the legislature one year, the basement was so damp the instructors "frequently suffered from malarial attacks on account of their unfavorable location." In 1900 the long-awaited chemistry building—now Bailey Hall—was completed, and the chemists left "The Shack" to the medics. The damp basement became a place where, according to a student writer several years later, "medical students carved on 'stiffs' in semigloom; and the existence the basement led was deadly dull." The attic became an animal house for raising rats and other rodents used in laboratory and experimental work, and once again the building had its distinctive odors. When the medics departed several years later, a student journalist wrote that the enduring problem was to "eradicate the rodent odors from the attic." By 1911, a newly-formed department—journalism—needed additional space. The University Kansan had resumed publication in 1904 after a suspension of several years, and in 1908 it had become a tri-weekly. The enrollment in journalism courses was increasing rapidly, and the printing department was crowded into a small area in the basement of Fraser Hall. THE MEDICS DEPARTED IN 1911 AND THE JOURNALISTS moved in. Writing of the move several years later, a student said: "A good job of house cleaning and airing naturally followed . . . and the basement turned from decomposing to composing." With adequate space, a home of their own, and status as a department, the journalists were ready for bigger things. On January 16, 1912, the University Kansan became a daily paper. FOR THE NEXT FORTY YEARS, the story of "The Shack"—as it was named by the journalism students—is the story of the UDK and the journalism department. The UDK "extras," the special editions, the crusades for campus improvements, and the day-by-day news came from "The Shack." Many men and women now prominent in journalism gained their first journalistic experience in "The Shack." Some of them are Ben Hibbs, editor of the Saturday Evening Post; James A. Bell, foreign correspondent for Time Magazine; Doris Fleeson, Washington correspondent for United Features Syndicate; Lester Suller, vice president of Look Magazine and Roy Roberts, president of the Kansas City Star. Presently in Kansas journalism are such graduates as Elton Carter. Norton Daily Telegram; John Conard, Kiowa County Signal; Eugene Lowther, Emporia Gazette; Clyde M. Reed Jr., Parsons Sun; Dolph Simons, Lawrence Journal-World; Oscar Stauffer, Stauffer Publications, Topeka; Ralph Hemenway, Minneapolis Messenger; Robert Bolitho, Harper Advocate and Otto Epp, Greeley County Republican. While in "The Shack," the journalism department experienced its "golden age," when over 200 students were enrolled in journalism courses one year. The new printing equipment and newsroom equipment needed made additional space necessary. Better working conditions also were needed. The newsroom was poorly lighted, and uncovered steam pipes in the lecture rooms popped and banged when they filled with steam, furnishing competition—along with the printing press—to the instructors. By the mid-1930s, journalism faculty members began to talk of moving the department to the Fowler Shops building when a proposed new shops building would be constructed. In 1942, Elmer Beth, professor of journalism, began tentative plans for remodelling Fowler Shops into a new home for the journalism department. THREE YEARS LATER. the floor plans were completed by Prof. Beth, revised somewhat by the department staff, and submitted. Blue prints were on display in the newsroom by the summer of 1945. The legislature appropriated $150,000 in 1945 and another $150,000 in 1947 for the Fowler Schopes project. MEANWHILE. THE JOURNALISM department reached two milestones. In 1944, the Board of Regents announced it was raising the department to the status of a School, and in 1948 the William Allen White School of Journalism became one of the 35 accredited journalism schools in the United States. The long-awaited move into the remodeled Fowler Shops—renamed Flint Hall—came in February, 1952, and "The Shack" once again settled into its former tranquil atmosphere. For several years it was used for extension classes and the theater workshop, and in 1956 its final residents, the anatomy students, moved in. "The Shack's" death warrant was issued last year when the legislature appropriated $1,800,000 for two new additions to Watson Library. One of these additions will extend east from the present structure and cover the area now occupied by "The Shack." By next spring, that little anonymous building which has housed students in chemistry, medicine, journalism, and anatomy, will no longer exist. UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON ST. LOUIS CATHEDRAL ONLY VISITORS—"The Shack," second oldest building on campus, has housed many departments. THE FIELD Engineering and Physical Science Seniors * GROW with a growing industry...the Bell Telephone System The Bell Telephone System, which has doubled in size in the last 10 years, is expanding rapidly to serve a growing nation. A growing telephone industry means new jobs, fresh opportunities for promotions, a rewarding career for you. The future is bright for young men who want to advance with a progressive industry. Representatives of these Bell System companies will be glad to talk with you: - Southwestern Bell Telephone Company builds, maintains and operates telephone and other communications systems throughout its five-state territory. - Bell Laboratories research, development, engineering and design in electronics and communications fields. - Western Electric manufacturing and supply unit. - Sandia Corporation applied research, development and design for production of atomic weapons. * Bell System representatives will be on campus November 14 and 15. Sign up for an interview at the engineering office. WELL STEMBERG CO., LTD. MILL STEMBERG CO., LTD. WWW.WELLSTEMBERG.COM Page 14 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 Collection of Paintings to Be Shown By Elaine F. Blaylock American landscape paintings ranging from nineteenth century art of the Hudson River school to contemporary abstract works will make up an exhibition opening Sunday at the Museum of Art. This group of paintings will be on display until Jan.15. "Legacy of the Land" is the title of this collection, which is being presented in honor of the Conference of the American Association of Land Grant Colleges and State Universities being held in Kansas City, Nov. 12-16. THIS SHOW WAS PLANNED to make use of the museum's excellent collection of American landscapes and to give students an opportunity to work with an exhibition, according to Gerald Bernstein, instructor of art history and curator of the art museum. Students in a seminar in American Landscape Paintings conducted by Mr. Bernstein are helping to prepare the exhibit. They also have written brief biographical sketches of the artists included in the exhibition for the catalogue. In the class are Craig Craven, Stanberry, Mo., senior; Harold Lind, Shawnee Mission graduate student; Karen Brookfield, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and Pamela Beezley, Kinsley senior. THE PAINTINGS WILL be shown in settings that suggest American homes of various periods to help the viewer visualize them in their original settings. Craig Craven executed the settings under the supervision of Mr. Bernstein. Craig has selected such articles as furniture, carpets, wallpaper, house plants, and window shutters to create the proper historical setting. "View of Old North College," earliest known painting of KU, will be shown in this exhibition. It was painted in 1880 by James Hess who was living in Lawrence at that time. The first school of American landscape painting was the Hudson River School. Contrasts within this school, Mr. Bernstein explained, are illustrated by the romantic and idealized painting of Thomas Cole as compared to the literal detail found in the work of Victor DeGrailly. As the pioneers moved westward, painters like Albert Bierstadt recorded the nation's expansion. Bierstadt's "Sunset on The Plains" will be exhibited. Books in Review By Roy D. Laird Assistant Professor of Political Science TITO: THE MAN WHO DEFIED HITLER AND STALIN, by Fitzroy Maclean, Ballantine Paperback, 75 cents. Yugoslavia is communist. Therefore, for our State Department to consider selling aircraft to Yugoslavia is "virtually treason." Making this charge to one of the State Department's key policy makers at a recent briefing, a lady reporter concluded that Tito would quickly hand the planes over to the Soviet army. When one takes a Devil view of politics, an understanding of international affairs becomes easy. Men are either good guys or bad guys. Nations are either for us or against us. REAL MEN ARE NEITHER gods or devils. Josip Broz, Marshal Tito, is at once a good guy, who fought first Hitler and later Stalin with great courage, and a bad guy, who has often dealt ruthlessly with his ideological opponents. Tito is a Communist who is both for us and against us, an idealist dedicated to the principle that capitalism must end, but a national leader who has learned from bitter experience that by far the greatest threat to Yugoslavia lies to the East from Soviet Russia. In his book, "Tito," Fitzroy Maclean, Member of Parliament, and Churchill's Commander attached to Tito's Partisans during World War II, clearly demonstrates both the strength of Tito's faith These demands forced Yugoslavia to go its own way, to make a and the impossible demands of Stalin in the name of that faith. clean break with the homeland of communism in a way that allows for no forseeable possibility of repair. The book should end once and for all the dispute over whether the Partisans or Mihajlovic's Cetniks were the real fighters against the Nazis — Tito and the Partisans. IN AN IDEAL WORLD in which morality and not power provided the key to international affairs, the West would repudiate fascist Spain and Communist Yugoslavia. Yugoslavia and Russia would be inseparable political twins. In the world we live in, however, probably the greatest blow yet suffered by the Soviet imperialists has been the defection of Yugoslavia. Western policies that failed to encourage such fragmentations of the Soviet empire would only work to advance communist imperialism. Tame Those Wildcats Jayhawkers! Quality Food - Delivery Service Sommers Grocery VI 3-1511 1021 Mass. INTERESTING EFFECTS can be seen in a painting by Martin J. Heade, who was fascinated by the quality of early morning light, and in one done by Winslow Homer, whose approach was straightforward and objective, giving his paintings drama and dignity. Finally, the show brings the viewer to the twentieth century with its new opportunities for experimentation. Among the examples of this period are a primitive fantasy by Louis Eilshemius and a sharply contrasting abstract vista by John Noble. AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) — Two University of Texas students paid part of their enrollment fees for this semester from money they earned in summer training with the Marine Corps. Find Gold in Marine Corps But it came from a pan instead of Uncle Sam. Henry McDonald and Ralph Johnson, members of the 13th Rifle Company of the Marine Corps Reserve, took their summer training in the Sierra Nevada mountains near Fallon, Nev. They found plenty of time to spend on the Walker River and used it to pan for gold. Neither wants to do it fulltime for a living. Best-Dressed DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI) The Southern Methodist University band can lay a strong claim to being the "best-dressed band in the land." The wardrobe for the 90-member band includes, besides a regular band uniform, blue blazers, a red-and-white candy-striped blazer, a red blazer, bermuda shorts, a tuxedo, and a red nightgown—for night pep rallies. They said they had to work about 12 hours to get $5 worth. Big Fingers Troublesome NEW YORK — (UPI) — A survey by a ring company showed that more than 300 women here each year call on police emergency squads to remove tight rings from fingers swollen by overweight, pregnancy, arthritis, climatic conditions, vigorous housework and other causes. Be the FAIR LADY of Homecoming Like a beautiful, filmy, softly-hued cloud . . . that's the look of your party dress because ACME carefully, carefully cleans it better. 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE Acme LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Hillcrest Shopping Center Downtown 1111 Mass. Malls Shopping Center TAYLOR JACKSON Acme Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Downtown 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 Friday, November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 15 DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK Lawrence's Progressive Bank Welcomes Grads to Homecoming THE HISTORY OF THE LIBRARY The Library is a modern, multi-facility institution that serves the community by providing access to books, periodicals, and other materials. It offers a variety of services, including a library card system, a library catalog, a reference desk, and a study room. The Library also hosts various events and activities, such as book readings, lectures, and performances. The Library is located in a beautiful location, surrounded by trees and open spaces. It has a spacious interior with large windows and high ceilings, creating a bright and welcoming atmosphere. The Library also features a collection of rare books and manuscripts, as well as a collection of art and photographs. The Library is a vital part of the community, providing access to knowledge and enriching life for everyone. Our New Bank and Drive-up Facilities on 9th Street Between Kentucky & Tennessee Homecoming Greetings to Kansas University. We are proud to join in your growth and development with the progress of our new bank building now being built. See us in our new location after December 1. Page 16 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10. 1961 Gunn Describes Work一 (Continued from page 1) Graduating from KU with a B.S. in journalism, he later received his M.A. in English at the University. He has served as an editor of alumni publications and is currently an instructor of English at KU. His favorite writing subject is science fiction. "I first discovered science fiction in the mid-30s," he says. "Science fiction offers a great deal of vitality and reward to a writer, and is different from most literature in that it concentrates on ideas rather than characterizations. I suspect that it has a great potential which is particularly suited to our times. "IT COULD BE A MOST rewarding literature for young people in their teens," he continues. "It would present to them ideas about our society. Our society is basically orientated toward the future, and science fiction reflects this. For young people to be exposed to it could be most beneficial." His love for science fiction is easily demonstrated. His M.A. thesis at KU was on science fiction. The new book, "The Immortals," is based on the potential problems of the search for immortality and increasing demands for better medical care. SINCE THAT TIME he has written almost 50 stories and four novels on science fiction. Some of the titles of his stories are: "Pill Roller," "The Man Who Owned Tomorrow," "Powder Keg" and "The Misogynist." The novels are: "This Fortress World," "Station in Space," "The Joy Makers" and a new one, "The Immortals." A fifth book, "Star Bridge" was written in collaboration with Jack Williamson. When the tall, lanky 38-year-old Mr. Gunn is not serving as an administrative assistant to the chancellor or in other public relations jobs, he spends time with his family (a wife, two children, a dog named Mandy and a cat named Silky). ABOUT HIS SCIENCE fiction writing, Gunn says: "I don't do much of it any more, but I plan to start soon. It will mean doing it at night." When he talks to you, his mouth breaks out in a smile. He does not look as haggard as one would suspect in view of his many time-consuming activities. "You find time to do all these things." he says. Solid Research- Reactor Center from the Radioactive Isotopes Laboratory behind and to the east of Summerfield Hall. With the reactor the department can increase its studies of radioactive materials and their effect on the body. (Continued from page 1) The majority of this work and the research work for the government is carried on by graduate and undergraduate students. Some are from the government agencies; others are taking the program in radiation biophysics. WITH THE GEIGER COUNTERS the department makes a valuable contribution to the university's welfare. They are responsible for seeing that all units of the university using radioactive material are safe and able to be used for such work. In the past few weeks the department has given a series of lectures at Lawrence High School on radiation and its physical and biological effects. Israel Develops- structors and survey missions to other countries. (Continued from page 1) - Training in the developing countries by Israeli teams assisted by local personnel trained in Israel. Students are trained in Israel with the purpose of taking over and continuing the work of Israelis. FOR EXAMPLE, Liberia sought aid in establishing an ophthalmological center. Four Israeli doctors and nurses went to Liberia and set up a project while some Liberians came to Israel for training. Especially satisfying to interested countries is the informality in the approach of Israelis to their requests and the swift response they received, according to government officials. A Foreign Ministry official said: "We get requests ranging all the way from how to organize a national day celebration to pretzel bending." ISRAELI OFFICIALS have been known to receive a request for a technical aid program at the beginning of the week and four days later they had the whole plan ready together with a list of Israel experts available for service in that particular country. No accounting has ever been made, they say, and no official here is able to provide such figures. But the costs are usually discussed informally at the time the program is prepared by Israelis and representatives of the recipient nation. The question of how much this aid costs Israel is a very difficult one to answer, officials say. Generally all costs except those of the trainees in Israel are borne by the recipient country. KU Municipal Airport Go KU Bomb the Wildcats Krhart Flying Service VI 3-2167 Students From Many Lands at KU Foreign students from nearly every section of the world are helping to give KU an international flavor this year. More than 300 students from 61 foreign countries are attending classes at the University this fall, said Clark Coan, KU foreign student adviser. Oral History THEY ARE ENROLLED in subjects ranging from English Literature to hydrology, and the part they play in campus clubs and political organizations is far out of proportion to their relatively small number. Which countries have the largest student delegations at KU this year? Nationalist China's group of 40 students is the largest here, followed by India with 31 and Germany with 22. Great Britain, Hong Kong and Iran each have 11. Asian students at KU outnumber those from European countries by nearly two to one - 160 to 87. Of the Asian students, 128 come from the Far East, 32 from the Near East. SOUTH AMERICAN STUDENTS make up the third largest foreign student group at KU, with 22 students here. Male foreign students outnumber the females 226 to 75. The men-women ratio among foreign students favors the women in much the same manner as it does within the entire student body. The oral history recordings were begun in 1948 by historian Allan Nevins in an effort to preserve for researchers recollections and ideas which had not been committed to written records. NEW YORK — (UPI) — An associate of the Wright brothers and several early stunt fliers are among the 85 persons interviewed on tape for a special history of flight project of Columbia University's Oral History Research Office. Through June 30 of this year. 6,024 hours of interviews with 1,055 persons had been recorded and 17,733 pages of the material transcribed and indexed for research use. ONE HOUR "MARTINIZING" the most in DRY CLEANING ONE HOUR MARTINIZING PRICES MEN'S LADIES' Suits ...1.20 Dress (plain) ...1.20 Pants ...60 Skirts ...60 Sweaters ...60 Sweaters ...60 Sport Shirts ...60 Blouses ...60 Sport Coats ...70 Short Coats ..1.10 Jackets ...75 Medium Coats ..1.25 Top Jackets ...1.35 Long Coats ..1.35 SHIRT SERVICE STILL TIME (BEFORE THE WEEKEND) at across from Central Jr. High 1407 Mass. 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Pennants $.25 to $2.50 String of Big Eight Pennants - $.98 Pick up a K.U. Souvenir at the KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 WALLOP THE WILDCATS! 32 Acacia Alpha Kappa Lambda Alpha Phi Alpha Delta Chi Delta Sigma Phi Delta Upsilon Kappa Alpha Psi Kappa SigmaLambda Chi Alpha Phi Delta Theta Phi Kappa Psi Welcome Back Alums! Friday. November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 3 K.U.'s GREEKS ARE BEHIND YOU! Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Kappa Theta Pi Kappa Alpha Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Chi Sigma Nu Sigma Phi Epsilon Tau Kappa Epsilon Theta Chi Triangle Welcome Back Alums! Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 TAKE THE LO HAMILTON A Sound Investment Membership in The K. U. Alumni Association 127 Strong Hall For a Greater Univer The Douglas County State BankFirst Nati --- Friday, November 10, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 5 LONG VIEW 1980 ment for the Future Support of the K.U. Endowment Association and Greater University Fund 224 Strong Hall - 270 Kansas Union University of Kansas National Bank Lawrence National Bank Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 AIR TREKKER ILLEGAL USE OF HANDS AND ARMS 1 BALL ILLEGALLY TOUCHED, KICKED OR BATTED I UNSPORTSMANLIKE CONDUCT OFFSIDE ILLEGAL MOTION OR SHIFT SALUTE ROUGHNESS AND PILING ON CLIPPING TOUCHDOWN OR FIELD GOAL BUFFALO STATE FIELD SKELETON ROUGHING THE KICKER ↑ INELIGIBLE RECEIVER DOWN FIELD ON PASS TIME-OUT WELCOME ALUMS to the KANSAS - K-STATE GAME WE ARE HAPPY TO HAVE YOU IN LAWRENCE, THE UNIVERSITY CITY. WE SUGGEST THAT YOU TAKE THIS PAGE TO THE GAME WITH YOU SO YOU'LL BE IN THE 'KNOW' WHEN THE 'FLAG IS DOWN.' FRIEND LUMBER COMPANY 1029 New Hampshire LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER COMPANY 900 N. Second St. McCONNELL LUMBER COMPANY 844 E.13th SHAW LUMBER COMPANY 7th and Vermont Lawrence Ready Mix 430 Maple ROOFING AND HEATING 646 N. Second St. EVERLEY Penny Ready Mix 730 Delaware Green Brothers 633 Mass. SCOTT TEMPERATURE EQUIPMENT Carrier Air Cond. & Heating 729 New Hampshire Sherwin-Williams PAINT COMPANY 1035 New Hampshire BUILDING MATERIALS CO. Quality Concrete Products 900 E. 15th MORTON'S FORWARD PASS OR KICK CATCHING INTERFERENCE 1. 双手向上抬起,掌心向下。 PRAYING SAFETY ILLEGALLY PASSING OR HANDING BALL FORWARD OFFICIAL REFERENCE DEFENSIVE HOLDING ↓ BALL READY-FOR-PLAY FAST FOOTBALL CLUB DELAY OF GAME INTENTIONAL GROUNDING STOP START INCOMPLETE FORWARD PASS, PENALTY DECLINED. NO PLAY OR NO SCORE Arrow FIRSTDOWN ILLEGAL POSITION OR PROCEDURE STATEN ISLAND arrow PERSONAL FOUL Friday, November 10. 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 7 OR NG CE SSING G ARD --- LDING DR-PLAY GAME GAME REFERENCE NALING REFERENCE UL GO KANSAS BEAT K-STATE K.U. CONCESSIONS KANSAS UNION ht e- le i- es vs a 0 d s s f s Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, November 10, 1961 GO KANSAS we're with you WOMEN'S Residence Halls MEN'S Residence Halls DOUTHART HALL BATTENFELD HALL HODDER HALL CARRUTH O'LEARY CORBIN HALL LEWIS HALL FOSTER HALL OREAD HALL Daily hansan 59th Year, No.42 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday, November 13, 1961 Day May Be Devoted To World Issues A suggestion that KU set aside a class day for discussion and debate of the international crisis is being circulated among faculty members. Early indications from a limited sampling of the KU staff indicate some reservations about the plan, at least in its particulars. THE CONCEPT WAS conceived at Cornell University, where classes will be suspended November 17 to focus academic attention on the world crisis. A mass meeting of students and faculty is also planned there. The idea reached KU by a letter to Howard Baumgartel, associate professor of Human Relations and Psychology, from a Cornell faculty member, William Delany. Prof. Baumgartel duplicated a statement contained in the letter and has begun its circulation among KU faculty members. OF MORE THAN 50 memoranda circulated by Prof. Baumgartel, by Friday only seven had been returned with comments and impressions concerning the idea. "We feel that the threat of global war, the effect of nuclear testing, and the attitude of helplessness in the face of these perils are subjects of the utmost importance. The Cornell statement, as presented in the memoranda said in part: "We believe that it is appropriate for the academic community to express its anxiety. Civilization is in danger... Our conscience dictates that, as part of our teaching obligation, we raise these issues as forcefully as we can." SIMILAR NOTES have been sent to persons at other universities to encourage similar programs. Prof. Baumgartel said he liked the idea in general but thought KU might develop a plan of its own. "If we wanted to do something about it perhaps something could originate from our own staff," Prof. Baumgartel said. He said of those who answered his inquiry, most seemed in favor of the concept behind the plan "but raised questions of procedure." WILLIAM EPSTEIN. assistant professor of psychology, one of those who received a copy of the suggestion, said "I think you can say I favor the proposal. However, I would like to see some of the details for procedure spelled out." Roy D. Laird, assistant professor of political science, and Robert Lawrence, assistant instructor of political science, said they favored an alternative plan for "bearing to bear the academic influence" on problems creating world tension. "IF SUCH A PROGRAM was to mark a serious and prolonged effort and concentrate on what might be Mr. Lawrence said he favored the concept of Peace Research Institute, a private institute with headquarters in Washington, D.C. done, I think the idea has merit,' Prof. Laird said. "The idea of the institute is to create enthusiasm for concentrated, long-range research on problems surrounding the cold war by people from the various disciplines," he said. Three other faculty members who were asked for their impression said they hadn't had time to study it sufficiently. Group Plans Day For Special Talks Tentative plans to set aside a special day to discuss the alternatives to nuclear war and life in a bomb shelter were made last night. Howard Baumgartel, associate professor of psychology and human relations said that he had already contacted several faculty members who had shown interest and support for the idea. A group of 14 students and faculty members decided to follow the example of Cornell University and suspend normal academic activities for the special day if such arrangements can be made. RAYMOND O'CONNER, assistant professor of history said that he had approached the Chancellor and that he was interested in the idea. PROF. O'CONNOR SAID. "If this is going to be successful it has to be a cooperative effort. Both students and faculty must work for the program." Prof. Baumgartel explained that the tentative plans include bringing speakers to the campus. Following the principal speeches, discussion groups with University faculty members serving as chairman could be arranged. The professors would chair groups discussing topics about which they are informed, he continued. The committee suggested the following topic for the special day: "What are the alternatives to nuclear war and life in a fallout shelter." A second meeting of the group will be at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union. All interested students are asked to attend. Kansan Presents Focus on Elections The executives of the University Daily Kansan interviewed the candidates for living district representatives to the ASC last Thursday in an effort to determine which ones were best qualified. The Kansan's editorial comment and candidate recommendations appear on pages two and three of this issue. Each candidate was questioned on re-affiliation with the National Student Association, the Human Rights Committee of the ASC, the campus traffic fine system, the stadium seating plan and the ASC investigation of Watkins Hospital and the Kansas Union. Opinions Differ on P-T-P Varied reactions to the Liberty Memorial Rededication and National People-to-People ceremonies Friday were expressed today by several KU foreign students who attended the gathering. "The fact that there were so many people there shows that a lot of people are interested in international understanding. I hope the University will find the backing of so many national leaders helpful." Shafiq Hashmi, Hyderabad, India graduate student and president of the International Club, said: "I expected it to be greater and I was a bit disappointed. We heard, or least I heard, so much about the rededication and I expected more people and more personal contact (an estimated 40,000 people attended although expectations were for 200,-000). BUSHRA KARAMAN, Haifa Israel, graduate student, said. "WHEN I WENT TO SPEAK to my ambassador," she continued, "I told him I was from Israel. He said, 'That's nice' and that was all. I did enjoy it, however." Jalal Razzak, Baghdad, Iraq, graduate student, said; "I think it was very interesting and Eisenhower's speech was also very good. "I WAS DISTURBED, however, because we didn't have a representative from my country there. I don't know if one was invited or not. People-to-People say they are not involved with politics, but Iraq, UAR, Syria, Saudi Arabia and Lebanon were not there." NEARLY 60 AMBASSADORS and other diplomatic representatives, the largest delegation of diplomats ever assembled in the Middlewest, gathered in Kansas City for the rededication of the Memorial to international understanding. When contacted, William Dawson, Kansas City senior and chairman of KU's People-to-People, explained that every nation in the United Nations was invited. "Those countries which were not represented were probably unable to send anyone," he added. Former President Dwight D Eisenhower gave the principal address. "A program such as People-to-People offers no spectacular and revolutionary change in the world climate, to be seen or felt at once. He said: "But as it grows and spreads and becomes sturdier, both in spirit and in size, the curve of progress will be sharply upward." "The People-to-People program was originated by President Eisenhower in 1956. It has resulted in millions of grass-roots friendships. When you look into the hearts and minds of men of any race, color or belief, you see that they have more in common than they have in difference. JOYCE C. HALL, president of Hall.mark Cards and chairman of National People-to-People also spoke at the rededication. Mr. Hall said: "But all of us who have participated in People-to-People realize that only the surface of the possibilities has been scratched." Following Mr. Eisenhower's speech the flags of more than 100 nations were raised as the newly installed carillon played "Bells of Liberty." Friday's activities were part of a three-day ceremony. Weather More cold weather is predicted for tonight and tomorrow with occasional light rain and possibly snow. The low tonight will be in the 30's. Ten per cent of the ballots cast in the primary election were not counted because they were turned in blank or were voided by election workers. 190 Ballots Voided On Voting Errors Errors on the part of the voters caused 190 ballots out of 1889 cast to be voided. RICHARD HARPER, Prairie Village senior and chairman of the ASC elections committee, said ballots turned in blank accounted for most of the errors. Another error was marking more than one choice for an office. For example, some students marked a person both choice one and choice two. Several marked two candidates for choice one. Harper said voter preference is the main criteria, and even though the ballot is in error it will be counted if what the voter wants can be clearly seen. Write-in candidates caused many errors, Harper said. BOTH THE NAME and a vote must be written on the ballot. If only the name is written in, the ballot will not be counted. Spelling of write-in candidate's names caused some of the primary ballots to be voided. Harper said the spelling "must be reasonably close." The voting procedure used in the primaries will also be used in the general election Tuesday and Wednesday. The procedure is: 1. The voter goes to the basement of Strong Hall and picks up an IBM card. This card gives his name, student number, address, and year, classifying him as to voting district, and designates whether he gets a freshman ballot. 2. The voter goes to the first floor of Strong Hall to any of the three polling places. 3. He gives one of the poll workers the IBM card and his student identification card. He then receives a ballot and a special marking pencil. He signs a register of all voters and goes to one of the voting booths, leaving his IBM card and student ID with the poll worker. 4. After marking the ballot, he returns to the polling place and deposits his ballot in a ballot box. He then returns the special pencil to the poll worker and receives his student ID card. The number of ASC representatives each district will elect is determined by the number of votes cast in that district. The following tabulation shows the number of votes needed for a given number of representatives. representatives Number of votes 0 under 75 1 75-200 2 201-425 3 426-675 4 676-950 5 951-1250 6 1251-1575 7 1576-1925 8 1926-2300 9 2301-2700 10 2701-3125 The number of votes for over 10 representatives is not defined because no district at present could poll this many votes. The number of representatives elected from each district last fall is as follows: No. of representatives No. of votes Fraternity 4 950 Sorority 3 450 Men's large dormitories 3 445 Men's small dormitories 1 157 Women's large dormitories 1 155 Women's small dormitories 1 136 Freshman Women's dormitories 2 311 Co-op and professional fraternities 0 26 Unmarried-unorganized 1 110 arrived 0 39 The United States has been a socialist country since the Constitution was ratified in 1787, a visiting representative of a right-wing school of economic thought said Friday. The tax, Mr. Berveiler argued, would not interfere with individual property rights because land—unlike other forms of property—was not created by man's labor and therefore does not belong exclusively to him. Speaker Attacks U.S. Tax System Robert Berveiler, director of the Henry George School of Social Science in New York City, spoke before about 60 students and faculty members at the Minority Opinion Forum. MR. BERVEILER said the present system of taxation should be replaced with a single tax levied on the value of land in this country. He told his audience the existing U.S. tax structure is socialistic because it interferes with the individual's exclusive right of ownership to anything produced or earned with his own labor. "We in the United States are now entering our 175th year of American socialism," he said. "Untold Community Chests, doogers and racketeers are now engaged in an effort to keep an enslaved people (the citizens of the United States) from uprising in the face of the most fictitious (financial) boom in the history of man. "SOCIALISM HAS solved nothing Let's abolish socialism and try freedom." The land tax proposed by Mr. Berveiler is based upon the writings of Henry George, an American economist who published most of his articles from 1870-1905. THE SINGLE TAX on land, he said, would be levied upon the value of the land itself. Any improvements upon the land would not be taxable. because the improvements are the result of human labor. One benefit of the tax, he said, would be to destroy the power of large landowners, who now hold idle land in anticipation of selling it at a profit later. The heavy land tax, he said, would force these landowners to make their land available to private industry or suffer economic loss. "Landlordism is the sire of all socialism and the basis of all corruption in the American economy today," he said. "We must make land common property by abolishing all taxes except those on land values." MR. BERVEILER concluded by urging that his somewhat skeptical audience expose themselves to the ideas advocated by Henry George. "I'm not so naive as to think that you will immediately accept so novel an idea as the Henry George philosophy," he said. "You've been exposed for too long to socialistic instruction. But I urge you to expose yourself to new ideas such as this one. Once you've accepted and formed clear ideals yourself, you can begin to spread them in the hope of improving social conditions." War Unlikely, Nehru Says HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India said today that "war is unlikely in the foreseeable future." He told a news conference that the way to "some kind of solution" of the Berlin crisis "is gradually opening out." Nehru, who will be 72 tomorrow, made his remarks before visiting a movie studio on his first trip to Hollywood. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, November 13, 1961 Kansan Focus on ASC Elections Tomorrow the polls open and selection of living group representatives to the All Student Council begins. The executive staff of the Kansan interviewed each of the candidates to determine which are best qualified to represent their living group on the All Student Council. MOST STUDENTS DO NOT have the opportunity to become acquainted with all of the candidates seeking election in their living district. The Kansan had the opportunity to meet with the candidates for the respective council seats in a three hour session last Thursday evening. Kansan recommendations, made on the basis of these interviews and the candidates' past records, appear in this special editorial feature today. The Kansan has made recommendations only in cases where one candidate is decidedly better than his opponent or opponents. In many cases there was little marked difference in the qualifications of the candidates. THE CANDIDATES FROM EACH LIVING DIStrict were interviewed in a body. Each candidate was asked the same five questions. The questions asked were designed to determine the candidates' knowledge and grasp of student affairs. These questions do not reflect the Kansan's conception of current issues but were on subjects that would allow some insight into the candidates' background and interest in campus affairs. The Kansan's selections were in no way dependent upon the candidates' agreement or disagreement with the Kansan's past editorial stands on these subjects. We would rather have informed opposition than ignorant support. THUMBNAIL SKETCHES OF THE CANDIDATES appear along with a picture of each candidate. Activities, honors, and reasons for running are listed in condensed form so that the voter may inform himself of at least the basic qualifications of each candidate. A record of the number of candidates elected from each living district in the past and an explanation of voting procedure appears on page one of this issue. Each voter should familiarize himself with this information so that when he goes to the polls he will be able to make the most intelligent choice. THE KANSAN EDITORS are disappointed at the general qualifications and knowledge of campus issues shown by most of the candidates. Many did not have knowledge of some of the important issues that the All Student Council has faced in the past few months. Some did not realize that an ASC Human Rights committee was created last spring. Many of their opinions on the ASC investigation of Watkins Hospital and the Kansas Union were hazy, showing a lack of knowledge about an ASC action taken just last week. However, a few of the candidates did show an excellent understanding of the issues they would be confronting as ASC members. In at least two districts the candidates for a single ASC seat both have excellent qualifications. The Kansan hopes that the information contained in this special feature will prove a valuable aid in the selection of the best possible Council members. The Editors MARCO GALLEGO Jerry Dickson Lee Ayres C. W. MILNE David Knudson David Gough P. S. M. Dean Salter Candidate Sketches Fraternity District JERRY DICKSON, NEWTON JUNIOR (VOX) Activities: Interfraternity Pledge Council president, KU debate squad, Delta Upsilon outstanding pledge, NSA committee, chairman Young Republicans. Statement: "Student government, in the last three years, has progressed significantly. It would be a pleasure for me to help in this improvement trend. I am particularly interested in seeing the liaison between state government and student opinion improve." LEE AYRES, WICHITA SOPHOMORE (UP) Activities: KU-Y, Statewide Activities, Sigma Chi executive committee, Sigma Chi social chairman. Statement: "My strong interest in making the fraternity men aware of the role of the ASC is my principal reason for running. Because of my intention to actively participate in all ASC functions, I believe this goal can be accomplished." DAVID KNUDSON, GOODLAND JUNIOR (VOX) Activities: SUA, Accounting Society, Canterbury Club, Pi Kappa Alpha pledge trainer. Statement: "I have felt that the ASC is not as strong a group as it could be, and I would like to aid in making it stronger. I have been a member of the VOX party for three years and they believe I have the potential to become a good ASC member." DAVID GOUGH, CHANUTE JUNIOR (UP) Activities: College Intermediary Board, vice president of Statewide Activities, Owl Society. SUA Publicity Committee, Varsity Golf, Alpha Tau Omega rush chairman, People-to-People. Statement: "My interest is in bringing several separate, but similar organizations into closer contact on such issues as stop week or dead week." DEAN SALTER, GARDEN CITY JUNIOR (VOX) Activities: Owl Society, Varsity debate, general chairman of SUA Activities Carnival, Interfraternity Council, president Delta Sigma Rho (honorary forensic society). Statement: "I enjoy active participation in student government and in carrying the responsibility of helping to determine the policies that contribute to the scope of the University." BOB CASH, HIAWATHA JUNIOR (VOX)—Activities: Interfraternity Council, Statewide Activities county chairman, Westminster Fellowship. Statement: "As a member of the IFC and of that organization's Rush Committee, I find myself positioned at the crossroads of fraternity opinion. I feel that I can represent the fraternity living district and desire to serve this district as best I may." The Kansan Recommends JERRY DIXON—Because of his wide experience and excellent record in student government. He has the necessary knowledge of campus issues. DEAN SALTER—Because of his knowledge and grasp of the issues facing the ASC. His past experience and successes on other student activities indicate he would make a responsible ASC member. The qualifications of the other candidates appear to be approximately equal. Men's Small Dormitories CARL LOGAN, HOLLIDAY SOPHOMORE (UP) Activities: SUA, International Club, intramural manager for Stephenson Hall. Statement: "There are, at the present time, many issues of great importance facing the student body here at KU. I feel that I should like to help form the policies that can best benefit all students here at KU in regard to these issues." GEORGE HAHM, SCOTCH PLAINS, N. J., JUNIOR (VOX)—Activities: Campus Chest, alumni chairman and secretary for Battenfeld Hall. Statement: Wants to encourage expansion of scholarship halls, eliminate duplications in campus activities and committees, "look into gymnasium building" and insure that out-of-state students are taught about KU and Kansas. The Kansan Recommends BOTH CANDIDATES are highly qualified. Either would make a good council member. Men's Large Dormitories BILL BRIER, OVERLAND PARK FRESHMAN (VOX)—High School Activities: Debate team, band. National Forensic League. Statement: "I am running for the ASC because I have a definite interest and desire to participate in student government. I also wish to strive for fair independent representation in all organizations on the campus." GARY GRAZDA, KANSAS CITY FRESHMAN (VOX)—High school activities: Vice president of student council, National Honor Society, Quill and Scroll. Statement: "If I am elected I would hold a meeting in my district prior to every major debate in the council. Through this meeting the men in my district could voice their opinion. Thus, I would have their ideas concerning the issues and would vote accordingly." HOLLACE CROSS, KANSAS CITY, MO., JUNIOR (UP)—Activities: Presently on the ASC. Statement: "I will hang a bulletin board in JRP on which I will post all new and old business of the ASC. I will poll the student opinion at JRP by means of an informal petition. I will always be available to listen to any student opinion from JRP." JEFF HUBRIG, LENEXA FRESHMAN (VOX) — Activities: Oread Hall treasurer. Statement: "I am running on the VOX platform for the ASC to ensure the independent district of fair representation on all campus issues. To give the independent opportunity to voice their opinions where they can be heard." JOBY JOBSON, PRAIRIE VILLAGE JUNIOR (UP) —Activities: Templin Senate, Templin Publicity Committee, Templin Decorations Committee. Statement: "My purpose in running for the ASC is to build interest in student government and thereby strengthen the position of student government at KU. If elected, I will actively and consciously represent the views of all men in my ASC living district." The Kansan Recommends HOLLACE CROSS—Because of his knowledge of the ASC's organization and work. WILLIAM BRIER—Because of his clear and logical stand on the issues he discussed. JEFFREY HUBRIG—Because of his desire to work in campus affairs. J. A. B. SMITH Carl Logan PETER C. MARTIN George Hahm JOHN C. WILSON Bill Brier PETER HUGHSON Gary Grazda P. Hollace Cross Monday. November 13. 1961 University Daily Kensan Page 3 P Robert Cash Patricia Wilson I Karen Cowell 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Nancy Ray 100 Carolyn Kranzler PETER M. DUNN Holly Thomson Candidate Sketches Women's Large Dormitories PATRICIA WILSON, KANSAS CITY JUNIOR (UP)—Activities: Model United Nations, Lewis Hall constitution committee. Student National Education Association. Statement: "My primary interest in running for ASC is a larger desire to be active in student government for my own experience and education, and in providing fair and informative representation for my living group. This is a way to become an integral part of student government and activity. KAREN COWELL, BARTLESVILLE, OKLA., sophomore (VOX)—Activities: Floor officer at Lewis Hall last year and this year, member of Angel Flight. Statement: "I want to see some interest created on this campus . . . Student government is educational, and it is a vital part of campus life...Once on the council, I would especially like to see the extended bus service put into action, as it would be a great help to the girls in my district." The Kansan Recommends Women's Small Dormitories BOTH CANDIDATES appear to have approximately the same qualifications for ASC membership. NANCY RAY, KANSAS CITY SENIOR (UP) — Activities: Historian and alumni secretary of Miller Hall, member of the Student National Education Association, senior representative to the senior privileges board of AWS, member office staff for hospitality committee of People-to-People, member Pi Lambda Theta (honorary Education society). Statement: "I am convinced that the ASC has a positive function in uniting and governing the students. I am also convinced that such government cannot be effective unless qualified representatives with both a broad view of the campus' integral groups and purposes and an informed view of his own district and its members listens and trys to judge issues justly and logically." CAROLYN KRANZLER, BROOKINGS, S. DAK. senior (VOX)—Activities: Disciplinary Committee, AWS, Jay Janes, Student Religious Council, WRA board, Homecoming House Decorations committee, People-to-People forum committee. Statement: "There are many girls, in my district especially, who do not realize the importance of ASC working closely with the administration in running this University, and I feel that I can help these girls understand the purpose and functions of ASC and take their opinions and ideas to the council and represent them there." The Kansan Recommends BOTH CANDIDATES have the qualifications of a good council member. Freshman Women's Dormitories HOLLY THOMSON, OTTAWA FRESHMAN (VOX) Activities: On high school student council two years, editor of high school paper two years, president of district of Future Homemakers of America, active in People-to-People at KU. Statement: "I want to be on the ASC mostly because I think the freshman girls don't know what's going on at KU. 100 YEARS OF ANNIVERSARY JUDY SMITH, BARRINGTON, ILL., FRESHMAN (VOX)—Activities: On high school student council four years, worked on high school yearbook and newspaper two years, senior representative to school board in high school, floor chairman for publicity in Gertrude Sellards Pearson. Statement: "As a representative, I would like to see the extended bus service put into action...the action that is needed to improve the telephone situation in the large women's dorms...certain buildings on kept open all night for late studying. BETSY STODDARD, WEBSTER GROVES, MO., freshman (UP)—Activities: Was on her class cabinet (Continued on page 4) Sorority District TRUDY MESERVE, ABILENE SOPHOMORE (VOX)-Activities: Floor chairman at GSP two semesters, vice president of Junior Panhellenic, president of pledge class, member of Alpha Phi Judiciary Board. Statement: "I am interested in the office because I am interested in seeing student government on the University of Kansas campus a most effective and vital integral. I would do my best to become the type of council member who would help student government realize this ideal." NANCY DEFEVER, INDEPENDENCE SOPHOMORE (UP)—Activities: Presently an ASC representative, SUA Current Events Forum Committee. Statement: "...having been on the ASC I have become acquainted with the problems of the University and I realize the importance of the workings of a student government. There is nothing more rewarding than making decisions which you know will work toward the betterment of the student body." JO SNYDER, BETHESDA, MD., SOPHOMORE (VOX)—Activities: ASC Peace Corps Committee, SUA Publicity Committee, Carnival Committee Chairman, Alpha Delta Pi scholarship chairman, Statewide Activities chairman for Maryland, People-to-People representative. Statement: "One of the most important duties of a representative on the ASC is to know what his or her constituents think on campus issues." BECKY SHIER, ST. JOSEPH, MO., SENIOR (VOX) Activities: Area chairman for Statewide Activities, AWS Orientation Steering Committee, Model U.N. bloc chairman, member of student senate at St. Joseph Junior College. Statement: "I want to tie together the ASC and its actions with the sorority living groups to be sure they are informed." Judy Smith MARTY SMITH, STOCKTON JUNIOR (UP) Activities: People-to-People, Statewide Activities, Young Republicans, SUA Carnival Committee. Statement: "I would like to be a member of the ASC because I am interested in student government. I would like to be more informed on matters concerning me as a student and the University as a whole. I feel that being on the Student Council is the best way to be informed." The Kansan Recommends JO SNYDER-Because of her wide experience in campus activities and her thorough knowledge of campus affairs. TRUDY MESERVE—Because of her interest in campus affairs as evidenced by her many activities. The qualifications of the other candidates appear to be approximately equal. Unmarried-Unorganized CHUCK ALLPHIN, LAWRENCE SOPHOMORE (VOX)—Activities: Member of the ASC Student Health Committee, finalist in the University Speaking Contest. Statement: "It would seem that it is a prerequisite for the independent representative to represent his voters' views. If I am fortunate enough to be elected I won't be like other representatives that were impossible to question. I will make it a must always to be available." MICHAEL MINER, LAWRENCE FRESHMAN (UP) Statement: "While running for the Council I hope to create new interest and stronger participation from the members of my living district. If the students are interested in the Council's activities, the council will gain importance and prestige. If the independent students desire a stronger voice in student government I would like to give it to them." The Kansan Recommends CHUCK ALLPHN—Because of his detailed knowledge of campus affairs. CALGARY Jeffrey Hubrig Joby Jobson PETER SMITH MARIE HANSON Trudy Meserve 10 Nancy DeFever Elizabeth Stoddard Jo Snyder Chuck Allphin BLACKHAZAR SECURITIES 20 Rebecca Shier (1) Michael Miner THUARDAY Martha Smith Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, November 13. 1961 Display Awards Given Long hours spent on homecoming decorations paid off Saturday for four campus living groups—winners of the annual homecoming decorations contest. The theme of this year's contest was "musical comedies." SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON, using a display based on the song "I'm Gonna Wash that Man Right Out of My Hair," won first place in the fraternity division. Sigma Kappa won in the sorority division with a display based on the song "Ridin' High." Lewis and Joseph R. Pearson residence halls won their respective divisions with displays based on the same musical comedy—"Camelot." OTHER WINNERS in the four divisions of the contest and the theme on which they based their display are as follows: fraternities—second place, Tau Kappa Epsilon, "Whatever Jayhawk Wants, Jayhawk Gets"; third place, Sigma Chi, "I'm Gonna Wash that Man Right Out of My Hair"; fourth place, Lambda Chi Alpha, "Jubilation T. Wildcat"; fifth place, Phi Kappa Tau, "Everything's Coming Up Roses." Sororities—second place, Chi Omega, and third place, Kappa Alpha Theta, both with "Luck Be a Lady Tonight." MEN'S RESIDENCE HALLS—second place, Foster Hall, third place, Grace Pearson Hall, both with "Calamity Jane." Women's residence halls—second place, Miller Hall, "Hey, Look Me Over." 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 NEWS DEPARTMENT Tom Turner ... Managing Editor --for three years in high school, head of pep club committees in high school, a cheerleader in high school, a member of KU Froshawks. Statement: "I believe student government is an education in itself for the student . . . I believe student government is only as successful as the amount of work put in by people on the council." Sale Ends CLIP THIS COUPON Nov. 18th COAT ANY CLOTH Men's-Child's-Ladies' CAR COATS FUR TRIMMED ZIP-IN LININGS OVERCOATS RAINCOATS ANY COAT! 59c NOTE: No Limit—But you must bring this coupon in WITH your order. TROUSERS TRUUSERS • SLACKS 5 TIES • SPORT SHIRTS • SWEATERS BLOUSES SKIRTS (plain) 39 ℃ ea. Note: No Limit. But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Order 25c SHIRTS NOW ONLY Laundered to perfection! Starched as you like! 20℃ Dress Shirts Leather or Rubber HALF SOLES With Rubber HEELS 1 99 pr. $3 val. Men's—Boys' RUBBER HEELS 49 c pr. MEN'S FELT Hats Factory cleaned & Blocked 109 ca. Leather or Rubber Leather or Rubber FULL SOLES 299 With Rubber HEELS pr. $5 val. DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT IJS FINEST DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DRY 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 23rd St. & Naismith Dr. VI 2-0200 Official Bulletin --for three years in high school, head of pep club committees in high school, a cheerleader in high school, a member of KU Froshawks. Statement: "I believe student government is an education in itself for the student . . . I believe student government is only as successful as the amount of work put in by people on the council." Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 a.m., St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Kuku Pep Club: 6:30 p.m., Oread Room, Kansas Union TODAY Robb, Kumsa Club: 7:30 p.m. Watkins Room, Kansas Union. A style show will be presented by members of the club and their children. TOMORROW Modern Book Review Forum: 4 p.m. Music Room, Kansas Union. John Meixner reviewing "Parade's End" by Ford Madax, Ford Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. NEW YORK—(UPI) Americans are eating more vegetables today than their grandparents did 50 years ago. The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Economic Research Service reports that vegetable consumption is about 15 per cent greater today than a half century ago. We now eat about 260 pounds of fresh and processed vegetables per person per year. Vegetable Diet Candidate- (Continued from page 3) Kansan Recommends HOLLY THOMSON — Because of her past interest in student affairs and her clearer grasp of issues. BETSY STODDARD — Because of her understanding of campus issues now facing the ASC. Humility must always be the portion of any man who receives acclaim earned in the blood of his followers and the sacrifices of his friends.—Dwight David Eisenhower Sale! Wool Tapered Pants $790 COACH HOUSE Clothes For Tern and Countrys KU Campus — 1237 Oread COACH HOUSE Clothes For Trees and Couture KU Campus — 1237 Oread Kansan Want Ads Get Results Check your opinions against L'M's Campus Opinion Poll #11 Has the Berlin crisis increased Russia's prestige in Asia and South America? YES NO $\textcircled{1}$ Has the Berlin crisis increased Russia's prestige in Asia and South America? □ YES □ NO $\textcircled{2}$ Do you look at every date as a prospective wife (or husband)? $\textcircled{3}$ How many cigarettes do you smoke a day? □ Half a pack or less □ Less than a pack □ A pack or more □ YES □ NO Expect more get more from J&M YES NO YES NO The image is a cartoon illustration of a man reading a book. He has a goatee and is wearing a dark sweater. The character's hands are holding the book open, with thumb and index finger on the pages. Expect more, get more, from L&M There's actually more rich-flavor leaf in L&M than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. You get more body in the blend, more flavor in the smoke, more taste through the filter. So get Lots More from filter smoking with L&M . . . the cigarette that smokes heartier as it draws freely through the pure-white, modern filter. L&M FILTERS LUGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. THE MIRACLE TIP L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. HERE'S HOW 1029 STUDENTS AT 100 COLLEGES VOTED! Have an L&M in pack or box Half a pack or less..33% Less than a pack..35% A pack or more..33% 3 (MEN) Yes...35% No...65% (WOMEN) Yes...39% No...61% Yes...23% No...77% L&M's the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke. Page 5 Kansas State 'Blues'; Hawk Defense Account for Win By Bill Sheldon The Kansas State Wildcat marching band came onto Memorial Stadium's turf at halftime Saturday to do its part in the University of Kansas Homecoming and played, as its opening number, "The St. Louis Blues." The purple and white clad musicians maneuvered from sideline to sideline, spurred on by the tempo from wafer-thin, platter-type drums. The KSU band, later seated amidst the series record breaking gathering of 34,000 on-lookers, came forth with the solemn notes of "Exodus." On the gridiron, the scrapy Wildcats must have felt the one thing they wanted was to leave, especially quarterback Larry Corrigan. LIKE THE BAND, the efforts of the Wildcat footballers resulted in the "Blues" as their offensive line showed little more resistance than the thin white drums, providing Purple backs only lateral "progress." But, although the visiting marchers departed with possibly just sore throats, the Wildcat team went back to "Silo Tech" feeling the pain of a 34-0 defeat from the Kansas Jayhawkers through their entire bodies, especially the plucky Mr. Corrigan. THE WINNERS, playing their best defensive game of the season, continually rolled back the smaller Kansas State offensive front wall to smother aspiring passer Corrigan. Fourteen times the superior KU defense erupted in waves of crimson to inundate Corrigan for a total 74 yard loss. Stopping almost all 'Cat rushing thrusts with experienced line play and tackling which was consistently more vicious than in any other game of the season, the Jayhawkers left the visitors the pass as the only recourse. But the determined Kansas chargers and the leech-like backs allowed the Purple only five connections in 14 aerials for 42 yards. THE DETERMINED Corrigan, returned to the line-up for his first heavy duty since injuring his back in the second game of the season, went down for the final time in the last two minutes as three KU rushers grounded him on the K-State 15-yard marker. Corrigan was knocked unconscious by the onslaught and remained motionless for a full minute. After the game he said, "I don't remember a thing." The sophomore signal-caller was not seriously injured. The Wildcats were dumped for a minus 10 yards total rushing and had only two plays of note. Spencer Puls skirted the Kansas right end twice for significant gains, racing 28 and 11 yards to start the final period. He was the loser's leading ground-gainer, getting 43 yards on three carries. NOT ONLY DID the Kansas defensive stalwarts, led by Ken Tiger, Elvin Basham, Jim Mills, Larry Allen, and Jay Roberts, allow the hapless Wildcats no quarter, they played a significant role in aiding the Jays' offense by maintaining field position for KU. "Our first drive was one of the finest of the season. Haddl's (John) running of the option was a big factor. But that one drive was all we did offensively. Our passing was nothing," said not overly pleased Coach Jack Mitchell following the win which lifted the Jayhawk- Crowd-Drawer EAST LANSING, Mich.—(UPI)— The Michigan State football team has played before crowds of 100,000 or more six times in the last nine years. Diamonds Gifts Jewelry In uplifting, get underneath- George Ade ers' record to 5-2-1 and 5-1 in the Big Eight. But the men of "Snob Hill" as one of the epigrams of the intra-state rivalry names the Jayhawkers, had enough offensive punch to grind for 257 yards rushing, a figure surpassed only by the 274 yards amassed in the 42-8 rout of Oklahoma State two weeks ago. DANIELS JEWELRY 914 Mass. VI 3-2572 The 215-pound senior, having possibly his best game of the season, scissored through the flailing arms of inept Wildcat linemen, befuddled and stiff-armed the 'Cat linebackers, and simply out-ran the deep defenders. LEADING THE JAYHAWKERS on the ground was Curtis McClinton who rambled for 82 yards on 14 carries. He tallied twice, once on a 5-yard slant through the opposite side of the Wildcat alignment from his right halfback position—the play with which he had the most success—to give the Hawkers a 14-0 intermission margin. The other touchdown came on a well faked, precisely lofted Hadl throw which covered 44 yards. This accounted for ASIDE FROM McCLINTON. Hadl's play had the greatest offensive effect on the outcome. the final touchdown with 3:05 remaining to play. The sophomore responded with two first downs and 17 yards on two consecutive bursts through left guard, and went on to score KU's third six-pointer. He had 44 yards for the game to boost his season mark to 390 lengths. Ken Coleman, the Hawkers' leading ball carrier of the season, wasn't even called upon by the KU coaches, continuing to employ their sideline semaphore play-calling technique, until early in the second half. Hadi tantalized the 'Cat defensive ends with his use of the option to total 43 yards rushing to add to his four-for-eight, 105 yards passing aggregate. The other scores for the winners, who face California at Berkeley in a non-league tussle next, were made by Hadl and soph Tony Leiker on 8-yard runs plus two extra point kicks by Dean Barnes and a two-point conversion by Roberts on a pass from Hadl. Jayhawkers Take Big Eight Crown The Jayhawkers placed Dan Ralston fifth, Tonni Coane seventh, and Bill Thornton tenth to wrap up the title with 26 points compared to Oklahoma State's and Colorado's 78 points. DOTSON'S championship time was 14:50, five seconds ahead of Metcalf and 18 seconds in front of Havward. Monday, November 13, 1961 University Daily Kansan In Big Eight meet scoring a team's top five men are counted in scoring, with the low score winning. Each team may run seven men, with two being designated as pushers. By Steve Clark Bill Dotson won the individual championship and the Jayhawkers, the team championship, here Saturday at the Big Eight cross country meet to give the University of Kansas the first Big Eight title of the '61-'62 school term. Dotson battled Oklahoma State's Danny Metcalfe and teammate Charlie Hayward most of the race before pulling away from the Cowboy distance ace in the last quarter mile to coast to victory. MISSOURI PLACED fourth with 119 points; Kansas State, fifth, 128; Oklahoma, sixth, 144; Nebraska, seventh, 150; Iowa State, eighth, 174. Ray Stevens, Nebraska's undefeated sprinter before the conference meet, finished fourth in 15:22 after being pushed by Kansas' Ralston who was two seconds behind. Kansas State's Pat McNeal was sixth with 15:29; Colorado's Robert Griffith, eighth, at 15:35; Missouri'Roy Bryant, ninth, in 15:36. THE PACK WAS closely bunched for the first half mile. At that point Colorado's Griffith and Steve McBrain, who finished 19th, set the pace. Nearing the mile mark Dotson, Metcalf and Hayward moved in front. The Lawrence Country Club course was in championship-caliber condition but a wind of 15 mph somewhat hampered the participants. The temperature was 54 degrees. The victory brought the league cross-country title back to Kansas after a year's absence. The Jayhawkers previous to last year owned a 13 year string as conference champions. Oklahoma State was the defending champions having upset the Jay-hawkers last year at Stillwater. Kansas has placed the individual winner 13 times in the past fifteen years. Threat by Hoop Frosh Falters; Varsity Wins The University of Kansas varsity cagers halted a last-minute frosh rally Friday night to win the annual fresh-varsity tilt, 67-63, in Allen Field House. By Roy Miller Led by center George Unseld and forward David Brill, the yearlings cut a 13-point varsity lead to two. With 1:40 left to play, the score stood at 65-63. VARSITY FORWARD Jim Dumas was then fouled and he connected on two free throw attempts. The Topeka forward's charity tosses proved to be the game's last points with neither team scoring in the last seconds of play. The frosh quintet threatened to stage the second upset in the contest's history when they led 36-35 at the end of the first half. Retaliating on the fast breaks of guard Jerry Gardner and center John Matt, the varsity stormed to an early second half lead of 55-42 before the frog began to threaten. For the varsity, Nolen Ellison potted 17 points, followed by Gardner and Matt who each collected 14. Although compiling only seven total points, the frosh's Brill came through with five key points in the frosh's final rally. ACCORDING TO COACH Ted Owens, balance was the key to the Javahawk frosh's threat. "Balance is the thing that helped us the most," freshman mentor Owens said Friday night. "Even when we sent in that last five (replacing the starting quintet) we were still able to do some good," Owens said. BEFORE THE GAME. Owens had spoken of the balance between the front line and back line, but height also proved important in the balance picture. With 6-7 Unseld, $ 6 - 7 \frac {1}{2} $ Jim Gough, and 6-5 Brill, the frosh controlled the boards. Besides the balance between units, Owens thought the reserves showed ability. "When Ruggles (Richard) and Gough went in, they helped us a lot." Owens said. Owens said that he knew defense against fast breaks would be a weakness. "We have no great speed," he said. The varsity took advantage of this weakness as they built their biggest lead with a series of fast breaks. 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NAME ADDRESS CITY AND STATE *The Aids and Awards office at KU is prepared to answer your questions about College Funds, Inc. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, November 13. 1961 Kaufmann to Give Humanities Talk Walter Kaufmann, professor of philosophy at Princeton University, will deliver the third in a series of Humanities Lectures at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Fraser Theater. His topic for lecture will be "A Critique of Existentialism." Prof. Kaufmann will speak at the Philosophy Club at 3 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. His topic will be "Existentialism vs. Positivism." He will also discuss "The Role of Belief in Religion" at 4 p.m. today in the Music Room of the Kansas Union. This lecture is sponsored by Student Union Activities. Since this country's beginning a time of tempest has seemed to come upon the continents of the earth. —Dwight David Eisenhower Diamond PREMIER DIAMOND SHOP 916 Mass. AN UNPAID TESTIMONIAL KING Richard the Lion-Hearted says: I would never have surrendered England ...if I'd had Jockey BRAND support Cmon. Rich! You're rationalizing. Jockey support$^1$ might never have secured you against the Emperor$^2$. But it certainly would have provided snug protection against the physical stresses and strains of your active life. Your armorer never tailored a coat of mail more knowingly than Jockey tailors a brief—from 13 separate, body-conforming pieces. 1. Other "imitation" briefs (copies of the original Jockey brand) have no more Jockey support than a limo lion cloth. 2. Richard the Lion-Hearted, 1157-99, surrendered England and a huge ransom to secure his release from Henry VI. Get the real thing. Look for the name 'Jockey' on the waist band $125 Jockey BRIEFS M COOPER'S, INC. • KENOSHA, WIS. Rush Registration to Begin Tomorrow Registration for women's formal rush will begin at 8 a.m. tomorrow in the Dean of Women's office. Registration forms and a $25 fee must be turned in to the office tomorrow before 5 p.m. Members of the Panhellenic Association will be at Lewis Hall at 6:30 p.m. today to answer questions about rush and distribute registration forms for upper class women. Any women who are not in the freshman women's residence halls or Lewis Hall and who are interested in going through rush are asked to pick up registration forms in the Dean of Women's office. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Seven KU student leaders may fly to Columbia, Mo., Wednesday, weather permitting, to discuss the impending KU-MU peace pact. KU Peace Group May Fly to MU Representatives from both schools will discuss each group's draft form of the pact before presenting an accepted pact to the Missouri student government. The ASC committee, headed by Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior, and president of the student body, will return to KU for classes Thursday. He who thinks himself wise, O Heavens! is a great fool. - Voltaire 365 Excuses 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Anniv. of the Smokes for the Yanks Drive Larry O. White, Hutchinson sophomore, was admitted to Watkins Memorial Hospital Sunday afternoon for treatment of a back injury suffered in an intra-fraternity football game. Student Injures Back In House Football White was playing in a game between pledges and actives of Phi Kappa Sigma. Hospital authorities said White suffered pulled back muscles. His condition was listed as good. Only the more rugged mortals should attempt to keep up with current literature.—George Ade VARSITY NOW SHOWINGI Paul Newman Jackie Gleason "The Hustler" 7:00-9:15 GRANADA NOW SHOWINGI Spencer Tracy Frank Sinatra "The Devil at 4 o'clock" 7:00-9:15 VARSITY NOW SHOWING! Paul Newman Jackie Gleason "The Hustler" 7:00-9:15 GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Spencer Tracy Frank Sinatra "The Devil at 4 o'clock" 7:00-9:15 Read and Use Kansan Classifieds Girl Watcher's Guide Presented by Pall Mall Famous Cigarettes Well-Preserved Forty plus LESSON 4 - Why men watch girls 4 Men watch girls for various reasons. Personally, we need no better reason than the reason men climb mountains. They are there. We have heard old men say they watch girls because it makes them feel younger and young men because it makes them feel older (see above). While investigating the reasons why men watch girls we picked up a clue from, of all things, a bird watcher. He told us that he formerly had been a flower watcher. Then one day a Speckle-Breasted Jackdaw happened to land in his garden as he was watching a calla lily and he noticed that the bird moved. He switched to birds on the spot. Girl watchers have discovered that girls enjoy this same advantage (movement) over calla lilies. (Speaking of advantages, how about Pall Mall's natural mildness!) WHY BE AN AMATEUR? JOIN THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF GIRL WATCHERS NOW! FREE MEMBERSHIP CARD. Visit the editorial office of this publication for a free membership card in the world's only society devoted to discreet, but relentless, girl watching. Constitution of the society on reverse side of card. This ad based on the book, "The Girl Watcher's Guide" Text: Dedini. Reprinted by permission of Harper & Brothers. C A T I O C Product of The American Racce-Company "Racce is our middle name" PALL MALL FAMOUS CIGARETTES IN NO THOUGHT WASTE WHEREVER PARTICULAR PEOPLE CONGREGATE Pall Mall's natural mildness is so good to your taste! So smooth, so satisfying, so downright smokeable! Monday, November 13, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $0c; 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 2$c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University of Texas at Austin business center on the day before publication is desired. LOST BLACK FOUNTAIN PEN with Dennis Malpass engraved on it. Please return to Dennis Malpass, 437 Joseph R. Pearson. Reward. 11-14 WANTED GIRL'S EYE GLASSES. Pinkish brown frames with case. Lost near water tower at Sunset and Stratford Rd. on Nov. 7. Call VI 3-5344. 11-15 TWO MALE STUDENTS to share three bedroom house. VI 2-3301 after 5 p.m. COLLEGE GIRL to baby sit every Wed. from 1-3 p.m. Two children, will usually be asleep. 20-8 Stouffer Pl. VI 2-374. 11-14 WANTED: GRADUATE STUDENT in IN VI 5-3833. Ask for Makin. 11-15 VI 5-3834. Ask for Makin. 11-15 TYPING TYPING — THEMES AND PAPERS. Use electric typewriters. 15c per paper, 5c per carbon. 1013 Connecticut, VI 3-0397. MILLIKEN'S & "S.O.S." at now two 1022-90-3202 1022-90-340 Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattiel, VI 3-8739. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow. 408 W. 19th. VI 2164-1685. EXPERIENCEFCD TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Ms. Fulcher, VI 3-0558 1031 Miss. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 R.I.L. VI 3-7485. 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 3-5136. Mori. Lu- gebach. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression on students." For excellent performance at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope VI 3-1097. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service, 5617 B Woodson, Mission, HI 2-7718. Eyes or Suit RA 2-2186. TYPING IN MY HOME. Fast service, reasonable rates. Call V 3-0762. 11-17 Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Type of work: 1511, 511, 21. St. CV1 VI 3-6440 t. Type of file: 1511, 511, 21. St. CV1 VI 3-6440 t. FORMER SECRETARY with plica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, paper mats, theses and dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. schoolmate, these cases & reports accurately. Standard tests. See Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. TYPING: Experimented typist. Former secretary with type theses, term papers, reports, Electric typewriter. Reasonable job. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mc-Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. tt I WILL DO TYPING IN MY HOME. Interested in themes, term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. Call VI 5-2925. 11-14 TYPIST. experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf FOR SALE SCRATCH AND SKETCH PADS only 35c lb. Standard sizes available ... want Lawrence Outlook, 1005 Massachusetts VI 3-3666 11-15 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 STEVEN5 2 Automatic Rifle, $24. Like new. Call VI 3-2906 after 6 p.m. tf HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Mauer, Mt 3-1420 or VI 3-4201. tf 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. tt Dodge in good running condition. $80. Call VI 3-4291. tf NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines, printing and drawing machines, reasonable business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today. tt PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 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. 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 5 BOOKCASE SHELVES 6' with risers; bookcase, 5' x 1', with glass doors; 15 books, 5' x 1', with glass doors; sinog. Rubbed cottonwood log with gliders; 12 gudgeon shotgun, single shot; tam and supplies: 3006 Springfield deer rifle. See at 1016 Hilpter Drive 1 p.m. 11-16 EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS One hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING Sudden Service at 1960 TURQOISE & WHITE Champion Lakewood mobile home for sale. One wheel truck, 54 ft., at 450 days daily from 6:30 p.m. at Dee's Trailer Court, 1417 East 15th. 11-13 1407 Mass. OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright typewriter sales, service, rentals. Larence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-3t- 3644 THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING ARTLEY FLUTE, excellent condition less than a year old - call VI 3-1715. ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING "Fresh as a Flower in Just 1-Hour" It's Fast - It's Safe - It's Thrifty GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New & used guns, and ammo. Liberal trade-ins. Special this week: 30 Springfield. See at 1304 Tenn. VI 3-7001. 11-16 FOR RENT 1960 VOLVO, red with brand new white carbonized custom made red carpet, radio, heater, and many accessories; in excellent com- fortable new week to week HI-TEST bidder. VI 2-3364 11-17 ATTENTION LAW STUDENTS: Practical law library for sale. Priced at $3.00 to $7.00 per volume. Pierce Van Lines, 7331° N. H. VI 3-8868 11-17 1955 JAGUAR - Excellent condition, advertise, extras. 11-17 VI 3-5889 Vacancy available for 2 men in com- mission to chk rd cellr Chil Rd. Cif 3-9635 for appointment; LARGE FURNISHED apartment, e a s t e s t, utilities paid, $50. Cail VI 3-6294. NEW 5 ROOM DUPLEX: has living room, dining area, lovely kitchen, 2 bedrooms, bath, & finished garage. Has air-conditioning, new electric stove & refrigerator. Call VI 3-7120 or KU 385 for appointment. 11-13 6 ROOM HOUSE — newly decorated, fenced yard and garden spot. Partly furnished or unfurn. Call at 428 Elm or call VI 3-3602. 11-13 FURNISHED APARTMENT — Clean, 3 rooms, with private bath, fireplace, kitchen, laundry room. KU. Prefer married couple, no children. By appointment only — VI 3-8129, 11-16 ONE BEDROOM HOUSE for rent, furn. or unfit, except for kitchen range. Large utility room, clean. Call VI 3-0654 after 7 p.m. 11-13 BUSINESS SERVICES SHARE APARTMENT with other boys, and 1 vacancy for a girl. 1 block from Union, cooking privileges. Call VI 3-6723. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI 3-265 any time. U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in midwest. Phone VI 3-2921 — Modern service — open weeks days 8 to 10 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, Chameleon, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — 1218 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 DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- lance a 3624 gm Alma Smith 3919 gm Mass. Call VI 3-5263. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3-851, or 921 Miss. **tf** RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if sented for two weeks or more. White sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1287. tlf MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, lee冷. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. sth, sth & Vermont. Phone VI vif 0350. BELGIAN AIRLINES Engineering and Physical Science Seniors * GROW with a growing industry... ...the Bell Telephone System The Bell Telephone System, which has doubled in size in the last 10 years, is expanding rapidly to serve a growing nation. A growing telephone industry means new jobs, fresh opportunities for promotions, a rewarding career for you. The future is bright for young men who want to advance with a progressive industry. Representatives of these Bell System companies will be glad to talk with you: - Southwestern Bell Telephone Company builds, maintains and operates telephone and other communications systems throughout its five-state territory. Bell Laboratories - Bell Laboratories research, development, engineering and design in electronics and communications fields. - Western Electric manufacturing and supply unit. Sandia Corporation - Sandia Corporation applied research, development and design for production of atomic weapons. Bell System representatives will be on campus November 14 and 15. Sign up for an interview at the engineering office. BELL SYSTEM Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday. November 13, 1961 U.S., Britain Want Nuclear Ban Talks WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The United States and Britain asked Russia today to join in new talks aimed at achieving a nuclear test ban treaty. But this country made clear it reserved the right to test pending a firm agreement. In formal notes delivered in Moscow, the two Western allies said they would be willing to meet the Russians at the conference table on or about Nov.28. THE STATE DEPARTMENT made it known that the United States and Britain would agree to negotiate even if the Soviet tests were continuing at the time. The State Department said in a separate statement that if the negotiations resume and the Russian nuclear tests continue, the United States "will pursue its own program of carefully circumscribed testing" until a treaty is signed. The State Department statement left open the question of whether the United States might resume atmospheric shots. This country now is testing only underground but is making preparations for atmospheric shots if they prove necessary. THE BRITISH-AMERICAN action was in line with a United Nations General Assembly resolution which urged a resumption of the test ban Menghini Is ASC Write-In Hopeful Charles Menghini, Pittsburgh senior and University Party co-chairman last year, has entered the All Student Council election as write-in candidate from the unmarried-unorganized district on a platform criticizing the "cowardly" platforms of the parties and the recent disaffiliation with NSA. "The platforms should have had something besides non-controversial issues," he said. "Political discussion is low enough without the parties advocating this type of do-nothingness." He criticized the University Party plank on student apathy. "It (UP) could have taken a much larger step to solve apathy by taking a stand on at least a couple of controversial issues affecting the campus, rather than trying to get students to vote without knowing what many of the issues are," he said. Menghini said he would introduce a bill for reaffiliation with NSA at the first ASC meeting and said he was optimistic it would pass. Page - Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 talks. These have been halted since Sept. 9 after Russia began its current test series. President Kennedy said Nov. 2 the United States was willing to sign a test ban treaty with the Soviets if it contained provisions for adequate inspection and control. Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil But it was in that same statement that Kennedy said the United States was making preparations to resume atmospheric testing if an evaluation of the Russian series showed this was necessary to maintain the U.S. nuclear lead. The U.S. statement, which was not included in the note to Russia, said negotiations and an early test ban agreement "can bring a secure and permanent halt to nuclear weapons testing and assure the world that there will not be a repetition of another series of secretly prepared massive Soviet explosions." THE FORMAL U.S. note to the Russians suggesting Nov. 28 as a date for the new talks said the United States would consider any other time which Russia might suggest for "prompt resumption" of the Geneva negotiations. The State Department said, "If the Soviet Union earnestly desires to erase concern over health hazards—if it is in fact ready and willing to end the testing of nuclear weapons—it can do so now." SINCE SEPT. 1, when the Russians resumed their tests, the Soviets have conducted more than 30 atmospheric shots, the State Department said. Construction will begin next week on a new building for the School of Engineering and Architecture. It is scheduled for completion in September, 1963. By Elaine Blaylock The new structure will be located northeast of the Nuclear Reactor Center, and across Naismith Drive west of Lindley Hall. It will house the departments of civil, aeronautical and electrical engineering as well as engineering mechanics. New Building for Engineering The aeronautical engineering department, according to Dean McNown, faces the worst housing problem. This sentiment was echoed by Ammon S. Andes, professor of areonautical engineering, who said, "We have not had adequate heat, classrooms, laboratories or offices." "QUITE IMPORTANT to the school is the fact that the laboratories them selves and the extra space will make possible stronger programs of graduate study and research in several of the departments," John S. McNown, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, said. The department has been in a quonset hut since 1947 and has been plagued with heating problems every winter. Prof. Andes explained that if the overhead heaters in the building were turned on students couldn't hear lectures. If they were left off, everyone froze. In contrast, in summer the building became so hot that equipment stored upstairs has been ruined. NEXT TO FACILITIES IN THE aeronautical quonset, the worst in the school are those used by the architects in Lindley Annex, Dean McNown said. "The new building will allow them to move all teaching activity from this open barracks to Marvin Hall." he said. The department of mechanical engineering will occupy the space which now includes the engineering laboratories behind Marvin Hall. Rooms currently being used by the departments of civil and electrical engineering and engineering mechanics are, except for minor revisions, over 40 years old, said Dean McNown. He emphasized that old space will be usable for many purposes, but not for specialized laboratory instruction. INCLUDED IN this new building will be a modern wind tunnel, a shock tube, and instrumentation and meteorology laboratories to replace the outdated, inadequate facilities presently being used in aeronautical engineering. Modern laboratories for circuits and electronics, solid and fluid mechanics, and structures will also be installed. The engineering building will cost $1,900,000 according to Keith Lawton, administrative assistant to the chancellor. It will consist of a two-story office and classroom wing, and a single-story laboratory section. The outside of the structure will be covered with the same type of brick and stone that was used to cover the outside of Murphy and Summerfield Halls. Precocious LIGONIER, Pa.—(UPI)—Golf star Arnold Palmer received his first set of golf clubs from his father at the age of three and was playing 18-hole courses regularly at the age of five. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO 摄影师 Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Prof. Carroll Clark Reminisces on Jazz NOV.19,7:30P.M. Big 8 Room - Student Union VOTE FOR X 10 KELLY ANDERSON for FROSH TREASURER JACK ZINN for Freshman Pres. The Election NOVEMBER 14-15 — STRONG HALL (Paid for by the Jack Zinn for President Committee) Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS 1912 West 25th St. FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED - central air conditioning - carpeted - off street parking - ●garbage disposal - laundry facilities 1/2 block - play area for children Phone VI 2-3416 office VI 3-8253 home Jay SHOPPE 835 Mass. & 12th & Oread won't fall down ...unless YOU DO!! the Adler Shape-ett is the first cotton crew sock guaranteed not to fall down...or your money back. ...only 69c. SHAPE·ETTE... by ADLER SKECHERS - News Briefs - By United Press International BERLIN—The East German Communists, following the line laid down in Moscow, purged the name and image of Josef Stalin from their territory today and predicted the overthrow of Albania's Stalinist leaders. Horst Schumann, head of the Communist Youth Organization, said Albania's leaders "have excluded themselves from the community of socialist nations" and "are traveling the road to anti-Communism." *** UNITED NATIONS—United Nations investigators said today that Katanga President Moise Tshombe and other high Katangese officials apparently were witnesses when former Congolese Premier Patrice Lumumba was killed. A team of legal experts from four nations also said the central Congolese government of President Joseph Kasavubu should share the blame for the deaths of Lumumba and two of his associates because it delivered them "into the hands of their bitterest political enemies." *** BONN—Chancellor Konrad Arenauer and his new cabinet were sworn into office in parliament today in ceremonies marred by the walkout of angry opposition socialists. The socialists demanded that the government's inaugural policy declaration be delivered immediately after the swearing-in ceremony. Adenauer has postponed the declaration until he returns from his talks in Washington with President Kennedy on Nov. 20-21. $$ ***** $$ HELSINKI—The Soviet Union has asked Finland for assurances that it will maintain a neutral foreign policy, the Finnish government announced today. The disclosure was made in a short government summary of Moscow talks between Finnish Foreign Minister Ahti Karjalainen and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. $$ **** $$ WASHINGTON—Colombia called today for a conference of Western hemisphere foreign ministers to deal with Communist penetration in Latin America. Although Cuba was not mentioned by name, the action was aimed at the regime of Fidel Castro. Mexico promptly opposed the proposal. Mexican Ambassador Vicente Sanchez said the Colombian proposal was "not ideal" to deal with the problem. Zuleta Angel, Colombian ambassador, told the 21-nation council that if the OAS "remains indifferent" to the rapidly worsening situation the confidence of the people of the Americas in the organization would disappear. *** BONHAM, Tex.—House Speaker Sam Rayburn lost more ground yesterday in his battle against cancer. On Sunday Rayburn rallied, but yesterday he developed breathing difficulties. The Speaker has had no visitors except members of his immediate family for the past three days. **** MANILA—Vice President Disodado Macapagal was reported today to have taken a slight lead over President Carlos Garcia in first unofficial returns in the race for President of the Philippines. The balloting was quiet in contrast to the violent campaign in which 39 persons were killed and 44 injured. A civic counting network set up to speed returns, gave Macapagal 33.528 votes to 23.326 for Garcia at 10 a.m. Daily hansan 59th Year, No. 43 "MY ONLY COMMENT is that I don't think it would accomplish anything." he said. He added: The opposite view was expressed by Richard Kaufman, Kansas City, Mo., medical school freshman. Students Divided on Proposal To Have World Crises Day "If the students can't read newspapers and become aware of this (the gravity of the international crisis) I don't see how this program is going to help him." "I think it would be a fine idea, real profitable for the student. It would give more students on the campus more time and opportunity to become part of world affairs." LAWRENCE, KANSAS Kaufman said he did his undergraduate work at Cornell University, where the concept of a World Crisis Day originated. Cornell has set Friday for their program, to include a student-faculty rally. Tuesday, November 14, 1961 KU students are sharply divided on the proposal to set aside a class day to focus attention on the world crises. "Ive been following the proposal there in the Cornell paper and I noticed that many of the top professors are not sponsors of the idea," Kaufman said. The idea is being generated by a group of students and faculty members who have suggested the topic, "What are the alternatives to nuclear war and life in a fallout shelter?" for such a day. HOWARD BAUMGRTEL, associate professor of psychology and human relations, said tentative plans for carrying out such a program would include bringing important speakers to KU. General discussion groups with University faculty members serving as chairmen would also be arranged. Larry Borchering, Kansas City Mo.. junior. said: JIM ANDERSON, Lawrence senior and co-chairman of the University Party, echoed Kaufman's attitude somewhat. He said: "I doubt that it will generate much interest unless there is an attraction by name speakers." Of the student's whose opinions were sampled this morning, the women seemed more optimistic about the plan. Partly cloudy today and tonight. Wednesday considerable cloudiness and continued cool with occasional rain. Highs today and Wednesday 40s. Lows tonight near 30. Weather Joann McAlpin, Nashville, Tenn. freshman, said: "I think it would be a very worthwhile idea because there seems to be too much unconcern among students over the world crisis. A program like this would enlighten the students a great deal." MARTHA PEACH. Topeka sophmore, expressed a different view. The success of the program, she said, would depend on whether there is adequate faculty guidance. "There are a lot of questions in everyone's mind," she said. "Unless there is someone around to give the answers, it will probably just generate a lot of worry. It will be OK if there is someone with the answers — but I doubt that there is." Other comments: Janice Young, Fairview freshman, said: "It might be a good idea if the students don't use it as another excuse to miss classes." Dick Harper, Prairie Village senior. said: "I'd like to see it done in connection with the model U.N. (a project of KU-Y)." The idea of a World Crisis Day has been presented to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, according to Raymond O'Conner, assistant professor of history. The chancellor is traveling with an alumni group to Phoenix, Ariz., Berkeley and Los Angeles, Calif., and will not return to his office until Monday, Election Continues Campus elections for All Student Council seats and freshman class officers will continue tomorrow from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Students should pick up the IBM cards in the basement of Strong and then proceed to the polls on the first floor in order to vote. Campus Elections Have Large Morning Turnout The general election for All Student Council living group representatives which began today will probably have a larger turnout than last year. During the first day of elections last year, 1.340 students had turned out to vote in the ASC election. Richard Harper, Prairie Village senior and elections chairman, has predicted a total for today of approximately 1.500. He said that when the total votes in the election are counted between 9 and 10 p.m. tomorrow a vote of around 3,100 will probably be shown. The final vote last year was 2,824. Harper said the reason for the increase in voting is the increased enrollment at KU. Two years ago, the total vote was 2,033. At 10 a.m. the breakdown of voting by districts was: Districts Total Fraternity 100 Sorority 50 Men's large dorms 41 Women's large dorms 12 Men's small dorms 16 Women's small dorms 10 Freshman Women's dorms 66 Professional fraternities and cooperatives 0 Unorganized-unmarried 12 Unorganized-married 3 Total 310 This total represents 149 votes cast for freshman officers, or almost half of the total vote. ALL THEIR SUPPORT-Some students gave full support to their candidates. Election Day Voters HALF THEIR SUPPORT—Some students gave only half their support to their candidate. --- NO SUPPORT AT ALL—Some students didn't even support their candidate. