Governor's Budget Decision Due Next Week Kansas Governor John Anderson will soon give his decision on the recommended $1.4 million cut from KU's $23.4 million budget request. The action will come next Tuesday or Wednesday when the Governor gives his state budget recommendation for the coming fiscal year to the Legislature. THE CUT WAS MADE late in November when State Budget Director James W. Bibb in his budget recommendations to the Governor deleted the amount from the Board of Regents' requests for KU. The Governor's recommendation is expected to be an increase over the Budget Director's figure, KU administration officials sav. Following Anderson's recommendation, the Legislature will act upon recommendations of its own committees. The final budget may be above or below the Governor's proposal. If the director's recommendation is approved as it stands, it will leave out funds necessary for replacement of Blake Hall, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University said in November. - All funds for faculty salary increases. - MR. NICHOLS SAID the cut would also deny the University; - $65,000 from the present routine repair figure. - All special repair funds including those for traffic control stations for reduction of campus traffic. Mr. Nichols said the cut would also limit the University to hiring only 27 of 64 additional staff and faculty members needed. "IT IS ANYONE'S guess about what the Governor will recommend." Mr. Nichols added. The budget proposal for the KU Medical Center was also cut in the Director's November action. He recommended $11.1 million for the Kansas City institution—a cut of $2.1 million from the requested $13.2 million. The Director's state-wide college and university budget recommendations amounted to $72,477.- 782—approximately $5.8 million less than requested by the State Board of Regents. 59th Year. No. 63 Daily hansan LAWRENCE. KANSAS "I think what this organization lacks right now is leadership," he said. "If we elect leaders, we'll have someone who can speak for the chapter." Thursday, Jan. 4, 1962 Local YAF Chapter Applies For National Charter Link After McIwaine's talk, however, Jay Deane, Kansas City junior, moved that the group elect permanent officers anyway. By Dennis Farney "YOU DON'T elect officers before you have rules," McIlwaine argued. "Right now you've got a division of opinion regarding the operation of the group, and both sides are afraid that the other will gain a numerical advantage if we delay in having elections." The KU chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom, after spending nearly three months organizing has applied for affiliation with the national YAF organization. - Was criticized by Charles McIlwaine, Wichita senior and a national director of YAF, for "picking on each other instead of the liberals." While the original purpose of the meeting was to elect permanent officers, the decisions to elect temporary officers and to apply for national affiliation came after McIlwaine told the group that they had "no standards for office, no records of who is qualified, no constitution, no rules, no organization and no concerns." The decision for national affiliation came during a stormy two-hour meeting held by the KU group Dec. 18. In the meeting, the group also: - Debated an alleged spilt within the group. - Elected temporary officers to guide them during the next two or three weeks, until permanent officers can be elected. - Discussed a letter to the editor published in the Dec. 18th issue of the Daily Kansan. (Mcellwaine was apparently referring to the friction between the Committee for an Effective KU-YAF and the then-acting leadership of the KU chapter. At the meeting the committee distributed a paper which listed its own candidates for permanent officers, and which criticized the "muddling inaction and disregard of state YAF directives shown by the temporary leadership." After further discussion, Deane was granted permission to make a substitute motion calling for election of temporary officers whose functions would be to establish the KU group as part of the national organization and the development of a constitution and set of bylaws for the group. An amendment by McIlwaine providing that permanent officers should be elected before the end of the first semester—carried, and the temporary officers were elected. MARICK PAYTON, Lawrence resident, was elected temporary chairman; Jim Williamson, Hutchinson junior, temporary vice chairman; and Sally Chandler, Holton junior, temporary secretary. Much of the meeting before the election was taken up by a debate between Richard Garnett, Shawnee Mission senior and author of the Dec. 18 letter to the editor, and Bob Gaskins, Wichita freshman and president of the Committee for an Effective KU-YAF. Garnett accused Gaskins of trying to "cut the YAF's throat" in a Dec. 18 statement to the Daily Kansan. (The statement, which was included in an editor's note above the letter, said there was a leadership struggle within the KU-YAF and called Garnett's Dec. 18 letter to the editor inaccurate and misleading.) GASKINS and his supporters, in turn, criticized Garnett's letter—which labeled Daily Kansan editorials on the YAF as "unsubstantiated slop"—as being in bad taste and said the letter did not reflect the views of the Committee for an Effective KU-YAF. "There never was a split in our leadership," Garnett said. "As I understand it, the split was engineered by Bob Gaskins—who is not now a leader of the KU-YAF, who has never been a leader of our chapter and who, I hope, will never in the future be a leader. He tried to cut our throats in the Kansan today." "OUR UNITED front is gone when we start having the incidents," Brent Mandry, Ferguson, Mo., senior and the then-acting chairman of the KU-YAF, told the group. "We (the acting officers) were all doing our best." "If the leadership is doing the best it can, then the best is not good enough," returned Gaskins. Gaskins asked Garnett why he wrote the letter without consulting the group as a whole. Garnett replied that, in writing the letter, he was merely speaking for himself. He said that he had attempted, without success, to change the signature on the letter from "Young Americans for Freedom, KU Chapter." to his name. Why, asked Gaskins, did Garnett ridicule the Daily Kansas by nominating it for the "Garbage Pail of the Month" award? "That was only a device to get the readers into the story," Garnett replied. AT THIS POINT, McIlwaine asked permission to talk to the group. He told them to concentrate their attack on the liberals instead of each other, and warned them against "trying to move too fast." "You don't seem to understand," he said, "that you must present an image of doing something constructive. Thus far, you have been ineffective because you, like all conservatives, pick on yourselves, rather than on the liberals. "You are trying to move too fast. KU has always lacked any conservative organizations, and you've been here only 13 weeks. "Before you talk about slaying the liberal dragon with anything more than a pickle fork, you need organization." Tshombe Rejects Only Two Points In Reunification ELISABETHVILLE. Katanga, The Congo — (UPI) President Moise Tshombe told his provincial assembly today he finds no fault with six of eight points of the Kitona agreement that would end Katanga's secession from the rest of the Congo. But he said he could not agree to points one and eight. Point one demands Katanga acceptance of the "fundamental law" — the Congo's temporary constitution. Point eight demands Katanga acceptance of United Nations resolutions. TSHOMBE'S SPEECH was considered remarkably mild. He made it to an assembly session that started late, almost never got off the ground and was made up of a bare quorum of 35 deputies. The session possibly could take a vote on the Kitona agreement, although there was no indication of how long the deputies intended to talk or when a final vote might be taken. The deputies set up two committees—one political, one foreign affairs—to study the Kitona document in detail and to report back to the assembly. The agreement was signed by Tshombe on Dec. 21 after 17 hours of talks with central Congo Premier Cyrille Adoula at the United Nations base at Kitona. But he said then it would have to be approved by the Katangese provincial assembly before it could take effect. DURING HIS SPEECH, Tshombe accused the UN. and the United States of "maladroit" interference during his conference with Adoula. But he did not repeat his personal attacks on U.S. Ambassador to Leopoldville Edmund A. Gullion. Class Gift Arrives Some $2,000 of the Class of 1961 Senior Golf fund went toward the purchase of a piece of sculpture called "The Avenger," now on display in Spooner-Thayer Museum. See page 5 for the story. A Kansan Series: Part I State Battle: Apportionment BY CLAYTON KELLER (Editor's note: This is the first in a three-part series of articles dealing with reapportionment of the Kansas Legislature.) If you are from a city area in Kansas, you do not have as much influence in the state legislature as you should have. In fact, you may have only one-twentieth as much representation as someone from a farm area. Residents of cities throughout the nation are under-represented in their state governments. In many states, the situation is worse than in Kansas. THE FOUR Kansas counties classified as metropolitan by the U.S. Census Bureau—Sedgwick, Wyandotte, Johnson, and Shawnee—have 813,804 residents, or nearly 40 per cent of the total population. These residents, however, have only four seats in the state Senate, ten per cent of the membership. But in many states—including Kansas—a number of persons are becoming aware of this discrimination and are doing something about it. In Tennessee, a group of citizens have taken a case to the United States Supreme Court, asking the Court to force the state legislature to reapportion itself according to population. Last week, a petition asking the Oklahoma Legislature to reapportion itself was signed by over 200,000 residents of that state. IN KANSAS, four newspapersmen — J. P. Harris, Peter Macdonald, and John McCormally of the Hutchinson News and Ernest W. Johnson of The Oathe News have filed a brief in support of the Tennessee case. They contend that the Kansas Legislature is as badly apportioned as the Tennessee Legislature. The Kansas constitution requires the Senate to be apportioned according to population only. The population of Kansas in 1600 was Just how badly apportioned is the Kansas legislature? Action Begins TOPEKA — (UPI) — A pretrial hearing in the suit to force reapportionment of the Kansas legislature has been slated for Feb. 2 in Shawnee County District Court here. In a letter to concerned parties Judge Marion Beatty said the motions are likely to be a major part of the suit and therefore he suggested the pre-trial hearing. He has proposed Feb. 28 as actual trial date, The suit brought by four newspapermen in Hutchinson and Olathe would compel the Legislature to reapportion the House and the Senate on the basis of population the hearing Feb. 2 will be held on motions to have the action dismissed. 2,178,611. Each of the 40 state Senators, therefore, should represent 54,465 persons. But Sedgwick County, with a population of 343,231, has only one seat in the state Senate. Wyandotte County's 185,495 residents have only one vote in the Senate. ON THE OTHER HAND, the 31st Senate district, containing Jewell and Mitchell Counties, has a population of only 16,083. These people have as much representation in the Senate as do the 343,231 residents of Sedgwick County. The vote of a resident of Jewell or Mitchell County, therefore, is worth approximately 21.3 times as much as a resident of Sedgwick County. What this means in the passage of legislation can easily be seen. Twenty-one of the 40 Senate seats—the number necessary to pass legislation—are controlled by 584,840 persons, or one-fourth of the people of Kansas. THE STATE House of Representatives, according to the brief, "presents a picture of gross discrimination in favor of rural areas which makes the upper chamber (Senate) appear a model of equality by contrast." The House, according to the constitution, has a membership of 125. Each county is required to have at least one representative. Twenty (Continued on page 8) Anything to Get Home- LUNA UNUSUAL BAGGAGE—KU students had to stand up in the baggage car from Newton to Hutchinson going home for the Christmas holidays. Over 150 students took the train west from Lawrence that night. They paid full fare. Photo by Tony Reed. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 4, 1962 The New Year The opening of a new year always seems to cause some people to either look back on the accomplishments and failures of the old year or to look forward at the prospects of the next 12 months. Since the Kansan has already presented its review of 1961 this editorial shall take the latter view. IT IS IMPOSSIBLE to predict the individual big events of a coming year but some trends can be noted and certain decisions seem inevitable. The campus, state, national, international and space scenes all promise interesting developments in the coming year. The civil rights issue will continue in the news during 1962 both on the campus and national levels. The Civil Rights Council is expected to begin a drive for elimination of discriminatory clauses from the charters of fraternities and sororities. Freedom riders will continue to make national news. POSSIBLY THE BIGGEST story of campus and state importance in the next few weeks will be the decision of the Legislature on state spending for the next fiscal year. If cuts made initially in the KU budget are not restored by the governor and his decision approved by the Legislature the KU expansion program will be greatly impaired. If enrollment figures continue to climb in the state educational system more funds for enlarged physical facilities must be provided. President Kennedy will again ask Congress to approve his medical aid for the aged plan and will push for at least a vote on his proposal. Congress will also be asked to consider lower tariff walls to put the United States in a better position to compete with the European Common Market. Tax legislation, the farm program, a 93 billion dollar budget and federal aid to education are other problems that will come before Congress. THE SPACE RACE will continue and the United States will send Lt. Col. John Glenn into orbit for three circuits of the earth. But the Russians may climb back into the lead by sending a three-man space vehicle into orbit. The political situation in many South American countries will remain shaky and the President's Alliance for Progress program will receive its first test. It is the task of the United States to educate the restless poor of South America to the advantages of democracy versus communism. AS IN THE PAST few years many headlines of 1962 will concern the crisis making Russians. The Berlin story of 1961 proved Nikita Khrushchev's ability to control the temperature of the cold war. The increase of communist pressure in Southeast Asia could be the top story of international crisis in 1962. Political news will also fill the news columns in this election year. The results of gubernatorial races in two widely separated states will be noted by party leaders and the political courses of Republicans Nixon and Rockefeller plotted accordingly. Political strategists will watch the results of congressional elections for hints of public approval or disapproval of the Kennedy administration. Several other international and domestic issues will doubtlessly crop up and demand our consideration in the next calendar year. It will be a year of mental challenges and possibly even nuclear threats to our existence. —Ron Gallagher Encouraging of Excellence But why should a college or any educational institution be all things to all students, or, what is worse, be like every other institution? Harvard encourages a certain type of excellence. Let other colleges encourage other types. It means, of course, that not all the best brains in the country should go to Harvard, however good it may be academically. Society needs brainy romantics as well as brainy critics. The most serious weakness in the argument that the best students should go to the best schools is the naive assumption that the best schools academically can be the "best," too, in the effects they have on character and personality, in shaping other types of human excellence. But let this not be an excuse for easy local pride. No college or university can lay a serious claim to the best students in its area if it is all things to all men and has developed no distinctive excellence of its own. Varieties of excellence in individuals, therefore, can be encouraged by varieties of excellence in the educational institutions they attend; but one more step is necessary for such a system to work. The institutions must avoid admitting students solely in terms of one type of excellence, namely, academic promise or performance. That is, if our new model provides for a variety of types of excellence encouraged in a variety of excellent ways, then one type of excellence must be prevented from becoming a monopoly and placing a strong restraint on "trade". Academic excellence has very nearly reached a monopoly position, despite the protests of admissions officers that they are still operating in terms of "other criteria." They are fighting a losing battle. The logic is inexorable. Students with the highest predicted grade-point averages are increasingly the ones admitted to any school or college. The last bastion in the Ivy League colleges of the East is about to crumble: alumni can no longer receive preference. NOW I HOLD no particular brief for the sons of alumni or Harvard professors; but I strongly object to the stranglehold that academic performance is getting on the admissions process. So long as there were other means of getting into our better colleges, at least there was a chance of admitting some students who were not marching in tune to the academic lock-step. A Franklin D. Roosevelt or a Chief Justice Harlan Stone might slip in through the side door as a son of an alumnus or graduate of a distinguished private school — though on the basis of academic performance neither could get in the front door today. Yet they represent for me a type of excellence that deserves an education in one of the "preferred" colleges. Yet even if they got in today, they would not stay long, if a practice tried out at Amherst College (where Justice Stone was an undergraduate) spreads. There for a time a student had to live up to his predicted grade-point average or he was expelled, even though he was earning passing grades. It is difficult not to be misunderstood on this point. Academic excellence is a wonderful thing. As a teacher I much prefer to have conscientious people in my classes who do what they are told, read their assignments, and turn in interesting papers on time. I am annoyed by that boy in the back of the room who comes late to class, never participates in the discussion, and appears to be listening only half-heartedly to the pearls of wisdom I am dropping before him, and I certainly will give him a low grade — but is that all there is to education? Am I or his college having no influence on him except in terms of what is represented in that grade? Does it mean nothing for the future of the country that the scion of one of our great fortunes received such a ribbling from a sociology professor at Yale that it is alleged to have changed his whole outlook on life? He did not graduate, and, probably, with the greater efficiency of our academic predictors today, he would not have been admitted; but is that all there is to the story? most colleges. Only those boys who on the basis of the usual academic tests had a predicted average of "C" would be further considered for admission. Then, within that group, quotas should be set up for various types of excellence. For example, the one hundred boys with the highest academic prediction should be admitted, then the one hundred with the most curiosity, another hundred with the highest need for Achievement, one hundred with the greatest imaginativeness or the most political ability, and so on down the list. The professors would be sure to protest, and perhaps they should get the quota of the academically talented up to fifty percent, but at least the principle would be established that other types of excellence deserve the kind of education that college is giving. For the professors should not have the exclusive say as to who should be educated. Quite naturally they like people who are like themselves, but they do not represent the only type of excellence in the country that is important or needs encouragement. What a revolution in values it would bring if only a few National Merit Scholarships were given for the highest scores on tests of curiosity, creativity, or imaginative-ness! WHAT CAN BE DONE, practically speaking? I have a dream about a new type of admissions procedure that I would like to see tried out at one of our better colleges. First, the admissions office would set a floor for predicted academic performance. It should not be set too high. For the sake of argument, let us say that it is set at "C," a passing grade at Our national problem is that we have tended to focus increasingly on encouraging one type of excellence, and a practical, measurable, action-oriented type of excellence at that. Other types of human excellence exist, particularly those involving character and the inner life, and the world of imagination and human sensitivity. They can be measured, if necessary, to combat the stress on academic performance. They, too, need encouragement, and they can be encouraged by less stress on the purely academic side of life and more stress on the unique styles of educational institutions that most influence such other human qualities. (Editor's Note: This is the fifth in a series of articles taken from the article "Encouraging Excellence, the Stranglehold of Academic Performance on the Admissions Process" which appeared in the fall 1951 issue of Daedalus, the Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.) the took world By Carol Berry Yates Center graduate student HORSES, by George Gaylord Simpson. Doubleday Anchor Book, Natural History Library Edition. 1961. $1.45. In his Introduction George Gaylord Simpson quotes a learned Arab who said, "Paradise on earth is to be found on the back of a horse, in the pages of a book, and in the arms of a woman." He goes on to say that a book about horses should thus rate one and a half terrestrial paradises. PERHAPS IT SHOULD. But such may not be the case for readers of this book whose interest in horses may be limited to pleasant afternoons on some sedate mount or at the racetrack, and may not extend to a detailed description of the evolution of the horse. Such readers would find their attention drawn to the attractive plates showing different breeds of horses, different colors found in horses, and different parts of horses, and to chapters dealing with living breeds, European strains in American stock, and color heredity in horses. These occupy only about one-fourth of the book, however. The rest deals with the evolution of the horse. PROFESSOR SIMPSON DISCLOSES the lineage of the horse with commendable clarity, probably because he takes the trouble to explain all technical terms (he analyzes "Equus caballus" from Kingdom to Species as an example for the reader at the beginning of the book). The author obviously aims at a wide audience, but the promise of general interest that he holds out at the beginning is not realized toward the end, where the subject matter becomes more technical. However impeccable the book may be from the standpoint of scholarship, it remains an archaeological document, and will be of greater interest to those with an interest in both archaeology and horses than to those interested in horses alone. By S. F. Rude (a pen name) 1961 PRO FOOTBALL, edited by Don Schiffer; Giant Cardinal Original: 50 cents. Maybe this is dirty pool, but why not look at a book of forecasts six months after its publication? Actually, Mr. Schiffer has written more than predictions. He tells us what the referee's hand signals mean and gives us an interminable section on records, including punts, passes and "most points after touchdown." But it's on his forecasts for the recently-ended pro football season by which we must judge our "prize-winning news writer." In the NFL, eastern conference, he put the Cleveland Browns first, the New York Giants third. The Giants won. In the NFL, western conference, he had the 49ers first, the Packers second. The Packers won. Our astute prognosticator finds fault with the Packers' defensive secondary and Bart Starr's imagination. Why a book like this anyway? I suppose because it's worse than we expected. So we know that millions of active Americans get their workouts in stadiums shouting the Crimson and Blue onward. But do we realize that for an evening's reading, when they can be torn from TV, our first line of defense against the Russian brain is busily devouring books on sports, magazines on sports, and newspaper sports sections? WELL, THE TEAM, as everyone who follows the pigskin knows, had enough defensive power to throttle the Giants, allowing them no points in the title game. And Bart Starr engineered the offense which, as the sports boys say, garnered 37 points. Onward and upward with the jocks. Worth Repeating The academic profession would do well to give up its guerilla warfare against change. (Academicians present the paradox of being liberals politically but die-hard conservatives professionally.) David Boroff Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triviseek 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Iking 3-700 Extension 711 news room Education 275 broadcast off 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. 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. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors. Thursday, Jan. 4, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 State Reaction on Crisis Day (Editor's note: The following editorial excerpts on KU's World Crisis Day are from various newspapers published in or circulating in Kansas. The controversy was the result of a protest by the Patrick Henry American Legion Post in Wichita on the World Crisis Day plan. The Patrick Henry Post was formed by former members of Wichita's Thomas Hopkins American Legion Post. They formed the Patrick Henry Post because they were unable to practice their program of "Americanism" in the old post. The speakers at the World Crisis Day convocation were Arthur Schlesinger Jr., special assistant to President Kennedy and Alexander Fomin, counselor for the Soviet Embassy in Washington. Many smaller seminars on various aspects of the Cold War, regional areas of crisis, overpopulation and other world problems followed the convocation.) Dec.14 If the Patrick Henry Post wishes to make an ass of itself in public, that is its privilege. But anyone free of their particular shrill neurosis will surely be repelled by the irresponsible language of the attack, and by the implications of the attack itself. The Wichita Eagle The point is this: it is the business of a university to examine ideas. When that function is attacked, whether by the dictates of a Commissar of Education or by the zeal of a Patrick Henry Post, someone had better start making noises in defense of it. The Soviet ambassador is not going to make any converts to communism at KU. College students do not have to be protected from themselves, or from ideas, no matter what any self-appointed protectors may think. As for the statement that Schlesinger is "hardly qualified," it is absurd that a highly rated professional historian and authority on contemporary America should be so challenged by a group whose only qualification is that they once wore their country's uniform. Military service is something to be proud of, but it is not a mystic source of expert knowledge. THE CALL for an "investigation" is another absurdity. If anyone wishes to know who was responsible for the program, he has only to call or write the university, get a copy of the program, or ask any student who attends today's events. It is certainly no secret. We trust the officials at KU will recognize the Patrick Henry Post's remarks for what they are: simply another case of radical crackpottery. They are entitled to their say, but no one is obliged to listen. Salina Journal Dec. 17 More Patriotic Students at the University of Kansas are more stoutly American today than they were before. They also are better informed; their patriotism has been strengthened by their knowledge. These are the observable results of a day spent in discussing world issues in this time of crisis. That the Soviet government was represented by its embassy counselor and the United States government was represented by the special representative of the President gave both drama and authority to the occasion. The campus at Lawrence was an exciting place Thursday. How stupid and craven were the fears of those who thought that Kansas college students could not face the world with eyes open without becoming contaminated! What real patriot fears the truth in any of its facets? Great Bend Daily Tribune Dec.15 If the Wichita Legion post wants to flail at purveyors of Russian propaganda, why not pick on the American press? We publish Russian speeches, claims, charges, lies, half-truths and what-have-you every day. We do it as a part of the press function of giving Americans the full picture. We do it in millions of copies, going into virtually every home in the country. It is hard to understand why a 30-minute exposure to a communist from the Soviet embassy can be considered remotely as dangerous to American interests and national security as this daily pounding the public gets through the press. Nor are we making apologies for the news media. The public wants the full picture, and should have it. Despite the tremendous volume of Khrushchev propaganda published in American newspapers, we don't think the national resolve to resist communism has diminished. It has been strengthened. Exposure of the KU student body to Russian diplomat Fomin might add somewhat to an understanding of the world crisis. We wouldn't propose to argue this point. But a 30-minute talk by a known Russian propagandist shouldn't occasion a storm. It has, providing us all with food and thought. Isn't it fine that the University of Kansas can invite a Russian diplomat to speak at a student convocation; that an American Legion post in Wichita can blow its stack and (as the Wichita Eagle puts it) make an ass of itself; that newspapers can editorialize about the incident; and that the public can argue the pros and cons over coffee until something more stimulating comes along? The Kansas City Star Dec.15 We doubt that the attack on KU had any effect except to focus wide attention on its worth-while effort. The controversial visitors were only a small part of the program. But from this part, the students did get, hot off the griddle, the new Soviet propaganda line which seeks to stir all the World fears of Germany. Getting the line through face-to-face contacts was certainly worth far more than reading it from an official handout. The students have seen a highly placed Russian in action, and with a capable U.S. representative in rebuttal. We don't think any of the students are gullible enough to fall for the Soviet line. If they are, they shouldn't be in college. The event seems to have served its purpose which is inquiry. It is the business of the university to continue boldly on its course. It would be tragic if it should ever be deterred by any unbounded criticism. The Parsons Sun Dec.15 There are those who want to build a wall around KU and the state of Kansas. Khrushev built a wall around West Berlin, too. The effect on freedom is the same in either case, even if the handiwork is the product of different authors in different locations with different aims. This state and the university demonstrated they are not afraid of freedom, as are a few of the shrill within our borders. The strength of freedom makes it unnecessary to adopt Communist tactics as a prelude to the examination of communism's practices. We should permit suppression to remain a communistic monopoly for nothing else so vividly emphasizes that system's weaknesses, or could be so disastrous to our own way of life. The Independence Reporter 195 Dec.15 The invitation to this enemy propagandist, the Legion stated, reveals the tragic and amoral "double-standard" which is applied in dealing with our Communist enemies. They asked, "Would the officials of KU sanction a similar invitation to an important Nazi or Fascist propagandist of Hitler or Mussolini, after forces under their sponsorship had killed tens of thousands of Americans?" Schlesinger, the Legion stated, is hardly qualified to present the case of free enterprise vs. communism. It quoted Mr. Schlesinger in a speech he made in 1949 as follows: "I happen to believe that the Communist Party should be granted freedom of political action and that Communists should be allowed to teach in universities, so long as they do not disqualify themselves by intellectual distortions in the classrooms." The engaging of these two men to speak before the entire Kansas U student body will bring many questions into the minds of parents. First, must we expose our children to Communist propaganda in order that they be educated? Secondly, what is Schlesinger doing in an important post of our government if he favors freedom for the Communists in this country? The best warning to KU officials and all other collegiate and school administrators can be found in the words of J. Edgar Hoover, who said: "We are at war with the Communists, and the sooner each red-blooded American realizes that, the better and safer we will be." Educators would do well these days to be sure their students are fully advised on the subject of Americanism before they are subjected to the isms designed to outstrip and finally bury our form of government. Hutchinson News Kansas University had its "Crisis Day" with Arthur Schlesinger of the President's staff and Alexander Fomin of the Soviet embassy, discussing Soviet-American relations... Dec. 15 The super-patriotic Patrick Henry Post of the American Legion denounced KU for un-Americanism for letting a Russian discuss Russian foreign policy. It was only slightly less disagreeable about having Schlesinger instead of "a forthright Americanist spokesman such as Sen. Dodd or Sen. Barry Goldwater." See how scared they are. They have so little faith in our youth, in our long educational tradition of free inquiry, in the power of truth to triumph—so little faith that they think a Russian official walking up Mt. Oread is "an un-American act of betrayal to our interest and our national security." And look at their logic. Don't let a Russian express Russian views. And don't ask one who has helped formulate American policy to explain it; get a critic to explain it. They are ridiculous, these toy soldiers; but also a little frightening. JS The Weekly Editor Every midwestern town has its self-appointed guardian of the community's virtue. It may be the local chapter of a woman's organization, the corner druggist, or a postmaster. These people find a plethora of vices and subversion about them: Smutty books in the library, girlie magazines on the newsstands, leftists in the state college, communism in history textbooks. When the criers of public alarm are in full pursuit they write letters to the editor, attend Parent Teacher Association meetings on masse, and in general make themselves heard. They usually have little effect, unless the community is so burdened with other business that behind this preoccupation they manage to intimidate some poor school principal or a librarian anxious to keep her job. BUT WHEN THE local truth-seeker and morals-keeper is the weekly newspaper editor the community finds itself in a different situation. Newspaper editors exercise great powers over their readers. Unfortunately, whatever noisemone bother they kick up, readers tend to accept the printed word as truth. So it is that in the United States the weekly editor is given a place of respect, listened to carefully and too often followed on the path to whatever folly he advises. Generally, he advises caution and inaction, which are themselves action of a sort. Many journalists in America mourn the passing of this old battier. I do not share their sorrow. In my trip across "America's heartland," as some of these editors describe their flat countryside, I have read their editorials. They cleave to Flag, Motherhood and Country, an American version of British blather about Empire and what have you. These weekly newspaper editors are generally Republicans of the Harding era. To them, Dwight Eisenhower was a traitor, not to his country, as the John Birch Society has it, but to the Grand Old Party. They are now embracing Sen. Goldwater, and their embrace will undoubtedly strangle the Arizona senator who would have his country coil up onto itself... THE EDITORS also look with disdain on any political theorists since Adam Smith, and although they know nothing of Keynesian economics they have been told that this was what Franklin Roosevelt practiced and so therefore they are against it. To the new president, John Kennedy, they are equally cool. Their favorite target of the new administration is the Peace Corps, which, since it involves the world outside their town's boundaries, is a boondoggle at best and training in communism at worst. Locally, they oppose flouridation, increased school construction, social sciences in the school system, racial integration. In short, they are trying to live out their lives in the comfortable 1920s which they knew in their prime. Befuddled, confused, yearning for a past that never can be regained. these men are no more representative of the American press than the New York Daily News, or the New York Times. (Excerpted from an article by Roger Bryce, "America as Seen by Others," in the Oct. 22 issue of World's Press.) University Daily Kansan Page 4 Thursday, Jan. 4, 1962 Humanities Talk On Forgotten Hero Following weeks of gridiron bowl games in which modern valiant helmeted warriors competed on 21-inch screens, the Humanities Lecture Series at the University of Kansas will present on Tuesday, January 9, the story of a hero of Greek mythology. The lecture, "A Forgotten hero—Development and Decay of a Greek Myth," will be given by Mary A. Grant, KU emeritus associate professor of Latin and Greek. Following the lecture at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater, an informal reception for Miss Grant will be held in the Faculty Club. "Miss Grant chooses not to reveal in advance the identity of the mythical character," explained Prof. Elmer F. Beth, chairman of the Humanities committee, "but I can say that he is a relative of one of the foremost warriors in Greek mythology, a god who was an inspiration to Greek youths." MISS GRANT will be the 14th KU scholar to be presented on the Humanities Lecture Series since the tradition was started in 1948. For years, she taught courses in Greek and Roman mythology here. Last year, the University of Kansas Press issued her latest work, "The Myths of Hyginus," which included the only English translation of a Latin text, "Fabulae," now out of print. She also is the author of articles and reviews in classical literature periodicals. She has had poems and narrative sketches published in Atlantic Monthly, Kansas Magazine, and Hospital Renews Flu Shot Appeal With confirmed outbreaks of influenza in several areas of the United States, including St. Louis, a renewed appeal has been issued by Watkins Memorial Hospital for KU students to obtain a flu immunization shot. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, hospital administrator, estimates there are between 5,000 and 6,000 students who still have not received an influenza shot. The hospital administrator said there have been several suspected cases of the flu at the hospital. Thus far, all have tested negative, however. With the extensive travel that many students and faculty members did over the holiday, it is a certainty some will have been exposed to the disease. Dr. Canuteson said the hospital will give the shots as rapidly as possible. Without a high percentage of students and faculty protected, Dr. Canuteson said, there is a strong likelihood there will be flu on the campus. Spirit magazine. She was for years curator of Wilcox Museum in Fraser Hall. After receiving the Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin in 1919, she taught Latin at Western College for Women in Oxford, Ohio; in 1921, she was appointed to the KU faculty and taught until her retirement last year. She held a fellowship at Bryn Mawr and a traveling fellowship from Wisconsin to the American Academy in Rome. She studied one summer at the American School in Athens, Greece, and she has taken six trips to Italy, Greece, and the Near East. She is a native Kansas; both her B.A. and M.A. were earned at the University of Kansas. CLIFFORD OSBORNE, professor of philosophy, was the first KU scholar to give a Humanities lecture (in 1948). Since then, in order, the KU speakers have been: John Hankins, professor of English; the late Charles Realy, professor of history; Dr. William Shoemaker, Romance languages; Dean Frederick Moreau, law; Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of drama; Dr. George Anderson, professor of history; J. Neale Carman, professor of Romance languages; L. R. Lind, professor of Latin and Greek; Dean M. Carl Slough, law; Dr. William D. Paden, professor of English; Jan Chapiusso, professor emeritus of piano; and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. The devotion of thought to an honest achievement makes the achievement possible.—Mary Baker Eddy I can try all things; I achieve what I can—Herman Melville Bubb Named To Regents Henry A. Bubb, president of the Topeka Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Association and former KU stu dent, was appointed to the Kansas Board of Regents Dec. 29. The 54-year-old businessman attended KU the Spring semester of 1925, the Spring semester of 1926 and the Fall semester of 1926. He then dropped out of the University. There was a Democratic majority on the board for the first time in history during the Docking administration. Having a Party? The appointment was made by Gov. John Anderson. Mr. Bubb assumed his duties Monday and will serve a four year term. THE LAW REQUIRES that the membership of the board be divided between the two major parties on a 5-4 basis. The appointment of Mr. Bubb returns control of the board to the Republicans. Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES MR. BUBB was appointed chairman of the United States Savings and Loan League's legislative committee for the eighth successive year. He will direct the national legislative program for the $80 billion savings and loan business in this position. He has served on several organizations connected with KU. He is a trustee of the Endowment Association and served on the Athletic Board from 1953 to 1956. He is also a past national chairman of the Alumni Association. Whitley Austin, publisher of the Salina Journal, was reappointed to the Board of Regents. He is currently chairman of the Board of Regents. Mr. Bubb replaces Russell R. Rust of Topeka, whose term on the board expired Sunday. One other term, that of George B. Collins, a Wichita Democrat, also expired Sunday. Since Mr. Bubb's appointment placed five Republicans on the board, Mr. Collins' successor must be a Democrat, but Gov. Anderson said he had not yet decided who will fill this position on the board. Our deeds determine us, as much as we determine our deeds.—George Eliot LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Resolve to Start Saving on All Your Dry Cleaning Do-it-yourself at Ninth & Mississippi Start the new year looking your best with economical, easy to use do-it-yourself dry cleaning. Eight pounds of dry cleaning for only eight quarters. PLENTY OF FREE PARKING Open Round the Clock — 7 Days a Week French Ph.D. Reading Exam: Jan 13 9a-10a on Friday be handed in to Miss Crigby by Jan 10. Official Bulletin Western Civilization Comprehensive Examination: Review Sessions: Jan. 9, 10 from 7:5-13:00 p.m., Bailey Auditorium. Examination: Jan. 13 at 1 a.m., rooms German Ph.D. Reading Exam: Jan. 13. 9 am and 2 pm Deadline for signing June 6, 12 ppm Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 & 8 a.m. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 p.m., Southern Baptist Activities Building, 1221 Oread. Bible study and devotional. TODAY Social Work Club: 7 p.m. 305 Kansas Union University, 1200 N. Kansas Avenue, Social Work for Me as a Vocational Choice? Prof. Joseph Meisels, Chr. of MS in Industrial Psychology, Can Find This, In Professional, Social Work Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion and Breakfast: 7 a.m. Canterbury House. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: 7:30 p.m., Cottonwood Room. Kansas Union. Reports on Urbana Missionary Convention. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Ise, McCoy Speak Jan. 13 The fourth KU Crucial Issues meeting since its beginning last spring will be held at 3:30 p.m. Jan. 13 for approximately 100 people from the area. John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, and Donald McCoy, associate professor of history, will speak on "Conservatism and Liberalism on and off the College Campus." Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER SCHMIDT WELCOME WELCOME HAPPY NEW YEAR And may we express our sincere thanks for all the nice things you have done for us during the past twelve months. We are grateful for your confidence and hope that we may play some part in helping to make your new year a Happy and Prosperous one. FIRST STP BEMBER FEDERAL SOPROV INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 746 Mass. CLEARANCE SALE PANTS SKIRTS SWEATERS DRESSES GLOVES CO 19 Ar The wooden creatеe surroun the cuir with C the boli ARY. gave i top b the pro protec remov piece by the light tallie golder form and pl It haс York --- --- 1237 Oread ACH HOUSE maili dama Th nego lengt of A quisi colle tENTH tinting ating or IORS of A temp temper to m to m therers to rers the eros cross live live Lipt On the Campus University Dolly Kansan Page 5 1961 Senior Class Gift Arrives at Art Museum By Gerald S. Bernstein Curator, Museum of Art The arrival last week of a heavy wooden crate to the Museum of Art created the usual excitement that surrounds a new acquisition. It bore the customary markings of "Handle with Care" and "Fragile," along with the bold, black stencil word: STATUARY. The address of the shipper gave no clue to the contents. The top boards came free easily under the pressure of the crowbar. The soft protective layers of excelsior were removed, revealing a very special piece of statuary, long anticipated by the Museum staff. Even in the dim light of the shipping room, its metallic textured surface reflected a golden tone. Carefully, the complex form was lifted out of its container and placed gently on the work table. It had made the journey from New York in the midst of the Christmas "The Avenger" --- mailing rush and had arrived undamaged. Thus, after eight months of study, negotiation, personal interviews and lengthy correspondence, the Museum of Art had made an important acquisition in its expanding Modern collection. THIS ACQUISITION REPRESENTS a part of the gift of the graduating class of 1961. Last year's seniors allocated funds to the Museum of Art to acquire a piece of contemporary sculpture by a leading American artist. The museum agreed to match these funds. The search for an appropriate monument led through various New York art dealers and galleries and ultimately to the artist, himself. Through the generosity of the seniors, the Museum collection now includes a representative piece of sculpture by the renowned American creator, Seymour Lipton. Born in New York in 1903, Lipton is considered one of the great innovators in contemporary art. Only after he graduated from Columbia University did he begin the study of sculpture. Working first with wood and stone, he later developed a technique of creating directly in metal. Lipton's use of nickel-silver for surface texture as well as internal strength has contributed a new dimension to modern sculpture. THE KANSAS LIPTON is 18 x 24 inches and is called "Avenger." In it we see the most characteristic elements of the artist's mature style. Resting on two slim shafts, the piece is executed in nickel-silver on monel metal with a highly textured surface. To Lipton, the inside and outside of a piece of sculpture become one in the struggle of growth. Both organic and mechanical forms are used to express a personal imagery. Andrew Ritchie, Curator of the Yale Art Gallery, has described "Avenger" as "a synthesis of shellfish and flower, enclosing a spiraling tongue." Tape recordings of the appearances of Alexander Fomin, counselor to the Soviet Embassy in Washington and Crisis Day speaker, in three KU classes may be used in future classwork. Klaus Pringsheim, instructor in political science, said he suggested Mr. Fomin's appearances be recorded. Fomin Tapes May Be Used in Classes "With all the accusations flying around, we would have proof he wasn't 'teaching' our students, and we'd also have recordings that could be used in instructing students in the future," Prof. Pringsheim said. The recording was done on University-owned tape on University tape recorders, Prof. Pringsheim said. BUSINESS MACHINES CO. 912 Mass. - VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up SALES SERVICE RENTALS Printing, Mimeographing and Duplicating Pick up — Delivery --- SALE ENDS CLIP THIS COUPON JAN. 6TH TROUSERS • SLACKS • 5 TIES • SPORT SHIRTS • SWEATERS • BLOUSES • SKIRTS (plain) 34℃ ea. Deluxe Cleaned, Beautifully Pressed Note: No Limit. But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Order 85c SHIRTS NOW ONLY 19℃ Dress Shirts Laundered to perfection! Starched as you like! 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 1300 West 23rd St. VI 2-0200 DeLuxe UDK Ties in National Contest Thursday, Jan. 4. 1982 Student writers on the University Daily Kansan gained a third place tie in the November competition conducted by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation for all the accredited schools and departments of journalism in the nation. The November competition was for sports writing, Fred Zimmerman, junior, from Kansas City, Mo., tied for sixth place in sports writing and William G. Sheldon, Williamstown, Mass., junior, had a 15th place tie. East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 The KU journalists, who won the Hearst all-around sweepstakes championship for 1960-61, took first place nationally in the October competition for newswriting. Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires L.P. Record Sale Pops & Jazz MONAURAL & STEREO 925 Mass. St. VI 3-2644 BELL MUSIC COMPANY Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters. ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. VI 3-3470 Semi-Annual SHOE SALE WINTHROP SHOES FOR MEN 6 $ ^{90} $ and $ 9^{90} $ Values to 15.95 Bucks - Slip-ons - Leather Chucka Boots WOMEN'S DRESS PUMPS 590 790 990 Values to 14.95 Vitality - Accent- Jacqueline WOMEN'S FLATS & SPORT SHOES 390 490 590 Values to 10.95 Penobscot - Coach & Four - Connie - Joyce Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 4, 1962 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Hawkers Finish 5th in Tourney A single point sent the University of Kansas basketball team into the losers bracket for the first time in several years in the annual Big Eight pre-season tourney in Kansas City Dec. 27, 28, 29, and 30. The Hawks, on the short end of a 61-60 score in the opening round game with Oklahoma, made the most of their unfamiliar surroundings in the consolation pairings by winning two straight games and capturing the consolation title. AFTER LOSING to the Sooners, the Jayhawk cagers went on to down Colorado, 75-66, and nudge Nebraska 69-68, in a consolation finals thriller. The tourney's individual honor went to KU guard Jerry Gardner Gardner was the meet's leading scorer with 75 points and received "most outstanding player" recognition. Picking Gardner as the "most outstanding player" marked only the second time in the tourney's 16-year history that a guard has received the honor. Gardner was KU's lone representative on the all-tourney quintet. The Hawker guard tallied 25, 23, and 27 points in tourney action. NOLEN ELLISON, the second part of KU's standout guard tandem, tied for third place in the tourney scoring race with 59 points. Kansas State, defending tourney and loop champion, retained its tourney crown. The Wildcats, led by center Mike Wrobleskis, fought to a 69-67 win over Iowa State in the finals. In the consolation final, KU's win was due largely to the combined efforts of guards Gardner and Ellison. Gardner contributed 27 points and Ellison had 26. The two guards sank all but one of KU's field goals in the second half. THE TITLE WAS CINCHED when Ellison made two free throws in a one-and-one situation with 13 seconds remaining in the game. The Cornhuskers, who meet the Hawks again Saturday in the conference inaugural, were paced by Tom Russell, Rex Swett, and Ivan Grupe. Russell had 23 points; Swett, 16; and Grupe, 14. In their opening round tilt against Oklahoma, KU, behind by a point, had the ball in its possession with eight seconds remaining. After a time out, a 20-footer by Ellison missed the mark. The first round consolation clash turned into a battle of the Kansas backcourt vs. the tall Colorado front line. The backcourt duo of Gardner and Ellison won the battle. KU emerged with a nine-point margin and Gardner hit for 23 points and Ellison added 22. Beam Team NEW YORK — (UPI) — What is the broadest part of a seated person? The seat breadth? The elbow breadth, with elbows held close to the body? The answers are important to the designers of furniture, clothing, transportation equipment — all sorts of things which should fit people. The U.S. Public Health Service, through an intensive survey, is attempting to answer this question — among others. The other big sports stories of the year ranked as follows: IM Bowling Comes To Close; Varsity Rolls Roger Maris' breaking the major league home run record but failing to break Babe Ruth's record ranked as the top sports story in a poll conducted among writers and editors of the University Daily Kansas. 3. ERNIE DAVIS wins the Heisman trophy. This story was particularly appealing since Davis was the first Negro to win this most coveted of college football trophies. This was the only story other than the Maris story to receive a first place vote. 2. The Yankees win the pennant under their new manager Ralph Houk. After Casey Stengal left, many wondered if the Yanks could win in 1961. The Bronx Bombers gave them a resounding answer. Bowling in the fall intramural leagues ends next week, according to Bascom Fearing, manager of Jay Bowl. By Mike Miller 4. Warren Spahn of the Milwaukee Braves wins his 300th major league game. Spahn's victory moved him into the very elite who have won that 300th game. The additional excitement of Maris' battle with Mantle also gave appeal to the story. It garnered 253 of a possible 260 points, and it was ranked first on 12 of the 13 ballots. 5. Alabama is national football champion. The Crimson Tide finished the season the only major unbeaten team. Plavoffs for the men's leagues are slated for Jan. 13 and 14. Women's leagues playoffs will be Jan. 13. 6. Yankees win the series. Although the series was not particularly exciting, the Yankees' team balance made it a good series. 