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, November 14. 1961 Rightist Comedians A speaker of the right wing variety, Robert Berveller, director of the Henry George School of Social Science in New York City, told his KU audience at the Minority Opinion Forum last Friday that the present U.S. tax system should be abolished and replaced by a single tax on land values. This proposal is based on the writings of an American economist who published most of his work between 1870 and 1905. THIS PROPOSAL IS THE SAME type that characterizes the John Birch Society and other elements of the lunatic fringe. It shows a frustration with the present makeup of American society and its beliefs and aims. The tax reformer and other groups with similar ideas give the impression they would be happy if only they could return to the happy days under good old King George. Any logical reasoning person knows that the present U.S. tax system, despite its heavy demands on private and corporate incomes, is necessary for the continued welfare and improvement of the United States. But perhaps the rightists do serve a useful purpose. They are a reminder of how far the United States has progressed in its social and economic improvements in the last two centuries. Of course, it is tough on the poor rightists to be so consistently opposed, but then they have always extolled the virtues of strong moral fiber and this ought to be good exercise for them. BERVEILER WENT ON IN HIS TALK TO explain that "Untold Community Chests, dogooders and racketeers are now engaged in an effort to keep an enslaved people (the citizens of the United States) from uprising in the face of the most fictitious (financial) boom in the history of man." This statement is a good indication of how far from reality this man and others like him are. The idea that the American people are enslaved and ripe for an uprising is a piece of fiction worthy of the rightists' arch enemies in Moscow and Peking. But the Minority Opinion Forum should definitely continue to invite rightists of Mr. Berveiler's type to speak at KU. They even ought to consider inviting George Rockwell to give a lecture on his philosophy. After all, KU does not want to be a serious old plodder. A little comedy now and then is good for the university community. —William H. Mullins Students and Politics Campus politics have been called a farce and members of political parties have been laughed at for their efforts, yet campus political parties remain. A political party can be worthwhile only if it fulfills its goals for the betterment or benefit of the student body. Have the parties fulfilled their goals? A look at last year's platform for both parties shows that most planks have been carried out. VOX ASKED FOR A STUDENT bill of rights, a separate election for living group representatives, a transportation control system of "rides home" for out-of-state students, wider publicity for the ASC (which included sending of minutes to organized houses) and the updating of the ASC constitution. UP's planks that were carried out are a stop day, strengthening of the ASC committees and continued participation in state affairs, one of which was the "letter to Topela" campaign of the spring semester 1960. Both parties took credit for the formation of a campus human rights commission. BUT BECAUSE THE PLANKS have been carried out doesn't necessarily mean the student has benefited in every case. A campus political party is formed for students and by students, but it cannot continue to provide services for the student unless he supports his party by voting. One goal of both parties is to give the student a working knowledge of campus politics and an awareness of the workings of national government. THIS IS AN ADMIRABLE GOAL. For those who participate and are interested in their party, it is fulfilled. Tomorrow is the last day of elections for ASC living group representatives. Evaluate carefully what the party has done for each student and also what the student should do for the party—then vote. Carrie Merryfield letters to the editor ED. I got four down slips at mid semester and the only reason I didn't get a fifth was that my cone prof said I looked intelligent and so there was some hope for me. (Actually, I was the only one who didn't sleep through his classes, so he must have had a feeling of obligation.) Anyway, I want to explain why this miserable showing—I had good grades at the junior college I went to. My, My What Confusion Editor: Why so bad here? It's the darned housing policy scramble. I'm a psych major and so I've been watching the guys who favor a change, the administrators who appeared to be resisting it and the town sitting by, like an Asian god, First off, the campus paper asks the administration to take a moral stand. Just tell these renters the university won't list those who discriminate. A reasonable position. But all hell breaks out. One administrator tells a group it will lead to trouble. Another says this is no way to do anything. The Negroes march to seek recognition of their problems. Then one Negro says everything is fine, the administration is doing a swell job. Another Negro won't buy it. He says he wants ACTION, not talk. An- LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler saying nothing, slightly smiling. Frankly, I can't figure it out, and the announcement of the new policy not to keep landlades who discriminate on the lists bugs me still more. Daily Hansan Then comes the housing policy, which says exactly what the administration has been saying won't work. Brother. I'm going to major in econ. They've got these graphs and lots of statistics. The hell with people. other student asks an administrator why the university won't add a rule prohibiting discrimination to the rules it sends landlades. The administrator says that's not what the people pushing it want—although this is what I thought they said they wanted in the first place. University of Kansas student newspaper S. F. Rude University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, trivweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business off Play Criticized 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. The comedy "Auntie Mame," mounted with infinite toil and good acting, leaves some of us wondering if the University Theatre has forsaken its announced goal of "providing examples of the world's best literature . . . and providing always the finest of dramatic fare." It now seems to be turning back to Restoration Drama. Does the Department think the plight of an unmarried pregnant woman merits raucous mirth? No Burlesque Show was more bespattered with God-damns. In coming plays shall we be assailed by all the robust four letter words to evoke neurotic giggles from the groundlings? C. M. Baker 22 21 "PHGSST—DID OLE MUSCLE-MOUTH TAKE ROLL TODAY?" the took world By Carol Berry MOMENT OF NO RETURN, by Stephen King-Hall. Ballantine Books. 50 cents. "Moment of No Return" is a novel which describes a jittery and familiar world, where Berlin is a pawn in a game between East and West in which national honor is at stake. In this world, where leaders live on their nerves, and the apathy of the common man is his only peace of mind, the whimsical voice of England is probably saner than any other, suggesting the "doctrine of the continuous summit" as the best foundation for world peace. Russia and America both stand poised and ready to destroy the world from their underground War Centers. "Moment of No Return" suggests to the reader that the only logical outcome of events as they are is destruction. The book, which was first published in 1960, now ceases to be prophetic and seems, to the reader, an eerie and only slightly exaggerated paraphrase of the events he reads about in the daily newspaper. THE GREAT CRISIS STEMS from a proposed invasion of West Berlin by the East German government, under the unofficial leadership of a fanatical ex-Nazi, to whom only the re-unification of Germany is important. He is aided by cosmopolitan and opportunist Pilkov, member of the Politburo responsible for keeping the satellite countries in line. The proposed occupation of West Berlin sets off a series of ludicrous believable misunderstandings between Russia and America which carry the world to the point of destruction. King-Hall describes the French, American, English, and Russian heads of state so that they embody national characteristics while remaining individuals. The French Secretary of the Foreign Office says of the Chief, Etienne Gallique, in the moment of crisis: "He will decide on a French point of view which will express the grandeur of our beloved country; a point of view, I must add, which is not likely to be entirely in accord with the views of our allies." President Kennix is indecisive and bound by bureaucracy while the Prime Minister is, in time of crisis, strong: ("Our statement of intention) must be firm but not provocative. My Secretary of State says...") The Prime Minister sighed. "Must we bring him into it? I've got my Foreign Secretary out there, and intend to keep him there. We've got to decide." "I was about to say," protested the President, "that my Secretary of State insists that in dealing with the Russians one must be tough." COMRADE BUGLOV, FIRST SECRETARY of the Communist Party, is strong and comically temperamental, but he keeps somewhere inside himself the Communist ideals in which he once believed. They do not aid him in the moment of crisis, and he, too, is forced to rely on someone else to make a decision. "Moment of No Return" deals with individual responsibility in an era in which collective thinking seems all too easy. It is a wellwritten, well-informed book which clearly shows both the hysterical humor and deadly seriousness of a situation in which the human race faces destruction. Tuesday, November 14. 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Around the Campus KU Installs 2 New KU Space Science Steam Generators To Be Examined The two new steam generators recently installed at the heating plant will take care of KU's heating needs for many years, according to Keith Lawton, director of physical plant. The generators, provided for in an appropriation from the 1960 legislature, were necessary because of new buildings planned. The heating capacity of the old units would have been exhausted upon completion of the addition to Dyche Hall, Mr. Lawton said. The new units are capable of 60,000 pounds of steam production per hour. The older units, installed nearly 40 years ago, occupied more space and were rated at only 15,000 pounds per hour, he said. Installation of the new units was the second part of a four-stage program for the heating and power plant. Mr. Lawton said. The first stage included construction of new oil storage tanks at 19th and Naismith Drive and removal of the old oil tanks. This project is approximately 70 per cent complete. The third stage, now being prepared for bids, includes piping and controls for the new steam generators. The final stage is the installation of an alternate main electrical source to the power plant. Bids will be taken on this project around Jan. 1, he said. YAF to Show Film On Red China The Young Americans for Freedom will sponsor the anti-Communist film "Red China—Outlaw" at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Fraser Theater. Klaus H. Fringsheim, instructor of political science, will give his views on the film and Red China and will answer questions from the audience after the film. The film, produced by the Committee of One Million, is designed to arouse public opinion against the admission of Red China into the United Nations. Mr. Pringsheis is a China specialist. He did his doctor's dissertation on the Chinese Communist Youth Movement. He taught at the University of Hong Kong before coming to KU. Marian Jerslid Gives 13th Recital Marian Jerslid, associate professor of piano, will give her 13th annual faculty recital at 8 p.m. Nov. 27 in Swarthout Recital Hall. She will play sonatas by Scarlatti, Hindemith and Schubert. Prof. Jerslid has taught at KU since 1947. In 1954. Prof. Jerslid won the New York Town Hall Debt award for her performance there. During 1957 and 1958 she studied on a Fulbright Grant in Berlin, Germany, giving solo and chamber music concerts in the America Houses of West Germany. Home Economists Meet "Research and Action" will be the discussion topic at the Home Economics Club meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Fraser Hall dining room. Speakers will be Charlotte Lee, assistant professor of home economics and Muriel H. Johnson, associate professor of home economics. Doctor to Talk on Stevioside "The Chemistry of Stevioside" will be discussed at 4 p.m. tomorrow by Dr. Erich Mosetting in 233 Malott. Dr. Mosetting is chief of the Steriod Section, National Institute of Arthritic and Metabolic Diseases, of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md. History Club Meets Tomorrow The History Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Jayhawker Room of the Kansas Union. E.A Bayne, American Universities Field Service representative, will speak on "My personal reminiscences of Chiang Kai-shek." KU's facilities and capabilities for aiding scientific and industrial growth in this area will be studied tomorrow by officials of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the Midwest Research Institute. Man's conceit is boundless.—Alfred Graham The meeting, part of a six-state program, will involve representatives of the science and engineering departments involved in space technological training. The 10-year program is designed to encourage colleges and universities to participate in research and education in space sciences, and to encourage industrial firms to utilize the technology resulting from space research. The NASA will receive information from the Midwest Research Institute concerning the skills and facilities available for advanced education, research and industry. The Institute, in turn, will receive scientific information from NASA and will make it available to area universities and industries. Officials of the program hope to increase the use of the Midwest's facilities for science research. They feel the Midwest has lagged behind the rest of the country in scientific development. Manuscripts and articles may be preserved without retyping or mimeographing due to a new photocopying service now being used by Watson Library. Photocopy Installed The work, done on full-size zerox paper, prints and reproduces tests, line drawings, manuscripts and unusual alphabets. But halftone plates and photographs also reproduce in satisfactory detail. Intended primarily for library use, the service is available to library patrons on the limited basis of library approval and one copy per person. A charge of five cents a page of photocopy is levied. Jay Janes Meet Jay Janes will meet at 5 p.m. tomorrow in the Fine Room of the Kansas Union. A $500 award for outstanding work in accounting has been awarded to Arthur M. Revell, Topeka senior, by the Haskins and Sells Foundation, Inc., of Kansas City, Mo. Accounting Award Won by KU Student The award, given on the basis of merit rather than financial need, is awarded to students at 74 colleges in the United States. It has been given six times to KU seniors in accounting. Sam E. Ellis of the Kansas City office of Haskins and Sells, presented the award Nov. 8 at a meeting of the Accounting Society. Revelv has a 2.8 grade point average and is on the dean's honor roll. He also holds the $500 Elizabeth M Hovt scholarship. It is completely unimportant. That is why it is so interesting. —Agathie Christie Field Trips Are KU Tradition By Margaret Cathcart Once every semester KU students don a pair of faded jeans, a baggy sweatsuit and their most tattered pair of sneakers, in order to participate in the campus tradition known as a field trip. Chigger bites, rain and water soaked clothing are symbols of the field trip. On a recent field trip to Potter Lake one of the zoology lab sections discovered a "wild creature." He turned out to be the Great Dane mascot of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. However, the class did observe through Thor's wild barking that he was deathly afraid of soap suds. The suds were being emptied into Potter Lake from the Chi Omega fountain. The same lab class found an unusual specimen floating around the edge of Potter Lake—a toy boat. STUDENTS INVARIABLY get so excited chasing frogs and other "hopping creatures" on field trips that they often hop into the pond with them. For example, a zoology student became so engrossed in frog-chasing that she chased the frog and herself into the water. "It seems clear to me that from now on we will probably learn more about the earth by going away from it than remaining on it," said Dr. Harrison Brown, professor of geochemistry who, with Dr. Bruce Murray, heads a lunar study group. But, they said, perhaps more significant than being the first stepping stone into space, the moon may be imprinted with missing chapters from the history of the solar system. Another student was so upset when the rowboat pulled away from the shore without her, that she kept chasing the boat even after the land ran into the water, and she did not stop chasing it until she fell face down in the water. This is possible, they explain, because the moon is virtually unchanged, unmodified by water and air, and unaffected by a molten core. There may be, they said, ice on the moon, hidden away in lunar depressions or caves that never are touched by the searing sunlight. The moon's temperature varies between about 250 degrees above Fahrenheit in sunlight to about 240 degrees below zero in the shade. "In particular, close study of the moon can teach us much about early earth history." Brown said. Ice may have formed long ago from water incorporated chemically in moon material and later released, Brown said. Or it could have been brought in by meteorite impacts. Color differences on the moon are being studied by the group with the 60-inch reflector telescope at Mt. Wilson. There is no atmosphere to moderate temperatures since the lunar surface is a vacuum. Why Go to the Moon? CIT Scientists Explain They also have ventured to predict what the first man to land on the moon might find. The group is interested in learning whether these color differences on the moon's flat areas are really color differences or caused by differing reflectivity. PASADENA, Calif. — (UPI) — Why go to the moon — that most familiar of earth's neighbors that is slated for the first stop in man's quest for the unknown? A group of hard-working California Institute of Technology scientists give at least one good reason for shooting the moon — to learn more about our own planet. Records! Records! Records! Stereo LPs 45s Up to 75% Discount THE FOLLOWING is the favorite field trip story of a KU entomology professor. Eight students and two professors had camped for the night in a canyon. Early the next morning a violent wind storm blew up. The wind picked up tents, cooking utensils and even a campstove, but most disastrously it blew away some snake specimens. The snakes were never seen again; wrapped inside white paper bags, they just disappeared, and the efforts of half day's searching proved fruitless in locating them. Just Received New Shipment in the six feet tall prairie grass out at the Natural History Reservation. Students also get lost on field trips, as a member of the animal ecology class proved the other day when she disappeared from sight ALL POPULAR LABELS VINCENT'S Discount Record Center 904 Mass. VI3-2011 And there is an entomology graduate student from New York who is afraid to go on a field trip without his gun because this is Kansas and he is afraid of cows. The entire investigative project is intended to complement and supplement the lunar probe work being done with rockets, Murray said. But rocket landings on the moon must be preceded by a considerable amount of laboratory and telescopic investigation to realize their full value, he said. Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Photography by Studio de Portra 912 Mass. — Lawrence, Kan. VI 2-2300 Sororities & Fraternities Contact us for your House Photography - Application - Portraits Creative Color or Black & White VOTE FOR X venta dinner - Gave KELLY ANDERSON for FROSH TREASURER The Election NOVEMBER 14-15 STRONG HALL Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. November 14. 1961 Students Cook Through School By Dennis Farney It is 5:15 p.m. Three men dressed in white aprons glance at the clock and then converge on a heavy black stove. They open the oven door and intently study the 10-pound roast inside. A scene in a local restaurant?—No—just an everyday occurrence in one of KU's five men's scholarship halls, a unique and successful experiment initiated here more than 20 years ago. Since then, four more men's scholarship halls have been built or converted from existing buildings: Stephenson, constructed in 1950; Jolliffe, reconverted in 1951; Pearson, constructed in 1952; and Foster, reconverted in 1955. The KU men's scholarship hall system—the only one of its kind in the nation—began in 1940 with the construction of Battenfeld Hall. THE FIVE HALLS house about 250 men, selected each year on the basis of their academic record in high school and upon personal recommendations. Some incoming students are also selected each year on the basis of their academic record. Selection among applicants is made by the Men's Scholarship Hall Committee, composed of KU faculty members. About 75-125 new students enter the five halls each year, replacing graduating seniors and underclassmen who failed to maintain a yearly 1.5 grade point average—a requirement for re-admittance to the hall. Once a member of the scholarshij hall system, an incoming student rapidly becomes an "expert" on cooking, cleaning or dishwashing, since all five halls are self-supporting. Each hall member does an average of an hour of work each day. This work, in effect, is credited against his monthly house bill, resulting in a yearly saving over dormitory living costs of about $275 HOW WELL has the KU men's scholarship hall system succeeded in its primary function — promoting a high degree of scholastic achievement among the 250 men within the system? group scholarship at KU, compiled by the registrar's office, provides a partial answer. Last year's report on organized Earning a yearly grade point average of 1.86, the five halls ranked above the 1.06 men's residence hall average, the 1.32 all-men's average and the 1.43 all-fraternity average. The 1.86 average also outranked the all-University average of 1.41 the all-women's average of 1.56 and the all-sorority average of 1.75. Pearson Hall, with a 2.05 average, was the highest-ranked men's living group on campus. How do the individual men within the halls evaluate the system? They generally praise it, listing the following factors: - The relatively small size of the living group within each hall about 50 men is conducive to friendly informality and cooperation. - They find the emphasis placed upon scholastic activities both stimulating and rewarding. - They enjoy the numerous hall social events and intramural activities. - They appreciate the yearly savings in house bills. - Finally, they emphasize the experience gained in their daily work duties. After all, who else can boast of going from high school graduate to college chef — all within a few weeks? Results Out Soon On Graded Tests Those students who took the English Proficiency Examination are going to have to sweat a bit longer. James E. Seaver, professor of history and director of the Western Civilization Department, announced today that the grading had been completed, but before the results are released they must be sent to the various deans. "Following that," he said, "the lists will go to the Registrar's office where the list of those who passed will be compiled and released." The results probably will not be released this week. Humanities Lecture Is at 8 p.m. Today Walter Kaufmann, associate professor of philosophy at Princeton University, will deliver the Humanities lecture at 8 p.m. tonight in Fraser Theater. Prof. Kaufmann will speak on "A Critique of Existentialism." Budget Deputy Here Saturday Elmer B. Staats, deputy director of the United States Bureau of the Budget, will be the featured speaker at the second annual Kansas-Missouri Conference on Public Administration, Saturday in the Kansas Union. Mr. Staats, a KU alumnus and national president of the American Society for Public Administration, will speak on "The Environment of Executive Action." About 100 personnel from federal, state and local agencies, as well as college and University faculty and students in the two states, are expected to attend the meeting. Since 1939 Mr. Staats has been associated with the Bureau of the Budget, becoming deputy director in 1959. He has been a research assistant for the Kansas Legislative Council and a lecturer at American University and George Washington University. Panel discussions also will be held on international administration, voting behavior in areas of change, transition in chief executive positions, impact of technological development and automation on recruitment, placement and training in the public service. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil NOW! Old Spice quality in a new hair tonic • Keeps hair handsomely groomed—all day • Fights dandruff • Moisturizes—prevents dryness • Guaranteed non-greasy Old Spice HAIR TONIC SHULTON 1.0c plus tax Student Cuts Wrist Condition Improves A KU student was found with his wrists slashed last night in his off-campus rooming house by three roommates. A hospital official credited friends with possibly saving the student's life. A tourniquet was applied and the hospital notified, so a physician was present when the student was brought in. He was taken to Watkins Memorial Hospital in critical condition. But hospital officials said this morning his condition was much improved. George Hart Speaks To Young Democrats George Hart, former Democratic treasurer for Kansas and a candidate for governor in 1962, will be the featured speaker at the Young Democrats meeting at 7 p.m. this evening in the Kansas Union. Mr. Hart will speak on the 1962 governor's race and his chances of winning it. The meeting is open to the public and members of the Young Democrats are urged to attend. Those who want much are always much in need.-Horace BUSINESS MACHINES CO. 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up SALES SERVICE RENTALS Printing, Mimeographing and Duplicating Pick up — Delivery Ransan Want Ads Get Results Going on a Picnic? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES Going on a Picnic? LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 the right coat is Cruiser by LONDON FOG Regular & Longs 25.95 Regular & Longs Sizes 34 to 44 Tailored in fine cotton poplin, the Cruiser is handsome, comfortable to wear, and boasts exclusive 3rd Barrier construction for assured rain protection. With fly front, center vent, brightened by a smart tartan lining and matching tartan under pocket flaps, the Cruiser is the one coat you need for any weather . . . it's a Maincoat by London Fog. THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN University Shop ON THE HILL Al Hack Ken Whitenight Tuesday, November 14. 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Journalism Student Shows Anxiety In Interviewing Professor Goff Who is Lewin Goff? This was the question that entered my mind when I saw his name written neatly on a small piece of paper which had found its way into my clutching finger tips LEWIN GOFF IS A BUSY MAN After finally locating his office, tucked neatly beside and behind the box office at Murphy Hall, I was destined to spend a few hours awaiting this busy man. AS THE SECRETARY prepared to "close up shop" for the day, the front door to the office swung open, and I got my first glimpse of the busy Prof. Goff. On a Saturday morning, when I usually catch up on my sleep, I sat for what was to be my last 45-minute wait. By this time, I had become well acquainted with Prof. Goff's secretary and had obtained a rather sketchy background of my subject from her. I shook hands with a handsome man, sporting a friendly smile, crew haircut and appearing to be about middle fortish. "Prof. Goff," I said, "my name is Bob Brooks. I am a student in the School of Journalism, and I would like an interview with you if possible." MY HEART BEAT was going wild now, because here I was, face to face with the subject of my interview, and I knew absolutely nothing about his field—the theater. 1 calmed down quickly. He couldn't give me any time at that moment because he was busy with one of his students. From my numerous visits with the secretary, I knew he was a busy man, and my chances of ever working the interview into his schedule were slim. BUT A TIME WAS SET. He had a free hour on Tuesday morning and no one else had spoken for the following Tuesday. Tuesday arrived, and I got my interview. Who is Lewin Goff? "HE IS A PROFESSOR of speech and drama, the director of the University Theatre and a busy man. Prof. Goff came to KU in 1955 after spending six years in the speech and drama department at the University of Iowa and one year at Michigan State University. He has A.B. and M.F.A. degrees from the University of Oklahoma and a Ph.D. degree from Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. HE TOOK THE "BRIGADOON" tour to the Orient during the summer of 1960, spent eight weeks of the fall of 1961 with Sir Tyrone Guthrie, a famous British director, and spent 11 days during the summer of 1961 in Vienna as an American delegate at the International Theatre Institution's 9th Congress. Prof. Goff feels that there is no better way to further international relations than among student theater exchanges. "It would be nice to have a bunch PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Diamonds Gifts Jewelry DANIELS JEWELRY 914 Mass. VI 3-2572 WHEN STUDENTS FROM different countries get together in the theater they must work together, he said. "I met people at the University of Vienna and talked with them about this sort of thing," he said. Prof. Goff is working on a plan to take eight students to the University of Vienna this summer. "THE AMERICAN DELEGATION took the Russian delegation to lunch." he said. of American students parked in Moscow and some Russian students over here," he said. WHEEL ALIGNMENT BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP 229 Elm VI 3-2250 I think the vienna congress was a tremendous thing, because there were people there from Russia, Poland and all over. K.C. Judge Speaks Tonight HOWEVER, NOTHING definite has been decided for the coming summer, as Prof. Goff said he has Judge Elmo Hunter of the Kansas City, Mo., Court of Appeals will be guest speaker tonight at 7:30 at a meeting of the KU Chancery Club in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Meixner Will Review Novel "Parade's End" will be reviewed by John Mixner, assistant professor of English, at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. Speaking of these exchange programs, he said, "This is a wonderful way to promote good feelings between countries." also applied to the American Educational Theatre Association for another trip to the Orient, and to the State Department for a possible trip to Latin America. Prof. Goff, during our visit, displayed a great deal of enthusiasm, which is necessary to keep a man going at such a torrid pace. AS I LEFT his office, he smiled, shook my hand and said, "Why don't you come over to the theatre tonight, and read for a part." Prof. Lewin Goff, previously unknown to me, has gained a new admirer. GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 DOING IT THE HARD WAY by hoff (GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!) easier 3-minute way for men: FITCH Men, get rid of embarrassing dandruff easy as 1-2-3 with FITCH! In just 3 minutes (one rubbing, one lathering, one rinsing), every trace of dandruff, grime, gummy old hair tonic goes right down the drain! Your hair looks hand- FITCH LEADING MAN'S SHAMPOO somer, healthier. Your scalp tingles, feels so refreshed. Use FITCH Dandruff Remover SHAMPOO every week for positive dandruff control. Keep your hair and scalp really clean, dandruff-free! FITCH SHAMPOO Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Tareyton delivers the flavor DVAL FILTER DOES IT! "Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!" says veteran coach Romulus (Uncle) Remus. "We have a saying over at the Coliseum—'Tareyton separates the gladiators from the gladioli'. It's a real magnus smoke. Take it from me, Tareyton delivers de gustibus—and the Dual Filter does it!" ACTIVATED CHARCOAL INNER FILTER PURE WHITE OUTER FILTER DUAL FILTER Tareyton Product of The American Tobacco Company "Tobacco is our middle name" Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. November 14. 1961 Georgia Tech May Lose Orange Bowl MIAMI—(UFI)—The Orange Bowl Committee met here yesterday to review possible choices of contenders in the New Year's Day Florida classic, in the light of the upsets which exploded Saturday. Chairman Van C. Kusrow indicated Georgia Tech's loss to Tennessee, 10-6, eliminated Tech from Orange Bowl contention. On the other side of the country, unbeaten Colorado also stumbled in its grab for the Orange blossoms. Utah stopped the Buffalo stampede with a 21 to 12 slaughter, putting the first blot on Colorado's hitherto unbeaten record. However, it was not a conference game for the Buffaloes, who still are the front-runners for the Orange Bowl bid. Kansas is second, with one big game left to play—with Missouri on the 25th. If the Jayhawks win they will have a 6-1 conference record and a good chance to make the bowl. Kansas and Colorado could wind up in a tie for the Big Eight pennant. Kussrow declined to speculate on those possibilities. Texas Still First In UPI Poll; KU 15th NEW YORK —(UPI)— Powerful Texas and Alabama, each unbeaten through eight games, remained 1-2 today in the weekly United Press International major college football ratings. Ohio State held onto its thirdplace spot while Minnesota replaced Louisana State in Fourth place. Louisiana State was fifth this week followed by Mississippi, Purdue, Michigan State, UCLA and Colorado to complete the ton 10. Missouri, 10th last week, failed to draw a single vote. Kansas was fifteenth. Lone K-State Weekend WinOverKUinBowling Kansas State beat the University of Kansas in at least one sport Saturday. The Wildcat bowling team nudged the Jayhawk bowlers by 15 pins. KSU totaled 2780 pins to KU's 2765 in the Jav Bowl. The KU quintet led after the first and second rounds, but K-State's 1010 total to KU's 931 in the third round that made the difference. In that final round, the Cat bowlers had games of 235, 206, 196, 192, and 181. Kansas Soccer Team Defeats Wildcats The KU soccer team defeated Kansas State here Saturday, 5-0. In the first half, Rudy Flick, Dutch exchange student, scored twice and Luis Gonzalo, from Venezuela, added another Thomas Hansen, goalie from Norway, was magnificent in his shut-out play. He stopped many good kicks at the goal, having to dive through the air most of the time. Sinan Kuraner, Turkish exchange student, kicked the fourth goal and the final tally was made by Lum Ho. Chinese student, with a beautiful high boot from the outside left position. High man for the match was Kansas State's Dave Smith. Smith fired a 199-185-196-380. Hansen was a member of the Norwegian National soccer team last year. Al Feinstein, Long Beach, New York senior, captain of the team, said it was the finest game KU had played all season. Terrell Hays, Shawnee junior, topped Coach Bascom Fearing's crew with a 180-211-183-574. The remaining Hawk series totals were as follows: Steve Rybolt, Ottawa sophomore, 570; John Member, Kansas City junior 545; Jim Kartsonis, Hutchinson senior, 538; and Paul Hammar, Overland Park junior, 538. The team will face Ft. Leavenworth there Saturday and will close their season here Sunday. The overshirt no longer is restricted to carefree wearing with blue jeans. It gets into the evening picture, teamed with floor-length evening skirts or pants. The new overshirts include deep-toned plaids, battik prints, lightweight oxfords, checks and dark stripes. 365 Excuses 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Anniv. of the Meeting of ASCAP VARSITY HOW SHOWING! Paul Newman Jackie Gleason "The Hustler" 7:00-9:15 GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Spencer Tracy Frank Sinatra "The Devil at 4 o'clock" 7:00-9:15 Kansan Want Ads Get Results Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Steve Clark Doug Weaver, Kansas State's coach, is a remarkable man. The smallish coach, standing at 5-9 and weighing only 170 pounds, is an enthusiastic individual who believes in "rah-rah football." His Kansas State football team this year substantiates this enthusiasm. The Wildeats were given only an outside chance of making it through the season with a victory. The "Cats" debit on everything but desire proved that the "will to win" is still important in today's commercial college football. THE PURPLE OPENED with Big Ten member Indiana and surprisingly came out with a 14-8 win The Wildcats then followed suit with pre-season prognostications losing their next six encounters. The Wildcats, having posted their win for the season, were given nary a hope of winning again. The 'Cats, however, having tasted victory, unleashed their "will to win" against the Falcons of Air Force. Weaver's crew, much to the surprise of most coaches, sportswriters and fans, squeaked to victory, 14-12. THE 'CATS, UNLIKE Kansas State teams of the past, did not have outrageous scores of 50-0 run up against them. Previous to the KU encounter 24 points proved to be the largest margin of loss. Nebraska won 24-0, and Iowa State scored a 31-7 victory. Against Kentucky, Colorado and Oklahoma the 'Cats looked particularly strong. Not possessing a potent offense, but an aggressive defense, they held another group of Wildcats from Kentucky to 21 points while moving for eight themselves. Against Colorado, big Eight leader, the Cats, sole holder of last place, threw a scare by bottling up the Buffs' passing attack, but were unable to couple an offensive threat and lost 13-0. AGAINST OKLAHOMA Kansas State played their closest against the Sooners in years but were unable to pin a loss on Bud Wilkinson's squad and lost, 17-6. Much of the Kansas State success has to be attributed to Weaver's confidence. The spirited coach, when asked to compare his team's play against KU with previous Saturday's, assuredly said, "We always play as hard as we can." The Wildest mentor, greeting reporters with a half-smile and a "Hi, How are you," puffed at a cigar and answered questions forthrightly. pulred at a cigar and answered questions forthrightly. "The game today was a simple story," he said. "They (Kansas) are a lot better football team than we are... They have a great team." "They do everything great. They have a great offense and a great defense. They are, by far the best team we have played." COMPARING THE JAYHAWKERS to Colorado Weaver said, KU's running game is much stronger than Colorado's, but perhaps Colorado didn't play one of their better games against us." Weaver said that his squad missed left-half Jack Richardson who did not make the trip because of a hip injury sustained in practice Thursday. The Wildcat coach commented on the aggresive play by both squads. He said that perhaps his squad's two personal foul infractions resulted from such aggressive play. Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS - central air conditioning - carpeted - off street parking - play area for children - laundry facilities 1/2 block ● garbage disposal Phone VI 2-3416 office VI 3-8253 home I am a man who is always looking for the best things in life. I am a man who is always looking for the best things in life. Engineering and Physical Science Seniors GROW with a growing industry... the Bell Telephone System * The Bell Telephone System, which has doubled in size in the last 10 years, is expanding rapidly to serve a growing nation. A growing telephone industry means new jobs, fresh opportunities for promotions, a rewarding career for you. The future is bright for young men who want to advance with a progressive industry. Representatives of these Bell System companies will be glad to talk with you: - Southwestern Bell Telephone Company builds, maintains and operates telephone One d and other communications systems throughout its five-state territory. - Bell Laboratories research, development, engineering and design in electronics and communications fields. BLAG Malpə Denn Rewa GIRL frame at Su Call - Western Electric manufacturing and supply unit. - Sandia Corporation applied research, development and design for production of atomic weapons. Bell System representatives will be on campus November 14 and 15. Sign up for an interview at the engineering office. COMMERCIAL BELL TECHNOLOGY BELL SYSTEM NEW YORK, NY & FLORIDA & TEXAS Tuesday, November 14. 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 25e for billing. All ads must be brought or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hal by 6 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. LOST ALLIGATOR RAINCOAT taken by mistake from Happy Hal's restaurant last Sat. evening. Please contact B. K. Mandry, VI 3-7415. Reward. 11-16 SMALL BLACK picture holder containing student ID, drivers license, etc. Fraser, library, or Union. Please call 2576 or mail to Sylvander, 918 Kentucky. 11-16 BLACK FOUNTAIN PEN with Dennis Malpass engraved on it. Please return to Dennis Malpass, 437 Joseph R. Pearson. Reward. 11-14 GIRL'S EYE GLASSES. Pinkish brown frames with case. Lost near water tower at Sunset and Stratford Rd. on Nov. 7. Call VI 3-5344. 11-15 BUSINESS SERVICES Experienced typist would like typing in seasonal rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in midwest. Phone VI 3-2921. Modern service — open weeks day 8 to 6:30 p.m. TYPEWITTERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies. school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI -3-6444. U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies beds — harness — sweaters, footwear, shoes and accessories everything in pet field plus Turtles Chameleons, fish birds, hamsters, etc. at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center . . . Shop sectionalized — save time and money. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentation. Mail VI 3-5263. Ola Smith $3913; Mass. Call VI 3-5263. 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. VI 3-1267. MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks. ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent dried paper bags. Plastic, party supplies decan. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 0350. FOR RENT WEST EDGE CAMPUS. 2 bedrooms. living room, carpet, drapes, fireplace, exteriors, ground, electric dishwasher, disposal, storage, garage. Call VI 3-3887 after 7. 11-20 Vacancy available for 2 men in com- munity shell Chal Rd Ct VI V-3635 for appointment. LARGE FURNISHED apartment, a east side, utilities paid. $50; Cali VI 3-6244. FURNISHED APARTMENT — Clean. 3 rooms with private bath, fireplace, kitchen, laundry, KU. Prefer married couple, no children. By appointment only — VI 3-8129, 11-16 SHARE APARTMENT with other boys, and 1 vacancy for a girl. 1 block from Union, cooking privileges. Call VI 3-6723. 11-17 WANTED YOUNG MAN TO SHARE 5 room apt Call Bill Gozeze, VI 2-3528 evenings TWO MALE STUDENTS to share three bedroom house. VI 2-3101 after 5 p.m. BOLLEGE GIRL to baby sit every Wed. from 1-3 p.m. Two children, will usually be asleep. 20-8 Stouffer Pl. VI 2-3974. 11-14 WANTED: GRADUATE STUDENT in INITIAL SCHOOL. T-3-989. Ask for Minin. 11-15 FOR SALE LEFT HAND GOLF CLUBS. 6 irons, 2 woods, bag. $45, extra 7 iron $30. Alto Sax mouthpiece. Otto-Link $15. Call VI 2-2284. 11-16 STRING BASS — EPIPHONE — Good condition. $75. Contact David Christian at 1222 Mississippi afternoons and evenings. 11-20 SCRATCH AND SKETCH PADS only 35c lb. Standard sizes available want the size out want. Lawrence Outlook. 10-15 Mass- achusetts. V 3-16666. 10-15 Dodge in good running condition. $80. Call VI 3-4291. tf ARTLEY FLUTE, excellent condition less than a year old - call VI 3-1715. 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 VII 3-4201. tf GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive lethitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $8.50. free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI 3-7788. tt NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines, including printing and business machines, reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. phone VI 3-0151 today. INTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 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** 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 5 BOOKCASE SHELVES. 6' with risers; bookcase, 5 x 1', with glass doors; 15 waterproof boxes; 20 x 10' spigot. Rubbed cottonwood log with gliders; 12 guage shotgun, single shot; aquarium and supplies; 3006 Springfield See. See at 1016 Hill Drive 1 p.m. 11-16 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright typewriter, sales, service, rentals. La Sance Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-164 GUNS: ROEERT REDDING FIREARMS. New & used guns, and ammo. Liberal trade-ins. Special this week: 30-06 Springfield. See at 1304 Tenn. V 3-7001. 1960 VOLVO, red with brand new white sidewall wallire (27 month guarantee); custom made red carpets, radio, heater; and many accessories; in excellent condition; must sell by next week to highest bidder. VI 2-3364. 11-17 1955 JAGUAR Excellent condition, overseason, reasonable VI 3-5681. 11-17 ATTENTION LAW STUDENTS: Practical law library for sale. Priced at $3.00 to $7.00 per volume. Pierce Van Lines. 733¹ N. H. VI 3-8863. 11-17 TYPING TYPING — THERMES AND PAPERS. Use carbon, 1013 Connecticut. VI 2-0397. MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." — Now at two locations. Call VI 3-5920 or 3-547. 1015 Lawrence Ave. & 1021l $% Mass. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8739. experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typa- rates, fast accurate service. Resona- rates. Mair, Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 2f- 1648. Mrs. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise POE, VI 3-1097. 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: Paper papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, research articles. Great neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I., VI. 3-7485. Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter interested in thesis, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf EXPERIENCIED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-8136. Mr. Luk Geibach FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service. 9317 B Woodson. Mission, HE 2-7715. Eval or Sat. R-2-2186. TYIPING IN MY HOME. Fast service, reasonable rates. Call I 3-0762. 11-17 Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Coding: will type reports, thesis, etc. well, 1511 W. 21 St. St. VI 3-6440 t will type reports, thesis, etc. well, 1511 W. 21 St. St. VI 3-6440 t FORMER SECRETARY with plica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, shees in dessertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher, Ms. Campbell; reports accurately. Standard rates. See Ms. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. **if** I WILL DO TYPING IN MY HOME. Interested in themes, term papers, theses, dissertations, etc. Call VI 5-2925. 11-14 TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type the papers, term papers, resume and Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mr. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8688. TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf Kansan Want Ads Get Results Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. VI 3-0152 Birds on a Branch BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. - Quality Parts STEREO - Guaranteed - Expert Service VOTE UP Lee Ayres ... Fraternity Dave Gough ... Fraternity Nancy Defever ... Sorority Marty Smith ... Sorority Hollis Cross ... Large Men's Dorms Joby Jobson ... Large Men's Dorms Ken Kahmann ---- Large Men's Dorms Carl (Max) Logan, Small Men's Dorms Pat Wilson ---- Large Women's Dorms Nancy Ray ---- Small Women's Dorms Betsy Stoddard, Fresh. Women's Dorms Mike Miner - Unorganized, Unmarried BE SURE TO VOTE TOMORROW, WED., NOV. 15 Polls Open 8-5 Paid by UP Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, November 14, 1961 Jews Dedicate New Synagogue Lawrence Jewish families, though they can trace Lawrence Judaism back to 1853, put their first permanent roots into the Lawrence community when they dedicated a synagogue, the Jewish Community Center. This new building will give Jewish families a place of worship after years of meeting in rented or borrowed buildings. It will give Bnai Brith Hillel Counselorship, Jewish student organization, a place for worship, meetings, parties and dinners. In previous year B'nai B'rith has met in homes and Danforth Chapel. previous year Bnai Brith has met in homes and Danforth Chapel. The Center is at 917 Highland Drive. At the dedication ceremony, Lawrence Mayor Ted Kennedy welcomed the Jewish community into the Lawrence community. William J. Moore, dean of the School of Religion, said that although each of the three great religions, Judaism, Christianity and Islam have distinctive qualities, they have their roots in the history of the ancient Hebrews (Jewish people). George Smith, dean of the University, thanked those at the dedication for providing a place of religious education for the Jewish community. He said this contribution stresses an area of education that is important. Wet Alarm NEW YORK—(UPI)A Japanese firm has brought out a diaper-cover wired for sound. The Wall St. Journal reports the slightest dampness sets off the cover's transistorized buzzer alarm. Official Bulletin Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 a.m., St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. TODAY Modern Book Review Forum: 4 p.m. Music Room, Kansas Union. John Meikner reviewing "Parade's End" by Ford Madox Ford. TOMORROW Chemistry Department Organic Colloquium: 4 p.m., Room 233 Malott. Dr. Joseph L. McGraw, the National Institute of Health, will lecture on "The Chemistry of Steviolide." Yet after brick and steel and stone are gone, And flesh and blood are dust, the dream lives on. —Anderson Episcopal Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. El Ateneo anuncia su proxima reunión el miércoles da 15 a la 4 de la tarde, en 11 Fraser. El Professor Ricart nos hablará sobre "La Musica de Espana, la música española y la cultura cordialmente invitados. Asistan, apendan, divierten y practicen el español hablado en un ambiente informal! Se servirán refrescos. Navv Research Meets Tonight George W. Byers, associate professor of entomology, will speak on his entomological field trip to Mexico, at the Naval Research Reserve company meeting at 7:30 p.m. tonight in 105 Military Science building. NOW OPEN— for your shopping convenience, LOCATED AT 1714 West 23rd As the name implies, "KWIK SHOP," located at 1714 West 23rd, here in Lawrence, a new type Food Market, has been designed by Dillons for your quick shopping and convenience. Here you will find your favorite food products compactly arranged in a minimum amount of space, thus eliminating blocks of aisles to hike through. You will find a nice stock of frozen foods, frozen meats, breads and pastries, fresh fruits and vegetables, cold beverages, dairy foods and delicatessen items. In addition you'll LOCATED AT 1714 West 23rd Kwik- SHOP WERE OPEN 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. WEEK DAYS Bailahu = $39+ OPEN WEEKDAYS 7 till - a.m. 11 p.m. You'll find a large parking area right at the front door, thus eliminating long walks from your car to the store. You can make your purchases and be checked out with no delay or long waiting lines, and from 7 in the morning till 11 at night, every day of the week except Sunday. We invite you to visit us and see how pleasant and swift shopping can be at Dillon's new "KWIK SHOP." A SUBSIDIARY OF J. S. DILLON & SONS STORES CO. Kwik- SHOP OPEN WEEKDAYS - 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. 1714 WEST 23RD STREET WESLEY CANTRELL Manager WILLIAM TAYLOR Ass't. Mgr. p. m. unión tarde, t nos paña" están sistan. en el e in- might profes- sion his co, at com- ght in Fraser Hall Filled For Kaufmann An audience that filled Fraser Theater last night heard that one facet of philosophy is to train people to use their critical powers. Voting Is Slow In ASC Election By Arthur Miller The speaker was Walter Kaufmann, author and professor of philosophy at Princeton University. Speaking at the second of a series of Humanities Lectures, he discussed existentialism (the philosophy concerned with an individual's making himself what he is). The voting dragged, and two representatives of the campus political parties played rummy this afternoon as a few students shuffled to the polls to vote. "It seems a little slower than yesterday," a candidate commented. "Yeah," another replied. "It's probably due to the weather." A student came up to vote. "Do you have your dean's card?" a poll-worker asked. "No." the voter replied. "Then you'll have to go to the basement and get it." Several poll-workers were finishing their lunches, and the faint smell of oranges lingered over the voting area. A few more voters approached, and the rummy game moved to a table. At the west end of the first floor of Strong Hall, a polling place was closed—not enough poll workers, or voters. The noon count showed the following breakdown of voting by districts:
DistrictToday's TotalNumber Elected
Fraternity1804
Sorority1112
Men's large dorms562
Women's large dorms271
Men's small dorms341
Women's small dorms291
Freshman Women's dorms412
Professional fraternities and cooperatives00
Unorganized-unmarried471
Unorganized-married30
Freshman ballots182...
Total63114
"I THINK WE (EDUCATORS) sometimes fool people out of ideas of philosophy, religion, politics and racial prejudice," he said. "But our business is not to fool people out of an idea by making it sound unimportant. It's to make them think more conscientiously, carefully and critically." Prof. Kaufmann explained that there were differences of thought in the existential school and these differences made it hard to pin down its doctrines. "EXISTENTIALISM IS INvolved with feelings," he went on. "This is where they start — with extreme anxiety, death or grief. This makes their writings very exciting." Prof. Kaufmann then turned to a critique of existentialism. He said that by criticizing one philosopher, he could present a picture of philosophical existentialism. He "picked on the greatest of the lot" — Kierkegaard — discussing Kierkegaard's view of reason. "Kierkegaard becomes distinctive in his connection of reason," he said. "He starts with a strong sense of the limitation of reason." AFTER KIERKGEAARD SEES that reason has limits, Prof. Kaufmann said, he goes too far in saying it cannot serve any function. "Reason can serve a purpose." Prof. Kaufmann asserted. "It can protect us from bad circumstances." He added that Kierkegaard showed a streak of subjectivism (the theory that limits knowledge with reality). "Kierkegaard does not distinguish sincerity from truth. In the first place he says sincerity in some respects is more important than subjective truth. He believes that the more certain a person is about his idea, the more true it is. "BUT." PROF. KAUFMANN said, "a man may be sincere in his beliefs but still be wrong. "To neutralism, and this would delay the United States' program in Iran," Bayne said in the question period after his talk. "The probability of chaos would be great," he asserted. "In the second place, he confuse certainty with truth." He said that expressing one's self clearly does not mean one grasps the truth. The more humble person may be afraid to express himself but be right, he added. "And third, it is occasionally found in Kierkegaard the idea that what makes one happy is true for him. It leaves wide open the question whether he is right or wrong." U.S. Aid to Iran Creates Danger, Says Bayne U. S. aid to Iran has created a revolutionary order which may destroy the progress the country has made, E. A. Bayne, American Universities Field Staff representative, said yesterday at the Faculty Forum. Where would they turn? WHAT THE UNITED STATES should do about the problem in Iran. Mr. Bayne will answer in his debate with Burton Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, Friday at the Current Events Forum. U. S. aid to Iran has developed a strong social fabric, Mr. Bayne said. "But in so doing we have created a problem which may destroy the order we have created," he explained. Out of their despair a desire to overthrow the old elements of society which inhibit them develops, Mr. Bayne said. THE PROBLEM consists of villagers who have come to Teheran and have lost the security they knew in their former society, he said. "These people move into the city and are confronted with a money economy, job contracts and freedom. They feel lost." The image was based on things the Iranians had never seen, Mr. Bayne said. The U.S. reached people with a massive program of malaria control and white and red health mobiles, he continued. The policy which has resulted in this situation was formulated to meet a vacuum the West caused by the abrupt withdrawal of the British when Dr. Mossadegh assumed power in 1950. Mossadegh rode into power on a wave of nationalism which flamed in the country. The United States—previous to this—had followed British policy to the hilt, Mr. Bayne continued. "THESE ITEMS became status symbols to the Iranians and every village completed for such things as insect sprayings and privies." Mr. Bayne explained. "But now the United States had to fill this vacuum," he said. "It undertook to fly the U.S. flag and establish an image." When Mossadegh fell in 1953, the U.S. was reputed to have helped cause it, Mr. Bayne said. Actually, the CIA sponsored revolution came off two weeks after the decisive battle had been won, he continued. Since then the U.S. has tried to help Iran achieve economic stability and enter the western bloc, Mr. Bayne said. But the increased urbanization of Teheran since 1948 has created serious problems for Iran and, ultimately, for the U.S., he said. Daily hansan 59th Year, No. 44 'Diddely Dumptin, My Son John' Wednesday, November 15, 1961 LAWRENCE, KANSAS George Hart Uses Rhyme To Mock Governor Anderson By Zeke Wigglesworth A Democratic candidate for governor of Kansas in 1962 last night charged that Kansas Gov. John Anderson does not know what he is doing. George Hart, former state treasurer of Kansas, and a candidate for governor next year, spoke to 25 A spokesman for the Rayburn family said the 78-year-old "Mr. Sam's" death is "only a matter of hours." Sam Rayburn Loses Alertness Grows Worse He was having fewer rallies from sinking spells, and each rally is weaker than the last. The bullet in said he no longer was as alert as he had been. Rayburn's two sisters spent much of the night with him, then left in the early morning hours. BONHAM, Tex. —(UPI)— House Speaker Sam Rayburn sank toward death today. His alertness diminished and his family felt the end was near. A medical bulletin issued by the Risser Hospital in Bonham at 9:30 a.m., Lawrence time, said the cancer-stricken speaker slept "unusually soundly" last night. There was no change in blood pressure or pulse. The cancer, diagnosed as inoperable last Oct. 5, has spread through much of his body. Mr. Rayburn has been a member of the U.S. House of Representatives 48 years, longer than any other man in history. He has been speaker 16 years, more than twice as long as any other man. Mr. Rayburn was dosed with experimental cancer drugs. They had little or no effect and on Oct. 31 he returned to Eonham to die, as he wished, among his friends and neighbors. He started suffering severe back pains more than three months ago, while Congress was still in session. Doctors in Washington sent him home to Bonham. They and the Rev. Jack Carson, 30, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Bonham, gathered at 7 p.m. in his room. With the speaker in a rally and sleeping peacefully, they left. The family includes Mr. Rayburn's only living brother, Dick Rayburn of Ector, Tex.; two sisters, Mrs. W. A. Thomas of Dallas and Mrs. S. E. (CQ) Bartley of Bonham; a nephew, Robert Bartley of Washington, D.C., who is a member of the Federal Communications Commission, and two nieces, Mrs. Joyce Lightfoot of Bonham and Mrs. Tom Bolton of Dallas. He became progressively worse and on Oct. 2, Dr. Joe JRoseir, his Bonham physician, sent him to Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas for a detailed test. He has had periodic sinking spells, but his condition from the cancer itself was pronounced critical for the first time last Saturday. At 5:30 p.m. yesterday Risser considered death so imminent that he called in Mr. Rayburn's family. An hour later, they started returning. All were seen to return except Mr. Rayburn's brother, who is in his 70s. The cancer was discovered Oct. 5. It was too far advanced to operate. Young Democrats in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. As he attacked Gov. Anderson, Mr.Hart, clad in a blue suit, black socks and a green tie with a donkey tie clap, raised his right hand. "GOVERNOR 'junior' Anderson reminds me of a nursery rhyme; you've all heard it: "Diddely Dumptin, my son John. Has one shoe off and one shoe on. on . . . "As he stated one day he was opposed to federal aid, and a very few days later he said the federal government should come in and repair a county road in Butler county "Diddely Dumptim, my son John, Wid one shoe off, and one shoe " . cannot make up his mind what is good for Kansas." He said the Governor's mansion is a waste of money. "I DON'T WANT the state to re rebuild a deteriorated estate such as Cedar Crest (the mansion and estate) so one can act like royalty Veep Leads in Philippine Vote MANILA — (UPI) — Pro-American Vice President Diosdado Macapagal held a commanding lead early today in the Philippine Presidential race and his campaign manager claimed victory. But incumbent President Carlos P. Garcia refused to be pushed into a concession, maintaining that most of the votes still out from Tuesday's election are from his strongholds in the south and central areas of the country. WITH ABOUT 70 per cent of the estimated seven million ballots counted, the 51-year-old Macapagal led incumbent President Garcia by about 650,000 votes. Most of the remaining uncounted votes are from the East Central and Southern Philippines, where Garcia generally was believed to have an edge because his home is in this area. However, Macapagal, a northerner, appeared to be cutting deeply into the early votes from these regions. Macapagal held a news conference in his frame and concrete house today and talked as though he already were president. HE SAID he would appoint Emanuel Pelaez, Garcia's liberal running mate, his foreign minister if he is elected. (Vice president decided separately.) This was a pointed reference to the fact that as vice president elected on an opposition slate with Garcia he never was given any kind of cabinet post or important job in the present administration. Earlier, Macapagal told United Press International that he would seek closer defense alliances with the United States if elected. "I favor the fullest implementation of security measures with the United States to strengthen the defense of the two countries in Asia," he said. Peace-Pact Trip Canceled Due to Rain Plans for seven University students to fly to MU to participate in a peace-pact conference have been called off because of bad weather. The students, members of an All Student Council committee headed by Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior, were to present KU's recommendations for a peace pact with Missouri. and entertain their royal subjects at the tune of over a half-million dollars of the Kansas taxpayers' money . . . If I am governor I do not want to live like an emperor in the 'Castle on the Kaw.' The Lawrence-Douglas County branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People will hold a "Freedom Fund" banquet at 6:30 p.m. Friday in the Crystal Room of the Eldridge Hotel. "I don't have a herd of Shetland ponies — I have three fox terrier dogs and all they need is a fire hydrant outside the door; they don't need hundreds and hundreds of acres to run over and graze on. Mr. Hart said he is definitely a candidate for governor next year. "I want you to know that I am sincere in my running for governor in 1962. Even if President Kennedy would come to Kansas and run for governor, I am still a candidate for governor. I am of the opinion that I can defeat Gov. 'junior' Anderson or any other Republican that might run for governor." HE TOLD THE Young Democrats that they must not be too overconfident about 1962 'just because of the Democratic victories we had throughout the country this year. Yeah we got the Republicans backed into a corner, but they'll fight that much harder to get out.' "We must have teamwork, like the Jayhawk football team which is led by a great coach, Jack Mitchell. We've got to have great heart like the Jayhawks — to be one for all and all for one—and we will win." In closing, Mr. Hart urged the Young Democrats to help he Democratic party. "YOU JUST GO out and preach the principles of the Democratic Party to every Kansas citizen. Point out the good state governments we've had under Democratic administrations. I'm confident that if we all put our shoulders to the wheel and push together, we will win. But don't be a defeatist, and don't be a Democratic traitor just because your candidate doesn't win a Democratic primary. "We Democrats have to be on our toes and not back off one inch but stay in there and keep punching for the Democratic party." Local NAACP to Hold Event Friday Proceeds from the banquet will be used for such NAACP activities as support of court costs in legal actions against the group, and aiding Negro students who have been forced out of Kansas City schools by segregation problems. Featured speaker at the banquet will be Leonard H. Carter, field secretary for Region four of the NAACP. Region four includes the states of North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas, Arkansas, and Nebraska. Tickets are $2.50 each and may be purchased from Jesse Milen, VI 3-5715. CRC to Meet Tonight The Civil Rights Council will meet tonight at 7 o'clock in Alcove C of the Kansas Union. Weather Cloudy with occasional rain or drizzle possibly becoming mixed with or changing to snow tonight. Snow flurries followed by diminishing cloudiness tomorrow. Colder tonight and tomorrow. High today in the 40s. Low tonight in upper 20s to lower 30s. High Thursday near 40. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 15, 1961 LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler The Discussion Day Plan A proposal to set aside a day of classes to discuss issues of international importance has been received by KU students with a traditional lack of interest and support. The plan now under consideration was conceived at Cornell University, where classes will be suspended this Friday for mass meetings and discussions of the world situation. The idea reached KU in a letter sent by a Cornell faculty member to Howard Baumgartel, associate professor of human relations and psychology. The letter said that we should raise the issues of the current condition "as forcefully as we can." PROF. BAUMGARTEL MADE 50 copies of the statement he received in the letter from Cornell and circulated them among the faculty for comment and suggestions on how this idea could be adapted for use here. Prof. Baumgartel said that perhaps KU could develop a plan of its own. Several other faculty members expressed general approval of the Cornell plan with some reservations about procedure. Thus far, the plan has advanced no further than the discussion stage. No plans have been made, but a student-faculty group is attempting to adapt the Cornell plan for use here. It is doubtful that the plan will progress much further than its present stage if more support and suggestions are not offered by KU students and faculty. After all, if the plan should be adopted by KU it will require the support of a large segment of the student body if it is to be successful. The administration will probably hesitate to support a plan that does not have wide student support. Large student support will be even more imperative if the plan entails interrupting class schedules. THOSE WHO ARE STUDYING the Cornell idea have not yet presented a plan for KU. Their proposals could range from a carbon copy of the Cornell idea to something vastly different, created especially for use at KU. A well conceived plan could conceivably break the barriers of student apathy, and possibly some faculty apathy, and meet with a considerable degree of success. The Model U.N. session is an example of the success a program like this could meet with if it is constructed to draw not only the interest but also the participation of the KU student. For some reason many who normally have little interest in the international scene become involved with the Model U.N. Perhaps it is because it provides a means of self expression, or it could be because it creates a competitive situation, bloc against bloc, that some people enjoy. WHATEVER THE REASON for success the group now considering a plan for University-wide discussion of international affairs can look to the Model U.N. for an example of a program that has captured at least the partial interest of the KU student. —Ron Gallagher Oh Boy, An Investigation Editor: Boy, oh boy, wuz I glad to hear the ASC is finally gonna git down to buziness and do some 'vestigatin!' I wuz beginnin' to think Congress had a monopoly on that stuff. And I wuz 'specially glad to hear they're gonna 'vestigate Watkins Hospital, 'cause I wuz in ther for three days this fall, and I think some 'vestigatin' needs doin'. Fer one thing, they got too durn many cute nurses over thar. They wuz obviously planted that by the Comm'nists to jure students away from classes an 'destroy the 'Merican cijicalnational system.' Sides thet, them nurses wait on a body hand and foot — Commries, in'tor tear down 'Merican physical fitness. What's more, the hospital is cleaner 'n a cow's udder after milk'in—thet's probably jist what folks mean when they talk 'bout "our sterile American society." The best thing 'bout these 'vesti- ... Letters ... gations is the qualifications of the ASC. I read in the paper tother day that some "Joint Commission of Accreditations" had been 'oprovin' Watkins since 1941, but they're probably a buncha Commies and don't know nothin' any way. I got a lot more faith in that ASC Health Committee. 'Course, may be the ASC ain't lookin' fer Commies, I don't know, guess they didn't rightly say. May be they're lookin' fer cocky-noachies instead. Or could be they're jist lookin' fer publicity. There are some folks 'round here think the ASC's been actin' kinda silly latex, even say they've been creatin' issues jist to have sumbith to make a noise about. 'Course, there ain't no truth in that, but if the ASC does some real honest-ta-gosh 'vestigatin', then people will see how important they are. 'Vestigatin's the thing in our 'American government, part of our traditions back to when the first legislator seen it wuz a good way to git people to notice him, and I'm right proud that the ASC is finally gonna provide us this fine and useful service. I bet if they put their minds to it they can 'vestigate durnear everythin'. Then they'll really be showin' their stuff! Rodney Kaufman Augusta sophomore Nuclear War and Apathy Editor: Congratulations to a few interested people on campus who realize the importance of the present international situation and the threat of a nuclear war. The proposal to dismiss classes November 17 for a discussion on the effect of a nuclear war—if it is realized—will be much more educational and significant than the regular schedule. Although the merit of the proposal is obvious, I doubt that it will be put into effect due to the stagnation of discussion that exists on our campus. movies Bv Bill Charles "The Hustler": with Paul Newman, Piper Laurie, George C. Scott, and Jackie Gleason. Directed by Robert Rossen. At the Varsity, through Saturday. "The Hustler" is a low-budget film about pool players. It is also one of the best films to hit Lawrence this year. The story is simple. Fast Eddie (Paul Newman) thinks he is the best pool shooter in the world. To prove this, he must beat Minnesota Fats (Jackie Gleason) who resides at Ames Pool Hall. Fast Eddie enters Ames, makes the challenge, and loses. At the end of the picture he does the same thing, but this time he wins. Between matches Fast Eddie rooms with a very unusual college girl (Piper Laurie). She and a gambler (George C. Scott) teach Eddie a few things, and through them he acquires "character." He becomes a winner 恋 Why is "The Huster" a good film? Consider the acting. It is all good, and with meatier parts some of it could have been great. Piper Laurie gives what must be her best performance in films to date. In underplaying her part she comes close to stealing the picture. Scott^1 Bert Gordon rivals his fine portrayal of Claude Dancer in "Anatomy of a Murder." He is a pleasure to watch. Gleason doesn't have more than 20 spoken lines in the whole film, yet his part seems much larger. He delivers many more lines without uttering a word, and proves himself a first-rate actor. Newman gives evidence that he may soon cease to rely on his bare torso and hard, penetrating eyes and get back to genuine acting. At times in "The Hustler" one can almost forget Newman and really believe in Fast Eddie. Robert Rossen's direction is excellent, helping to tell the story without being overbearing. In the hands of an inexperienced director "The Hustler" would have been nothing but two hours of "fiveball in the corner." He must also have had a hand in the musical score, or, rather, the lack of it. How refreshing it is not to have melodius violins screaming a "love-theme" when boy-meets-girl, boy-kisses-girl, etc. Perhaps the budget couldn't stand 101 strings. Perhaps the budget couldn't stand fancy sets and a cast of thousands, either. It's a good thing. More money might have ruined it. Chuck Menghini Pittsburg senior We all agree that the students are apathetic. Now we have an opportunity to witness whether or not the administration and the faculty are captured by that same apathy. University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, trieweekly 1908, daily Jan. 18, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represen- ted by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St. New York, NY. Published by United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday examinations and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Extension 711, news rooms Extension 276, business office Daily Hansan EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Brown Business Manager David McCulloch, Advertising Manager Bonnie McCulloch, Circulation Manager; David Wiemens, National Advertising Manager; Martinache, Citizenship Advertising Manager; Hal Smith, Promotion Manager. NEWS DEPARTMENT Tom Turner Managing Editor Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Assistant City Editor Hill Sheldon, Sports Editor Barbara Howell, Society Editor. FACULTY "I UNDERSTAND HE'S UP FOR RETIREMENT NEXT YEAR." Objectivty Urged It Looks This Way... So they are teaching communism in public schools. Sounds great, doesn't it? Children of 12, 13, etc., can now learn all about communism and contrast it with democracy. Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World." is moving closer all the time. In just a couple more steps, we can have 2 and 3 year olds learning to say "dirty Red" before they say "momma." Communism is a complex theory of government. It is questionable whether or not it can be put across on an objective plane to young students without the academic background or freedom from prejudice to understand it. Kansas City public schools are currently "teaching about communism compared to democracy," according to a Kansas City Star article last week. ONE TEACHER SAID HER SOURCE of material for the course consisted of manuals on communism—one prepared by the House Committee on Un-American Activities and the other a publication of the House subcommittee to investigate administration of the internal security laws. "It's sickening the way some characters are easily swayed by Communists and can influence others," she said. "It says right in here (the Un-American Activities Committee report) that Communists use teachers, preachers and lawyers." Another instructor said that for instructional materials he distributed mimeographed sheets about communism to his pupils, taking the information from a pamphlet prepared by a large company. Obviously this is unbissed material. It is also unimpeachable—"It says right in here that the Communists. . . ." The attitudes of the Kansas City teachers can probably be generalized as the attitudes of most teachers. This is the problem. A COURSE COMPARING COMMUNISM to democracy could be a valuable thing for students—if it were objective. Of course, it is much harder to teach an objective course. You cannot send off for the latest dope from the House Un-American Activities Committee and say, "It says right in here..." You cannot get course material about communism from a large company—who ever heard of a large company being objective about communism? On the other hand, if good texts were obtained and the teachers were objective, comparing communism to democracy would be fine if it could be put across to the student. School administrators who allow biased teaching cannot expect the student to live in a vacuum after he has passed the course. Sooner or later, he will be exposed to a relatively objective viewpoint on communism. The shock at having his pat ideas exposed may make him more lenient to communism than he would have been had he known nothing about it. IF IT CANNOT BE TAUGHT objectively, students would be better off knowing nothing. G T Democracy has nothing to lose by an objective comparison with communism. If democracy cannot stand on its own two feet without being shielded by a subjective teacher, perhaps we ought to stand back and take another look. —Karl Koch Wednesday, November 15. 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 3 GOP Leaders Want Test Resumption United Press International Top Republican Party leaders have reiterated their appeals for an immediate resumption of nuclear testing by the United States. In separate statements yesterday, former Vice President Richard M. Nixon and Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York also issued strong warnings to President Kennedy to think twice before seeking new test ban talks with Russia. Nixon said in Chicago that he was strongly opposed to a nuclear test ban unless airtight inspections were written into any treaty. THEIR REMARKS came little more than a day after the Kennedy Administration joined Great Britain in calling on the Soviet Union to resume nuclear test ban talks. If he had won the Presidency last year, Nixon added, he would have ordered an immediate resumption of testing after his inauguration. ROCKEFELLER TOLD newsmen in Albany, N. Y., that the United States should avoid signing any moratorium on tests at present because it could "place in jeopardy both our national safety and the defense of freedom throughout the world." "The Soviet record of cheating during the last nuclear test moratorium shows they cannot be trusted," he said. An aide to Sen. Barry Goldwater, said the Arizona Republican stood by his statement of last January that testing should be renewed, either above or below ground. NIXON FIRST called for renewed atmospheric testing after Russia set off its 50 megaton bomb. Rockefeller had urged fullscale testing in the atmosphere Oct. 27, before the Soviet set off the big bomb. Former President Eisenhower had no comment yesterday. Rockefeller, in a statement later, said he was "increasingly concerned by the possibility of a significant shift in power in favor of the Soviet Union unless we realistically face the facts." HE DESCRIBED the nation's nuclear power as a "shield for the whole free world." "The strength of this shield has been called into question by the Soviet Union's recent series of nuclear tests — producing still unknown and unmeasured advances in Soviet nuclear technology," he said. Rockefeller, a potential 1964 GOP Presidential candidate, called for "serious attention" to the "inadequacy of today's detection methods, which must be perfected to make Engineerettes to Meet The KU Engineerettes will meet tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the Watkins Room of the Kansas Union. The guest speaker will be M. B. Tracy, General Electric Co. regional recruiter. Tracy's talk is the "Role of Engineering Life in Industry." Husbands of Engineeettes are invited to attend the meeting. any test ban consistent with national security." At the same time, he said, testing must be renewed to develop lighter warheads for more mobile retaliatory weapons; to develop anti-missile missiles; to improve our tactical weapons; to develop new and more flexible weapons; to improve control devices guarding against error or miscalculation in handling of atomic weapons and to develop a foolproof system of detection. Zorin Urges Peace in First U.N. Session — Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin said today the risk of war becomes more tangible daily. He called for destruction of "the whole military machinery of all states." UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. - (UPI) "If the Western powers and governments are interested genuinely in the maintenance of peace, they should grasp at the peace-loving proposals of the Soviet Union with both hands," he said. Zorin made the statement in opening the annual U.N. full-dress debate in the general assembly's main political committee. "They should sit down at a round negotiating table with us and reach agreement on a German peace treaty without stalling, and sign it." "The Soviet Union is eager to agree with the Western powers." U. S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson was listed to follow Zorin in the disarmament debate. Zorin reviewed Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's proposal for "general and complete disarmament" of the entire world within a four-year period. He said the Western powers rejected Russia's stand that it is necessary to "consolidate the existing frontiers of the two German states" and instead sought "forcibly to modify the frontiers worked out after World War II in their favor." Instead, he said, the United States and its allies "intensified preparations for handing nuclear weapons to West Germany." Females Shun Science NEW YORK—(UPI) The National Science Foundation reports that science ranks far down on the list of professions that women have entered in great numbers. Only about four per cent of all federally-employed scientists and engineers are women. About seven per cent of a total of more than 166,000 registrants in the National Register of Scientific and Technical Personnel are women. "The whole world is in a state of chassis." Sean O'Casey STUDENT TRAVEL... STUDENTS CAN AFFORD! 40 ITINERARIES featuring: Western & Eastern Europe Scandinavia • Africa South America • Japan round-the-world TRAVEL-STUDY PROGRAMS work camp & hosteling programs also available 40-70 days from $600 54-80 days from $600 SPRING VACATION TRIPS MEXICO CITY — (UPI) — An American anthropologist and author has come up with a plan which he says could be used as a guide for the U.S. Government's Peace Corps program in Latin America. Bermuda • Puerto Rico Hawaii from $195 STUDENT TRAVEL PUBLICATIONS "The combination of an anthropology field team tasks with those of the 'Peace Corps' offers opportunity for an excellent give-and-take relationship with Latin American rural residents," he said. Oscar Lewis, a University of Illinois professor who has made a 20-year study of Mexican rural life, said the plan is based on the experience of a group of U.S. students in a small Mexican village during the past summer. Lewis directed the students in a two-month pioneering stay at the "off-the-beaten-path" village of San Andres de la Cal. International Student ID Card...$1.00 Hostels & Restaurants Handbook...1.00 Work, Study, Travel Abroad...1.00 "INSTEAD OF SWAMPING them with gadgets that Americans think the people should have, the team tries to fill the needs expressed by villagers and actively helps them while at the same time gathering research material about their culture." Lewis related how the "give and take" worked out during the two months that six U.S. university students lived in the hut dwellings of San Andres de la Cal, an ancient Nahautel village of about 500 persons in 90 families. By Jaime Plenn United Press International U. S. NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION Educational Travel, Inc., Dept. cn 20 West 38th Street, New York 18, New York OXford, 5,562 "The villagers wept when our students left," he said. OXford 5-5070 Professor Gives Plan for Corps UNIVERSITY OF MALAYA "USNSA is a non-profit organization serving the American student community" He identified the students as three anthropology majors, Mrs. Janet Fitchen, Philip Young and Muriel Kaminsky; a Latin American literature student, Judith Zalenka; a political science student, Thomas Tirado, all of the University of Illinois Graduate School, and Ofelia Vargas, of Wellesley College. He said the students had an opportunity to do their field work while living in the village devoid of the usual middle class comforts — no running water, no electricity, no gas. "OUR IDEA BASICALLY has been to do something for the people while studying their culture," he said, "and I think this plan, as well as many of the conclusions of my 20-year-study can be applied in our Latin American programs for people-to-people relationships." Some of the group knew Spanish, but others learned it in their two-month stay, he said. The villagers are "bilingual." speaking both Spanish and Nahaute. Willingness of "people of culture" to live the simple life of the peasants and share their daily chores impressed the villagers greatly, Lewis said, and each student became a "Padrino" or "Madrina" (godfather or godmother) of several village children. One student, Mrs. Fitchen, took her year-old baby with her during their stay. THE VILLAGERS WERE greatly interested in learning English. Some had been to the United States as "braceros" (farm field hands) but had not learned much English there because of their isolated work-camp residence, he said. Lewis said he selected the village Diamonds Gifts Jewelry DANIELS JEWELRY 914 Mass. VI 3-2572 for the pioneer "humanized anthropology" project because of earlier studies of documents hundreds of years old pertaining to the area and personal recommendations of friends in Teopotlan. At Teopotlán, Lewis did much of his Mexican research work, continuing the work of another U.S. scholar, Robert Redfield, and his studies have been the basis for several books prior to "The Children of Sanchez," his latest work. Since 1948, he has been professor of anthropology at the University of Illinois. Lewis has done field research work in Canada, Cuba, India, Spain, and Texas in addition to Mexico which has been his major focus of interest. Kansan Want Ads Get Results JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Ronnie's FASHION BEAUTY SALONS For the gay fall social whirl, let our beauticians design a coiffure that makes the most of your beauty. . . MALLS CENTER VI 2-1144 HILLCREST CENTER VI 2-1978 CREME COLD WAVE only $595 ● HAIRCUT complete ● SHAMPOO with ● PERM - SET Appointment Not Usually Needed - Open Late Week Nights SIC FLICS Chesterfield "Thanks, Mr. Frobish-but I still think I'd rather have CHESTERFIELDS!" Chesterfield KING CIGARETTES LUCKET & LIVERS TOBACCO CO. 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD - THEY SATISFY Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. November 15. 1961 Hollywood Is 'Behind' Murrow HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) Edward R. Murrow, who hinted that Hollywood should sell a better "image" of America overseas, can rest assured movie makers are behind him. Extraordinarily far behind him, as a matter of fact. AS DIRECTOR OF the United States Information Agency (USIA), Murrow addressed movielet brass earlier this month, hopeful they would mend their ways of depicting us as a nation of gamblers, gangsters and brawlers. But the celluloid Mahatmas were already one up on him. Before Murrow made his speech, the Motion Picture Association of America, headed by Eric Johnston, had relaxed its code to accept immoral relationships, including homosexuality. BUT THAT DOESN'T mean movie men aren't in favor of a better image Johnston revealed there is a double standard for showing American pictures abroad. Very few films downgrading our way of life are sent to what Mr. Johnston described as "underdeveloped countries." Such places as Uganda and Somaliand are nurtured along on John Wayne extravaganzas. Films depicting narcotics addicts, sex deviates, cannibals and other all-American types are sent to civilized countries, i.e. Western Europe, because, according to Johnston "they have the same kind of problems." HE INDICATED chances were slim (perhaps nil) such films as "The Crisis Day Plans Take Another Step Plans to set aside a day from regular academic activities for discussion of the effects of nuclear war took another step closer to reality yesterday. AN AD HOC STEERING COMMITTEE of faculty and students set the week of Dec. 6 as the tentative date for the discussion pending the approval of the chancellor. The chancellor is out of town and will not be contacted until he returns next week. Earlier this week, however, he was approached with the idea and appeared to favor it. Patricia Coutts, Lawrence sophomore, was appointed temporary chairman at yesterday's meeting. She will serve as student spokesman for the group. Raymond O'Connor, assistant professor of history, is the faculty spokesman. PROF. O'CONNER EXPLAINED that previous plans for two separate committees, one faculty and one student, was dropped. "Several of us (faculty members) felt that there should be only one committee," he said. He added that one committee would probably be able to work better with students doing the major portion of the work and the faculty serving as advisers Activities for the special day will be discussed at the next meeting of the committee at 4 p.m. Thursday. Hula Lessons SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) — Hula dancing "graduation" ceremonies are a tradition on Matson line cruises to Hawaii. Passengers take lessons during the trip from San Francisco. On the last night before getting into Honolulu, they do their stuff as the highlight of a floor show before other passengers. Page - Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Children's Hour" and "Advise and Consent" — both containing homosexual themes — would ever reach the likes of Indonesia or Ghana. Thus, our image is as pure as Mickey Mouse in Outer Mongolia. But in Monaco or Lapland, natives can see us for the barbarians we really are in the eyes of movie producers. "We have quotas in underdeveloped nations," Johnston explained. "And they wouldn't include pictures like 'Children's Hour' or 'Advise and Consent.'" IN SUPPORT of easing the production code to include sex deviation, Johnston said: "Movies are now a mature form of entertainment. They are no longer juvenile beep shows. "No more restraint should be placed against motion pictures than against any other mature medium of communication. "We felt that some sections of the code should be altered so movies would be free to compete with what is read in books, magazines, newspapers and what is seen on Broadway." HE FAILED to note that few Broadway plays tour the foreign market as do movies. And inasmuch as most of the world doesn't read English, our newspapers and books never have swamped the Congo and Korea. But with the new code revisions, Murray's chances of seeing our image improved abroad through movies are almost nonexistent. We may come off worse than before. Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Anti-China Film Presented The Young Americans for Freedom will sponsor the anti-Communist film "Red China — Outlaw" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Fraser Theater. The film is produced by the Committee of One Million Against the Admission of Red China to the United Nations. The public is invited. Dean Thomas Gorton of the KU School of Fine Arts will preside at the National Association of Schools of Music's 37th annual meeting, Nov. 24-25. in Denver. Gorton Presides at Meeting Dean Gorton was re-elected to a third term as president of the NASM in 1960. KU is a charter member of the 280-member organization which was founded in 1924. Records! Records! Records! Stereo LPs 45s Up to 75% Discount Just Received New Shipment ALL POPULAR LABELS VINCENT'S Discount Record Center 904 Mass. VI 3-2011 Now is the time to let your parents know what you need for Christmas! And we’ll help you convince them you should have a Remington MONARCH portable typewriter to take the work out of your school work . . . and make homework fun! All you do is fill out and mail the coupon below. Then we write a letter to your folks outlining the reasons why a Remington MONARCH portable can help you get better grades. (Incidentally, the MONARCH portable comes complete with carrying case plus a terrific self-teaching touch-typing course that’s a pushover to master!) Ask to see the rugged, modern, compact MONARCH portable at your college store or your Remington dealer! How to get yourself a superb new MONARCH* portable typewriter by Remington for CHRISTMAS! Remington MONARCH --- CHECK THESE SUPERB "EXTRA FEATURES": 1. Single key instantly sets or clears columns and indents! 2. Touch regulator adjusts to your individual "feel"! 3. Variable line spacer lets you type "right on the lines" of ruled paper! 4. Adjustable paper edge guide lets you insert paper precisely every time! 5. Calibrated scale on paper baillets you center your headings faster! 6. Numerals and calibrations on paper table simplify margin settings—positively! 7. Erasure table on cylinder simplifies making corrections! 8. Card and writing line scale lets you type more precisely! 9. Removable top cover makes ribbon changing and cleaning easier! 10. Carriage centering device locks machine tight for safer carrying! 11. Two-color ribbon and stencil control! 12. Lighter weight without a hint of filmsim or "creep" while you type! *Trademark Mr. William Most, Advertising Manager Remington Portable Typewriter Div. of Sperry Rand Corp. 315 Park Avenue South. N.Y. 10, N.Y. Yes, my parents could use a little convincing . . . and I can happily use the MONARCH portable to take the work out of homework! YOUR NAME___ ADDRESS___ ___CITY___STATE___ PARENT'S NAME___ ADDRESS ADDRESS CITY STATE --- Page 5 Campus Politics Topic Of Press, Faculty Panel A radio broadcast on "Campus Politics: Its Strengths and Weaknesses" became the sounding board Monday night for discussion on the administration's relationship to campus politics. The occasion was the first of a series of "University Press Forum Lectures," sponsored by KUOK, campus radio station. JAMES GUNN, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, spoke for the administration. L. C. Agnew, professor of history represented the faculty. Jerry Dickson, Newton junior, and James Anderson, Lawrence senior, represented Vox Populi and University Party respectively. Representatives from KUOK and the Daily Kansan questioned the panel. Larry Wagner, Lawrence junior, and Jim Martin, Arkansas City seni- lor, represented KUOK. Zeke Wigglesworth, Lawrence junior, and Carrie Merryfield, Minneapolis senior, represented the UDK. Several of the questions asked were on how the administration stands in relation to the All Student Council. MR. GUNN WAS ASKED if the administration could veto an action of the ASC. Mr. Gunn replied that it was his understanding that "a resolution of the ASC has no validity until signed by the Chancellor." Could the administration disband the ASC if it desired? "I don't know about this. Anything can be done. For example, the Board of Regents can fire the Chancellor if it wants." he said. On the other hand, the VOX representative, Dickson, said that campus politics can act as a "worthwhile check on the administration." CAN THE ADMINISTRATION pressure the ASC? Mr. Gunn replied: "I don't know of anyone who has done this. There has been no type of moral saiasion used on campus politics," he said, with a slight grin. Another question was directed to Dickson about criticism of the ASC for not taking a stand on important issues. "The ASC did definitely take a stand on the housing issue, the National Student Association and other issues," he replied. "Just because the ASC agreed with the Chancellor doesn't mean it isn't a definite stand. You can be for the status quo and still accept the responsibility of taking a definite stand." DICKSON WAS ALSO asked if "campus politics were a measure of budding political success for participants?" "I believe it is a definite worth to the individual to be engaged in politics or any form of leadership," he said. The same question was posed to Prof. Agnew to get the opinion of the faculty. "No doubt about it," he said. "But I wish more serious issues were involved." The KU department of English and University Extension will sponsor the ninth annual Conference on Composition and Literature in High School and College which will be held here Friday. Teachers to Meet About 200 educators, high school and college English teachers from Kansas and western Missouri, are expected. They will discuss the question "Freshman English in College and High School Preparation for It." The program for the morning session includes James Ruoff, University of Wichita, "The Objectives of Freshman English"; John Noonan, Kansas State University, "The Content of Freshman English"; David Dykstra, assistant professor of English at the University of Kansas, "Grading Standards"; and Theodore Owne, Emporia State Teachers College. "Recommendations for High School Teachers." In the afternoon, the program will continue with discussion groups. The guest speaker at the evening session will be Floyd V. Rinker, director of the Commission on English, in Boston. "Diplomacy is to do and say the nastiest thing in the nicest way." Isaac Goldberg SUA FILM SERIES PRESENTS: THE CLASSICAL VERSION OF - WED., NOV. 15 AT 7:30 "PHANTOM of the OPERA" - IN THE FORUM ROOM OF THE UNION - 60c ADMISSION PRICE Purchase Your Tickets At The Information Desk Of The Union "Irreversible Thermodynamics" will be the topic of a lecture sponsored by the departments of mechanical and electrical engineering at 9 a.m. Saturday in 411 Summerfield. Thermodynamics Speech Given Saturday Wednesday, November 15. 1961 University Daily Kansan The speaker will be George N. Hatsopoulos, associate professor of mechanical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Prof. Hatsopoulos received the Pi Tau Sigma Gold Medal award for achievements in engineering from 1950 to 1960, and this year he received the Golden Plate award from the Academy of Achievement. He has written more than thirty "We do not live to extendate the miseries of the past nor to accept as incurable those of the present." —Fairfield Osborn papers in his field and he holds several basic patents in the field of thermionic conversion. Mudroch to Talk on Islam Vaclav Mudroch, assoc. prof. of history, will speak to KU Mosleml students on the subject "Islam in Medieval History" tonight at 7:30 in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union. Submarine Sandwiches A MEAL IN ITSELF --- MEATS - MEATS - CHEESE - LETTUCE - TASTY SAUCE COLD POP ICE COLD MILK Joe's Bakery 412 W. 9th V1 3-4720 Book Features of the Month New Books CUBA AND CASTRO, Tersesa Casuso, Random House $5.00 The personal, tragic and affecting story of a Cuban woman diplomat and press agent who has broken away from the regime after having been one of Castro's closest helpers and representatives — her house in Mexico was the jumping-off point for Castro's revolution. She describes the Castro she first knew and the arrogant Castro, with a "Disordered mind," she last saw, and bitterly describes the worsening tyranny of the Castro regime. WHAT IVAN KNOWS THAT JOHNNY DOESN'T, Arthur S. Trace, Random House $3.95 A shocking book. The author compares the Soviet and American systems of education in reading, literature, foreign languages, history and geography, and finds us coming out second-best most of the time. The most appailling difference, he states, is the reading gap. The basic source material he has used is Soviet textbooks and syllabi and a large number of American textbooks. Current Best Sellers SPIRIT LAKE, MacKinlay Kantor, World $6.95 This novel of the American frontier portrays the men, women, and children who, in the 1850s, followed a dream from New England, the Ohio Valley, or the central crowded East to the wide Iowa territory. It is the story, too, of the American Indian and his defense of his homeland. His book "Andersonville" was a best seller. I SHOULD HAVE KISSED HER MORE, Alexander King, Simon & Schuster $4.50 This third volume of Alexander King's reminiscences opens with his description of his own funeral and the people who attend it. Most of them are women, and the book is essentially the story of those moments when their paths crossed with that of the author. Other books, "Mine Enemy Grows Older" and "May this House be Safe from Tigers." FRANNY AND ZOOEY, J. D. Salinger, Little, Brown $4.00 The most eagerly awaited book of the year, by the author of The Catcher in the Rye and None Stories. Kansas Kansas Union Book Store Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 15, 1961 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Bill Sheldon Kansas will face a tough Oklahoma team in the first round of the annual Big Eight pre-season basketball tournament in Kansas City, Dec. 27-30. In other opening pairings, touted Kansas State meets a fine Nebraska team, Oklahoma State, a definite contender, plays weak Missouri and Colorado and Iowa State, both dark horses for conference laurels, play. KU is in the same bracket with the winner of the CU-I-State tussle. THUS, THE PICTURE is not too dim concerning the tournament, with the possibility of finishing as well as last season, second to the K-State Wildcats, not completely out of the question. Of the play of the varsity in its slim win over the frosh Friday, there is obviously a long road to be traveled by Coach Dick Harp and his hardies before they can be considered as even a dark horse. But, there were bright spots, or evidences thereof, to provide basis for an opinion that the Hawkers will certainly be far from an embarrassing member of the Jayhawk athletic family. The fshr provided excellent opposition in the game and will continue to do so in the weeks to come as the Crimson and the Blue prepare for the season tip-off against Arkansas here Dec. 1. SUCH YEARLING STANDOUTS as Dave Brill, George Unseld, Ron Shanks, Kerry Bolton, Dick Ruggles and Jim Gough are all sound enough players even at this stage in their development to preview the type of competition which the Hawks may face this season. Although the 65-63 score did not reveal that the varsity had much strength, it must be taken into consideration that whenever Coach Harp had his first five in action, there was no doubt of their superiority. Granted, the varsity showed a lack of depth and this will be one of the determining factors in many games this season, but there may be enough talent among the first five or six to carry KU to more wins than they are presently being given credit for. The play of Nolen Ellison and Jerry Gardner at the guard slots was obviously good and despite showing a few loopholes, should be the backbone of the team. THE MAIN PROBLEM facing Coach Harp at the beginning of the season and right now is the three front positions. Footballers Lee Flachsbarth and Jay Roberts are scheduled to add talent, but their performance cannot be counted on at this time. At center, long a stronghold of great Kansas basketball players, strong junior John Matt has inherited a difficult task of stepping into the starting role with little game experience. SHOWING ONLY A REAL weakness on defense, the 6-7 205 pound maneuvered for 14 tallies against the frosh. Matt certainly will not perform in the same vein as Wayne Hightower or Bill Bridges, but, after gaining self-confidence and sufficient mechanical ability, he should be able to hold his own and provide the steady play under the boards and as a feeder which will be necessary to make the KU offense effective. One thing is certain, KU basketball will be of a different type than has been seen in a long time in the "house that Wilt built." Play will not be based around the ability of the center as it has been in the past several seasons. This is not to say anything against Matt, for his worth will not be fully established until a few games have been played. But, with the emphasis on players and positions other than the center, the play of the Hawkers could actually become far more interesting and even more steady. Fancy the rapture of being there when the world was made! —Earl Marlatt Small (6-1) but aggressive Jim Dumas showed he has the fire and determination to play Big Eight ball. Last season in games against Missouri and Kansas State the Topeka jumper did a fine job and should be counted upon to come through in the same fashion again this winter. DUMAS' FORTE is hustle, "guts" and jumping ability for his size. KU had Dick Gisel playing the same forward just two seasons back and his lack of height (5-11) didn't prove to be a great detriment to the Hawkers who came from behind to tie for the league title. At the other forward, Loye Sparks showed signs of developing into the type player liked by Coach Harp. Sparks has the power on the boards and the shot to become a threat. His main problem, along with Matt and Dumas, is experience. Carl Detter and Terry Smith will battle for the intramural tennis singles title tomorrow afternoon. IM Tennis Final Will Be Tomorrow Detter, Hutchinson freshman, defeated Karl Kreutziger, Wichita senior, 7-5, 6-3, in the semi-finals. Smith, Arkansas City junior and former national junior college singles champ, downed Stan Werner, Lawrence graduate student. Smith won with sets of 4-6, 6-4, 8-6. Detter and Smith, who teamed up to win the doubles crown last week, represent Templin. Hornung in Army FORT RILEY - (UPI) - Paul Hornung will not be playing any more football this year. The all-pro haliback from the Green Bay Packers reported for active duty with the U.S. army here yesterday. He will not receive any weekend passes to play football with the Packers, nor will he even have the opportunity to play for a team here. Hornning expressed no bitterness or discontent upon reporting to Fort Riley. "I'm glad to be here," the curly-headed backfield ace grinned. Gentlemen always seem to remember blonds. - Anita Loos KANSAS CITY — (UPI)—Wichita's Bill Stangone, who gained 107 yards rushing and scored three touchdowns against Drake last week, has been named Missouri Valley Conference back of the week Wichita Halfback Receives Honor ries, completed four of seven passes for 38 yards, ran a kickoff back 20 yards, and scored touchdowns on runs of 77. one and six vards. The 5-foot 10-inch 172-pound junior gained 107 yards on the 12 car- Stangarone, of Turtle Creek, Pa., is tied with North Texas State's Bobby Smith for the conference scoring lead with 42 points apiece. Wednesday Special Today Only 6 TASTY BURGERS 4 JUNIOR FRENCH FRIES 4 8-OZ. COKES All for $1.25 TASTY DRIVE-IN 914 W. 23 "the wardrobe touch".. a must for any wardrobe is the all weather coat — light but warm, distinctive but conservative, heavy but action-free. drop by dieboldt's today to pick out your all weather coat and investigate our newest service, the "wardrobe touch." diebolt's 843 Mass. diebolt's Page 7 Charges Against Lightfoot Dropped CHICAGO — (UPI) — A Federal District Court today dismissed charges against Claude Lightfoot, the first top American Communist to be indicted simply because he was a member of the Communist Party. The Federal Government itself asked Judge William J. Campbell to throw out the 6-year-old charges against Lightfoot, executive secretary of the Illinois Communist Party. U. S. ATTORNEY Donald Manion said that, in light of recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions, the government was not sure it could prove that Lightfoot had knowledge of the Communist Party's intent to teach and advocate the violent overthrow of the government. Campbell, the chief judge of the Federal District Court, ruled that in view of the government statement it would be a waste of the court's time to proceed with a trial. The request and decision came as a complete surprise. Lightfoot had actually been convicted of the charges in 1955 and had been sentenced to five years in prison. But in 1957 the Supreme Court upheld his appeal and ordered a new trial. THE NEW TRIAL was scheduled to begin today and Lightfoot, a 50-year-old Arkansas-born Negro, was in court with his attorney. He indicated before the court session began that he was prepared for a long court battle. When Manion made his statement. Lightfoot's jaw dropped and his eyes bulged. AT THE TIME of Lightfoot's first conviction, it was believed that a precedent had been set in the prosecution of Communist leaders. Before his indictment, S1 Commu nists had been convicted under the Smith Act of teaching, advocating or encouraging the violent overthrow of the government. Lightfoot was brought to trial under a previously untested clause of the act which made it illegal to become a member of or affiliate with any such group. LIGHTFOOT, a gray-haired, gray mustached man of dignified appearance, left the court without commenting on the surprise dismissal of the charges against him. His record as a Communist stretches back to 1934. When he was 25, he journeyed to Moscow for Communist Party training. Since Lightfoot's conviction, the government succeeded in obtaining conviction of another Communist leader, Junius Scales, on similar charges. However, Manilon said today that the Scales conviction was based on evidence that he had advocated overthrow of the government. Manion said he feared the government would not be able to prove that Lightfoot, despite his record as a veteran Communist, had "knowledge of the party's illegal advocacy and intent of bringing about the violent overthrow of the government." The U.S. attorney said the government was not sure it was "able to show such evidence that he had actually suggested such an overthrow as a member of the Communist Party." Lightfoot has been free ever since his 1955 conviction and has continued to direct the affairs of the Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Illinois Communist Party from a shabby office in Chicago's loo. Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER In 1958 he told an interviewer "I could go to jail for five years. But I guess that's one of the risks I have to take. I believe in taking risks — but only when you have to." In addition to heading the Illinois Communist Party, Lightfoot is vice chairman of the national committee of the American Communist Party. Smart Bear HOLLYWOOD—(UPI)—No Hollywood animal ever was trained more for a picture role than was Neewa, a bear who plays an important role in Walt Disney's "Nikki, Wild Dog of the North." Neewa was trained from birth for the role. She was taught how to do a scene without losing an audience, how to act with her dog co-star, Nikki, and even how to ride a birch bark canoe along the rivers of the great Northwest wilderness with her human star, Jean Coutu. Official Bulletin Chemistry Department Organic Colloquium: 4 p.m., Room 223 Malott, Dr Erickson, with the National Institutes of Health, will lecture on "The Chemistry of Stevioside." Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 a.m., St John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. TODAY El Atenco anuncia su proxima reunión el miercoles día 15 a las 4 de la tarde, en 11 Fraser. El Professor Ricart nos hablará sobre "La Musica de España". Todos los estudiantes de español estan aprendiendo, divierten y practiquen el espanol hablando en un ambiente informal! Se servirán refrescos. Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch: 12 noon. Canterbury House. TOMORROW Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. **Red China—Outlaw.** 7:30 p.m. Fraser Tucker, presented by YAF. Public inli- vies. American Society of Tool and Manf. Elmer J. Vanderploeg, Engineer & Pres. of Yoder Company, Cleveland, Ohio, will have a meeting in Rockville, MD on Boh Farming., All engineers invited Westminster Center: Choir. 5:45 p.m. rehearsal. 6:45 p.m. supper. 7:00 p.m. United Presbyterian Men. Westminster Center. 1204 Oread. Wednesday, November 15. 1961 University Daily Kansan Der Duetsche Verein trift sich, am Donnerstag, den 16. November, um fuenft Fraser Doktor Klaus Berger, sprich neibe Lucas Cranch, Maler der Reformation. Conform and be dull. —J. Frank Dobie Bridges Leads American Basketball League CHICAGO — (UPI) — Former Kansas University basketball star Bill Bridges is the leading scorer and rebounder in the new professional American Basketball League. Bridges, who won the Big Eight Conference individual rebounding championship three times at Kansas, is the mainstay of the Kansas City Steers. He has averaged 26 points and 14.3 rebounds per game. Los Angeles is the top scoring club with 111.3 points per game, and Kansas City is second with 102. Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS 1912 West 25th St. FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED - central air conditioning - carpeted - off street parking - ● garbage disposal - laundry facilities 1/2 block - play area for children Phone VI 2-3416 office VI 3-8253 home LUCKY STRIKE presents: LUCKY PUFFERS "HOMECOMING WEEKEND" "Boy, is this place packed !" HOMECOMING VICTORY DANCE LUCKY STRIKE "Wow! Is the team ever fired up for this game!" "Him? Why, that's Col. Smythe-Hubertt, the oldest living graduate." GLASS A CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE ITS TOASTED CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. "Him? Why, that's Col. Smythe-Hubertt, the oldest living graduate." LUCKY STRIKE IT'S TEAMTED CIGARETTES CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE IT'S TOO TLD CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. "Get on the float committee, you said... nothing to it, you said... a breeze, you said..." WHAT DOES AN OLD GRAD LIKE BEST ABOUT HOMECOMING? Next to shaking hands, he likes reminiscing. About fraternity parties, girls, sorority parties, girls, off-campus parties, girls—and, of course, about how great cigarettes used to taste. Fortunately for you, Luckies still do taste great. (So great that college students smoke more of them than any other regular cigarette.) Which shows that the important things in college life stay the same. Parties. Girls. Luckies. CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change! $ \textcircled{C} $ A. T. Co. Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. November 15, 1961 A Kansan Profile: Prof. Clark Has Varied Interests Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology and chairman of the KU sociology department, is one of KU's most varied personalities. Educator, researcher, author, sports fan, jazz musician and soldier, he has one of the longer KU service records, with over 30 years as head of the sociology department. Prof. Clark's greatest interest throughout the years has been KU's growth "not only in quantity but in quality." He remarks with pride how he has watched as KU "has become to a growing extent an international University" instead of a "rather provincial state university." Prof. Clark says he wants to be remembered not just for his efforts to establish a graduate sociology program and human relations courses but, more important, for his efforts to develop a staff with a world outlook. ASKED ABOUT student attitudes on controversial issues. Prof. Clark said there has always been considerable student apathy, but where liberal student groups of the past were more concerned with smaller, less consequential issues, today's KU student groups are concerned with bigger issues. He used the People-to-People program as an example of something "radical in the right sense." He further explained, saying "the word radical means root," and programs such as People-to-People to the real root of things. Prof. Clark says his greatest interest outside the University is jazz. He recalls having played in Dixieland bands, dance bands and, as an undergraduate at KU, in the KU marching band. He says that he has not lost his interest in jazz since purchasing a second-hand alto saxophone in the late 1930's. FOR TWO YEARS, 1958 and 1959. Prof. Clark presented an hour-long weekly jazz program on KANU. He says he still likes to play along with jazz records on his portable hi-fi but is a "little rusty" now. Prof. Clark says he is interested in modern forms of jazz even though his heart is still with the "hot music" he came to love in the 1930's. Of Dave Brubeck, one of the better-known proponents of the "cool sound." Prof. Clark says, "He (Brubeck) has something to say." Trumpeter Miles Davis is his favorite modern. Among his older favorites are Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Woody Herman. PROF. CLARK describes old-time jazz as a "free-wheeling kind of music that flourishes best in unconventional settings." Where old-time jazz was more functional (for dancing), he feels that today's jazz is becoming a bit "to respectable" through concerts and more formal night club performances. He mentioned that Kansas City, once rich in jazz musicians, has faded a great deal in this respect in recent years. In part, he attributes this to Kansas City's increasing respectability. The Negro, whose only expression of soul used to be jazz, has become "an increasingly respectable citizen" and now has other outlets. EXPERT TAILORING and Alterations DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FINEST 23rd St. & Naismith Dr. Prof. Clark does, however, have a great deal of appreciation for the jazz created by today's Negro jazz musician, who may be extensively trained through formal music schools. JAZZ IS THE "only native American art form," said Prof. Clark. He feels that it has had a world-wide impact and that the "best emissaries we have sent abroad were our iazz men." Prof. Clark says the future of jazz is with the young people: "Real jazz has always been music for the discriminating minority," he says. "I enjoy classical music, but classical music is essentially European music while jazz is as American as apple pie or football." An avid sports fan, Prof. Clark was on the KU Athletic Board for 12 years. He said he still sees most of KU's home games. HE DESCRIBES the growth of professionalization and commercialization in collegiate athletics as an unhappy development but feels that firmer control is developing. Of KU's encounter with the NCAA, he said, "some of our friends weren't sufficiently discreet." He feels that the NCAA was overly technical in its dealings with KU, for it is "very difficult to restrain the ardor of the alumni." "KU has had an unusually sound athletic program, particularly under Chancellors Murphy and Wescoe," he says. He described KU's athletic director, A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg, as a very scrupulous administrator who has done a great deal to build a balanced athletic program for KU. "To me there is no minor sport in intercollegiate athletics," said Prof. Clark. He wants to see swimming and baseball at KU developed as successfully as football, basketball and track are now. PROF. CLARK'S educational and teaching backgrounds are as varied as his outside interests. He began teaching in 1916 at Ashland, Kan., where he was the elementary school principal, school band director and football coach. He resigned this post in 1917 to join the Coast Artillery Corps, 53rd Regiment, with which he attained the rank of first sergeant and saw service in France. In 1919 he returned from France and came to KU, where he received his B.A. degree three years later. He then became superintendent of schools in Wakefield, Kan. In 1925 he returned to KU to become an instructor of sociology and work on his master's degree. PROF. CLARK went on to the University of Chicago, where he received his Ph.D. degree and specialized in collective behavior in relation to newspapers and public opinion. He then taught at the Universities of Virginia and Connecticut before coming back to KU in 1930, where he has been ever since except for sabbatical leaves and a military leave, during which he became a major in the Air Training Command. He trained navigators at Selman Field, La. during World War II. Prof. Clark became acting chairman of KU's sociology department in 1931. This post was made official in 1933, and he has held it since that time. AFTER LEAVING military service in 1945. Prof. Clark was asked by former Chancellor Maltot to go to Harvard University, at its invitation, to be a visiting professor and also to study the case method in human relations. He returned to KU a year later to introduce the case method into KU human relations courses. Prof. Clark was a sociological consultant with former Governor Alfred M. Landon's Kansas State Planning Board. His research project, "People of Kansas: A Sociological and Demographic Study," was published with a foreword by William Allen White. Prof. Clark was also a co-author and editor of "Handbook of Kansas" Social Resources." HE ATTENDED the University of Iowa conference to study the use of public opinion polls in the 1948 presidential election. He wrote several sections in "The Polls and Public Opinions," a critical study of the effectiveness of public opinion polls in predicting sociologically determined events. Prof. Clark said the scientific basis for sociology is growing today. He feels that sociologists are now much less given to sweeping generalizations. "We should never forget that one of the main links in sociology has traditionally been with the humanities rather than with the positivistic conception that would make it an imitator of the natural sciences," said Prof. Clark. Joseph M. Kellogg's, professor emeritus of architecture, water colors exhibition opens Saturday in the south lounge of the Kansas Union. Paintings to Be Shown The showing, which runs until November 26, features a collection of paintings in the English water color style. Most of the pictures are scenes of the Maine coast and Laguna Beach in California. KU Senate Lifts Restrictions The University Senate has removed all scholarship restrictions on students participating in non-athletic, extra-curricular activities The former regulation, which was the same as the Big Eight eligibility ruling for intercollegiate athletics, stated a student must have 60 per cent C's to participate in extra-curricular activities. The Big Eight recently raised the standards to 0.6 for freshmen and sophomores, and 0.8 for juniors and seniors. dent either had a grade point average better than the Big Eight's new standard, or was on academic probation. The Senate, composed of senior faculty members, thought any stu- Freshmen and sophomores are placed on academic probation if they do not maintain a GPA of 0.8.The minimum for juniors and seniors is 1.0. Peace Corps Exams Soon Peace Corps examinations will be held in Lawrence Post Office at 8:30 a.m., on Nov. 28 and 29. 》Exclusive《 THE AUTHENTIC STORY OF PRESIDENT KENNEDY'S WARTIME ADVENTURES 109 This week The Saturday Evening Post publishes the first authentic account of Lieutenant Kennedy at war. To get this story, writer Robert Donovan traveled halfway around the world. He got eyewitness reports from every survivor of the Kennedy crew. He even interviewed the Japanese commander whose destroyer sank Kennedy's PT boat. This is a story of heroism, humor and heartbreak. You will follow John Kennedy's adventures from the moment his ship went down — right up to his dramatic rescue from a desert island. Read "PT 109: The Adventure That Made a President." The Saturday Evening POST A CURTIS MAGAZINE/NOVEMBER 18, 1961 2-for-1 NIGHT at the CATACOMBS (cellar of the Pizza Hut) WEDNESDAY NIGHT 7:00-9:00 Buy 1 beverage — Get the second one free! It's 2-for-1 Night!! Catacombs Open Every Week Night 5:00-11:00 Friday & Saturday Night 5:00-1:00 Featuring the FINEST PIZZA in the Midwest Open 4-11 Monday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday 646 Mass. PIZZA HUT VI 3-9760 Wednesday, November 15. 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 9 FALL ANNIVERSARY SALE Open House: Wed., Thurs., Fri. Open Until 1 a.m. at Night NEW MUD & SNOW TREADS 1/3 OFF Including 650x13 and Smaller Sizes Including 650x13 and Smaller Sizes NEW U.S. ROYAL WINTERIDE TIRES Fits Compacts to Cadillacs Including NARROW WHITEWALLS to Match Compact Tires and Original Tires on All 1962 Cars Drop in Any Time and Look Around at All the Great Tire Bargains!! Safe Driving Contest FREE 100 Gallons of Gas FREE Register and Guess the Number of Tires That Will Be Traded in During This Sale. Gift With Each Fill-up You Don't Have to Be Present to Win. In Case of Tie, the Prize Will Be Divided. Minimum Purchase: 8 Gal. (One to a Customer) FREE Coffee & Cookies While You Look Over the Biggest Used Tire Display in This Entire Area. BARGAINS GALORE A Big Selection of 300 Used Tires 50% Off Another Group of 150 Used Tires 33% Off All Others 25% Off LAWRENCE TIRE & OIL CO. 1000 Mass. - VI 2-0247 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 15, 1961 Deliberate War Is Considered Unlikely By K. C. Thaler LONDON — (UPI) — The cold war is hotter today than at any time since World War II, and more dangerous than during the grim days of the 1948-49 Berlin blockade. For the second time in less than 15 years Berlin is the focal center of East-West tensions, but it is not the only danger point. The potential flashpoints extend from Europe to South East Asia, and from Africa to Latin America. DESPIE THE WAR fears, there appears general agreement among competent observers in all major capitals that war will not come from any deliberate act of either East or West. The concern is for a war by "misstep or miscalculation." The present situation began building about 18 months ago when Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev broke up, in anger, the 1960 Four Power Summit meeting in Paris following the U2 incident. Since then the cold war has warmed up month by month. NOWHERE HAS the danger of an international explosion been more alarmingly demonstrated than in Berlin, at the Communist-built, city-dividing wall where Russian and American tanks have faced each other, and armed men face each other across a few yards of noman's land on either side of the barrier. Until now, Khrushchev has avoided overstepping the line to which both sides in the conflict have moved several times in the nervous weeks since the Berlin wall went up on Aug. 13. Just how do things stand now? A poll of authoritative diplomatic opinion around the world produced the following assessment: WASHINGTON—The danger of a "deliberate" war is slight and no greater now than a year ago. But the possible outbreak of a nuclear war by "ignorance, mistake or miscalculation" is greater today. The Washington observers give as reason for the fears the danger of incidents in Berlin getting out of hand. They also are apprehensive that growing Communist Guerrilla activity in South East Asia, and especially in Laos, could spark a major conflict. LONDON — Observers here also fear more a war by "misstep" than by calculation. As British observers see it, Khrushchev is determined on a showdown with the West over Berlin and other European problems largely because he is stronger now than he might be a year or two hence. The British believe Khrushchev—unless he suffers from or develops a Hitler-type megalomania—will shy away from a war showdown. In the British view Khrushchev can afford to walk up to the line and back away from it without risking his position at home. The British believe his recent triumph over party adversaries at the 22nd Party Congress has enhanced his prestige and power at home enough so that he can operate for a time, anyway—with a fairly free hand. B-School, KSCPA to Meet The University of Kansas School of Business and the Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants will hold their annual meeting, Nov. 16-17, at the Hotel Jayhawk in Topeka. Speakers from the KU business school will be Dean James R. S. surface, Assoc. Prof. Sherwood W. Newton, Prof. John G. Blocker, and Prof. Howard F. Stettler, Assistant Dean L. Martin Jones and Prof. W. Keith Weltmer are on the planning committee. Yanks in Britain LONDON — (UPI) — The number of American visitors to Britain increased 234 per cent between 1950 and 1960, the British Travel Association reports. 150 PREMIER DIAMOND SHOP 916 Mass. FAR EAST—Observers in this part of the world hold much the same opinion as Western experts—that the main war danger is a war by mistake. But they agree this danger is a grave one, more so than a year ago. They also have misgivings about the situation in Laos and elsewhere in South East Asia, but that the worst flashpoint—from the standpoint of possible outbreak of a nuclear war—is Berlin. Although there is general agreement that Berlin provides the biggest challenge at this stage to world peace, there also is agreement that it is not the only area of dangerous tension. IN SOUTHERN EUROPE, Turkey and, even more so, Iran, are under pressure from Moscow. Most recently the Kremlin has been maneuvering in the direction of Scandinavia, with a major diplomatic offensive against Norway, Denmark and Sweden and Finland called upon for "defense" consultations. In Latin America Moscow looks to Cuba as an operative foothold in that hemisphere and a jumping-off place for infiltration of the United States' "backyard." Then there's Africa. Temporary setbacks in this continent have by no means ended Russia's activities there. In the Black Continent the cold war is fought on the economic plane, laced with Soviet arms and heavy doses of "anti-imperialist" propaganda to undermine the Western position with the newly emerging nations. THERE IS A wide feeling that Khrushchev wants now to consolidate what he's got and feels he can do this by pushing the cold war to the limit. During and since World War II Russia, in one of the most imperialistic expansions in history, has annexed outright areas totalling 182,000 square miles of territory with populations totaling some 25,000,000. These areas include parts of Finland, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania and German East Prussia, plus all of Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia. In addition the Soviet Union has extended control to the satellites in Europe taking in 393,000 square miles of territory with poo- ulations of more than 90,000,000. NOW SHOWING! (Thru Saturday) Shows At 7:00 & 9:15 ulations of more than 90,000,000. It is formal recognition of this booty that Moscow means when it talks about wanting the West to recognize the "status quo," extending the Iron Curtain to Russia's boundaries in Europe. It delves into the hungers that lie deep within us all! 20th Century Fox PAUL NEWMAN IN ROBERT ROSSEN'S THE HUSTLER PIPER LAURIE - GEORGE C. SCOTT JACKIE GLEASON BY MINNESOTA FOX TO MAKE THIS empire water-tight, the Kremlin feels it must remove Western influence from Berlin. MYRON M*CORMICK ROBERT ROSSEN SENET CARRILLE - ROSSEN CINEMA SOPPE Why is Khrushchev suddenly pushing so hard now? He may feel time is running out for him. First, he is now at the peak of his power. Second, Russia is at a peak of strength. Khrushchev appears to feel that at this point Russia has the edge on the United States in rocketry and "nuclear delivery." It could be he calculates that in another year or two Allied strength, and especially that of the United States, will be too great. These are only suppositions, but they are suppositions by persons in a position to assess international affairs at the highest diplomatic levels. PETER MORGAN THERE ARE MANY other factors, not the least of them economic. Russia is worried, for example, by the growing movement toward European unification through the Common Market. It looks uneasily upon increasing Western European politicalties, along with the military. Today, Communism in Europe is on the decline. An economic boom, full employment and to some degree political disillusionment within the Communist bloc countries themselves all are working to the Kremlin's disadvantage. VARSITY NOW! At 7:00 & 9:15 In the high-adventure tradition of "The Guns Of Navarone!" SPENCER TRACY SPENCER FRANK TRACY AND SINATRA T. B. M. in the MERVYN LEROY-FRED KOHLMAR production COLUMBIA PICTURES presents THE DEVIL AT 40CLOCK FRANK AND SINATRA If the bewildering complexities of the cold war can be summed up in a few words it might be said that the Soviet Union wants to keep what it has, extend its power wherever it can—and give up nothing. The West, which already has given up so much, is determined to give no more. KEGWIN MATHEWS • JEAN PIERRE AUMONT SCREENPLAY BY BENELLI • MICHAEL NORRIS • KATARINA ASLAN • SOULYRY • LUNA • LIAM OBRIEN PRODUCTION BY MERVYN LEROY • FRED KOHLMAR EASTMAN COLOR COMING NEXT! a remarkable film experience! M.G.M Presents Carroll Baker Bridge to the Sun GRANADA TREATURE Telefónica VIVO 3-STUDIO Neither side wants war. But either side would fight if it felt the time had come when it had to. And that is the danger that confronts the world today. Scientist's Role Discussion Topic "The Role of the Scientist and his Obligation to Society" will be discussed by a panel at the meeting of Sigma Xi. honorary scientific research society, at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 411 Summerfield. The panelists will be Peter J. Caws, associate professor of philosophy; Roy D. Laird, assistant professor of political science; John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, and Robert Katz, professor of physics at Kansas State University. Kansan Want Ads Get Results BAY EXCUSES TO ENJOY YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE JAY HAWK CAFE ON This day in 1940, A Box of CHURCHILL'S CIGARS SOLD FOR $2,010.00 $ PENN Pat Weaver, National College Quaon What does this lovely College Queen want in her diamond ring? Miss Pat Weaver, America's National College Queen, revealed her feminine taste as well as her practical sense when asked about diamond rings. She selected as her favorite the lovely Artcarved Evening Star—one of Artcarved's award-winning designs. Why did she choose it? Because of its breathtaking beauty and guaranteed quality. You see, every Artcarved ring is guaranteed in writing for all the years to come by America's most respected ring maker. You buy it with confidence—wear it with pride. Visit your local Arcaved Jeweler and see why Arcaved diamond rings have been the choice of millions for more than a century. Perhaps you can start hinting for yours now! NATIONALLY ADVERTISED IN AMERICA'S LEADING MAGAZINES One Artcarved DIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGS SANDERSON MUSEUM EVENING STAR First choice of America's College Queens J. R. Wood & Sons, Inc., Dept. CP-31 216 E. 45th St, New York 17, N.Y. Please send me more facts about diamond rings and "Wedding Guide for Bride and Groom." Also name of nearest (or hometown) Arcarved Jeweler. I am enclosing 10¢ to cover handling and postage. Name_ Address City___ County or Zone___ State___ MU guilfoy John 1956 $121 STRE new LEE wood Sox VI STRE ditto 122 SC onikie was sac Dona Clover ARles HG bead MeeCe GE conethe $31-8 NE2 Seedred rei NE2 prepared Noi Wereg Hiv 5 bead ggcl ad Orcil LI Li GMts H is cated He is cated Al $7 Wednesday, November 15, 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 insurer's ansal on the day before publication is desired. No responsible for any report reported before second insertion. BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cream. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plain, party supplies. plant, etn & Vermont. Vicor VI 3509 MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- cation of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LOST ALLIGATOR RAINCOAT taken by mistake from Happy Hal's restaurant last Sat.宴 please contact B. K. Manchvi. VI 3-7415. Reward. 11-16 SMALL BLACK picture holder containing student ID, drivers license, etc. Fraser, library or Union. Please call 5276 or mail to Sylvander, 918 Kentucky. 11-16 FOR RENT GIRL'S EYE GLASSES. Pinkish brown frames with case. Lost near water tower at Sunset and Stratford Rd. on Nov. 7. Call VI 3-5344. 11-15 Vacancy available for 2 men in com- munity Hall McRill Rd. Ct. 819553 for appointment. **if** you are not interested, **if** WEST EDGE CAMPUS. 2 bedrooms, living room, carpet, drapes, fireplace, cloister, electrical, garage, disposal, garage, storage. Call VI 3-3887 after 7. 11-20 LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid, $50. Call VI 3-6294. FURNISHED APARTMENT - Clean. 3 rooms, with private bath - both room. Prefer children. PEU. Prefer married children. By appointment only - VI 3-8125 11-16 SHARE APARTMENT with other boys, and 1 vacancy for a girl. 1 block from Union, cooking privileges. Call VI 3-6223. 11-17 FOR SALE MUST SELL New Guild West-Western Johnson V 3-4811 bidder Call Guild 11-28 1950 PLYMOUTH, runs good, looks good. $125. Call VI 3-7268. 11-28 STEVENS 22 Automatic Rifle, $24. Like new. Call VI 3-2906 after 6 p.m. If tf LEFT HAND GOLF CLUBS. 6 irons, 2 woods, bag. $45., extra 7 iron $30. Alto Sax mouthpiece. Otto-Link $15. Call VI 2-2284. 11-1f STRING BASS — EPIPHONE — Good condition. $75. Contact David Christian at 1222 Mississippi afternoons and evenings. 11-20 Dodge in good running condition. $80. Call VI 3-4291. tf SCRATCH AND SKETCH PADS only 35c lb. Standard sizes sizeable. call help on Web site the size you Lawrence Outlook, 1005 Mas- gachusetts VI 3-3666. 11-15 ARTLEY FLUTE, excellent condition less than a year old - call VI 8-1234- 11-15 HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or greeting. Including Cactus, flowering Muletea, Begonias, Collius, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tt 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. tl NEW. FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters en adding machines, computers and business at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today. 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. ¶f WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All two 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. 5 BOOKCASE SHELVES. 6' with risers; bookcase, 5' x 1', with glass doors; gallon bucket, 20 oz.; Rubbed cottonwood leg with gliders; 12 guage shotgun, single shot; aquarium and supplies: 3006 Spring deer rifle. See at 1016 Hilpot Drive after 11-16 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, service, rentals. Enforcement Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-3644. GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New & used guns, and ammo. Liberal trade-ins. Special this week: 30-06 Springfield. See at 1304 Tenn. VI 31-08. 1860 VOLVO, red with brand new white sidewall tires (27 month guarantee); custom made red carpets, radio, heater, and many accessories; in excellent condition; must sell by next week to highest bidder. VI 2-3364. 11-17 1855 JAGUAR - Excellent condition. reasonable - VI 3-9011. 11-17 HELP WANTED ATTENTION LAW STUDENTS: Practical law library for sale. Priced at $3.00 to $7.00 per volume. Pierce Van Lines. 7331⁵ N. H. VI 3-8688. 11-17 A SAXOPHONE PLAYER: Alto or tenor. Must be able to play any type music by ear. Work 3 regular nights a week. Phone VI 2-3780. 11-17 WANTED SECRETARY WANTED: Apply in person. Plaza Club, 2222 Iowa. 11-28 YOUNG MAN TO SHARE 5 room apt Call Bill Goetze, VI 2-3528 evenings TWO MALE STUDENTS to share three bedroom house. VI 2-3301 after 5 p.m. COLLEGE GIRL to baby sit every Wed. from 1-3 p.m. Two children, will usually be asleep. 20-8 Stouffer Pl. VI 2-3974. 11-15 WANTED: GRADUATE STUDENT in INVIVI VI-3.8833. For ask for Mahin. 11-15 TYPING EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Charles. Charles Vi1, III 5-8379. MILLIKEN'S 'S.O.S.' — Now at two 4016, 1008, 1014, 1010 Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Earlow. 408 W. 15th. II-2t-168. Mrs. Earlow. 408 W. 15th. II-2t-168. 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: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts. Wrote a column in The New York neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting type of vectors. For excelle rtyping et standard vectors, call MISS Lou- Pope, PE 3-1997. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter interested in thesis, term papers, etc. Student notes. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker, Call VI 3-2001. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name - call V 3-9163 Mo尔斯, L. Gebich, FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Services 9317 B Wilson, Mission H 2-7717 Evers or Sat TA 2-2186. TYFING IN MY HOME. Fast service reasonable rates. Call VI 3-7062. 11-17 Typing. Will type reports, thesis, etc. April 15, 2017 seli 1511, W 21. St. COL VI 3-6440. tf Scribbles: W 21. St. COL VI 3-6440. tf FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing rates, dessertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs Marilyn Hav. VI 3-2318. Miss ff HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. writer for the school. Tests & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. tf TYPING: Expertenced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. M. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8686. TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf BUSINESS SERVICES Experienced typist would like typing in seasonal occasions. Call VI 3-2651 any time. Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters. U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center - most complete shop in mid- Phone VI 3-2921 Modern self-service — open weeks day 8 to 6:30 o.m. Save Money Income Insurance TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI -3644. FRANK ALEXANDER 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 American United Life offers exclusive STUDENT LIFE PLAN GROUP INSURANCE Morris Kay VI 3-7114 DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentation. Call: Ola Smail 13919 Mass. Call: Mi 3-2683. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3-1751, or 921 Miss. u Save Money Income Insurance 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. RALPH FREED FOR WE'RE GEARED FOR Any Job That Includes Money We'll help you save it, protect it . . . loan it to you for any worthwhile purpose. Whatever your plans or problems, make our bank your first stop if it has to do with dollars. Money is our business and we want to help if we can. ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 746 Mass. D On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) IT'S LATER THAN YOU THINK! All year long you've been promising yourself to go there. Now the semester is nearly over and you still haven't set foot in the place. Shame on you! But it's not too late. Right now, this very minute, before you weaken, lift up your head and forward march to the place you have been avoiding ever since school began. I refer, of course, to the library. Now here you are at the library. That wasn't so bad, was it? Of course not! Go inside. What do you see? A sign that says "NO SMOKING." Go outside. Light a Marlboro. Smoke. Go back inside. Because now you are ready. Now your trembling resolution is rigid. Now your pulsing psyche is serene. You have been calmed by mild Marlboro. You have been soothed by that fine selectrate filter, by that fine full flavor that dots and pampers, and caresses, that lifts the fallen, repairs the shattered, straightens the bent, unravels the knotted, rights the askew, and fastens the unbuttoned. In the center of the library you see the main circulation desk. Look in the card catalogue for the number of the book you want, write the number on a slip, and hand it to the efficient and obliging young lady at the desk. The efficient and obliging young lady then gives the slip to an efficient and obliging page boy who trots briskly back into the stacks, curls up on a limp leather encyclopedia, and sleeps for an hour or two. Then, puffy but refreshed, he returns your slip to the efficient and obliging young lady at the desk, who tells you one of three things: a) "Your book is out." b) "Your book is at the bindery." c) "Your book is on reserve." Having learned that the circulation desk hasn't the least intention of ever parting with a book, let us now go into the periodical room. Here we spend hours sifting through an imposing array of magazines—magazines from all the far corners of the earth, magazines of every nature and description—but though we search diligently and well, we cannot find Mad or Playboy. "You binned or anything?" "You pinned or anything?" Next let us venture into the reference room. Here in this hushed, vaulted chamber, we find the true scholars of the university—earnest, dedicated young men and women who care for only one thing in the world: the pursuit of knowledge. Let us eavesdrop for a moment on this crudite couple poring over heavy tomes at the corner table. Hush! She speaks: SHE: Whatcha readin', hey? HE: The Origin of Species. You ever read it? SHE: No, but I seen the movie. HE: Oh. SHE: You like readin'? SHE: What do you like? HE: Hockey, licorice, girls, stuff like that. SHE: Me too, hey. HE: You pinned or anything? SHE: Well, sort of. I'm wearin a fellow's motorcycle emblem . . . But it's only platicon. HE: Wanna go out for a smoke? SHE: Marlboro? HE: What else? And as our learned friends take their leave, let us too wend our way homeward—a trifle weary, perhaps, but enlightened and renewed and better citizens for having spent these happy hours in the library, Aloha, library, aloha! * * © 1961 Max Shulman the makers of Mariboro, who sponsor this column, could write volumes about another one of their fine products—the unfiltered king-size Philip Morris Commander—but we'll only tell you this: Take a leaf from our book. Enjoy a Commander today. Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 15. 1961 FOOTBALL CONTEST THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN'S "TOTAL POINT PREDICTION" CONTEST Lawrence Tire & Oil Co. 1000 Mass. VI 2-0247 HEADQUARTERS FOR: US Royal Tires Conoco Oil Products Alignment - Wheel Balance Electrical System Repair & Rebuilding Complete Mechanical Service OPEN EVERY DAY UNTIL 1 am Colorado vs Nebraska Gotta GET EMBACK BEFORE ME WIFE GETS HOME! MARLY IN THE EARLY DAYS OF FOOTBALL THE UNIFORM OF ONE TEAM WAS SHORT PANTS AND HANDKERCHIEFS TIED AROUND THE HEAD. MARLAY GOTTA GET 'EM BACK BEFORE ME WIFE GETS HOME! IN THE EARLY DAYS OF FOOTBALL THE UNIFORM OF ONE TEAM WAS SHORT PANTS AND HANDKERCHIEFS TIED AROUND THE HEAD. The Southern Pit 1834 Mass. Army vs Oklahoma "Specialists in fabric care " VI 3-3711 10th & N.H. For the Finest in Laundry and Dry Cleaning Missouri vs Kansas State see Lawrence Laundry "Quality Guaranteed" CONVERSE Francis Sporting Goods — Houston vs Oklahoma State — - Team Price $7.95 731 Mass. VI 3-4191 843 massachusetts the 'flying wedge'? the 'single wing'? High Top or Low Cuts men's wear - White Only diebolt's Navy vs Virginia CHUCK TAYLOR, All Star Basketball Shoes by CONVERSE regardless, you will be 'suited' to a 'T' at diebolt's Kansas vs California Of Your Choice For Women BLOUSE American Girl - Risque Summerettes - Glov-etts Smart-Aire - Red Ball Fabric Redman's Shoes Crosby Square — Randcraft Red Wing Work Shoes ACME BOOTS For Men 815 Mass. VI 3-9871 A BOBBIE BROOKS BLOUSE SHOP AT THE CAMPUS Jay SHOPPE Iowa State vs Tulsa ___ 12th and Oread Visit the campus Jay Shoppe each week and register for drawing on Saturday. (No purchase necessary to register.) CAMPUS FASHIONS For EVERY OCCASION This Week's Gift 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. 3. Return to Daily Kansan Adv. Dept., 111 Flint Hall, no later than midnight Friday, 11-17. 2. Fill out & clip coupon. In case of ties the $10 will be split. Name ___ Address ___ Ph. My prediction is ___ points. One entry per student. LAST WEEK'S WINNER Mike Garrett 252 pts. Actual Points 251 pts. LAST WEEK'S WINNER: --- A. H. FREELINK H "Brilliant" says Marilyn King of the King Sisters The New Roberts "990" 4-Track Stereo Tape Recorder is your best buy Kief's Record & HiFi On the Mall Open Evenings Till 8 Texas vs Texas Christian On the Mall 一、 UP Edges Vox In ASC Contest Vox Populi came out of the general elections last night holding control of the All Student Council. Although it lost one seat to the University Party, Vox still maintains a 16 to 11 edge over UP. UP won nine of the living district representative seats last night. Vox won eight. One representative from the men's large dormitories district will not be decided upon until after Thanksgiving because of the close vote. VOX HOLDS EIGHT SEATS from last spring's election of school representatives, and UP holds two. The vote total of 3.710 is 886 greater than last fall's 2.824 total. Vote tabulation last night turned into a $ 5 \frac{1}{2} $ hour task for members of the election committee. The tense atmosphere and varying degrees of confusion caused tempers to grow shorter as the hours grew longer and the votes grew closer. An irregularity in tabulating the votes was discovered about $2\frac{1}{2}$ hours after the committee began work. The committee found it it had been figurating vote quotas (a figure used in calculating votes See Election Results, p. 2 for candidates other than first-place winners) on total number of votes, both valid and invalid. The ASC elections bill states only valid votes will be used in the figuring. SIX DISTRICTS HAD ALREADY been decided at the time, Richard Harper, Prairie Village senior and chairman of the election committee, ordered a recount of the men's large dormitories district. A recount was not taken of fraternities, sororities, women's large dormitories, men's small dormitories, and women's small dormitories. "Men's large dormitories is the only vote where the slight change of quota could have involved a change in results." Harper said. Despite the slow work in the counting room, students waited patiently outside the guarded door for results to be posted. The results were handed out for each district as they were totaled. THE TWO PEOPLE who waited most anxiously were the chairmen of the political parties. Both were in the counting room and had the right to contest any vote calculation. Only men's large dormitories' votes were contested. Ted Childers, Wamego senior and Vox chairman, said he was pleased with the results in some districts and disappointed in others. "The closeness of the votes in the districts was amazing," he said. "We have a lot of work to do between now and next spring." Tom Hardy. Hoisington junior and UP co-chairman, said: "We're happy for the people who won and we're confidently looking forward to the spring elections." (Two UP candidates lost out in the general elections. Six Vox candidates were unsuccessful.) Stewart Wins in Record Frosh Vote Four freshmen started their KU political careers last night by coming out ahead in the election of class officers. Robert Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., was elected president. Others elected were Sal Allessandro, Valley Stream, N.Y., vice president; Marilyn Huff, Wichita, secretary; and Jon Alexiou, Mission treasurer. "I INTENT TO TRY my best to carry out all the promises that I have made throughout the campaign." Stewart said. "It was a close race and I was worried up until the last minute," he said. "This was the toughest election I've ever won in my life." THE WHO'S WINNING—Students gather outside the accounting room in Bailey to read election results. Students on the other side of the glass worked until 1 a.m. for final results. From left to right the curious readers are Jerry Freund, Dodge City junior; Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore; and Rod Kuehn, Wakarusa freshman. Victory parties followed the announcements. Daily hansan 59th Year No. 45 LAWRENCE. KANSAS Nov. 24-25 Parties To Be Registered Thursday, Nov. 16, 1961 Organized houses planning parties on Nov. 24 or 25 must register them at the Dean of Women's Office, Gary Dilley, Emporia senior and chairman of the ASC Social Committee, said today. The parties will be under the ASC Social Committee rules even though these days are over a holiday period. Dilley said the parties must be registered by 5 p.m. Tuesday. Weather Grandma may have the snow she needs to break out the sleigh for Thanksgiving. Strong northerly winds 25 to 40 miles per hour with snow flurries were predicted this morning. Partly cloudy and colder this afternoon with diminishing winds, Generally fair tonight and Friday. Colder tonight. Highs today and Friday 35 to 40. Lows tonight 15 to 20. A Kansan Series-Part I: Watkins Hospital Lacks Space (Editor's Note—This is the first in a three-part series on Watkins Memorial Hospital.) By Richard Bonnett Watkins Memorial Hospital, the KU student health facility, is in a pinch. A resolution passed recently by the All Student Council called for an investigation of hospital facilities as a possible step toward "better service to the student." THE ASC resolution was adopted following the death at the hospital of an 18-year-old Oklahoma City, Okla., freshman from correlations arising from an appendicitis attack. But the roots of student discontent apparently go deeper than this incident and reflect a bad "image" the hospital has with a segment of the student body. Michael Thomas, Kansas City, Mo., senior, the ASC member who introduced the resolution for an investigation said in a telephone interview recently; "OVFP THE PAST few years I've heard students comment occasionally on it (the health "AS FAR AS I can determine," he said, "students seem to be in doubt about what services are offered and what to do when they need medical care." service) and the comments have never been favorable." Thomas said from what he has heard, complaints seem to be along two basic lines: Hospital staff members seem to show no personal interest in the students, and the students have difficulty in obtaining medical aid after regular hospital office hours and on weekends. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, hospital administrator, has answered the criticism directed at the hospital by stating: "The only thing that can be criticized about Watkins is the lack of space." He adds that the hospital is one of only 10 student health hospitals in the U.S. that is fully accredited by the Joint Committee on Accreditation, a group composed of the major medical and hospital associations in the country. (Continued on page 8) 'Mr. Sam' Is Dead; Burial in Bonham BONHAM, Tex.—(UPI)—Mr. Sam died today. He had cancer. House Speaker Sam Rayburn was 79. He had been a member of the U.S. House of Representatives 48 years, longer than any other man. He had been speaker 16 years, more than twice as long as any other man. "Mr. Sam" was second only to the President of the United States in the power he wielded. He was an adviser of Presidents, the human symbol of his party. He was "Mr. Democrat." the Rayburn ranch; Dr. Risser; three Rayburn administrative assistants, and three nurses. HIS IMPRINT on the lawbooks of the land stretched from the age of the horse and buggy to the age of the atomic bomb and the missile. "Mr. Sam" died at 6:20 a.m., CST. He died in a ground floor room of Risser Hospital in Bonham, near the sandy northeast Texas fields and pastures he loved. He came home Oct. 31 to die among his friends and neighbors, as he had wished. Dr. Joe Risser, his physician and personal friend, gave this description of his death. "At 6:20 a.m. Mr. Sam passed away. He died quietly. His respiration stopped. His heart continued to beat for four minutes. There was no evidence of pain lines in his face. "HE SEEMED as one in sleep. The cause of death was a paralysis of the breathing muscles in the central respiratory system. The respiratory center of the brain ceased to function." It was. Dr. Risser said, "a very easy death." Funeral arrangements were not immediately arranged. President Kennedy, who was told of Rayburn's death before it was announced publicly, probably will attend the funeral. Rayburn was to be buried in the family plot in Willow Wild Cemetery, at Bonham. In the House of Representatives, he probably will be succeeded as speaker by Rep. John W. McCormack of Massachusetts. McCormack has been his understudy 10 years. With Rayburn when he died were his sisters, Mrs. S. E. Bartley of Bonham and Mrs. W. A. Thomas of Dallas; two nieces, the foreman at RISSEER SAID the Speaker had asked to be buried by his sister Lucinda (Miss Lu), who died in 1956. She was the closest of 11 brothers and sisters to him. She also died of cancer. "Mr. Sam" knew he had cancer even before diagnostic tests and a biopsy in Dallas Oct. 5 confirmed it. He was told Sept. 27. Dr. Janet Travell, the President's physician, examined Rayburn, and after conferring with Dr. Risser, who had Rayburn's complete medical file, prescribed drugs to eliminate amoebic lesions of the kidneys. He was aware in early summer, Dr. Risser disclosed, that he was seriously ill. But he refused to let himself be examined in a hospital and treated because he was determined to get as much of the Kennedy program as possible through Congress. His cancer was confirmed at Baylor. It probably was centered in his pancreas. Cancer cells had broken loose and passed through his blood stream, so that the malignancy was spread throughout his body. THIS DID NOT stop Rayburn's steady decline in weight. He came home to Bonham two weeks before Congress adjourned. Dr. Drisser sent him to Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas Oct. 2. He fought an amazing battle to live. He sank time and again to the point of death, only to rally. But each rally was weaker. There was never any hope. LAST SATURDAY. Risser said "Mr. Sam" had from hours to days to live. (Continued on page 8) Page 2 --- University Daily Kansan Thursday. Nov. 16. 1961 THE NATIONAL CITIZEN SERVICE ] --- The U.N. and Reality The U.N. General Assembly political committee adopted a resolution Tuesday outlawing the use of nuclear weapons in war. It was passed by the Asian and African states with the support of the Soviet bloc. The United States and Great Britain opposed the resolution. THIS RESOLUTION IS A REFLECTION OF the Asian and African states' fear of nuclear war and weapons testing. There is no doubt of their sincerity and concern with the nuclear weapons problem. But they are being unrealistic when they pass such resolutions as this one. And there is no better indication of it than the cynical attitude of the Soviet Union in supporting the resolution. The Kremlin just completed a series of nuclear weapons tests in the face of hostile world opinion and has repeatedly threatened to use nuclear weapons against the West and any nation supporting the West. THE UNITED STATES AND GREAT Britain frankly opposed the resolution, knowing that it was pointless in the face of international realities. Certainly it is completely impossible to enforce. The hard truth which the resolution cannot change is that both the great powers are committed to the use of nuclear weapons in any future war. The Soviet Union has repeatedly emphasized this and the NATO Allies have long relied on nuclear weapons to provide an effective deterrent to Soviet expansion. Only the great powers can decide whether or not nuclear weapons will be banned, because there is no way to force them to abandon their policy of reliance on nuclear weapons. PERHAPS ONE OF THE reasons the resolution was backed by the Asian and African states was a hope that it would help persuade the United States and the Soviet Union to abandon their reliance on nuclear weapons. If this was the case, it shows an unfortunate misunderstanding of the effect world opinion can have when it is not backed by the strength of a committed world power. The underlying problem behind the nuclear arms race and the Cold War is the basic goal of Soviet foreign policy: expansion. The actions of the West are a reaction to that policy. They represent a desire to prevent Soviet expansion and contain the imperialistic drive of the communist bloc. The West's nuclear retaliation policy is part of the effort to contain communist imperialism. This policy obviously will not change while the Soviet Union and its Red Chinese ally continue with their aggressive policies and development of nuclear weapons. SOME NATIONS HAVE EXPRESSED THE opinion that the West's resumption of nuclear testing shows it is just as bad as the Soviet Union in regard to the Cold War and the nuclear arms race. They ought to remember that it was the Soviet Union that broke the nuclear test moratorium, unnecessarily tested massive terror bombs and ignored outraged world opinion. The length of the Soviet test series—over 30 tests were conducted—indicates that the Kremlin spent much time planning the tests. This shows the Soviet Union never meant to keep the nuclear test moratorium and that it has no respect for the world opinion that the U.N. resolution symbolizes. When subjected to the cold light of reality, it is obvious that the U.N. resolution outlawing the use of nuclear weapons in war will be recorded as another futile effort to oppose the harshness of international power politics with man's desire for peace and security. —William H. Mullins 'Dark of the Moon' Applauded By Richard Currie The Theater Corner Several trends which are applicable to modern society are stated and dramatically developed in Howard Richardson and William Barney's "Dark of the Moon," running at the Experimental Theatre this week. The play runs through Monday with performances nightly. Based on the folk tale "Barbara Allen." "Dark of the Moon" is set in the mountains of West Virginia and the conformity, fanaticism and superstition typical of the people who live there dominates the play. Barbara Allen is in her late twenties, a fully developed woman without a husband. Her family, friends and the preacher press her to marry. She stoutly refuses. JOHN, A WITCH-BOY who lives on Bald Mountain, meets her and falls desperately in love with her. He appeals to a conjurer- woman, also a witch but one who has more magical power than John, to change him into a human being so he can marry Barbara. She grants his request provided Barbara is true to him for one year. John and Barbara marry, have a child who dies because it is a witch. Barbara is beseed by her mother to give John up and repent her sin. This she does at a revival meeting, just before the one year agreement is up. Barbara dies in John's arms at midnight when John reassumes the form of a witch. The pressure John and Barbara are subjected to reminds one of the pressure certain political groups apply to the individual. But relation to politics is a facile interpretation of the play. Accurate as it is, "Dark of the Moon" probes deeper, exploring the right of individuals to decide for themselves what they will do. THE QUESTION IS: may Barbara and John, coming from classes which hate each other for obvious reasons, marry and live lives of their own. They are given a chance, almost through expedition on the part of both the classes they are members of, but their marriage ends abruptly when the child they have dies upon its birth as a witch. The forces of conformity win out when Barbara and John are persuaded to realize the error of their thinking and return o their respective flocks. The authors' conclusion that individuals cannot exist through decisions of their own is rather unnerving. Especially the religious fanaticism of a revival meeting which convinces Barbara she is wrong. The tragedy of it is—and "Dark of the Moon" is a tragedy—that people today are essentially in the same position as Barbara and John were 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. 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 Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Toni 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. CASTING ASIDE the obvious similarity to the totalitarian states the play has. "Dark of the Moon" points to the elements in modern society which clamor for adherence to a particular set of beliefs and customs. The demands of America's high middle class and the dogmas of the social structure stifle the individual and his aspirations much as the taboos of the mountain society smother Barbara and John. The development of this theme is done effectively. The cast does a good job, combining mastery of the mountain people's dialect and their superstitious emotions with obvious skill. Short Ones If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him. - Voltaire History is little else than a picture of human crimes and misfortunes.—Voltaire Election Results PRATERNITIES (1089 votes cast, first five elected) Lee Ayres (UP) ... 217 Dean Salter (Vox) ... 196 Robert Cash (Vox) ... 171 Jerry Dickson (Vox) ... 170 David Gough (UP) ... 158 David Knudson (Vox)* ... 149 SORORITIES (539 votes cast, first three listed were elected) Jo Snyder (Vox) ... 163 Trudy Meserve (Vox) ... 146 Martha Smith (UP) ... 114 Nancy DeFever (UP)* ... 109 Rebecca Shier (Vox)* ... 63 MEN'S LARGE DORMITORIES (464 votes cast, first two elected, third representative to be decided after Thanksgiving) Hollace Cross (UP) ... 177 William (Joby) Jobson (UP) ... 148 Jeffrey Hubrig (Vox) ... 51 William Brier (Vox) ... 49 Gary Grazda (Vox) ... 26 Kenny Kahmann (UP) ... 25 WOMEN'S LARGE DORMITORIES (203 votes cast, both candidates elected) Patricia Wilson (UP) ... 109 Karen Cowell (Vox) ... 92 MEN'S SMALL DORMITORIES (188 votes cast, first one elected) George Hahn (Vox) ... 105 Carl Logan (UP)* ... 81 WOMEN'S SMALL DORMITORIES (166 votes cast, first one elected) Nancy Ray (UP) ... 116 Carolyn Kranzler (Vox)* ... 52 FRESHMAN WOMEN'S DORMITORIES (358 votes cast, first two elected) Holly Thomson (Vox) ... 119 Elizabeth Stoddard (UP) ... 118 Judy Smith (Vox)* ... 116 PROFESSIONAL FRATERNTIES AND CO-OPS (7 votes cast, one representative with speaking privileges only) Jan Flora (Write-in) ... 3 Other write-ins ... 3 UNMARRIED-UNORGANIZED (179 votes cast, first one elected) Michael Miner (UP) ... 83 Charles Allphin (Vox)* ... 76 Charles Menghini (write-in)* ... 29 MARRIED (17 votes cast, first one elected, speaking privileges only) Douglas Reed (Vox) ... 16 Byron Stout (write-in) ... 1 *—means candidate was defeated, and will not be a member of the ASC Ballots voided or blank—230 or 6.2% of total votes Freshman Totals PRESIDENT Robert Stewart ... 485 Rodney Kuehn ... 469 Henry (Jack) Zinn ... 235 Six write-ins ... 6 1223 VICE PRESIDENT Sal Allessandro ... 428 James Caven ... 342 Fred Slicker ... 231 Michael Fisher ... 169 1223 SECRETARY Marilyn Huff ... 561 Mary Ann McConahey ... 329 Arthur Spears ... 274 Write-ins ... 7 1222 TREASURER Jon Alexiou ... 460 Betty Ann Bennett ... 384 Carolyn (Kelly) Anderson ... 322 Write-ins ... 7 The total figure for each office included voided or blank ballots. GE MU Jou 189 cont REI 198 $1 STEN LEwo SAV1 STID 123 APLES HObe MEOV1 GIbe deHa$3 198 chr 198 nev NE$ sedn 012 196 cund旦est PPpe Noiv WHggr VIiv 5 bo gaq agde1 OLicyD36 GNN trsp ATaIy73 VOCa Tue Mlu Jol 18 col cat Rtl 195 $1 st ne 19 le wo S vi 20 dit 21 a les Kbc Me Ce Sov 19 Gc do et 34 19 ch Nm $2 dmne 011 19 siu an dt et Ppe po No lv Wn gp Vi lv 5 bo ga qde Ol cly 36 Gl nr Sr A lat 73 Vo Ca Tw be Page 3 Thursday, Nov. 16, 1961 University Daily Kansan Long Count Poops UP Victory Party By Marty Moser What was supposed to be a merry party of jubilant UP members turned out last night to be four students munching hamburgers. UP was having this party to celebrate its 9-8 victory over Vox. The group discussion centered around the election. At 11:15 p.m. in a local restaurant, they still did not know all the election results. "I hate to see counting drag on like this," one commented. "Yeah," another agreed. "I'll bet Kenny Kahmann (Springfield, Mo., junior) does, too." (Kahmann's seat on the ASC was being contested by Vox Populi.) "I mean if you know you've lost, you've lost and that it's. But when you don't know . . ." he grimaced. "Where's Anderson?" one of them wanted to know. He was referring to Jim Anderson, Lawrence senior and co-chairman of the UP. "He's still down counting election returns." Tom Hardy, Hoisington junior and co-chairman of UP said. Anderson did come, though, a short time later. He scooted into the booth. Then, raising himself part way, ordered a hamburger from across the room in sign language. "I've been down in that counting room since 5 o'clock," he said. "Joby (Joby Jobson, Prairie Village junior) called for a recount on large men's dormitories." "Why?" Hardy asked "Oh, it's legal. You can contest any vote." He pulled out a clipboard and flipped through it for election totals. Michael Miner, Lawrence freshman, winning candidate from the unmarried-unorganized district, and Gene Gaines, Joplin, Mo, junior, present ASC council member, congratulated Anderson and Hardy. They sat down with the group. Other UP members began to drift in the restaurant and it looked as if the party might grow livier. Conversation sprouted from all corners of the booth. Anderson received his hamburger and gestured with it as he read off election totals. "Well, we got nine ASC seats to their eight and,we might get ten." "How did we come out overall?" someone asked. "We should have cleaned them on the big dorms. They probably took us on the fraternities. "Oh yes five to two." Another group in the booth were discussing; "I think we ought to count the ballots all over again." "They are over Thanksgiving vacation." Another couple said; "I Joseph R. Pearson had about 40 per cent voting. That's good for that place." "Over-all, voting has been a lot better than last spring." "We really have to start working for this spring election." One box in the booth said: "I think the election bill ought to be changed." He looked up. No one was listening. It was 11:45 and the party broke up soon afterward. Sweet Birds BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. TV - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service Open Letter to K.U. Students... The boss has gone to California to see the Jayhawks win that game Saturday. He needs expense money, so come on down and fill your gas tank. Thanks! FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE More than 250 pieces of surplus wooden furniture — some of it dating back to pre-World War II days—will be sold by the University today for only a fraction of its original value. University Furniture Sale Today China Film Tonight The Young Americans for Freedom will sponsor the anti-Communist film "Red China—Outlaw" at 7:30 tonight in Fraser Theater. The film is produced by the Committee of One Million Against the Admission of Red China to the United Nations. The public is invited. Hughes to Speak Dudley J. Hughes will be guest speaker at the geology department and state geological survey meeting today at 3:45 p.m. in Lindley Hall, Mr. Hughes, lecturer for the American Association of Petroleum Geologists, will speak on "Faulting Associated with Deep-seated Salt Domes in the Northeast Portion of the Mississippi Salt Basin." Included in the sale will be about 25 desks priced from $5 to $7 apiece, 200 desk chairs at $2, 20 bookshelves and cabinets and 15 wooden tables. The sale will be held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at a University Quonset Hut storage area located at 837 Pennsylvania St. All sales are cash and are final. Purchases must be removed from the site tomorrow by the buyers. Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 go gal, go! Casually of course ... In the soft, flexible, stylish comfort of the COUNTRY SQUARE! Something about a pair that makes you interesting to look at ... and fun to know! oldmaine trotters AAAA to B to 10 Natural waxhide $10.95 Black leather $9.95 Royal College Shop oldmaine trotters Quality Watch Repairing DANIELS JEWELRY 914 Mass, Ph. VI 3-2572 Kansan Classifieds Get Results COMPLETE SHOE REPAIR SERVICE DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DAY CLEANING AT ITS FIRST COMPLETE SHOE REPAIR SERVICE DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FINEST 23rd St. & Naismith Dr. Get with it, man! You belong in traditional Post-Grad Slacks PARKER Smoothest pair of slacks that ever hit a campus! Trim, tapered Post-Grads have the authentic natural look other slacks try to imitate! Belt loops and cuffs are standard equipment. Pleatless? Of course! Pick out a few pair today-at stores that are "with it". Only $4.95 to $9.95 in blends of Orlon® and other washable fabrics. h. i.s SPORTSWEAR Don't envy H·I·S...wear them Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 16. 1961 Presidents Called Him 'Mr. Speaker' Rayburn 'Just Sam' at Home By William Johnston BONHAM, Tex. — (UPI) — In his hometown of Bonham, Mr. Rayburn, was addressed as "Sam" or "Mr. Sam". That was the way he wanted it. When he came home from Washington, he was just one of the homefolks. Mr. Rayburn was the eighth in a family of 11 children. He was born Jan. 6, 1882, on a farm near Kingston, Tenn. His father, William Marion Rayburn, was a veteran of the Confederate Army. WHEN MR. RAYBURN WAS five, his parents moved to Texas. They settled on 40 acres near Bonham and planted a cotton crop. The farm was not one of the most productive in the area, and the Rayburns did not make enough money to send all their children to college. But Sam was determined to go, and his father sent him off to East Texas Normal College with $25 and his blessings. Mr. Rayburn worked his wav through school by sweeping floors for $3 a month. During his stay at Baylor Medical Center in Dallas, Mr. Rayburn reminisced with Chaplain B.F. Bennett about his boyhood. HE TOLD CHAPLAIN BENNETT about his hard life on the farm and how he had worked his way up to become the second most powerful man in Washington. His power was exceeded only by that of the President, and Mr. Rayburn liked to say he served "with" Presidents, not "under" them. He had served "with" eight Presidents. The eighth, John F. Kennedy, showed the regard in which he held "Mr. Sam" by flying a 3,100-mile round trip to visit him 15 minutes when he was at Baylor. Rayburn worked his way from college to the Texas legislature, to Speaker of the Texas legislature, to Congress and to Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives. He set his sights on Congress and the Speakership when he was 10 years old and in his last years, having achieved it, said he wanted nothing more. HE WAS ELECTED TO THE House from the Fourth Texas District in 1912, when he was 30. He became Speaker of the House Sept. 15, 1940. 365 Excuses 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Christening Day of King Leo Santa Claus CHRISTMAS IS COMING Order Your Personalized Christmas Cards From Us Now. THE when Speaker William B. B. bankhead of Alabama died. His Democratic colleagues reelected him Speaker every time since then when they were in control of the House. That was nine times. As Speaker, he made $45,000 a year and rode in a $11,000 air-conditioned limousine driven by a chauffeur. BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Despite his conservative background, he followed a liberal line at the sides of Presidents Roosevelt. Truman and Kennedy. He helped Roosevelt with his "New Deal" legislation, Truman with his "Fair Deal" and Kennedy with his "New Frontier." IF MR. RAYBURN DID NOT like a proposed piece of legislation, it had little or no chance of passing. He did not hesitate to tell presidents about his likes and dislikes and they called him "Mr. Speaker." If he wanted legislation passed, he pleaded, cajoled or threatened until he usually got a majority. In Washington, he lived for more than 30 years in the same one-bedroom bachelor apartment. When Congress was adjourned or in recess, he usually returned to Bonham. In reaction to his death, many of Mr. Rayburn's congressional colleagues, both Republicans and Democrats, referred to him as a man "who placed the well-being of the country ahead of partisan politics." Going on a Picnic? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 "I know that the sorrow in Democratic hearts will be shared by those Republicans in the Congress who admired him as a man and respected him as an opponent," said Democratic National Chairman John Bailey. Mr. Bailey noted that Speaker Rayburn served as "a moving force in the administration of four Democratic Presidents" and said Democrats particularly "are heartstick with grief over the passing of the man all of us affectionately regarded as "Mr. Democrat." "... RAYBURN WAS A Democrat who always placed his beloved country ahead of partisanship." Mr. Bailey said. "His death is a grievous loss for his country and the free people of the world." Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen, Ill., said Mr. Rayburn "was impeccably fair and his respect for the rights of the minority party was a household word." Current Events Forum Friday The Current Events Forum will be held at 4 p.m. Friday in the Browsing Room of the Student Union. "Iran: How Much U.S. Intervention" will be the topic discussed. Speakers are E. A. Bayne of the American Universities Field Staff and Dean Burton Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism. GUY'S GUY'S POTATO CHIPS GUY'S POTATO CHIPS Be Wise — Buy Guy's Records! Records! Records! Stereo LPs 45s Up to 75% Discount Just Received New Shipment ALL POPULAR LABELS VINCENT'S Discount Record Center 904 Mass. VI 3-2011 SELF-SELECTION Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 1302 W. 23rd St. (23rd & Naismith) WOMEN'S BAL TIE Brass Eyelets — Black Crepe Sole. Ebony Black. Sizes 4½ to 10 $387 Harvey's Discount Price OPEN 9 to 9 Daily Noon to 5 Sundays Kansan Want Ads Get Results Well, we didn't exactly get rid of the "KLINK"-but we did change it to a "SPRONG." CLYDE'S GAS OIL GREASE MILK B?O Forget the KLINKS - and the SPRONGS. We give your car only one sound...a soft purr... UNIVERSITY FORD SALES 714 Vermont VI 3-3500 UNIVERSITY FORD SALES U Th Art play las Nov Th illus ings lusti now the Dav ficia War Wor so the who Brose seum othe so-o Amo Dor in Hon P at Bea mat chil Union Commercial Display The Allstate Insurance Company Art Collection is currently on display in the south lounge of the Kansas Union. The exhibit will close Nov.18. The display represents commercial illustration. It is made up of paintings which have been created to illustrate a story, article or poem. The paintings originally appeared in Allstate's digest-size magazine Home & Highway. Some of the artists represented in the collection include Adolph Dehn, whose paintings also hang in the Brooklyn Museum, Minneapolis Museum, Honolulu Museum and many others; Doris Lee, one of the first so-called "primitives artists" in America; Arnold Blanch, husband of Dorie Lee. Joseph Hirsch, who painted the now-famous theatrical poster for the play "Death of a Salesman"; David Stone Martin, who created official pictorial records during World War II; Fletcher Martin, another World War II artist correspondent. Paul Sample, an artist in residence at Dartmouth College; Lawrence Beall Smith, who takes as subject matter for his work anything from children playing, to men at war. Arthur Shilstone, whose illustrations have also appeared in Sports Illustrated, Life, Outdoor Life and Colliers; Calvin D. Dunn, winner of awards for motion picture and cartoon work, and Ezra Jack Keats, who has lately illustrated children's books and textbooks. Kelloqq Display Next A water color display by Joseph M. Kellogg, professor emeritus of architecture and former head of the KU architecture department, will be on display in the south lounge of the Kansas Union, Nov. 18-26. Most of the paintings will be seascapes off the California and Maine coasts, representing Prof. Kellogg's work from 1933-1959. A price list of pictures for sale will be available at the Information Desk in the Kansas Union. The exhibit is being sponsored by Scarab, a professional architecture fraternity. Meet a Paris favorite: the vamp. Straight out of the 1930's, she's dressed in black up to her knees, down to her brows. She hems her rocks with fur and hides her chin in a high collar. Page 8 Der Duetsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 16. November, um fuernf in Fraser. Doktor Klaus Berger, spitich nibe, Lucas Cranch, Maler der Reformation. Official Bulletin BOWLING is FUN! TODAY Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. BOWLING American Society of Tool and Manufacturing Engineers, 7 p.m., 300 Fowler. Mr. Elmer J. Vanderploeg, Engineer and Vice President of Yoder Company, Cleveland. "Principles and Application of Roll Forming." All engineers are invited. Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa Westminster Center; Choir, 5:45 p.m. Westminster Hall, 1204 Oread. Supper following at 6:45 32 AUTOMATIC LANES Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. United Presbyterian Men: 7 p.m., West- minster Center, 1204 Oread Episcopal Holy Communion and Breakfast: 7 a.m. Canterbury House. Chemistry Department Special Collo- cation purification pumps Hidetake Kakihama Prof. of Nuclear Chemistry, Tokyo Institute of Tech- ech on Iron Ton Exchange Separation of Iotones Episcopic Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Thursday, Nov. 16, 1961 Jet Fuel NEW YORK — (UPI)—Consumption of jet engine fuel surpassed that of regular aviation gas back in 1955, according to industry sources. It said consumption of jet fuel is expected to reach the impressive total of one million barrels a day by next year. University Daily Kansan Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Page - Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Van Cliburn's LATEST "MY FAVORITE CHOPIN" | | | | | | | | | | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| on RCA Victor Records VI 3-2644 BELL MUSIC CO. Trading Stamps Popular NEW YORK — (UPI)—Trading stamps will continue to increase their influence in U.S. purchasing according to Printers' Ink magazine. The advertising weekly said sales of stamps to retailers should reach $750 million this year and could top $1 billion by 1965. 925 Mass. St. LORETTA MARCOUX Alpha Phi Take a Pastel Wool Suit Home for the Holidays COACH HOUSE Chicken Fet Towels and Guesting K.C. Lawrence K.C. Blue Ridge KU Campus Plaza KANSAS 34 PLAYER OF THE WEEK Curtis McClinton For being the leading ground gainer in the KU-K-State game. Why not try the tops in cleaning and refinishing by the one that leads them all. . . . 1-HOUR 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING'SERVICE Acme Acme LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Downtown 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Nov. 16. 1961 Rocky to See KU-MU Fray Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller will be on the University of Kansas campus Nov. 25 for a luncheon and the Missouri-KU football game. Howard Workman, state Republican executive secretary, said yesterday in a telephone interview that Gov. Rockefeller will definitely come to KU. Rockefeller, New York governor and a prospective GOP presidential nominee in 1964, is coming to Kansas for a fund-raising dinner in Topeka that night. Rockefeller will be Kansas Gov John Anderson's guest here. Anderson, Rockefeller, and other officials will attend a luncheon in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union at 11:45 before the game. KU Young Republican's president, Jerry Dickson, Newton junior, said he and the club's executive council will make plans for Rockefeller's attendance at the KU-MU game before school is dismissed for Thanksgiving vacation. Dickson said there would probably be a poster, 150-200 feet long, made for the stadium. He also said that there may be a demonstration at the game. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT NOW! At 7:00 & 9:15 PAUL NEWMAN ROBERT ROSSEN'S THE HUSTLER ILLUSTRATED BY JACKIE GLEASON CINEMASCOPE COMING SUNDAY! A motion picture that brings new vitality to the screen! COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS SIDNEY POITIER a raisin in the sun THE CATALINA PRIZE PLAY IS A NEW MOTION PICTURE CLAUDIA McNEIL - RUBY DUE Secretary by LORIANA HANDEGGER but play-Produced DANIEL SUSKIN and PRIKE BOSS - Produced by DANIEL SUSKIN VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VKKING 31065 According to Dickson, Rockefeller will meet spectators at the grid battle during halftime. "I welcome any ideas from Young Republicans and other students for welcoming Rockefeller," Dickson said. He may be contacted at VI 3-7370. Vanderploeq to Speak Army ROTC Staff For 1961-62 Named Elmer J. Vanderploeg will speak at a meeting of the American Society of Tool and Manufacturing Engineers today at 7 p.m. in the Fowler Shops. Mr. Vanderploeg, engineer and vice president of a Cleveland, Ohio firm, will speak on "Principles and Applications of Roll Forming." Cadet Col. Robert B. McAnany, Brentwood, Mo., senior, has announced the organization of the 1961-62 Army ROTC Corps of Cadets. McAnny's aides are Cadet Lt. Col, Loyd M. Willson, Dallas, Tex. senior, deputy battle group commander, and Cadet Maj. James W. Straight, Bartlesville, Okla., senior, battle group executive officer. Members of the battle group staff are Cadet Captains John R. Benz, Bartlesville, Okla., junior; Herbert R. Rosen, Lawrence senior; Con J. Poirier, Topea senior; and Ronald L. Leslie, Goodland senior. The five cadet company heads are Roy J. Deem, Joplin, Mo., senior; Michael M. Thomas, Kirkwood, Mo., senior; Robert L. Aufdemberge, Leavenworth senior; and Hugh B. Smith, Lawrence junior. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Photography by Studio de Portra 912 Mass. — Lawrence, Kan. VI 2-2300 Sororities & Fraternities Contact us for your House Photography - Portraits - Application - Creative Color or Black & White TONITE & FRIDAY! At 7:00 & 9:15 Frank Sinatra --- Spencer Tracy "THE DEVIL AT 4 O'CLOCK" Metro Goldwyn Mayer Carroll Baker Bridge to the Sun Metro Goldwyn Mayer Carroll Baker Bridge to the Sun The story that had to be told! No wonder it was read by millions as a best-seller and Reader's Digest special feature. She gave up her way of life for his—an American girl defying danger in war-ravaged Tokyo ... knowing a love so great that made it all worthwhile. Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents Carroll Baker Bridge to the Sun JAMES SHIGETA JAMES FAIR LEM FLORENCE HIRSCH NOBRI ELIZABETH HERMAINY based on the autobiographical novel by GENE TURANNA screen play by CHARLES NAPHRAN produced by JACQUEL RAR directed by FERNIE PERERS JOZIE FRANG PRODUCTION GRANADA THEATRE TEKSTROM WIKING 3-5781 STARTS SATURDAY! GRANADA CENTRE ... telephone VKJMG 3-5783 Before You Leave for Home, Stop By and Gas Up At HARRELL'S TEXACO 9th & Miss. One hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING STILL TIME (Before the Weekend) at 1407 Mass. It's Fast - It's Safe - It's Thrifty ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING "Fresh as a Flower in Just 1-Hour" Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Dress up for THANKSGIVING SUPERBAS FREEMAN $10.95 to $19.95 Black Cordovan Midnight Brown Dark Olive y pair You'll f Here's an easy way to greater holiday enjoyment! Treat yourself to a handsome pair of shoes by Freeman. You'll feel your very best when you're dressed right for occasion . . . comfortably right! Royal College Shop Thursday. Nov. 16. 1961 University Daily Kansan 7 $ \mathrm{U p} $ Page CLASSIFIED ADS CO 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. end) FOR SALE MUST SELL - New Guild Folk-Western Johnson, V 3-4811 11-28 Johnson, V 3-4811 1946 PLYMOUTH SEPCIAL DeLuxe coupe, clean. good running condition. 11-20 RELAXACISOR, like new, keep slim and trim when you study. $5. Call VI 31-12-20 1950 PLYMOUTH, runs good, looks good. $125. Call VI 3-7268. 11-28 STEVEN5 22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like new, Call VI 3-2906 after 6 p.m. tt LEFT HAND GOLF CLUBS. 6 irons, 2 wlocks, bag $45, extra 7 iron $300. Alto Sax mouthpiece. Otto-Link $15. Call VI 2-2284. 11-16 STRING BASS - EPIPHONE — Good condition. $75. Contact David Christian at 1222 Mississippi afternoons and evenings. 11-20 ARTLEY FLUTE, excellent condition less than a year old - call VI 3-811-16- HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or beading. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, tt 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. Happy cross index for quick reference. $3.80. free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI 3-7778. tf 19:35 JAGUAR - Excellent condition, wheel drive extra extras. VIA 0-5081 11-17 NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up, Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Telephone and e-mail of reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th, Phone VI 3-0151 today. 1950 VOLVO, red with brand new white sidewall tires (27 month guarantee); custom made red carpets, radio, heater, and many accessories; in excellent condition; must sell by next week to highest bidder. VI 2-3364. 11-17 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. 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. 5 1000KCASE SHELVES, 6" with risers; bookcase, 5' x 5', with glass doors; gadget, 7" x 8", with glass doors; Rubbed cottonwood log with gliders; 12 gauge shotgun, single shot aquarium and supplies; 300# metal image. See at 1016 Hilltop Drive after 1 9am. OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, service, rental. Enceance Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-36 44. GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New & used guns, and ammo. Liberal trade-ins. Special this week. Springfield. See at 1304 Tenn. VI 3-7001. 11-16 ATTENTION LAW STUDENTS: Practical law library for sale. Priced at $3.00 to $7.00 per volume. Pierce Van Lines, 93 N.H. VI 3-8868. 11-17 WANTED YOUNG MAN TO SHARE 5 room apt Call Bill Goetze, VI 2-3528 evenings. TWO MALE STUDENTS to share three bedroom house. VI 2-2301 after 5 p.m. HELP WANTED NEED REGISTERED NURSE for after noon shift at Samaritan Lodge—also nee aide for summer shift. Call VI 3-8396. A SAXOPHONE PLAYER: Alto or tenor. Must be able to play any type music by ear. Work 3 regular nights a week. Phone VI 2-3780. 11-17 LOST SECRETARY WANTED: Apply in person. Plaza Club, 2222 Iowa. 11-28 10 x 50 BINOCULARS at game Friday. ward, Rm. $31 JRP 11-29 ward, Rm. $31 JRP Lost — Black collapsible umbrella in either Fraser Hall, Student Union, or Faculty Club. Reward. Dr. Pucci, ext. 410, 202 Fraser Hall. 11-20 LLIGATOR RAINCOAT.taken by mistake from Happy Hal's restaurant last sat. evening. Please contact B. K. Manly. IV 3-7415. Reward. 11-16 FOR RENT WEST EDGE CAMPUS. 2 bedrooms, living room, carpet, drapes, fireplace, exciting view., electric, garage, disposal, garage, storage. CALL WI.3-3887 after 7. 11-20 Vacancy available for 2 men in com- munity center, Chelseal Rd G.Ct 3-9655 for appointment; LARGE FURNISHED apartment, e a s t s i t e, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. FURNISHED APARTMENT - Clean, 3 rooms, with private bath, fireplace, alcove, laundry room. KU. Prefer married couple no children. By appointment only - VI 3-8129. 11-16 SHARE APARTMENT with other boys, and 1 vacancy for a girl. 1 block from Union, cooking privileges. Call VI 3- 6723. 11-17 TYPING MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S.". At now at two 41012500 1020 - 1021 w. Lawrence Ave. &, 1021 Mass. Typing: Will type reports, thesis etc. Call: Will report on thesis of seli 1511 W. 21 St. Cali VI 3-6440. tlf e-mail: willreport@ucs.edu EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattil, VI 3-8375 Experiented typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI 2i-78. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, articles, and other neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress-ment for reporters." For exceeding typing at standard rates, call MRS Pope, PBI 3-1907. tl Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter Interested in the 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 Services. 5917 B Woods Mission. H 2-7718 Eves or Sat RA 2-2186 EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Loo- Gehbach. TYPING IN MY HOME. Fast service. reasonable rates. Call VI 3-7602. 11-17 Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf 1912 West 25th St. TYPING: Experiented typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. M. Edlowney. Ph. VI 3-8688. - off street parking - ● garbage disposal - carpeted - central air conditioning HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. Eng. who spoke about these reports & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. **tf** - laundry facilities 1/2 block - play area for children FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing dissertations. Ratees. dessertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- merial Call. Ola Smith 3291's Mass. Call I1 3-2563. Save Money FRANK ALEXANDER Income Insurance EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558 1031 Miss. tf Phone VI 2-3416 office G. 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WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete shop in mid- south Phone VI 3-2921 Muddy self-service — open weeks 8 to 6:30 p 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 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plonic, party supplier. 6th and 8th. Vermont. Phone VI 3-2750 9350 ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- sation of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. Typewriters Olympia Portables sales-service rentals Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 3 IN 1...ONE SNO-BO and so light... so soft and cu Glov-Et by Dodson THREE-IN-ONE SNO-BOO WITH SNAPS For campu after sk all-a STYLE 1 STYLE 2 STYLE 3 Cozy 1 pile Dy- cr STYLE 2 STYLE 3 Glov-Ett by Dodson THREE-IN-ONE SNO-BOOTS WITH ANKS Glov-Ett by Dodson Cozy 100% deep pile lining, soft Dynel fur collar, cushion crepe sole 11.99 REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass 815 Mass. People-to-People Forum No.2 "WHAT IS THE MEGATON?" Various aspects of the megaton nuclear bomb explosion by the Russians will be discussed by the following panel: BILLKIANG-a student from Hong Kong DR. J. A. WEIR - of the Zoology Dept. will speak about the genetic aspects of the explosion DR. ROY D. LAIRD - of the Political Science Dept. will speak about the political aspects REV. PAUL DAVIS - of the Congregational Church will will discuss the radiation aspect of the bomb REV. PAUL DAVIS - of the Congregatinal Church will discuss the ethical aspects NOVEMBER 19 - 7 P.M. Forum Room - Student Union Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Nov. 16, 1961 Watkins Hospital Lacks Space (Continued from page 1) "WE HAVE a staff second to none and all are devoted to providing the best possible medical service to the student," he says. The ASC student health committee has been charged with conducting the investigation and delivering a report to the ASC at the first meeting following the Thanksgiving holiday. The committee, under the chairmanship of Lauren Ward, Ottawa junior, has only begun its inquiry into hospital services and facilities. WARD, who says the committee has limited qualifications for conducting the inquiry, has said the committee's findings will not be released until they have been presented formally to the ASC. AT THAT TIME, the committee recommended additional hospital space, but gave priority to expansion programs for the School of Engineering and Watson Library. Whatever the report includes, it will probably recognize that a considerable part of Watkins Hospital's difficulties lie in a critical space shortage. The space problem was recognized by another ASC committee which investigated University physical plant facilities in the spring of 1959. In 1960, the Kansas State Board of Health, Division of Hospital Facilities, made an inspection of Watkins Hospital. It issued a report which said hospital expansion was "indicated" as early as 1947 and added "the need is now critical." The state report, filled with two pages of statistics, diagrams a fundamental point: A BUILDING constructed in 1921 which could adequately provide health services for a student enrollment of 4,500, is entirely inadequate for a student population of 10,000. "The present Watkins Memoria Hospital has become obsolete from time and from expanding services brought about by a rapidly expanding student body," the report said in a summary. For the past several years, KU's student enrollment has climbed an average of 600 students a year. According to popularly accepted estimates, the student body will grow to 16,000 by 1975. The daily average number of outpatients treated in the years prior to 1944 was 75. In 1959-60 the hospital logged in a total of 46,650 outpatient calls for an average of more than 177 per day. WHAT THAT will mean in terms of service that can be expected from a student health facility operating in the present unexpanded building is indicated in the following figures. OF THE 8,771 students listed on the campus enrollment for the 1959-60 school year, a total of 6,493 sought some sort of outpatient treatment. Use of the various aspects of the student health service over the years by individual students ranges from 75 to 85 per cent of the student body, with the average number of clinic calls per student running between 6 and 8. Because of the availability of better drugs and an apparent willingness of the students to use the health service promptly, a steady increase has been noted in the number of outpatients. built on the edge of Bonham, a north Texas town of 10,000 population 90 miles northeast of Dallas. "There is a surprising correlation between the space allowed for various departments and the workability and degree of care in a hospital. Hospitals deficient in too many areas are dangerous and unsuitable for patient care." But elaborate respiratory equipment was necessary, and he was taken to Risser Hospital. a house converted into a 15-bed hospital by his doctor. ON THE QUESTION of hospital space, the State Board of Health report said: A team of specialists did all they could for the man known to millions of Americans as "Mr. Democrat." But the cancer was inoperable, and the final result of the widespread malignancy was never in doubt. He became so weak Tuesday that Risser called in Rayburn's family. The relatives were with him to the end. Sir Knight FORMAL WEAR 1342 Ohio SPECIAL 3 Days Only Thurs., Fri., Sat. NEW BLACK TUX and Accessories. Shirt Jewelry Tie Handkerchief Cummerbund & Suspenders All for 5995 (Continued from page 1) Rayburn's grave will be a family plot about a half-mile west of the town's white marble Sam Rayburn Library. The second of this three-part series will appear in the Kansas tomorrow. Mr. Sam' Is Dead- TO COMPLICATE MATTERS. Rayburn caught pneumonia and lapsed into a coma. A near-miraculous recovery allowed physicians to treat him with experimental drugs. They also administered radiation treatments with a six-million volt x-ray machine. When Rayburn came home to Bonham for the last time Oct. 31, one of his sisters quoted him as saying he wanted to end his days among "those friends and neighbors who for so long have given me a love and loyalty unsurpassed in any annals." JOE DENTON SR., owner of the Wise Funeral Home in Bonham and a life-long friend of Rayburn, took the Speaker's body from the hospital shortly after the family left. Rayburn wanted to die in the two-story, white colonial home he had THE CATACOMBS (cellar of the Pizza Hut) is featuring H Friday 9-12:30 -- The Accents Saturday 9-12:30 - The Hi-Phi's Catacombs Open: 4-11 Monday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday NOW PIZZA HUT FAST DELIVERY!! Featuring the FINEST PIZZA in the Midwest Open 4-11 Monday-Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday VI 3-9760 646 Mass. PIZZA HUT ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 IT'S A-BOOT TIME! Let it rain! Let it snow! Joyce keeps you insulated against all sorts of unfair weather! Just snuggle your stocking foot into the warm shearling lining of this jaunty Joyce boot. Water-repellent leather. Sure-footed ribbed crepe sole, too! Joyce gives you everything! Black Calf 12.95 HALF TIME joyce ...a way of life! Narrow & Medium Widths CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED 2. China-U.N. Issue Dead, Expert Says By Jerry Musil A speaker following an anti-Communist film said last night Red China's admission to the United Nations is a dead issue. He said it was a dead issue because Red China will eventually be admitted to the United Nations. Klaus Pringsheim, instructor of political science and a China expert, discussed and answered questions about the film, "Red China-Outlaw." THE FILM IS PRODUCED by the Committee of One Million, a group working for the continued withholding of U.N. membership from Red China. It was sponsored by the KU chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom. Mr. Pringsheim spent more than 10 years in the Orient including two years at the University of Hong Kong. He said the Chinese Communists will not sit on the U.N. General Assembly with the government of Chiang Kai-shek. Crisis Day Idea Grows Steadily Contact with campus student organizations and several nationally prominent speakers highlighted the discussion of an ad hoc committee yesterday for a special "World Crisis Day." Chester Bowles, Harland Cleavland, Jerome Frank, Norman Thomas, and Arthur Schlesinger were named as possible keynote speakers for the event. RAYMOND O'CONNOR, ASSISTant professor of history and one of the organizers of the group is in Washington this weekend and will contact several of the possible speakers. Lewis Wheelock, lecturer of history, commented that Prof. O'Connor said he can definitely get a prominent speaker to come to KU for this program without any cost. All religious groups, and other campus student organizations will be contacted this weekend for support of the idea of a "World Crisis Day," it was decided at yesterday's meeting. A resolution supporting the idea is being written today and will be presented to the student organizations for their approval. KLAUS PRINGSHEIM, instructor of political science, said that the approved resolutions will be presented (Continued on page 3) "THEY WILL CONTINUE pressure to gain the two-thirds majority necessary for admission I believe if they were admitted the Nationalists would walk out. What would we do? Do we recognize Red China or continue to recognize Chiang Kai-shek and walk out?" he asked. Questioned if the admission of Red China would serve a good purpose, Mr. Pringsheim said many Southeast Asian and African countries believe it would serve some purpose. They ask the United States how she expects to control the Chinese Communists if not through the United Nations, he added. "The Afro-Asian Bloc is pressuring for Red China's admission. They feel the United Nations could control Red China," he said. He said an adverse vote did not stop the Soviet Union from exploding the 50 megaton bomb and doubts if it would stop President Kennedy if he felt a nuclear test was necessary. Mr. Pringsheim discussed three reasons for opposing Red China's U.N. admission which were pointed out by three Congressmen in the film. The reasons are: - Chinese Communist atrocities in China, Tibet and Korea, - Growth, production and illegal sales abroad of opium. - China's aggressive actions which (Continued on page 3) Weather Generally fair today becoming cloudy and not so cold tonight and tomorrow. Highs today and tomorrow in the 40s. Low tonight near 30. Daily hansan 59th Year No.46 LAWRENCE. KANSAS Friday, Nov. 17, 1961 'Tiger' Badges Seized Under Expulsion Threat By Karl Koch Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, has confiscated about 2,950 ATAP lapel buttons from a group of students who planned to sell them. DEAN WOODRUFF said in an interview yesterday that the seizure came about because "these buttons A spokesman for the group asserted they had turned over the buttons under threat of expulsion from the University. The buttons, which ostensibly mean All Tigers Are Pushovers, a reply to the AHAB (All Hawks are B----) buttons worn by MU students at last year's MU-KU games. have become sort of a symbol of poor sportsmanship on the part of both institutions." He said he probably had no legal right to take the buttons. He said he would destroy them. "I think we have a natural right to do what is necessary to protect the dignity of a great institution," he said. He affirmed that he would have expelled the students for selling the buttons. "I SAID IF THEY continued in this (selling buttons), I'd have no alternative," he said. The spokesman for the students, Dale MacCallum, Kansas City senior, said in an interview earlier this week that the seizure cost the students involved about $50 each -- a total of $408. The students ordered 3,000 buttons from a company in St. Louis, and put them on sale at the Stables, a Lawrence tavern. Moses Gunn Is Active Because of Two Boys A few days later, Dean Woodruff called MacCallum and another student involved into his office. A KU student said last night that he became active in anti-discrimination programs because of two small children. "THERE ARE two little boys who play up and down the campus. Maybe you've seen them," he said. Moses Gunn, Lawrence graduate student, was speaking to 20 members of the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy, an anti-discrimination group. "DEAN WOODRUFF told us if we didn't have the buttons in his office by 5 o'clock that night, along with a signed statement that we wouldn't sell any more buttons, he'd kick us out of school," MacCallum said. "One night I was in a laundromat, and the two kids came in. They played and ran around the place for a while, laughing. "One boy is a Negro, the other is white. The Negro boy is named Norman; the other boy is named Richard. They play together laughing and running around. "Here I was a great big grown-up, and I couldn't bowl. He told me he could bowl at the Union, but not in the bowling alley across the street. He asked me why. I told him he was only a little boy. He told me he was a little boy up at the Union, too." "Then Norman came up to me. He wasn't smiling. He asked me if I could bowl. I told him no. He was surprised at this. AS GUNN SPOKE, a woman two rows in front of him darned socks. Another woman knitted with bright blue yarn, staring intently at him. The room was quiet, the people intent and interested. "The success of this community depends on what those two little boys do. What will probably happen is that one will get a huge superiority complex, and the oth- "It suddenly came to my mind, as I talked to Norman that there was something about those two kids that makes them different." Gunn said. "They play and laugh together in youthful innocence. (Continued on page 3) MacCallum said that they had asked Dean Woodruff about the administration's feelings before they ordered the buttons. At that time, Dean Woodruff told the group's representative that "the administration would take a dim view of student's distributing the buttons." MacCallum said. He added that the group took this to mean that the University would not be pleased by the buttons, but would not expell students from school for selling the buttons. HOWEVER, DEAN WOODRUFF said yesterday that he had told the student who talked to him that a person connected with this enterprise would put his school career in jeopardy. "They were given warning," he said. In his statement to the Kansan Tuesday, MaeCallum said he did not think the University had a right to interfere with the legal business enterprises of the students. "If we hadn't been enrolled in school, there's not a thing he could have done," he said, referring to Dean Woodruff's action. Dean Woodruff said yesterday that the University "probably shouldn't interfere as long as the (Continued on page 3) A Kansan Series-Part II Watkins Personnel Swamped Because of Space Shortage By Richard Bonett (Editor's Note: This is the second in a three-part series on the space shortage at Watkins Memorial Hospital.) Take a tour of Watkins Memorial Hospital and one theme is repeated over and over by staff members: The lack of space has created innumerable bottlenecks that act as a handicap in the efficient performance of their jobs. Nearly all the worst examples are related to outpatient treatment, which constitutes more than three-fourths of the hospital's work load. JAMES GILLESPIE, HEAD of the hospital's Pharmacy and an employee there for 15 years, is one whose department is affected. "How many drugstores would you find in a town of 10,000? I'd wager three or four. Well KU is just like such a town," he says. Mr. Gillespie, with two part-time assistants, last year handled 19,814 perscriptions. The Kansas State Board of Health recommends a hospital the size of Watkins Memorial have 500 square feet of space for the pharmacy. Following a 1960 inspection, the board credited the hospital's pharmacy with only 200 square feet. "IF WE HAD MORE space we could fill prescriptions so much faster there wouldn't be any need for students to wait in line as they sometimes have to now," Mr. Gillespie explains. The pharmacist further points out that more than two-thirds of his supplies are stored in makeshift areas dug out of a sub-basement several years ago, or in an attic. "That means 10 to 12 trips a day for supplies," he says. In addition, the shortage of space means ordering in smaller quantities, necessitating more frequent orders and consequent delays. There has been no addition or major remodeling of Watkins Hospital since its construction. To keep up with increasing demands on the facility, space for services that have outgrown initial quarters has been made available wherever it could be found. Virginia Detlor, in charge of laboratory facilities and a member of the hospital staff 21 years, sits in a cluttered first-floor office and tells a similar story. "We have converted a bathroom in an adjoining doctor's office into a small lab that's available to us — when we can get to it between patients," she says. The laboratory department, which last year performed 22.417 test procedures, should have 560 square feet of space for efficient operation. It is credited with 300 square feet by the state board. Miss Detlor gave a chilling description of what this could mean to a student undergoing extensive chemical tests that require periodic testing over a three or four-hour period. "WE HAVE NO PLACE FOR A patient to sit in privacy. He sits in the hall—not a pleasant experience if you have a gastric tube stuck down your throat," she says. The space shortage is so critical in her department, Miss Detlor said, that only one test can be performed at a time. To make more efficient use of the four laboratory technicians who are employed by the department, a (Continued on page 8) (Continued on page 8) YES. THEY SHOULD ALWAYS READ WRITER'S WORK. Short on space ... long on confusion — Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 17, 1961 户值清单 A Dedicated Leader Praise of Sam Rayburn has been flowing from every direction since his death yesterday morning. Even those who have sat on the opposite side of the aisle in Congress have responded with warmth and affection in their accounts of dealings with "Mr. Sam." In his half century of service in the House of Representatives of the United States, Sam Rayburn established a record as one of the greatest legislators in the history of our country. The length of his tenure represents more than one-fourth of the total history of the United States. "MR. SAM" BEGAN HIS CONGRESSIONAL career in the days before prohibition and women's suffrage. He took over his seat in the House in a time when the United States was a country existing behind a wall of isolationism. He later saw the United States develop into the position of world leadership that it now occupies. As the United States developed into an international power Rayburn started his own drive for the position he had aspired to since early childhood. In 1940 he was elected to the speakership of the house, a position he held twice as long as anyone else in the history of our country. He built his job into the nation's second most powerful post, outranked only by the Presidency. IN HIS YEARS AS SPEAKER Sam Rayburn mingled with the great. He was a close adviser to Presidents Roosevelt, Truman and Kennedy. Although his advice was not sought, he had much to say about the programs the Eisenhower Administration was able to carry out. Speaker Rayburn never had any desire to be a senator or anything else but speaker. He considered the power of the house to be at least equal if not greater than the power of the Senate. Anyone who in Rayburn's presence used the term "upper body" to refer to the Senate simply did not know much about getting along with Sam Rayburn. THE SPEAKER'S LAST YEAR in the House he loved was spent working for the legislative program of a Democratic President whose candidacy he had initially opposed. This was Sam Rayburn—always devoted to his party. So great was his dedication to the goals of his party that in 1955 a special "Rayburn" dinner was held to bestow the title "Mr. Democrat" on the House leader. President Kennedy tells of the time he was in Canada, Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson was in Asia, and Secretary of State Dean Rusk was at Geneva. A high level call came into the White House switchboard, for each of the three in his turn. "Then who is keeping the store?" the frustrated caller demanded. "THE SAME MAN WHO'S ALWAYS KEPT it—Sam Rayburn," the operator was supposed to have answered. The name of Sam Rayburn will certainly go down as one of those who were most dedicated to their country. It has not been often that a man has had the opportunity and the desire to serve his countrymen as long and as well as Sam Rayburn did. A historical perspective is hardly needed to judge the accomplishments of this man. His era will be recorded as a bright one in the history of the country he served so well. Ron Gallagher The KU-MU Rivalry Preliminary negotiations have already been established for a peace pact between KU and the University of Missouri. The pact is scheduled to receive final approval in a meeting of the student representatives of both schools which will possibly be held Sunday. THE PACT IS AN UNDERSTANDING ON the part of students of both universities to promote better relations and prevent riots and property destruction. It is an understanding which, if followed, will lead to the betterment of the reputations of both Universities. School spirit will run high on Nov. 25. Everyone expects it to. But perhaps a definition of school spirit is necessary. School spirit is difficult to define in terms of what it is, and simpler to define in terms of what it is not. Win or tie, spirit is not flaunting the score in the face of the visiting team. It is not "playing the victor" by making fun of the defeated. Spirit is, however, loyalty to one's University. But loyalty cannot explain away fighting in the stadium, nor can loyalty explain away name-calling of the opposition. SCHOOL SPIRIT IS NOT WAVING derogatory banners about the opposition. It is not wearing a large badge with the letters ATAP. You may answer that some of KU's opposition teams have not had "school spirit" or that they have done many of the things KU students are being asked not to do. It is true that Missouri started the "war of the badges" by wearing AHAB buttons. But it is also true that they have agreed not to wear them Nov. 25. It is true that at last year's KU-MU game uncomplimentary banners and signs were displayed for our benefit. But MU has agreed to leave these at home this year. SCHOOL SPIRIT IS MANY THINGS combined. Among them it is the combined efforts of students backing a decision made by the governing body they have elected. In this case, students from KU and MU must back the peace pact which will be made by the combined committee, working for the best interest of all students. Support KU with the right kind of spirit and leave the "fighting" to the football team. NSA In World Affairs NSA membership goes beyond the local campus level. It is not my intent to de-emphasize the services NSA has to offer the member schools—which I feel are outstanding—but rather to point up several things that I do not think have been covered. I have read with interest your recent articles and letters about NSA. I would like to present one side of the picture. The National Student Assn. is the chief spokesman against Communism in the world student community. The work of NSA in the international student community was recognized in a statement of evaluation adopted by the three major deans' organizations in the United States recently, declaring that NSA has "spearheaded and led the mobilization of the unions of students of the free world in ... Letters . . . combating the partisan propaganda and distortion of truth fostered by the Communist-led International Union of Students." MARRIAGE: A community consisting of a master, a mistress, and two slaves, making in all, two—Ambrose Bierce Short Ones BORE: A person who talks when you wish him to listen.—Ambrose Bierce Woman would be more charming if one could fall into her arms without falling into her hands. —Ambrose Bierce SAINT: A dead sinner revised and edited.—Ambrose Bierce These sentiments have been echoed by many others, including former President Eisenhower who said: "the USNSA is rendering a significant service to the people of this country and to the world." President Kennedy wrote last August 17, that "the record of the National Student Assn. in matters of campus, national and international concern is well known, and one of which all of you can be proud." The situation at the University of Kansas is, in reality, not the question of affiliating or not with the organization NSA, but whether it wishes to rejoin the national and international student community. I feel that NSA is the most effective means by which we can accomplish this goal. Bruce Hall Bruce Hull Chairman. Missouri- Charmian, Missouri Kansas Region USNSA the took world By Mark Dull Kansas City, Kan., graduate student THE WATERS OF KRONOS, by Conrad Richter. Bantam Books. 50 cents. Old and not well, John Donner drives up to the Kronos River and painfully gazes upon the huge concrete structure that progress has thrown up against the forces of the mysterious river, backing it up the valley in bewildering defeat, and submerging by many fathoms, the small Pennsylvania Dutch town of Unionville. KRONOS — THE RIVER OF TIME — has sealed off Unionville from the rest of the world, as time has sealed off the past from the present. Through the magic of fantasy fiction that flows from the vivid and descriptive pen of Conrad Richter, Donner momentarily brushes aside the "moving hand" and propels himself through the receded waters of the Kronos into the town and the life that he knew as a bcy. Readers will be, pleasantly, I think, reminded of Thornton Wilder's retrospective play, "Our Town" as they consume the author's lightly nostalgic passages that resurrect an earlier America. John Donner trudges down the shadowy streets that he had run through so unappreciatively as a boy, now as an old stranger to his family and the townspeople. The realization that he is alone pierces his tortured and sensitive soul. His family and his home are lost to him. Even the graves of the picturesque St. Mark's Reformed and Trinity Lutheran Cemetery have been uprooted and moved into an orderly substitute for a cemetery, with identical numbered markers for gravestones, high above the Kronos. THE CHASM THAT EXISTED between the father and the son in the boy's childhood yawns even wider in this reunion through the inability of the father to recognize his aged son. He is unable to get close enough to his constant mother to determine whether he can re-establish their old intimacy. He finally disproves to his satisfaction any connection with the classic Oedipus story in his relationship with his father. "It was the great deception practiced by man on himself and his fellows, the legend of hate against the father so the son need not face the real and ultimate abomination, might conceal the actual nature of the monster who haunted the shadows of childhood, whose name only the soul knew and who never revealed himself before the end when it was found that all those disturbing things seen and felt in the father, which as a boy had given him an uncomprehending sense of dread and hostility, were only intimations of his older self to come, a self marked with the inescapable dissolution and decay of his youth." THE RIVER OF KRONOS figures rather strongly in the novel as one of the many symbolic devices employed by Richter. Kronos, according to pre-Hellenic myth, was the youngest son of Heaven and Earth and leader of the Titans. By advice of his mother he castrated his father, who therefore no longer approached Earth but left room for the Titans between them. Later Kronos is overthrown by his own son. He has taken precautions against this by swallowing each son in turn. However, the mother decries him and hides her last son, Zeus, from him, and substitutes a rock in swaddling clothes for the child. Kronos seems to have survived today as the symbol of father time. As the river Kronos is vanquished by the modern dam of the new era, the mythical Kronos is also deceived once again and stayed from re-creation by Donner's re-entry into the past and his disclosures in the home of his father. THE INFIRM DONNER is at last given part relief in his quest for the answers to the questions that have haunted him, and he shrugs a great weight off his wintry shoulders. His sojourn behind the closed doors of his now cherished childhood is not wholly complete and author Richter hedges a little on the completion. He lays aside his pen leaving Donner immobilized, and the responsibility with the reader to write the last page of the novel. Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. 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. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher Editor Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Toni 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 Moses Gunn Is Active一 (Continued from page 1) er one an inferiority complex. This should not happen." GUNN TOLD the League members that there is a "nation-wide cultural gap" in the United States. margin gap in the United States. "I used to criticize KU Negro students for sitting in only one place in the Hawk's Nest. I now realize that their background has been that of the ghetto. Each side, white and black, is hesitant to take the step across the line. This is the barrier that must be destroyed," he said. "I'll give you another example," he said. "When I first came to KU in 1959, I was stage manager for a play. I had a lot of kids working under me, and I had them really hopping. One night I was getting a sandwich at a cafe, and one of the white boys working for me came in. He was a little high. He said to me: "Hey, you old nigger you. You give me a lot of orders. I've never seen a nigger have so much authority before. I come from a little town in Missouri. The niggers live here, the white folks live there." "THIS IS WHAT I mean," Gunn continued. "Here is the gap I spoke of. The guy grew up in a little town where there was no interplay between the Negro and the white. When he got to KU, he was shocked because of the cosmopolitan atmosphere." Gunn explained that there was another reason why he took part in the Oct. 13 march. "Americans are patronizing the foreigner. There are a lot of places a foreigner can go into that a Negro is barred from. What we need is a People-to-People group for Americans. Here is that gap again. I know Negroes who have never been in a white home. I know whites who have never been in a Negro home. This gap has got to be filled." IN CLOSING. he commented on the change in University housing policy. "I'm not sure it was a victory. We are closer to the solution of the problem than ever before, but we must reach people on a larger scale. Only by filling the huge cultural gap can this be accomplished." China-U.N. Issue- (Continued from page 1) disqualify her for admission under the U.N. charter. THE THREE MEMBERS of Congress are Senators Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn., and Paul H. Douglas, D-Ill., and Rep. Walter H. Judd, R-Minn. Following the film, Mr. Pringsheim explained some Chinese Communist viewpoints. He said that while he was in Hong Kong, he asked a Chinese Communist how Red China expected to win the respect of other nations and join the United Nations when they exported opium to Hong Kong. "THE FELLOW MUST HAVE been waiting for the chance to answer." Mr. Pringsheim said. "Sure, Red China produces and sells opium, but as a medicinal drug, If, in their stupidity, the people of Western countries use the drug excessively, you blame us." Mr. Pringsheim said there is no way to bring pressure upon China, which does not recognize the World Court in The Hague, Netherlands, and are not members of the United Nations. "The Chinese said war raises passions in every man. He said it is hard for a group of soldiers who have just seen 20 friends killed by a shell to act like gentlemen." ON THE QUESTION of atrocities, Mr. Pringsheim said he again raised the question with a Chinese Communist in Hong Kong. Mr. Pringsheim said atrocities were committed by both sides. He said the Chinese probably had committed more, because of differences in cultural background. "WE HAVE more regard for life and are more afraid of death and killing," he said. "We act more American or Western, but not necessarily more human." one film stated that the Chinese Communist attacked the United Nations forces near the Manchurian border without warning. Mr. Pring- sheim called the statement "patently untrue." "The Chinese gave us full warning in press releases. I read them myself at the time. They said if the American forces crossed the 38th parallel, they would have the Chinese Army to reckon with." "INFORMATION released recently shows that Red China did not start the Korean War. Stain personally gave the order with Russian generals standing behind the Korean generals when the order was given." A questioner in the audience said Joseph Alsop (a newspaper columnist) said 30 million people have been liquidated by the Chinese Communists. He asked for comment on the number of people liquidated and the justification Mr. Pringsheim said he was not trying to justify the Chinese Communist position. He added he did not know how many people had been killed but that a "Time" correspondent said 25,592,681 persons had been liquidated. "A COMMUNIST would say your figure is wrong, though," Mr. Pringsheim said. "The most persons Chairman Mao (Mao Tse-tung, chairman of the Chinese Communist Party) admits to having been killed is 800,000." "They would answer that it is necessary in the course of any revolution to eliminate those who impede progress toward the social goals. "They would say, 'If a Chinese worker cooperates with us, we shall feed him not bother him, but if he sabotages our efforts, we will kill him.'" 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the 365 Excuses Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Anniv of a Notre Dame-Northwestern game University Daily Kansan Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See (Continued from page 1) enterprise does not besmirch the reputation of the University." PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS 1912 West 25th St. FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED BUT, HE ADDED, "this feeling between KU and MU has brought enough discredit to the two of us. We're going to do anything we can to prevent repetition of what has happened in the past." - off street parking - central air conditioning - garbage disposal - carpeted Tiger Badges He was referring to KU-MU alterations of previous years, such as the KU-MU battle during a nationally televised basketball game last year. "BUT SOME pretty insignificant things lead to mob action. I know these boys argue, 'Now look, these buttons are no worse than a picture you see in the Union of a Jayhawker putting his foot down on a Tiger.' But these buttons have become a symbol of poor sportsmanship on the part of both institutions," he added. - laundry facilities 1/2 block Whether the ATAP buttons could start fights is admittedly a question, Dean Woodruff said. The administrators from both KU and MU met last spring, Dean Woodruff said, and "had resolved to do whatever we could to play down any offbeat activity on the part of alumni and students." He added that the administration would "frown upon" students wearing the buttons. "I don't want to make any threats. I hope our students will not display these or any other defamatory sort of symbols." - play area for children Crisis Day- He said he did not mean suspension of students by the term "frowned upon." VI 3-8253 home Other discussion centered around plans for "World Crisis Day." (Continued from page 1) to the chancellor for his consideration when he returns. Phone VI 2-3416 office At present the plan calls for two keynote speakers, one presenting the government's view of the cold war and another presenting alternative viewpoints. SUGGESTED TOPICS for the small discussion groups are: the moral crisis, unilateral disarmament, hemispheric solidarity, the individual in the world crisis, psychological effects of the situation today, and the effects of the cold war on African, Latin American, and Middle Eastern nations. Following the principal talks it is suggested that small discussion groups form. These would be chaired by various members of the faculty directing discussion in their field of specialization. The next meeting of the steering committee at 4 p.m. Monday in the Kansas Union will start making definite plans for the "World Crisis Day" sometime during the week of Dec. 6. Friday. Nov. 17, 1961 Three professors, a local minister, and an exchange student will discuss the question "What is a Megaton" at the People-to-People Forum, 7 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union. 'Megaton' the Topic Of P-T-P Forum Each speaker will present an analysis of nuclear weapons in terms of his field or specialization. The speakers are John A. Weir, associate professor of zoology; Roy D. Laird, assistant professor of political science; Edward Shaw, associate professor of radiation biophysics, Rev. Paul Davis, pastor of the Plymouth Congregational Church, and William Kiang, Hong Kong senior. To Discuss East Churches Michael Klimenko, instructor in Russian, will discuss Eastern Orthodox Church's Sunday at the Canterbury Association meeting. The talk will follow evening prayer at 5 p.m. and a buffet supper at 5:30, and will be followed by a question period. Club to View German Film The International Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Hoch Auditorium for the German film, "Three Penny Opera." Following the showing of the film the club will have its regular dance and refreshments in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Kansan Want Ads Get Results New Orleans Is Coming North Kansan Classifieds Get Results 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 VI 3-5307 by the Malls CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE CAMPUS BEAUT For the Latest in FALL HAIR STYLINGS Come in and Get Acquainted 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 - HAIR COLORING FOR APPOINTMENTS call VI 3-3034 1144 Indiana - 1 block north of Student Union SHEPHERD A. KRIVENSKY JERRY DOLE from Wichita has joined our staff to help us serve you better. STAFF MEMBERS Judy Ross, Marlene Rodke, Inge Stoner, Pat Williams, Barbara Arnold Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 17, 1961 产情 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Jayhawkers Meet Bears in Must Game Time is growing shorter while the pressure is getting greater as Coach Jack Mitchell's Kansas Jayhawkers invade Memorial Stadium at Berkeley, Calif., for an all-important non-conference clash with the California Bears, Saturday, 3:30 p.m. (CST). Mitchell's crew must win convincingly over the Bears and then down the Missouri Tigers the following Saturday to receive an Orange Bowl bid. COACH MARV LEVY'S CALIFORNIA SQUAD has been hard hit by injuries. Levy expects several key men to be back in the lineup for the Kansas game. The California Bears are sporting a 1-6-1 record. The Bears' only win came at the expense of Washington. California tied the Missouri Tigers 14-14. THE JAYHAWKERS HAVE BEEN TABBED by sportswriters and an Orange Bowl executive as the favored team for New Year's Day classic if they can push past their final two foes. Wingback Rudy Carvajal will be the principal returnee. His hip pointer suffered against UCLA should be healed. Sophomores Loren Hawley, end, and Jim Anderson, fullback, are expected to play after suffering injuries against the Air Force. Last week the Bears were beaten by the Air Force Academy 15-14. The Falcons fought back from a 14-7 deficit to push across a score and then control the ball the final six minutes to hand the Bears their sixth defeat. End Ron Vaughn's severe charlie horse which kept him out of the Air Force game is still a question mark. The only California player not expected to suit up is captain Jim Burress. FULLBACK GEORGE PIEROVICH, tackle Larry Lowell and wingback Jack Trumbo suffered knee injuries in the UCLA encounter but these should be healed and the men in top condition. Alan Nelson is the leading Bear rusher with 310 yards in 52 carries for a 5.96 average. His longest run of the year is 78 yards. Pierovich is second with 198 yards in 66 carries for a 3.00 average The fullback's longest carry is 14 yards. QUARTERBACK RANDY GOLD is the Bears' leading scorer with 20 points. Gold is also the squad's leading passer with 34 completions of 65 attempts for 340 yards, three touchdowns and a 52.3 percentage. His longest aerial is 25 yards. Gold's favorite receiver is Bob Willis who has hauled in 16 completions for 212 yards and two touchdowns. The Bears have a placekicking specialist, Jim Ferguson, who has booted 22 consecutive extra points. Ferguson holds his school's record. KU Runners To Chicago The Jayhawker cross country squad is competing today against top midwestern schools in the Central Collegiate Championships held at Washington Park in Chicago. This is the first time the Jayhawkers have entered this meet, as always before there have been schedule conflicts. The race will cover four miles, one mile more than the previous Kansas cross country meets. BIG EIGHT individual champion Bill Dotson will put his undefeated season record on the line for three top challengers to shoot toward. Expected to push Dotson are Don Hancock of Western Michigan, who last year finished fifth, Paul Carver, Notre Dame, and Jim Dupree, Southern Illinois. Dotson whipped Dupree earlier in the year in a Southern Illinois, Missouri and Kansas triangular. Western Michigan is the defending team champion. Last year they scored a low of 21 points compared to Notre Dame's 44, Marquette's 68 and Bowling Green's 96. This year all four squads return in addition to Ohio University, Loyola of Chicago, Miami (Ohio) and several expected late entries. KANSAS ENTERS the meet undefeated with the Big Eight crown under its belt and an eye toward the NCAA championships at East Lansing, Mich. on Nov. 27. This will be the last meet for the Jayhawkers previous to the NCAA. Weather may prove to be a factor in the meet as the temperatures are expected to be low due to cold breezes blowing in from Lake Michigan. Western Michigan last year placed seven men in the top ten finishers. Kansas will be running the same crew that copped the Big Eight. Behind Dotson, will be Charlie Hayward, third place finisher in the Big Eight, Dan Ralston, fifth, Tonie Coane, seventh, Bill Thornton, tenth , George Cabrera and Mike Fulghum. Buffs Skip Workout Colorado skipped contact work in a quick half-hour session yesterday, the practice being stopped because of freezing rain. Buff Coach Sonny Grandelius said a 36-man squad will fly to Nebraska today. PREMIER DIAMOND SHOP 916 Mass. People-to-People Forum No.2 "WHAT IS THE MEGATON?" Various aspects of the megaton nuclear bomb explosion by the Russians will be discussed by the following panel: DR. J. A. WEIR - of the Zoology Dept. will speak about the genetic aspects of the explosion DR. ROY D. LAIRD - of the Political Science Dept. will speak about the political aspects BILL KIANG - a student from Hong Kong REV. PAUL DAVIS - of the Congregational Church will discuss the ethical aspects DR. EDWARD SHAW - of the Radiation Biology Dept. will discuss the radiation aspect of the bomb NOVEMBER 19-7 P.M. Huskers Fear Pass Forum Room - Student Union Nebraska, which faces Big Eight leader Colorado Saturday, took a day off from practice yesterday because of bad weather. Two Tigers Injured Cornhusker Coach Bill Jennings said he was planning to work on pass defense, as he is worried about Colorado quarterback Gale Weidner's throwing ability. Coach Dan Devine, whose Missouri Tigers have dropped their last two games by scores of 7-6 and 7-0, said center Bill McCartney probably will not be able to play against Kansas State tomorrow and punter Daryl Krugman may see only limited duty. Before You Leave for Thanksgiving... You still have time to meet your friends this weekend at The Old Mission Inn 1904 Mass. BEST BURGERS IN TOWN All Beverages Friendly Service Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Just in Time for Winter T' CAR COATS Fur Trimmed Corduroys, Poplins, Wools, in all popular colors SEE THEM THIS WEEKEND At Hiley's 935 Mass. Page 5 University Daily Kansan Coach Triplett Says Frosh May Bolster'62 Jayhawkers Triplett did not mention any individual prospects. By Roy Miller Freshman football coach Tom Triplett believes five or six of his charges will "definitely" help the varsity next year. "You can't really tell until spring practice, though," Triplett added. In the Missouri game Friday at Columbia the Kansas Freshmen came back from a 21-6 halftime deficit to tie the Tigers. TRIPLETT SAID freshman aid to the varsity could be in both the line and the backfield. Triplett, in his first year as frush mentor, led a talented yearling squad to a season's record of one win (over Kansas State, 21-6) and one tie (with Missouri, 21-21). RIGHT HALFBACK Gale Sayers scored all three Jayhawker touch-downs. Sayers scored with jaunts of 79, 25, and two vards. The Omaha, Neb., halfback also scored all three touchdowns in KU's victory over K-State. With 38 seconds left in the game KU had a fourth down situation in Missouri territory with the score tied. The Hawks attempted a field goal, but missed. "WE COULD HAVE gone for the score," Triplett said, "but we didn't feel we had the time." Triplett, praising Missouri, said. "They had much more depth and speed than K-State." The blocking in the game was good, according to Triplett, but he still felt their tackling was below par. The reason for sub-par tackling, Triplett said, was the lack of contact work in practices Kansas State Coach Doug Weaver announced that sophomore wing-back Ralph McFillin, injured in last week's 34-0 loss to Kansas, will not be able to play against Missouri tomorrow. He will be replaced by converted end Ron McDonald. Wildcat Iniured Three other injured halfbacks remain on the doubtful list—Dave Laurie, Jack Richardson and Glenn sernhagen. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Now– give yourself "Professional" shaves with... Old Spice SUPER SOUOTH SHAVE NEW SUPER SMOOTH SHAVE New "wetter-than-water" action melts beard's toughness—in seconds. Remarkable new "wetter-than-water" action gives Old Spice Super Smooth Shave its scientific approximation to the feather-touch feel and the efficiency of barber shop shaves. Melts your beard's toughness like hot towels and massage—in seconds. Shaves that are so comfortable you barely feel the blade. A unique combination of anti-evaporation agents makes Super Smooth Shave stay moist and firm. No re-lathering, no dry spots. Richer and creamier...gives you the most satisfying shave...fastest, cleanest—and most comfortable. Regular or mentholated, 1.00. Old Spice SHULTON The Kansas-California football game will be carried at 3:15 p.m. (CST) Saturday by the following area radio stations: KANU, Lawrence; KLWN, Lawrence; KTOP, Topeka; KJAY, Topeka; KOFO, Ottawa; KCKN, Kansas City; and KMBC, Kansas City. California Game To Be Broadcast The Kansas Jayhawkers lead the Big Eight conference in total first downs, rushing and total offense. The Hawkers have racked up 127 first downs compared to their opponents' 96. Kansas Leads Big Eight Friday, Nov. 17, 1961 Hoppmann to Miss Tulsa Encounter Iowa State tailback Dave Hopmann, the nations total offense leader, will not start Saturday against Tulsa. By United Press International Coach Clay Stapleton listed a tentative starting lineup yesterday which did not include Hoppmann, blocking back Paul Sullivan, or tackle Dick Walton. All are injured. "We are in very poor physical Make war on the men — the ladies have too long memories. Stephen Vincent Benet condition. We could be in the very worst of the season." Stapleton said. Iowa State drilled for two hours yesterday, winding up its week's work. Hadl Is Top Scorer Kansas' John Hadl is the Big Eight conference's leading scorer. Hadl has scored six touchdowns for 36 points. Colorado end Jerry Hillebrand is second with three touchdowns eight extra points and three field goals for 35 points. Iowa, State's Dave Hoppmann, the nation's leading rusher, is fourth with five touchdowns for 30 points. YOU CAN WIN A FREE TRIP TO PARADISE! Ship Insurance A FREE TRIP FOR TWO TO BEAUTIFUL NASSAU IN THE BAHAMAS! Your Paradise trip includes round-trip air flight to Miami — meals — and three wonderful days aboard the air-conditioned cruise ship, the S.S. FLORIDA! "BACHELOR in PARADISE" CAPTION CONTEST MORRISON My caption is --------------------------------------------------------------------------- NAME ... Address ___ Town ___ Clip and deposit this entry at the Paradise Display at Granada Theatre BEACH BACKWARD WORKSHOP RULES for the "Bachelor in Paradise" Caption Contest: Entrants must be 18 years of age or older. Contest closes Friday, December 1, 1961. Contest conducted by Commonwealth Theatres in Columbia, Missouri, Lawrence and Manhattan, Kansas. One winner will be chosen from the combined entries of these three towns only. Caption must be 10 words or less and winner will be determined on originality and adaptability of copy. No purchase required and limit one entry per person. All entrances are required from either St. Louis or Kansas City. Participants be taken by March 31, 1962. Employees of Commonwealth Theatre, or any participating firm, or members of their families are not eligible. All entries become the property of Commonwealth Theatres. Decision of judges is final. Bob Hope Lana Turner 'BACHELOR in PARADISE' Starting Wednesday at the GRANADA Page 6 University Daily Kansan 产假 Friday, Nov. 17, 1961 Dorm Named for Californian The new women's dormitory under construction at the west edge of the campus has been named Margaret B. Hashinger Hall by the Board of Regents. Announcement of the name was made last night by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe at a KU alumni meeting in Los Angeles. THE DORMITORY honors Mrs. Edward B. Hashinger of La Jolla, Calif., who has given funds for buildings at both the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses. In 1940, then the wife of the lats J. E. Battenfeld, she and her husband established Battenfeld Hall, men's scholarship hall, in memory Faculty Members To Analyze Play Five KU faculty members will participate in discussions after performances of Edward Albee's "The Sandbox" at Westminster Center Saturday and Sunday nights. They are Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama; L. R. C. Agnew, associate professor of medical history; Peter J. Caws, associate professor and chairman of the department of philosophy; Walter Meserve, associate professor of English, and Sylvia Levine, instructor of sociology and anthropology. "The Sandbox" is being presented by amateurs in connection with Westminster Center's religious seminar program. The discussion, led by the faculty members, will attempt to analyze the play's theme and relevance to American society. of her younger son, John C. Battenfeld, who died in an automobile accident in 1939 while a KU student. AFTER THE DEATH of Mr. Battenfeld in 1947, she gave funds for the auditorium at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City. This gift was to honor her other son, Dr. Jesse R. Battenfield Jr., who was killed in a Navy airplane crash. HASHINGER HALL is expected to be completed and ready for occupancy by next September. It will house 444 women. The dormitory has the same room plan as Lewis and Templin Halls, but the center portion is designed for possible co-educational use if needed in the future. Two stairways and two elevators are being constructed, and a removable partition could be placed across the center of the lounge on each floor to separate the men's and women's sections. Total cost of the dormitory will be above $1.9 million, with construction costs accounting for $1.5 million. It is financed by the "quarter-mill dorm levy" passed by the 1955 legislature. Book Drive Started For Asia Foundation A book drive for the Asia Foundation has been started at KU. It will last until the end of the semester. The sponsors, KU-Y and Watson Library, request that college texts since 1945 and supplementary paperbacks and American novels be turned in at Watson Library. **Forcigen Students:** Please turn in your Test Grade and the Forcigen Student Advisor by Wednesday. The forms are on page 11 of the November issue of the International Campus News- Chemistry Department Special Collo- laboratory in pharmacy, Hidetake Rakihana Prof. of Nuclear Chemistry, Tokyo Institute of Tech- ech and Information on 'Ion Exchange Sponction of Fortune' Official Bulletin Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TODAY Hiliel Services: 6:45 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Dr. International Club: Directly towne- king Kansas Univ. Dancing and refreshments Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: 7:30 p.m. Cottonwood Room of Student Union. Rev. Chester McCavley of Kansas will speak on "Christian Friendship." TOMORROW The Sandbox by Edward Albee. 8:15 p.m., Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. Lutheran Church Services; 8:30 and 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Immanuel Lutheran Church, 17th & Vermont. 5 p.m. Wednesdays. Catholic Mass: 9 and 11 a.m., Fraser Hall. (Newman Club). Faith & Life Seminar: 8:45 a.m. . West- ern Bible study: 1204 Oread . Breakfast and Bible study. Lutheran Church Services: 9:15 and 11:45 Lutheran Church, 13th and New, Hampshire. Oread Friends Worship Meeting: 10:30 a.m. Welcome to this silent Quaker meeting. Morning Worship: 11 a.m. Westminster College Church; Late Service, United Presbyterian Women. Sunday Evening Fellowship: 5:15 Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. Supper followed at 6:30 by "The Sandbox" by Edward Albee. Lutheran Student Association Evening Vespers: 5:15 p.m., Dunnah Chapel. Dinn- room, be at 5:45 in the Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union, with the program following. "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself."—Franklin D. Roosevelt NINA FOCH • DEAN JAGGER • E.G. MARSHALL • HENRY JONES *Corporate by LENORE COFFEE and MARIAN HARGROVE.* *PRESENTED BY HENRY BLANKE.* *Directed by JOSEPH PENNER* Big, Bright romantic delight! James Garner and Natalie Wood in "Cash McCall" From WARNER BROS. TECHNICOLOR FRI.-SAT.-SUN. Adm. Only 75c WARNER BROS. PRESENT Lucky Me CINEMA SCOPE AND WARNER COLOR IT STARS DORIS DAY ROBT. CUMMINGS PHIL SILVERS Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway # Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Fraternity Jewelry BOOKS FOR SALE Encyclopedia Britannica, Americana, American Educator, World Book, Compton's Balfour 411 W.14th VI3-1571 PLUS TWO BONUS FEATURES SAT. ONLY! Compton's. AL LAUTER Large selection, current editions moderately priced. MIDWEST BOOK CENTER Two Big Hits! MIDWEST BOOK CENTER 5136 N. Kimball Ave., Chicago 25. III. Price lists sent on request. We ship anywhere in the U.S.A. MAT. 2 P.M., EVE. 7 & 9 CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 2:30 ON STARTS SATURDAY! Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Carroll Baker Bridge to the Sun JAMES SHIGETA JAMES YARR EMP FLOWER HENSCHE / MONI ELLIANZE THE HERMANE Granada THEATRE ...Telephone 1-3-5789 imported by the exhibition council by DENN TERRAGAN writer plays by CHARLES FAULT MAN and producer JAMES SHIGETA arranged by TETINE PERLUER PAGE 4 FILM PRODUCTION ENDS TONITE "DEVIL AT 4 O'CLOCK" Granada THEATRE • Telephone V1 3-5788 The story that had to be told! No wonder it was read by millions as a best-seller and Reader's Digest special feature. She gave up her way of life for his—an American girl defying danger in war-ravaged Tokyo ...knowing a love so great that made it all worthwhile. Mamie Goldman Mayer presents Carroll Baker Bridge to the Sun JAMES SHIGETA JAMES TAYK SIM FLORENCE HINSON - NEW ELIZABETH HEFRAINE Granada THEATRE...Telephone V13-5782 Imported on the insulating spirit novel by OREN TERASADA written by CHRISTINA KAISAN, produced by JACQUES SAH written by TERENE PEREN JA COTE FILM PRODUCTION ENDS TONITE "DEVIL AT 4 O'CLOCK" "MAGNIFICENT! Sharp wit, rich folk humor, high comedy, gripping drama. Sensitive, searching emotion-packed closeups. May well turn out to be the best picture of the year!' —Jesse Zunser, Cue ONDERFUL, warm, comprehension of people's humor strength and dignity. Brilliantly played!" Bosley Crowther, N.Y. Times EXTRAORDINARY picture...as tight a weave of humor and pathos as you're likely to see. Few films put so much humor and such fierce drama together so successfully!" —Paul V. Beckley, Herald Tribune The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize any text or content. It appears to be a black-and-white photograph showing two individuals lying on their backs in a relaxed position, possibly asleep or resting. The focus is on the upper bodies of the subjects, with no distinguishable facial features or clothing details. COLUMBIA PICTURES presents SIDNEY POITIER a raisin in the sun with CLAUDIA McNEIL · RUBY DEE Screenplay by LOR from her play - Produced by DAVID SUSSKIND and PHILIP ROSE Directed by DAN CLAUDIA McNEIL · RUBY DEE Screenplay by LORRAINE HANSBERRY from her play - Produced by DAVID SUSSKIND and PHILIP ROSE Directed by DANIEL PETRIE STARTS SUNDAY! TONITE & SATURDAY PAUL NEWMAN in "THE HUSTLER" One d CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 2:30 ON HOUS beddii Maple Cereu Some VI 3- GENI com defini Hand $3.50. 3-577 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065 1960 sidew custo and diition est l NEW $225. Servi addin mime ness 0151 NEE noor aide Friday, Nov. 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 25e for billing All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan BusinessOffice in Flint Hall by 6:30 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. FOR SALE MUST SELL - New Guild Fly-Western Johnson, V 1-34811. binder. Call Gild Johnson, V 1-34811. 11-25 1946 PLYMOUTH SPECIAL Deluxe 1947 RJ-17 RJ-1 or call VH-3 4-6200 11-20 RELAXACISOR, like new. keep alim and trim while you study. $95. Call VI 321-11-20 FOR RENT 1850 PLYMOUTH.runs good, looks good. $125. Call VI 3-7268. 11-28 KNIGHTKIT R100 shortwave radio. 3 s.w. bands and broadcast band. Only 6 months old. Will sacrifice for $55. New price $100. Call Balgali, P1 2-2497. STEVENS 22 Automatic Rifle. $24. Like new. Call VI 3-2906 on 6 p.m. tf STRING BASS — EPIPHONE — Good condition. $7.5. Contact David Christian at 1222 Mississippi afternoons and evenings. 11-20 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 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 3-4201 or VI 3-4201. tf NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machine computers waiting at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today. tf 1960 VOLVO, red with brand new white sidewall tires (27 month guarantee); custom made red carpets, radio, heater, and many accessories; in excellent condition; must sell by next week to highest bidder. VI 2-3364. 11-17 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. 1955 JAGUAR = Excellent condition, reasonable VI = 3-0881. 11-17 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 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriter, precision made to perform like an upright, typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-3644. ATTENTION LAW STUDENTS: Practical law library for sale. Priced at $3.00 to $7.00 per volume. Pierce Van Lines, 733½ N. H. VI 3-8868. 11-17 HELP WANTED NEED REGISTERED NURSE for afternoon shift at Samaritan Lodge—also need aide for morning shift. Call VI 3-8936. A SAXONPHONE PLAYER: Alto or tenor Must be able to play any type music by ear. Work 3 regular nights a week Phone VI 2-3780. 11-17 SECRETARY WANTED: Apply in person. Plaza Club, 2222 Iowa. 11-28 DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. BUSINESS SERVICES 2 ROOMS AND BATH. Priv. entr. university Drive, 5 minutes from campus. Gentlemen in mature ladies. For rent to Call 8 at between 7 & 10 am, or 6 p.m. 11-30 DRESS MAKING and aetrations. For- mation 1939 $^{1}$ 3263, Gaul Sniff- $^{1}$ 3891 $^{2}$ Mass. Call I 3-5263. U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, doggie clothes and everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Conn. Shop — In- Pet Center, Conn. Shop sectionalized — save time and money! t ALETERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3 15751, or 921 Miss. MILLIKEN'S SOS SPECIALTIES - Direct Mail Addressing - Telephone Answering Serv. - Thermo-Fax Copying - Complete Secretarial Serv. - Qualified Personnel WEST EDGE CAMPUS, 2 bedrooms, living room, carpet, drapes, fireplace, explosion door, and electric dishwasher, dishwasher, garage, storage. Call VI 3-3887 after 7. 11-20 - Monthly Statements and Credit Collection - Notary Public and many other Services Free of Charge Suite 8 1021₂¹ Massachusetts ofc. VI 3-5924 after hrs. VI 3-5947 Experienced typist would like typing in adjusted font size. Reasonable resou ates. Call VI 3251 any time. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 1-3644. tf RENT a now electric portable sewing machine. $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing tector, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. Te U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- self-service VI 3-2921 Modern service — open weeks days 8 to 6:30 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED ADVERTISE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- cate of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BEVERAGES — All kinds of s-kips. ice. crushed Ice in water repellent closed paper袋. Picnic, party supply for Plant, &t 8 &ermondment. Phone VI x500 YOUNG MAN TO SHARE 5 room apt Call Bill GOETZE, I-2 35284 evenings TYPING MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." - Now at two 410 lawrence Ave. &, 1021w. Mass. - EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, I 3-8379 LOST Experience typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typeset, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mr. Barlow, 40 W, 13th, VI 2-1648. Mrs. Barlow, 40 W, 13th, VI 2-1648. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Sell 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. tf ttf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, articles in journal, neat recurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favourable image. For excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tt Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in thesis, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Secretarial Service, 9317 B Woods, HE 2-7718 Evers or Sat S 2-2186 TYPING IN MY HOME. Fast service, reasonable rates. Call VI 3-0762. 11-17 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558 1031 Miss. tf FORMER SECRETARY with pica cellar electric typewriter wants to do typing, theses, theses, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Marilyn Ha. VI 3-2318. Mft. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher Erica Hagan these & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. TYPING: Experimented typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, memoirs, reports, Requable rates. Electric typewriter, Mrs. Mc Eldowney, Ph. VI 3-8568. TYPIST. experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 8-3409. tf --the word for quality cleaning and laundry DELUXE Business Shirts, Reg. 22c SHIRTS $ 12^{\mathrm{c}} $ WASH PANTS . . . 29c pr. DELUXE WHEN INCLUDED IN THE DELUXE FAMILY BUNDLE, 5 LBS. ONLY 79c (Additional pounds only 14c each) --- 10 x 50 BINOCULARS at game Friday. 10 x 50 BINOCULARS or Don Foley ward. Rm 331 JBP. 11-29 Drive In and Save — Open 7 A.M. to 7 P.M. Except Sunday 23rd St. & Naismith Dr. VI 2-0200 --- This Sunday at 10 and 10:30 a.m., Plymouth church will provide a bus to carry students from the campus to the church. Be at the bus stop when the bus comes. The driver will not stop if no one is there. If you cannot be at the bus stop designated, flag the driver. If he sees you, he will stop. Vacancy available for 2 men in com- munity care at McKenzie Rell Cd. Caif 1-9-3683 for appointment; Free Sunday Bus Service to Plymouth - West Hills and Emery Roads - High Drive and Oxford Road - Triangle at Fraser Hall Bus Route Lost — Black collapsible umbrella in either Fraser Hall, Student Union, or Faculty Club. Reward. Dr. Pucci. ext. 410, 202 Fraser Hall. 11-20 - Lewis entrance - West Hills and West Campus Roads - Stratford and West Campus Roads - Gamma Phi Beta LARGE FURNISHED apartment a e s t a t e, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294 13th and Oread 12th and Louisiana - Entrance GSP Kansan Want Ads Get Results There will also be bus service to take you back to campus after church. 12th and Indiana SHARE APARTMENT with other boys, and 1 vacancy for a girl. 1 block from Union, cooking privileges. Call VI 3- 6723. 11-17 the LOWEST COST BOOK you'll Need for College! CHECKING ACCOUNT ThriftiCheck COLLEGE With financial matters in good order you can set your sights on top grades, and with ThriftiCheck there'll be no wondering where the money went. You'll have an accurate account of all your expenses and permanent proof of payment. ThriftiChecks are imprinted with your name .cost just pennies each .and you get a handsome checkbook embossed with the seal of your college. You can open a ThriftiCheck College Checking Account with any amount and no minimum balance is required. DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK CONVENIENT NIGHT DEPOSITORY University Daily Kansan Page 8 1 Friday. Nov. 17, 1961 Watkins Personnel- (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) system of staggered shifts has been put in effect this semester for the first time. In spite of this move, members of her staff have been working 10 and 12 hours a day almost constantly since the present semester began, Miss Detlor continued. "YOU CAN SEE THIS works out fine for women who are married and have families to take care of," she says. "We have four movable filing cabinets that have to be kept in the hall, and this office resembles a perpetual cyclone. We don't even have enough space for good house keeping." Mrs. Eleanor Morgan is head of the hospital administrative staff. The shortage of centralized office space has forced the storage of health records in three different locations, she says, some in the sub-basement. THE HOSPITAL NERVE CENTER is the small office off the first-floor entrance lobby. All patients must register here before going to an inner hall which serves as a waiting room. During the period of peak hospital activity, the first several weeks of each semester and following off-campus holidays, the small lobby is often crowded with 20 or more students waiting to register to see a doctor. With office personnel scrambling to pull records on such occasions the situation can resemble chaos, Mrs. Morgan explains. To demonstrate her point she goes to one of several filing cabinets that glut the small area. She pulls the cabinet drawer full out. All traffic around the cabinet is stopped. THE SITUATION RESULTS in "to turnaround time later." Asked how the space situation affected him, he answered: "a tremendous time loss," she says. Dr. R. A. Schwegler, who practiced privately in Lawrence for more than 20 years and who has been a consultant to Watkins for women's diseases much of that time, joined the staff on a full time basis in 1958. "The room we're sitting in is an example." He pointed out that neither his office nor any of the others used for examining were arranged for modesty. If a student has to undress the doctor must leave the room. "It doesn't sound like much, but when you're paying $5 an hour to doctors it becomes no small item," he said. IDEALLY, DR. SCHWEGLER said, the hospital staff of physicians could work more efficiently and handle more students with less loss of time if each doctor had two or three small examining rooms. "That would allow a nurse to prepare the student by performing such preliminary tasks as taking temperatures and the doctor could go from student to student without any waste of time." Three weeks ago the hospital added a seventh physician to the staff, Dr. Anne Svare, who came to KU from Norway. THE ONLY AVAILABLE SPACE for an office for Dr. Svare is a small room formerly used as a medical library. Some of the books were moved out. Many are still there for lack of any other place to put them. Through her office is also the entrance to the only women's rest room facilities on the first floor of the hospital and a closet that serves as a storage area for x-ray films. The report of the State Board of Health last year listed figures showing Watkins Hospital, operating under its present status as a 52-bed institution, was 51.4 per cent deficient in space. THE REPORT LISTED NO space for emergency treatment, none for employees' facilities, and none for storage. The deficiency of these facilities totaled 2,305 square feet. Only half value was given for space in some other areas because of "poor arrangement," "location," or "makeshift provision." "Our lack of space has not only forced a reduction in service (entrance examinations were given by the health service prior to September 1960), but the potential output of the staff is severely hampered," Dr. Canuteson says. "Unless we can show concrete evidence of attempting to improve deficiencies, we may not be able to maintain full hospital accreditation in the future," he warns. KU-MU Tickets Will Be Purchased (Editor's Note: The final article of this series, dealing with future prospects, will appear in the Monday Kansan.) A 3 to 1 profit may be reaped by students who have purchased tickets to the KU-MU game but now find they will be unable to attend. The Athletic Department office is offering $2 for the tickets purchased by students for 50 cents, to help alleviate the shortage and meet a big demand for game tickets. Students are urged to take any unwanted tickets to the business office in Strong Hall or the Athletic Ticket office in Allen Field House on or before Tuesday. Observatory Open Those of you interested in an intimate view of the moon will have a special opportunity tonight. But you will not be able to observe this view with a coed in your arms. Why? The six-inch telescope at the KU observatory (500 Lindley), which is open to visitors for moonviewing from 7 to 10 tonight, accommodates only one at a time. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Chest Committee Asks Support Members of the Campus Chest committee and KU-Y are visiting presidents of Greek houses, dormitories, and scholarship halls to enlist support for the 1961 Campus Chest drive. THE DRIVE, WITH THE THEME "$1 from you, $10,000 from KU," will get underway Dec. 2 with a kickoff breakfast for solicitors. A concert by the Dukes of Dixieland on Dec. 3 will highlight the drive. "I think the personal contact method will really help the success of this year's drive," said Charles Hess, Kansas City, Mo., senior and Campus Chest committee chairman. Each president was given an information sheet which is to be posted on the bulletin board in each house and dormitory floor. Each house's contribution to last year's drive will be posted, with an estimate of the amount the committee hopes the house will donate this year. TICKETS FOR THE DUKES OF Dixieland concert will go on sale after Thanksgiving vacation. Trophies will be awarded the fraternity, sorority, men's dormitory, and women's dormitory making the largest donations. The Campus Chest is KU's only charitable campaign during the year. Donations are divided among various organizations, with the World University Service receiving the largest portion. Other organizations to receive funds include CARE, the Heart Association, Cancer Fund, Save the Children Federation, People-to-People, and other national organizations. Portraits of Distinction 人 HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 WHEEL ALIGNMENT BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP 229 Elm VI 3-2250 THE CATACOMBS = (cellar of the Pizza Hut) is featuring Catacombs Open: 4-11 Monday–Thursday 4-1 Friday & Saturday Friday 9-12:30 -- The Accents Saturday 9 - 12:30 - The Hi-Phi's NOW PIZZA HUT FAST DELIVERY!! Featuring the FINEST PIZZA in the Midwest Open 4-11 Monday-Thursday VI 3-9760 4-1 Friday & Saturday PIZZA To Speak on Kierkegaard HUT 646 Mass. Neil Malicky, minister of the Methodist Church at Moran, will speak at the Wesley Foundation, 5 p.m. Sunday. The Rev. Malicky will speak on the existentialist philosopher, Kierkegaard. Cunard Changes Mind LONDON — (UPI)—The Cunard Line has postponed plans to build a 70,000-ton replacement for the 81,000-ton, 25-year old "Queen Mary" because of competition from the airlines, the company reported. IT'S HERE NOW!! The Miraculous New . . . Rouge FAIRNESS GLOW hair spray Ronnie's HAIR SPRAY WITH PROTEIN CONDITIONER Create Your Own Long Lasting Hairstyles • Keeps Hair In Place All Day • Softly Conditions Hair • Gives You Long Lasting Control introductory Offer . . . Giant $2.50 Size Only $1.49 plus tax R. AVAILABLE AT ALL RONNIE'S SALONS & YOUR FAVORITE COSMETIC COUNTER Quality - In the many items we stock - In the counsel we gladly offer - In the famous brands we carry Id Fa R - In the services we render Complete Departmentst DIAMONDS WATCHES JEWELRY CHINA CRYSTAL GIFTS STERLING 茶 Diamond CUP & TEACUP MORNING TEAPOT SUNDAY Tea Pot W 10 Quality is not a matter of price...but discernment and good taste. May we help you with your purchases, whether as gifts or for yourself. Gustafson Ideas Given on Fallout Shelters Radiation Effects Five speakers discussing several aspects of "What is a Megaton?" last night found only one point of agreement: a nuclear war should be avoided. At the People-to-People forum in the Kansas Union, Roy Laird, assistant professor of political science; Edward Shaw, associate professor of radiation biophysics; John A. Weir, associate professor of zoology; the Rev. Paul Davis, Plymouth Congregational Church and William Kiang, Hong Kong senior, presented their views on atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons and the feasibility of building bomb shelters. Disagreement on nuclear testing in the atmosphere centered around the question of its effect on the world's health. REV. DAVIS SAID: "I ran onto this statistic the other day which says that any 20 megaton bomb detonated in the atmosphere means that 15,000 children yet unborn will be born with defects and that another 15,000 people now living will die of leukemia or bone cancer." Prof. Shaw commented: "Only five per cent of natural mutations are caused by radioactivity. A doubling of background activity (radiation) would only cause a small increase in the mutation rate." Presenting a similar view, Prof. Weir said: "You hear that mutations are harmful, but this is not necessarily so. Usually mutations are 50-50 good and bad." PROF, LAIRD QUOTED one Soviet scientist as saying that a 50 megaton bomb would claim from 200 to 300 lives a year. "Because of the 100 megatons released by the Soviets recently, nearly 2 million people have been condemned to death and another 200,000 babies will be defective at birth," he added. Turning to the question of bomb shelters, the speakers were also in disagreement. Rev. Davis said that he opposed building bomb shelters because they would enhance the war psychology and push the nation nearer to the point where people will be willing to take the chance. He said: "If we must build fall-out shelters they ought to be public and not private. They should be built according to federal plans." Prof. Shaw said that shelters are effective. In an adequate shelter people could survive, he added. "COMMUNITY SHELTERS ARE not the answer," he continued, "because of panic and the time available for getting to the shelter. The shelter would have to be within (Continued on page 8) KOEN HONG JIANG UTOPIAN IDEA—"If it's utopian to speak about survival, then let's be utopian," explains Prof. Laird (on the left) at the People-to-People Forum last night. William Kiang (in the middle), another speaker, and Bruce Whisler, moderator, listen. Effigy Hanged; Peace Made Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, was hanged in effigy Friday evening, apparently because of his action in confiscating more than 2,900 ATAP buttons from students planning to sell them. Dean Woodruff had told the students distributing the buttons they would be expelled from the University if they continued selling the buttons. HE ALSO told them they would face expulsion if they did not give him the buttons. They turned in the buttons. The ATAP buttons are a reply to AHAB (All Hawks are B----s) and AHAMF (All Hawks are "My Friends") buttons which were being circulated at Missouri University. Daily hansan ATAP supposedly meant "All Tigers Are Pushovers," though it has been interpreted in an obscene manner as has the "My Friends" buttons at MU. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday, Nov. 20, 1961 59th Year, No. 47 Rockefeller's Son Missing On South Pacific Expedition By United Press International A Dutch Navy ship today rescued the companion of missing Michael Rockefeller, youngest son of the New York Governor, who last was seen trying to swim to the wilderness shore of New Guinea from a disabled boat. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller flew to Tokyo today en route to the South Pacific to join in the search for his son. The Republican State Committee headquarters in Topeka said Gov. Rockefeller's advisers in New York said to continue with plans for the governor's attendance at the KU-MU game Saturday. Calendars Err on Schedule Contrary to several calendars posted around the campus, school will not resume Tuesday. Nov. 28 after Thanksgiving vacation. Class will begin 8 a.m. Monday. Nov. 27. Officials at Hollandia, Dutch New Guinea, radioed a terse report to the defense ministry at the Hague, The Netherlands, saying that Rocke- ROCKEFELLER WAS informed of the possible family tragedy last night, barely 48 hours after he and his wife announced they were ending their 31-year-marriage with separation and divorce. No cause was given. feller's companion, Dutch ethnologist R. S. Wassink, 34, had been picked up safely. Michael was one of five grown children of the couple. His twin sister, Mrs Mary Rockefeller Strawbridge, accompanied the governor on his flight. The mother remained in seclusion near New York. In New Guinea, Wassink was reported to have told his rescuers that he and young Rockefeller were exploring the remote and crocodile-infested south coast of Dutch New Guinea when their native boat lost its power and started drifting out to sea near the mouth of the Elanden River. The engine fell off and the small shallow-draft boat started drifting out into the Arafura Sea. The craft was sighted by search planes Saturday, but darkness closed in before help could come. THE BOAT, CALLED a prahu, is made of two small Mayalan canoes lashed together catamaran style. Normally, it is powered with sails and oars, and sometimes an engine—as was the case this time. Wassink said he stayed with the prahu, and young Rockefeller decided to try for shore to get help. MICHAEL LASHED TWO empty gasoline cans together and started swimming toward the swampy and jungle-choked coastline more than 15 miles away, using the cans for buoyancy. "I saw Mike swimming in the ocean toward the New Guinea shore yesterday (Saturday New York time)," Wassink told his rescuers. "I don't know if he made it. I haven't seen him since." "He was pushing two empty gasoline cans ahead of him," Wassink said. Weather Considerable cloudiness today and tonight and becoming warmer by Tuesday afternoon. High today 35 to 40 and low tonight 25 to 30. High Tuesday afternoon in the 40%. DEAN WOODRUFF said he confiscated the buttons because they "have become a sort of symbol of poor sportsmanship on the part of both the institutions." PAINTED ON the effigy's hat was "Woodie" and on the pants "Woodie the Wise." The effigy was found by police Saturday morning. It was dangling from a tree in front of Flint Hall. A sign on the dummy read "If not ATAP then how 'bout WAIP," "Sic Semper Tyrannus" and "Eliminate Autocracy at KU." Dean Woodruff declined to comment on the effigy. KU-MU Pact Signed Four KU students met a delegation from MU Sunday in Kansas City to officially sign a "peace pact" between the two schools. The pact, similar to the one signed several years ago between KU and Kansas State University, recognizes the animosities that have arisen between the two institutions and makes two recommendations: - That acts which may damage the reputations of both institutions be defined to include assault and battery, acts to incite riots, property destruction and obnoxious or disorderly conduct - That offenders be punished according to the severity of their act, including suspension from school as the maximum penalty. FRATERNITIES AND SORORI- ties will support the pact by holding open houses for MU students before and after the game, and a reception for independent students and alumni of both universities will be held following the game. Newspapers on both campuses will appeal to students and alumni to support the principles of the pact by conducting themselves in a mature fashion. THE PACT REQUESTS SPECTATORS to remain seated during the game to prevent milling on the track and in the stands A statement released by the KU delegation reports the pact will be enforced by Pinkerton Dectectives, Lawrence policemen and "the discretion of those attending" the game. Plans for the peace pact began last May with letters, telegrams, and telephone calls between student leaders of KU and MU. The principles of the pact were decided upon before yesterday's meeting The pact will continue to be enforced at all KU-MU athletic events. See page 4 for statements Last Kansan Until Tuesday, Nov. 28 This is the last UDK that will be published until Nov. 28. A Kansan Series-Part III Lack of Funds May Slow Hospital Expansion By Richard Bonett Editor's note:—This is the last of a three-part series on Watkins Memorial Hospital. It appears that another private gift or state beneficence will have to provide the revenue if the hospital is to expand to meet present and future needs. Watkins Memorial Hospital was founded on the generosity of the late Mrs. Elizabeth M. Watkins as a memorial to her late husband. Mrs. Watkins provided the gift that made possible the construction and equipping of the present building. Keith Lawton, administrative assistant to the chancellor for physical plant development and coordination, said the University is aware of the hospital's space problem. "It (a plan for expansion) is in the University's 10-year building program," he said recently. He added, however, that there are no immediate plans for expansion of Watkins Hospital, indicating the project is low on the priority list. HOW SOON the University will be able to act in any expansion program for the hospital depends almost entirely on how rapidly the Kansas Legislature wants to fund the 10-year building program. Asked if he believed such expansion would take place in the next 10 years to meet the anticipated increase in student enrollment, Mr. Lawton answered: ALEXANDRA PARKER THE LINEUP — Students wait for service at Watkins. "I hope it can be done within the 10-year period." Mrs. Watkins, in her will, specified a cash bequest to provide a yearly income for the hospital, but the revenue from that amounts to about $11,000 a year, earmarked primarily for new equipment and equipment maintenance. In 1947, the need for additional hospital space was established to the satisfaction of the Federal Works Agency and an allocation for Hill-Burton funds, which provides a federal grant on a matchingfund basis, was approved. However, a well-known Kansas City, Mo., architect and KU alumnus, drew plans for a 3-story addition to be added to the rear of the present building and stretching out toward Sunflower Drive. ACCORDING to Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, hospital administrator, a change in the agency's administration in the Kansas City office occurred and the project was never carried out. The extension, approximately 45 feet long and 38 feet wide, would have added more than 5,000 square feet to the present structure. At that time, the hospital had built up a cash reserve of about $105,000 and the construction estimate for the expansion was about $205,000. THE MONEY WAS accumulated from student fees paid during (Continued on page 8) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday. Nov. 20, 1961 What Price Peace? Last week the costs of promoting a peaceful atmosphere for the KU-Missouri game became painfully apparent. In fact, three KU students consider the price prohibitive. The University's confiscation of 2,950 ATAP buttons indicates that it plans to insure peace this weekend, regardless of costs. But it appears that the University's peace-at-any-cost attitude may have done more to heighten the rivalry than the 3,000 buttons. THE THREE STUDENTS CERTAINLY have the right to engage in free enterprise without interference by the University. The fact that the sale of the buttons might not be in the best interest of the University should not have any bearing on their right to sell them. Even the question of the effect of the buttons on crowd behavior is not a clear cut one. Some people have said that the wearing of a button indicates school spirit and not intentions by the wearer to become involved in some type of disorderly conduct. The Administration admitted it had no legal right to seize the buttons but it attempted to defend the seizure by saying it has a moral right to "defend the dignity of a great institution." It is hard to see how an action such as this is a defense of the "dignity" of KU. It would seem that a disciplinary action that has no foundation in law would be an affront, rather than an action to protect the dignity of the University. ADMINISTRATORS HAVE A TENDENCY to sometimes be too concerned with the "image" of their institution. They react defensively to anything that poses a threat to this "image." They should realize that although the actions of individuals often affect the reputation of the University, they do not always come within the control of the University. What could the University have done if those involved in the sale of the ATAP buttons were not students? The University can go only so far in its attempts to prevent the disturbances that many fear will break out. The University certainly cannot act as the conscience of every individual who will be present in Memorial Stadium. Each of the 40,000 who will witness this game must be responsible for his own actions. Perhaps an appeal to the conscience and responsibility of each student and spectator would have been more effective than actions that do not allow the student an opportunity to use this responsibility. It is obvious that by disallowing the sale of the ATAP buttons the University has eliminated the need for the student to be responsible in making his decision regarding the buttons. But it will not be as easy for the University to so limit the other possible circumstances that might lead to disturbances at the stadium. IT IS THE OPINION OF THE KANSAN that KU students do not require the paternalistic protection that the University has insisted on providing. Dean Woodruff would not have been hanged in effigy and the University could not be accused of acting outside the law if the administration had allowed the sale of the buttons and at the same time appealed to the student body to use its better judgment and not buy them. College is generally regarded as the last step in the individual's preparation for the full responsibilities of life. But the University continually shields the individual from the necessity of making decisions he will later have to make for himself. A historical look at the enthusiasm KU crowds have shown at athletic events indicates that there has been a general lack of exuberance. Just this year the KU head cheerleader complained of a lack of spirit at football games. So there is historical basis for belief that KU students are responsible in their behavior at the stadium and field house. Why couldn't the University recognize the right of those involved to sell the buttons, then make an appeal, aimed at the maturity of the KU student, in which he would be asked not to buy the buttons? Except for the confiscation, the University and the student body have fulfilled their responsibilities. The Administration announced it has doubled the number of ushers, policemen and Pinkerton ticket takers in an attempt to prevent trouble. The student assemblies and leaders of both schools have signed a pact which officially re-establishes peaceful relations between the students of both universities. WHAT MORE CAN BE DONE? The Kansan certainly does not feel that the University should go so far as to abuse the rights of students in its efforts to promote peace. However, the adoption of more positive attitudes toward the coming athletic contest could possibly help a crisis. As long as everyone continues to think there will be trouble, there is a good chance their expectations will be rewarded. The Kansan hopes that KU students will use this opportunity to show their ability to exercise judgment and make decisions on a mature and adult level. We believe that KU students will do this and act this Saturday with the forethought and restraint that has characterized their participation as spectators at past athletic events. The Kansan does not agree with the opinions expressed recently in the editorial columns of the Lawrence Journal-World and reprinted on this page. The editorial writer no doubt considers students to be the most irresponsible of all creatures. The Kansan hopes that in the future the administration will act with the realization that KU students want to be treated as responsible individuals. -The Editors Guest Editorial- Orchids to KU (Editor's Note: The Kansan is reprinting the following editorial from the Saturday Lawrence Journal-World so that the reader may compare conflicting opinions on the Administration's seizure of the ATAP buttons.) Kansas University and its dean of students, Laurence Woodruff, are to be congratulated for their decisive stand against lapel buttons and signs that tend to stir up trouble and ill-will for the Kansas-Missouri football contest here a week from today. WOODRUFF LEFT NO DOUBT about what was in store for youngsters caught "dealing" in such childish material when he declared, "I take a dim view of the idea, and anyone associating himself with the buttons is jeopardizing his student status . . . I gave them their choice. They could either turn the buttons in to me, or run the chance of being disqualified as students. I probably had no legal right to do what I did but I think we have a moral right to do what is necessary to protect the dignity of a great institution. These buttons have become a symbol of KU has taken the leadership and seems to be expending every effort to prevent trouble—such as occurred on KU football and basketball visits to Columbia last year. The school and its leaders are to be congratulated on this positive stand. There will be grumbling by some students about the denial of their rights, but these will be the ones who realize least that with rights goes responsibility. poor sportsmanship on the part of both MU and KU." Let's hope Missouri officials work as hard as those here at preventing trouble next week. If they do, chances are good there will be no severe disturbances such as have marred the rivalry of late. DEALING IN SIGNS AND BUTTONS with obviously unwholesome connotations does not reflect a burning sense of responsibility by anyone. It is refreshing and encouraging to hear about a KU dean speaking out and acting so forcefully in a matter of discipline. DEAM OF 2 LUCIENT OFFICE EXTON - DAVID PANASAN 61 "Well, I don't know what to do with them! You confiscated 'em!" Sound & Fury A Defense of Buttons (Editor's Note: The following is a statement released by one of the students involved in the University's seizure of 2,950 ATAP buttons.) The question concerning ATAP buttons is not one of their effect on school spirit, for this is merely a matter of opinion. It seems there is a deeper and more important question involved in the seizure of the ATAP buttons by Dean Laurence C. Woodruff of the University of Kansas than that of their questionable effect on KUMU relations. Dean Woodruff admitted, "I probably had no legal right to do what I did." In taking his action Dean Woodruff has seized private property without authority or due process of law. It seems he has accomplished this by using his power to expell students as a threat to coerce the students involved in selling buttons into turning their property, in this case their buttons, over to him. Dean Woodruff has said that, "I think we have a moral right to do what is necessary to protect the dignity of a great institution." What kind of "moral right" allows individual and constitutional rights to be compromised as they were in the confiscation of the buttons? The University has shed any dignity it might have had by compromising the very principles upon which it and this country were founded. In taking his actions the Dean has given himself the power to restrict free and legal trade. Dean Woodruff seems to have found it necessary to apply the Machiavellian principle of the means being justified by the ends which they accomplish. For although the University's ends may be justified, the means used to achieve these ends are very questionable. Dale MacCollum Kansas City senior Dailu 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 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. T 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. Monday, Nov. 20, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 3 The Kansan on Elections The Kansan does not usually comment on any criticism of its policies. However, when such sweeping attacks are made as the one on the Kansan's election recommendations in the Sound and Fury column on this page, the Kansan considers it necessary to reply. THE WRITER OF THE SOUND AND FURY article questions the objectivity of the Kansan's staff because eight of the ten candidates it recommended were running on the VOX ticket. A related criticism is the attack on the Kansan's method of evaluation. The student points out that the Kansan spent only three hours interviewing 27 candidates. The Kansan spent only three hours interviewing the candidates because they took only that long to answer the questions that were asked them. In some cases the candidate was uninformed about the issue a question was based on and could not offer an evaluation or opinion on it. Very often the candidates were able to answer quickly because they simply mouthed the party line on the issue. The candidates were recommended on the basis of their interviews, past records and written statements on their reasons for running for office. THE RECOMMENDATIONS REPRESENT the combined efforts of six Kansan executives. Each executive gave his recommendations to the editorial staff, which made the final decision in each case. Agreement among the Kansan executives on the best qualified candidates was almost unanimous. The Kansan made its recommendations with a far greater knowledge of the candidates than the majority of students have and its recommendations were made on an objective basis. The fact that eight of the ten candidates recommended were on the VOX ticket is an incidental result of the candidate-by-candidate evaluation the Kansan made. The student also criticizes the Kansan's recommendation of candidates on the grounds that the issues involved in an election are more important than the candidates. The Kansan agrees that the issues are important and the failure of both parties to deal adequately with them in their platforms was criticized in a Kansan editorial. But the qualifications and ability of the candidates to deal with the issues is also important. It was this the Kansan was concerned with when it conducted its interviews with the candidates. The Kansan realizes that for many people politics are to a large degree subjective in nature. Complete agreement with the Kansan by all members of the campus community is not expected, however objective Kansan coverage may be. But the Kansan is the only non-partisan source of information and evaluation of candidates most students have. THE CHARGE OF INADEQUATE COVERAGE of parties, platforms (The Kansan printed the full texts of both platforms) and candidates (The Kansan gave background material on each candidate.) may seem justified to the writer because of an intense interest in campus politics. But the Kansan must cover many other topics and can devote only a certain amount of space to any one subject. If the writer had explained what is meant by "inadequate coverage," a more precise answer to this charge would be possible. The Kansan will therefore continue what it regards as a sound and useful service to the campus. The Editors Seating Plan Criticized Editor: Since the ASC seems to relish a good investigation now and then, there is a particular branch of the University which I would like to recommend for its next inquiry. That is the ticket office for the KU athletic department. I have two complaints, both of which I think are valid grounds for a lynching; however, I believe recognition of the problem is probably the best I can hope for. Number one complaint is that the ticket office sold me a ticket for the KU-KS game that was directly in the middle of the Froshawk's section. Don't misunderstand, I liked the seat, until the usher stated very bluntly that if I didn't remove myself from the seat he would remove me from the stadium. The second, and more serious complaint, is that when I ordered my parent's and friend's tickets for the KU-MU game the office assured me that I had ordered in time to secure good grandstand seats (I ordered July 26). Then, when the tickets arrived, I found they were for the un-reserved bleacher section. This, I think, is an injustice and does not make for good public relations. I don't believe that I am the only person who has been offended by the ticket office's shaky methods of managing their business. Consequently, for my personal satisfaction, as well as for other KU fan's benefit, I would like to recommend an investigation. Larry Shawhan Belton, Mo., sophomore Red China Issue Restated Editor: May I thank your reporter, Mr. Jerry Musil, for his generally accurate report on my remarks made after the YAF sponsored showing of "Red China Outlaw." There is however, one important point which I would like to rectify. I am quoted as terming the admission of Red China to the U.N. a dead issue "because Red China will eventually be admitted to the United Nations." This grossly distorts what I actually said. My statement did indeed term the admission as being a dead one. However the reason I gave was different from the one quoted in your story. ... Letters ... I termed the issue dead, because the Chinese People's Republic will refuse to enter the U.N. as long as the Nationalist Government of Chiang Kai-shek remains in the U.N. with pretensions to be the representative of mainland China. Since the only way in which Communist China could be brought into the U.N. is by a general acceptance by Red China, Nationalist China, the Soviet Union, and the United States of a "Two China's Concept," and since all of the aforementioned governments are firmly committed to a non-acceptance of such a formula, the issue of Red China's admission is dead until some radical political change occurs which will completely alter the present impasse. I therefore regard both of these issues as being dead for the time being. I did however say, in another context, that I believed that Red China would eventually be admitted to the U.N., whether we liked it or not. The reason is that the small nations of the world will feel safer with China in the U.N., where they hope to be able to control and influence her—especially after she becomes a nuclear power. This may however be a vain hope, since the U.S.S.R. seems to pay little attention to what the Afro-Asian bloc wants when she considers that her vital interests are involved. THE UNITED STATES Congress and the platform of President Kennedy's Democratic Party both categorically reject Red China's admission as well as recognition of the regime. Recognition, incidentally is an equally dead issue, since the Chinese Communists would never recognize us, nor permit us to send an Ambassador to Peking until we evacuate what they call "our territory of Taiwan." There seems to be little if any likelihood, possibly for years to come, that the existing impediments to both recognition and admission will be eliminated. CERTAINLY THERE IS no good argument for changing U.S. policy towards Red China's admission at the present time, unless Red China should be willing to give iron-clad guarantees as to the integrity of Taiwan. Taiwan has become the equivalent of the Berlin situation in Asia. We have committed ourselves to the defense of Taiwan, and we must now defend it. There will be no recognition and no admission of Red China to the U.N. until the status of Taiwan is guaranteed. It is on these grounds that I oppose the recognition of Communist China, as well as her admission to the U.N. and consider these matters dead issues for the time being. Klaus H. Pringsheim Instructor of Political Science UDK Executive Criticized (Editor's note: This is a letter mailed to the editor of the University of the Philippines, and the letter was also mailed to the editorial staff of the UDK. The guest by a UDK executive and dealt with the John Birch Society.) I have just finished reading your guest editorial, "What to Expect" in reference to Bob Love's appearance on the campus Thursday night, November 16, 1961. Editor: The writer states "But it is unfortunate that they have wandered into a half-baked fight against a harmless foe; the Communist sympathizer." Get the implication — a harmless foe! It so happens the United States is pouring out its wealth and blood to fight Communism, and here is a writer in a college paper saying that a Communist sympathizer is a "harmless foe." This is a treasonous statement and I'll let you judge where his sympathies are. Russia is engaged in a fight to the finish with our country. This is it, and if we lose, the last vestige of freedom will disappear from this earth; and it will be a long, long struggle for our children and their children to regain it. A college student who thinks so little of the values of his freedom, is proof of the failure of our schools to teach American history in its proper perspective. He has his freedom today because men had the will to fight and die for it before he was born. And he calls a sympathizer with our enemy a harmless foe! How can your paper lend prestige to such writing as this? Don C. Simpson 307 South Clifton Wichita, Kan. Sound & Fury Kansan Criticized When a Daily Kansan reporter attempts to write an article covering a lecture or book review, he often distorts things so that the speaker can only shudder. However, we non-journalism majors at KU realize that student reporters are getting the necessary training for future, competent journalism. When the Kansan's editors attempt to write profound editorials on international issues, or oppose an issue one semester and support it the next equally as vehemently, we readers again keep in mind the fact that journalism students, like the rest of us, must learn, and often only through practice and mistakes. But when the whole Kansan staff, apparently, collaborates cooly and calculatingly to defy basic standards of campus journalism, then I must protest. I am referring to the following standards; bi-partisanship, objectivity and neutrality in campus issues outside the editorial columns. NOVEMBER 13 THE KANSAN stated that the "executives of the University Daily Kansan" had tried to determine which of the candidates were best qualified and advised the students accordingly. The excuse, er, reason, given was that most students can't get acquainted with their district candidates. Since when in democratic elections is it necessary for the voters to personally know their candidates? I always thought that the issues were most important. The media of communication should be the press, the UDK. Instead of telling, er, recommending, to us how to vote, why not improve the Kansan's inadequate coverage of the parties, platforms and candidates? Granted that most students probably don't read about national and international issues in newspapers and magazines. But the majority of students do, it's unquestionable, read the Kansan. I believe that KU students have a right to know exactly who did the dictating, er, recommending. If they were students, why were they assumed to be more wise and capable of judging the candidates than their fellow students? Who were the people who made the recommendations? It seems unfair to me that a few individuals should have such a splendid opportunity to plug for their favorites and yet not have to identify themselves. I wonder if I could get equal time. I'm also questioning the method used to evaluate the candidates. If only three hours were spent interrogating the twenty-seven, it means that each candidate received only 4.44 minutes of attention. Each candidate was supposedly questioned about five issues, thus giving him less than one minute to explain his position on each issue. Thoroughness seems to be lacking. I'M WONDERING ABOUT the staff's objectivity. Of the ten candidates recommended, eight were from Vox. Since the platforms of both parties were of such similar quality, I hesitate to believe that one party's candidates were so superior to the other's. Perhaps the majority of KU students are apathetic towards the election. But the majority of students don't vote!!! The minority that does vote has clear opinions about the issues and firm beliefs concerning student government. It must, or how else could these students muster up enough perseverance to last through the process of voting that only enrollment can vie with in terms of confusion and red tape? The fact that ten per cent of the ballots cast in the primaries were invalid testifies to the difficulty of voting in a KU campus election. UNDOUBTEDLY, THE KANSAN was merely trying to help me make the correct choice between the candidates. It only succeeded in insulting me. I could little more resent the open booth and army-patrolled polls method. I am as familiar with the issues as the candidates and "executives" are and feel quite capable of voting without anyone's help. And I'm sure that I'm not the only proud person on campus. Oh! I'm surprised that the Kansan dared to print all the pictures of the candidates. Aren't the "executives" afraid that we students will become distracted from the issues? At the Movies Rv Rill Charles By Bill Charles. "A Ration in the canyon"; with Sidney Politer and Claudia McNeil. Directed by Claudia Petrie. At the Varsity. Lorraine Hansberry's hit play is a story of a Negro family living on Chicago's South Side and the effect of a $10,000 insurance check on its members. Underlying this is the question of money versus man's dignity. THE SCREEN VERSION suffers from what is usually a fatal film disease; most of it looks like a play photographed from the balcony of a theater. The direction by Daniel Petrie is about as imaginative and pedestrian as film direction can be. One gets the impression that his sole objective was to record the action on film. He seems to have exerted no control over his actors, an omission which probably produced the gross overplaying so evident in the film. The cast is effective, but overzealous. Poitier exhausted the stockpile of arm gestures available to an actor and had to steal a couple from the repertoire of the pop singers. He looked much too much like a dark-skinned Marlon Brando. He is good, but his hambone is showing. As the family matriarch, Claudia McNeil is the best in the picture. Her acting lends solidarity to the film, although she has the least believable part. EASILY THE BEST thing about the film is the screenplay by Miss Hansberry It is good enough to compensate for the below-par elements and make the film worthwhile. Except for the grandmother the characters are real and believable. They avoid being stock because their race permits a view of things from a fresh angle. The story is entertaining, thought-provoking, and often moving. It asks a valid question and gives an equally valid answer. It might make good case material for an urban people-to-people program. Page 4 广信 University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 20, 1961 Missouri's Statement (Editor's Note: Yesterday the presidents of both the KU and Missouri student bodies issued statements as a part of the peace pact agreement that was made final at Kansas City.) For the past several years, the problem of rivalry between the Kansas and Missouri Universities has become increasingly acute. This has been due, in many respects, to the almost parallel growth of the two institutions. Scholastically, athletically and in many other fields the two universities are achieving national stature. LAST YEAR THOUGH, was the first outbreak of actual violence and it has given both schools a black eye. Since then the student governments of KU and MU have been meeting, trying to find possible solutions to the problem. Many worthwhile programs can come from these groups, but the ultimate solutions must come from each and every individual, Kansan or Missourian, who attends these athletic events. Certainly, it is a lot of fun to wear AHAB buttons, to have a strong rivalry with another university, to "rub it in" when we win, to complain when we lose. Missouri and Kansas have one of the most long-standing rivalries in the country and in most ways it is something to be proud of. But when the rivalry deteriorates into hatred, when athletic competition on the field becomes fist fighting competition in the stands, high officials in both university administrations begin to question the value of the rivalry. THOSE OF US WHO are going to Lawrence for the game should remember that much more than a single victory is at stake. Let's go and cheer the team as much as we can, but let's go as gentlemen and ladies. The continuance of the KU-MU tradition may well depend upon how each individual conducts himself at this game. A simple application of the principles of human respect will provide a solution to the problem. Roger Bridges President, Missouri Students Association 3.4 Eberhart's Statement The students of the University of Kansas and the University of Missouri are faced with an important decision in the matter of student conduct and University policy. This decision involves a simple choice between two possible courses of action. ONE OF THESE CHOICES, preceded by past performances of our students and contemplated by some for the coming football game, involves destruction of property and open disrespect for the two schools and their athletic departments. A riot, general fist-fighting, or malicious conduct might push the relations between KU and MU to a point that would result in the discontinuation of athletic contests between the two schools. On the other hand, if we can direct our enthusiasm to the teams on the playing field, show some respect for each other by not flaunting our derogatory comments and "buttons," and show that we realize how much is at stake by displaying some sportsmanship—then we can have the proud satisfaction of knowing that we insured one of the strongest, oldest, and most exciting athletic rivalries in the mid-West. STUDENT GOVERNMENT MEMBERS, University officials, newspapermen, and cheerleaders from both schools have tried to represent our best interests in working to prevent the defamation of both schools' fine reputations. Although you may temporarily question some of their proposals, try to view the long-range consequences to see if you want the Universities to be noted for academic achievements and fine athletic teams—or for vicious riots. Although our decision involves two choices I'm sure we will want to choose the one showing our maturity and our acceptance of responsibility. Let's go to the game and enjoy it the way we should. Max E. Eberhardt Great Bend senior KU Student Body President JFK Returns to Capital For Adenauer Talks By Merriman Smith En route with President Kennedy — (UPI) — President Kennedy speed back to Washington by jet transport today for a round of Berlin crisis conferences with West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. The Chief Executive wound up a four-day western speech tour in Los Angeles late last night and left aboard an Air Force Jet transport for Andrews Field outside Washington. AFTER THREE successive days of public speaking, the Chief Executive spent a relatively easy Sunday in Los Angeles before his night flight back to the nation's capital. Kennedy's Sunday began with a long distance telephone conference with Secretary of State Dean Rusk in Washington. After attending mass at the Church of the Good Shepherd in Beverly Hills, the President returned to his suite at the Beverly Hilton Hotel and talked with Rusk again. ACCORDING TO Fress Secretary Pierre Salinger, the President and his foreign affairs officer wanted to talk over two matters of immediate concern—the conferences with Adenauer and mounting unrest in the Dominican Republic. Before seeing the German Chancellor this afternoon, the President had another international engagement on his agenda for today. He planned a morning meeting with Paul Henri Spaak, former chief civilian officer of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and now the Belgian foreign minister. Optimism, said Candide, is a mania for maintaining that all is well when things are going badly.—Voltaire WASHINGTON — (UPI) A committee of the Organization of American States agreed today to send a mission to the Dominican Republic to investigate recent developments which brought a U.S. naval task force into the area over the weekend. OAS to Check Trujillo Move A subcommittee will be sent to Ciudad Trujillo as soon as the Dominican government agrees to receive it. The U.S. Navy action in which American warships stood by near the Caribbean republic followed an apparent attempt by members of the family of the late dictator Raf- acl Trujillo to regain control of the government. Delegates from Colombia, Chile, Ecuador, Panama and the United States are expected to be on the OAS commission. Formosan Methodists TAIPEI, Formosa — (UPI) — The Wesley Girls' High School, first Methodist high school on the Island of Formosa, opened for classes this fall. The first class, of 160 seventh grade girls, was admitted in September. Eventually there will be 560 students in grades from six through twelve. Christian endeavor is notoriously hard on female pulchritude—Henry Louis Mencken Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 FIGURE 10.18 HIXON STUDIO A GOOD MOVE FOR YOU... ©2. . . IS TO HAVE YOUR DRY CLEANING DONE AT LAWRENCE LAUNDRY. We feature exclusive Sanitone dry cleaning,the only cleaning process recommended by clothing manufacturers. The Sanitone method will give your clothes the fine treatment they deserve. ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTE FOR YOUR WARDROBE CARE. "Quality Guaranteed" LAWRENCE "Quality Guaranteed" LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. VI 3-3711 "Specialists in Fabric Care" S C Page 5 Monday, Nov. 20, 1961 University Daily Kansan Summer Institute Called Worthwhile Two students who participated in the Summer Language Institute and the Institute director said Sunday the institute was a worthwhile program. "We probably learned as much conversational language in one summer as we could have learned in three years at home," Latta said. J. A. BURZLE, professor of German and director of the institute, spoke before 50 members of the Faculty Club. Appearing with him were Alan Latta, Wichita senior, and Breon Mitchell, Salina sophomore. THE SPEAKERS MENTIONED several misconceptions about the United States by the native students. They sail it was worthwhile because the participating students learned the language and culture of the countries better and because many misconceptions about the United States were cleared up. "The program was successful in every way—academically, culturally, and in helping us understand the students better." Mitchell said. "They thought all American students were rich" he said. "Many German students thought of the United States as skyscrapers in the East and Indians in the West," Mitchell said. Prof. Burzle said the program was started because many of the exchange programs were little more than "tourist's adventures." The high cost of other programs was another factor which led to the KU program, he said. Prof. Burzle said the native German instructors were impressed by the honor system used in the final examination. "THEY COULDN'T BELIEVE we could leave students alone and they wouldn't cheat," he said. The Summer Language Institute cost $725 per student, he said, and financial help was available to students who needed it. The scholarships were given principally by the Carnegie Foundation and the KU Endowment Association. PROF. BURZLE SAID THE Summer Language Institute was set up with six requirements; - It should be academic, with the "pleasure aspects" relegated to the background. - Participants should have at The Civil Rights Council has begun consideration of another area of what it feels is discrimination in University housing: discriminatory clauses in fraternities and sororities. CRC to Study Greek Housing No definite plans have been formulated by the group, but delegates from the CRC are going to attempt to talk to Chancellor W. Clarke Westcoe, Donald Seward, Stuart Jenkins and Paul Ingemanson, Toleda junior and head of the interfraternity council to discuss the problem. "Since the University has taken a stand on off-campus housing. I think it should look at on-campus housing, of which fraternities and sororities are a part." STEVE BARATZ. Lawrence graduate student and former chairman of the Council, said that: He said that the University is unintentionally using a "double standard." "IM SURE IT DOESN'T want to do this. I think that since we have a reputation for getting things done, we should let the fraternities know what we are going to do. It's their problem, they should get involved. I am confident that something will be done quickly if we acquaint the University of its ambiguous stand." Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior that sororities are the big problem. "The fraternities are getting rid of discriminatory clauses much faster than sororites, per usual." In other action last week the eight members at the meeting unanimously adopted a resolution to support the proposed World Crisis Dry. least one year of language study. - Academic requirements should be the same as at the home institution. - The director should be a teacher at the home institution. - Financial matters should be handled by the institution, rather than by the individual students. - The academic requirements during the eight-week session were identical to the requirements for the second year of language study at KU. Prof. Burzle said. - Participation should not depend on the students' financial resources. TWENTY STUDENTS EACH in German, French and Spanish were selected to participate, he said. All took a course at KU last spring in the culture of the country in which they would study. "On the whole, the Summer Language Institute was a worthwhile undertaking," Prof. Burzle said. Prof. Burzle said the students attended classes approximately 25 hours per week. Weekends were left free for travel, he said. "I hope it isn't the only time it will be done," he added. "I believe we can do it again, and involve even more students." NEW YORK—(UPI) A major contradiction now further complicates the statistically-based theory that smoking, especially cigarette smoking, is "associated" with high blood levels of cholesterol. Smoking-Cancer Thesis Contradicted The contradiction is that in 221 men 65 to 85 years old, there was no such "association." In fact, there was a statistical possibility smoking meant lower cholesterol levels rather than higher. THIS WAS PUZZLING to the two scientists involved because the smoking-high cholesterol "association" has been turned up statistically among men in widely separated places — the United States, Great Britain, Finland and South Africa. The 221 old men were pensioners of a Dublin brewer. The scientists were Roy M. Acheson, a well-known English medical statistician, and Prof. W.J.E. Jessop of Trinity College, Dublin. The previous studies were of men of middle age and younger. This led Acheson and Jessop to suggest the body handled fats like cholesterol differently in old age than in young-er years although the said the contradiction was "difficult to explain." IN THEIR opinion, however, "there can be little question of the relationship" between blood fats and cigarette smoking in middle aged SUIT SALE SUIT SALE SUIT SALE Edmiston's BROOKLYN EDMISTON STORES men even though "in the present data based on old men there is no evidence whatsoever of such a relationship." SUITS - S29 By special arrangement with one of our leading clothing manufacturers, we are presenting a large selection of this fall's best patterns and most wanted fabrics in men's suits. This ad is our first announcement of this sale. We hope you will take advantage of this "sneak preview" and make your selection now. Rather, their statistics "suggested" a higher blood fats level in the nonsmokers among the aged brewery pensioners than the smokers. Because of the complexity of the statistical measuring and its mathematical checks, they couldn't be more positive on this point. All suits in this group — $29, shorts, regulars and longs. As always, necessary alterations without charge at Edmiston's. The importance of such studies is that high blood fats level, particularly cholesterol, are believed intimately involved in artery "hardening" and consequent heart attacks and "strokes." Acheson and Jespow pointed out that heart attacks usually are of a different nature in old men than in younger men. THIS MEANT their supporting findings in old men were at least "compatible" with what is known about heart attacks in the old compared with the younger. Nevertheless, "it is not possible to give a reason" for the findings, "even less to explain the possibility of an inverse relationship," they said. But "several theories suggest themselves," they added. Since the men were pensioners, their means could have been so limited that in order to smoke it was necessary to eat less Their study did not measure this possibility. It also could be that aging dulls the sense of taste even more than smoking which might lead aged smokers to eat less foods with high cholesterol content. A previous scientific study had suggested that heavy smokers are likely to have a high taste preference for the cholesterol-producing foods. Big Board Members NEW YORK — (UPI)—At last count, the New York stock exchange had 3.166 member offices located in 772 different cities in the United States and in 23 foreign countries. Have You Inquired About The BONUS BOOK PLAN At The BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. NATIONAL COLLEGE QUEEN SQUARE Times Square becomes National College Queen Square College Queens make great discovery in New York! Of course, they loved the city—the fun and the excitement. 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Artcarved DIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGS Artcarved DIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGS Three of the ten loveliest Artcarved styles as chosen by America's College Queens Canterbury Tanglers Evening Star as chosen by America's College Queens Canterbury Tanglers Evening Star 10K YELLOW GOLD RING WITH 5 DIAMONDS OF .32CT WIDTHS AND 18K WHITE GOLD BAND. SIZE 6.5 MARIE LENA University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 20, 1961 1 Bowl Hopes Lifted; Missouri in Finale Missouri, Beware! KU's 53-7 Win Better Orange Bowl Chances By Bill Sheldon A Kansas football team played its first game in the San Francisco Bay area Saturday and came home with a win which left fans from along the entire West Coast dumbfounded and impressed. Only 30,000 spectators turned out for the non-league intersectional initial meeting between the Jayhawkers and the Golden Bears, but from the first play, there was little doubt of the superiority of the visitors. Kansas kept alive its Orange Bowl hopes and kindled a spark of excitement among the Rose Bowl selection committee as it unmercifully handed California its worst beating in 31 years, scoring freely for a 53-7 win. Only in 1930 had the Bears suffered a more devastating loss when Southern California beat them, 74-0. WITH COLORADO downing Nebraska, 7-0, and maintaining a seemingly unmatchable 5-0 Big Eight record, Kansas knew it had to leave the tight bowl formed by Cal's Memorial Stadium at the base of the beautiful Berkeley Hills with an impressive win over the floundering Bears to stay in the picture as a possible choice for the Orange Bowl. 9 With conference tilts against Missouri, for KU, and Iowa State, for Colorado, remaining (Colorado must also face Air Force), Kansas has only a slim chance of attaining a tie for the title and an almost guaranteed bowl bid. Almost all of the fans stayed seated throughout the entire game despite suffering as their local heroes absorbed a beating such as has never before been administered by a Jack Mitchell coached squad. This interest in the awesome Kansas play was reflected yesterday with the announcement that members of the Rose Bowl committee now hold considerable interest in Kansas as a host team in the oldest of all the post-season extravaganzas. KANSAS How did Kansas, a 14-point favorite, win so easily? The answer was basic football. THE BIG FACTOR in the Jayhawker's win was the never ending ability of the Crimson and Blue line to stretch out gaps in the slower, less experienced Cal line through which their backs galloped for 408 vards, another high under Mitchell. COACH MITCHELL, usually one to come up with some new little twist every game, showed the fans, and rival Missouri's scout, little which had not previously been displayed. The defense, a 4-3-4, was to bunched to stop a well executed draw with Bear Rudy Carvajal scooting 77 yards down the west side of the KU three before reserve Armand Baughman made an excellent play for the tackle. Two plays later the losers connected on a six-yard pass from Randy Gold to Bob Wills for a score. The California score came late in the fourth quarter with Kansas leading. 47-0. Curtis McClinton churned for 99 yards and crossed the single yellow chalk mark four times to total 24 points to lead the KU assault. Two noticeable exceptions were the farcical successful playing of guard Elvin Basham and center Kent Staab in the backfield late in the game, and a defense not common to the Jayhawkers which allowed the Bear rooters their only chance to cheer. This point total came five shy of the school mark established by Charles Black in 1923 with 29 points against Washington of St. Louis. But, unfortunately for McClinton, he had another score nullified by a penalty when he snared a perfect John Hadl pass deep in the end zone. Jim Mills, the other guard, also had a ball-toting opportunity. He surcried eight yards with the oval on the kick-off return to start the second half. (Continued on page 7) NEW-FOUND TALENT AS BALL CARRIERS — These two outstanding Kansas linemen were shuffled into the Jayhawker backfield in the final minutes of the win over California and both performed surprisingly well. "It's a lot of fun," said the senior center in describing his run after the game. Elvin Basham, at the left, carried twice for four yards. "Carrying the ball is a pud," said Basham. "They had me defensed and the line wasn't blocking," quipped the 195-pound senior guard explaining why he didn't gain more yards. The explanation of the shift of the linemen after the game by Coach Jack Mitchell was: "I didn't hear any backs volunteering to play in the line," the soft-spoken Basham concluded. Kent Staab, at the right, burrowed through the center of the Cal defense for seven yards on his lone try with the ball. "Some of our seniors were about to die, they wanted to play so badly so we sent them in." BIG EIGHT STANDINGS Season Standings Team W L T PTS. OP. Colorado 7 1 0 114 67 Kansas 6 2 1 229 71 Missouri 6 2 1 114 50 Iowa State 5 4 0 151 99 Oklahoma State 3 5 0 96 145 Oklahoma 3 5 0 80 114 Nebraska 3 5 1 105 114 Kansas State 2 7 0 58 187 Conference Standings This Week's Games | Team | W | L | T | PTS. | OP. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Colorado | 6 | 0 | 0 | 93 | 39 | | Kansas | 5 | 1 | 0 | 154 | 41 | | Missouri | 4 | 2 | 0 | 66 | 20 | | Iowa State | 3 | 3 | 0 | 93 | 79 | | Oklahoma | 2 | 3 | 0 | 53 | 59 | | Nebraska | 2 | 4 | 0 | 52 | 72 | | Oklahoma State | 1 | 4 | 0 | 29 | 96 | | Kansas State | 0 | 6 | 0 | 22 | 146 | Saturday: Missouri at Kansas; Oklahoma at Nebraska; Kansas State at Oklahoma State; Iowa State at Colorado. Wichita Loses; Accepts Bowl Bid By United Press International Coach Hank Foldberg's Missouri Valley Conference champions were upset by Dayton 23-12 in last week's season finale, but accepted a berth in the Sun Bowl immediately after the game. The Sun Bowl will be played in El Paso, Dec. 30. Wichita's Wheatshockers blew their final game, but got a bowl bid anyway. Wichita's opponent will be Villanova, which compiled a 7-2 record during the regular season. Villanova, coached by Alex Bell, defeated Miami (O.) 33-0, Virginia Military Institute 22-0, Holy Cross 20-6, Massachusetts 33-13, Buffalo 28-6, Quantico Marines 34-13, and West Chester (Pa.) 40-13. Its losses were to Boston College 22-6 and Detroit 20-6. Wichita disposed of Toledo 12-7 Cincinnati 21-13, West Texas State 41-34, North Texas State 26-14 New Mexico State 42-27, Tulsa 9-7 Oklahoma State 25-13, and Drake 26-13. Its losses were to Daytor and Arizona State, the latter being a 21-7 defeat in the second game of the season. Fans, Not Players Jubilant After One-Sided KU Victory The Kansas locker room following the Jayhawk demolition of California was a place of jubilation-for friends and alumni, not the players. Coach Jack Mitchell spoke to his team immediately after the win and told them of the importance of the Missouri tussle. The expressions and feelings of the players showed they were obviously happy over posting such an impressive win, but their thoughts had quickly become centered upon the coming battle, almost completely forgetting the triumph over the Bears. IN ADDITION TO THE DOZENS OF JAWHAWKER ROOTERS who stopped by to congratulate the team and players, were numerous professional scouts who talked to the players on the Kansas team in whom they have an interest. Off in a corner, Coach Mitchell kept the pencils of Bay area scribes hurrying across note pads as he commented on the game, the Orange Bowl, the players, the season, and almost anything asked. "We were ready to play because we came out here scared to death. We were lucky to catch them the week before their big game (Stanford) and at a time when they had a lot of injuries," said Mitchell in explaining some of the reasons for the tremendous margin of the KU win. ASKED IF HE WAS TRYING TO BUILD UP THE score (Kansas tallied 19 points in the final period) to make an impressive showing in an effort to stay in contention for an Orange Bowl bid. Mitchell said: "We would have been satisfied with a 21-0 win—that would have been impressive enough. I don't think we were trying to either build up or hold down the score. Since we could only bring 35 players along, we had to go with the players we had (everyone but Willis Brooks, who has an injured foot, played). I think the third team played as much or more than anybody else." Several times during the game players from both teams had trouble keeping their feet. During the game Jim Marshall, KU defensive back, said the field was "hard, slippery and difficult to cut on." "THAT WAS THE HARDEST FIELD WE HAVE ever played on," said a perturbed Mitchell in the locker room. "If we had to play on a field like that as often as California has, we'd have half our team out with injuries. No wonder they have a lot of boys who are hurt. As it is, many of our players are bruised from the hard turf. The luxurious green grass of Cal's Memorial Stadium was clipped to about one-half inch in length, providing little cushion and had been watered. As the people milled around the room, there were comments such as "the greatest team I've seen in a long time," "They (KU) remind me a lot of the great Oklahoma teams, fast, small lines and strong backs." Tension Mounts As Tigers-Jays To Meet Here KU vs. MU KU vs. MU Every fall gridiron enthusiasts throughout the plains area await the meeting of Kansas and Missouri, traditionally the finale for both schools. But, this fall the interest is at an exceptionally high level. The game has great bearing upon the outcome of the seasons of the respective teams, but this is not the main reason for the added incentive, on the field and in what should be overflowing seats, for a victory by both sides. THE TENSION which arose last October with the NCAA probationary action against Kansas and was revived in Columbia for the football game (won by the Jayhawkers, 23-7) and the basketball game (at which there was an almost uncontrollable fight) and, according to some, here at Allen Field House for the hoop contest (there was some uncalled for booing of the Tiger players). Now, with Kansas bidding for a tie with Colorado for the official Big Eight title and an opportunity to play in the Orange Bowl, while Missouri attempts to gain a second place deadlock with KU, the game becomes one of the greatest attractions in recent conference history. MISSOURI BRINGS the toughest defense in the league and one of the sternest in the entire land to Memorial Stadium to try and stop a Kansas offense which has become virtually uncontainable in the past six games. Every coach frequently tells his players "this is the game you've been waiting for ever since you first started playing football. This is the biggest game of your career. Everything you have done since you have come to college has been in preparation for this game," or similar statements. Probably both KU mentor Jack Mitchell and MU's Dan Devine will employ such oratory before their players take the field. MU, although losers in two of its last three games — to Colorado and Oklahoma while beating Kansas State — has still proven to be almost impossible to beat on the ground. "Missouri has the toughest line we have faced all season and what we think is one of the best in the nation," said Coach Mitchell speaking about the coming game. "Man for man they have more strength and power than we do," continued Mitchell. ALTHOUGH THE Missouri defense has allowed only slightly better than five points per game, the Tiger offense can be counted upon for only somewhat more than 11 points per contest. Missouri lost considerable backfield strength from last season and is being held together, offensively, by the bulls of fullback Fred Russell, the sweeps of Norm Beal and the running passes of diminutive quarterback Ron Taylor. COACH MITCHELL stated his staff considers Beal to be a "treemendous" ball player and added that the Tigers have varied their offense somewhat this fall. No longer do the Tigers depend upon the wide power sweep as their basic ground gainer. The play of Russell and Taylor has allowed Devine to keep the opposing defense more on the alert. Mitchell said this may be a factor since the KU defense in last year's win was set to force the wide play to the sideline—which it did very successfully. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Monday. Nov. 20. 1961 Page 7 upon re the acen- would factory siast's awaitouri, both est is for a all Big ty to while second game tracry. last tion- was foot- kickers, e (at con- g to e for some Tiger s his you've first s the very-have prep-milar men-Danatory field. ghest of the Me top a come past of its o andansas e al- the line what in the peak- more do, de bet the upon an 11 d his "tre- added their back and vively, Rusl and native depend their way of defense fac last wide did Dotson Leads Kansas Harriers To Easy Win Bill Dotson and his fellow Jayhawker cross country runners extended their undefeated record Friday at the Central Intercollegiate Championships run over a four-mile Washington Park course in Chicago. THE JAYHAWKERS placed men first, second, fifth, 17th and 23rd to post a five-man low of 48 points. This was front in front of second place Southern Illinois University with 70 points. Defending champion Western Michigan was third with 78 points. Dotson and Charlie Hayward were a familiar sight crossing the finish stripe. With the exception of the Big Eight meet the pair has finished 1-2 in all of the Jayhawker meets. Jayhawkers Dan Ralston, George Cabrera and Bill Thornton placed fifth, 17th and 23rd respectively. The CIC was a first for Kansas as the Jayhawkers have not been able to participate in past years because of schedule conflicts. The CIC was the last meet for the Jayhawkers before next Monday's NCAA championships at East Lansing, Mich. Oklahoma State's Danny Metcalf dropped Hayward to a third place finish in the Big Eight meet held here nine days ago. DOTSON'S WINNING TIME was 19:30.7. Hayward was close behind with a 19:33. Another first was the four-mile course. The Jayhawkers in previous races have run three miles. The Washington Park course was soggy and a brisk wind blew slightly throughout the race. The Big Eight champions hold wins over Southern Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma, Arkansas and the Chicago Track Club. McClinton Honored SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) — Rugged Curtis McClinton of the Kansas Jayhawks received an unusual honor today when he was named the Big Five's "Back of the Week" for his work against California. McClinton, a 212-pound senior from Wichita, scored four touchdowns for the Jayhawks and rolled up 97 yards on 16 carries. He is the first man outside the Big Five to be honored by the conference this season. THROUGH THE ENGLAND STADIUM Along the JAYHAWKER trail THE EMPTY ORANGE BOWL—The drawing above is of the Orange Bowl in Miami where the traditional post season classic will be played Jan. 1. But, as of now, neither team has been chosen. Colorado and Kansas are still in contention from the Big Eight while several other top squads loom as possible opponents. Among the teams considered to oppose the Big Eight entrant are Louisiana State, Alabama and Miami. By Bill Sheldon Even the offense of the Bears — who were clad in black jerseys with gold stripes and numerals, gold pants and helmet and black stockings—could do nothing with the superior Kansans. Elvin Basham, the terror-dealing Kansas guard, coming home from California, had an interesting comment about the Missouri defense which the Jayhawkers will face Saturday. "They move those big tackles inside on their split six-man line. They line-up on the outside shoulders of our guards and this makes them real hard to block," continued the 195-pound senior who will be called upon to handle the much larger Tiger defenders. "It is the fine Missouri tackles which make their defense so tough," said Basham. One of the best executed plays of the warm afternoon was a 26-yard power sweep on which Gib Wilson went unscathed for KU's seventh touchdown with 9:02 gone in the final period. THE HAWKERS took advantage of two recovered fumbles and an intercepted pass for tallies with almost no extra effort. MISSOURI BOASTS two of the finest tackles in the area with 225-pound Bill Wegener and 217-pound Ed Blaire at the starting posts. Cal Coach Marv Levy, who suffered the worst defeat of his coaching career, employed a line which is unbalanced to the right with a split right end and a wingback outside the right tackle. It was in the last quarter when the Hawkers actually showed their best scoring punch, getting 19 points. Kansas has done well against teams employing six-man defensive lines; but the moving of the tackles to the inside may be the difference which makes the MU defense tough. McCLINTON WAS named the outstanding player of the game which probably pleased Los Angeles Ram scout Elroy Hirsch who talked to the 215-pound senior following the game. McClinton was the second draft choice of the Rams last year. (Continued from page 6) Bowl Chances Better- The speedy Kansas right half knocked over, out-ran and carried tacklers for scoring runs of three, two, six, and two yards. THE TEAMS WHICH stick primarily to a six-man front have been MITCHELL PLAYED his third unit a great deal in the second half but even it was able to move easily through the Bear defense. This type of defense is usually vulnerable up the middle and in the secondary against the pass. But, as Basham pointed out, Missouri makes gaining ground through the center much harder by playing its tackles where they do. Although the Jayhawkers probably have not faced a front wall so impressive and powerful as that of Missouri's, the offensive show which the Hawks have put on in the past six games makes it seem hard to think MU can control Kansas. Oklahema, Oklahoma State, Nebraska and California. QUARTERBACK Larry Ballett, with eight for 13 for 120 yards, led the California aerial game to 10 completions in 19 throws. Basham, who was voted the best lineman of the game by the writers and broadcasters, led the Jay fiveman front as it held Cal to 22 yards, with 20 coming in the first half, not counting Carvajal's run. THIS WAS THE first time KU faced such an alignment but it posed no serious problems. Aside from the Carvajal thriller, the longest gain on the ground for the losers was a 10-yard pick-up by Jack Trumbo. California got into Kansas territory only twice other than when it scored but made a serious threat neither time. Hadi again made the Kansas passing attack the off-setting factor to the unstoppable running game. He completed his first four tries and ended with seven connections in nine tries for 91 yards and a touchdown. AGAINST KANSAS STATE it was the stout and superior play of the KU lines which was the biggest factor in making the Hawk's offense tick. The throwing score was on a 15- yard toss to sophomore Jay Roberts who out-reached and out-fought a Cal defender in the end zone. Roberts caught another pass to lead KU receivers with two for 31 yards in addition to playing his best defensive game of the season. But, the Bear passing attack did provide a few touchy moments for Kansas. At California, the fighting runs of the Kansas backs appeared predominate. The lines were certainly effective in the缸 over the Golden Bears, but it took some almost unbelievable carries by the backs to pile up such a score. Even if the Tigers are able to throttle the Kansas attack, they must generate some scoring punch of their own. It is doubtful, and has been proven, that the Tigers do not have the individuals to be a potent striking force with the ball. And, even if they did, they would have to penetrate a Kansas defense which has come to be very, very stingy. If Kansas can combine these two efforts Saturday, Missouri should have little hope of stopping the KU machine which has averaged over 26 points per game. Thus, all the tangible figures point to a Kansas victory; but it appears the things such as spirit, desire, "guts" and, of course, the breaks will help tell the difference. Terry Smith, Larned junior, edged Carl Detter, Hutchinson freshman, for the intramural tennis singles trophy yesterday. Playing with temperatures in the 30s, Smith won in sets of 9-7 and 6-3. Smith Tennis Champ COMING: The Dukes of Dixieland Duck Around the BIG 8 By Steve Clark The 70-year-old Kansas-Missouri rivalry has been spiced by colorful pageantry and hard-fought football contests. Each year the two rivals disregard season records, vital statistics and sportswriters' pre-game predictions to make football history. This year more than 40,000 fans may set a new Memorial Stadium attendance record to see what is billed by area sportswriters as "The Game of the Century." KANSAS FANS ARE HOPING that a precedent established the past two years will not carry over to derail their Jayhawkers from an Orange Bowl bid. The two squads were equal in ability but the Jayhawkers were given a slight edge because of the home field. Two feet were to keep the Jayhawkers from their New Year's Day appearance. The Jayhawkers and Tigers met here in 1959 to decide who would represent the Big Eight in the Orange Bowl. A conference ruling at that time prohibited Oklahoma, the league champion, from going to Miami two consecutive years. Missouri took a 7-0 lead with 13:12 remaining in the first half on a Phil Snowden-to-Don Smith 23-yard pass play. THE JAYHAWKERS RETALIATED EARLY in the second half with an 80-yard scoring drive, scoring on Doyle Shick's seven yard line plunge. Missouri, with less than 10 minutes remaining in the fourth quarter, took a 13-7 lead. Kansas then returned the kickoff to the 26 yard line and marched to within two feet of the Missouri goal line before being stopped. Kansas picked up two points late in the game when Missouri gave it an intentional safety to move the ball out of Tiger territory. LAST YEAR THE RIVALS MET at Columbia. Missouri was riding aloft the national rankings with an undefeated record. Kansas stood 6-2-1 for the season and 4-0-1 in conference play. Missouri was given an edge because of its ranking, stendy play and the home field edge. The Jayhawkers pulled a surprise. Led by Bert Coan's dazzling open field running the Kansas crew upended the nation's number one team 23-7. THIS YEAR THE MISSOURI GAME is a "Must" for the Javahawkers. Orange Bowl officials have hinted if the Jayhawkers defeat Missouri. Kansas will go south for New Year's Day. Missouri is void of a bowl bid since conference champion Colorado will be invited undisputedly if the Jayhawkers lose. Kansas will be given the edge this year on strength of their inspired play the past six games. The 53-7 California wallop compared to Missouri's 14-14 tie with the Bears makes the Hawks a solid favorite. The Jayhawker's home field advantage is supposed to add to Kansas' pre-game favorite's role. Nevertheless, look what happened in 1959 and 1960. The home field "doesn't mean a thing." The tables have been turned twice consecutively. It has been said history repeats itself. Kansas fans are hoping not. Hember Number One KU Bowler John Hember remains the number one KU varsity bowler according to the current standings. Hember, Kansas City junior, has a 190 average for 24 games. The Hawk top five is rounded out by Steve Rybolt, Ottawa sophomore, 187; Terrell Hays, Shawnne junior, 187; Paul Hammar, Overland Park junior, 185; and Jim Kartonsis, Hutchinson senior, 181. One hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING STILL TIME ( Before Vacation) at 1407 Mass. It's Fast - It's Safe - It's Thrifty ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING "Fresh as a Flower in Just 1-Hour" University Daily Kansan Page 8 户堰 Monday. Nov. 20, 1961 Lack of Funds- (Continued from page 1) the heavy influx of veterans following World War II. The cash savings resulted from a number of factors, but primarily the hospital's inability to obtain sufficient staff for the increased enrollment. But the savings was eaten up during a period of expanding services and rising prices over the next 10 years. Student health fees were raised from $10 to $12 a semester in 1956 to meet the financial burden of increased costs. SINCE ITS INCEPTION, except for minor building repairs amounting to about 3 per cent of the annual operating costs, the KU student health service has been supported almost entirely by the student health fee. The total cost of operation from June 1959 to July 1960 was $309,- 000. The preceding year, the cost was $282,000. If the hospital is to receive Hill-Burton funds now, the matching funds will have to be raised. Dr. Canuteson estimates an addition to the hospital similar to the one planned in 1947 will cost approximately $400,000 today. How much money can be obtained in Hill-Burton funds depends to some degree on the legal classification of Watkins hospital. It is likely the government would grant between 40 and 50 per cent of the expansion cost. IT IS ALSO LKELY that the school's share of the expansion cost will have to come from a legislative grant, about $200,000. Dr. Canuteson believes this is feasible and fair since the student health program has cost the taxpayer only a negligible amount over the past 30 years. While the most critical need for space is in the outpatient department, the hospital will also have to add beds to meet the anticipated increase in student enrollment. What space has been provided for expansion of other health services has come from cutting space available for beds. Rooms which formerly accommodated 12 beds have been turned into offices for the mental health department, a relatively new service. EVEN THOUGH ADVANCES in medicine in the past 30 years have reduced the number of beds needed per 1,000 students from 14 to 10. Watkins Hospital, with 52 beds, lacks nearly 50 beds of meeting the standard for present enrollment. The proposed new wing would provide space for most but not all of the extra 50 beds to meet current needs. However, the need for more beds only becomes critical in times of epidemics, such as the mild influenza epidemic which came in two waves in 1957. Dr. Canuteson says. At that time, 403 cases were admitted to Watkins hospital and 213 less seriously ill patients were treated in dormitories. It is for such emergencies that the hospital should maintain a level of one bed per 100 students, the administrator said. THE STATE BOARD OF HEALTH, in its 1960 report, recommended the present hospital building be remodeled to house only administrative, outpatient and adjunct services, and that a new section contain only beds or complete nursing units. The report stated: "The University should give serious consideration to complete remodeling of the present hospital, and adding of beds and services as may be required for a 150-bed hospital. "A 100-bed hospital is needed now. . . . It is recommended that adjunct facilities be designed for a 150-bed facility and the addition be so planned that 50 beds can be added easily at a later date." It is the feeling of most members of the hospital staff that Watkins can maintain a high level of service without necessarily expanding to 150 beds. However, the inadequacy of the present facility makes some kind of major expansion imperative, they say. Reds Fortify Berlin Wall BERLIN—(UPI)—Several thousand East German soldiers, policemen, militiamen and workers today turned the Communist wall dividing East and West Berlin into a fortification designed to withstand a western attack. TANK TRAPS similar to those built by the Nazis into their West Wall were erected along the 25-mile East-West Berlin border. The wall itself was enlarged, extended and deepened. Informed Allied officials said the reinforced wall obviously was built in fear of a Western attempt to break through the wall. "The first wall was built Aug. 15 to keep East Germans in," an Allied official said. "The new work obviously is aimed at keeping people out." SEVERAL THOUSAND soldiers policemen, militia and workers toiled on the wall today, patching up weak points and sealing the famous Brandenburg Gate with cement blocks six feet thick and pilled six feet high, instead of the barbed wire which has blocked it since Aug. 13. Eyewitnesses returning from East Berlin said the city resembles an armed camp. Steel girders were THE COMMUNISTS dug a deep trench right across Potsdamer Platz last night, flanked it with barricades and removed both streetcar tracks and overhead wires. Today they poured cement into the ditch to hold camouflaged tank traps of steel girders. Kansan Classifieds Get Results rammed into the ground behind the wall and East German armored cars stood near the Brandenburg Gate and Potsdam Platz. Page-Greighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 five minutes walking distance if it were to be effective. Prof. Weir said that one argument is that shelters are a deterrent to war. (Continued from page 1) Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil "But another aspect," he continued, "is that if we convince people that building of shelters is protection against war, it might result in the attitude that we can survive a war." "But since we continue to think that the only solution to international problems is war or the fear of war, a great danger does exist." Ideas Given on Fallout Shelters "On the basis of past actions and words, and on the basis of the theory of international relations, there seems every reason to believe that the Soviets do not want to start World War III. Prof. Laird said: Prof. Laird added that what is needed is a third group to take our nuclear weapons and if the United States or the Russians started anything the third group (the UN or something like the UN) could bring the dispute to a halt. KIANG EXPLAINED the problem as one of disarmament, not shelters. He said: "Disarmament by itself will never stop a war. Our forefathers fought with bows and arrows." "What assurance do we have that if a non-nuclear war begins those nations capable will not begin to build nuclear weapons again. "I think true disarmament should begin in our minds," he concluded. Turning again to nuclear testing, Prof. Laird said: "When the day comes that we have enough bombs to wipe out Russia, I can see no reason to go farther. It's like running a spear through a person's heart, knocking him down and then stomping on him. "I'm sure we're going to start testing again, then the Soviets will start and it won't stop until we have reached overkill." KU Coed Attacked; Released Unharmed A KU coed was thrown to the ground last night by a tall molester who grabbed her as she was leaving Malott Hall, according to a report made to campus security police. The woman described her attacker as tall, thin and wearing a light tan trench coat and grey cap. She told police the man grabbed her at the steps of the building, pulled her over into some bushes and threw her to the ground. She told the man she expected friends along any moment and he released her and ran off toward Flint Hall after warning her not to report the incident, the report stated. Check your opinions against L'M's Campus Opinion Poll #9 1 Has the Berlin crisis increased the likelihood of military service for you? L □ YES Pablo Picasso Dancing Together 2 NO 2 With an exam coming up... 1234567890 would you study and get a B or keep a big date and settle for C? How long have you been smoking your present brand? JAN FEB MAR APR NEG 62 □ less than 1 month □ less than 1 year □ more than 1 year Here's how 1029 students at 100 colleges voted! Expect more... get more from L&M L&M The rich-flavor leaf among L&M's choice tobacco gives you more body in the blend ..more flavor in the smoke ..more taste through the filter. Get lots more—L&M! L&M FILTERS L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO MTS INTRUSTED JIRP L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. Pack or box—L&M's the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke. Less than 1 year ... 9% Less than 1 year ... 21% More than 1 year ... 70% 3 Study...60% Keep date...40% 2 Yes...70% No...30% Try best tasting L&M today in pack or box Monday. Nov. 20, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 9 681 Pass English Proficiency More than three-fourths of the students who took the English Proficiency examination this fall can breathe a sigh of relief—they passed. The English Proficiency committee has released the names of 681 students who passed the examination. This figure is 76.8 per cent of the 857 students who took the examination. THE RESULTS WERE ALMOST identical to those of last fall, when 879 students took the examination and 674, or 75.7 per cent, passed. This fall's figure was only slightly under the spring figure of 78.9 passing. The record was set in fall, 1957. when 80 per cent of 558 students passed the examination. THE PAPERS WERE GRADED by 90 faculty members of schools requiring the examination for graduation. Students who failed the examination can see their papers in the writing clinic, 12 Strong Annex D, from 4 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, said James E. Seaver, professor of western civilization and chairman of the English Proficiency committee. Papers will be available through the end of the semester. Those who passed the examination: ABBEY-BARBOUR Robert G. Abbey, Nancy J. Abbott, Keith J. Abercrombie, Robert M. Adams, Susan B. Adams, Judith J. Addis, Pamela Kay Anastasia Janice, Judith J. Alexander Gary, Alexander, Judith Anderson, Sondra Anderson, Guinnever Anpaugh, Vernetta M. Antenna, Michleu Astle Armour, John D. Armstrong, Jonathan B. Bell, A. Atwood Mary Lou Auer, Barbara A. Bacon, Judith R. Bailey, Billie Bain, Susan A. Baker, Maxine Barbour. BARNES-BRAUCHI BRAUCHI-CAMPBELL Opal E. Barnes, Sharon Barnes, Elizabeth B. Barrett, Billy Dean Bell, Barry A. Bennington, Elaine V. Benson, Carl A. Benzt, David Beersky, Daniel Bernursky, M. Berson, Carol Bettack, Larry Bidwell, Susan I. Blackard, Larry Blackman, Melvin C. Bloomfield, Bryan Bolin, Geraldine M. Bolinger, Marilyn J. Bondurant, Harry Booker, James Brown, Judith Bowman, Barbara Boyd, Dennis Bransister, Joanne E. Brauchi. Nila Jean Brauchi, Barbara J. Bredehoff, Bettsy Y. Bridensthal, Diana M. Britton, Marion C. Burnett, Marilyn S. Brown, Sarah Ann Brooner, Laurence S. Brown, Nancy E. Brown, Pamela Brown, Patricia Ann Brown, Beverly L. Brown, Susan F. Brown, John Bucher, Janet S. Burnett, Dorothy E. Burton, David Byer Sarah Jane Byram, Richard W. Byrum Susan M. Callender, Daniel A. Caliendo Susan M. Callender, Bruce H. Campbell, Joyce Ann Campbell. Donna Kay Cannon, Jack Cannon, Katharra McGuire, Jack McGuire, Carson, Robert Clemens, Mélanie Chandier, Cynthia Cheesbrough, Arthur Chevalier, Leanna Childers, Enya Childers, Jeffrey Childers, Clark, Richard Clark, Clark, Robert Clark, Carol Ann Cline, Marvin Clothier, James Clutz, Jan Cobble, Judith Coberly, Roger Charles, Charles, Mancher, Charles Collie, Sandra Colvin. COMES-DAVIS John Comes, Charles Converse, David Cooley, Nancy Copeland, Marcella Coppola, Robert Cory, Gene Cottam, Patricia Courts, Esther Craig, Daniel Crary, Donald Crawford, Matthew Sawyer, Elizabeth Cress, Marlyn Cromb, Marvin Crotchett, Ian Cumming, Richard Currie, Ronald Daigle, Douglas Daniels, Sally Daniels, Janice Davis, Jeanette DAWSON-DOZE Douglas Dawson, Pegge Dean, Jay Cotterman, Thomas Denny, James Devall, Dwain Dewey, Catherine Dibble, Hugh Dick, Martin Dickin, Paula Dickerson, Jerry Dickinson, Michael Dixon, Michael Dixon, Elaine Dixson, Sharon Dobbins, Brenda Dodson, Joyce Donovan, Mary Dougherty, Robert Douglas, Richard Downey, Rosemary Doze. DRAPER-FASSNACHT David Draper, Linda Duff, Patti Duncan, Barbara Dunlap, Sarah Dunlap, Virginia Eriksen, Eloise Eriksen, Fred Eriksen, James Ellis, John Ellis, Jan Engstroland, Susan Erschay, Mary Erickson, Thomas Ericson, Sandra Erwin, Donna Evans, Roy Evens, James Eriksen, Cindra Erawl, Bertram Faierchild, Shartie Fearald, Brook Farrell, Joan Fassnacht. FEITZ-GEDBOIC Robert Feitz, Rebecca Feldman, Delores Filzer, Janet Finkmeier, Judith Gardner, Emily Feiner, Noah Gart, Foster, Mary Feiner, Diane Forn Helen Hrakes, John Franklin, Jay Franz, Myrna Frazer, Verna Frazer, Constance Freeman, Lois Freiderman, Jerry Fried- man, Mark Frisch, Jonathan Michael Gafney, Galloway, Linda Sarrett, Sidney Gay, Ruth Gedroic. GEISENDORF-GUSTAFSON Judith Geisendorf, Emelle Geisteldt, Gilbert, Georg Gill, Robert Gish, Kevin Gilbert, Georg Gill, Robert Gish, Kevin Glynn, Richard Goepfert, William Goetze, James Gohl, Robert Gallier, Beatrice Gordon, Brice Gordon, David Gough, Anne Goucher, Sarah Gruber, Freed Green, Mary Griffin, Nancy Grimsley, Frank Griswold, Roy Groves Sally Guest, Susan Gustafson. HAGAN-HARTSHORN Kirk Hagan, Helene Hagstrom, George Hahn, Marcia Hahn, Joe Haines, Sarah Haines, Richard Haitbrik, Ritva Hallman, Richard Hallman, Linda Hamilton, Hamilton, Linda Hamilton, Mary Hamilton, Mary Hanning, Charles Hammond, Nancy Hansen, Alan Hardtarfer, Michael Hansen, Peter Hardtarfer, Michael Harris, Carolek Harrison, Janet Hart, Charles Hartman, Jean Hartshorn. HARTZLER-HORSKY Joe Hartzler, Roger Hatfield, Phillip Haveren, Carolyn Heard, Joyce Hedrick, Frank Hedstrom, Mary Reynolds, Carolyn Herod, James Hesser, Herbert Hesser, James Hesser, Jeri Hibler, Willard Hiebert, Robert Hill, George Hills, James Hills, Barbara Hite, Jack Sag, Cousell Hewes, Reid Holbrook, Danny Hopper, Carolyn Horne, Mark Horsky. HOUSER-JENNETT Carolyn Houser, Larry Houston, Mary Howard, Jeanne Howell, Donna Hrdina, Thomas Hudgens, David Huffman, James Hyman, Michael Kushner, Edith Hyman, Stanford Ingram, Linda Inman, Galen Irwin, Robert Isle, Rees Jackman, Betty Jackson, Gene Jackson, James Jackson, Jeffrey Jackson, Janine, Gary Janssen, Sue Janzen, Nancy Jasperson, Jamie Jeffers, Jerry Jennett JEWELL-KELLER Jack Jewell, Loretta Jewett, William Jobson, Keith Jochim, Carl Johnson, John Johnson, Karen Johnson, Lin Johnson, Karen Johnson, robert Johnson, John Jones, Josephine Jones, Johnson, John Jones, Josephine Jones, dening, Gary Jouvenat, Alun Kamb, Karen Kampermeer, Loise Kangawe, Henry Karrie, Kean Keating, Robert Keller, Warren Keller, KELLY-KRUEGER Norma Kelly, Clyde Kensinger, Gerald Kepner, Ronald Kessler, Doug Kiswert, Stephen King, Bonnie King, Fred King, Julia King, Martha King, Richard Kirsch, Karen Klemp, Jane Klewer, Klomp Mark, Kristen Koehler, Katherine Kocher, Anita Kopmanis, Peter Korth, Charles Kramer, Rockie Krebs, Mary Krezmelier, Kise Krueger Judith Kulowski, Stephen Labouffe, Bruce Lackey, Fredric Lamar, Dhine Umar, John Lester, William Lovan, ham Latias, John Lavery, Eugene Lee, Ronald Lee, Lee Leger, Carolyn Lehmman, Daniel Lee, John Lester, Patricia Leroux, Paul Lessin, June Lovels, Wylene Lipe, David Livingston, Virginia Locse, Jon Lohmeier, Ramona Lopez, Lorraine Lortsche, William Lovan, Jim Lovejoy. KULOWSKI-LOVEJOY LUCKERT-McCOLLUM Karl Luckert, Dixie Luellen, Jimmie Lunecoff, Leslie Lusk, Gerald Luss, Michael Muinpark, Gary MacAllister, Malinowsky, Greg Manning, Gordon Mark, Harvey Martin, Peggy Martin, Mark Muinpark, Robert McAlison, Pamela Maupin, Connie Maxson, John Maxwell, James May, Herman Mast, Patricia Mayhew, Maryhood, Mayhood, Maryhood, McAllister, John McCall, Jewel McColllum. McCUE-MILLS Mary McCue, Karen McDonald, Rodger McFarland, Marlene McGinness, Jay McKinsey, Philip McKnight, Kinsley, Phillip McKnight, Johnnie McLaurain, Winona McManama, Joan McNair, Jeff McNair, Keith Mendenhall, Carol Merryfield, Mary Mertz, Sandra Meyer, Doris Miller, Thomas Miller, Nancy Mayer, Martin Miller, Michael Miller, Nancy Miller, Thomas Miller, Judith Mills Mary Mischler, Kathryn Mishell, Denis Mitchell, Robert Mitchell, Roger Mitchell, Joel Mitchell, Carol Moore, Jimmie Moore, Larry Moore, Sharon Moore, Sidonia Moore, James Moore, Patrick Morris, Richard Morris, Patricia Morrison, Joan Mortenson, Homer Mosley, Marsha Mowder, James Mullen, William Murray, Jerome Musil, Eva Myers, Marcia Myers MISCHLER-MYERS John Neal, Mary Neil, Lani Nelson, Margaret Nelson, William Nichols, Margaret Nelson, David Nichols, Noyes, Carole Oboynick, Francia O'Brien, Deil Odeil, Naoi Olens, Shirley Olson, John Osberg, Terrille Osborn, Marvin Paeckie, Juliana Parrott, Charles Patter-ton, Paul Peeler, Robert Perkins, Paul Peeler, Betty Pendley, Robert Perkins, Donald Perry, Judith Perry. NEAL-PERRY PETERSON-RILEY Norma Peterson, Roberta Peterson, Warren Peterson, Donald Puitzeet, Jake Pullen, Donald Pogue, Meianie Poor, Eben Porch, Linda Power, Ralph Prueger, Richard Reamon, Cynthia Ray, Richard Reamon, Kathlyn Reed, Kathryn Reinhardt, Curtis Rhodes, Nancy Rich, Rickett, Evan Ridgway, James Rody ROBB-SAYLOR Bruce Robb, Donna Robertson, Clifford Robertson, Kenneth Robertson, Christina Robinson, Deborah Robinson, John Robinson, Deborah Robinson, Rex Roser, Roger Rose, James Rothe, Martha Rowe, Phyllis Rueb, Julie Russell, Robert Ruzicka, Suzanne Ryder, Rusty Russell, Todd Salter, Sharon Salzer, Shirley Samson, Janice Sappenfeld, James Saylor. SCANLON-SLABY Byron Scanlon, Beverly Schepler, John Schermersey, Barbara Schmidt, Max Croogin, Karen Stainley, Steany Seidel, Scott Senne, Elizabeth Seymour, Wilma Shelthass, Richard Shivers, Carolyn Shull, Annette Simon, Susan Siemon, David Slaby. Darrell Sloan, James Sloan, Mary Dloan, Milo Sloo, Christine Smith, Claude Smith, Denno Smith, Delbert Smith, Jeffrey Smith, John Smith, Smith, Mary Frances Smith, Maurice Smith, Sandra Smith, Theresa Smith, Wayne Smith, Robert Soren, Robert Stallings, Tony Stations, William Steeve, Rosalie Steele, Alfred Steinman. SLIGAR-STEINMAN STEPHENSON-SYMPSON James Stephenson, Dorothy Stevens, James Stevens, John Stevens, Betty Stevens, James Stevens, Joe Stoddard, Joe Stoddard, William Stoddard, Samuel Stone, Nancy Stout, Sandra Stout, Joan Stuckey, Daniel Stuckey, Nicholas Stucky, Strand, Jack Stuber, Nicholas Stucky, Johanna Stuckemann, Susan Suller, Rebecca Swallow, John Swanson, Ca- rson Swallow, Roger Wogler, William Swyers, Robert Sympson. TAKESONO-TROXEL Jane Takesono, James Talley, Sailce Tappen, Robert Tate, Diann Taylor, Thomas Frazier, Michael Taylor, Thomas, Ernest Thompson, Francia Thompson, Patricia Thompson, Charles Thompson, John Thompson, Kay Timberlake, James Tipping, Joyce Tobiasen, Nancy Teddy, Carolyn Toews, Dantee Tombs, Ronald Trachsel, James Tobiasen, Nancy Troja, Judith Trollope, Linda Troxel. TRUEB-WENHOLZ Linda Alice Trueb, John Bowen Turner, John Earl Ubelaker, Robert Mannman, Cynthia Vaughan, Robert Vexel, Linda Lola, Karen Vogel, Kendall Waibridge, Maren Waltar, Walbridge, John Walker, David Walstrom, Hollis Walters, Woodrow Walton, Donna Ward, Gary Watson, Gerald Weatherby, Dennis Weathers, Darrell Weatherby, Fred Welner, Richard Weinshillbon, Virginia Welsch, Judith Wenholz. WHITE-ZWADYK Lary White, Allan Wicker, John Wickert, Lewis Wiens, Lynda Williams, James Willis, Lloyd Willson, Margaret Wingate, Wolfe Robert, Wolfie Wolfe, Robert Wolf, Devin Wolter, Richard Wood, Steven Wood, John Woster, Bruce Wright, James Wright, Katharine Wright, Rita Wright, Robert Judith Robert, Foster Young, Judith Marily Young, Peter Young, Paul Young, Victor Zuercher, Marilyn Zumwalt, Peter Zwadyk. Forest Fires NEW YORK — (UFI) There were 104,662 forest fires reported in 1960, burning 4,155,591 acres of timberland, according to the American Forest Products Industries. More than 90 per cent of these fires in protected areas were caused by care- Diamonds Gifts Jewelry DANIELS JEWELRY 914 Mass. V1 3-2572 Now— give yourself "Professional" shaves with... Old Spice SUPER SMOOTH SHAVE NEW SUPER SMOOTH SHAVE New "wetter-than-water" action melts beard's toughness—in seconds. 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Ask your school authorities for details* or mail the coupon below. College Funds Inc. WALNUT AT AVENUE A HUTCHINSON, KANSAS CFI 111 COLLEGE FUNDS, ING. WALNUT AT AVENUE A HUTCHINSON, KANBAS Please send me information about your Educational Loan Plan. NAME ADDRESS CITY AND STATE *The Aids and Awards office at KU is prepared to answer your questions about College Funds, Inc. Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 20, 1961 户值 A Theater Review Society Criticized In 'The Sandbox' By Richard Currie Edward Albee makes some valid criticisms of American society in his one-act play "The Sandbox" which was presented at Westminster Center Saturday and Sunday night. Albee took characters from "The American Dream," a three act play, and put them to work for him in "The Sandbox." The result is a mocking 15-minute play in which Albee strips all his characters bare except one, Grandma, and chides Americans for their treatment of the aged and their attitudes towards death. He says they are silly and inhuman, though not as cut and dried as that. Grandma is the only one in the play who has any affinity with the human race, aged, broken and cast about as she is by her daughter and son-in-law. They come to the beach to bury her where the angel of death, a young actor dressed in white clothes, is fluttering his wings in a certain sort of anticipation. What it is I do not know. Grandma dies sweetly after hurling some biting remarks at her undertakers which are hilarious. YET THE PLAY is so short in character delineation that none of them quite come off. You are left with the feeling that you see the message and know the characters, but somehow it is not because of what the playwright said but what you know personally. Perhaps it is Albee's intention not to draw sharp characters but to have them merely comment or recite upon their parts. Nevertheless, what they do say has relevance to American thinking and practices. For an amateur cast the play was well done. Harriet Wyatt, Miami Okla., junior, as Mommy and DeAnna Denlinger, 1324 West 19th Terrace, as Grandma, grasped their parts and performed adequately, though Mrs. Denlinger was not as effective as she had been in rehearsals. ROBERT PHILLIPS. Chanute senior, directed the play and did justice to its meager fare, probably extricating all the value Albee put into the character. For his initial attempt at direction he did remarkably well. A panel discussion followed the play during which Peter Caws, associate professor and chairman of the department of philosophy and L. R. C. Agnew, professor and chairman of the department of medical history, expressed disappointment at the lack of character delineation but saw some of the criticisms the play made and termed them valid. Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama, the third member of the panel said he saw little value in the play or its characters but praised its performance. Dance Planned For Ball Team LEE SAID IT IS HOPED that seven members of the team will be at the dance although he said no promises have been made. A "Football Appreciation Dance" will be held in the Kansas Union ballroom Saturday 8:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. in honor of the KU gridiron team, Gene Lee, Wichita junior, has announced. "This type of dance sounds like what we used to do when I played," said Coach Jack Mitchell. The charge of admission will be $.75 and the dress is to be casual. "There used to be a lot of school spirit then and the students would all get together after the game and have a big dance which the players would attend. It's good to see such enthusiasm return," continued the Kansas football boss. "THIS TYPE OF DANCE is a great honor for the team. It is good to know the students are behind it so much and feel it is deserving of such an honor." said Mitchell. Music for the dance will be provided by what should be an exciting combination of musicians. Vaun Kampschroeder, Wichita junior, has announced that an "All-Star" rock-n-roll quintet will play for the dance. This group will be composed of five of the best individual musicians in the area especially picked for this dance. **Foreign Students:** Please turn in your试卷 to the International Campus Advisor by Wednesday. The forms are on page 11 of the November issue of the International Campus Newsletter. Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. KuKu Pep: 6:30 p.m., Oread Room, Kansas Union. Russkii Klub sobiraetas 7:30 chasov. 20s sonia. U'v umosobrani my budymen Union, V'u umosobrani my budymen pet russkylie pesni. Viz izuchahushiye russkylie russkylie yazyk ochen origalhaystua. TODAY TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion and Breakfast: 7 a.m. Canterbury House. P-T-P Tour Planned To K.C. Wednesday Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Official Bulletin People-to-People will have its third Industrial tour to Kansas City, Mo., Wednesday. The bus will leave the Kansas Union at 12:30 p.m. All students who are interested may sign up at the People-to-People office in the Kansas Union, or in the Dean of Men's office, Strong Hall. The tour will be at the Chevrolet Co. in Kansas City, Mo. KU J-School First in Nation The William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information placed first among all accredited schools and departments of journalism in the national newswriting competition sponsored during October by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation. Fred Zimmerman, Lawrence junior, placed second among the individual competitors. Scott Payne, Bethel junior, received honorable mention. Last year Zimmerman ranked seventh among all individual competitors for the entire school year, and Frank Morgan Jr., who was graduated in June, rated second. The School of Journalism won $5,600 in the contest. For placing second in the October news writing category Zimmerman will receive a scroll and a $150 fellowship. The Naval Research Reserve Company will have its fall inspection at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Room 105 of the Military Science Building. Inspection Set For Naval Reserve Kansan Want Ads Get Results MU Suspends Badge Wearer The University of Missouri suspended a student Friday for refusing to say where he had gotten an AHAMF button. It is the dull man who is always sure, and the sure man who is always dull—Henry Louis Mencken The student body president of MU Roger Bridges, said in a telephone interview last night that the MU dean of students has called in several student leaders in an attempt to find the sources of the AHAB buttons and the AHAMF buttons. We haven't been able to seize the buttons. The AHAB buttons have been out for two years. About MU efforts to prevent violence at the KU-MU game Saturday, Bridges said he had personally sent letters to all organized houses at MU asking them to not wear the lapel buttons. He said he had written an editorial in the campus newspaper and had spoken on radio several times. HE ESTIMATED THAT the number of AHAMF buttons was very limited, but that the extent of the AHAB buttons was hard to judge since they had been out for so long. "We've done all we can about getting more drastic," he said. "As a group, I'm sure both student bodies won't cause trouble. The problem is a certain group of individuals on both sides." He said the buttons at MU were "more of a fad than an effort to say something against KU," and added that MU has had buttons going around before other games. One of them, he said, is that the buttons are not needed for an increase in school spirit. The game itself takes care of that." The KU student body president, Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior, said that KU's objection to the lapel buttons can be based on five reasons. ALSO, HE SAID, "The buttons could cause a rise of negative feelings and negative emotions in people from Missouri. The buttons would help a MU student looking for a fight to find a KU student, he said. "We are trying to keep feelings pointed toward the game, not toward each other," he said. "YOU COULD POSSIBLY ENDanger yourself by wearing an ATAP button." PREMIER DIAMOND SHOP 916 Mass. Referring to the KU students who planned to sell the buttons, Eberhart said: "Dean Woodruff warned these people. They took the risk. It's my understanding they were in it for profit, thus weren't too much concerned about what would happen." GRANADA MOW SHOWING! GRANADA NOW SHOWINGI Carroll Baker "Bridge in the Sun" Showings—7 & 9 An employee of the University Thursday night charged that the University's Building and Grounds department has been violating the school's non-discrimination policy. Speaking at a meeting of the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy, the worker explained the reason for his charge. KU Hiring Policy Hit At Lawrence Meeting "I have worked on the hill for 15 years, and I know some people who have worked for 20," he said. "Why aren't these people foremen? When they (the University) need a new foreman they bring in a white farmer who has probably only cleaned a barn." VARSITY NOW SHOWING! HE CONTINUED, "We as a race always have to be a little better; we always need another piece of paper to qualify. Sidney Poitier "I think they (Buildings and Grounds) do discriminate," he added. The worker's remarks followed a report by Oswald P. Backus, professor of history. "A Raisin in the Sun" Prof. Backus said that he had discussed the hiring of workers with C.A.Harkness, personnel officer for the University. Showings—7 & 9:10 "He told me that the University's policy is one of non-discrimination and that the school doesn't believe in discrimination because of color." Prof. Backus said. --- PROF BACKUS CONTINUED, "When asked if there are any job openings at the present time, he (Mr. Harkness) said that there are four." (The four are: a secretary in the zoning office who must know shorthand and typing; two electricians and a steamfitter.) Mr. Harkness said that for the electricians and the steamfitter a journeyman's license of experience, or the equivalent thereof, is necessary, Prof. Backus explained. He commented that Negroes are quite welcome. Prof. Backus added. Prof. Backus said that he was convinced by the conversation that Mr.Harkness is sincere and that he believes the University will obey the non-discrimination policy. He explained the dilemma as one in which they (LLPD) encourage people who are interested in getting a job, but there aren't enough unskilled jobs for them. "THE PROBLEM IS THAT Buildings and Grounds has not been employing Negroes in skilled positions, and besides that there are no opportunities for them," he said. Harry Shaffer, assistant professor of economics said there is no Negro electrician with a journeyman's license because unions will not take Negroes. "WHENEVER WE TELL Negroes to go to Buildings and Grounds they ask why. They say they won't get hired anyway." Hobart Woody, of Lawrence, who works in a lab at the University, said that the University does hire workers as apprentices. The League decided to contact Harry M. Buchholz, superintendent of the Buildings and Grounds Department, and ask him to speak on their policy. "They're all wet," said Buchholz in a telephone interview Monday with the UDK. "If a man comes in for a job, and he is well qualified for that job, he will get the job regardless of race or creed." Union Leaves Labor Group Lyddane said discontent began in his local, formerly affiliated with the Congress of Industrial Organization (CIO), when former CIO members were soundly defeated for offices in the state federation during its convention last month. HUTCHINSON — (UPI) — More than 200 union communication workers withdrew from the Kansas Federation of Labor because they "felt they would have no representation." Hutchinson local President George Lyddane said today. Most of the offices were won by men formerly associated with the old American Federation of Labor (AFL) before the organizations combined to form the AFL-CIO. The Hutchinson Local 6400, Communications Workers of America, pulled out of the state labor organization earlier this month, and Lyddane said he hoped other communications locals in Kansas would follow the lead. Diplomat's Son Acts James Yount of Kansas City lost his position as executive vice president of the federation and the only other CIO-affiliated member of the federation's executive board lost his seat. Ahn has been portraying Orientals in film productions in Hollywood for the past 25 years. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT "One for the Road" Make it Spudnut O Buy a dozen - Eat them on your way home for Thanksgiving - you'll love 'em Be sure and be back for the big game Saturday! AND REMEMBER You'll enjoy delicious Spudnuts Before, During, and After the game Get them at Spudnut Drive-In 1422 West 23rd 1 Monday, Nov. 20, 1961 University Daily Kansar 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 billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan BusinessOffice in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. WANTED YOUNG MAN TO SHARE 5 room apt. Call Bill Goozte, VI 2-3528 evenings. FOR SALE MUST SELL -- New Guild Folk-Western Seller 3-44 -- bidders bidder Calgary Glenn VI 3-44 -- 1846 PLYMOUTH SPECIAL Deluxe 1851 157 R. 1, or call QR N=4620, 11-20 1851 157 R. 1, or call QR N=4620, 11-20 RELAXCISOR, like new, keep alim and tim, while you study it. 99s. Call VI T1. 11;20 1850 PLYMOUTH. runs good, looks good. $125. CALL VI 3-7268. 11-28 KNIGHTKIT R100 shortwave radio. 3 s.w. bands and broadcast band. Only 6 months old. Will sacrifice for $55. New price $100. Call Bellago, VI 2-2497. 2 ROOMS AND BATH. Priv. entr. Uni. Rent to 6 minutes from campus. Rent to either of our ladies. For rent to either. Call VI 3-0577 between 7 & 10 a.m. or 6 p.m. 11-30 STRING BASS — EPIPHONE — Good condition. $75. Contact David Christian at 1222 Mississippi afternoons and evenings. 11-20 GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive deninitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. £3.50. free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553, VI 3-5778. tf 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 3-4201 or VI 3-4201. tt WEST EDGE CAMPUS. 2 bedrooms, living room, carpet, drapes, fireplace, explosion gate, garage, electric, dishwasher, disposal, storage, garage. Call VI 3-3887 after 7. 11-20 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 typewriter, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding macnaces. Printing and marketing at reasonable cost. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-6101 today. WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES; All new and revised. 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1801 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI S-3644. TYPING MILLIKEN'S 'S.'O.S. " New at two 10 twelve Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattie, VI 3-8579 Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Responsible for Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 1688, Mrs. Kramer. Typing: Will type reports, theses, etc. Call: tpwil.1311.W 21.St.CV1 3-64400. Sell: 1311.W 21.St.CV1 3-64400. EXPERIMENTED TYPE: term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, journals, and articles. Next accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 R.I., VI 3-1485. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- tation." For excerile typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise POE, VI 3-1997. Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in tesis, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Tef. Fulcher, VI 3-0558 1031 Miss. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing home -- call VI 3-8136. Ms. Lon Gehibak HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng student who reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton. 1391 Vt. apt. 3. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execu- sional Service. S917 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7718. Evs or Sa- son, 2-2186. TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing rates and dessertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs Marilyn Ha. VI. 3-2318. TYPING: Experimented typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, essays. Electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. M. Edlowen. Ph. VI 3-8568. LOST 10 x 50 BINOCULARS at game Friday. Rick or Don for warden. Rim, 323 JRI 11:25 a.m. Lost — Black collapsible umbrella in either Fraser Hall, Student Union, or Faculty Club. Reward. Dr. Puec1. ext. 410, 202 Fraser Hall. 11-20 BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- more information, Ola Snitt. $329! Mass. Call VI 3-5263. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3-1551, or NI 921 Miss. MILLIKEN'S SOS SPECIALTIES - Direct Mail Addressing - Telephone Answering Serv. - Thermo-Fax Copying - Complete Secretarial Serv. - Monthly Statements and Credit Collection - Qualified Personnel - Notary Public and many other Services Free of Charge Suite 8 10211¹ Massachusetts ofc, VI 3-5920 after hrs, VI 3-5947 Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. Wait, the prompt says "Maintain a clean and professional document." The image has text that is not clearly readable. Maybe it's just a block of text. Let's try to transcribe it. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. Wait, let me look at the first line again. "Experienced typist would like typing in" Wait, it's "Experienced typist would like typing in". Let me re-read the whole thing. "Experienced typist would like typing in" "reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time." Okay, I'm ready to transcribe. Let's re-read the first line. "Experienced typist would like typing in" "reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time." Wait, let me re-read the second line. "Experienced typist would like typing in" "reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time." Yes, that's what I see. One more check on the third line. "Experienced typist would like typing in" "reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time." It looks like they are all saying the same thing. Actually, it might be: "Experienced typist would like typing in" "reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time." Let's try to transcribe it exactly as it appears. "Experienced typist would like typing in" "reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time." Okay, I'm ready to transcribe. TYPEWRITERS - Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 1-3644. tf Vacancy available for 2 men in come- lation at Balmoral Residential Rd Cai- lion S-9635 for appointment. **if** U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- time Self-Pose VI 3-2921 Modern service — open weeks days 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 3-1257. FOR RENT U. AUTO C.