7. Ty Cobb dies. The immortal Georgia Peach's death made headline news as well as many feature stories. 8. CINCINNATI beats Ohio State for NCAA basketball championship. Cincinnati's upset of favored Ohio State was one of the big basketball stories in years. Maris' Home Run Named As Top Sports Story of Year THE FIRST PLACE winner in each of the nine men's leagues and the three highest teams will compete in the finals. 9. American Basketball League formed. This erected a new major league in basketball. Although it does not yet measure up to the standard of the NBL, the ABL promises to raise in quality in the next few years. Winners of the two women's leagues, plus the next two high teams, will bowl for the championship in that division: House and independent trophies will be awarded. Individual awards will also be made. Hember, the top KU bowler, has a 197 average for 45 games rolled in the varsity standings and a 204 average for six games in the KU national intercollegiate standings. IN VARSITY BOWLING, the Jayhawk crew rolls against Colorado Monday in the Big Eight Postal League. KU is third in the loop standings and the Buffs are second. Leading the Hawk keglers will be John Hember, Shawnee Mission sophomore. In the current league standings, Hember is second with a 216 average for 9 games. Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. NOW! Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 JERRY LEWIS as... THE ERRAND BOY (A JERRY LEWIS PRODUCTION) FRACTURES HOLLYWOOD WITH A MILLION HOWLIS- ROAR BY ROAR! 10. Frank Budd runs the 100-yard dash in 9.2. The Villanova speedster broke the old record of 9.3 held by many runners. 11. Warren Spahn throws second career no-hitter. Spahn had not thrown a no-hitter until last year. This second no-hitter in less than a year moved him up to a listing among the few pitchers who have thrown more than one career no-hitter. 12. PRO ATHLETES are drafted into the Army, Such football stars as Paul Hornung and Boyd Dowler and baseball stars as Tony Kubek left their teams to serve in the armed forces. 14. Phil Hill is the first American to win the European world racing championship. The Californian compiled the most total points in the Grand Prix circuit. 13. Gary Player beats Arnold Palmer in the Master's. The spunky little South African took advantage of Palmer's errors to ruin Palmer's bid to win the Master's three years in a row. NOW! Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 JERRY LEWIS as", THE ERRAND BOY (A JERRY LEWIS PRODUCTION) FRACTURES HOLLYWOOD WITH A MILLION HOWLS- ROAR BY ROAR! PLUS FOOTBALL HIGHLIGHTS OF 1961! PENNEBAKER PRODUCTIONS and DIANE PRODUCTIONS present PAUL JOANNE SIDNEY NEWMAN·WOODWARD·POITIER You'll live every wild wonderful minuta of its brash excitement! "Paris Blues" LOUIS ARMSTRONG DIAHANN CARROLL COMING SUNDAY! VARSITY THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-1065 PAUL JOANNE SIDNEY NEWMAN·WOODWARD·POITIER You'll live every wild wonderful minute of its brash excitement! "Paris Blues" LOUIS ARMSTRONG DIAHANN CARROLL 15. Ohio State faculty committee turns down Rose Bowl bid. The school's faculty voted not to let the team go to the Rose Bowl, thus letting Minnesota go for the second consecutive year. 16. A. J. FOYT wins Indianapolis 500. The young Texan took advantage of Eddie Sacks' car trouble in the final leg of the race to win the 500. 17. Wolfgang von Tripps is killed. The famous driver was killed in a racing accident at Monza in Italy. VARSITY THEATRE Telephone YIKING 3.1055 18. Carry Back wins the first two of racing's triple crown. Carry Back won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness but was beaten in the Belmont Stakes. 19. Unbeaten Texas is upset by TCU. Powerful, Texas, which had swarmed over its previous opponents, went down to rival TVU by a heartbreak breaking 6-0 score. 20. Floyd Patterson defends crown by knocking out Tom McNeely in four rounds. The heavy-weight champion knocked McNeely down six times before the young Bostonian finally was unable to get up. Typewriters sales - service - rentals Olympia Portables Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 GUY'S GUY'S POTATO CHIPS GUY'S POTATO CHIPS Be Wise — Buy Guy's NOW SHOWING! At 7:00 & 9:00 The Brightest Happiest Time of Your Life! Walt Disney presents VICTOR HEARBERT'S BARES IN TOYLAND TECHNICOLOR® 1981 WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS- RELEASED BY BUENA VASA DISTRIBUTION CO., INC. AUDREY HEPBURN ...that delightful darling, HOLLY GOLIGHTLY! ...serving champagne kisses, wild oats, and wonderful fun! BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S A JUROW-SHEPHERD PRODUCTION GEORGE PEPPARD TECHNICOLOR PATRIA BUDDY MARTIN NEAL EBSEN BALSAM MIKEY ROONEY STARTS SATURDAY! GRANADA THEATRE...Telefonica VENUE 34001 GRADI Large from U appoin One da A TRAIL for stu Nice 3 Trailer 3 ROC blocks & bath preferm ONLY & wa $26 pe GRANADA THEATRE Telephone VOICE 3-7142 3 ROC pletely $40 ea 1005 M FOR close garage HOME style. VI 3-4 NEW 2 Elec. Lower Alabar LARC rooms 3 stu 0731. Ka ADVE fied se KANS. ATTE room: priv. $40 Miss. LARG or 2 1 7642 a University Daily Kensan Page 7 had po- by SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS nds Mc- vy- Mc- the un- 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 Kansai BusinessOffice in Fint on publication on the day before publication is desired. FOR RENT GRADUATE MEN — Why climb the hill? Large rooms available now. 1₂ block from Union, $25.121 Oread. Call for appointment. VI 3-6798 or VI 3-8796. 1-10 TRAILER SPACE for rent. Good location for students. Set up for 8' or 10' widths. Nice yard with trees. See at Hillcrest Trailer Court. Or call VI 3-3884. 1-10 ONLY ½ bLOCK FROM CAMPUS. Nice hardback. Mail to: £26 per mail. Call V1 3-6694. 1-10 3 ROOM NICELY furnished apt. 21* blocks from campus. Priv. entr., phone & bath. $55 a month, utilities paid. Boys preferred. Phone VI 3-7830. 1-10 HOME COOKED meals. Served family room for gentleman. Phone 3-1-4667. FOR RENT Two bedroom cottages garage, fenced yard. Gall VI 3-8344-1-16 3 ROOM FURNISHED apt. for 2. Completely private. 1st floor, all utilities paid. $40 ea. Located at 1029 Miss. Inquire at 1055 Miss.. VI 3-4349. 1-10 NEW 2 BEDROOM apts. Furn. or unfurn. Elev. rack, air cond., garbage disposal. Lower rates to year around tenants. 2331 Alabama. Call VI 3-2346. 1-10 Kansan Want Ads Get Results LARGE ROOM with priv. bath for 2 girl 1042 or 5 on weekends 1-10 642 after 5 or on weekends 1-10 Kansan Want Ads Get Results ADVERTISE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- fied section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 0731. ATTRACTIVE APT. for 2 KU men. 3 rooms & shower, twin beds, completely equipped. KU All utilities include $40 each. Available Jan. 1. Inquire 1005 Miss. VI 3-4349. THE HOUSE FOR GRADUATE MEN will have available Jan. 1 and Feb. 1. two completely furnished bachelor apartments for one or two graduate men or mature seniors entering graduate school. Quiet ideal study conditions made possible by hiring staffes paid. One clock from Union. For appointment phone IV 2-8534. 1-3 LARGE FURNISHED apartment, e a s t side, utilities paid, $50. Call VI 3-6294. FOR RENT TO MALE STUDENT. Single large house, 1122 Kentucky. 1-800- 534-7677. 1122 Kentucky. 1-800- 534-7677. 3 ROOM APT, nicely furn. farm, bath and courtroom from courthouse. Call VI. 3-5956. 1-8 HELP WANTED RN's NEEDED: Full or part time. General duty any shift. Also operating room. Contact Mrs. Blasingame. Call collect. Contact 2-3344 or Cherry 2-2929, Ottawa, Kansas. MIMEOGRAPH OPERATOR-TYPIST: must be experienced, accurate typist. IBM electric typewriters; addressgraph equipment; multiflush operator. State Civil Service positions. See Thos. C. Rythter. 117 Flint Hall. Phone KU-373. tf BUSINESS SERVICES ALTERATIONS, men & women, men's alterations, coats relined. CALL VI- 1345. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- warding. Glia Smith 93%; Mass. Call I 3-5263. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. tf U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- morning. Phone VI 3-2921. Modern self-service — open weekdays 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. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-7515, or NI 921 Miss. tt U. AUTO C.-Our complete lines of Pet Supplies. beds - harness - sweaters, etc. in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Conn., In-Pet Center. At Coun., Shop sectionalized - save time and money. tf JIM'S CAFE 838 Moss. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Kansan Want Ads Get Results TUTORING MATH TUTORING in undergrad. courses math grad. stud. Reasonable VI II MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent clay paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI. tfl 0350. FOR SALE TERRIFIC LOCATION to KU & Centennial School. 3 bedrooms, rancher manicured front yard, room attached garage, utility room, room aluminum storms $12,000 M-9,8576 GOING TO EUROPE. Will sell 2 good cars, $10,000. Will sell 3 good car, $750. The economy car, $450. Also 1958 Jaguar 2.4 Sedan. White with red leather upholstery. Patient condition, $2,250. Call 8795. 8795. V-1-10 GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS, New & used guns. Ammo. Professional -Reblung Excellent. Seen them at 1304 Tenn. (rear). Call VI 3-7001. 1-5 FOR SALE OR RENT: 2 bdrm. house trailer, 40 x 8', air cond. & in good condition. Located at Hillcrest Trailer Court or call VI 3-3884. 1-10 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. Science Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI S-1644. NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and micrographing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 912 Mass. Phone VI 3-0151 today. tf WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised. 100 pages, minoegraphed 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 3-5778. tf PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 prehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition: formerly known as the Theta library I: 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery w/key $4.50. HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Colllus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendron & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tt USED MAGNAVOX 21" table model TV F-840, Pettignet, Dell, 723 Mass. If f-840, Pettignet, Dell, 723 Mass. TYPING PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing Reasonable rates. Mrs. Nancy Cain, VI 3-0524 MILKENIER S' "S.O.S." Now at two 108 Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass. Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call V1 3-2654 any time. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Tec. tk. 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. Shelf 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, articles. Send neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI.3-7485. 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. Reasons: Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th. V 1-26ft. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- tying architectures. For excele- sting at standard rates, call MISS La- Pope, VI 3-1097. lt EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typos name call VI 3-9126. MoL. Gebihbach. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, memorandums, and reports. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mc- Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter. Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf TYPIST. experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executionson, Mission HE 2-7718. Eves or Sat. **RA** 2-2186. FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing. Experienced in the paper, papers, theses and Reasoning rates. Mt. Marilyn Hail. VI 3-2318. Mt. ff HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher? No. Please check & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. Selling - Buying Need Help For best results, use the University Daily Kansan Classified Page Phone Ext. 376 It's what's up front that counts KING SIZE Winston Up front is FILTER-BLEND and only Winston has it! Rich, golden tobaccos specially selected and specially processed for full flavor in filter smoking. Winston Winston FILTER • CIGARETTES FINER FILTER FOR FINER FLAVOR FINER FILLED FOR FINER MORAL R. J. Reynolds Tohareo Co., Winston-Salem, N. C. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 4, 1962 Apportionment — (Continued from page 1) seats, therefore, are available to be divided among the more populous counties. The brief points out that based on the 1960 U.S. census, each House member should represent 18,155 people. On this basis, Sedgwick County should have 19 representatives instead of five as at present. If each county must have at least one representative, Sedgwick County would have 171 seats to have equal representation with Wallace, the smallest county with a population of 2,068. THE HOUSE is controlled by an even smaller proportion of the population than is the Senate. Sixty-three House seats are controlled by 402,687 Kansans, or only 18 per cent of the total population. Inequalities occur even within a given county. The most flagrant inequality cited by the brief is in Reno County. The 74th district, which contains the city of Hutchinson and some rural areas, contains 49,398 people, but the 75th district in the same county has only 9,715 people. The voters in one part of Reno County, therefore, have five times the influence in the state House of Representatives as do the voters in the other part of the county. TO SOME KANSANS, the legislature is obviously badly in need of reapportionment. The state constitution requires both houses to be reapportioned every five years. The House and Senate, however, have been reapportioned only twice each since 1900. The last reapportionment in both houses was in the 1950s, but obviously these changes did not correct the situation. The next article will discuss past attempts at reapportionment and why reapportionment solely according to population is opposed today. Wescoe to Speak Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will address the International Club meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. Following the Chancellor's address, pictures will be taken for the Jayhawker. Men are requested to wear coats and ties. Refreshments will be served and there will be dancing. Payroll Deductions Faculty payroll retirement deductions begin next month, Keith L. Nitcher, business office comptroller announced today. Mr. Nitcher said payroll deductions this month, which have been questioned by some faculty members, were social security withholdings for the new year. Bikinied Bow-Wows ST. TROPEZ, France — (UPI) — Something new has come to this Riviera resort of the Bikini bathing suit. French poodles are wearing bikinis now. Architectural Students Win Design Awards A total of $200 in prizes has been awarded to six architecture and architectural engineering students in the 1611 annual design competition program sponsored by the Kansas Concrete Masonry Association. Two other students received honorable mention. All students were members of Design III and IV classes. The cash prizes were $50, $30 and $20 for first, second and third place winners. Winners are: DESIGN III First prize: Julian Ominski, Kansas City, Mo., junior; second prize: Michael Kephart, Perryville, Mo., senior; third prize: Larry Hansen, Kansas City senior; honorable mention: William K. Kahmann, Springfield, Mo., junior. DESIGN IV First prize: Philip A. Lawrence, Jr., Lawrence senior; second prize: John Rollin Allen, Prairie Village senior; third prize: Gary D. Ultican, Blue Springs, Mo., senior; honorable mention: Charles D. Ogden, Sabetha junior. KU Graduate Ready For Peace Cords University of Kansas graduate Emery M. Bontrager, Scott City, has been assigned to Paracale, Camarines Norte, Philippines for a two-year Peace Corps service. Emery has spent the last two months of training in the Philippines, learning first-hand about Philippine culture and society. His training schedule includes class six days a week from eight to five studying such subjects as Intensive Tagalog (the Philippine national language), Philippine culture and society, the Philippine school system, and methods of teaching. Beyond formal training he has been a member of the Peace Corps softball team and co-chairman of the Motor Pool. BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING WHEEL ALIGNMENT FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP 229 Elm VI 3-2250 Now Open! Dixon's Are Back Now You Can Get the Very Best in Food and Personalized Service Discover the Big Difference Quality Makes Drive-In Restaurant DIXON'S 2500 West 6th Street Open 4 to 12 p.m. — Closed Tuesdays We Deliver - VI 3-7446 Weather Temperatures in Kansas will be dropping to near-zero as a result of a new cold wave. Snow is expected in east and central Kansas tomorrow, with temperatures falling to near 10 above by Saturday morning. The low tonight will be near 15 in the Northwest and in the lower 30's in the Southeast. Foreign Students Must File Report International students who are not United States citizens are required to file address report cards with the Immigration and Naturalization Service during January. The cards, Form I-53, are available at the U.S. Post Offices in Strong Hall and downtown. The report must be filed this month regardless of any reports submitted previously. Further information is available in the office of Clark Coan, dean of students and foreign student adviser. BOWLING is FUN! Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 32 AUTOMATIC LANES Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers WELCOME BACK A man and a woman in a suit and coat laughing together. Sanitone is the only cleaning method that is recommended by such clothing manufacturers as Botany, Serbin, G Jonathan Logan. WE HOPE YOUR HOLIDAYS WERE HAPPY ONES And now that vacation is over, it's a good time to let us clean your winter wardrobe. Remember, Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaners has the exclusive Sanitone process that preserves the like-new smartness of your fine clothing. SEE US SOON LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. VI3-3711 "Specialists in Fabric Care" 59th UR VII The charging" perin a few tive Ho sourc repor tivity The word a Co vision static bordé el fo Th mun attac MR AF offici wrote Comi "psy- ning stand durin coal" Th Fren dale from lowe Th the f lyn musi Spai 51436097 --- Daily hansan 59th Year, No.64 Friday, Jan. 5, 1962 U.S.-Laos Fighting Reports Disagree VIENTIANE. Laos — (UPI) The Royal Laotian government charged last night that "hard fighting" had broken out on the defense perimeter along the Nam River, only a few miles north of this administrative capital. However, official U.S. Embassy sources said they had received "no reports of any unusual military activity during the past few days." The government, in an urgently-worded communique, said also that a Communist North Vietnamese division was standing by at "ready stations" on the Viet Nam-Laos border to assist the Communist rebel forces in this country. AFTER CONSULTING with U.S. officials here, diplomatic observers wrote off the "Defense Ministry Communique No. 1" as the start of "psychological war" aimed at winning U.S. support for the strong stand the Laotian government took during recent attempts to form a coalition government. The communique said the Communist-supported rebel forces had attacked frontline positions along the Nam River and also attacked a guerrilla post inside rebel territory. It said that Viet Minh (Communist North Viet Nam) forces inside Laos had increased in size while a Viet Minh division was ordered to stand by along the border. However, a usually reliable source said regarding the government communique: "There is no evidence of new developments concerning North Vietnamese in Laos or on its borders." THE COMMUNIQUE came on the heels of an order by the Laotian national bank to halt the exchange of national currency into foreign currency. LAWRENCE. KANSAS The order, which went into effect today, was expected to send the Laotian kip much higher than the present American-backed rate of 80 to one U.S. dollar. American officials here were under strict orders not to comment on the reasons for the bank's action, but it was assumed by most observers that it was triggered by an American move to tighten and toughen the U.S. air program. Museum Director's Art Received From Spain The Museum of Art has received the four pieces of art found by Mariiyn Stokstad, acting director of the museum, while she was working in Spain last summer. The pieces include a 14th century French sculpture of St. Mary Magdalene; a carved and gilded column from an altarpiece by a close follower of Jose Churriguera; a pair of --- silver Spanish Baroque andl壁ickests and a late medieval Spanish sword. The sculpture shows the saint holding a jar and book, the symbols of Mary Magdalene. The statue wears a late 13th century dress used by older women, widows and nuns of the period. The column is a twisted form around which a grapevine is twisted. It represents the style which influenced the development of colonial art and architecture, especially in Mexico and Peru. "I consider the acquisition of this sculpture for the museum the most important part of my work last summer. However, I was also able to find the other three works which add to the breadth and the quality of our collection," Miss Stokstad said. Students can learn about protection against radioactive fallout if they pick up a booklet entitled "Fallout Protection" at the Lawrence Post Office, 645 New Hampshire St. New Book Studies Fallout Shelters About 1500 copies of the booklet, which has just been released by the government, have arrived in Lawrence. The booklet deals with the construction of private fallout shelters. A second booklet, dealing with public shelters, will be released later. Weather St. Mary Magdalene Heavy snow warning extreme northeast and extreme east central cloudy and colder this afternoon and evening with snow east portion. Heavy snow with blowing and drifting snow and near blizzard conditions extreme north-northeast and extreme east central this afternoon continuing into night. Total snow accumulation over six inches. Partly cloudy to cloudy elsewhere over the state tonight. Much colder this afternoon and tonight with strong northerly winds 30 to 50 miles per hour this afternoon, diminishing tonight. Saturday partly cloudy. Low tonight 5 to 15. High Saturday 20s southeast to 30s north-west. Hoping the Snow Will Flake Off Break out the dogsleds, group, it's snowing like Hell. Winds of horrendous proportions are sweeping the white stuff from Heaven through the broad expanses of our fair campus, leaving bodies, blood and curses behind. ONE STUDENT, after a neat prat fall, turned to another and said "%%#$1%$!" This is typical of the language one finds as he trudges across the snow-befallen campus. Everyone seems to be in a foul mood. Especially noticeable is the language used by the automobile and truck drivers who try to drive through Mt. Oread's fairest roads. One conversation went something like this: "I SAY, SIR, could you find it in your heart to allow me to cut in front of you? If I stop, I might get stuck for good?" The reply was fast in coming: "Why, certainly, my dear sir, allow me. It would ill behoove one who has cut in front of others to not allow another to cut in front of him. At your convenience, sir, please." Elsewhere around the old domicile, students are wrapped up like characters out of Jack London's novels. One student was seen putting up a relay post between Strong and Murphy Hall. He was selling dogsleds, dogs, beverages, coffee and California post cards. PERHAPS THE MARTYRS in this whole thing are the Buildings and Grounds personnel. They, who would rather be home watching TV and sipping a grog, are instead picking up tons of snow from the streets, walks and the littered bodies of those who didn't quite make it. Classroom attendance dropped and the students who did manage to make it speak more minutes thawing on one stick the trick again at the sound of the whistle. One petit young lady said she was wearing her little sister's "legings," and two professors lifted their trousers in the Hawk's Nest to demonstrate that long underwear was still the fashion. Prospects Bright For Unification ELISABETHVILLE, Katanga, The Congo — (UPI) — Foreign diplomats said today that prospects were much brighter for ratification of the Kitona agreement by Katanga's national assembly which will formally unite the breakaway province with the Central Congo government. THE ASSEMBLY THEN SET UP a committee to study the implications of the agreement as it affects Katanga's international and domestic affairs. The diplomats said they were heartened by President Moise Tshombe's unexpectedly mild speech which urged the assembly to ratify six of eight points of the Kiton agreement that he signed with Congo Premier Cyrille Adoula. Despite the fact that Tshombe was against the points dealing with acceptance of the "fundamental law"—the Congo's temporary constitution—and Katanga's adherence to United Nation's resolutions, consular officials here were optimistic that the agreement would be passed. TSHOMBE'S SPEECH contained little anti-United Nations or anti-United States talk. But he accused them both of "bungling" interference in the Kitona talks with Adoulia. A number of Katangese ministers appealed to the United Nations to assist in getting more deputies to Elisabethville from the more remote regions of Katanga. Only 35 showed up at yesterday's meeting — just three over the quorum. It was after 17 hours of talks with Adoula that Tshombe finally signed the agreement on Dec. 21. However, he immediately made it clear that his assembly would have to ratify the pact. Of the 35 deputies who heard Tshombe's speech, only eight were members of the anti-Tshombe Balubakat party. A few of the 17 remaining Balubakat deputies have expressed fear for their personal safety in Elisabethville. MC, Skits Chosen for Rock Chalk Production The master of ceremonies and the skits for the 1962 Rock Chalk Revue March 2 and 3 have been chosen. Hoite Caston, Independence junior, has been selected the master of ceremonies. The four fraternity-sorority skits chosen are: Kappa Sigma-Delta Delta Delta, Phi Delta Theta-Gamma Phi Beta, Beta Theta P-i-Kappa Alpha Theta, and Alpha Tau Omega-Kappa Kappa Gamma. The theme is "Classics Awry." THE FOUR PARTICIPANTS were chosen from eight entrants. Each group submitted a complete skit script by which they were judged. The judges were in different cities and passed the scripts through the mail. The judges were men who are familiar with speech and drama, and who have had experience in similar productions. Caston is a radio and television major. He played the male lead in "Greensleeve's Magic" and was Ito, the Japanese houseboy, in "Auntie Mame" last fall. THE PRODUCER AND assistant producer of the revue are Jim Scholten, Salina senior, and Sharon Kay Dobbins, Lawrence junior. A new attraction of this year's show, according to Miss Dobbins and Scholten, will be the continuity of the skits, the in-between acts and the master of ceremonies to one another. All will directly tie to the theme of the show. Music for the show will be handled by a 13-piece band under the direction of Charles Snodgrass, Lawrence junior. Music for the show is now being arranged and composed by a former KU student, Gary Foster, in California. THE SHOW'S SCENERY WILL differ from last year's production. Most of the scenery will be "flats" in comparison to last year's "three dimensional" props. This will make Season's Greetings FROM MAD Hoite Caston handling easier and will provide for a smoother running show, according to the student producers. Rural Areas Fear City Control of Legislature (Editor's note: This is the second in a three-part series of articles dealing with reattachment of the Kansas Legislature.) By Clayton Keller "We have watched those city slickers operate. They want us country fellers to pay for their local projects." The editor of the western Kansas weekly newspaper who made this statement in a recent editorial was expressing one of the attitudes held by opponents of reapportionment of the Kansas Legislature solely according to population. This editor went on to say he wants no part of a system where a western Kansan's vote "cast after much study and careful weighing of the issues" does not count more than MUCH OPPOSITION of this type has been heard as a result of court actions by four Kansas newspapermen — John McCormally, J. P. Harris, and Peter Macdonald of The Hutchinson News and Ernest W. Johnson of The Olathe News — to force reapportionment solely according to population. the vote of "an almost illiterate person in the slum area of a city whose only interest in government is the size of his relief check or more liberal unemployment (compensation)" They have filed a "friend of the court" brief in support of Tennessee citizens who have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to force that state's legislature to reapportion according to population. In addition, they have filed a petition in Shawnee County district court to force reattachment of the Kansas Legislature. A pre-trial hearing in this case is set for Feb.2. Mr. McCormally explained in a speech at Emporia State Teachers College last summer why many people oppose majority rule in the legislature. He said: "IMPORTANT LEADERS in both parties, prominent editors, a minor but fervent segment of the electorate, simply do not want city people to have full and equal representation. They fear the irresponsibility of such a legislature; that it would bankrupt the state in a spending spree for more services; that it would tax the wealth of the state more heavily to The Salina Journal, however, has opposed the reapportionment of the legislature solely on the basis of population, contending that at least one house should be based on geography. educate the children of the state because such a legislature would represent the parents of the children more than the owners of the wealth." Whitley Austin, editor of The Journal, in a letter to this reporter, said reapportionment of both houses according to population would destroy the system of checks and balances. "HISTORICALLY, this republic has operated under a system of checks and balances, giving rule to the majority while safeguarding the interests of the minorities," Mr. Austin said. "This is the system adopted by the Kansas constitution, although the concept of the Senate-House is reverse that of the U.S. Congress." He suggested that the present situation could be corrected by reducing the House membership to 105, thus giving each county one representative, and apportioning the Senate according to population. "The House would then be able to represent regional, local and minority interests, particularly rural and western and agricultural interests that are often different than those of urban and industrial interests." he said. (Continued on page 4) He said the Senate, while it should --- Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday. Jan. 5. 1962 The Road to Peace A new group concerned over what they call the drift toward nuclear war was organized recently. It is called "Turn Toward Peace" and includes such groups as the American Friends Service Committee, American Veterans Committee, Committee for Nonviolent Action, National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy and a number of others. In a package of information it issued recently it said that "Our final goal is a disarmed world under law by negotiated agreement among the nations of the world. "GIVEN THE PRESENT Cold War tensions and the militaristic response and counter-response of the Soviet Union and the United States, there is little chance of agreement. Thus both sides in the arms race pile tension upon tension while attempts to negotiate are stalemated. "In addition to efforts at negotiation, we propose that the United States adopt a new policy, consisting of a series of American initiatives—acts not dependent on prior Communist agreement—which would be actual steps toward a disarmed world under law. These acts could be set in a context and done in a manner to challenge the Communist world to a new response, to win support from other nations, and to create a new world climate favorable to negotiation. "DISARMAMENT STEPS alone are not enough. We must at the same time have American initiatives in six other related areas: 1) growth toward world law, 2) development of a sense of world community, 3) economic planning for disarmament, 4) aid to just demands for revolutionary change, 5) reduction of international tensions, and 6) development of nonviolent defenses of freedom. "The validity of this approach does not depend on an optimistic view of Communist intentions. It is based on a realistic appraisal of what policies, in what context, offer the best chance for peace and the survival of free societies...even given the most pessimistic view of Communist intentions." Four problems of "crucial" importance are identified: Berlin and Germany, nuclear weapons tests and disarmament, China in the world community and the future of the United Nations. THERE ARE TWO key points in the organization's statement of its "final goal" and program for achieving it. They are those concerning "a disarmed world" and a "realistic" approach to "what policies, in what context, offer the best chance for peace and the survival of free societies." Whether or not a disarmed world can be achieved ultimately is a question no one can presume to answer definitely at present. But it cannot be achieved in the near future and probably not in this century. The reasons for this are not philosophical. They are the cold realities of the present world situation. The United States is heavily armed basically as a reaction to the aggressive actions of the Soviet Union and Red China. These two Communist giants undoubtedly are heavily armed to a certain extent because they fear the West. But it must not be forgotten that even if they did not fear an attack from the West, they would require large armed forces to continue their policies of aggression and to hold their conquered territories. There is no doubt that if the Soviet Union disarmed, its Eastern European satellites would break away. The new imperial aristocracy in the Kremlin has no intention of permitting that. It is also a matter of grave concern and danger that the Peiping regime does not believe in the Soviet concept of co-existence, but considers war to be inevitable. THERE ARE ALSO considerable conflicts among the underdeveloped nations of the world. The Arab-Israeli conflict and the dispute between India and Pakistan over which of them the Kashmir area belongs to are several good examples of this. The "realistic" approach the "Turn Toward Peace" group has taken is quite unrealistic when examined closely. It wants growth toward world law, but this is in itself no guarantee of any improvement. International law can be and has been broken with impunity by the major powers whenever they chose to do so. THE PROPOSAL FOR the development of nonviolent defenses of freedom is one of the most dangerously unrealistic of the "realistic" points in the organization's program. Nonviolent action can be effective when it is directed against a nation like Great Britain that has a basic respect for human life and rights. It is not effective when it is directed against groups like the Soviet army and secret police. The millions of people who were liquidated by these groups are undeniable evidence of this. The things the "Turn Toward Peace" group wants are too idealistic or too far removed from present realities to be possibilities for at least the next few decades. BUT THERE ARE other key currents in the present day world that the group overlooked or chose not to consider which may well provide a solution to the present international power struggle. The amazing growth of the Common Market in Western Europe is one of these. Thus far it has been a union for trade and tariff purposes only, but it is pulling its members together and if they manage to consolidate into a single political unit, the international power struggle will have been won by the West. The tremendous concentration of skilled manpower and industry the nations of Western Europe possess would easily make a unified Western Europe the most powerful state in the world. The Communist bloc would face a North Atlantic complex so great that it could not hope to compete with it. In the final analysis, what the "Turn Toward Peace" group presents in its program is not a "realistic" set of policies for preserving peace and free societies, but what they wish was a realistic set of policies. But the possibilities for a solution of the power struggle and nuclear armament does not include disarmament among its realistic methods. It does not for the simple reason that disarmament, especially total disarmament becomes less and less of a possibility as more and more nations gain nuclear weapons, thereby making disarmament an increasingly difficult and complex course of action. letters to the editor William H. Mullins Schlesinger Praised Editor: The excellent address by Mr. Arthur Schlesinger stating the American democratic ideals and this country's hopes for world peace serves well to refute any statements included in the Wichita protest ridiculing his integrity or intellectual ability to effectively counter Communist arguments or propaganda. We are indeed fortunate to have intelligent and progressive national leadership as provided by the present national administration and its competent members such as Mr. Schlesinger. I would hope that students of this University and the populace of this nation ignore irrational attempts of emotional, misinformed extremist groups to sway public opinion on national matters, and place greater faith in the ability of progressive government to provide leadership in meeting the Communist opposition and other challenges, both foreign and domestic, when they arise. Jack Franklin Kansas City, Kan. graduate student Short Ones New opinions are always suspected and usually opposed, without any other reason but because they are not already common. — John Locke University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. UNIVERSITY Dailu Hansan Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East $50 South New York University. United States. International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year; except summer holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Telephone VIking 3-2700 NEWS DEPARTMENT Tom Tuener Managing Editor Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Assis- tant Managing Editor Bob Hellen, Hill Sheldon, Sports Edi- tor; Barbara Howell, Society Editor. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Brown Manager Dick, Advertising Manager; Bonnie McCullough, Circulation Manager; David Wiens, National Advisor; Classified Advertising Manager; Hai Smith, Promotion Manager. EATON'S FRIDAY CARTOON Mikhail Kushin "Again!" On Other Campuses NEW HAVEN, Conn.-Memo to all those who doubt that present-day college students are serious about studying: consider what happened to the Yale study seminars this fall. More than 150 students signed up to take one of the 11 special seminars being given for two hours every week on subjects dealing with religious themes in History and in contemporary life. The courses in themselves are not unusual nor the fact that students enrolled. What has given Yale officials a pleasant surprise is that so many students are eager to take these non-credit seminars in addition to their heavy required courseload. LYNCHBURG, Va.—The Lynchburg College Bookstore is establishing a new policy this year. Students are now allowed to open charge accounts. It was stressed that no charges will be accepted during the first two weeks of each semester. All transactions for this period must be on a cash basis. Charge accounts may be opened after this period to continue as long as regulations are complied with, until the end of the semester, at which time all accounts will be closed. An account must be paid in full by the 10th of the month following purchases. An unpaid account at this time terminates all credit privileges. CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—President Nathan M. Pusey recently restated Harvard University's protest against the disclaimer affidavit required of needy students who receive educational loans under the National Defense Education Act. For a fourth year, Harvard will stay out of the loan program which is administered by the colleges and universities, "even though this means sacrificing $250,000 annually which could otherwise be distributed in loans to students." "Ideed, the feeling here is that only by standing firm on this point can we and other American colleges make clear our determined opposition to legislation in which there is implied an infringement of an ancient freedom—the freedom of universities to govern themselves," President Pusey added. govern themselves. "We do not object to the oath of allegiance (required of student borrowers), since this affirmation is asked of citizens in all walks of life on many occasions. Our quarrel, as we have stated many times, is with the disclaimer affidavit, primarily because it singles out students as special objects of distrust and asks them to make negative statements about their beliefs in a way contrary to American principle." BOULDER, Colo.