-Our complete lines of Pet Supplies - beds - harness - sweaters, etc. in pet field plus Turtles Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Campus Drive-In Pet Center - 1218 Office Drive sectionalized - save money and money . tf MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent dried paper bags. Plastic, party supplies ice float, 6th & Vermont. Frost VI. 3250 NEED REGISTERED NURSE for afternoon shift at Samaritan Lodge—also need aide for morning shift. Call VI 3-8936. SECRETARY WANTED: Apply in person. Plaza Club, 2222 Iowa. 11-28 HELP WANTED DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. 11-29 FOR RENT OR SALE, 2 bdrm, cottage 1 block from campus, full basement, fenced yard, garage, off street parking. Call VI 3-8344. 11-20 FURNISHED APT., 2 rms, priv. bath, 900 block Indiana. Call VI 3-9027 am- titude. LARGE FURNISHED apartment, e s s t sides, utilities paid.$50. Cash VI 3-6394 ADVERTISING YOUR NEEDS in the class! OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAAN. Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS 1912 West 25th St 1912 West 25th St. FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED - central air conditioning - carpeted - garbage disposal - off street parking - laundry facilities 1/2 block - play area for children Phone VI 2-3416 office VI 3-8253 home KINGSIZ Winston KING SIZE Winston FILTER • CIGARETTES FINER FILTTER FOR FINER FLAVOR Winston FILTER·CIGARETTES FINER FILTER FORTLINER FLAVOR It's what's up front that counts Up front is FILTER-BLEND and only Winston has it! Rich, golden tobaccos specially selected and specially processed for full flavor in filter smoking. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N.C. WINSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should! Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday. Nov. 20, 1961 FOOTBALL CONTEST THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN'S "TOTAL POINT PREDICTION" CONTEST Lawrence Tire & Oil Co. 1000 Mass. VI 2-0247 HEADQUARTERS FOR: US Royal Tires Conoco Oil Products Alignment - Wheel Balance Electrical System Repair & Rebuilding Complete Mechanical Service OPEN EVERY DAY UNTIL 1 am Colorado vs Iowa State 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, 11-24. In case of ties the $10 will be split. Name Address ___ Ph. My prediction is ___ points. One entry per student. LATERNITY/NEW YEAR. LAST WEEK'S WINNERS: Jerry Buxton 234 pts. Eldon Lowman 234 pts. --see "Quality Guaranteed" 3 DUH-H.H, SAY THATS A DIRTY TRICK ! estate AN LONDON AROUND 1314 AN EDICT WAS PASSED WHICH PROHIBITED THE PLAYING OF FOOTBALL DUE TO THE MANY DISTRURANCES THE GAMES CAUSED IN THE STREETS The Southern Pit 1834 Mass. Nebraska vs Oklahoma For the Finest in Laundry and Dry Cleaning Lawrence Laundry "Specialists in fabric care " VI 3-3711 10th & N.H. — Oklahoma State vs Kansas State — the 'flying wedge'? the 'single wing'? regardless, you will be 'suited' to a 'T' at diebolt's diebolt's 843 massachusetts men's wear Texas vs Texas A&M 1. For Women American Girl - Risque Summerettes - Glov-etts Smart-Aire - Red Ball Fabric For Men Crosby Square — Randcraft Red Wing Work Shoes ACME BOOTS Redman's Shoes 815 Mass. VI 3-9871 T. C.U. vs Rice SHOP AT THE CAMPUS Of Your Choice Jay SHOPPE 12th and Oread Kansas vs Missouri Visit the campus Jay Shoppe each week and register for drawing on Saturday. (No purchase necessary to register.) CAMPUS FASHIONS For EVERY OCCASION BLOUSE This Week's Gift A BOBBIE BROOKS 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 pag 2 Fill out for free 3. Return to Daily Kansan Adv. Dept., 111 Flint Hall, no later than midnight Friday, 11-24. 2. Fill out & clip coupon. In case of ties the $10 will be split. Name ___ Address ___ Ph. ___ My prediction is ___ points. One entry per student. LAST WEEK'S WINNERS: Jerry Buxton ... 234 pts. Eldon Lowman ... 234 pts. --- 1087 "Brilliant" says Marilyn King of the King Sisters The New Roberts "990" 4-Track Stereo Tape Recorder is your best buy Kief's Record & Hi Fi On the Mall Open Evenings Till 8 - Iowa vs Notre Dame ___ Daily Hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No. 48 Tuesday, November 28, 1961 KU Budget Cut $1.4 Million Budget Cut Not Final Budget Approva Until Legislature Acts Involved Process KU administrators appear displeased about the $1.4 million cut from the State Board of Regents' requested budget of $24.3 million for the University. However, they indicated that the budget as approved by the legislature probably will be higher than the present recommendation. "KU's requests were minimal," said Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University. "Unless the budget cuts Mr. Bibb (James W. Bibb, State Budget Director) recommended to the governor are restored, the quality of educational service here will be seriously affected. "For example, Mr. Bibb's recommendations eliminate that part of the budget intended for expansion of library operations. "Furthermore, the director's action leaves out the funds necessary for the replacement of Blake Hall. "Considering the number of students we are expecting in the next few years, we're going to need that classroom space badly. As it is we have had to reschedule classes for next semester." (Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe on Oct. 16 announced that classes next fall would begin one-half hour earlier and end one-half hour later than at present. He said the measure was being taken to alleviate a predicted classroom shortage in the face of an enrollment of 10,700 expected next fall.) PETER N. RICHARDSON Continuing, Mr. Nichols said this was not all the damage the deletion in the budget would do. He said it would put a strain on the KU staff itself. Raymond Nichols "IN CONSIDERATION of the enrollment jump that is coming, the Board of Regents allowed us funds in their budget for 41 new instructors. Mr. Bibb's budget cuts have reduced this number to 25." He said the regents' budget proposal also had provided for hiring of 23 additional classified office personnel. (These were to be secretarial and administrative workers, not academic personnel.) "Bibb's budget changes would limit the University to two such employees." Mr. Nichols said. He said the state budget director's recommendation also would deprive the University of: - All funds for faculty salary increases. - $65,000 from the present routine repair figure. - All special repair funds including those allotted for proposed traffic control stations. (The latter had been proposed by the chancellor in his address (Continued on page 8) He explained that a budget request must go through the following five steps before it is finally adopted: The proposed KU budget is not in its final form by any means, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the University said yesterday. - A budget request is made by the administration of the University based upon its needs. The request is then forwarded to the State Board of Regents. (Continued on page 8) - The regents' requests then go to a budget hearing committee headed by the state budget director. Here the budget is reviewed and again may be modified according to state resources. This is a joint meeting of the regents and the budget director's staff. - The Board of Regents examines the request and attempts to fit it into an over-all minimal request for state institutions. Available state revenue resources are considered at this stage. - The budget then is recommended to the governor. The governor reviews the budget and may make further modifications he deems necessary. The KU budget is now in this stage. - The governor then submits the final formal budget to the legislature for its approval. This will be done Jan. 10. This budget involves all state institutions. The budget (now a bill) goes first to the senate where it is sent to the Senate Ways and Means Committee. If passed by the Senate when returned from the committee, the bill is sent to the House of Representatives. Here it undergoes a similar process. After approval by the House, the bill returns to the Senate for a final vote. If the Senate fails to approve any changes the House may have made, the bill goes to a compromise committee. When the committee reaches a solution, the bill is returned to the governor for either signature or veto. If vetoled, the bill must undergo further legislation, otherwise the bill (budget) goes into effect. Partly cloudy to clear today through tomorrow. Slowly rising temperatures. Highs today 40 to 45. Lows tonight around 30. Highs tomorrow 45 to 50. Weather Wescoe Backs KU Crisis Day A proposal for a "World Crisis Day" has been given enthusiastic support by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. A resolution presented to him by an ad hoc steering committee (eight students and 3 faculty) asked for the chancellor's approval to hold a special convocation followed by smaller seminar meetings. The resolution said in part: "There has been a growing concern for the need of greater awareness among students of this University of the present international crisis, the arms race, nuclear testing, and other factors imperiling the peace and security of all peoples." The chancellor said: "The idea is good, but I would make one plea, that the speaker be first class. This is the way to create real enthusiasm. "DECIDE WHOM you want and then set the date," he added. "I have no objection to Dec. 7 (the tentative date) if you can arrange it." "I do think," he continued, "that whoever comes should plan to spend the whole day and should attend some of the smaller seminars." Brian O'Heron, Torrington, Conn. senior and co-chairman of the committee asked if there was any money available for obtaining speakers. The Chancellor explained that the expenses could be handled by the University's convocations committee. It was also decided at the meeting that classes would not be dismissed for the day. An earlier proposal called for suspension of all regular academic activities for a day, but the committee and the chancellor felt that too many students would be inclined to stay in bed rather than attend the meetings. PRESENT PLANS for the convocation call for either two speakers, one representing the government view and one the alternative view, or only one speaker from the government. There has been no definite confirmation on speakers at the present time. More than 200 students, 50 faculty members and 40 organizations have signed a resolution supporting the concept of "World Crisis Day." O'Heron commented that he was happy about the support but what is needed now is more student and faculty participation in making arrangements for the program. He asked that all interested students attend the next meeting of the ad hoc committee at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union. Moscow Publishes JFK Interview in Red Paper MOSCOW — (UPI) — President Kennedy proposed an international administration to control traffic on the highway lifeline between Berlin and West Germany in an exclusive interview published today in the Soviet government newspaper Izvestia. The interview was obtained by Izvestia editor Alexei Adzhubeh, son-in-law of Premier Nikita Khrushchev, at the President's vacation home at Hyannis Port, Mass., l.a.t Saturday. "All we want is to maintain limited and numerically very limited forces of the three powers in West Berlin and have, for example, an international administration for the highway so that goods and people could go back and forth without hindrance," the President said. "Then we could secure peace in this area for many years." IN SEEING ADZHUBEL, Kennedy granted the first exclusive interview ever given to a Soviet journalist by an American President. The two men were together for two hours, and Adzhubei, frequently advancing his own opinions, talked almost half as much as the President. Printing the interview in Izvestia was an extraordinary event for the Soviet press which seldom carries remarks by Western leaders that are critical of Russian policy. The President blamed the dangers to peace on the Soviet Union's efforts to "communize the world," and made these other points: - East-West relations: The So- (Continued on page 8) KU Student Dies In Car Accident Thomas J. Loberg, Houston, Tex., freshman died in a two-car accident Thursday afternoon in Wichita. He was killed when he was tossed from his small foreign car. The force of the impact threw the light car on Loberg's body. Loberg had gone to Wichita over Thanksgiving vacation to visit his grandparents. He is a former resident of Wichita. At KU, Loberg was a pledge of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. He was planning to study journalism, and was a script writer for the Rock Chalk Revue. Kansas Football Fizzles in Final Game By Fred Zimmerman It happened with tiresome regularity. John Hadl raised his arm to pass and was pounded to the ground by Missouri tacklers . . . Curtis McClinton took a handoff and started around left end, but the Missouri line never let him turn the corner. Forty thousand Kansas fans took these images with them as they left Memorial Stadium Saturday after watching KU's humiliation by its most bitter rival. Just a week ago, Hadl was being called "everybody's All America," and McClinton was "the best college back" one professional scout said he had seen all year. Just a week ago, Kansas had won its sixth straight victory, piling up 53 points against a California team that had tied Missouri. AND BEFORE THAT were the pre-season predictions of brilliance for the KU team. picked by Playboy Magazine to finish first in the nation. But as the stadium emitted Saturday all anyone remembered was that Kansas had been humbled in the final game of the season by a team that had entered the game as a 2-touchdown underdog. But the players want another chance. Hoping for partial vindication, the team voted unanimously yesterday to accept an invitation to play Dec. 16 in the Bluebonnet Bowl in Houston. Tex. "That's enough football for me," a disgusted alumnus said to his wife, whose chrysanthemum had wilted on her lapel. If a vote had been taken immediately after the game, however, the team probably would have rejected a bowl invitation. In the locker room, defeat and frustration prevailed as players dressed in silence. "AFTER MISSOURI, we were ready to just give up," Hadl said today. "But I think we'll go down there now and play our best game of the year." The 40 or 50 alumni, who always jam into the dressing room after a game to congratulate the players, pound Coach Jack Mitchell on the back, and watch the team dress, did not seem to know what to do after Saturday's game. Many of them looked slightly embarrassed as they shuffled aimlessly from one end of the room to the other, occasionally being pushed gently aside by players trying to get to the showers. A man in a gray topcoat dragged his 8-year-old son through the A sad walk home . . . dressing room mob and introduced him to Rodger McFarland. "Say, Rog, this is my boy, Jimmy." McFarland, sitting in dejection before his opened locker, looked up. "Hi, Jimmy," he said, and shook Jimmy's hand. There was an uneasy pause before the father steered his son back into the crowd. One boy whispered to his friend: "Did you see Hadl's eyes? He's crying." HADL. naked and dripping from the shower, slowly made his way back to his locker, trailed by five or six small boys wanting autographs. In the middle of the room, Kent Staab knelt at the knee of Jim Mills and offered him a drink of water. For three minutes the two players — both seniors who had just played their last game in Memorial Stadium — bowed their heads and whispered to each other. Nearby, Coach Bernie Taylor—who Coach Mitchell had said was most responsible for KU's surprising comeback after a slow start at the beginning of the season—stood lifelessly in front of a locker, staring into space. Gradually the crowd noticed, and pulled back from the two to watch in silence. Staab and Mills finally separated, not knowing 20 persons had been watching them. GRADUALLY THE CROWD thinned. The grade-school boys got their autographs, and the alumni decided they had seen all there was to see. On his way out, an alumnus in a plaid sport coat stopped to pat a player on the shoulder. "You're still champs," he told him. He then walked out the door, past the hand-written slogan someone had tacked to the bulletin board. "Your greatest handicap is fear." t said. "Your best day is today." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, November 28, 1961 On English Proficiency The English Proficiency examination continues to show that about one-fifth of the students required to take it are not competent in English according to university standards. This figure has remained approximately the same for the last three semesters. It has been nearly twice as much on several occasions. The only apparent reason for the test is to make sure students are proficient in written English before they leave the university. But it should also serve as an indication of the general proficiency in English among the student body. SOMETHING IS OBVIOUSLY WRONG when 20 per cent or more of the students taking the examination fail it. It is difficult to understand how students can struggle through four semesters of English and fail to acquire the necessary skill in English. It would be unrealistic to assume that 100 per cent of the students who take the examination should be expected to pass it. But certainly more than 60 to 80 per cent of the students taking the test should be able to master it. And the problem has been evident for at least four years. (The first year percentages of failing and passing students were made public was 1957.) THE PROBLEM IS NOT NECESSARILY one of student incompetence in English. The value of a single examination—one theme written under pressure—as an indication of a student's competency in English is highly questionable. The ability of some of the instructors who grade the examination papers to judge a student's competence in English is also highly questionable. One full professor who has judged examination papers told this writer that he did not really know if the commas and periods were in the right place. He had to keep an English book at hand to check when he was grading the papers. The problem would seem to lie in the fact that the English Proficiency Examination does not do what it is supposed to do: judge the student's competency in English. Instead it is merely an obstacle that the student has to overcome, in the process of which both his and the University's energy is wasted. —William H. Mullins KU Students Responsible KU students proved last Saturday that they are a responsible group. Their excellent behavior at the KU-MU game should leave little doubt of the maturity of the KU student. BEFORE THE GAME many people had expected more of the same type of trouble that was encountered on two different occasions at Columbia last year. But instead of the disorderly unsportsmanlike conduct of last year the crowd last Saturday acted in a way that would reflect credit on almost any group. Both students and the administration had made the proper mental and physical preparations before the game. Students, realizing the consequences of improper conduct, had adopted the attitude that there would be no violence at the game. THE ADMINISTRATION proved, by the precautions that it took, that it had learned from last year's experience at Columbia. The physical preparations made by the University were elaborate and well planned. No one could accuse the University of not being ready for the trouble that many had expected. The real responsibility for good conduct at the game was in the hands of every individual there. If a large segment of the crowd had been determined to cause trouble, even the most elaborate University preparations could not have prevented it. KU'S UNEXPECTED LOSS to Missouri made it much harder for the crowd to behave in the manner in which it did. It has been said that the only thing bad about sportsmanship is that you have to lose to prove that you have it. It is easy for the winner to act in a sportsmanlike manner. However, Saturday KU passed the test of good sportsmanship at a time when less admirable conduct was expected. The spectators at Saturday's football game acted in a manner which reflects credit on both them and the University. —Ron Gallagher By Bill Charles "Claudelle English": with Diane McBain, Arthur Kennedy, and Claudie Akins. Directed by Gordon Douglas. At the Varsity. "Bachelor in Paradise": with Bob Hope, Lana Turner, and Paula Prentiss. Directed by Jack Arnold. At the Granada. "Bachelor in Paradise" is a picture only Hollywood could have made. Everything inanimate in the film is shining and new; the women never wear the same clothes twice. The characters are the kind of people one never meets, because they exist only in movies and magazines. Nevertheless, putting aside its slickness, At the Movies "Bachelor is Paradise" is a very entertaining movie. THE BACHELOR is A. J. Niles (Hope) and Paradise is a modern housing development which he invades, intent on producing a book called How the Americans Live. This to Niles means the mating habits of the suburbanites. While living in a house he has rented from Rosemary Howard (Turner), Niles becomes a bit too involved with his neighbors and winds up as correspondent in three divorce suits. The film is a perfect vehicle for Hope. He completely dominates the action, largely because Miss Turner has no flair for comedy and because the screenwriters have almost completely ignored the rest of the cast, giving Hope a good 90% of the funny lines. Paula Prentiss has practically no chance to show off her talent for comedy. The remainder of the cast is adequate, which is a compliment when one considers the quality of their parts. BACHELOR IN PARADISE" is one of the funnier film produced this year. When you see it, don't look for a good story or a particularly well-made film or expert acting. Just enjoy it. If you don't care for comedy, take in "Claudelle English" at the Varsity. It isn't as bad as the ads make it look. Based on the Erskine Caldwell novel, the film is about a Southern lass who is jitted and then turns herself into the talk of the town, the sort of girl whose name is found on washroom walls all across the land. Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1994, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Viking, 3-2700 Telephone Vlking 3-2700 Extension 711 news room Extension 376.business office Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT **Tom Turner** ... Managing Editor ciety Editor. Diane McBain as Claudelle and Claude Akins as her middle-aged suitor give fine performances, but the acting honors go to Arthur Kennedy as Claudelle's father. This is his best role in a long time, and he does an excellent job. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Brown Tom Brown Business Manager Don Gergick, Advertising Manager; Bonnie McCullough, Circulation Manager; David Weias. National Advertising Manager; Charles Martinache, Classified Advertising Manager; Hal Smith, Promotion Manager. THE MAIN TROUBLE with "Claudelle English" is that it lacks direction. Advertised as a very sexy film, it will disappoint those who believe what the posters say. The film itself is no more daring than a Disney picture, showing only befores and afternoons with no durings. On the other hand, there is enough latent material for a sensitive examination of some of the joys and heartbreak involved in growing up. In place of these two extremes, writer-producer Leonard Freeman has come up with a heavy-handed film which is knee-deep in cliches. Fine acting brings the final product up to average film fare. the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism The enigmatic man who was the bete noire of American conservatives at the turn of the century and American liberals in the thirties and forties finally gets a fair biographical treatment. W.A. Swanberg has bent over backwards to assure a balanced treatment of the famous publisher. CITIZEN HEARST, by W. A. Swanberg. Scribner's. $7.50. In doing so he has produced a monumental work. "Citizen Hearst" not only is thorough; it is fascinating, and it should have a wide audience. William Randolph Hearst is a relatively unfamiliar name to today's college generation. His papers have declined in significance and have grown relatively respectable. It would be pointless—and unfair—to tell the hateful stories that made Hearst a baleful legend in his own time. HEARST WAS THE SON OF A CRUDE AND FOUL-TALKING Californian who bought his way into the U.S. Senate after making a fortune in mining. He was a spoiled boy who got himself thrown out of Harvard after one too many escapades. He was the editor of his own paper in his twenties, and on that paper, the San Francisco Examiner, he explored the journalistic techniques that he would utilize to the fullest after going to New York a decade later. It was the heyday of yellow journalism, and the king of the journalists was Joseph Pulitzer. Young Hearst went to New York, made his assault upon Pulitzer and the World, pushed yellow journalism even further, and with Pulitzer helped push America into the Spanish-American War. . The war over, the flamboyant young man from the West began to use his newspapers to promote liberal causes and his own career in politics. For two generations he was a kingpin in Democratic party politics; then he went conservative and supported the most right-wing of Republicans. He spent two terms in Congress, tried many times to get the Democratic nomination for the presidency, or the job of mayor of New York City, or the governorship of New York state. HE ALWAYS BACKED THE LOSING MAN—including himself. He promoted Bryan, Champ Clark, Landon, Willkie, Dewey and MacArthur. He even backed his old enemy, Al Smith, when Smith turned against Roosevelt in 1936. Swanberg gives us in "Citizen Hearst" a biography of such monumental proportions that it is impossible to treat much of it in a brief review. He tells us of the willful capitalist Hearst who couldn't use his own money properly and went into near-bankruptcy in the 1930s. He tells us of St. Donat's castle, the purchases of art and old cloisters and armor and the wild animals for the vast California estate of San Simeon. Here is, perhaps, the first full-fledged depiction of Hearst's affair with Marion Davies. Throughout the twenties and thirties Hearst tried to make Miss Davies the great star of the screen. Beyond that, she was his mistress, and there is little doubt that he bore for her a genuine love. Best of all, we see the dedicated Hearst, the man who really believed in liberalism, who sincerely favored the cause of the Cubans, who genuinely mourned for the downtrodden. But Hearst, like Pulitzer, had a Jekyll-and-Hyde personality. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler MARRIAGE AND FAMILY RELATIONS 213 PITTER © WALTER S. DENVER TITLE PATTERN 0-15 "IT'S ALL RIGHT DEAN WILSON—WE'RE SHOWING A MOVIE." Page 3 Around the Campus Panel Will Discuss Laredo to Play College Athletics In Concert Cours To defend athletics against accusers who feel that an athletic program is a detriment to a university will be the purpose of the panel discussion sponsored by the KU-Y at 8 tonight in the Forum Room of the Union. Christopher Stuart, instructor of English, will moderate the discussion of "Intercollegiate Athletics on Trial." Members of the panel are C. A. Leone, professor of zoology; Charles Oldfather, professor of law and James Gunn, assistant to the Chancellor on University relations. All are members of the Athletic Board. Also on the panel will be Frederick Samson, associate professor of physiology and Roy Edwards, an alum from Kansas City who is a former member of the Athletic Board. The panel also will consider athletic scholarships, athletics as a cultural rite, how much athletics contribute to a university's budget through the support of alums and whether athletics have lost their true meaning and have fallen into the realm of big business. AEC Project Head Speaks Edward A Martell, director of the Atomic Energy Commission's Sunshine project, will speak on "The Influence of the Atmosphere on World-Wide Fallout" at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 411 Summerfield. The lecture is sponsored by Sigma Xi, national honorary scientific society. A former child prodigy will play his violin at 8:20 p.m. tomorrow in the University Theatre. Jaime Laredo, 18 year-old Bolivian violinist, who made his concert debut at eight, will play in KU's Concert Course, its third attraction. Mr. Laredo, born in Cochamba, Bolivia, came to San Francisco in 1948 and gave his first full recital after just two years' acquaintance with the violin. Three years later he played with the San Francisco Symphony directed by Arthur Fiedler. When he was 15 Mr. Laredo made a ten-concert tour of Peru, Bolivia and Puerto Rico. Tickets for the concert are available with I.D. cards in the Fine Arts office only. For his program here, Mr. Laredo will play sonatas by Guisepee Tartina and Gabriel Faure, Adagio in E Major and Rondo in C Major by Mozart, Rondo brilliant in B Minor by Schubert and Nocturne and Tarantelle by Karel Szymanowski. Radiation To Be Discussed How to detect radium and strontium in human bone will be discussed at 7:30 tonight by an Army reserve officer. Second Lieutenant LeMoine Cunningham, U.S. Army Reserve will speak on the "Detection of Strontium and Radium in Human Bone" in room 105 of the Military Science Building. Block Seats Available For Sunday Concert The deadline for reserving blocks of seats for the Dukes of Dixieland concert Sunday has been extended to tomorrow evening by the Campus Chest committee. Organized houses may order blocks of 20 or more seats for the concert. Solicitors in each house may turn in the orders and money tonight and tomorrow night from 7 to 9 in the Activities Lounge of the Kansas Union. The drawing for block seat locations will be held at 9 p.m. tomorrow. Individual seats can be reserved from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. each day this week in the Information Booth on Jayhawk Boulevard and in the Kansas Union. Marvin to Discuss Iran Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism will speak about his experiences in Iran to members of Sigma Delta Chi, Theta Sigma Phi, Alpha Delta Sigma and Gamma Alpha Chi at 8 p.m. Thursday in the English Room of the Kansas Union. Life Saving Fashion NEW YORK — (UPI) A lifesize mannequin with a breathing apparatus and fleshlike plastic covering is being used to train students in the technique of mouth-to-mouth artificial respiration, the Public Health Service reports. Plastic valves prevent the dummy's lungs from inflating unless the head is positioned properly by the student. Tuesday, November 28. 1961 University Daily Kansan Dental Duty NEW YORK — (UPI) — A survey by the American Dental Association shows that the average dentist in private practice works a 43-hour week. But three out of every eight dentists work more than a 45-hour week. The 43 hours are distributed this way: 34 hours at the dental chair, four hours doing laboratory work, two hours doing other office work, and three hours in free office time. The average dentist, it was reported, takes a three-week vacation each year. Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS 1912 West 25th St. FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED - central air conditioning - carpeted - off street parking - garbage disposal - laundry facilities 1/2 block - play area for childrer Phone V1 2-3416 office VI 3-8253 home Latin Peace Corps May Train at KU The University appears to have passed a major hurdle on its way to becoming a training center for a Peace Corps project in Costa Rica. While several months of further negotiations will be necessary to determine whether final approval will be given to the project, a tentative program designed by faculty members last September has gained the unofficial approval of the Costa Rican government and the interest of Washington Peace Corps officials. If approved, the program would establish KU as a training center next summer for 25 Peace Corps delegates to Costa Rica. AFTER THEIR two-month training period at KU, the delegates would be sent to aid in the development of secondary education in rural Costa Rica. Participants in the program would be selected from throughout the United States on the basis of their abilities to: - Teach basic sciences on the high school level. - Teach English on the high school level. - The government-financed program would have a two-year duration. - Perform counseling and guidance services. John P. Augelli, chairman of the KU Latin American Area Studies program and in charge of developing the tentative program offered by KU to the Costa Rican government, explained the present status of the program. "Our program has been submitted to various officials in Costa Rica and has won the approval of the Costa Rican minister of education and the tentative approval of the present Costa Rican cabinet," he said. He explained that President Mario Echandi of Costa Rica could not officially commit the Costa Rican government to support of the program because Costa Rican elections will alter the composition of the Costa Rican administration. "PEACE CORPS officials in Washington are aware of our interest in this program and have invited us to discuss the program with them early in December." But Prof. Aurelli said he felt the program would be officially approved by the new administration. Prof. Augelli said the idea for the program was born last May when George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, wrote to Peace Corps officials in an effort to learn what part KU could play in the Peace Corps program. KU is especially interested in participating in a program involving Costa Rica, he continued, because the University already has developed close ties with the Latin American country through a two-year-old faculty and student exchange between KU and the University of Costa Rica. Art Instructor Wins Prize at Exhibition Other KU artists represented in the exhibition were Robert Sudlow, assistant professor of drawing and painting; John Taleur, assistant professor of drawing and painting and Thomas Coleman, instructor of drawing and painting. Harold Boyd, assistant instructor of drawing & painting has won second prize of $150 at the Centennial Exhibition of the American Association of Land Grant Colleges and Universities. The exhibition opened Nov. 12 at the Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City, Mo. It is better to risk saving a guilty person than to condemn an innocent one.—Voltaire Mr. Boyd's prize-winning intaglio, "Souvenir," was entered in the student art work, and was one of six prize-winners from the 240 entries by faculty and students of the 65 universities and colleges in the association. The Centennial Exhibition will be on view through Sunday. WHEEL ALIGNMENT BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP 229 Elm VI 3-2250 WE'RE HAVING A Birthday DeLuxe Sale Ends LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FINEST Dec. 2nd Birthday WE'RE HAVING A DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEAMING AT ITS FINEST ANY CLOTH Men's-Child's-Ladies' CLIP THIS COUPON COAT Beautifully Dry Cleaned Beautifully Dry Cleaned and Hand Finished. 59℃ ca. Reg. $1.09 CLIP THIS COUPON CLIP 17. ANY MATCHED SUIT OR ANY PLAIN 1-PC. DRESS Beautifully Dry Cleaned and Pressed. CLIP THIS COUPON TROUSERS ● Skirts (plain) ● Sport Shirts ● Sweaters 29c ea. Reg. 59c Deluxe Cleaned, Hand Pressed CLIP THIS COUPON ANY MATCHED SUIT OR ANY PLAIN 1-PC. DRESS Beautifully Dry Cleaned and Pressed. Reg. $1.04 CLIP THIS COUPON DRESS SHIRTS SHIRTS 17 c.ea. Laundered to perfection! Starched as you like! Frayed Collars Turned Free! NOTE: No Limit—But you must bring this coupon in WITH your order. Minimum Order 25c Men's—Boys' RUBBER HEELS 49 c.pr. Any Wool BLANKET 59 c.ea. Cleaned, Fluffed, Moth-Proofed. Ladies' Heel LIFTS Leather or Composition Reg. to 95c Leather or Rubber HALF SOLES With Rubber HEELLS 199 pr.$3 val. MEN'S FELT Hats Factory cleaned & Blocked 99 c.ea. Leather or Rubber FULL SOLES With Rubber HEELLS 299 pr.$5 val. Men's—Boys' RUBBER HEELS 49c pr. Men's—Boys' RUBBER HEELS 49c pr. Any Wool BLANKET 59c ca. Cleaned. Fluffed, Moth-Proofed. Ladies' Heel LIFTS 39c pr. Leather or Composition Reg. to 95c Leather or Rubber HALF SOLES 199 pr. $3 val. MEN'S FELT Hats 99c ca. Factory cleaned & Blocked Leather or Rubber FULL SOLES 299 pr. $5 val. With Rubber HEELS Any Wool BLANKET 59c Cleaned, Fluffed, Moth-Proofed. Leather or Rubber HALF SOLES With Rubber HEELS 1.99 pr. $3 val. MEN'S FELT Hats Factory cleaned & Blocked 99c ca. Drive In and Save - Open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Except Sunday - 1300 West 23rd St. VI 2-0200 SAME DAY SERVICE Fri. & Sat. In by 9 a.m. Out by 5 p.m. --- Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. November 28,196 Veta Lear, Assistant to Dean Dies Following Long Illness The death of Veta Lear, 71, was "undoubtedly a loss" to all who knew her, George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said. Miss Lear died Nov. 18 in her home after a long illness. She retired in October, 1958 as assistant to the dean of the College. In her 38 years in the College office, Miss Lear served under four deans: Olin Templin, Joseph G. Brandt, Paul B. Lawson and Dean Waggoner. SHE WAS BORN AT STEFFON- ville, Mo., in 1890. Her family moved to Columbus, Kan., when she was a junior in high school. She graduated from the Cherokee County high school in 1909. While at KU, she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, national honor society for the liberal arts and sciences. She served as secretary of the KU chapter from 1923 to 1932 and as vice president from 1944 to 1946. After studying a year at the University of Illinois, she discontinued her studies for a year. She then came to KU where she received her A.B. degree in 1914. AFTER GRADUATION, Miss Lea taught Latin and German at Osawatomie high school. In 1917 she became principal of Anthony (Kan.) high school. Miss Lear came to Lawrence in 1919 where she taught Latin in the SELF-SELECTION Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES high school. She was appointed secretary of the College in 1920 and was later promoted to assistant to the dean. While in the College office, she was counselor and adviser to many of the students who worked part time in the office. 1302 W. 23rd St. (23rd and Naismith) PRE-CHRISTMAS SPECIAL CORDUROY TENNIS SHOE Pet Therapy "She influenced hundreds of alumni, including myself," Dean Waggoner said. "She endlessly pushed the students under her to make the best record they could." Colors: Black White Green Sizes 4½ to 10 Reg. $2.99 NEW YORK—(UPI)—The family canine might eat you out of house and home but he's worth the expense. He's a cheap form of psychotherapy. Dr. Boris Levinson, of Yeshiva University's Psychological Center, reports that the house pet—particularly the dog—is more important to man psychologically than in any other way. $ 1^{83} $ OPEN 9 TO 9 DAILY NOON TO 5 SUNDAYS He says the dog helps humans to fill needs for loyalty, trust, respect, obedience, and submission. COMING TO KU ... IN PERSON!! THE PHENOMENAL DUKES OF DIXIELAND AUDIO FIDELITY RECORDING ARTISTS BAND Students not dreaming of a white Christmas have the opportunity to take a vacation trip to sunny Mexico. International Club Sponsors Mexico Trip SUNDAY DEC. 3RD HOCH AUDITORIUM $1.50 DON'T MISS IT The International Club is sponsoring the trip, which will cost $115 per student. This includes food, room, and transportation. The trip, by chartered buses, will include stops at San Miguel, Mexico City, Acapulco, and Oaxaca. The buses will leave Lawrence Dec. 20 and will return Jan. 2. Students interested may contact Peter Ling, Hong Kong senior and International Club vice president, for information. His telephone number is VI 3-9893. Business As Usual WASHINGTON — (UPI) — U.S. merchandise licensed for shipment to communist countries jumped 800 per cent, a $6.3 million increase in recent weeks despite the Berlin crisis. Official Bulletin Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 a.m., St. John's Church, 13th and Kentucky. TODAY Mathematics Colloquium: 4 p.m., 119 Strong Hall. Lecturer, Prof. K. Kuratowski "On Extending Homeomorphisms in Acylic Continua." Foreign Students; 5 p.m. today is the deadline for you to make reservations for this Friday's trip to Independence and the Harry S. Truman Library. Reservations are to be made in 228 Strong Hall. New Foreign Students: are reminded of the "Seminar on Life in the U.S.A." in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. You have no class conflicts, please attend. Angel Flight Meeting: 7 p.m., Military Science Building. Wallet Is Reported Missing A wallet containing $7 was reported stolen from a purse on the first floor of Strong Hall yesterday. Joyce Leasure, LaCygne freshman, told campus security police that she left the purse on a chair on the first floor for 30 minutes. It was gone when she returned. WEDNESDAY **Peace Corps:** Interested students who did not take the Peace Corps examination and did not have an opportunity to take the exam at 8:30 a.m. in the Lawrence Post Office downtown. Epispcial Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. ADS-GAX Meeting: 7:30 p.m., English Room, Kansas Union. Speaker, Dean Burton Marvin. Wheeze Total NEW YORK—(UPI)—The allergy Foundation of America estimates that up to four million Americans suffer from bronchial asthma. This form of asthma is a chronic allergic reaction in the bronchial tree. The foundation said it is most often found in persons with a family history of allergy, but it may develop gradually during a bronchial infection. It also may set in suddenly after exposure to an allergen. Look Familiar? --of course not. We've all come a long way from the "good old days" of the cracker barrel and pot bellied stove. Dry cleaning methods, too, have advanced through the years. Lawrence Laundry's exclusive Sanitone way of dry cleaning represents the ultimate in dry cleaning. Sanitone is kinder to your fine clothes, and is the only cleaning method recommended by such clothing manufacturers as Botany, Worsted-Tex, Handmacher, and Serbin. SEE US SOON LAWRENCE "Quality Guaranteed" launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. VI3-3711 "Specialists in Fabric Care" Tuesday, November 28, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 9 EXTRA BIG FOOD BUYS! CLIP THESE VALUABLE COUPONS AND SAVE $1 AT DILLONS' COMPLETE NEW KWIK-SHOP THIS COUPON WORTH 10c at Dillons! KWIK-SHOP 1714 West 23rd St. ON ANY LOAF OF DILLON'S BREAD or PASTRY (LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER) SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE THIS COUPON WORTH 15c at Dillons! KWIK-SHOP 1714 West 23rd St. ON A 1 POUND CAN OF DILLON'S COFFEE (LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER) SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE THIS COUPON WORTH 15c at Dillons! KWIK-SHOP 1714 West 23rd St. ON ANY FLAVOR OF ICE CREAM (LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER) SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE (LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER) SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE THIS COUPON WORTH 10c at Dillons! KWIK-SHOP 1714 West 23rd St. On a 1 POUND BOX of ANY BRAND Salted SODA CRACKERS THIS COUPON WORTH 10c at Dillons! KWIK-SHOP 1714 West 23rd St. ON A 5 POUND BAG OF RED McCLURE POTATOES (LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER) SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE THIS COUPON WORTH 10c at Dillons! KWIK-SHOP 1714 West 23rd St. ON ANY PACKAGE OF FRESH or MEATS FROZEN (LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER) SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE (LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER) SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE ON ANY 6 BOTTLE CARTON OF BEVERAGE THIS COUPON WORTH 10c at Dallons! KWIK-SHOP 1714 West 23rd St. (LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER) SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE THIS COUPON WORTH 10c at Dillons! KWIK-SHOP 1714 West 23rd St. ON THE PURCHASE OF ANY KIND 1/2 GAL. of MILK (LIMIT ONE COUPON TO CUSTOMER) SALE TAX MUST BE PAID ON REGULAR RETAIL PRICE THIS COUPON WORTH 10c at Dillons! KWIK-SHOP 1714 West 23rd St. ON THE PURCHASE OF ANY FROZEN FOOD SHOP THE NEW - QUICK - CONVENIENT - COMPLETE — Kwik- SHOP OPEN WEEKDAYS -7a.m to 11p.m. AT 1714 WEST 23rd St. . . . Just South of the Campus Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. November 28, 1961 KU Takes 4th In NCAA Meet --- Oregon State captured both crowns the NCAA offered. The Rocks won the team championship with 68 points and Dale Story wrapped up the individual title over a four-mile course in 19:46.6. The wind was strong, the temperature was sub-freezing and the Jayhawkier cross-country runners were "cold." Coach Bill Easton's squad, undefeated Big Eight champions, had been priming themselves toward the national collegiate crown. Kansas' hopes rode on Bill Dotson. Dotson had blazed to glory in every race this fall, winning easily against strong opposition. Dotson entered the race as one of the favorites for the NCAA's 1961 individual champion. Dotson gave it all he had, but what he had wasn't enough. The Kansas great who has been compared as equal to all-time star performers Wes Santee, Herb Semper and Al Frame, finished 13th. Yesterday, the Jayhawkers ran at East Lansing, Mich., against the largest and most formidable field the NCAA had compiled in recent years and much to their "disappointment" finished fourth. "He didn't feel well." said Easton of his anchor man. "I don't know what happened and he doesn't either." Kansas had at East Lansing what every athletic squad fears, "a cold day." The Jayhawkers had it on the day they had hoped to be at their best. KANSAS HAD ITS FIRST clue that the day was going to be a "Blue Monday" when senior stalwart Dan Ralston became ill before the race. Ralston had been battling the flu bug and the cold weather irritated him. Ralston, Charlie Hayward and Bill Thornton were the KU "middle men" designated to pick up much needed points to assure the Jayhawkers of victory. Ralston ran despite his handicap and finished 31st. Bill Thornton was on his heels, placing 32nd. MIKE FULGHUM, who last year won the national junior college championship, was the Jayhawkers' only bright spot as he ran his best race of the season. The junior transfer ran third among his teammates and finished 20th overall. In previous meets he had not run above fifth against his teammates. The Kansas sophomores George Cabrera and Tonnie Coane placed 45th and 77th respectively. Hayward had been Dotson's shadow the entire season. The junior had finished second to Dotson in every meet except for the Big Eight meet when he placed third. Hayward's times were usually a couple of seconds behind Dotson's. The top ten finishers behind Story were: Matti Raty, Brigham Young; Pat Clohessy, Houston; Jeffery Fishback, San Jose State; Tom O'Hara, Loyola (Chicago); Charlie Clark, San Jose State; Barry Almond, Houston; Jim Tucker, Iowa; Danny Metcalf, Oklahoma State; Gerald Clyde, Colorado State. THE TEAMS behind Oregon State were San Jose State, 81 points; Houston, 122; Kansas, 124, Iowa, 164; Western Michigan, 165; and Southern Illinois, 173. Hayward, like the rest of the Jayhawker crew, couldn't get moving. He finished 21st. "We had a real fine season, one of which we can be proud. We had a great leader, Captain Bill Dotson, who did a great job. We have nothing to be ashamed of. Intramural football play ends next week with the Hill Championship. In that tilt will be the winners of the playoff between the division champions. "Our performance showed that we are the top power in the Middle West. We defeated the Big Ten Champion, Iowa." The Ed Leach, Lawrence graduate student, to Jim Emerson, Bartlesville, Okla., senior, pass combination clicked for two touchdowns. The Leach to Dave Phillips, Colby sophomore, duo accounted for the final score. Leach scored both PAT's Betas Down Phi Gams Navy is the Independent "B" champion. The Navy eleven downed Ace Pearson, 20-6. Beta Theta Pi emerged as the fraternity "A" champion yesterday with a 20-10 win over Phi Gamma Delta. Bill Jenkins, Fayetteville, Ark, freshman, threw three touchdown passes for the Navy, Larry Mahafey, Coffeyville senior, received two touchdown passes and accounted for an extra point. Ray Henry scored the final Navy touchdown on a pass play. Tom Black, Lawrence sophomore, made the extra point. ___ Report Card NEW YORK — (UPI) The nation's two million college students carted possessions valued at more than a billion dollars back to school this fall. The Insurance Information Institute reports that in almost all instances the possessions are protected under family insurance plans. Even, for example, dad's old school tie. VARSITY NOW SHOWING! VARSITY NOW SHOWINGI Erskine Caldwell's "Claudelle Inglish" Ohio State Takes First From 'Bama NEW YORK — (UPI) — Big Ten champion Ohio State, unbeaten but tied once in nine games, was named the No.1 major college football team today in the next-to-last weekly balloting by the United Press International coaches rating board. 1. Ohio State (19) (8-0-1) 1. Ohio State (19) (8-0-1) 329 2. Alabama (15) (9-0) 316 3. Louisiana State (9-1) 253 4. Texas (9-1) 237 5. Mississippi (8-1) 194 6. Colorado (1) (8-1) 124 7. Minnesota (7-2) 123 8. Michigan State (7-2) 108 9. Arkansas (8-2) 92 10. Purdue (6-3) 35 Second 10 teams—11 (tie), Utah State and Missouri 30 each; 13, Georgia Tech 8; 14, Wyoming 7; 15, Penn State 6; 16 (tie), Duke, Miami (Fla.) and Syracuse 5 each; 19 (tie), Kansas and UCLA 4 each. Plaza Barber Shop Appointments (Open to the public) VI 2-3950, 2222 Iowa Ken Pringle GRANADA MOW SHOWINGI Bob Hope Lana Turner "Bachelor in Paradise" Kansan Want Ads Get Results Campus WEST Campus WEST REDUCTION Limited Number of Skirts, Sweaters and Blouses ALL SALES FINAL 1424 Crescent Road SOCIAL CHAIRMEN Now You Can Reserve the Flame Room of the Dine-A-Mite at No Expense, Mondays thru Thursdays. HERE'S HOW YOU DO IT! 1. See Chuck Borgen at the Dine-A-Mite, 23rd & Louisiana. You Must Make Your Reservation in Person, No Phone Calls. 2. Make a $10 Deposit. This Deposit Will Be Returned If You Have 50 Persons or More at Your Party. (This Offer Is Good Only on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays) Make Your Reservations Early for the Busy Social Season Ahead. Ideal for Hour Dances, Pinning Parties, Alumni Events. THE DINE-A-MITE 23rd & Louisiana --- 2 Tuesday, November 28, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 7 op SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS sults 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 Day Kansan BusinessOffice in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. FOR SALE New and used guns and ammo. Hand- guns re-blued. Special this week: 30-06 Springfield. ammo in stock. See at 1304 Tenn. VI 3-7001. 12-4 MAGNAVOX PORTABLE 19" TV. Hand wired, power transformer, antenna, floor model reduced to $149. Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. 12-4 MAGNAVOX. DANISH WALNUT. Stereo Console with AM-FM radio. Floor model and reed storage. Danish modern styling. Pet-tengill-Davis Store, 723 Mass. MUST SELL — New Guild Folk-Western guitar. Sell to highest bidder. Call George Johnson, VI 3-4811. 11-28 1946 PLYMOUTH SPECIAL DeLuxe coupe, clean, good running condition. See at 1517 R. I., or call VI 3-4620. 11-20 For Sale: Arteryiley, excellent condi- tion. Practically new. $100. Call 1715. I 12-4 Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates. VI 3-12- 12-18 MERCEDES-BENZ — 1956 BL-Fordor- 2205. Clean. WW tires — 2 new. For sale by owner — O. L. Caldwell, Chanute, Kansas. 12-4 For sale, rent, and have; respectively— 1952 Ford 8 Custom Sedan. Recently overhaulled, $125. Also — private room for grad. student. Share kitchen & other facilities. $30 per month. Also — pure- ture laundry service. Toilet trained, and cute by Christmas. Male $20, Female $25. 1229 Ohio. VI 2- 0195. 12-4 MOVING TO FLORIDA. don't need winter clothes. Shirts, size 10; blouses, 30-32; sweaters, 36-38. For sale for reasonable prices. If interested call VI 3-5672. 11-30 $500 down buys this five room home within 1 bik. of campus. Priced at $7,750 reasonable monthly payments, cheaper than rent. Garage. Cain Realty. 9271² Mass. Phone VI 3-8316 or after 5 VI 3-9027 or VI 3-8989. 12-4 1950 PLYMOUTH, runs good, looks good. $125. CALL VI 3-7268. 11-28 RELAXACISOR, like new. keep slim and trim while you study. $95. Call VI T1. 11-20 KNIGHTKIT R100 shortwave radio. s.w. bands and broadcast band. Only 6 months old. Will sacrifice for $55. New price $100. Call Calgali. VI 2-2497. STRING BASS—EPIPHONE — Good condition. $75. Contact David Christian at 1222 Mississippi afternoons and evenings. 11-20 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 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, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and portable printing machines. minigraphing at reasonable rate. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today. tt 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 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 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, service, rentals. Enforcement Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-3644. LOST 10 x 50 BINOCULARS at game Friday. 10 x 50 BINOCULARS at Ron or Don for ward. wkr. 531 JRP. 11-29 Lost — Black collapsible umbrella in either Fraser Hall, Student Union, or Faculty Club. Reward. Dr. Pucci, ext. 410, 202 Fraser Hall. 11-20 BLACK NOTEBOOK 9 x 7" missing from 531B Malalti since 7th. 23rd.Contains Pharmacology 210 notes irr. to 531B malalti ordered but returned to 531 Malalti or call VI 3-0041 with information. Extremely valuable. No questions asked. 12-4 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. 6th & 8th. Vermont. Phone VI 0350. BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formalis, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 939½ Mass, Call VI 3-5263. tf AUTERATIONS — Call Gail Reef, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. TYPEWITTERS — 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 U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- west. Phone VI 3-2921. Modern service — open week days 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. tf U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, dressers — cages — accessories everything in pet plus Turtles Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at a live-In Pet Center — 121I Conn. Shop sectionalized — save time and money! FOR RENT FOR RENT OR SALE, 2 bdrm. cottage 1 block from campus, full basement fenced yard, garage, off street parking Call VI 3-8344. 11-20 FURNISHED APT. 2 rms. priv. bath. 900 block Indiana Call VI 3-9027 128 n 2 ROOMS AND BATH. Priv. entr. University. Irive. 5 minutes from campus. Irive. Irive. For rent to ladies. For rent to either. Call VI 3-3077 between 7 & 10 a.m. or 6 p.m. 11-30 WEST EDGE CAMPUS, 2 bedrooms, living room, carpet, drapes, fireplace, exteriors, electricity and electric dishwasher, disposal, garage, storage Call VI 3-1887 after 7. 11-20 Vacancy available for 2 men in commi- cation teams with Bell Hill Rd. Ca- lifornia 3-9635 for appointment. LARGE FURNISHED apartment, e a s t side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. SINCLE & DOUBLE sleeping rooms. North of Jayhawk Café, after 6 p.m. 12-18 FURNISHED APTS. 3 & 4 rooms, priv. Phone VI-5 24 afternoons or evenings 12- TWO SINGLE ROOMS, shower bath. telephone. 1315 Tenn. Phone I 3-3900 LARGE, NICE ROOMS for boys 3 bikins. from Union. Call Now VI 3-7642. 12-4 For rent or sale—unfurnished two bed- room apartments locks from campus. Close to library High School and schools. Full basement, garage, fenced yard, off street parking. Phone VI 3-8344 MILKEN'S 'S.O.S.' — Now at two 4017, 1074 Lawrence Ave. & 1021} Mass. 19 TYPING Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VT 3-2651 an time. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattie, VI 3-8727 Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter. Inst accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mar. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI. 2t 1648. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Cisco's 1511 W. 21 St. St. CV1 3-6440 fc sell 1511 W. 21 St. St. CV1 3-6440 fc EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, research articles. Must be neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs Robert Cook, 2000 RL, VI 3-7485. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting instructor." For excellent typing at standard rates, call MISS Louft pope, VI 3-1097 Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter. Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing in my home --- call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lou Gilbach. tt FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service. S917 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7718. Or eat or Sat. R 2-2186. EXPERIENCED TYPEIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mr. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, these types dessertations. These papers rates. Mrs Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. learning specialist. Speech & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. tf TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, research papers, Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- cation OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. SPECIAL COMPLIMENTARY OFFER Enjoy the Original Extra-Mild Cavendish in the Handy "Poly" Pocket Pouch Learn the Pleasures of Fine Tobacco... es AMPHORA is cool, even-burning, long-lasting. Its pleasurable smoking qualities have won loyal friends—it outsells all AMPHORA D·E LIMITED TIME Blended in Holland by Douwe Egberts Royal Factories [EXTENT] DOUWE & GUBERTS AMPHORA Extra Mild Cavendish a gentle taste D.E LINCOLN UPS HELP WANTED other tobaccos in its class! If you haven't tried AMPHORA, be our guest. Simply fill in the coupon below and mail it. You will receive a complimentary full 2-ounce pouch. DRICKY'S INTERNATIONAL TOBACCO CO. 11018 Vina Street, North Hollywood, California Gentlemen: Please send me a complimentary full 2-ounce pouch of AMPHORA. I enclose 10¢ coin to cover cost of handling and mailing. (PLEASE TYPE OR PRINT) NAME TRANSPORTATION CITY, ZONE, STATE STREET. CITY, ZONE, STATE UNIVERSITY Only one offer per person. Not good after December 31, 1961 NEED REGISTERED NURSE for after- noon shift at Samaritan Lodge—also need aid for morning shift. Call VI 3-8936. 11:29 SECRETARY WANTED: Apply in person. Plaza Club, 2222 Iowa. 11-28 DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. RIDERS WANTED; Driving to L.A. Christmas via southern route — want riders to share driving and expenses. Call Nancy Rollins. V1 2-1340. 12-4 Would like a ride to New York either on the 15, 16, or 17th of December. Phillis Renshield. VI 2-2340. 12-4 WANTED YOUNG MAN TO SHARE 5 room apt. Call Bill Goetze, VI 2-3528 evenings. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Birds on a branch HOME RADIO BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. Sale At CAMPUS SHOPPE Only - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service Jay SHOPPE 12th & Oread After Thanksgiving SALE ONE GROUP Wednesday, Thursday, Friday & Saturday Fall Suits Reduced 40% Dresses Now $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price ONE GROUP Fall Skirts&Sweaters Reduced 40% ONE TABLE Blouses white included Reduced 40% ONE GROUP Slacks Reduced 40% Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. November 28, 1961 8 Issues Separate East-West Treaty GENEVA — (UPI) — Eight basic issues separate East from West at the nuclear test ban talks resuming here today. After three frustrating years and 340 tiresome and propaganda-filled sessions, only the "easy" two-thirds of a treaty apparently are agreed upon by Britain, the United States and the Soviet Union. Now there is serious concern that Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev is backing out of painstakingly-negotiated agreements on a preamble, 16 articles and two annexes of the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. Whether or not the new Soviet nuclear plan forces the West to start from scratch, there are eight major issues unresolved: - Administrator: The Soviets demand virtual veto power in a three-man "Troika" directorate to run the control system, composed of a Communist, a neutral and a Western representative. The West wants a one-man administrator to govern control operations. - Quota: The Soviets insist on three annual on-site inspections to check on suspicious underground disturbances. The West demands twenty. - Moratorium: The Soviets want a four to five-year moratorium, the West a three-year ban. No new proposals have been put before the conference formally. The West now says it will not agree to any uncontrolled moratorium. The new Soviet four-point program calls for uncontrolled banning of underground tests until a control system is agreed to as part of total disarmament. - Seismic Research Program: The West, claiming present devices are not sufficient to detect some types of nuclear explosions, wants to undertake a research program to perfect detecting equipment. The Soviets claim existing equipment is able to detect even small underground explosions which resemble earthquakes on seismographs. - Control posts: The West wants 19 fixed control posts in the Soviet Union. The Soviets say there should be 15. - Nationality of on-site inspection teams: The Soviets want a national of the country being inspected to head the team there. The West wants a foreign chief and a foreign staff. - Nationality of chiefs of permanent control posts: The Soviets want a resident national to head the permanent control post in a country. The West wants him to be a foreigner. - Criteria for on-site inspections: The West wants to inspect an area of a least 120 square miles. Budget Request Cut- (Continued from page 1) to the student body in the convocation opening the semester. The stations were to strictly limit traffic on the campus.) Mr. Nichols said it is "anyone's guess" as to what Gov. Anderson will recommend to the legislature in regard to the budget. HE INDICATED that it is the hope of the administration that the budget will be restored as originally proposed. Turning to the reasoning behind the Budget Director's actions. Mr. Nichols said: "We must recognize Mr. Bibb's problem. It is all a question of arithmetic with him. He is trying to stay within the bounds of present university expenditures—this is his job. "Another reason he made the cuts was to get the Board of Regents to justify the needs of the state universities in detail." Budget Cuts Item Requested Recommended New Positions classified (23) $ 75,000 (2) $ 9,570 teaching (41.5) 311,250 (25.5) 191,250 Salary increases, faculty 390,957 none Library Operations 40,750 none Student Help 25,424 none Geological survey 11,900 none Extension 14,500 none Regularly budgeted repairs none $65,000 cut from present Special repairs 65,000 none Misc. credits none 63,741 Restore Blake Hall 720,000 none Total 1,654,781 199,561 Difference 1,455,240 The budget proposal for the KU Medical Center was also cut by Budget Director Bibb and his staff in the day-long budget hearings last Tuesday in Topeka. The Medical Center budget was cut from the requested $13.2 million to $11.1 million—a cut of $2.1 million. Mr. Bibb's state-wide college and university budget recommendation was $72,447,782—approximately $5.8 million less than requested by the Board of Regents. THIS BUDGET, which is a $5.8 million increase over the present budget of $66,678,998, would mean an 11.08 per cent increase from general fund appropriations, Mr. Bibb said. The matter is now in the hands of Gov. John Anderson who will give the final budget recommendation to the legislature on Jan. 10. Going on a Picnic? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service GLASS (Continued from page 1) viet Union and the United States must live together in peace. JFK Interview- ● War and Peace: "I think we could have peace in this century in Central Europe if we can reach an accord over West Berlin." AUTO GLASS - GERMAN reunification; Continued division of Germany and Berlin increase rather than decrease world tensions. - Berlin: Any peace treaty signed between the Soviet Union and the East German regime cannot deny Western rights in Berlin. East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 - Cuba: As long as the Castro regime does not permit free and honest elections in Cuba, it cannot claim to represent the Cuban people. - The satellites: The Yalta and Potsdam agreements called for free elections in Eastern Europe, but "these elections have not been held." - Disarmament: One of the first things he did when he took office was to seek an end to nuclear tests, yet the Soviet Union resumed its own tests even while negotiations were underway in Geneva. Any future agreement on disarmment must be backed up by inspection controls, or neither side would have any guarantee of its security. Communist Chinese Propaganda Shown A Chinese Communist propaganda display will be in the Kansas Union near the Forum Room today through Friday. Klaus Pringsheim, instructor of political science, placed the propaganda and publications in the Union in preparation for his talk on "The Cold War in Asia" at the Current Events Forum Friday. He explained that his talk will deal with the propaganda efforts by the United States and Communist China in the Far East and especially Hong Kong. The reports on Watkins Hospital and the Kansas Union will be given at tonight's All Student Council meeting at 7:30 in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union. All old and newly-elected members are required to attend. ASC Meets Tonight Rockefeller Begins Long Journey Home BIAK, Dutch New Guinea—(UPI) Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller made the long journey home today, saddened by fears that his missing son, Michael, is dead. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Rockefeller and his party left New Guinea at 6:30 a.m. aboard KLM flight 862 for Manila and Amsterdam. He is due in New York at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil QUARTERBACK CLUB MEETING Exciting Films of the KU-California and KU-Missouri Games Narrated by Coach Don Pfutzenreuter and John Hadl Big 8 Room — Student Union TUESDAY, NOV. 28 - 7 P.M. free admission TUXEDO A MAN'S SUIT with those extras Here is a fine suit with all the features you have been looking for .and only $49.50 A 3-piece 100% worsted suit . . . natural shoulder. . narrow lapel . . lapped seams . . pleatless trousers . . narrow leg. A SMOOTH NEW LOOK IN BLACK OR BLACK-OLIVE. $49.50 Alterations Included The Friendliest Clothiers In Lawrence THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN DOWNTOWN University Shop Tass Distorted JFK Interview. Officials Say Ev Stewart Hensley WASHINGTON—(UPI) —American officials said today that the Soviet news agency Tass distributed a distorted, editorialized version of the interview President Kennedy granted Izvestia editor Alexei Adzhubei. They said the agency's Russianlanguage summary omitted several major points the President made and submerged his remarks on other issues to the argumentative comments of the interviewer. MR. ADZHUBEI STUCK BY HIS promise to publish the full text in Izvestia, the official government newspaper, which claims circulation of four million. For this the President publicly expressed gratitude. However, the Tass summary, which is the only version available to the remaining 200 million Russians, dismayed those here who hoped Kennedy had blasted a real hole in the Iron Curtain. In general it left the impression of Kennedv *e* "evasive" and on the President Kennedy defensive against Adzhubei's skillful questions based on "concrete examples." U. S. officials cited the following major omissions in the Tass Russian language summary for the home audience: - The President's charge that Russia had violated the Yalta and Potsdam agreements by never allowing the people of the East European satellite countries to vote freely on what form of government they wanted. - Kennedy's statement that the Soviet Union broke the moratorium on nuclear tests after preparing for new blasts while it was still negotiating with Britain and the United States at Geneva on a possible test ban treaty. - His claim that the Berlin problems stems in large part from the Soviet refusal to agree to reunification of Germany. It was assumed that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, who gave permission for the publication in Ivestia, was certain that Kennedy's statements could do him no appreciable damage and the printing of the interview could be cited as evidence that Russia does not fear an exchange of controversial ideas. ★★ Soviet Newspaper Attacks U.S. Press MOSCOW — (UPI) - The Soviet government newspaper. Izvestia criticized the way American newspapers reported the exclusive interview with President Kennedy it printed yesterday. A dispatch from Izvesta's New York correspondent said the American press, "as though on orders," headlined Kennedy's charge that the Soviet Union is seeking to "communize the world." The Izvestia correspondent said handling of the interview by the American newspapers "speaks of the desire to use the interview in the cold war." "However," he said, "it is highly doubtful whether this can facilitate better understanding in relations between the two countries, about which President Kennedy spoke in his statement." Daily hansan 59th Year No. 49 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Wednesday, November 29, 1961 Speakers Back NSA At Regional Meeting By Scott Payne Ways to combat school disaffiliation from the National Student Association (NSA) were discussed at the recent Missouri-Kansas regional NSA conference at Kansas City University. Representatives from 21 colleges and universities in the two-state area listened to Edward Garvey, NSA president and University of Wisconsin graduate, and Arthur C. Miller, Pittsburg junior and member of the former KU NSA committee, discuss various aspects of disaffiliation. GARVEY SAID NSA has been widely criticized because of "irresponsibility" in several of its resolutions. "NSA was criticized for protesting the sealing of the East Berlin border," he said. "It was felt in many circles that students had no business making such a protest." Garvey said German students had wanted to hear him speak during a recent visit to Berlin. "GERMAN STUDENTS were begging for student support from the United States. Their response was heartening when I told them U.S. students were behind them 100 per cent." "Not because I was Ed Garvey," he said, "but because I was president of NSA. "Our country has not been successful in fighting the Communist trend in Central and South American countries," he said. WE MUST SHOW our concern to Latin American students who are looked to for intellectual leadership in their own countries. Garvey said NSA has also been criticized for its condemnation of U.S. and Soviet intervention in Cuba. "NSA is working to defeat the Communist trend in these countries. We cannot ignore this threat we have got to spend more time and energy in this area," he said. Garvey said more time spent on NSA's international work would not create a de-emphasis elsewhere. "I THINK ONE REASON that KU disaffiliated from NSA was that communications between that campus and the national offices of NSA were vague and inefficient," he said. "This is one problem which I think has plagued most of the schools in the Middle West." We're going to try to do something about it by creating the office of Midwest Affairs Program Vice President and basing this officer in Kansas City," Garvey said. SPEAKING ABOUT THE disaffiliation issue at KU, Miller said KU was no longer part of NSA because the committee here was never given the time to inform the student body about NSA. "We had our feet knocked out from under us before we could get anything done," he said. "Many arguments used against NSA were not used openly," he added. "One argument—that NSA has a four-step plan to integrate fraternities and sororites—definitely hurt us. This charge is not true but we didn't receive information to refute it until after the ASC at KU has voted." IN ANSWER TO QUESTIONS Miller said he felt there was a "reasonable chance" of KU reaffiliating with NSA. "Since ASC elections," he said, "I think we can count on at least 10 votes which, while not a majority, is a good start. "The issue will probably be a terrific fight and will be a very close vote. It will undoubtedly take a lot of hard work." "LATE LAST SPRING I called several conservatives practically begging them to go as delegates to the Congress. Not one of them would go. "If they wanted KU to vote conservatively, they should have gone to the Congress." he said. Turning to the NSA controversy at KU itself, Miller said there was a "great personality conflict throughout the whole business which created some ill-feeling and didn't help the issue at all. "FURTHERMORE." Miller said, "there were those who thought NSA was a Communist front organization. Between this and student apathy—KU students are apathetic as hell—the NSA committee didn't have much of a chance. "Disaffiliation should not be based on whether or not you agree with NSA's stands," he continued. "If you disagree with NSA's policy the best thing you can do is remain in the organization, unite with other schools holding the same opinion and express your views at the National Congress." ASC Committee Report Says Hospital Doing Adequate Job The chairman of the All Student Council Health committee told the ASC last night that Watkins Hospital is doing an adequate job in view of its overcrowded conditions. The ASC passed a resolution to investigate the hospital at its last meeting, Nov. 7. The committee's report was based on tours of Watkins, interviews with Watkins employees, and reports of accreditation boards on the hospital. THE ASC ALSO heard a report on the Kansas Union. Melvin Saferstein, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student and chairman of the Union committee, said more investigations are necessary before any conclusions may be drawn. The Watkins Hospital investigation was aimed at answering three questions, Lauren Ward, Ottawa junior and chairman of the Health Committee, said. He told the ASC that the Union's prices and payment of sales tax will be looked into in the near future. gency room? - Does Wetking have an emer - Does Watkins have an operating room? - Does Lawrence Memorial Hospital admit KU students? Watkins Hospital does have an emergency room, he said, but it is limited for performing major emergency surgery and is "very, very small." He said the emergency room is attended by nurses. Doctors are called in if necessary. After working hours, doctors are on call. He said the nurses estimated that it takes five to ten minutes to get a doctor on call. is caring for the student. There is no set policy, Ward said. Throughout his report, Ward stressed the overcrowded conditions of Watkins. WATKINS ALSO has an adequate operating room, Ward said. The Joint Committee on Accreditations, has recommended that Watkins move the operating room away from heavy traffic, he added. At present, the operating room is on the first floor, immediately off the hallway. IN THE REPORT on the Kansas Union, Saferstein said he was interested in finding why the University of Missouri student union pays no sales tax and why the prices of the Kansas State University union are lower than those of the Kansas Union. Whether Lawrence Memorial Hospital will admit KU students is strict up to the physician who "I don't think we should be paying sales tax since we're on state property. We supposedly have to do this under the statutes of Kansas, but something ought to be done," he said. He said also that he wanted to find out why the K-State Union can get state funds and the KU Union cannot. He did not elaborate. In an interview after the meeting, Saferstein said he was not sure about the K-State Union getting funds and wanted to check further. Capsule Trouble Brings Chimp Back to Earth CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) — The United States rocketed a little chimp named "Enos" into orbit today and sent him whirling two times around the globe before technical difficulties developed and the space cabin was returned to earth. At 12:42 p.m. Lawrence time NASA said both destroyers reported they were about 30 miles from the floating capsule and estimated they would pull alongside it in about one hour. NASA said it still continued to float and weather in the area was "excellent". Mercury scientists said ground tracking stations detected increasing heat in an electrical inverter as well as problems in the attitude control system as the capsule whizzed across the Pacific Ocean toward Canton Island in its second orbital sweep. THE FIRST ORBIT and about half of the second went fine. The retro rockets were fired at 12:08 p.m. Lawrence time to slow the capsule from its 17,500 miles an hour orbital speed and send it on a red hot plunge through the earth's atmosphere. The capsule was supposed to land in a target area about 500 miles south of Bermuda. A recovery force which had been sent into the area just for such an emergency stood by to recover the spacecraft and its animal passenger after their planned parachute descent into the ocean. The capsule was detected on its downward path by the tracking station at Guaymas, Mexico, at 12:09 p.m. Lawrence time and Corpus Christi, Tex., at 12:11 p.m. No details of the difficulties were given immediately. The inverter is a system on board the capsule for converting direct current to alternating current. Mercury officials said it was running hot. THE EMERGENCY did not mean the flight was a failure. Scientists had prepared well for the possibility they might not make three full orbits on the first try. When recovery ships were sent out, they were strung across the Atlantic Ocean to cover pre-planned landing area where the capsule would descend in case it was brought down after one, two or three orbits. Similar difficulties have cropped up from time to time in previous Mercury capsules but none caused any serious problems or delays. THE ATTITUDE control system consists of a series of hydrogen peroxide jets which maneuver the spacecraft in orbit. Enos was supposed to circle the earth three times. Cape Canaveral contacted the spacecraft at 12:16 p.m. Lawrence time. All indications were the chimpanzee was in "good condition." Project Mercury officials said. About two weeks ago Enos' space capsule developed a leak in the hydrogen peroxide system and had to undergo a lengthy examination and repair. But scientists checked it out thoroughly before placing it back atop its Atlas booster last week for today's flight. Thurmond Decries 'Silent Socialists' Long Beach, Calif. — (UPI)—Sen. J. Strom Thurmond, D-S.C., has told an anti-Communist rally in Long Beach Municipal Auditorium that the position of the United States in world affairs is being lowered by what he terms "silent socialists." Thurmond said socialist factions existed in the White House, Pentagon, State Department, Department of Health, Education and Welfare and Department of Interior. The Southern Democrat urged the American public to check on their representatives to see that they were "sound conservative people." Thurmond said, "A person who believes in God cannot be a Communist. This is a battle between belief in God and atheism. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 29. 1961 The ASC Investigation The All Student Council last night heard the involved and somewhat complicated results of two committees investigating Watkins Memorial Hospital and the Kansas Union. One report, due to the nature of the subject, will require much more work. The other was presented in relatively complete form leaving only a few questions unanswered. THE STUDENT HEALTH COMMITTEE presented the findings of its investigation of Watkins Hospital with the observation that lack of space seems to be at the root of the Hospital's difficulties. They cited figures, observations and reports to support their conclusion. A Kansan series earlier this month also pointed out that the hospital is suffering because of an acute space shortage. Now that the problem has been located the Council should start to consider ways in which it can influence a solution. The Committee report stated that it would probably be at least 10-15 years before funds will be available to enlarge the hospital. The Council should attempt to evaluate the current need for enlargement of the hospital to see if perhaps the University should be urged to assign hospital expansion a more prominent place on its priority list. Now that the Student Health Committee has found the way in which the efficiency of Watkins Hospital can be increased it should begin the search for ways in which this solution can be implemented. BECAUSE OF THE COMPLEXITY of the subject, the report submitted by the Union Investigating Committee is far from its final form. The chairman of the committee indicated that he plans to go into much greater detail in his investigation of union operating practices. Very few, if any, KU students have a clear conception of what the union is. The organization of the union is extremely complicated. In many ways it is a state institution but in other ways it is a private organization. The financial affairs of the union are subject to a state audit. But the union does not qualify for the tax advantages enjoyed by state institutions. THE UNION MUST ALSO USE a state accounting system which is outmoded in several ways. Because of this it is hard to determine the exact margin of profit on each item and service sold by the union. Students do not understand why it often costs them more to eat in their own union than it does to eat in a private restaurant. Many students also complain that the prices of other items and services seem somewhat high for an institution created to serve the student. MOST PEOPLE ARE NOT ACQUAINTED with the way in which the union is governed. Even members of the Union Operating Board, which is supposedly the governing body, are not sure of their function and power. The many questions that have been raised about the operation of the union indicates that a tremendous task lies ahead for the members of the Union Investigating Committee. Ron Gallagher Beer or Campus Chest? "Let's go get a beer. I'll buy!" Does that sound familiar? Maybe so or maybe not, but beer costs 30 cents a bottle. And that is 5 cents more than most people gave to the campus chest fund drive last year. SO WHAT, YOU SAY. Last year your house gave more than any other house on the hill. Well, pal, that's real nice. With what your living group contributed, the average for the entire campus still was only 25 cents a person. And while we're speaking about organized groups, I'll tell you a couple more interesting facts. Fraternities contributed an average of 18 cents per person; sororities gave 40 cents per person, men's dormitories gave 8 cents a person and women's dorms gave 30 cents a person. Oh yes, you bought tickets for the concert last year, too. You think all the money from the concert should raise the average? Well, you're right. Ticket money, contributions from students and faculty members still netted only $2,500, and figuring 10,000 students, that still is only 25 cents a person. NOT SO GOOD IS IT? "Well, then, what do you do about it, raising more money, that is?" Start, first of all, with you. You're a typical KU man. How much did you give last year? "Wait a minute. I just told you about my house and the tickets and besides that, I gave a dime... I mean I had a date that weekend, so I had to save my cash." KU students do save money for important things, like beer or cigarettes or dates. BUT FEW REALIZE the importance of an annual campus-wide drive called Campus Chest. Campus Chest is not connected with any national drive such as Community Chest or the Red Feather or United Campaign. It is run by students on campuses over the country. The money is turned over to national charities, not national fund drives. First, money collected is divided among several organizations. World University Service receives a certain amount to help university students around the world. Money collected from KU and given to the Damon Runyon Cancer Fund is marked as a donation from the students of the University of Kansas. PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE ON THE KU CAMPUS will also be allocated a certain amount. Then there are the national foundations, such as CARE and the polio and multiple sclerosis funds and an adoption plan which benefits from the KU Campus Chest. Then the money is put to use. Students help make projects and research possible by giving. And by the way, KU was ranked lower in the Big 8 fund drive "competition" than it was in Football. Carrie Merryfield Speaker Misquoted Reporters have neither the time nor the wisdom to check all of their materials for accuracy; consequently one should never be surprised to find oneself "misquoted." At the November 19 People-to-People forum "What is a megaton?" I described some reasons why geneticists are in general agreement that most mutations are harmful and why they believe that any increase in mutation rates would be disadvantageous. ... Letters ... I then pointed out that R. A. Fisher has stated that, for a special class of mutant (those with very small effects) the chance should be about even that the change will effect an improvement or the reverse. The quote attributed to me creates the erroneous impress- sion that I believe this to be true for mutations in general. The use of copious quotes in a news item does not give full credit to the efforts of the reporter and suggests that he merely copied down some of the words of the speakers. Incidentally, another statement in the article, attributed to me, concerning bomb shelters, though not in my own words, accurately and succinctly conveys the gist of what I had to say. J. A. Weir associate professor of zoology --concerning the ASC, I am filled with one quixotic thought. I wonder what poor, underpaid, English instructor has had this specimen thrust upon him. The dialect is unauthentic, but much worse than that, it hampers communication. Graduate Criticizes Student Editor: After reading Rodney Kauffman's brilliant essay of Nov. 15 Sally Carnahan 1960 KU graduate Certainly Mr. Kaufman has a right and a duty to criticize the workings of his government, but perhaps the learning of the English language should take precedence. Then if he should ever be graduated (the English proficiency, you know), and sets about writing letters to the editor, I would not mind so much the mention of his connection with the University. On Other Campuses DES MOINES, Ia.—"Task groups"-six to eight students and one faculty adviser-will do "background studies" on university and student problems this year at Drake University, according to an announcement by the Student-Faculty Council. "One of the problems facing each new Student-Faculty Council is the completion of enough adequate background studies, preliminary to intelligent Council decisions which establish new student projects or send recommendations to the University," the S-FC news release stated. "The establishment of task groups which involve students interested in particular problems and areas is intended to alleviate the serious lack of research, without which responsible Council decision is hampered and slowed." These task groups are to conduct fact-finding "relevant to the solution of any important problems which might exist" and make recommendations to the S-FC. In addition to the task groups, the release outlined a Peace Corps Promotions Group to "promote a pro-Peace-Corps attitude among students and student groups," conduct an information office, and sponsor a "publicity and study campaign." \* \* \* HANOVER. Ind.-The faculty of Hanover College recently voted a wholly new curricular structure into its educational program. Salient points of the Hanover Plan: 1. Beginning in 1962 a Hanover student will take seven courses a year, plus physical education in the first two years. 2. The 33-week academic year will be divided into three terms: the first of 14 weeks, during which a student will carry three courses, the second of 14 weeks, in which he will carry three more courses, and a third of five weeks, during which he will take one course. 3. In addition, a student may elect to carry quarter courses in such activity work as band, choir, forensics, organ, piano, painting, and play introduction. 5. From the 29 courses, 21 must be in areas other than that of the major. 4. Of the 29 courses necessary for graduation, 15 will be required of all students. quired 'of all students. From the 29 courses, 21 must be in areas other than that of the major. 6. The required courses will be taken in a carefully structured sequence. WALLA WALLA, Wash.—The Faculty Council at Whitman College has been charged with the responsibility of investigating the controversial grading system. Campus opinion here is opposed to the "out-moded, non-discriminating means of measuring scholastic success;" specifically, the honor point rating. Critics point to the following "characteristic assumptions of the honor point rating. The Hanover Plan includes an unusual, and perhaps unique, calendar consisting of three terms, the first two 14 weeks in length and the third one five weeks in length, according to a brief report released here by the administration. Various colleges have used a tripartite division, which has, for the most part, consisted of periods of equal length. Hanover's unusual division calls for two equal periods followed by a sharply differing third. ** ** "1. All 'passing' and even all failing grades, i.e. all grades from F to 84 have the same value; viz, none. "3. All grades from 95 to 100 have the same value. "2. All grades from 85 to 94 have the same value "4. All grades from 95-100 are assigned twice the value of grades from 84-95." **** LOS ANGELES, Calif.—Occidental College has received a $25,000 grant from the Danforth Foundation to help continue its College Honors program, President Arthur G. Coons, announced recently. Inaugurated in September of 1959, the College Honors Program cuts across traditional fields of knowledge to stress qualities of comprehension, logic, judgment, and communication which are basic to leadership in society. Typical College Honors seminars, usually in the junior year, explore the "Anatomy of Knowing" and the field of "Responsibility." Each of the seminars is led by three professors, one from the natural sciences, one from the fine arts, and one from the humanities. "This interdisciplinary approach," declares Dr. Coons, "gives the student an insight into the problems under discussion that would not be possible with a single instructor from a single department." Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 11, news 1008 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 Ron Gallagher EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT ... Editorial Editor Tom Brown BUSINESS DEPARTMENT ... Business Manager Tom Brown ... Business Manager Wednesday, Nov. 29, 1961 University Daily Kansan the took world Page 3 By Charley E. Staley Assistant Professor of Economics A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF AMERICAN ECONOMIC POLICY SINCE 1789, edited by William Letwin, Anchor Books, $1.45. This handy little four hundred page book contains twenty-nine documents illustrating how the United States felt about important and recurring economic problems at moments when they erupted as major political issues. Documents for Professor Letwin include reports of administrative officials, speeches of members of Congress, Congressional hearings, arguments of lawyers in important cases and Supreme Court decisions, acts of Congress and speeches of private citizens. THE BOOK IS DIVIDED INTO THREE PARTS CORRESPONDING with Professor Letwin's idea of the major trends of economic policy. Thus, in the period 1789-1862, the major policy concern of both federal and state governments was the promotion of internal growth. Documents such as Hamilton's "Report on Manufactures" and Clay's address on internal improvements are representative items of this period. During the years 1862-1912 Professor Letwin argues that the major concern changed from subsidy to regulation. To illustrate this trend, he uses (among others) Munn vs. Illinois, the seminal case in public utilities regulation; Northern Securities Co. vs. U.S., an important case in anti-trust litigation; and the conclusions of the Pujo Committee, which had an important influence on the formation of the Federal Reserve System. After 1912 the major influence was the attempt to formulate some notion of economic equity—note, equity, not equality. The efforts in the 1920s to assist agriculture, culminating in the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933, are one of the manifestations of this trend. Others selected by the author include several items dealing with the National Recovery Administration and one of the opinions handed down by the Securities and Exchange Commission. THE EDITOR'S GENERAL INTRODUCTORY ESSAY AND his short comments on each selection provide a number of ideas and a capsule view of the history of economic policy. I was mildly surprised that he did not include any material on labor problems. I was greatly surprised to read that he considered that not much has been said to justify the notion of progressive taxation; Randolph Paul's "Taxation in the United States" (Little, Brown and Co.: 1954) contains a wealth of material on the debates over the income tax. On reflection, however, most of this material is not in the category considered as documents by Professor Letwin; it is in newspaper editorials and books of both scholars and propagandists rather than governmental sources. The book should make a convenient, although admittedly incomplete, source of references for students of government, history and economics. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. ANCIENT SEMITIC CIVILIZATIONS, by Sabatino Moscati, Capricorn Books, $1.65. By Jon Muller Salina junior THE LIVING PAST, by Ivar Lissner, Capricorn Books, $1.95. The subject of ancient civilizations is one of great interest to many people, and in recent years there have been many attempts to popularize the vast amount of material available in the journals and technical works in classical and anthropological archaeology. These two books represent two different approaches, neither entirely satisfactory. "Ancient Semitic Civilizations" is a semi-scholarly work dealing with the history of the Semitic peoples from the earliest times up to the spread of Islam across the Middle East. On the other hand, "The Living Past" attempts to give pocket summaries of the higher world civilizations. The major fault with both of these books is that they try to cover such a broad scope that they accomplish little. The second book is the more guilty here. Mr. Lissner, who is a journalist and nothing more, says: This book is apparently the result of Lissner's having reached this stage of advanced enlightenment, but because, perhaps, of the broad scope or because of other reasons it falls far short of its announced goal and becomes a sort of catalogue of strange wonders and marvelous occurrences. "In fact, it took me many years to gain a comprehensive and living picture of this earth, with its diversity of peoples, their driving motives, their failures and successes." "The Living Past" is a book which might prove of interest to certain people, but it should be read with the greatest of caution. The book is over-popularized, slightly out-of-date and sometimes misleading. "Ancient Semitic Civilizations," although it has suffered from oversimplification in places, is a much more valuable book and presents a picture of life in ancient times. The most serious objection to this book is its style, and in some places the reader finds it necessary to force himself to read on. Of course, for someone with a deep interest in this area this could be quite different. On the whole, I personally would not recommend these books, but I do believe that it is possible that Moscati's book could be of value to someone looking for information in a "digested" form. Ye Old and Wondrous Obsolete Readers It Looks This Way . . . A community-school hassle over elementary school reading textbooks erupted in Twin Lakes, Wisconsin, recently. Parents decidedly ruled out a nostalgic return "to the good old days" in reading instruction, at least. Some time ago, the school board members of Twin Falls had decided to make the famous McGuffey Readers available in their school. The teachers evidently plied the readers vigorously. A community meeting resulted and everyone was there. PARENTAL OBJECTION was on the grounds of sectarianism. But there is no particular doctrinaire line in the reading series. The school principal, ever one who smooths ruffled feathers, did his best when he said, "it entails a lot of work for the students to comprehend them." A FEW SELECTIONS in these readers might just imply a kind of sectarianism that modern parents would object to if the word, sectarianism, is defined loosely enough. There is, for example, the gory description (page 138) of a "Rebellion in Massachusetts State Prison." The principal was right. A McGuffey fifth grade pupil had to master such words as: languor, bellying, bijou, voluptuary, bon vivant, epicure, expiates, imprecations, precipitancy, devoirs, vindictive, mazy, boon, ignominious, saffron, chapeau, warder and levianth. And these are but a few of such words appearing in lists of up to a dozen each on approximately 100 of the 351 pages of that reader. Such a progression is impossible for any fifth grader. "Knives, hammars and chisels, with every variety of such weapons, were in the hands of the ferocious spirits, who are drawn away from their encroachments on society, forming a congregation of strength, vileness, and talent that can hardly be equaled on earth, even among the famed brigands of Italy." A villain-ess appears in the legend "Faithless Nelly Gray" (pages 143-4). Witness the following opening and closing stanzas: 'Ben Battle was a soldier bold, And used to war's alarms; But a cannon ball took off his legs, So he laid down his arms!" Subsequently his darling Nelly Gray didn't love him anymore so Ben hung himself. The details continue in grim humour: And there he hung till he was dead As any nail in town; For, though distress had cut him up. It could not cut him down!" "The Venomous Worm" (pages 77-8) starts with: "Who has not heard of the rattlesnake or copperhead? An expected sight of either of these reptiles will make even the lords of creation recoil; but there is a species of worm, found in various parts of this country, which conveys a poison of a nature so deadly that, compared with it, even the venom of the rattlesnake is harmless. To guard our readers against this foe of human kind is the object of this lesson." The "worm" is further involved in six paragraphs of increasing concern over most dire consequences. It finally turns out that the "worm" is the copper coil of a still used in making liquor! SUCH MORAL CORN does appear to be way out, but the real problem was the impossible vocabulary. Lest you misjudge the McGuffey readers entirely, let me hasten to add that contents included excerpts from the writings of Cooper, Irving, Hawthorne, Tennyson, Thackeray, Thoreau, Whittier and many other literary giants. The McGuffey Readers were first developed during the middle of the nineteenth century by William Holmes McGuffey, professor of moral philosophy and political economy at the University of Virginia. Professor McGuffey died in 1873, but the readers continued his name through several reprints, copyrights and revisions, and became a standard for subsequent textbooks. A graded balanced fare of prose and poetry including literature from the masters as well as discussions of current topics was presented and supported with a strong undercurrent of moral teaching. Virtually every selection carried an ethical precept. Although copies of McGuffey's Readers are still available, they are becoming collector's items, and one publisher is attempting modernized versions in a current series. THE McGUFFEY Readers were excellent in their day but they cannot fill the bill today. Publishers of modern school books go to enormous expense to apply research findings of readability studies and vocabulary control. Countless apparently innocent references to race, creed, color or vocation must be eliminated. The result is the "fluid drive" of the modern reading instruction program—not a perfect program yet, but a lot smoother than anyone realizes. Going back to the horse and buggy reading program won't do. The ride is too bumpy. You can't get there nearly so fast. —Ervin H. Schmidt Lawrence Graduate Student SPACE, MISSILE & JET PROJECTS AT DOUGLAS have created outstanding career opportunities for SCIENTISTS and ENGINEERS SCIENTISTS and ENGINEERS B. S. degrees or better Assignments include the following areas: Servo-Mechanisms—relating to all types of control problems Electronic Systems—relating to all types of guidance, detection, control and communications Propulsion—relating to fluidmechanics, thermodynamics, dynamics, internal aerodynamics Environmental—relating to air conditioning, pressurization and oxygen systems Human Factors analysis of environment affecting pilot and space crews, design of cockpit consoles, instrument panels and pilot equipment. Heat Transfer—relating to missile and space vehicle structures Structures—relating to cyclic loads, temperature effects, and the investigation of new materials, methods products, etc. Aerodynamics—relating to wind tunnel, research, stability and control Solid State Physics—relating to metal surfaces and fatigue Space vehicle and weapon system studies—of all types, involving a vast range of scientific and engineering skills Get full information at INDIVIDUAL ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS with a Douglas representative Tuesday - December 5 We urge you to make an appointment through your placement office. If you cannot, please write to S. A. Amestoy, Staff Assistant to VP Engineering DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT COMPANY, INC. 3000 Ocean Park Blvd., Santa Monica, California An equal opportunity employer Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 29, 1961 Kansan Want Ads Get Results Scientists Study a Bunch of Drunk Cats By Delos Smith NEW YORK — (UPI) — Because of the weird thoughts and behavior of drunks, science has always thought intoxicating beverage messed up the brain. You can see why scientists would. No guess could seem more factual. THIS ELECTRICAL activity is in the so-called "brain waves" which are measured and recorded by the electroencephalograph. Normal patterns of "brain waves" show the parts of that indispensable organ are communicating freely and all is well at the summit. Then imagine the surprise of the scientists who first tried to prove the guess anatomically (back in 1940). They couldn't! The electrical activity of the brains of drunks seemed more or less normal, though slowed a little. Naturally scientists didn't believe in that first failure. It seemed obvious that something had been wrong with the experiment. But other scientists recorded the "brain waves" of other drunks and unfailingly got the more or less normal result. There's been some scientific brooding over it since, and now in 1961 come Drs. J. L. Story, E. Eidelberg Agnew Discusses Pornography A book should be "taken as a whole" when determining whether is pornographic, L. R. C. Agnew, professor of medical history, said yesterday at the Faculty Forum. He quoted from the Obscenity Publication Act of 1959 of Great Britain which states a book is obscene "if its effect...if taken as a whole is such as to deprave and corrupt persons." Prof. Agnew quoted an American book on pornography which differentiated between "hard core obsessivity" and works of literary merit. HE SAID AN ENTIRE BOOK instead of isolated passages and words should determine the obscenity of a book. The book states that "hard core obscenity" is written only to stimulate erotic responses in the reader and has no literary merit. PROF. AGNEW said the difficult problem was who should determine if a book was pornographic and where the cut-off point should be. He said control could go too far. He cited Ireland as an example of too much control. He showed four booklets of banned books in Ireland which includes books by Ernest Hemingway and Arthur Miller. He said we should first agree that some book should be banned and by what criteria it should be banned. He added he was against too much control. Tanganyika — another "Congo"? Tanganyika becomes a free nation next week. Can the "moderates" and the tyranny of hunger, poverty and ignorance? Or will the African extremists rampage—and turn the country into another Congo? Read this week's Post. The Saturday Evening POST and J. D. French of the University of California, Los Angeles, with an idea of how to change the result. This involved getting a bunch of cats drunk. THE ELECTRODES which pick up the "brain waves" for the electroencephalograph to record are attached to the skull. The electrical activity in the deep parts of the brain can escape this recording and it could well be that alcohol only messes up those deep parts, the scientists figured. The normal patterns of "brain waves" in these deep brain structures were recorded, and then the cats were made drunk and drunken by measured steps until they were at the passed-out stage. This was done by injecting an alcoholic solution, somewhat stronger than the usual highball, into them. They implanted recording electrodes deep into the brains of cats with wire "leads" coming out through the skull. When the animals recovered from this surgery, they seemed to be normally behaving cats. AND WHAT DO you know! Even heavily intoxicating doses of alcohol did not "cause any major changes in the spontaneous electrical activity" in any of four deep brain structures, the scientists reported to a technical journal published by the American Medical Association. However, there were small an regional changes which were comparable to the "slowing" of activity which the 1940 scientists noted in the surface "brain waves" of human drunks. The brain centers which note body sensations and visual information were "markedly depressed" in responses to nerve impulses. Health Insurance The scientists suggested that alcohol could depress the responses of some of the brain's inter-communications while leaving others alone. This, they said, "is probably involved" in muddling the brains of people who have had too much to drink. NEW YORK—(UPI)—The number of persons covered by some form of health insurance and the amount of benefits paid reached new highs last year, the Health Insurance Council reported. Coverage increased by 4.1 million during 1960 to reach a total of nearly 132 million persons. Benefit payments amounted to more than $4.8 billion, up $500 million over 1959. Official Bulletin Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m., St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. TODAY Foreign Students: The deadline for reserving bus space for the Truman visit on Friday has been extended until 9 a.m. tomorrow, when in reservation forms SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m. 360 Kansas Union. Instruction, Larry Bodle, TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch: 12 noon, Centertown, House. Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 30. November, um fuenführ in 11 Fraser. Herrr Dr. Schmaeling gibt eine Einleitung hoem Boerspel. Wir werden "das Klopfeichen" von Heinrich Boell lesen und besprechen. ADS-GAX Meeting: 7:30 p.m. English Union, Speaker, Dean Barton Marshi Christian Science Organization: 7:30 v.m., Danforth Chapel. Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Piazza Barber Shop Appointments (Open to the public) VI 2-3950, 2222 Iowa Ken Pringle JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W.23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil USAF "the wardrobe touch"... nothing adds to the college man's wardrobe like a collegiate styled sport jacket. no other piece in your wardrobe is as versatile and smart looking. diebolt's handles a complete line of fashionably tailored sport jackets for your inspection. come by today to select yours and investigate the newest service, the "wardrobe touch." diebolt's 843 Mass. man's tyled your mart com- ored ion. and the diebolt's diebolt's 843 Mass. Wednesday, Nov. 29, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 8 'American Youth - Serious, Realistic' Editor's note: Are America's young people becoming increasingly conservative and conformist? Such is the opinion expressed recently by a former counsel for the Peace Corps. United Press International asked 40 educators, university and high school, across the nation if they agreed. The following dispatch reports their view. By Jack V. Fox United Press International The young people of the United States today are in a serious mood, they are much more sophisticated politically than their counterparts of a generation ago, and they are much more realistic. The comparative economic security of recent years has resulted in less outward and emotional rebellion than during the New Deal days. There is acceptance of the "organization man" status. BUT BASICALLY they are moving away from the passivity of the "Silent 505" and are showing signs of being an energetic new force in American society. That is the consensus of a poll taken by UPI among 40 educators — university professors and deans, high school principals and teachers — reacting to the recent challenge of Morris B. Abram, former counsel for the Peace Corps Abram said college and high school youths are becoming conservative and conformist and that they have little or no objection to censorship, to wire-tapping or to third-degree police methods. A F EW EDUCATORS agreed with Abram. But the overwhelming majority disagreed. Their view was summed up succinctly by James C. McLeod, dean of students at Northwestern University, Chicago. "I don't think in any generation have I seen more enthusiasm for departure from the conservative and conformist outlook than in the present generation of college students." said McLeod. COMMENTED DR. Frank Duddy, president of Westminster College, Salt Lake City; "Today's students are more conscious of the world around them, more cognizant of the problems and more concerned about them." "I think your young people of today have much more belief in themselves. I think they are less conformist than they were five years ago. There is no jazz hoopla about them today." "It seems to me they are aware that changes need to be made and where they need to be made. These kids are nobody's fools. They tend to work organizationally today more than they did in the 30s." A NUMBER OF educators asked what Abram meant by "conservative." "There is no question of the increase of political conservatism," said Dr. Adolph Grugger, dean of men at U.C.L.A. "We have thrice the number of Young Republicans on the campus as Young Democrats and there is a definite movement behind Goldwater. "But to equate this to mean they are conformists and willing to submit to such things as censorship is impossible. Today's students are absolutely not conformists. If anything, we have a revival of rugged individualism." ONE OF THE FEW who agreed almost completely with Abram was Dr. Norman Zucker, professor of political science, Northeastern University, Boston. Said Zucker: "This trend is explicable by view of the fact that the political forces facing the youth of today are overpowering. These forces are so overpowering that present day students are unable to comprehend what is going on and, furthermore, do not want to comprehend or accept the world and its complexities." Here are some comments from high schools: Gordon A. Bailey, principal, Austin, Tex.: "They have more interest in what's going on than we give them credit for. Maybe there aren't public demonstrations, but those aren't the mark of an inquiring mind." HYMEN ALPERN, principal, New York City: "Many of our students are willing to conform to the standards set by society, but this represents no change in their attitude over the years. Perhaps this characteristic is more noticeable today because the children now come from families that are more financially secure." Harry Nicholson, principal, Denver. Colo. "IF THE WORLD thinks the high school and college students are conservative and conformist, adults are looking at the youth through conforming and conservative eyes. Adults get a misconception that youth is apathetic because adults don't take time to sit down and find out what students are thinking." Ralph Backman, principal, Salt Lake City: "I have noticed that the general behavior in school this year is one of sober conformity. They're greatly concerned about the world. I New Discovery to Help In Leukemia Research LOS ANGELES - (UPI) The concept of leukemia must be re-examined in the light of a new discovery. That was what Dr. Howard R. Bierman, director of the Institute for Cancer and Blood Research in Beverly Hills, Calif., told the American Society of Hermatology. Bierman said an unsuspected defect in leukemia patients which could have bearing on past research was discussed by his staff. He said there was an apparent breakdown in the delivery of white cells from the bone marrow, the manufacturing center, to the circulating blood. He was one of four experts to outline the latest steps in the battle against cancer and leukemia during the group's fourth annual meeting. BREAKDOWN OF THE "conveyor system" compounds abnormalities found in a leukemia victim's rate of manufacturing white cells, he said. (White cells are the disease fighters in blood.) Lt. Col. Donald L. Howie of the hermatology division of Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Washington told the meeting a vaccine apparently had therapeutic effect on cancer of the lymph glands. He said the vaccine prepared from Venezuela equine encephalitis virus Another physician from Walter Reed Hospital, Dr. William H. Crossby, said researchers found that when a cancer patient's spleen was removed the patient was able to tolerate larger doses of anticancer drugs. He said removal of the spleen might prove to be an important discovery. The fourth expert to discuss cancer was Dr. Frank H. Garner of Peter Brigham Hospital in Boston. He spoke of the use of male hormones (testosterone) and female hormones (estrogen) in bone marrow failure cases (anemia). HOWIE POINTED OUT THAT 11 cases were treated with the vaccine. He said two of seven cases which were not advanced showed dramatic improvement. probably was not the answer to cancer. But he said it might lead to the discovery of other viruses which could be used to treat cancer. Garner pointed out that testosterone in large doses weekly tended to build up the blood. But he said with women and young girls it sometimes was necessary to simultaneously give estrogen to counteract the effects of the testosterone. would say the times have had a sobering effect on teen-agers to a great extent." A STRIKING difference was noted in responses from different parts of the country. Said Dr. Walter Delaplane, dean of the school of arts and sciences at Southern Methodist University, Dallas: The only difference between a caprice and a life long passion is that the caprice lasts a little longer. —Oscar Wilde "Students in this part of the country seem to be more interested in the football game or the dance than academic activities. Students here tend to be conservative. Their parents seem to give them everything—so why should they want anything more? They seem to be less creative than they were." ON THE OTHER HAND. Thaddeus Eymour, dean of Dartmouth College. savs: "In recent years I have been aware of an emerging conscience among our young people and a growing commitment to service. There are heartening signs in the 1960s that the silent generation of the 1950s is beginning to speak and act." BUSINESS MACHINES CO. 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up SALES SERVICE RENTALS SERVICE RENTALS Printing, Mimeographing and Duplicating Pick up - Delivery Robert Baram, assistant professor of journalism, Boston University, says Abram is more right than wrong. "WE ARE IN sore danger of shaping our nation's political way of life into the same kind of infallible idol the Reds have long created of theirs. There is now a strong movement to make of our system a new or auxiliary religion. This means that sharp criticism and or censure are looked upon by many as indecent, or even sinful." IN A HUMOROUS VEIN, John T. Bonner, Jr., executive dean of student relations at Ohio State, said: "All youths are somewhat rebelious. The unfortunate part about being a college dean is that you become a father image at about the time the students are beginning to hate their fathers." Photography by Studio de Portra 912 Mass. — Lawrence, Kan. 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Long sleeves $5.00 CARL'S Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 29, 1961 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Rice Situation Similar to KU's Kansas' likely opponent in the Bluebonnet Bowl will be the Houston-based Rice Owls. Should they falter in their finale against Baylor, which is possible, Duke, Auburn and Tennessee are in contention. Since the Owls are from Houston and have had a good season (they go into Saturday's game with a 6-3 record), they are the popular choice of the bowl committee. Therefore, from a brief glance at KU's probable host, it looks as though the second edition of this bowl may be one of the more interesting post season affairs anywhere in the nation. BOTH TEAMS WERE SELECTED by national magazines to finish as the top team in the nation. Kansas was selected by Playboy while Rice was chosen by Stanley Woodward in his Dell publication. In a third magazine, the thorough Street and Smith's Yearbook, the Jayhawkers were tabbed for second with the Owls listed ninth. Thus the story of the two teams through the season has been similar. At this juncture, the Jayhawkers have climbed back into the national ratings, being tied with UCLA (which will play in the Rose Bowl) for 19th in the most recent United Press International selections. The Hawks have been as high as tenth. BUT THE OWLS ARE NOT NAMED among the top 20 teams This does not mean they have not recaptured some of the power which was attributed to them in the pre-season polls. Last week they ran over a good TCU team, 35-16. The Frogs are the only opponent common to both schools. But a comparison of scores is unrealistic because KU played the Horn Frogs 10 weeks ago (losing 17-16). This type of comparison has been proven senseless with the KU-California-Missouri situation. Rice has suffered many of the same frustrations as the Hawks, losing crucial games to league opponents and seeing a good chance at the Southwest Conference title slowly drop from sight. THE OWLS OPENED WITH A STARTLING defeat of now third ranked Louisiana State, 16-3. But, then misfortune like KU's brought losses to Georgia Tech (ranked thirteenth), Arkansas (ranked ninth), and Texas (ranked fourth). The hub of the Rice attack is crafty, sharp-passing quarterback, Billy Cox. He and alternate Randy Kerbow provide a duo which equates with the effectiveness of KU's John Hadd. ANOTHER RICE OFFENSIVE stalwart is outstanding fullback Roland Jackson who was a consensus all-conference selection a year ago and has had another fine season. He and Curt McClinton should tangle in an interesting duel. Rice, like Kansas, boasts four tackles who are long on experience. But the Owl forwards are bigger. Rice should have John Cornett, one of the best in the Southwest, 240, Bob Johnston, 215, George Karam, 210, and Ray Alborn, 220, ready to tangle with Stan Kirshman, Mike Fisher, Larry Lousch, Fred Eiseeman, and Dick Davis. Another good Owl in the front line is all-league end Johnny Burrell, 185-pound senior. Faculty Members Discuss Athletics A panel of six faculty members and a Kansas City alumnus found the merits of intercollegiate athletics a highly debatable subject last night. The panel—which included three present and one past member of the KU Athletic Board—discussed the subject before an audience of about 35 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. TWO PANEL MEMBERS — Charles A. Leone, professor of zoology, and Frederick Samson, associate professor of physiology — attacked intercollegiate athletics for occupying too important a place in the University and for "creating the wrong type of heroes on a university campus." James Gunn, assistant to the chancellor on University relations, and Roy Edwards, alumnus and past member of the Athletic Board, defended intercollegiate athletics. L. R. C. AGNEW, professor of history, and Charles Oldfather, professor of law, agreed that athletics provide a meeting ground for students and alumni, but attacked the granting of athletic scholarships as merely favoring students with "over-active pituitary glands." Athletics, they said, provide "a common meeting ground for students and alumni" and prepare athletes for competition in a "highly competitive business world" after graduation. "I think athletics — to the athletes themselves — are overemphasized," said Prof. Leone. "Athletes get the idea they are here to compete, and everything else is secondary." Prof. Samson said that this over-emphasis on athletics creates the wrong type of campus hero because intellectual and scholastic activities tend to be overlooked. "IT'S THE DAY-TO-DAY intellectual competition between students that really counts," he said. Countering this argument, Mr. Gunn warned that the University must avoid creating "an elite of the intellectual," and stressed that athletics provide a meeting ground for all types of students and graduates. "A great part of the public will not be interested in intellectual or cultural activities. They must be reached through athletics." PROF. AGNEW ATTACKED today's intercollegiate athletics as "big business" activities devoted to making money. Athletes, he said, are granted athletic scholarships regardless of their intellectual ability and are then manipulated by coaches who seem to be "directing marionettes," not developing character. Mr. Edwards argued that the present "big business" status of athletics will prepare athletes for life after graduation. "If the time ever comes," he said, "when the emphasis in athletics isn't on money, we'll have a sad situation. Nothing else better teaches students to compete in a highly competitive business world." Thanks! For the reception given our High Quality Christmas Trees last year. This year we have a greater variety Ready now for your selection Scotch Pine White Pine Norway Pine Jayhawk Tree Mart "OPERATED BY STUDENTS" 19th at Mass. VI 3-1495 365 Excuses 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Anniv. of Byrd Today's excuse: Anniv. of Byrd reached the North Pole Day PREMIER DIAMOND SHOP 916 Mass. CARTOON On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "Rally Round The Flag, Boys", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) "HAPPINESS CAN'T BUY MONEY" To the topic then: Should a coed share expenses on a date? I think I can best answer the question by citing the following typical case: I have asked the makers of Marlboro—an enterprising and aggressive group of men; yet at the same time warm and lovable; though not without acumen, perspicacity, and drive; which does not, however, mask their essential great-heartedness; a quality evident to all who have ever enjoyed the beneficence of their wares; I refer, of course, to Marlboro Cigarettes, a smoke fashioned with such loving care and tipped with such an easy-drawing filter that these old eyes grow misty when I think upon it—I have asked, I say, the makers of Marlboro—that aggregate of shrewd but kindly tobaccoists, that cluster of hearty souls bound together by the profit motive and an unflagging determination to provide a cigarette forever flavorful and eternally pleasing—I have asked, I say, the makers of Marlboro whether I might use today's column to take up the controversial question: Should a coid share expenses on a date? Poseidon Nebenzal, a student at Oklahoma A and M, majoring in hides and tallow, fell wildly in love with Mary Ellen Flange, a flax weevil major at the same school. His love, he had "Yes," said the makers simply. We all shook hands then and squeezed each other's shoulders and exchanged brave smiles, and if our eyes were a trifle moist, who can blame us? VICO ROVAS "On, foolish reaper! Why have you not told me before?" reason to believe from Mary Ellen's sidelong glances and maidenly blushes, was not entirely unrequited, and by and by he mustered up enough courage to ask her the all-important question: "Will you wear my 4-H pin?" "Yes," she said simply. They shook hands then and squeezed each other's shoulders and exchanged brave smiles, and if their eyes were a trifle moist, who can blame them? For a time things went swimmingly. Then a cloud appeared. Mary Ellen, it seems, was a rich girl and accustomed to costly pleasures. Poseidon was bone-poor and he quickly ran out of money. Unable to take Mary Ellen to the posh places she fancied and too proud to tell her the reason, he turned surly and full of melancholy. Soon their romance, so promising at the beginning, was headed for a breakup. But at the last moment, Poseidon managed to blurt out the truth. "Oh, beloved agrarian!" cried Mary Ellen, grappling him close. "Oh, proud husbandman! Oh, foolish reaper! Why have you not told me before? I have plenty of money, and I will contribute according to my ability." And it worked fine! They were happy—truly happy! And what's more, when they graduated they had a nice little nest egg—eight million dollars—with which to furnish a lovely apartment in Lubbock, Texas, where today they operate the local laundromat. Poseidon, of course, protested, but she finally persuaded him of the wisdom of her course. From then on they split all expenses according to their incomes. Rather than embarrass Poseidon by handing him money in public, a joint bank account was set up to allow him to write checks. Into this account each week they faithfully deposited their respective allowances—35 cents from Poseidon: $2300 from Mary Ellen. So you see? You too can salvage your failing romance if you will only adopt a healthy, sensible attitude toward money. © 1961 Max Shulman * * * Lucre is no obstacle when it comes to popular-priced Marlboro, or to Marlboro's popularly priced partner in pleasure—the unfiltered, king-size Philip Morris Commander. Get aboard. You'll find long enjoyment for short money. Wednesday, Nov. 29, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Steve Clark The Kansas Jayhawkers are going to their second post-season bowl in school history when they meet Rice (the Owls are in if they beat Baylor) in the bluebonnet Bowl on Dec. 16 at Houston. The Jayhawkers first bowl appearance was in 1948 when they lost to Georgia Tech 20-14 in the Orange Bowl. KU HAS BEEN READY for a bowl the past two years. Each year they have been sidetracked in their effort toward a post-season appearance. As A. C. (Dutch) Lonberg, athletic director, said, "We have missed the Orange Bowl by six inches and two votes." Kansas defeated Missouri last year and thought they were bowl-bound. Spirit was high. After the MU game the KU campus went into pandemonium. Cars jammed Jayhawk Boulevard. Students yelled from their cars, "We won! Miami, here we come." This year dreams of a bowl trip became reality. The Jayhawkers were going to do what they had been trying to do for 13 years. KANSAS WAS FINALLY going to a bowl! What was the result? Nothing! An attitude of conservatism prevailed among the KU students and the football team. The football team was invited down on the Monday preceding the game by the Bluebonnet Committee. This is a customary practice as usually the team practices on the field, and makes personal appearances drawing attention to the bowl. What did Kansas say. "We've got studying to do." (So what if this is our second bowl appearance in school history.) THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas is considered as one of the nation's top academic schools. This can be substantiated by the education- minded Javhawker football team. Students are apathetic. There is speculation that students will disregard the football team's academic example on Dec. 16 to "party" instead of going to Houston for the bowl. The Jayhawker's trip to a bowl seems to be a stagnant situation. It looks as if the team is being forced to go like a small child being urged by his father to attend Sunday school. THERE ARE SEVERAL reasons why Kansas will go to the bowl. First, the athletic department will profit approximately $100,000 by the trip. Second, alumni have apparently been pressuring the school to go. Third, it will give the team another opportunity to finish their season on a winning note. "It will be just like a regular football weekend," said Coach Jack Mitchell. The Jayhawkers are taking a lackadaisical attitude toward their bowl appearance. There is no pageantry or excitement over the school's first post-season appearance in 13 years. The bowl is being pictured as "drudgery" by the Kansas football team. The attitude is bad; the hopes are hat the play won't be. Davis Gets Trophy NEW YORK — (UPI) — All America halfback Ernie Davis, whose running powered Syracuse to a Liberty Bowl bid, said today his selection as the first Negro ever to win the Heisman Memorial Trophy "is the kind of thing you dream about but are sure will never happen to you." Davis won the award in a close vote over Bob Ferguson, Negro fullback of Ohio State. John Hadl placed seventh in the voting. Leitch Leads Betas to 20-6 Win Over JRP for Hill Championship Warren Leitch, Leavenworth senior, led Beta Theta Pi to its fourth straight A Hill Championship in intramural football action yesterday. Leitch, Beta quarterback, tossed three touchdown passes and added two extra points as the Betas downed J. R. Pearson 20-6. Leitch connected with Jim Emerson, Bartlesville, Okla., senior; John Falletta, Arma senior; and Dave Phillips, Colby sophomore; for the three scores. Jim Poague, Falls City, Neb., junior, scored the lone JRP counter. The Beta B squad, gunning for its third straight Division crown, will meet Phi Gamma Delta this afternoon in a semi-final game. The Cousy Leads Celtics to Win Bob Cousy led the Boston Celtics to a 116-108 win over the Detroit Pistons last night with 27 points. Cincinnati defeated New York, 131-117 while Syracuse defeated Los Angeles, 121-111 and Philadelphia beat St. Louis, 121-111 in other games. IM Deadline Set winner of that game will meet Navy tomorrow in the B Hill Championship tilt. The deadline for all entries for the coming intramural basketball season is 4 p.m. Fridav. A meeting of all intramural managers is scheduled for 4 p.m. tomorrow in 202 Robinson. Suit Sale $29.00 There are a number of Ivy styled, natural shoulder suits still in stock. Edmiston's Sale ends Saturday, Dec. 2 SANDY'S THRIFT & SWIFT DRIVE-IN 2120 West 9th Across from Hillcrest Café City There Is No Waiting at Sandy's 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 "Midwest's Top Hair Stylists" Ronnie's FASHION BEAUTY SALONS Special!! Special!! CREME COLD WAVE HILLCREST CENTER VI2-1978 MALLS CENTER VI2-1144 $595 COMPLETE A REAL BEAUTY BUY . . . A REAL BEAUTY BUY ... RONNIE'S $2.50 HAIR SPRAY Giant Size $149 PLUS TAX 7 APPOINTMENT NOT USUALLY NEEDED • OPEN LATE WEEK NIGHTS Guns & Ammo - Changing Times - Columbia Law Review BETTER HOMES & GARDE HORIZON 4000 Magazines and Periodicals available through SPORTS ILLUSTRATED SATURDAY EVENING POST LIFE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY READER'S DIGEST OUTDOOR LIFE SCIENCE ILLUSTRATED TV GUIDE TRUE POPULAR MECHANICS RUDDER LADIES' HOME JOURNAL KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE AMERICAN HERITAGE LANCET JOURNAL Special Xmas gift subscription Prices on many titles JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN NEWSWEEK ER Many Foreign Periodicals Patronage refund paid on all subscriptions NEW YORKER NEW Wall Street Journal - U.S. News & World Report MOTOR TREND Holiday Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 29, 1961 Frank Hoecker Is Radiation Expert By Richard Currie A professor who did not receive a formal high school education has established himself as a scientist and has built a department at KU in his field. He worked as a chemist for the Pillsbury Baking Co. when "he should have been in high school," as he puts it. Nevertheless, Frank E. Hoecker, professor of radiation biophysics, has established himself as a radiologist of considerable proportion and his department a formidable one, verified by its close contact with the government. PROF. HOECKER has built this reputation through a series of government jobs, appointments and papers. In 1946, two years after he came to KU, he began a 14-year study of radium and its effects on the human body. Later expanding to include strontium, Prof. Hoecker delivered a paper on his progress at the International Conference of Atomic Energy for Peaceful Uses in 1955. He gave another paper on the same subject at the Conference's second meeting in 1958. But papers are not the extent of Prof. Hoecker's work in radiation. In 1943 he was in charge of radiation protection work for every facility using radium in the country. Later that year he worked at Columbia University on the measurement and detection of neutrons and biological effects. HOW DID he do all this without even the beginnings of a formal education? Prof. Hoecker made up his deficiency by taking high school courses when he was working for Pillsbury, graduated magna cum laude from the College of Emporia in 3 years and received his Master's and Ph.D. from KU in the early 30s. After a stint as head of the department of physics at the University of Kansas City, Prof. Hoecker began his work with the government. Prof. Hoecker's Columbia research led to his radium project when a coroner-friend of his in New Jersey allowed the department to examine the bones of people who had died from radium poisoning. ON A LEAVE of absence during 1958-59, Prof. Hoecker developed a dosimeter for the U.S. Army, a device which measures the preservative limit of radiation present in food until it subsides. When it does subside the dosimeter, a small capsule with liquid in it, becomes immobile. The development of this device enabled the Army to solve the Pres. Kennedy's war exploits When Lt. Kennedy's PT boat was sunk in '43, he and his crew were up for dead. But actually, they were fighting starvation on a desert island. Read the authentic account of their ordeal in this week's Saturday Evening Post. The Saturday Evening POST problem of protecting food against radiation. The dosimeter warns them if the food has become contaminated. Prof. Hoecker attended the atomic demonstrations at Bikini Atoll in 1945 and commented that man would use the atomic bomb. Today with nuclear weapons testing running rampant he still thinks man will resort to nuclear war to settle his differences. "TIVE BEEN THROUGH two world wars," he says. "I can see similarities between those two buildsups and today's." Yet Prof. Hoecker maintains the United States should carry on nuclear testing. "Why shouldn't we?" he asks. "It would be nothing short of suicide if we failed to do so." Prof. Hoeker ridicules those people who fret and protest against nuclear testing. He cannot understand why they worry about an insignificant amount of fallout when they disregard their health. "SMOKING and excessive drinking hurt the body much more than fallout," he asserts. "Ideally, we don't want very much fallout, but what we're getting from these tests isn't going to harm anyone." Prof. Hoecker says he sees a great challenge for him in his department and will not leave KU, though he has had some attractive job offers. He sees, however, another area where his services are needed and feels a certain sense of obligation to stay here. Prof. Hoecker is the only certified radiologist in this area and does an enormous amount of work consulting and advising hospitals in radiation protection. With this work in mind he feels bound to KU but happily so. Self-reliance NEW YORK — (UPI) Children born today will be forced to rely more on each other than on adults for working out many of life's problems. Dr. Hugh Gertthon Morgan reports. The director of the Institute for Child Study, University of Maryland, also told the New York State Council for Children that even now children learn more from each other than grownups ever can hope to teach them. What is a turkey dinner without a turkey? Sin has many tools, but a lie is the handle which fits them all.— Oliver Wendell Holmes KU Prof. Studying Poultry Diseases Albert A. Benedict, associate professor of bacteriology is trying to prevent just such a problem. For the past four years, Prof. Benedict has been doing research on the problem of ornithosis, a virus infection of wild birds and domestic fowl that can be passed on to poultry dressing plant workers. He is doing the research under a grant from the U.S. Public Health Service. Prof. Benedict who joined the University of Kansas faculty in 1957, began the project when he was assistant professor of preventive medicine and public health at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. NEW YORK — (UPI) — The nation's family doctors recently urged President Kennedy and the congress to enact legislation that would let homeowners deduct the cost of constructing atomic fallout shelters. Shelter Deduction Eastern Civ Class Offered in Spring Dr. Floyd C. Bratt, president of the American Academy of General Practice, one of those favoring a tax incentive, said such shelters fall within the scope of scientific preventive medicine. A new pilot project in the area of Eastern Civilization will begin at KU in the Spring semester. The plan is an outgrowth of the present Western Civilization program, required for most KU students. The new course will attempt to acquaint students with some of the forces which have formed the "Eastern mind." The course will be an honors section, by invitation only, in Oriental Languages and Literatures 53 — "East Asian Literature in Translation." It will be taught by Benjamin Wallacker, assistant professor of Oriental languages. Francis Heller, associate dean of the college said that in the study of Eastern Civilization our Western concepts are inadequate. He said that there is a difference of formulation in verbal symbols. The class will be composed of mostly sophomores and a few juniors, but no seniors. Man is not the creature of circumstances. Circumstances are the creatures of man.—Benjamin Disraeli Submarine Sandwiches A MEAL IN ITSELF --- MEATS CHEESE - LETTUCE - DELICIOUS SAUCE COLD POP ICE COLD MILK Joe's Bakery 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 Christmas DIAMOND SALE Sale Lasts Through Month of December - You Can Save up to 50% on Your Diamond Purchase. - You May Lay-A-Way Now. Pick Up Later. (Shop While Selection Is Complete.) - See Into The Diamond You Select. (Viewed Under Our Binocular Gem Scope, Highly Magnified, You Can Actually See What You Are Buying.) - Sale Includes Our Entire Stock of Mounted Diamonds. (These Are Not Inferior, Specially Purchased Rings, or Salesmen's samples.) IF YOU ARE THINKING OF BUYING A DIAMOND RING, DON'T MISS THIS SALE. We also have a group of watches at greatly reduced prices. DANIELS JEWELRY DIAMONDS — WATCHES — GIFTS 914 Mass St. Just Across The Street From Woolworths Phone VI 3-2572 The trend is to mid-arm length gloves and to simple classic styles. In addition to washable leathers, fabrics vary, ranging from cotton and synthetic fiber knits to nylon that looks like suede. do you need money to stay in school? College life is educational in more ways than one. You may be learning that the budget you worked out with your parents is inadequate to cover your expenses and complete your education. And maybe your parents find it hard to meet your money needs from current income. If this is your problem, an educational loan from College Funds, Inc. may provide the answer. Ask your school authorities for details* — or mail the coupon below. WALNUT AT AVENUE A HUTCHINGSON, KANASB College Funds Inc. CF1 CFL COLLEGE FUNDS. ING. WALNUT AT AVENUE A HUTCHINSON, KANSAS Please send me information about your Educational Loan Plan. NAME ADDRESS CITY AND STATE *The Aids and Awards office at KU is prepared to answer your questions about College Funds, Inc. Page 9 New Book Asks for Trouble WASHINGTON — (UPI) — "To-morrow's Illiterates" is the title of a just-published book that should shake and rattle the roof trees of all homes that shelter little children. During the recent American Rocket Society meeting here, Krieger passed on these additional observations on the Soviet space program: Krieger, a researcher in the physics department of the Rand Corp., Santa Monica, Calif., has specialized in compiling and evaluating for the Air Force all available material on the Soviet space program. His studies of Communist technical papers and newspapers enabled him to forecast the first Soviet satellite shot in 1957. —More powerful missiles, possibly capable of manned lunar flight: "Current Soviet tests in the Pacific may indicate whether they have them. But their claims are usually borne out eventually, especially when Khrushchev makes them." NEW YORK — (UFI) — Dr. F. J. Krieger has been described as "an authority on the Russians in his field insofar as any one can be an authority on the Russians." His field is astronautics. Last April, he predicted the Soviets would put a man into orbit "within the next month." They did a few days later. —Space failures: "They cover up their apparent failures. Lunik, which we know about, took only nine photographs of the other side of the moon. They published 30; apparently varied reproductions of the nine." This book was published by Little, Brown and Co., for the Council on Basic Education. It tells what hit U.S. education and why. It names names, invites combat. Every parent-teachers association in the United States should make "Tomorrow's Illiterates" required reading for all members. Space Expert Tells Of Soviet Efforts —Who runs the manned space program: "Khrushchev is boss, according to (cosmonaut Yuri) Gagarin, who says Vostock is Khrushchev's baby." —Space exploration by machines instead of man: "Russian literature is replete with examples of these ideas, their caterpillar tractor in particular. But it hasn't gained priority although the Russians appear to be working on it." - Access to technical information: "A Soviet scientist can't even get American technical papers on developments in his own field without Communist party approval and proper security clearance." STUDY IN SOUTHERN FRANCE FRENCH LANGUAGE and LITERATURE EUROPEAN STUDIES An academic year in Aix-en-Provence for undergraduates. Institute students enrolled at the University of Aix-Marseille; founded in 1409. Classes in English or French satisfying American curriculum requirements. Students may live in French homes. Tuition, trans-Atlantic fares, room and board, about $1,850. For further information, write airmail to: Wednesday, Nov. 29, 1961 University Daily Kansan INSTITUTE FOR AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES aff. University of Aix-Marseille 21 rue Gaston-de-Saporta AIX-EN-PROVENCE France IT IS LIKELY, thereafter, that teachers would cease speaking to parents and that parents would cease speaking to teachers. This book deals with the teaching of reading in the lower grades. It finds guilty the U.S. educational system in general and the early grade teachers individually on serious charges. The system and the teachers stand charged with converting the little kids who pass through first, second and third grades into delts who cannot read. The book asserts that there has been: As for the early grade teachers, themselves, they simply are carrying on in the tradition imposed upon them. Some selected quotations from "Tomorrow's Illiterates" will convey some of its ideas: "A NATIONAL failure in reading instruction which we (the authors) see as the single major cause of the deterioration of our educational system." - "IT IS CLEAR that we not only have a national reading problem of Three authors hold responsible for this situation a variety of individuals and institutions. They include, the U.S. Office of Education, Teachers Colleges, James B. Conant, former President of Harvard University, textbook publishers whose interests are vested in no change, the system of progressive education. John Dewey and his satellite saints of pedagogy, and others. appalling seriousness but also that it is completely unnecessary. - "It is entirely due to the methods of reading instruction generally followed in our public schools. - "The (teaching) system, the texts, the theory are, in official school-of-education circles, today about what they were in 1925. - Dr. Trace said fourth grade Russian children use books with a vocabulary of about 10,000 words. Fourth grade Americans have basal readers with vocabularies of fewer than 1,800 words. - "The system has spread over the country (taking the hinterlands in the 1930s). It has produced a disastrous retardation not only in reading but also of education in general. - "Tomorrow's Illiterates" is a 50-megaton bomb blast at U.S. educational practices. It should arouse great controversy. - "Considerably more than half, probably 75 per cent, of our young people do not read as they could. At least 35 per cent of them are very seriously retarded." THIS BOOK is one of a salvo of complaints being fired at the teaching methods that send young people into college unable to read at a grade school or high school standard. There has been the inevitable comparison with the Soviet Union system. The New York Times reported in the last week of October on a study made by Dr. Arthur S. Trace Jr., of the John Carroll University, Cleveland, O. Vitamin Tip NEW YORK — (UPI) The National Vitamin Foundation reports that vitamin B-1 is necessary for proper function of heart and nervous system. Early signs of deficiency include insomnia, loss of appetite, constipation and irritability. The vitamin also is required to obtain energy from food. It's in enriched cereals and bread, fish, lean meat, liver, milk, pork, poultry, dried yeast, whole grain cereals. Fraternity Jewelry Everything is funny as long as it is happening to somebody else.— Will Rogers Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS 1912 West 25th St. FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED - central air conditioning Career Cues: carpeted - off street parking - garbage disposal - laundry facilities 1/2 block - play area for children Phone VI 2-3416 office VI 3-8253 home "This age of specialization opens special opportunities for the well-rounded man!" Robert Saudek, President Robert Saudek Associates, In "The more specialists society creates to cope with its complexities, the easier it can be for a non-specialist to achieve success. If that seems paradoxical, look at it this way: the more men who go out for specific positions on the ball club, the more chance you have to wind up as manager! Today's world - in government, business, the arts, even science - needs the well-rounded man. He's the man who can see the entire picture...the man who can draw on a broad background of knowledge, evaluate the problem, then assign the details to specialists. The world of entertainment may seem somewhat special, but it's a case in point. These days, it demands more of its people than ever before. Today's musical comedy score is often as sophisticated as grand opera. Drama draws heavily on psychology and history. Television productions are concerned with nuclear science and political science. If you've ever watched 'Omnibus' you may have seen how our productions have run the gamut of a wide range of man's interests. So I suggest to you that even though you may concentrate on one special field of interest, keep your viewpoint broad. Keep your college curriculum as diversified as possible. Attend lectures and concerts, the theatres and museums. Above all, read and read, and listen and listen! But pay scant heed to the oracle who says there's no route to the top but that of specialization. I don't believe it!" Robert Saudek is the creator of many of television's most famous programs—including the award-winning "Omnibus" series. Former network executive and head of the TV-Radio Workshop of the Ford Foundation, Bob enjoys a "Camel break". He's been a Camel fan since undergraduate days at Harvard. And for a special kind of smoking satisfaction... Have a real cigarette-Camel THE BEST TOBACCO MAKES THE BEST SMOKE CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BIRD CHAMPION R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Winston-Salem North Carolina Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 29, 1961 The U.N.'s Rocky Road By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign, News Analyst More than 15 months after undertaking its peace mission in the Congo, the United Nations finds itself close to being broke, its authority challenged from both left and right and peace still a distant goal. While suggestions that the U.N. should abandon its Congo mission have not yet become general, there is increasing pessimism over the world organization's ability to settle any dispute once it becomes enmeshed in the cold war between the great powers. IT WAS IN the hope of avoiding just such an entanglement that the late U.N. Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold sought and obtained from the U.N. Security Council the broadest range of powers ever granted to his office, including the use of force if necessary. Dodd 'Shocked' By Congo Mobs "I guess this is the Congo after all," added Dodd, who has been a leading defender of Katanga in the United States. ELISABETHVILLE, Katanga, The Congo — (UPI) — Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn., said today he was "shocked" by the action of a mob of Katangese troops who dragged two high United Nations officials away from a party he was attending last night and beat them with rifle butts. DODD WITNESSED PART of the incident when the Katangese invaded the home of a local oil company executive who was hosting the party for Dodd. They seized U.N. officials George Ivan Smith and Brian Urquhart, and then clubbed and beat them up. Smith suffered possible broken ribs and Urquhart suffered cuts and bruises. Dodd was reported "deeply upset" by the attack. Acting U.N. Secretary General Thant immediately sent a cable from New York demanding "public apologies" from the Katangese government for the "crazed" actions of the troops and asking swift and "severe punishment" for the guilty ones. IN THE WAKE OF last night's assault, a U.N. Indian Gurkha soldier was found murdered this morning near the home of Katanga President Moise Tshombe, and a Gurkha major was missing. Smith, who was x-rayed for the suspected broken ribs, was inclined to dismiss his own attack and said: "I regard the fate of the two Gurkhas as far more important than what happened to us last night." Genius, that power which dazles mortal eyes, is oft but perserverance in disguise. — Henry Willard Austin. Party Season Ahead C. Order your centerpieces and arrangements from Regnier's VI 3-1701 And in the jungle of cold-war, Congo and African politics in general, speed proved impossible. But to be successful, speed was necessary. THE RESULT IS today's mess in which the fire-breathing secessionist president of Katanga, Moise Tshombe, promises a scorched earth campaign against any attempt to integrate his province by force with the rest of the Congo. Soviet-supported Vice Premier Antoine Gizenga is off on some mysterious mission in Kivu and Eastern Provinces, and the Central Government cannot even discipline the troops who recently murdered 13 Italian airmen. There was a suspicion that Gizenga, nominally a member of the Central Government, was trying to organize a secessionist movement of his own. THERE WERE other difficulties. In the U.N. Security Council, the Soviet Union supported a move to disarm Tshombe but opposed any similar move against Gizenga. General, U Thant was laboring to carry out Security Council mandates but already was under the same threat from Russia as had confronted Hammarskjold. The U.N.'s new acting Secretary- Last week the Russians warned him that any action contrary to Soviet wishes would have "sad results for the United Nations." AT THE CORE of the difficulty is the Congolese army. Presumably, its strength is about 17,000. But its men regularly disappear into the brush and mutiny is so common as to be ignored. The United States so far has paid for more than half of the Congo costs. The Soviet Union has paid none while reserving the right to criticize and interfere. U. S. Ambassador to the U.N. Adlai Stevenson put the question succinctly when he said that "if the members will not pay for the United Nations, they will not have it." The U.S. cannot be expected to bear indefinitely a disproportionate share of U.N. costs. But to abandon the U.N. would be to admit the inevitability of war. A capacity crowd is expected to attend the concert by the Dukes of Dixieland Sunday evening, according to members of the Campus Chest committee, sponsor of the concert. Big Crowd Expected For Dixieland Show The concert, to begin at 8:00 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium, will begin the 1961 Campus Chest drive. Tickets went on sale yesterday, with organized houses being given the opportunity to buy blocks of seats until 9 p.m. today. Individual seats are being sold at the Information Booth and in the Kansas Union. Tickets are $1.50 each, and all proceeds will go to Campus Chest. Professor's Book Published VARSITY NOW SHOWING! Erskine Caldwell's "Claudelle Inglish" A book co-authored by a KU education professor has been chosen as the Educator's Book Club selection of the month. "Psychology in Teaching Reading," by Henry P. Smith, KU professor of education, and Emerald V. Dechant, of the division of education and psychology at Fort Hays State College, helps teachers understand the psychological factors in a pupil's reading ability. Youth is a blunder; manhood a struggle; old age a regret.—Benjamin Disraeli Kansan Want Ads Get Results VARSITY MOW SHOWINGI Erskine Caldwell's "Claudelle Inglish" GRANADA MOW SHOWINGI Bob Hope Lana Turner "Bachelor in Paradise" GRANADA MOW SHOWING Bob Hope Lana Turner "Bachelor in Paradise" LUCKY STRIKE presents: LUCKY PUFFERS "STUDENT SOLDIERS" "I'll say it just once more: 'Volunteers for judo, step forward!'" "Maybe they are just bluffing, but I'm keeping my head down." "For cryin' out loud, Hawkins! Who ever taught you to put up a tent?" CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE IT'S ZOMETELD CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. "Doesn't anybody know how to fire this thing?" "THE SMOKING LAMP IS LIT!" For Sailors and Marines, that means happy time. They can slow down and light up a Lucky. In the Army and Air Force, the cry is "Take ten!"—Lucky lighting time again. But Lucky you; you can enjoy Luckies any time. Why, you can even have one right now. And won't it taste great! Full, rich tobacco flavor-that's why college students smoke more Luckies than any other regular. March out and buy a pack. CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change! One $ \textcircled{c} $ A. F. C. Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" Wednesday, Nov. 29. 1961 University Daily Kansan SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Page 11 One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms账: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 BusinessOffice in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. LOST 10 x 50 BINOULCARS at game Friday. 10 x 50 BINOULCARS or Don Fries or ward. Rm SSI JRP. 11-29 FOR RENT BLACK NOTEBOOK 9 x 7" missing from 531B Malott since tine 23rd. Contains Pharmacology 210 notes irrepairable or graded by the doctor to 511 Mallett for CV 3-0041 with information. Extremely valuable. No questions asked. 12-4 FURNISHED APT. 2 rms. priv. bath. b00 block Indiana. Call VI 3-927 121 a400 block Indiana. Call VI 3-927 121 ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED apt. 3 large rooms, kitchen, pavilion & bath en- trance, street park, garage. $62 plus part of utilities. Phone 3-6066 after 5 p.m. 12-5 SPACIOUS ROOMS. FIRST floor apartment — furnished or unfurnished. Convenient location for campus. $30, utilities paid. Phone VI 2-0147 after 3. 12-5 4 room spt. for 4 bovs, util. paid, 1 block off campus, 1142 Indiana. Possession 12-6 2 ROOMS AND BATH. Priv. ent. University Drive, 5 minutes from campus. Renew. For rent to either Cali IV VI 3-3077 between 7 & 10 am, or 6 pm. 11-30 Vacancy available for 2 men in com- munity care centre Rd. Cali. Cr. 3-9635 for appointment LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities, paid $50. Cali VI 3-6244. SINGLE & DOUBLE sleeping rooms. North of Jaywalk Hawk Cafe: after 6 p.m. 12-18 FURNISHED APTS. 3 & 4 rooms, priv. Phone VI 3-250 afternoons on 12-4 LARGE, NICE ROOMS for boys. 3 blks. from Union, Call Now. VI 3-7642. 12-4 TWO SINGLE ROOMS, shower bath, telephone. 1315 Tenn. Phone I 3-3960. For rent or sale—unfurnished two-bedroom cottage two blocks from campus. Schools. Full basement, garage, fenced yard, off street parking. Phone VI 3-8344 HELP WANTED NEED REGISTERED NURSE for afternoon shift at Samaritan Lodge—also need aide for morning call. Call VI 3-8336. SECRETARY FOR MEDICAL LAB: Med. term experience preferred. Immediate & permanent opening. Challenging opportunity. Call VI 3-2690. Mr. Johnson. 12-5 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 11 0350. Kansan Want Ads Get Results BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 939 $ \frac{1}{8} $ , Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tf Save Money FRANK ALEXANDER Income Insurance ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed. VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. tf TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI S-3644. tf American United Life offers exclusive STUDENT LIFE PLAN GROUP INSURANCE Morris Kay VI 3-7114 U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- mile. Phone VI 3-2821 — 5 days to self-service — open weekends 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. Save Money RALPH FREED Income Insurance U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, cat grooming supplies, everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Conn. Live-In Pet Center. at Conn. Shop sectionalized — save time and money. tf TRANSPORTATION RIDERS WANTED: Driving to L.A. Christmas via southern route — want riders to share driving and expenses. Call Nancy Rollins, VI 2-1340. 12-4 Would like a ride to New York either on a train or by car. Rosehillfield, VI 2-2340. 12-5 WANT 2 PASSEYGERS to fly to Blue Bonnet Bowl, split costs. Contact 1612 Tenn., basement apt. after 4 p.m., before 27th. 12-1 FOR SALE DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. New and Used guns and ammo. Handguns re-blued. Special this week: 30-06 Springfield, ammo in stock. See at 1204 Tenn. VI 3-7001. 12-4 NEW MAGNAVOX portable stereo phonograph. 2" b bass speakers & diaphram reed needle. Plays all records on. Less reduced to $88. Pettigill-dhavis. 723-124 Mass. HAPPY NEW YEAR! 1956 Chev. V-8 Power Glide, 4 door, good tires, new battery, one owner, moderate use. Carriage immaculate, mechanically well built to show. $305. VI 2-1548 after 5. 12-5 MAGNAVOX. DANISH WALNUT. Stereo Console with AM-FM radio. Floor model storage. Danish modern styling. Pettengil-Davis Store, 723 Mass. 12-4 For Sale: Artery fluen, excellent condi- tion. Practically new. $100. Call VI-12- 47178. Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates. 11-5-85- 0312 MERCEDES-BENZ — 1956 BL-Fordor- 2205. Clean, WW tires — 2 new. For sale by owner — O. L. Caldwell, Chanute, Kansas. 12-4 Pay For Them The Easy Way IDEAL HOLIDAY GIFT for giving or getting. Pureslime Kernels will be toilet trained & weaned by the holidays. Place your deposit now. Total cost, male, $20; female, $25. See at 1229 Ohio VI 3- 0195. 12-4 Pay For Them The Easy Way Join Our NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machine printing and printing at reasonable rate. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3- 0515 today. CHRISTMAS CLUB FOR 1962 $500 down buys this five room home within 1 bik, of campus. Priced at $7,750 reasonable monthly payments, cheaper than rent. Garage. Cain Reality. 927₂¹ Mass. Phone VI 3-8316 or after 5 VI 3-9027 or VI 3-8898. 12-4 Join This Weekl Experienced typist would like typing in standard keyboard and standard seasonal rates. Call VI S-2651 any time. TYPING MILLIKEN'S 'S.O.S.' — Now at two 474 101 Lawrence Ave. & 1021 j Mass. 189 11-30 *Typing*. Will type reports, thesis, etc. sell, 1511 W, 2 St. Ctl VI 2-6440, ft sell, 1511 W, 2 St. Ctl VI 2-6440, ft OLYMPIA FORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lendence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI . III - 364 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, report manuscripts, journal articles. We are neat accurate work Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485 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 Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, first accurate service. Reasonable salary. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 15th. VI $1648. Pick The One That Fits You The Best Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter. Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker, Call VI 3-2001. tf "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting of standard roles, for exclu-sive typing at standard courts, call MISSORE Pope, VI 3-1097. lt EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-1916. Mrs. Loe- Gebihb. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng- lish teacher, Dr. Kathryn Blank, & reports accurately. Standard rates. See tf, Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. $ .50 a week pays you $ 25.00 $ 1.00 a week pays you $ 50.00 $ 2.00 a week pays you $100.00 $ 3.00 a week pays you $150.00 $ 5.00 a week pays you $250.00 $10.00 a week pays you $500.00 EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, books, research papers. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. Me: tcf EXPERIENCED TYPEIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf 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 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 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 FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Excuse- son. Mission, HE 2-7181. Eyes or Sat. SA- 2-2186. ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- sation of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, uses these sheets, these dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Martilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. Mr. MOVING TO FLORIDA, don't need winter clothes. Shirts, size 10; blouses, 30-32; sweaters, 36-38. For sale for reasonable prices. If interested call VI 3-5672. 11-30 KNIGHTKIT R100 shortwave radio. 3 s.w. bands and broadcast band. Only 6 months old. Will sacrifice for $55. New price $100. Call Balogal, VI 2-2497. 1ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 746 Mass. 746 Mass. ENROLL NOW SEMINAR IN SWING PROFESSORS: THE DUKES OF DIXIELAND BUILDING: HOCH AUDITORIUM TIME: 8 P.M. FEES: $1.50 DATE: SUN-DEC. 3 HOURS OF BASIN STREET CULTURE AVOID AN EARLY CLOSING Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 29. 1961 Dollar Due for Tough Days in House By Lyle C. Wilson WASHINGTON - (UPI) The purchasing power of the U.S. dollar will enjoy little protection from the new management of the U.S. House of Representatives. The new management will succeed the late manager, Speaker Sam Rayburn. Mr. Sam did not give the U.S. buck much protection either. Rep. John W. McCormack (D-Mass.) is slated to succeed Rayburn as speaker. Rep. Richard Bolling (D-Mo.) is contesting Rep. Carl Albert (D-Okla.) for the House Democratic leadership, the job from which McCormack will be promoted to the speakership. CARL ALBERT looks like the winner of that one. There are several sound reasons why Albert is Campus Chest Drive Nears Organizing and publicizing a drive such as Campus Chest takes lots of time and hard work. To insure that the drive will be in everyone's mind, the committee has been working since early October appointing solicitors, writing letters, gathering informational material, and planning publicity. The Dukes of Dixieland will kick off the drive with a concert at 8 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium. Tickets are on sale this week for $1.50. Proceeds will go to the drive. THE COMMITTEE IS ASKING students and faculty members to consider the concert as entertainment and not as a contribution to Campus Chest. "The concert is our way of thanking the students in advance for the support we know they'll give us during the drive," said Philip McKnight, Wichita junior and Campus Chest publicity chairman. "Our biggest job is to make sure everyone knows the drive is going on," McKnight said. "We're not trying to pressure people into giving; we're trying to inform them so they'll want to give. "WE TRIED TO GET RESPONsible people for solicitors, because it's a very important job. The success of the drive, to a large extent, rests on the solicitors. "It operates like the community chest in that people are asked to donate only once instead of being asked to donate to each separate charity," he said. The largest portion of the funds raised during the drive will go to the World University Service. Other national charities, such as CARE and the cancer fund, will also receive part of the proceeds. TV's offbeat hit: "The Flintstones" HANNA-BARBERA PRODS. ©1961 The most surprised men in Hollywood are a couple of middle-aged cartoonists. Four years ago they were has-beens. Today they own a multimillion-dollar empire. Read the story of the men behind "The Flintstones" in this week's Post, more likely than Bolling to be elected leader of the House Democrats. The best summary of all those reasons was stated by Raymond Lahr, chief political writer for United Press International. Lahr said: The Saturday Evening POST "Mr. Sam died about five years too soon for Bolling." And that is about it. Bolling is a comer, no doubt about that, but Albert already has arrived. On the Rayburn-McCormack team, Carl Albert was Democratic whip. The whip is the man responsible for (A) knowing how all House Democrats will vote on a given matter and (B) seeing to it that they are present and voting when the roll is called. Hard-money conservatives rate the prospective new Democratic management of the House as a wasteful management, careless of the taxpayers' dollars. They are big spenders, Bolling equally with Albert, so it would make not much difference which of them succeeded to the House Democratic leadership. Whether McCormack, Albert & Co. are, in fact, wasteful of the taxpayers' dollars depends, of course, on the point of view. That they are big spenders in the New Deal, Fair Deal, New Frontier tradition is a matter of the record. The hardmoney conservative judgment of these top Democrats is harsh. It is most forcibly expressed in an analysis of their voting records by an organization called Americans for Constitutional Action (ACA). ACA is unlunate fringe outfit. Its trustees include retired Admiral Ben Boreeell, chairman; Charles Edison, a secretary of Navy in a Roosevelt cabinet; Edgar Eisenhower, you know who's brother; and former President Herbert Hoover. ACA analyzed votes over a period of years on issues which it interpreted as raising the question whether the vote would be for sound money and against inflation or the reverse. FROM THE STANPOINT of ACA, top score would be 100 per Rock Chalk Applications Due Friday, KU-Y Office Applications for master of ceremonies and in-between acts in the Rock Chalk Revue have to be turned in by 5 p.m. Friday at the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union. cent for a congressman who voted in all instances for sound money and against inflation. Some members of Congress score 100 per cent. On those issues, ACA graded McCormack at zero. Bolling scored four and Albert seven per cent. In another category, "for economy and against waste," McCormack rated another zero. Bolling's grade was six and Albert's 10 per cent. Laredo Cancels KU Concert Engagement Grant Johannesen, American pianist, will play in KU's Concert Course tonight in place of Jaime Laredo, Bolivian violinist, who was forced to cancel because of a virus infection. Mr. Johannesen will play Beethoven's Sonata in E flat, Prelude Chorale and Fugue by Franck, two pieces by Faure, and Prokofieff's Sonata No. 7. Milton Steinhardt, professor of music history, will introduce Mr. Johannesen at the Classical Music Forum in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union today at 4 p.m. Nehru Protests Red Chinese Aggression New Delhi, India — (UPI) — Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru disclosed yesterday that India had accused Communist China of fresh aggression on India's northern frontier. He said India would protect its territory by "warfare" if necessary. Nehru released to Parliament the text of a note sent to Peiping charging that Communist Chinese troops were strengthening their military positions in Ladakh — bordering Tibet — where 10 Indians were killed in a border clash two years ago. Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 摄像师 W what's pure research? Distinguished from that which has practical application, pure research is concerned with the discovery of fundamental knowledge to widen man's understanding of himself and the universe. Ford Motor Company's Scientific Laboratory in Dearborn, Michigan is dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge in the physical sciences. On its staff are scientists of national and international reputation who conduct independent basic research programs of an extremely broad nature. Why does Ford Motor Company support research which seemingly is unrelated to the manufacture of its products? It is our view, and a pioneering concept in our industry, that entirely new approaches to automotive development can come only from unhampered scientific investigation. Deeper understanding of matter itself, and of the conversion and storage of energy-aside from widening man's primary knowledge-may have practical application in tomorrow's vehicle design. Thus knowledge wrested from nature by scientists will be taken by technologists and applied to serve practical needs and desires. Another example of Ford's leadership through scientific research and engineering. Ford MOTOR COMPANY The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan PRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD · THE FARM INDUSTRY · AND THE AGE OF SPACE Plans Viewed For Bowl Trip University officials are viewing plans for a student migration to the Bluebonnet Bowl football game in Houston, Texas, where KU will play on Dec. 16. Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, said today that the administration is considering a proposal for transportation with Rock Island Lines. Dean Woodruff estimated the cost of the trip including meals, $5.50 for the game ticket, other expenses while in Houston would bring the total to about $60. THE PROPOSED round-trip coach fare to Houston from Kansas City would be $49. This figure would include four meals while on the train, storage of personal effects on the train while in Houston and also the services of escorts. The train would leave Kansas City 4:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 15, and arrive in Houston at 8:45 the next morning. The return trip would begin at 11:59 p.m. Saturday night. The train would arrive in Kansas City at 2:55 p.m. the following day. "These plans are still in the tentative stage," said Dean Woodruff. "There may be changes made before the matter is decided upon," he added. ARTHUR C. (DUTCII) Lonborg, associate professor of physical education and athletic director, said, contrary to an article in yesterday's Daily Kansas, the athletic department here will not receive $100,000 for the game. "We will receive money for the team's expenses plus one eighth of the remainder of the $100,000," he said. "The remaining seven eighths will go to the other Big-eight schools. CRC Talks Funds The Civil Rights Council discussed plans for a fund drive for SNCC (The Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee) at its meeting in the Kansas Union last night. SNCC was formed shortly after the first "sit-in" in Greensboro, N.C. It was formed to act as a means of communication between different protest groups in the South. The Committee set up an office in Atlanta, Ga., with one full time worker to compile and receive information and make it available to student groups in the civil rights movement. The most significant contribution made by SNCC during 1960 was to plan the "freedom rides." BY THE SUMMER OF 1960, the movement had reached a point which forced SNCC to change from a communication group to one which coordinated activities. The group also examined voter registration problems in McComb, Miss. THE FUTURE of SNCC in the South is the reason the CRC last night discussed raising funds for the group. Charles Menghini, Pittsburgh senior, and co-chairman of the CRC, said if SNCC can obtain proper financial and mortal support from many people, it will be able to continue its anti-discriminatory activities in the South. "I think that now should be the time to start this drive. Now while there is liberal feeling and interest on the campus," he said. HE POINTED out that SNCC needs the money to pay for court costs and lawyers' fees of SNCC members and others who have been arrested or detained because of their activities in McComb, Miss., and other southern cities. The CRC is planning to contact various Lawrence and campus organizations to participate in a fund drive. The organizations include KU-Y, The Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy, The Congregational Church, the local branch of the NAACP, and a Unitarian group at KU. "THE DRIVE should probably be a day or so before the World Crisis Day," Menghini said. Other plans discussed by the CRC for the drive were the possibility of passing boxes around during the basketball game next week and the collection of money at night, with those people interested in contributing leaving their porch lights on. A meeting will be held with representatives from the various groups next Monday at 4 p.m. in the Kansas Union. TOPEKA — (UPI) — Gov. John Anderson said he expects to have his budget recommendations completed late today. Bulletin Gov. Anderson and budget director James Bibb have been in conference for the past week deciding the budget the Governor will recommend to the Legislature in January. DUKES OF DIXIE-LAND The Information Booth can be a mighty lonely place. Daily hansan LAWRENCE. KANSAS Thursday, November 30, 1961 59th Year No. 50 Campus Chest Lagging Behind In Sale of 'Dixieland' Tickets The Dukes of Dixieland, the musical kick-off for the Campus Chest fund drive, will cost $2.000. Last night $650 had been recorded in ticket sales. Only $250 in bloc tickets were sold this year. Last year more than $2,000 in bloc tickets were sold for the featured band. House to house solicitors will begin circulation tonight to dormitories, Greek organizations and scholarship halls in an attempt to sell more tickets. Assisting members of the Campus Chest committee will be members of the KU-Y and over 100 solicitors at the houses and dormitories. TICKET SALES will continue tomorrow and Saturday morning at the Information Booth on Jayhawk Boulevard and in the Kansas Union. Tickets will also be sold at the door Sunday evening. Tickets are $1.50 The Campus Chest drive is the only fund-raising drive held at KU each year. Proceeds are divided among ten national and local charity organizations, with the World University Service receiving the largest portion. "THE CAMPUS CHEST, like the Weather Considerable cloudiness east and central, party cloudy extreme west this afternoon and tonight. Occasional drizzle east and central tonight. Partly cloudy west and decreasing cloudiness east portion Friday. A little warmer central this afternoon and in extreme east tonight. Warmer most of state Friday. Low tonight lower 30s west to upper 30s east. High Friday in 50s. UP Picks Up Contested ASC Seat The All Student Council elections committee has settled on a third representative to the ASC from large men's dormitories. William K. Kahmann, Springfield, Mo., senior, on the recount vote received 98 votes to 87 for the runner up, William Brier, Overland Park freshman. Kahmann was the University Party candidate. THE ORIGINAL VOTE totals for the third representative in the general election two weeks ago were challenged because of errors in following the ASC election bill, and because of the closeness of the original vote. Kahmann's victory now sets the ASC voting representation at 16 for Vox Populi against 12 for the UP. VOX POPULI HAS 17 seated representatives, one having only speaking privileges because he did not receive enough votes in the general election to gain voting representation. He represents the married district. OUT OF THE PRESENT 30 members of the ASC,10 represent schools of the University. The remaining 20 represent living districts.The school representatives were selected last spring. AT THIS MEETING, the newly elected representatives from living districts were sworn in. One other member in the ASC, the representative from professional fraternities and co-op houses, has only speaking privileges. At this week's ASC meeting, one of the college representatives, Bill Rothenberger, Hays sophomore, representing the School of Engineering, resigned. He was replaced by Richard Cooksey, Iola freshman. The ASC members are: Name From the schools of the University: Roy Deem, Joplin, Mo., senior Carol McMillen, Coldwater senior Gene Gaines, Joplin, Mo., senior Richard Cooksey, Iola freshman Charlotte Masters, Advance, Mo., charlotte Masters, Advance, Mo., senior senior Loree Antenner, Bazine senior Melvin Saferstein, St. Joseph, Mo. graduate student graduate student Ezqueli Munoz, Topeka senior Verne Gauby, Grand Island, Neb., School Party School Party Business Vox Populi College Vox Populi College University Party Engineering University Party Fine Arts Vox Populi Education Vox Populi Graduate Vox Populi third year law student Ronald Gagliar, Fort Scott senior Journalism Vox Populi Pharmacy Vox Populi Law Vox Populi Representatives from living districts: Name FRATERNITIES: Lee Ayres, St. Joseph, Mo., sophomore Dean Salter, Garden City junior Robert Cash, Lawrence junior Jerry Dickson, Newton junior David Gough, Chanute junior Party (Continued on page 12) University Party Vox Populi Vox Populi Vox Populi University Party Community Chest in many towns, is held so people can give one large contribution to charity," said Charles Hess, Kansas City senior and Campus Chest committee chairman. "That way they won't be asked for donations by a lot of different organizations during the year." The Dukes of Dixieland was organized soon after World War II by Frankie and Freddie Assunto, trumpeter and trombonist, who are still with the group. Both received their musical training from their father. OTHER long-time members of the group are Roger Johnston, who plays drums; Artie Seelig, piano, and Bill Potter, bass. The Dukes' first big break came when they were signed for a month-long stand at the Famous Door in New Orleans. They were so popular they were retained for over five years. They signed a long-term contract to appear at the Preview Lounge in Chicago in 1955. They have just completed a series of performances at Eddy's Night Club in Kansas City. TOKYO — (UPI) — Red China hinted today it may take action if the United States ignores its repeated protests against U.S. military aid to Communist-attacked South Viet Nam. Red China Issues Viet Nam Threat A Peiping broadcast quoting a "serious warning" from the Red regime said the Communists "absolutely cannot be indifferent to the adventurous deeds of the United States." Observers familiar with the Peiping jargon said this phraseology amounted to a threat of some kind of Red Chinese action in the matter. "If the U.S. government does not stop its . . . aggressive acts, it must bear full responsibility for breaching the peace of Indo China and Southeast Asia," the statement declared. It urged Britain and Russia to "take effective and timely measures to check the outrageous actions of the United States." Britain and Russia were co-chairmen of the 1954 conference which partitioned Indo-China. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday. November 30.1951 The Restless Generation An interesting pattern of campus political activity is beginning to form. It has become increasingly evident in the last two years. A conservative movement is developing steadily. This spring the Young Republicans issued a statement in support of Goldwater conservatism. Charles McIlwaine, Wichita senior and president of the Young Republicans last year, strengthened his position by gaining the chairmanships of the Young Republicans of Kansas and of a region consisting of Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Missouri and Iowa. McILWAINE ALSO EXPRESSED SUPPORT for the House Un-American Activities Committee and the Young Americans for Freedom, a conservative youth organization that also supports the Goldwater philosophy. This fall the Young Americans for Freedom came to KU. A chapter of the organization formed on the KU campus and is planning its development. But liberal elements are active at KU also. Liberal elements supporting the retention of the National Student Association at KU fought hard to keep it here and are presently fighting to bring it back following KU's disaffiliation this fall. In the area of civil rights, a group of liberals represented mainly by the Civil Rights Council is working to rid the campus and Lawrence of discrimination involving students. A quickly shattered attempt was even made to establish a conservative group patterned after the John Birch Society this spring. THE NEGRO STUDENTS HAVE BEGUN to take strong action on their own against discrimination. One example of this is the march they staged this fall calling for a refusal by the administration to list discriminatory renters on the university housing list. Other elements are involved in the campus political picture. A new discussion program called the Presidential Forum was formed to discuss problems similar to those the U.S. presidency involves, such as civil defense and nuclear testing. At present plans are being made for a university sponsored "World Crisis Day." This special program will consist of a convocation and smaller seminars dealing with the international tensions caused by such things as the arms race and nuclear testing. These developments have all taken place in the last two years. They represent a definite increase in student activity and interest. The Presidential Forum and the Crisis Day program reflect recognition by both administration and faculty members of this increased interest about social and political problems among students. MUCH OF THE INTEREST HAS BEEN channeled into the new conservatism that is appearing on the college campuses of the United States. The establishment of the Young Americans for Freedom and the support it and the Young Republicans have given the Goldwater brand of conservatism inject a new element into campus political life. The increasing activity by the Civil Rights Council and the Negro students themselves against discrimination is also a recent development. The determination of these people shows that they will continue their efforts. THIS PATTERN IS NOT MERELY a fluctuation in KU's political atmosphere. It is part of a movement all over the United States. The American Negro is fighting against discrimination throughout the United States, and Negro students are playing a large role in this fight. The conservative movement is spreading to universities in all parts of the United States. There is general recognition that U.S. students are becoming increasingly interested in and vocal on national and international issues. This is a marked change from the old label attached to the present college population of "the silent generation." The change is still going on. As the present generation students leave the colleges and universities and enter their various occupations, these changes in their attitudes and beliefs will be felt in the national life. How wide their effect will be and how deep it will go is yet unanswered. But there is no doubt that their influence will be felt. "The silent generation" is gone. Letters to the Editor George School Not Right Wing Editor; —William H. Mullins I should like to call your attention to what I believe is a misreading of history. In your editorial on the Henry George School, you describe the speaker at the Minority Opinion Forum and the school as spokesman of "the right wing variety." I do not believe this is justified. Nor is your linking of the George school with the John Birch Society a legitimate conclusion. As for the George school and its followers being members of the "lunatic fringe" well now this is uncalled for. The School is a respected if antiquated, approach to a basic problem which we still have not solved: an equitable, fair and foolproof tax system. The probable truth is that the Henry George school of thought is much closer to the left than to the right. Perhaps some digging into history will reveal this. May I also take issue with your call to the forum to invite other rightists? I for one think we ought to invite some leftists. Does anyone agree? Joan Gentle 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 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. The Rough Edge By Bill Mullins It just occurred to us that chemists are liable to learn how to make a reasonably good human being, which would make sex obsolete and throw the advertising agencies into a panic. \* \* \* --sons to go out of the state to school -- but such events may be viewed as unfortunate imperfections in the idealized, rational model in terms of which most thinking people are planning the future of the nation. *** \* \* \* A Russian journalist visiting the United States mentioned that they still set type by hand in his country. This is not as much of a handicap as you might think, since they plan the news long before it happens. A friend was incensed at my asking him what he believed in recently. He does not care for these subjects he is not informed about. It is a tough job going over political speeches for meaningful statements. When you cross out all the vague rhetoric, the whole speech has disappeared. By David C. McClelland These characters who like to reminisce about the "good old days" had better find some way to censor history. * * A new dance called the twist has arrived at KU. Personally, we are not too enthusiastic about it. It reminds us of the movements we saw a fellow go through on an ice street just before he broke his leg. * * The biggest contributing factor to the delinquency of children is their parents. Encouraging Excellence * * After counting up the "serious warnings" issued to the United States by Red China, we begin to wonder if this is some kind of game the boys in Peking play in their lighter moments. Americans have already discovered, and are pursuing with alarming vigor, a system for encouraging excellence. It may be summed up briefly in the following formula: "the best boys should go to the best schools and then on to the best jobs." The implications of the formula are eminently practical: the nation engages in a country-wide talent search to discover by means of objective psychological tests who the ablest youngsters are. The tests identify the ablest students regardless of race, creed, color, economic condition, or teacher's opinion. Once discovered, these students ideally go to the best schools. In order to facilitate the process, the schools, in their turn, participate in the talent search and encourage the best students to apply. Since many of the colleges currently defined as best are in the expensive Ivy League, National Merit Scholarships are provided so that the ablest young people can attend them. Once they are in the best colleges, the students, if they continue to do their academic best, can look forward to being recruited by professional schools or business for the most important positions in developing and serving the nation. THE AMERICAN FORMULA for encouraging excellence involves a single upward mobility ladder based on academic performance and running from West Redwing, Minnesota, to Harvard, to President of the United States or General Dynamics. The formula is an attractive one and has always appealed to important American values — like belief in achievement and in giving everyone a fair chance to get ahead according to his merit. Only recently, however, we have been in a position to put it into effect with any real efficiency. We have developed objective psychological tests that can be and have been administered to tens of thousands, if not millions, of students, so that we can discover the ablest ones quickly and within small margins of error. We have begun to get better organized in providing nation-wide scholarship competitions administered by some of the better universities or independently. Mass communication networks — the radio, the press, TV — have knit the country together so that the talented boy in West Redwing has a better chance of knowing than he did a generation ago that Ivy League colleges exist and that in the rankings of institutions for academic merit, they stand at the top. Shouldn't he, as the ablest boy in his town, go to the place where he can get the best education and have the greatest chance to realize his own potential and be of most use to his country? Isn't this the model of success most Americans have in mind when they think about "encouraging excellence" today? To be sure, local considerations still apply — alumni bring pressure to admit a quarterback, or Alabamans may not want their IN FACT, TO RAISE any questions about the rational model is a little like being against virtue. It is so obviously practical, efficient, democratic, and non-authoritarian. For, after all, no one is forcing anybody to do anything. In fact, the model calls only for creating a climate of persuasion in which excellence is defined, identified, and encouraged to go to the top. Why, then, does it make us slightly uneasy? Why does it positively give John Hersey the shivers in "The Child Buyer?" His Orwellian nightmare revolves precisely around what happens when the ablest boy in a small town is offered the "best" kind of education (though it is considerably different from Harvard's) in order to maximize his own potentialities and his contribution to his country. Why does Jerome S. Bruner state with some concern that "the danger signs of meritocracy and a new form of competitiveness are already in evidence"? What has led Dael Wolfle of the American Association for the Advancement of Science to insist on the diversity of talent? Let us look at the balance sheet for a moment: what do we gain by such a system and what do we lose? On the credit side, it has certainly helped to set uniformly high academic standards everywhere and to provide an upward channel of mobility for talented youngsters no matter what their social class or racial background may be. Not even Texans can argue for the superiority of their academic institutions if their students regularly score lower on scholastic achievement tests. And no one can deny that a high test score and a National Merit Scholarship have given many an underprivileged boy or girl a break they would never otherwise have had. These are important matters; we believe in an open society with rewards given for uniformly high standards of achievement and, to a very considerable extent, we have created one. Access to high-level positions in our society probably depends less on social class background and more on individual merit than in any other country today. Why complain? We do indeed have a great deal to be proud of, and a long way to go in introducing the academic merit system everywhere in the country, yet we must also look ahead lest such a system lead us into a kind of overspecialized excellence that would be as fatal in the long run as the overspecialization of the dinosaur. (This is the first in a series of (Articles taken from an article published in The Journal of Academic Performance on the Admissions Process" which appeared in the Faith and Freedom of Daedelus, the journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.) Worth Repeating On the goals of education: The Founding Fathers could not have understood the mass education of today any more than they could our mass production in Detroit. Still less could they have grasped the modern failure to distinguish between the process of making a machine and the process of making a man—Robert I. Gannon ... Each college or university has a personality. Anybody who has spent time at a college knows it, feels it, but can't always define it.—David Boroff In making the rounds, I was struck by the fact that schools divide into two kinds: those which we might call adolescent reservations, fenced off from serious adult concerns, and those which represent a transition to adulthood.-David Boroff It is important to remember that a university's reputation is usually based on its graduate schools, not on the quality of undergraduate instruction. Few people know this—except disgruntled undergraduates—for the great universities keep their reputations golden through research breakthroughs, Big Names, and books, books, books. What takes place in freshman composition or World Civilization is of less moment.-David Boroff LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Page 3 R2 BYBER "SO I GAVE HIM BACK HIS OLE FRATERNITY FIN." the took world By Martha Eissenstat Assistant Instructor of English HOSPITAL, by Kenneth Fearing. Ballantine Books, 35 cents. Those who delight in reading about the antiseptic and ether of a hospital might be drawn to read Kenneth Fearing's "The Hospital." The book would be a disappointment, for the hospital atmosphere seems forced, merely a place where the soap opera characters can operate (pun intentional). The plot is thin and melodramatic with only one character, Helen Russell, attaining any degree of humanness and showing any emotion which might be called real—in her case, relief. THE BOOK IS WORTH SOME TIME as a study in just how poorly a book can be written and still get published, much less reprinted. Written in 1939, it seems to be a parody on Hemingway and Dos Passos. Covering a period of about three to four hours, it is divided into sections headed by the character's name in which this character thinks, talks, and acts—patterned after Dos Passos. Instead of giving us a series of good character sketches, this device merely confuses because of the poor writing. Each character sounds exactly like the character who appeared before him. One character gains some individuality by interspersing "my God" every other line. Also mimicking Dos Passos, the author has interwoven the "Annual Report: Hudson General Hospital" between the characters. Attempts to capture Hemingway's barren but nevertheless effective style results in such sparkling writing as— "The nurse wheels the patient in from our anesthesia room, and we get her up on the operating table. I sit down by the patient's head, bring the big stand into place and adjust the mask." or Miss Marmon: "I notice, then, that the switchboard fan is slowing. Now it stops. Maybe there's something the matter with the hourse (sic, typical of the poor proofreading) current everywhere." THE ATTEMPT AT IMMEDIACY by the present tense completely fails because the author apparently forgot what he was doing and occasionally writes a section in the past. This serves to completely confuse the reader, who is having enough trouble trying to keep track of the characters. One aspect is somewhat interesting. Written in the thirties, the book does capture some of the atmosphere of the depression: the object poverty—the indignity of burial in potter's field, the impersonality of the clinic care, the antiseptic indifference of the nurse to the body she prepares for the morgue and the allusions to the Red Scare and to the violence of strikes (one longshoreman has acid thrown in his eyes). Otherwise the book is a waste of time. Kenneth Fearing has written much better works. Worth Repeating College faculties should be shaken up a little. Intramural warfare notwithstanding, life is too easy for many. There are the ineluctable corruptions of teaching; the too-quick dominion over students' minds, the sleazy omniscience, the sacerdotal aura of the lectern. It would be wise to have more faculty seminars, and teams of teachers handling the same class in active opposition to each other. All too often it is considered bad taste for professors to discuss ideas—they are inherently monologists—and some faculty dining rooms have the starchy chattiness of a British officers' mess.—David Boroff Fallout Is Topic Of Special Meeting Thursday, November 30,1961 University Daily Kansan Edward A. Martell, from the office of aerospace research, will be featured speaker at a special session of Kansas chapter of Sigma Xi, honorary scientific research society, at 7:30 p.m. today. Mr. Martell will speak on "The Influence of the Atmosphere on World Wide Fallout." Mr. Martell is determining world wide fallout from radioactive samples taken during high altitude flights of balloons, rockets and aircraft. He has recently observed the distribution of Rhodium 102 which was formed as a radioactive tracer in a hydrogen bomb explosion in 1958. Greek Monastery Lecture Subject St. Catherine's, the oldest Greek orthodox monastery, is the subject of a lecture to be given here tomorrow at 4 p.m. Fred Anderegk, head of photographic services at the University of Michigan and official photographer for an expedition which explored the Mt. Sinai monastery, will speak in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union on "The Monastery of St. Catherine on Mt. Sinai." Mr. Anderegg helped photograph parts of the monastery with a group of professors from the Universities of Michigan, Princeton and Alexandria, Egypt, during the summer of 1958. One of the principal results of Mr. Anderegg's photography was a complete record of the huge mosaic of the Transfiguration of Christ above the monastery's altar. Many documents and manuscripts were found in the monastery. Entrance to St. Catherine's is limited by pass from the Greek Archbishop of Cairo. If we open a quarrel between the past and the present, we shall find that we have lost the future.—Sir Winston Churchill A ALWAYS THE RIGHT MOVE! There are no "ifs, ands or buts" about it! Want ads are your smartest move for quick results! Read and use the want ads daily — you'll find these small ads at small cost offer bigger bargains; sell your excess possessions for more money; give you whopping big results in record time! Stop thinking . . . start acting! Make your move today! Read and use the want ads to buy, sell, trade or find! Call the University Daily Kansan Business Office, WANT ADS THE MARKET PLACE OF MILLIONS NATIONAL WANT AD WEEK Flint Hall, Kansas University. Telephone VI 3-2700 extension 376. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 30, 1961 Greece International Music Project THE DUKES OF DIXIELAND—Fred and Frank Assunto, 24-year-old members of the Dukes of Dixieland, received their musical training from their father, Jac Assunto, right. The Dukes will give a concert Sunday at 8 p.m. in Hoech Auditorium to kick off the Campus Chest drive. Housemothers Play Key Role Bv Joanne Zabornik Housemothers are as much a part of a college campus as the ivy on the buildings or perhaps even the professors themselves. Think of the magnitude and the responsibility of the role which requires one woman to be a "mother away from home" for fifty or sixty college students. Her position is indeed a strenuous one, "requiring long hours and a great deal of physical vitality and vigor," as it is described in the letter which is sent to prospective applicants by the Dean of Women's Office. Consider the housemother's responsibility for ordering food and planning menus. No matter how hard one tries, it's virtually impossible to find a house full of 60 people who all like brussels sprouts! ANOTHER DUTY stated in the letter is "helping students with their social planning." The housemother also assists the governing body of the house, the student officers, in upholding University and house regulations. In women's houses this means staying up until closing to make sure all women that signed out have returned to the house. She is hired by the fraternal group itself, with the approval of the Dean of Men or Dean of Women and she is directly responsible to that University official, as well as to her group and its advisory board. IT IS HER POISE, her personality, and her moral character which influence the standards, the manners and the social conduct of the entire living group. She is the official hostess of the house. One point on which most students living in organized houses agree is that a housemother should be enthusiastic. She should be interested in the students and their activities. Moreover, she should have an understanding of college students. There are 50 housemothers on the hill living in 13 sorority houses, 27 fraternity houses, 4 women's scholarship halls, 5 men's scholarship halls and Hodder Hall, a small women's dormitory. SHINING GRAY HAIR plus shining smiles seem to be their most common denominator and walking into one of their apartments seems to make one feel really "at home." Mrs. D. L. Anderson is the new housemother at the Alpha Omieron Pi house, but the job itself is nothing new as this is the eleventh year she has held such a position. Her first three years as a housemother were spent at the KU Phi Kappa Theta house. The next seven years were spent at the Phi Delta Theta house at Washburn University in Topeka. She came back to KU because many of her friends who were housemothers 11 years ago are still here and also because she enjoyed it here so much the first time. Mrs. Anderson has had the experience of being a housemother in both a sorority and a fraternity house, but prefers sororities. "You enjoy the courtesy that it is natural for a man to show a woman, she said, "but, I like the closer communion I feel with the women." "GUESS WHAT," said one of her wards who poked her head through the doorway on her way to her room. "I think I did a lot better on this French test than I did on the last one." "That's what I mean," said Mother Anderson after the girl had left. "The girls are ready to share everything with you." Mrs. Nan Piper has been a housemother at the Sigma Kappa house for three years. Mrs. Piper's conversation is punctuated with smiles and laughter and if you look close enough you can see a devilish glint in her eye when she teases one of her girls. Living alone in an apartment, as Mrs. Piper once did, can be lonely and after a little prodding from her friends she decided to apply for a position as a housemother. MOTHER PIPER CHOSE a sorority because she felt that she would be able to better understand women than she would men. "Also," she added, "women are more interested in you as a person rather than as a housemother." Mrs. Marietta Jackson is starting her second year as housemother at Foster Scholarship Hall. "I'm happy I chose KU," she said, "because I have a group of boys that are closer than most and who are 'brains,' too!" MRS. JACKSON BOASTS of the night she shared her TV with a capacity crowd of 23 boys. "When that many come in we have to move the coffee table out," she said, "but I love to have them here." PHONO PHONO-RECORDS at All Popular Records New Shipment Just Received DISCOUNT STEREO & MONORAL Reg. $5.98 Now $4.97 Reg. $4.98 Now $3.97 Reg. $3.98 Now $2.97 Reg. $1.98 Now $1.58 904 Mass. V VINCENTS S VI 3-2011 Some women will invest in a beauty shop, or a gift or food stand. SMOP week begins today. This is the time campus women don an appropriate outfit, a salesman's manner and a housewife's value of a dollar and set themselves up in business. SMOP Week Begins Today Propaganda Battle In Far East Topic Mr. Pringsheim's talk will deal with propaganda efforts by the United States and Communist China in the Far East. Gottschalk Wins Billards Klaus Pringsheim, instructor of political science, will speak on "The Cold War in Asia" at the Current Events Forum in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union tomorrow at 4 p.m. Tom Gottschalk, Garden City freshman, is the winner of the first event in the Jay Bowl billiards tournament. Gottschalk won over George Maier, Lawrence junior, in the three-cushion billiards finals. Play in the second billiards event, 14-1 continuous, is presently in the first round with the finals slated for Sunday. No house should ever be built on any hill or on anything. It should be of the hill, belonging to it, so hill and house could live together each the happier for the other.—Frank Lloyd Wright Some will be shining shoes. Others will manage a baby-sitting agency. And even those less inclined to work will be busy raffling off their sorority sisters for odd jobs. The funds raised from this drive are given in a scholarship to an outstanding KU woman. The scholarship is given in memory of KU women who died while in school. These hard-working women hope that everyone will SMOP with them or "Support Merrily Our Project." The SMOP working projects are a part of the annual AWS fund raising drive for the Women's Memorial Scholarship. The women's houses are in competition for the best working project. Dean Emily Taylor will trade places for a day with the president of the winning house as a prize. The houses will be judged on the amount of money received per capita, the most original idea and the largest number of participants. sales - service - rentals Typewriters Olympia Portables Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 This is ATTENTION Pay ATTENTION to our future ads We'll tell you more about our many services as we go along! A TTENTION is what your car gets at Fritz Co. -- No detail of service is too small. That's why we have so many satisfied repeat customers. △ FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE Bowl Trip Excites Mitchell You'd think by watching Jack Mitchell that he's headed for his first football bowl game. United Press International The handsome, cigar-puffing 38-year-old Kansas University coach was as nervous as a kitten as he waited for his players' decision this week on the Dec. 16 Bluebonnet Bowl at Houston, Tex. MITCHELL PACED BACK and forth outside the closed doors where the players were voting. He gnawed at a cigar and kept running his fingers through his hair. When team spokesman John Hall opened the door and announced that the players had voted to go, Mitchell broke out in a big grin, flipped his chewed cigar into a nearby trash can, and said, "I'm glad we're going — because I like to play football." HE PLAYED WITH Oklahoma teams which defeated North Carolina State 34-13 in the 1947 Gator Bowl and North Carolina 14-6 in the 1949 Sugar Bowl, and he was an assistant coach at Texas Tech in 1951 when that team won the Border Conference and whipped College of Pacific 25-14 in the Sun Bowl. Actually, these post-season bowl engagements are old stuff for Mitchell. "But this is my first bowl team as head coach." Mitchell said, "and I have to admit it's a different kind of thrill." The popular Jayhawk coach, who was awarded a lifetime contract last year after leading Kansas to a 7-2-1 season, will be guiding the second bowl team in the school's history. Kansas defeated Georgia Tech 20-14 in the 1948 Orange Bowl in its only previous appearance. MITCHELL IS CALM and collected, as college football coaches go. He keeps his composure—most of the time—on the field, although he is constantly gnawing on his cigar or a blade or grass. But the energetic Jayhawk coach bubbles with energy and enthusiasm, and his exhuberance spreads throughout his coaching staff and team. Page 9 "Jack is so enthusiastic that you know he believes in what he's saying and doing, so you believe in it too," Kansas assistant coach Bill Pace said. "EVEN AS A PLAYER, Jack's enthusiasm was catching and inspirational. His enthusiasm for football was so great that nothing was too unimportant to receive his full attention," said Bobby Goad, a teammate of Mitchell at Oklahoma and former Kansas assistant. Mitchell still holds several individual records at Oklahoma, where he played from 1945-1949. He wound up his college career by quarterbacking the Sooners to their victory over North Carolina in the Sugar Bowl after they had compiled a 9-1 record for the regular season. In his three years as Oklahoma's first-string quarterback, Mitchell helped lead the Sooners to 25 victories, five losses and one tie. HE HEAS CONTINUED his winning ways as a coach, compiling a 14-5. 1 record in two years as head man at Wichita; 17-12-1 mark in three seasons at Arkansas; and 22-15-3 ir four years at Kansas. Kansas was deprived of a Bowl game a year ago when it was slapped with an NCAA probation. "The seniors on our ball team this year certainly deserved a bowl bid." Mitchell said. "They have played good, sound football for three years and I feel it is fitting and rewarding that the Bluebonnet Bowl selection committee asked us to play." THE MAIN THING worrying Mitchell now is who the Jayhawks opponent will be. Several teams have been mentioned, with Rice and Baylor the most prominent. Rice reportedly has been tendered an invitation, provided it beats Baylor Saturday. "Rice and Kansas would be a good match," Mitchell said, "provided it is Rice. ISSAN Jack Mitchell JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT University Daily Kansan Photography by Studio de Portra 912 Mass. — Lawrence, Kan. V1 2-2300 Sororities & Fraternities Contact us for your House Photography "UNTIL WE KNOW for sure, we will run through conditioning drills and keep in shape. Then, as soon as our opponent is named we can start formulating definite offensive and defensive plans." - Application - Creative Color or Black & White - Portraits Mitchell admits he was a little disappointed with his team's 6-3-1 record this year, but adds, "with a little luck we could have had an undefeated season." 30. Kansas lost two games by one point, another by three points, and battled underdog Wyoming to a 6-6 tie. "We don't have that long gainer this year. . . that breakaway threat," Mitchell said, "but we have a good football team and will give a good account of ourselves in the Bluebonnet Bowl." SOUTH BEND, Ind.—(UPI)—Notre Dame today should receive the official NCAA ruling that its game-winning field goal over Syracuse was illegal but it may not be the "final" decision. A letter has been mailed to the Irish by NCAA President Henry Hardt of Texas Christian University, backing up the opinion of rules committee Chairman Robert R. Neyland of Tennessee that the 41-yard field goal by Joe Perkowski came on a down which should not have been permitted by the officials. Notre Dame yesterday had not received the letter and Athletic Director Moose Krause had no comment until the opinion has been received. It was believed likely that the Irish again would request a study of the interpretation by the officials, which allowed the extra down, by the full rules committee. Executive Vice President Rev. Edmund P. Joyce Tuesday asked the NCAA for such a hearing. Notre Dame is not obligated to concede the victory to Syracuse, now on record as defeated by a 17-15 score. The rules provide "no redress" and thus neither Neyland nor the NCAA can reverse the score. Dispute Remains Over Field Goal Should the Irish renew this demand, then presumably the decision would be delayed until January when the rules committee meets to discuss possible changes for 1962. Thursday, Nov. 1961 Topeka May Lose Baseball Franchise TAMPA, Fla. — (UPI) — Topeka may be without professional baseball next season. Ken Blackman of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, president of the Three-I League, announced here yesterday that the six clubs which operated in the league last year were unable to find enough Major League affiliates. Knowledge and timber shouldn't be much used till they are seasoned. 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Old Spice SHULTON AFTER SHAVE LOTION Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 30, 1961 Hawk Basketball Lies Between Great Tradition, Bright Future By Bill Sheldon Kansas has been playing intercollegiate basketball for 61 years and during that time there have been only 11 losing seasons for Jayhawk quintets. In conference play, spanning 53 years, there has never been a last place finish and KU squads have finished in the second division only five times. But on the eve of a new era of basketball, the outlook is dimmer than it has been since 1948 when the Crimson and Blue had a 9-15 mark. Certainly this season, which opens tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in Allen Field House here with Arkansas, marks the low ebb of Coach Dick Harp's tenure as head man after the retirement of Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen. HARP, A LONG TIME assistant to Dr. Allen, has compiled a 109-62 won-loss record in his five seasons at the Hawk helm. This includes an outright championship, a title tie, a second, a runner-up tie, and a third place deadlock in Big Eight competition. But this could be the season when the Hawkers finish in the lower half of the standings for the first time since the Big Eight was formed in 1958 and the first below the middle mark since 1956. It is no secret that the Jayhawkers are, for all practical purposes, out of the title picture and will have to struggle to end up in the top four. With the traditional Kansas-championship combination out of the picture and hopes already looking towards next winter, how is the present squad and Coach Harp preparing for the 25-game schedule facing them? What is their attitude? KU PLAYS SOME of the top teams in the nation again and this makes the season even longer. One of the big worries of the KU mentor is that his squad will get overly discouraged if it gets beaten too much or by some wide margins. After all, Jayhawker basketball players have traditionally not been accustomed to losing, and not many have gone through a season where defeat by an embarrassing score was even occasional. "The team spirit now is real good. But this may be a big problem if we get beat a lot," said a long-faced Coach Harp. Harp must depend upon the experience and leadership of guards Jerry Gardner and Nolen Ellison to carry his team into the upper echelon of the league. His major problem is along the front line, and especially at center. SLATED TO START for KU at the pivot is rangy junior John Matt. Behind this strong 6-6 letterman will be only footballer Lee Flachsbarth who has had only a couple of days of practice. "I lie awake for hours every night trying to think of something, someway we can help John," said Harp. "John has got to go after the ball and rebound for us and if this problem can be solved to a certain degree we can do a lot to help ourselves in other areas," commented Harp. The leader on the floor will be Gardner. "WE HAVE TO SOLVE our own problems before we can start worrying about the other team." said the senior playmaker when asked if he had seen any movies of Arkansas of last season. (KU hasn't played the Razorbacks since 1946.) "We have had some good practice this week with the emphasis on offense. When we get in trouble during a game, we have to know what to do with the ball." continued Gardner There is very little optimism among any of the team members on this year's squad, but yet practice operates at a very fast, spirited pace with abundant enthusiasm and tremendous effort in evidence. The reason? The freshmen. COACH HARP HAS the top 10 members of assistant Coach Ted Owens' fresh team work out with the varsity during practice. Since KU has what Harp has called "the best freshman team in 12 years," having a joint practice strengthens both groups. "It will be fun bringing along some of the freshmen and working with them. They, along with the men on the varsity, are all outstanding," said Harp with a longing pause in contemplation of the future. Thus, although the picture is bleak for this winter for the Kansas basketball team, it appears as though the transition back to title contention will be a quick and pleasant one with definite results showing in the next couple of seasons—a return to the tradition of championship basketball which has long lingered on Mt. Oread. See HARRELL'S TEXACO for all your automotive needs 9th & Mississippi Christmas Special! for the entire family Bedroom Slippers $1^{99} - $4^{99} REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. HAIR STYLES FOR THE HOLIDAYS Vacation time is near at hand. Now is the time to come down and have your hair done for the holidays. "We're Interested in How You Look" D DRISCOLL 908 Mass. BEAUTY SALON VI 3-4070 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers ENGINEERS PHYSICISTS MATHEMATICIANS TLANTIC Interviews will be conducted by visiting members of our Research and Engineering Staff. See your Placement Office now for an appointment. INTERVIEW DATE ON THIS CAMPUS: A limited number of Litton Study-Work Fellowships are available to B.S. graduates of high academic achievement. Applied Science, Data Systems, Guidance & Control, Maryland & Westex Divisions DECEMBER 4 LITTON SYSTEMS, INC. Woodland Hills, California Great New LPs from by the GREATEST NAMES IN JAZZ! Litton Systems, Inc., with engineering and manufacturing facilities in Southern California, Waltham, Massachusetts, and College Park, Maryland, has positions available now for Ph.D., M.S. and B.S. candidates in these fields: INERTIAL GUIDANCE AND CONTROL TACTICAL DATA PROCESSING SYSTEMS COMPUTER AND CONTROL SYSTEMS TECHNICAL SUPPORT ENGINEERING ADVANCED COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUES 4 RAY CHARLES The Genius Sings the Blues 8052 (mono only) A great blues album by the greatest blues singer of them all — Ray Charles. Some other Ray Charles LPs: The Genius After Hours 1369 The Genius of Ray Charles 1312 Ray Charles in Person 8039 1. Tell Me How You Feel 2. I Got a Woman 3. Heartbreaker 4. Tell the Truth 1. What'd I Say 2. Talkin' 'Bout You 3. You Be My Baby 4. Leave My Woman Alone 5. I'm Movin' On THE GENIUS SINGS THE BLUES RAY CHARLES DO THE TWIST! WITH RAY CHARLES Atlantic 8054 These two great new releases regularly $3.98 limited time- $2.97 --open every night till 8 p.m. DEC.1 OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT ENTIRE RAY CHARLES CATALOG LIMITED TIME 10% DISCOUNT - Ray Charles in Person - What'd I Say - The Genius of Ray Charles - Genius After Hours - Rock 'n Roll - Ray Charles - Soul Brothers, Milt Jackson & Ray Charles - Ray Charles at Newport - The Great Ray Charles KIEF'S RECORDS & HI-FI MALLS SHOPPING CENTER - GREAT SALES - Thursday, November 30, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Around the Campus I-State English Poet Topic KU's debate squad left today for the State University of Iowa for a three-day tournament there. Representing KU will be Dean Salter, Garden City junior; Dan Crary, Kansas City junior; Louis Lawrence, Great Bend senior, and Joy Bullis, Davenport, Iowa, freshman. Bullis and Lawrence gathered four wins to two losses in the Central States Debate Tournament recently. Summer Opportunities KU-Y Forum Focus Information will be given on the Hong Kong Project, the U.S.S.R. Student Exchange Program, Washington D.C. summer seminars, New York City, Chicago and Colorado job opportunities, the Union Theological Seminary, travel and study in Europe, and work camps in Mexico and the Middle East. The KU-Y will conduct a forum at 7:30 tonight at the Kansas Union for students interested in summer opportunities. Students who have participated in these programs in the past will be present to lead discussions. Applications for many opportunities will be due shortly. Hember Top Bowler John Hember, Overland Park junior, owns the second high game and series in Big Eight varsity bowling action to date. Hember, top KU kegler with a 195 average for 30 games, had a 266 game and a 645 series. Missouri's Angstead is the top Big Eight bowler with a 269 game and a high series of 636. Monday the Jayhawk bowling team matches Nebraska in a postal meet. Architects' Workshop The Fourth Annual Architects Workshop on Office Practice is being held today, tomorrow and Saturday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Speakers for the event will be Daniel Schwartzmann, F.A.I.A., of New York; Rolf Sklarek, AIA, Victor Gruen Associates, of Los Angeles and Ted Griest, AIA, of Topeka. Fees for the workshop are $90. Franklyn Nelick, associate professor of English, will speak on the life and works of English poet, Gerard Manley Hopkins, at this week's SUA poetry hour. The poetry hour will be held at 4 p.m. today in the Music Room of the Kansas Union. A Jesuit priest, Father Hopkins, did much of his writing between 1885 and his death in 1889. He is known for his experiments in verse form. 'Boy Friend' Musical To Run Nine Days "The Boy Friend," a musical comedy with a setting in the 1920's, will be presented by the University Players at 8 p.m. Dec. 4-12. The play will feature Larry Snee-gas, Lawrence senior; Sharon Scoville, Kansas City junior; Karin Gold, Overland Park sophomore; Steve Booser, Kansas City junior; Kay Carroll, El Dorado junior; and Tom Woodard, Des Moines, Iowa sophomore, in leading roles. Tickets are on sale for $1.00 at the Kansas Union, Keif's on the Malls, Bell's downtown, and the University Theatre box office. Germanic Evening The International Club's German-Austrian evening will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Songs by German and Austrian students will be a part of the evening's activities. There also will be an exchange of Christmas presents (costing from 5 to 25 cents). Japanese Haiku Forum Topic Japanese Haiku, a poetic form related to Zen Buddhism will be the topic of discussion at the next KU-Y Frosh Forum at 7 p.m. Dec. 7. The featured lecturer will be Leon Zalbrod of the Oriental language and literature department. A discussion will follow. Everyone is invited to attend. The mutual confidence on which all else depends can be maintained only by an open mind and a brave reliance upon free discussion. Learned Hand Give a Record for CHRISTMAS CLASSICS POPS JAZZ SOUND TRACKS & SHOWS The Gift That Keeps on Giving BELL MUSIC CO. 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 SIC FLICS --- SIC FLICS Chesterfield "Look! Fiedler's back from vacation!" Chesterfield KING CIGARETTES LIGGETT E. MYERS TOBACCO CO. 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD - THEY SATISFY I A MAN'S SUIT with those extras Here is a fine suit with all the features you have been looking for. .and only $49.50 A 3-piece 100% worsted suit . . natural shoulder. . narrow lapel . . lapped seams . . pleatless trousers .. narrow leg. A SMOOTH NEW LOOK IN BLACK OR BLACK-OLIVE. $49.50 Alterations Included The Friendliest Clothiers In Lawrence Town Shop DOWNTOWN University Shop Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 30, 1961 A Kansan Profile: Storer Critical of Space Race Ey Tom Winston N. W. Storer, professor of astronomy since 1935, feels that U.S. space program efforts are being spent in the wrong way. Twelve years ago Prof. Storer told one of his classes: "I can't believe that we are going to lose the moon within the next 100 years," he said. He admitted at the time that it was scientifically possible, but he felt the scientific value of a moon voyage wasn't worth the billions of dollars it would cost. He didn't feel Congress would think so either. TODAY, WHEN TRAFFIC to the moon looks decidedly probable, Prof. Storer still sticks to his guns. "I can't believe there is scientific value in a trip to the moon anywhere nearly commensurate with the amount of money it would cost," he said. "While I'll admit something could come of it, I would not be willing to pay $60 times the number of my dependents for a photograph of the other side of the moon." It would take at least $10 billion to get equipment to the other side of the moon, and probably more than that, he said. That means at least $60 for every man, woman and child (based on 160 million people). More progress in astronomy would result if we should spend 1/100 of that money ($100 million) on observatories," he said. PROF. STORER isn't alone in his view. Some weeks ago Gen Eisenhower, speaking at the Case Institute of Technology in Cleveland, Ohio, observed: "I for one do not fully understand why, in the midst of necessary and costly activities, our nation should be required, urgently to develop a capacity to put men on the moon and challenge our principal opponent to a race in doing so." "Nowadays," Prof. Storer said, "the many investigations in science need enormous sums of money. Private organizations simply can't pay for them. It has been said that science is for the amusement of scientists." Dr. Storer said That is primarily so, he added, since these interested in science are the ones who go into it. But science isn't the same today as it once was, he said. Since private organizations can no longer finance today's huge investigations in science the matter is left up to the government, and it ultimately comes back to the taxpayer. NOTICE: SEMINAR IN SWING IS CLOSING OUT Enroll Today IN PERSON!! THE PHENOMENAL DUKES OF DIXIELAND But there is good in testing rockets, Prof. Storer said. There is an observatory in New Mexico, that is cooperating with a number of universities and the National Science Foundation in investigating the ultimate possibility of getting a telescope into a rocket. AUDIO FIDELITY RECORDING ARTISTS STELLAR OPSERVATION from the earth's surface is hampered by the atmosphere, he said. There are clouds, but even when the sky is clear there is a turbulence in the atmosphere that gives about the same effect as a hot fire, spoiling the best focus. We aren't able to use even as much power as our telescopes will allow, said Prof. Storer, because we magnify the turbulence at the same time we magnify the object. Other facts than those about the moon could be more scientifically useful, Prof. Storer said. If we could get a photo of the canals on Mars we could clear up some of the mysteries about them. If we could get pictures of the sun "we could tell a good number of things about the spectrum and ultraviolet light," he said. December 3rd 8 p.m. By way of illustration, Prof. Storer pointed to a window. "WE CONSIDER IT transparent; but ultraviolet light won't go through it, because the window acts like a wall. The wave lengths of ultraviolet are much shorter than those of normal light. It takes a special kind of glass for ultraviolet light to pass through," he said. Prof. Storer believes that the pictures the Soviet Union claims to have taken two years ago of the other side of the moon are authentic. "I don't believe (the Russian scientists) would perpetrate a haox like that, because sooner or later it would kick back on them," he said. HE SAID HE DOESNT know about conditions in the Soviet Union. Perhaps the government would make them publish such statements for propaganda purposes. But most astronomers believe that the photographs are authentic. Several days ago a Watson librarian called Prof. Storer and asked him if he wanted to look at a new book. It was a translated Russian publication, an atlas of the other side of the moon. Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you planning to get married? Come Out to See One must have a good memory to be able to keep the promises one makes.—Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS 1912 West 25th St. FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED - central air conditioning - carpeted - off street parking - garbage disposal - laundry facilities 1/2 block - play area for children Phone VI 2-3416 office VI 3-8253 home Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Sweater SALE ONE GROUP WHILE THEY LAST! Reg. Price $10.95 to $19.95 1/2 OFF men's diebolt's wear 843 Mass. men's diebolt's wear 843 Mass "If you ask me-he needs some new mice. These two are worn out." CLYDE'S CLYDE'S REPAIRS TEETH PULLED GREEN STAMPS No matter what kind of engine you may have-4.6.V-8 - we will recapture its full-bodied power.Sorry,no mice . . . UNIVERSITY FORD SALES 714 Vermont E VI 3-3500 Thursday, November 30, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Death, Prison or Acquittal? Eichmann Verdict Next Month By Eliav Simon United Press International JERUSALEM (UPI) — A three-judge Israeli court will reconvene early in December to deliver its verdict in the case of Adolph Eichmann, charged with crimes against the Jewish people and against humanity for the atrocities of Nazi Germany. It is expected to take three days for the judges, reading in relays, to present their decision on each of the 15 counts against the former Gestapo officer. Twelve counts carry a possible death penalty on conviction. THROUGH THE READING, Eichmann, who was for 15 years a fugitive, will be seated again in the same bullet-proof glass box he occupied during five months of trial sessions which ended Aug. 15. Because of the unusual conditions of this extraordinary trial, a small group of men and women will learn the verdict in advance of the defendant. The translators, charged with rendering the 250-page decision in English, French, Spanish and German before the court meets, will be held under heavy police guard in a local hotel for the several days required to complete their work. EICIMANN will be returned to his cell in the improvised Jerusalem court building from Jalami prison near Haifa. The court decision will be by majority vote of the three judges on each of the 15 counts; each count will be reviewed and the verdict announced separately, with a dissenting judge making any explanation of his decision he desires. POSSIBLE VERDICTS include acquittal on all counts; a guilty verdict on a lesser count, which might carry a possible maximum sentence of 20 years imprisonment; or a guilty verdict on one or more major counts. which could result in a sentence of death. In event of acquittal, the attorney general and chief prosecutor, Gideon Hausner, may ask a retrial. If his request is granted, Eichman would be free, but forced to remain in Israel, until it begins. He may ask for, and will receive, police protection, according to Deputy State's Attorney Gideon Hasid. If the verdict is guilty, Hauser is expected to request the death penalty. Eichmann's attorney, Dr. Robert Servatius, presumably would reply with a plea for mercy and may ask to call new witnesses or offer evidence in mitigation. SENTENCE PROBABLY would be handed down a day after completion of the defense plea. Eichmann has a right of appeal to a five-man panel of Supreme Court Judges. Most Israelis believe Eichmann will be sentenced to death by hanging. No such penalty has been carried out since the establishment of the state in 1954; it does not exist except for treason or collaboration with the Nazis, and there is no hangman in Israel. HASID SAID the executioner, if needed, probably would be brought from abroad and his identity kept secret. He said letters have been received from persons volunteering for the job. The last came from a man in Rhodesia who is not a Jew. However the trial ends, the verdict and sentence will seem an anti-climax to many Israelis, who believe the trial itself served their purpose Plaza Barber Shop Appointments (Open to the public) VI 2-3950, 2222 Iowa Ken Pringle by bringing the horrors of the Nazi period to the world's view. The prosecution sought to prove Eichmann was the master hand behind Nazi policy to destroy the Jews. The defense attempted to prove he was merely "a transportation officer," a small cog in the machinery of death. "No matter what happens to Eichmann," said a woman whose family was slaughtered at Auschwitz, "nothing can ever avenge what they did to us." By the cigars they smoke, and the composers they love, ye shall know the texture of men's souls. — John Galsworthy Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 New & Used Parts and Tires Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Auto Wrecking & Junk East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. HI-FI - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION G 8 8 8 CHRISTMAS IS NEAR AT HAND! Give the gift that will always be treasured. BOWLING BALLS, BAGS, SHOES & BILLIARD CUES. Quick Service at the Jay Bowl Daily 8 a.m.-11:30 p.m. Sun. 1 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters. SANDRA MUNCHER Girls-You Can Trust Us! ...to clean your woolens carefully We give all your clothes our expert cleaning Plus our meticulous finishing! Your good wool suits and dresses deserve the finest care always! TRY US TODAY! 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE Acme UNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Downtown 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 We'll Pick-up and Deliver for You WEDNESDAY Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 30, 1961 Dominican Strife, Prestige Catalyst Bv Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst First results of the United States' limited return to gunboa diplomacy were good. The brothers Hector Bienvenido and Jose Arismendi Trujillo, reported planning a coup to restore their Dominican fortunes, packed up and left. PRESIDENT JOAQUIN Balaguer, a Trujillo holdover but proving himself remarkably tough, went on the air to appeal for national support. Crowds surged into the streets shouting, "Liberty!" Backing him were the Dominican armed forces. But this week the inevitable reaction set in. Balaguer resisted opposition demands that he step down to erase the last vestige of Trujilloism. The opposition reportedly sought to establish a junta which would rule without a congress until elections which would be put off until May, 1964. BALAGUER, on the other hand wanted to remain in office until elections could be held in May, 1962. And when the crowds surged into the streets again in answer to a general strike call by the opposition National Civic Union, the holiday spirit had given way to a more threatening mood. Outside Dominican waters but plainly visible from shore stood units of the United States Navy. Forty years ago U.S. forces had occupied the Dominican Republic, and the newspaper of the National Civic Union referred bitterly to that period, calling it "eight years of military dictatorship imposed by naval forces of the United States of America." THUS ENFLAMED,encouraged by pro-Castroites and leftists,the street crowds took on an anti-American tinge. One such, massed before a cable office, shouted threats at UPI newsman James R. Whelan when he went there to file his dispatch to New York. When the United States sent two aircraft carriers and other naval units to patrol off Dominican shores, it took a calculated risk. Another disaster such as the illfated Cuban invasion of last spring could further damage U.S. prestige around the world. Involved also were the United States' relations with its fellow members of the Organization of American States and its interpretation of the OAS charter adopted in Bogota in 1948. THE PRINCIPLES of the charter provide that all member states should be representative democracies and that no state has the right to intervene in another's internal affairs. Clearly, in the Dominican Republic, the one principle contradicted the other. Yet, in Latin America the feeling against intervention, particularly U.S. intervention, is strong. It has been strong enough to prevent hemispheric action against Cuba. Despite its early success, the U.S. calculated risk in the Dominican Republic has not yet been resolved wholly. Balaguer is certain of remaining in office only so long as the army supports him. What does the United States do if a group including pro-Castroites and leftists supplants him? VanderWerf Terms KU Chemistry'Nation's Best' Calvin VanderWerf, professor of chemistry and chairman of the department, described the chemistry program at KU as "one of the best in the country" in his recent "State of the Department" address to an undergraduate seminar. "I doubt that there is another group of 15 men on any faculty that is more productive in research," he said, referring to research by the staff. (He estimated the total research income at $750,000.) HE SAID that students will someday use textbooks written by KU chemistry staff members for every chemistry course necessary for a major in chemistry. Of Malott Hall he said "It is probably the finest building between the Mississippi River and the West Coast." He said the department is well equipped and has always been able to get any new instruments that were needed. "But much more important than the instruments . . . is the spirit," he said. He emphasized he felt the department wielded a sense of urgency, mission and accomplishment, it's greatest asset being "a real determination and zeal to do better and to be better." ALTHOUGH HE praised his staff teaching, he pointed out the high ratio of students to staff members often creates a problem, particularly in the laboratory. He said laboratory instructors are unable to give as much detailed personal attention as they would like to give, but added, "we are on the road to improving this situation." DURING THE question-and-answer period following Prof. Vander-Werf's speech, the reasons for the limited number of graduating chemistry majors were sought. The difficulty of the curriculum in general, and the first quantitative analysis course as a particular stumbling block were brought up. V. S. Vaidhyanathan, research associate in the chemistry department, said that perhaps students do not get a broad enough perspective of chemistry early enough in their study. He felt that a course surveying the entire field might help to balance the fragmented view sometimes received by students taking one specialized course at a time. Prof. VanderWerf said that some universities are now holding the first quantitative analysis course until later in the sequence of chemistry courses. Winnie Celebrates 87 LONDON — (UPI) — Sir Winston Churchill downed a breakfast of oysters and white wine and announced he was marking his 87th birthday today by going to the house he calls his home—the House of Commons. GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Bob Hope Lana Turner "Bachelor in Paradise" Churchill's aides said the former Prime Minister announced he would attend Commons after polishing off his traditional birthday luncheon of roast suckling pig. At the outset of the day Churchill upset his family's apparent plans for a "quiet" birthday shortly after he rose from bed at his usual hour— 11:30 a.m. CLAMPING A CHURCHILLIAN cigar into his mouth, the former Prime Minister marched downstairs in his London house, waded through knee-high stacks of congratulatory mail and went into the parlor to face his wife and servants. There they presented Churchill with a waist-high barrel of Whit- VARSITY NOW SHOWING! Hilarious Comedy "Watch Your Stern" and "Secret Partner" University buses will be used for the trip and will leave at 12:30 p.m. from the Kansas Union. They will arrive back about 5 p.m. This trip, sponsored by the office of the Foreign Student Adviser, has been taken each fall for several years. A massive case of champagne — Churchill's favorite libation next to brandy—arrived at his doorstep shortly before he entered his limousine for the drive to the suckling pig luncheon. stable oysters. Lady Churchill helped serve the wine while the servants toasted their master. About 100 foreign students will go to Independence, Missouri, tomorrow for a visit with former President Harry S. Truman and a tour through the Truman Library. Churchill nodded happily at the champagne. He turned and made his famed two-finger, V-for-victory sign to a cluster of bystanders outside his house. DOZENS OF FLORAL tributes banked his hallway. One, in the shape of a yacht, apparently came from his friend and yachting-host, Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis. Friends said Churchill appeared in usually chipper spirits this morning. They said he spent an extra long time in his bath tub—a favorite relaxation spot for Churchill. Truman Visit Draws 100 Foreign Students A straw vote only shows which way the hot air blows.—O. Henry 365 Excuses 365 Excuses 365 excuses for having your favorite beverage at the Jayhawk Cafe — 1340 Ohio Today's excuse: Anniv. of Bonifacio Day Check your opinions against L*M's Campus Opinion Poll #1 $\textcircled{1}$ Are there too few or too many intellectuals in high government posts? Check your opinions against L&M’s Campus Opinion Poll #12 $\textcircled{1}$ Are there too few or too many intellectuals in high government posts? ☐ Too few ☐ Too manv $\textcircled{2}$ Is it wrong for a faculty member to date a coed? ☐ YES ☐ NO $\textcircled{3}$ What gives you the most smoking pleasure in a filter cigarette? ☐ Quality tobacco ☐ Quality filter ☐ Both Expect more, get more, from L&M There’s actually more rich-flavor leaf in L&M than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. You get more body in the blend, more flavor in the smoke, more taste through the filter. So get Lots More from filter smoking with L&M... the cigarette that smokes heartier as it draws freely through the pure-white, modern filter. HERE’S HOW 1029 STUDENTS AT 100 COLLEGES VOTED! Have an L&M in pack or box $\textcircled{1}$ Too few...80% $\textcircled{2}$ Too many...20% $\textcircled{3}$ Quality tobacco...31% $\textcircled{4}$ Quality filter...13% $\textcircled{5}$ No...66% $\textcircled{6}$ Yes...34% T CENTRAL MUSEUM OF ARTS AND CULTURE WASHINGTON DC YES NO □ YES □ NO Quality tobacco Quality filter Both Quality tobacco L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. THE MIRACLE TIP L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. One c 3 2 BLAG from Conta repiaa turn inforn questi 1 L&M's the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke. GUNS New guns Sprin Tenn. NEW phone mond left. 1. Mass. 1956 tires, use. excel VI 2. Thursday, November 30, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $12.5. Terms Call: 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 Daley Kansan BusinessOffice in Flint Hall by 5 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. LOST AT SAT. GAME: 3 4/4 length jacket with large knit collar; sec. 40; row 10. Call Toby KU ext. 419 after 8 p.m. or contact Dyche front office. 12-4 CLOTH, RAINCOAT WITH name Guill- monti assouri game - Heward. I 3- 39833. BLACK NOTEBOOK 9 x 7" missing from 531B Malcolm since thirst. 23rd.C contains Pharmacology 210 notes irreplaceable to grad. student Please reiplace information or call 3046 for information. Extremely valuable No questions asked. 12-4 RIDERS WANTED; Driving to LA. Christmas via southern route — want riders to share driving and expenses. Call Nancy Rollins, VI 2-1340. 12-4 Would like a ride to New York either on September 25 or December 16. Rosenshield, VI 2-24-30. 12-5 TRANSPORTATION WANT 2 PASSENGERS to fly to Blue Tom., basement aft. after 4 p.m. 12-6 FOR SALE GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New and Used guns and ammo. Hand- made and sold special this week. See at 1804 Tenn. VI 2-7001. See at 12-4 NEW MAGNAVOX portable stereo phonograph. 2' B bass speakers & dia- neck necklace in record cases on left. Reduced to $98. Pettengi-Davis, 723 12-4 1956 Chev. V-8 Power Glide, 4 door, good tires, new battery, one owner, moderate temperature, maculude, masonite excellent. Willing to show. 855. Phone VI 2-1543 after 5. 12-5 MAGNAVOX. DANISH WALNUT, Stereo Console with AM-FM radio. Floor model storage. Danish modern styling. Pettengil-Davis Store. 723 Mass. 12-4 DIXIE CARMEL SHOP for tops in 1033 Mass. VI 3-6311 Candy — Popcorn — Mixed Nuts For Sale: Artery play, excellent condition. Practically new. $100. Call 124- 1715. Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates VI 3-578 1-214 MERCEDES-BENZ — 1956 BL-Fordor- 2205. Clean, WW tires — 2 new. For sale by owner — O. L. Caldwell, Chanute, Kansas. 12-4 IDEAL HOLIDAY GIFT for giving or getting. Purebred Siamese kittens will be toilet trained & weaned by the holidays. Place your deposit now. Total cost, male, $20; female, $25. See at 1229 Ohio, VI 3-0145. NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters. $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. On demand, printing and business machines, at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 18 E. 9th. Phone VI 3-0151 today. $590 down within 1 bik. of campus. Priced at $7,750. reasonable monthly payments, cheaper than rent. Garage. Cain Realty. 922%! Mass. Phone VI 3-8316 or after 5 VI 3- 9027 or VI 3-9899. 12-4 MOVING TO FLORIDA. don't need winter clothes. Shirts, size 10; blouses, 30-32; sweaters, 36-38. For sale for reasonable prices. If interested call VI 3-5672. 11-30 KNIGHTKIT R100 shortwave radio. 3 s.w. bands and broadcast band. Only 6 months old. Will sacrifice for $55. New price $100. Call Balogal, VI 2-2497. HOUSE FLANTS 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 11-30 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 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 3-7578. 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. tt OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriter, precision to make perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. lance Typewriter, 733 Mass. VI. 15 at 3644. BUSINESS SERVICES DRESS MAKING and alterations. For formatting, see page 386. Ola Smith, Mass. Cal. VI 3-5263. Save Money FRANK ALEXANDER Income Insurance ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. tf TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. American United Life offers exclusive STUDENT LIFE PLAN GROUP INSURANCE Morris Kay VI 3-7114 J. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in midnight. Phone VI 3-2921. Modern set-service — open week days 8 to 6:30 o.m. Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. VI 3-0152 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 t. Save Money RALPH FREED Income Insurance U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, gloves, shoes, and socks; everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Coats's Live-In Pet Center at Coats. Shop sectionalized — save time and money. **tf** HELP WANTED REGISTERED NURSE to become supervisor of nurses at Samaritan Lodge Rest Home. Also need relief R.N. Call VI 3-8936. BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Pimple, phone supply. Plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 0350 SECRETARY FOR MEDICAL LAB; Med. term experience preferred. Immediate & permanent opening. Challenging opportunity. Call VI 3-3630. Mr. Johnson. 12-5 MISCELLANEOUS TUTORING WANTED TUTOR--DIFFERENTIAL equations and other math courses. VI 2-3458. 12-6 FOR RENT LARGE CLEAN SLEEPING rm. & kitchen to senior or graduate woman student. Vacant Dec. 4. Call Vi T 3-1585 before 9 a.m. or after 7 p.m. 940 Miss. 12-6 ROOM FOR ONE MALE STUDENT in double room with senior; quiet and close to campus, call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tf HOUSE FOR RENT: Modern 5 room house, available immediately. Within walking distance from campus. Call VI 3-4136. 12-6 FURNISHED APT. 2 rms. priv. bath 800 block Indiana Call VI 3-9027 12-1 12-1 ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED apt. 3. large rooms, kitchen priv. bath & bath 3. garage on street near garage. garage $62 plus part of utilities Phone III 3-6969 after 5 p.m. 12-5 2 ROOMS AND BATH. Priv. entr. university Drive, 5 minutes from campus ladies. For rent to elther. Call VI 3 between 7 & 10 a.m. or 6 p.m. 11-30 4 room apt. for 4 boys, ill paid, 1 block off campus; 1142 Indiana. Possession 12-6 Vacancy available for 2 men in comm office. Call Randal Rd. Caivit 3-1-3635 for appointment. LARGE FURNISHED apartment east side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6234. tf FURNISHED APTS. 3 & 4 rooms, priv. phone: 3-812-7500, phone VI-812- afternoons or evenings. 12-4 TWO SINGLE ROOMS, shower bath. telephone. 1315 Tenn. Phone. 9-31-360 LARGE, NICE ROOMS for boys 3 blkks from Union. Call Now VI 3-7642. 12-4 TYPING For rent or sale—unfurnished two bed- room apts. Located in Junior High School and grade schools. Full basement, garage, fenced yard, off street parking. Phone VI 3-8244 MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." Now at two 1031 Lawrence Ave. & 1021's Mass. Lawrence Ave. & 1021's Mass. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call V1 3-2651 any time. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Call, 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440 TEL, 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Nest, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8371 EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do trypting some home call VI S-8126. Ms. L. Geibach ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- dATE OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ONE HOUR MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING STILL TIME (Before the Weekend) at 1407 Mass. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting and instructors." For excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise loff. POE, III 1-3097. It's Fast - It's Safe - It's Thrifty "Fresh as a Flower in Just 1-Hour" Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student labels, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. tf ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, books, articles. Reasonable work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. **tf** FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service. G317 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7718. or Esv or SAri R-2 2186. Kansan Want Ads Get Results FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, dresses and dessertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher. Reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, presentations, and Rasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3409. tf PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Royal College Shop ALPINE Black Leather Bone Leather $12.95 Royal College Shop Royal College Shop ALPINE Black Leather Bone Leather $12.95 APRES SKI Beige Bucko Black Leather $13.95 COBBIES A RED CROSS SHOP APRES SKI Beige Bucko Black Leather $13.95 COBBIES A RED CROSS SHOP Cozy Cobbie boots to wear, when the weather won't play fair! Travel in cozy comfort through rain, snow, sleet or cold in these smart water-repellent Cobbie boots. They cuddle your stocking foot with a deep pile lining. Walk confidently on non-skid soles. Fit the wonderful way Cobbies always do. And each comes complete with its own plastic "Change-aboot" bag to carry your indoor shoes along. This product has no connection whatever with The American National Red Cross Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 30, 1961 ASC Seats-says Virgilius (Vinegar Virgil) Cassius, noble Praetorian guardsman, as he prepares for another glorious parade. "Don't run around in Circus looking for a good smoke," says Vinegar Virgil. "Tareyton's one filter cigarette that really delivers de gustibus. Be one of the cohorts and carpe diem with Tareyton." (Continued from page 1) SORORITIES: Jo Snyder, Bethesda, Md., sophomore Trudy Meserve, Abilene sophomore Martha Smith, Stockton junior MEN'S LARGE DORMITORIES: WOMEN'S LARGE DORMITORIES: Hollace Cross, Kansas City, Mo., junior William Jobson, Prairie Village junior Kenny Kahmann, Springfield, Mo., senior Patricia Wilson, Kansas City junior Karen Cowell, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore WOMEN'S SMALL DORMITORIES Nancy Ray, Kansas City senior MEN'S SMALL DOWNLINES: George Hahm, Scotch Plains, N. J., junior FRESHMAN WOMEN'S DORMITORIES: Holly Thomson, Ottawa freshman Elizabeth Stoddard, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman UNMARRIED-UNORGANIZED: Michael Miner, Lawrence freshman Douglas Reed, Cassoday senior $ ^{*} $ MARRIED Vox Populi Vox Populi University Party PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITIES AND CO-OPS: Jan Flora, Quinter junior* Non-partisan University Party University Party University Party University Party Vox Populi University Party Vox Populi Vox Populi University Party University Party Vox Populi SUA Holds TV Party Student Union Activities will hold a TV party in the main lounge of the Kansas Union at 8:30 p.m, today for the Hallmark Hall of Fame TV Special "Victoria Regina" starring Julie Harris, James Donald, Felix Aylmer, Pamela Brown, Barry Jones, Basil Rathbone and Inga Swenson. Robert Hartwung wrote the TV adaptation of Laurence Housman's character study of the British monarch. All those who do not have access to TV sets or who prefer to see the program in color are invited. Cider will be served. We never understand how little we need in this world until we know the loss of it.—James Matthew Barrie - representative has speaking privileges only GUY'S GUY'S POTATO CHIPS GUY'S POTATO CHIPS Be Wise — Buy Guy's Gorton Heads NASM Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, was elected president of the National Association of Schools of Music at the NASM convention in Denver, Colo. Nov. 24 and 25. This is the fourth consecutive time Dean Gorton has served as president of NASM. NASM is the official accrediting agency for schools and departments of music in universities and colleges. It assesses the value of a department and ranks it accordingly. Dean Gorton is the third KU music dean to serve as NASM's president. Harold Butler and Donald M. Swarthout have served before. Going on a Picnic? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Kansan Want Ads Get Results BOWLING is FUN! Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 32 AUTOMATIC LANES Official Bulletin Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters. Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 a.m., St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. TODAY TOMORROW ADS-GAX Meeting: 7:30 p.m. English Room, Kansas Union, Speaker, Dean Brown Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 30. November, um fuenführ in 11 Fraser. Herr Roch. Schmaeling gibt eine Einstellung zum Hoerpael. Wir werden "das Klopfzeichen" von Heinrich Boell lesen und besprechen. **Foreign Students:** The buses for Independence at 12:30 p.m. from the Kansas Union. International Club: "German-Austrian Evening," 7:30 p.m., Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. It is an early Christmas program and every one is expected to bring refreshments, including 5c and 25c. Freshments, including Austrian cookies, will be served. Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship: 7:30 p.m. cottonwood Room, Kansas 1:30 p.m. cottonwood Room, from the Reformed Presbyterian Church in Topeka, on "Personal Evangelism." CAROLINE MORRIS Frilly White Overblouses PATTI SCHWOPE Alpha Chi Omega You'll be pretty as a picture in one of our COACH HOUSE Clothes For Town and Country K.C. Lawrence K.C. Blue Ridge KU Campus Plaza Tareyton delivers the flavor... DVAL FILTER DOES IT! "Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!" ACTIVATED CHARCOAL INNER FILTER PURE WHITE OUTER FILTER DUAL FILTER Tareyton / Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" Daily Hansan 59th Year, No. 36 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, November 3, 1961 UN Security Council Gives Gen.Walker Resigns Due to Censorship WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Army was ready today to accept the resignation of Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker, who is ending a 30-year service career in protest against military "censorship." your future is now! IBM RECRUITING DATES: November 8th and 9th Engineering students may register on the interview schedule in the Dean's office, School of Engineering. > Business Administration, School of Arts and Science and all others may register on the interview schedule in room #202 Summerfield Hall. which swings around carrying two different sets, will be full with Mame's Beekman Place apartment on one side and Jackson Beauregard's country estate on the other. SLATS ATTACHED TO OUTLINE BOARDS will enable the stage crew to make quick scene changes by unhooking the slats' hinges. Scenes will be flown in from the ceiling via cables controlled by a panel backstage. Props with wheels will be used extensively as the stage crew must make 23 scene changes, 16 major set switches and a host of costume changes. In addition to the set changes, two nylon-thin curtains will create two scenes at the lip of the stage. All the stage space is being used. IV A PARTY MEMBER came up with another question about the UP platform. He asked Cathey what the party was going to do about the new "off shoot of the NSA?" (He was probably referring to the newly created Committee for Effective Student Government. Eight members of this committee are former members of the NSA.) "These people need to be together. They probably deserve each other." Cathey, a member of the NSA last year, replied: He added, laughing, that this was not a part of the UP platform. is a civilian ontinue his ich he had sible to do the power name of service to noved from Division active itinere based wing John would refuse cement pay staying in 30th an- cent series, retic. The session said v-to-inter- mation in a mega- statement, re nuclear tion that ave stump- ment and the Soviet with last us explospeculate ome across periments p. ) Atomic ited States nuclear months if them nechave esti- than $100 st program eday such a current owed more d to mainer Russia. a resump- they pre- the Eni- and in the or the last San Antonio, said he had no further comment on his resignation because his statement to the sub committee speaks for itself. But he added that he agreed with Gen. Douglas MacArthur that executive power has become so strong that military men are being treated ruthlessly for speaking their minds. with the and lows rally fair the highs "It will be my purpose now, as a civilian, to attempt to do what I have found it no longer possible to do in uniform." Testing Could Three Months Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara later testified that Walker had attempted to influence the votes of his troops in the 1960 election. He said the General made "inflammatory and derogatory statements" against former President Truman, former Secretary of State Dean Acheson and Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt. there because of the necessity to replace and repair facilities. In the past it has taken about six months to prepare the proving ground and organize a task force to carry out an ambitious test program. But sources said it now could be done in two or three months if necessary. V WEAPONS EXPERTS predicted that, if Kennedy gives the go-ahead, a test would be conducted next year of a Nike-Zeus anti-missile missile with powerful nuclear warhead. Other tests, they said, might include experiments to increase the power of the Polaris, Minuteman and other missile warheads without increasing their bulk and weight. The Chief Executive denounced Russia's "campaign of fear" but offered again to sign a nuclear test ban treaty so long as it provides for adequate inspection and control. KENNEDY SAID in his statement that if tests are resumed, the United States would hold fallout to an "absolute minimum." He said this country had no intention of exploding anything like a 50-megaton bomb. "In the meantime, as a matter of prudence, we shall make necessary preparations for such tests so as to be ready in case it becomes necessary to conduct them," he said. These experts said this country also might proof-test battlefield weapons such as the Davy Crockett Atomic Bazooka, and conduct scientific tests aimed ultimately at producing the Neutron bomb. A SPOKESMAN for the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) said: "We will proceed to get ready as fast as possible. If a decision is made to resume atmospheric testing, it should not take long to begin." TEDDY DAVIS AND MARGARET BROWN HOMECOMING QUEEN ANNOUNCED—This morning at a pep rally in front of Strong Hall the 1961 Homecoming queen and her attendants were announced. They are, from left to right, Leslie Gail Coover, Junction City senior, attendant; Mary Nan Scamman, Tarkio, Mo., junior, queen; and Lawalta Dean Heyde, Shawnee Mission junior, attendant. 1 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday. November 2,1961 THURSDAY·FRIDAY·SATURDAY·NOVEMBER 2.3.4 Gala Gra SYSTEMS ENGINEER Smart step. to fall 5 $^{87}$ to 6 $^{47}$ Sizes 4 1/2 to 10 Smart step to fall 5 $^{87}$ to 6 $^{47}$ Sizes 4½ to 10 Harvey's Discount Shoes comes to Lawrence . . . Our policy is to offer you wide and varied selection FIRST QUALITY shoes every description and s Compare the quality, com the styling, compare the p you'll know why Harv shoes are your biggest value. Shop the relaxing, selection way and SAVE. GRAND O GRAND O Open 9 to 9 Daily Noon to 5 Sunday If you are of above-average intelligence and have an analytical mind . . consider IBM Data Processing Systems Engineering. As modern as the missile age, as up-to-date as tomorrow, IBM Systems Engineering is a new kind of business career with an unlimited future. What does an IBM Systems Engineer do? How are you trained? What qualifications do you need? What kind of people does Systems Engineering attract? Your college specialization is the foundation on which IBM will build your knowledge of the company's data processing products and applications. IBM's Systems Engineering training program is a combination of formal classes and practical field experience. You will receive an excellent salary while learning, and will undergo approximately eighteen months of formal and on-the-job training in programming and the use of IBM equipment. A Systems Engineer's activities can best be described as surveying, analyzing and defining the data processing problems of IBM's customers, and integrating machines, people and procedures into working systems that solve these problems. You must possess an analytical mind capable of performing disciplined thinking at a high level. In this regard, courses in engineering, the physical sciences, mathematics and philosophy are a valuable background. In addition, knowledge of business administration and economies are strong factors in the development of competent IBM Systems Engineers. But above all, IBM needs keen minds who, while diligent with details, are capable of the abstract thinking required to produce definitive solutions to complex problems. To answer this question, and at the same time to further acquaint you with Systems Engineering, let's trace the careers of two talented young IBMers who are engaged in this stimulating new profession. Meet William T. (Tom) Eley of Richmond, Va. A graduate of the College of William and Mary, Tom was awarded a B.A. in Physics. He joined the IBM organization in 1957 and has just completed the curriculum of specialized training offered by the IBM Systems Research Institute in New York City. Tom began his IBM career in Washington, D.C., where he received instruction in the basic operating principles of IBM equipment. Upon completion of the preliminary training program, he was assigned to the Washington sales office where he acquired considerable practical experience working with Senior Systems Engineers on the solution of customers' data processing problems. He was later transferred to the IBM office in Richmond, Va, where he received additional training in IBM data processing methods and equipment. After completing these advanced courses, he helped with the installation of RAMAC® 650 and 305 data processing systems which had been ordered by two important IBM users in the Richmond area. Tom has found his scientific background to be extremely helpful in Systems Engineering work. At the Richmond office, for example, he was responsible for assisting customers engaged in scientific work to develop the full potential of their IBM data processing installations. In addition to working on the 650 and 305 installations, Tom also conducted scientific seminars and programming and machine operations classes for IBM's customers. Tom's outstanding work singled him out for admission to the IBM Systems Research Institute, the company's new graduate level educational facility which has been created for the advanced study of the application of data processing systems to the solution of business and scientific problems. Now let's meet George Knebel of Scarsdale, N. Y. A graduate of Princeton University where he was awarded a B.A. in Economics, George also holds a Master's degree in Business Administration from the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania. He joined IBM three years ago and is currently assigned to an IBM office in busy mid-Manhattan. George's first weeks with the company were spent at the IBM Education Center in New York City where he learned the basic operating principles of IBM equipment. After completing introductory training, he was assigned to a sales office in New York where he worked with other Systems Engineers in a variety of situations. Further study in methods of using IBM equipment to handle accounting and record-keeping problems and advanced courses in the IBM 700-series computing systems concluded George's preparatory training. His first field assignment was to coordinate the installation of an IBM 702 system at a nationally-known trading stamp firm which was converting from an IBM 650 to the more powerful 702. After completing the conversion, he underwent training in the IBM 7070, an intermediate data processing system incorporating solid-state circuits, and was assigned to prepare for the installation of a 7070 at the New York headquarters of a prominent retail chain. Upon completion of this assignment, George was selected to help develop a total systems concept for a prominent brokerage firm. He is still occupied with this assignment, working in a team which includes Systems Engineers with individual specialties appropriate to the project. The Systems Engineer's potential for advancement within the IBM company is almost limitless. Qualified systems personnel can advance into such specialized positions as Advisory Systems Engineer or Senior Systems Engineer. In addition to those professional specialties, other Systems Engineers can move into administrative and managerial capacities at headquarters or in the branch and regional offices. Additionally, many opportunities exist in other IBM divisions for men with a Systems Engineering background. The importance of the systems area of IBM's business is underscored by the ever-increasing demand for qualified systems people. The new IBM Systems Research Institute further attests to this need. The data processing industry is one of the fastest growing fields in the U.S. today and has yet to approach its full potential. American industry is relying more and more on data processing equipment to handle its paperwork load. IBM itself is constantly growing. These growth factors alone add up to real opportunities for advancement. What lies ahead for Tom and George? As you can see from the dissimilarity of these men's backgrounds, Systems Engineering attracts those talented people who can respond to challenging situations in a creative manner. Although Tom and George have different educational backgrounds, the combination of their personal attributes and individual specialties provided a firm foundation for their IBM Systems Engineering careers. GRAND O Open 9 to 9 Daily Noon to 5 Sunday Cords & Canvas Sizes 4½ to 10 287 Dress, Sport Shoes, Loafers 687 to 1087 So Suave FREE PARKING George credits his strong background in business and economics with being invaluable to him in the pursuit of his Systems Engineering career. Working primarily with business firms, he has found a thorough knowledge of business principles essential to the development of practicable system concepts. 287 Cords & Canvas Sizes 41/2 to 10 Dress, Sport Shoes, Loafers 687 to 1087 So Suave 287 FREE PARKING 590 Dress, Sport Shoes, Loafers 687 to 1087 So Suave FREE PARKING So Suave Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No. 36 Friday, November 3, 1961 UN Security Council Gives and in in- Sys pri- pri and a ipeiples cable ty of Engi- who in a and back-sonal pro- IBM or ad- is alisonnel nitions bienior those Ensie andees ers or Addi- other systems tance issing de- The fur- nooess- owing vet to in an data aaper- grow- up to SYSTEMS SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE A stimulating and exciting job Three years ago, Mary Bayer graduated from Bryn Mawr. Today, as an IBM System Service Representative, she helps business management apply IBM equipment to their accounting and record keeping functions. "When a company needs assistance on a new installation of equipment or wants help in improving the efficiency of an established one, I work closely with the sales representative to accomplish whatever is required. "As a part of my job, I meet everybody from bankers to engineers . . . from company presidents to switchboard operators. I find myself working in every kind of business . . . advertising agencies, insurance companies, trucking firms . . nearly anything you can name. The variety of my assignments makes this a very stimulating and exciting job." ALEXANDRA M. MURPHY Training program What background did Mary Bayer have for system service work? "Before I joined the company, I had no technical training," she recalls. "I came to IBM directly from college where I received a liberal arts degree, with the usual exposure to the physical sciences. All the technical knowledge required was secured through the company's comprehensive training program." The training begins in one of seventeen Education Centers located in the larger cities of the country. The first eight weeks are devoted to the operating principles, capacities and functions of such equipment as calculators and accounting machines. The second phase of training consists of approximately four months of actual assignments in customers' offices under the guidance of more experienced systems people. The remainder of the training program is spent learning about more advanced equipment, along with additional practical experience in customers' offices. A wide variety of assignments "I've been a System Service Representative for nearly two years now." Mary Bayer says, "and I still find the work as interesting and challenging as when I first started. This is one of the wonderful things about my job. In the course of a single month, for instance, I worked on a bank assignment, installing a new, fast system for handling commercial credit. I was stationed at NBC Television during the election campaign compiling election returns. And I helped a hospital solve its in-patient billing problems." How does she go about performing an assignment? "First of all," she explains, "I study the company's operations and system objectives. How can the company achieve the degree of efficiency it is seeking . . . by extending the application of its present equipment or by installing newer, more advanced equipment?" After determining the "how," she assists the salesman in drafting a proposal outlining the method, procedures and equipment that would achieve the desired results. If the company accepts the proposal, then she follows through and shows the customer how to make more effective use of his new system. This may involve many things . . . setting up new methods to handle the flow of paper work, changing procedures for more efficient machine processing, or teaching machine operations to customer personnel. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Army was ready today to accept the resignation of Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker, who is ending a 30-year service career in protest against military "censorship." Gen.Walker Resigns Due to Censorship Gen. Walker said that as a civilian continue his which he had iossible to do Important in IBM Sales Service m the power the name of yal service to removed from Division in political activ were based ht wing John would refuse retirement pay System Service Representatives are important members of the IBM sales group. Their assignment is to apply IBM's vast resources of systems knowledge to the operations of business, industry, science and government. Their goal is to keep the customer advised of the most profitable use of IBM methods and equipment. System Service Representatives work with all types of IBM equipment ranging from simple punched card systems to large-scale electronic data processing systems. A leader in the electronic computer field, IBM supports its customer service group with the latest, most up-to-date products created in IBM's world-wide network of research and development facilities. is staying in Excellent training programs are continuously in operation to back up these products with the methods and systems know how to insure their most effective use A career with great potential earday such if a current showed more ired to main- over Russia. iis statement, more nuclear ulation that have stum- elopment and (PI)— Atomic United States sound nuclear e months if ds them necand 30th ancurrent series, Arctic The Mary Bayer's future presents varied and mission said interesting opportunities. She could be low-to-intercome an instructor at an IBM Education than a mega-Center or even a Manager of an Education Center. Many System Service Rep. the Soviet resentatives hold responsible positions in with last the company's headquarters in various-plus exploareas such as Personnel, Advertising, to speculate Market Research and Analysis, Producte come across Planning, and Methods and Procedures. experiments "The electronics computer field is one of up. the fastest-expanding areas in America today," she says, "and there's no telling air, they pre-visualize a career that holds more potential around in the for the college graduate." San Antonio, said he had no further comment on his resignation because his statement to the sub committee speaks for itself. But he added that he agreed with Gen. Douglas MacArthur that executive power has become so strong that military men are being treated ruthlessly for speaking their minds. "It will be my purpose now, as a civilian, to attempt to do what I have found it no longer possible to do in uniform." Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara later testified that Walker had attempted to influence the votes of his troops in the 1960 election. He said the General made "inflammatory and derogatory statements" against former President Truman, former Secretary of State Dean Acheson and Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt. have esti- more than $100 test program r Testing Could in Three Months ight with the 0s and lows generally fair th the highs r In the past it has taken about six months to prepare the proving ground and organize a task force to carry out an ambitious test program. But sources said it now could be done in two or three months if necessary. KENNEDY SAID in his statement that if tests are resumed, the United States would hold fallout to an "absolute minimum." He said this country had no intention of exploding anything like a 50-megaton bomb. WEAPONS EXPERTS predicted that, if Kennedy gives the go-ahead, a test would be conducted next year of a Nike-Zeus anti-missile missile with powerful nuclear warhead. Other tests, they said, might include experiments to increase the power of the Polaris, Minuteman and other missile warheads without increasing their bulk and weight. These experts said this country also might proof-test battlefield weapons as the Davy Crockett Atomic Bazooka, and conduct scientific tests aimed ultimately at producing the Neutron bomb. The Chief Executive denounced Russia's "campaign of fear" but again offered to sign a nuclear test ban treaty so long as it provides for adequate inspection and control. "In the meantime, as a matter of prudence, we shall make necessary preparations for such tests so as to be ready in case it becomes necessary to conduct them," he said. there because of the necessity to replace and repair facilities. A SPOKESMAN for the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) said: "We will proceed to get ready as fast as possible. If a decision is made to resume atmospheric testing, it should not take long to begin." International Business Machines Corporation which swings around carrying two different sets, will be full with Mame's Beekman Place apartment on one side and Jackson Beauregard's country estate on the other. SLATS ATTACHED TO OUTLINE BOARDS will enable the stage crew to make quick scene changes by unhooking the slats' hinges. Scenes will be flown in from the ceiling via cables controlled by a panel backstage. Props with wheels will be used extensively as the stage crew must make 23 scene changes, 16 major set switches and a host of costume changes. In addition to the set changes, two nylon-thin curtains will create two scenes at the lip of the stage. All the stage space is being used. A PARTY MEMBER came up with another question about the UP platform. He asked Cathey what the party was going to do about the new "off shoot of the NSA?" (He was probably referring to the newly created Committee for Effective Student Government. Eight members of this committee are former members of the NSA.) Cathey, a member of the NSA last year, replied: "These people need to be together. They probably deserve each other." He added, laughing, that this was not a part of the UP platform. IBM HOMECOMING QUEEN ANNOUNCED—This morning at a pep rally in front of Strong Hall the 1961 Homecoming queen and her attendants were announced. They are, from left to right, Leslie Gail Coover, Junction City senior, attendant; Mary Nan Scamman, Tarkio, Mo., junior, queen; and Lawalta Dean Heyde, Shawnee Mission junior, attendant. Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, November 2, 1961 THURSDAY·FRIDAY·SATURDAY·NOVEMBER 2.3.4 Gala MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE Gala MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE Smart step to fall 5 $^{87}$ to 6 $^{47}$ Sizes 4½ to 10 Gra Smart step to fall 5 $^{87}$ to 6 $^{47}$ Sizes 4½ to 10 Harvey's Discount Shoes comes to Lawrence . . . Our policy is to offer wide and varied selection FIRST QUALITY shoes every description and s Compare the quality, com the styling, compare the p .you'll know why Harv shoes are your biggest value. Shop the relaxing, selection way and SAVE. GRAND O GRAND O Open 9 to 9 Daily Noon to 5 Sunday "Selling more efficient data processing methods . . . " IBM will train you When you ask IBM Marketing Representative Robert H. Holmes what he sells, he tells you: "More efficient data processing methods. Whether I'm talking to a small manufacturer about a simple punched card system or to a huge insurance company about a large-scale electronic data processing system," he explains, "I'm still talking about the same thing: Better ways of managing a business. My goal is to give management timely information with which to operate its business. "This is tremendously interesting and challenging work. You find yourself dealing with top management of both large and small organizations. Your assignments take you deep into the operational control of business, industry, government, and science. You become vitally concerned with everything from payrolls, inventory control, and operating statements to advanced engineering projects. Whenever I tackle a job, I have the confidence that we can provide the proper methods and equipment to complete the assignment successfully. This is why I find my work so satisfying." A. R. D. "I knew nothing at all about data processing — electronic or otherwise — before joining IBM," Bob Holmes recalls. "I came to IBM directly from the Marine Corps after graduating from Dartmouth with a liberal arts degree. While there are no hard and fast college course prerequisites for IBM sales, if you were to prescribe the most useful background it would probably be a broad liberal arts background with exposure to math or the physical sciences. "Of course, the job does require considerable technical knowledge. But IBM has a first-rate program that will give you all the technical information you need. This training continues throughout your IBM career." In IBM's marketing training program, Bob Holmes combined formal classwork with tours of duty in the field. After a sound orientation in equipment and its applications, he began an extended period of practical, on-the-job training as a contributing member of an IBM marketing team. Under the supervision of experienced marketing representatives, he worked on a variety of problems involving several different customers. As an assistant to senior men, he helped write methods and equipment proposals, programmed new data processing systems, and taught procedures to customer classes. The final step in his comprehensive and interesting training program was attendance at IBM's well-known marketing school. Exactly how does the Marketing Representative go about making a sale? "The first thing to do," Bob Holmes says, "is to analyze the problem of the customer or prospect involved. You find out what he wants. What are his present operating procedures? In what respect are they inadequate or too costly in terms of time or money? How can he achieve top operating efficiency—by extending the application of his present data processing system or by installing newer, more advanced IBM methods and equipment? In short, you make a study in depth, cost the study and determine the advantages to the customer. "Of course, you get plenty of support from IBM. A task force of specialists scientists, engineers, instructors, and technicians — is available to lend a helping hand when you need it. "When you've analyzed the problem and determined what's needed, you'll find — as I have — that IBM has the equipment and methods that are applicable. Somewhere in the vast range of products and methods know-how will be a solution to your customer's, or prospect's, problem. "In IBM sales, however, your responsibilities don't end with the order," he points out. "It's up to you to assist the customer in making the installation. In this way you become an important and valued advisor to his organization—helping him to apply his equipment to further advantage and keeping him informed about new product developments and methods." Operation: sales BEER MAKAC Personal qualifications "You don't have to be a scientist or an engineer to be successful in IBM sales," Bob Holmes says. "Anyone who is interested and has the capacity to absorb instruction can soon understand the operations of the most advanced and powerful electronic data processing equipment that IBM produces." What personal qualities should an IBM marketing representative have? "You need an inquiring mind, the ability to think objectively and to act with good judgment. You have to be a self-starter—operate on your own—show initiative. Not only must you be able to work alone and independently, but you must also be able to operate effectively as a member of a team—more often than not as the controlling member of that team—a spot which calls for leadership and, at the same time, the capacity to recognize, accept and adopt the good ideas of others. "One of the most stimulating aspects of this work is the fact that I constantly find myself in new and interesting situations involving a variety of working relationships with many different management people whose responsibilities run the gamut from operations to top-staff policy making. No other job I can think of offers the recent college graduate such an opportunity to become acquainted with all phases of commercial, business, industrial, and governmental activity. This kind of experience is excellent preparation for the many management positions available in this fast-growing company." "Advancement opportunities in IBM," Bob Holmes says, "are excellent. Ahead of me on the marketing management advancement road are over 200 branch or assistant managerships, special representation to an industry, and numerous district, regional, and headquarters positions in five different IBM divisions. What other IBM advantages can he point to? "In planning a business career," Bob Holmes says, "I looked for three major satisfactions; an interesting job, one with promotional opportunity, one that offers financial reward. Bob Holmes reports that IBM's reputation for leadership and service in data processing methods and equipment makes his selling job easier than he had anticipated. "It's an advantage that you don't fully appreciate until you are out in the field." Advantages of IBM "In spite of its phenomenal growth, the electronic computer systems field is still in its infancy," says Bob Holmes. "We are going to witness a host of new applications and uses of electronic computing and 'memory' devices. That's why I feel that I am in on the ground floor. My future at IBM? Unlimited! Many of IBM's top executives started in sales. My next step will be to more important responsibility in the sales organization. I feel that opportunities for the future are excellent—and up to me." In the fall of 1958, Bob Holmes was promoted to a key position in IBM's well-known school for customers' executives. An unlimited future 287 Cords & Canvas Sizes 4½ to 10 596 2 $^{8 7}$ Dress, Sport Shoes, Loafers 6 $87 to 10$ 87 So Suave So Suave FREE PARKING