—A University of Colorado study published by Dr. Howard Gruber, associate professor of psychology, indicates that federally financed programs are failing to train high school science teachers to present science as a thought. Dr. Gruber's research on a sampling of nine Academic Year Institutes, sponsored by the National Science Foundation, revealed the following pertinent facts: In A BE helm nine three wall throat men pisto Only 25 per cent of the Fellows evaluated were rated "strong" in their concern for teaching about science as a way of thought. More than 60 per cent showed "negligible" interest in this aspect. Where Institute Fellows were allowed to choose electives and participate in seminars and laboratory work, the results were more favorable than where more passive methods of formal lectures, tests and prescribed course study were followed. tests and please Unduly long hours of non-elective work led to unfavorable results, suggesting that leisure for thoughtful discussion of the meaning of science is more important than extensive academic busywork. Page 3 Incidents Continue Along Berlin Wall University Daily Kansan BERLIN — (UPI) — Twenty steel-heldmed Communist policemen and nine police dogs today guarded a three-by-five foot hole in the Berlin wall to keep anyone from getting through. The East German policemen (Vopos) brandished machine pistols. West Berlin police said the hole opened up when a frozen section of the brick-and-barbed wire wall along Bernauer Street thawed. The police showed up to keep anyone from escaping west, they said. IN ANOTHER DEVELOPMENT, an American spokesman said a U.S. military police officer chased a Russian automobile that tried to race past "checkpoint Charlie" on Friedrichstrasse last Tuesday. He caught it after six blocks, checked the Russians' credentials and let them pass, the spokesman said. Americans began screening Russian cars recently to keep the Soviet commandant and political adviser in East Berlin out of the U.S. sector. The Russian officials were barred soon after Communist border guards stopped the U.S. military commander in West Berlin from visiting Russian headquarters. e re- ean- work. The developments came as East t German Communist leader Walter Ulbricht threatened to complete the split of Berlin and bar the Western Allies from the Soviet sector unless they get East German visas. ULBRICHT, IN AN interview with the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS), denounced U.S. Army convoys to and from Berlin as provocations that blocked the 110-mile Berlin-Helmstede autobahn through East German territory. He demanded that the Western Allies reach agreements with East Germany to use air, land and water routes to Berlin and submit to Communist controls. Uibright warned he would accept only one result of four-power talks on Berlin — the eradication of Western rights in the city. He said if the West refused such a solution in East-West negotiations, the Soviet Union would sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany that would end Western rights. THE TEXT OF ULBRICHT'S interview with CBS interviewer Daniel Schorr was published by the East German news service ADN today. Ulbricht said if he traveled to the United States he would need a visa and it was not right that Americans could enter East Berlin without a visa. He said flatly that a visa system would be introduced in East Germany but did not say when. "We will see when we will do it," he said. Asked if the system would be introduced before a peace treaty is signed, he answered: "We haven't reached any final decision on that." THE INTRODUCTION OF VISAS would result in the final split of Berlin and end the limited right of movement the Western Allies still have in East Berlin since the East Germans built the wall that divides the city. It would be certain to prompt the most energetic Western allied protests. In addition to a visa system, Ulbricht threatened that "further measures" would be taken on the West Berlin border to safeguard East Germany if the United States and West Germany continued their cold war against the Communist countries. Ulbricht did not elaborate on this point. With confirmed outbreaks of influenza in several areas of the U.S. during the latter part of December, Watkins Memorial Hospital officials have issued a renewed appeal for KU students and staff to obtain their immunization shot. Students Urged To Get Flu Shots Fear that students returning from Christmas vacation after exposure to the virus would create at least a mild epidemic of flu here has so far not been borne out, the administrator said. Only a few students have reported to Watkins hospital sufficiently ill for admission and of these only two are suspected of suffering from flu. Positive determination of these cases will require further tests, however. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, hospital administrator, estimates there are between 5,000 and 6,000 students here who have not received an influenza vaccination. Annually, the end of the holiday period is marked by a sharp up turn in the number of patients at Watkins. In the meantime, Dr. Canuteson urged all students still not protected by a vaccination to obtain one as soon as possible. Prevention is still the best protection against an outbreak of flu here, Dr. Canuteson said. I have never considered a difference of opinion in politics, in religion, in philosophy, as cause for withdrawing from a friend.—Thomas Jefferson Submarine Sandwiches A MEAL IN ITSELF --- MEATS CHEESE LETTUCE - DELICIOUS SAUCE COLD POP ICE COLD MILK Joe's Bakery Play Tickets on Sale 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 Tickets for the plays "Joan of Arc at the Stake" and "Purple Dust" are on sale in the University Theatre box office. Reservations may be made by calling University phone extension 591. "Purple Dust" will run Jan. 13, 14, 18-21 and "Joan" will play Jan. 15-17. Tickets for "Joan" are free with an identification card or $1.50. Tickets for "Purple Dust" are 50 cents plus identification card or $1. The SUA Current Events Forum normally held on Friday, will not be held today. Current Events Forum Off Chancellor Wescoe to Speak Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will address the International Club meeting at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. Following the address, a club picture will be taken for the Jayhawker. Men are requested to wear coats and ties. Refreshments and dancing will follow the meeting. A Fishy Story HAMILTON, Bermuda —(UPI) There are no established commercial fisheries in the Bermudas. However, individual fishermen annually deliver some 1.2 million pounds of fish and more than 10,000 lobsters to local markets. BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING WHEEL ALIGNMENT FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP 229 Elm VI 3-2250 Kansan Want Ads Get Results Managing College Expenses ...EASY as ABC 3 with a LOW COST ThriftCheck COLLEGE CHECKING ACCOUNT Designed to make life easier for college students, a ThriftiCheck Personal Checking Account will help keep your personal finances in order give you an accurate record of your college expenses and provide proof of bills paid! Your handsome ThriftiCheck checkbook cover is imprinted with the seal of your college or university without charge. Your parents can deposit your expenses and allowance directly to your account. Look into ThriftiCheck costs only a few pennies a check. - Open an account with any amount - No Minimum Deposit - Provides Permanent Proof of Payment - Colorful Checkbook Cover embossed with your college seal - Checks personalized, free Douglas County State Bank At a New Location 9th & Kentucky University Daily Kansan Page 4 Friday, Jan. 5, 1962 Rural Areas Fear Loss of Control— (Continued from page 1) be apportioned according to population, should not be district so that any single district contains more than 10 or 12 counties. "SENATE PAY DOES NOT cover actual expenses, and it is too costly for candidates to campaign in bigger areas," Mr. Austin said. "Bigger areas would lessen effective representation of population interests." He pointed out that this plan would have the Governor and Senate elected on the basis of population and the House on the basis of geography. "I am opposed to the election of all three — Governor, Senate and House — on a population basis because this would leave nearly half of the state without any effective representation and would destroy the system of checks and balances that is the essence of our form of government." ONE OF THE reasons for the inequality between urban and rural representation is that the Legislature itself must take the initiative in reapportionment. It has not done so, despite constitutional statements Regional IAWS conventions are held every two years. This year, KU will host the convention for the southern region, comprising 15 states with 40 member schools. AWS to Begin Conference Plans In charge of preparations for the convention is a steering committee of Susan Callender, Bonner Springs junior; Diane Coen, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Susan Flood, Hays sophomore; Priscilla Camp, Lawrence junior; and Carolyn Houser, Howard junior. About 60 members of the KU Associated Women Students will meet at 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union to begin preparations for a regional Intercollegiate Associated Women Students (IAWS) convention to be held at KU April 1-4. Other committee members are: Karen Jordan, Great Bend junior; Patricia Kendall, Holton sophomore; Jeanne Maxwell, Lawrence senior; Ann Leffler, Pittsburgh sophomore; George Anne Porter, Kansas City junior; and Mary Nan Scamman, Tarkio, Mo., junior. Emily Taylor, dean of women and regional IAWS adviser, will be present at today's meeting. Krone Receives $60,000 Grant Ralph W. Krone, professor of physics at the University of Kansas, has received a $60,000 renewal of his Atomic Energy Commission contract for research in high energy physics. The renewal will support the fifth year of his study entitled "Execited States of Medium Light Elements." The research is part of a larger study of the properties of the nuclei of the lighter elements, being conducted in the KU Nuclear Physics Laboratory. Most of the research is carried out using the Van de Graaff accelerator which provides the high energy particles — protons and deuterons — which can produce the nuclear changes being studied. The KU laboratory is one of very few in the United States engaged in this particular area of research. Prof. Krone said. The over-all project staff includes Daniel S. Ling Jr., associate professor of physics; Francis W. Prosser, assistant professor of physics; and Kenneth H. Purser, research associate. Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 that this must be done every five years. CARE FOR HUMAN WELFARE HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 "It cannot be doubted that the existing districts and their incumbents would for the most part be singularly unenthusiastic about voting themselves out of office and out of existence," according to the brief filed in support of the Tennessee case before the U.S. Supreme Court. Because of this reluctance to change the status quo, reapportionments have been extremely limited both in number and in scope. The last major reapportionment of the House of Representatives was in 1910 and the last major Senate reapportionment was in 1886, and only minor changes have been made since then. Since 1910, however, the state's population has undergone vast changes. The total population has increased by 25 per cent; but this increase has not been uniform throughout the state. Sixty-three counties have actually lost population since 1910, with 38 of them losing over one-fourth of their 1910 population. ON THE OTHER HAND, several counties have registered huge increases. Johnson County, experience- ing large suburban growth, has increased 671 per cent in population. Wichita's growth pushed Sedgwick County up 338 per cent. Official Bulletin The last reapportionment in the House was made just two years ago. At that time, the 20 "floating" seats were reapportioned, with the four largest counties receiving eleven of the extra seats. The recent Senate reappointments were in 1933, when two western Kansas districts were split to make four districts, and in 1947 when Johnson and Reno counties, previously sharing their districts with another county, were made into separate districts. It can be seen that the changes have been slight. The House is probably apportioned as fairly as possible under the present constitutional provision that each county must have at least one seat. The Senate, however, could easily be reapportioned so it would be based on population, as required in the state constitution. The next article will discuss the effects of the present inequality in the state legislature and what reapportionment backers hope to accomplish. Foreign Students: On Monday at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room, Kansas Union, Mr. Duncan will teach you how to use new Service will speak to you on your responsibilities in filing income tax returns. If you have questions concerning taxes, be present unless there is a conflict. Western Civilization Comprehensive Examination: Review Sessions: Jan. 9. 10 from 7:15-9:30 p.m. Bailey Auditorium. Jan. 13 at 1 a.m. rooms to be assigned. German Ph.D. Reading Exam: 9 a.m. Jan. 8, 12 noon. Deadline for signing Jan. 8, 12 noon. French Ph.D. Reading Exam: 9-11 a.m. Jason Gavin. To Miss Craig, be handed in to Miss Craig by Jan. 10. TODAY Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m. Baptist Student Activities Building, 1221 Oread. Devotional studies and fellowship. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: 7:30 p.m., Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union. Reports on Urbana Missionary Convention. International Club Meeting: 7:30 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union. Address by Chancellor Wescoe. Picture of all members of the club will be taken for the Jaywalkers; we please wear coat and flower. Follow our refreshments, dancing, and music by music. Hillel Services: 7:30 p.m. Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. TOMORROW Chinese Club Meeting: 8 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Lutheran Church Services; 8 and 11 l.m., Immanuel Lutheran Church, 17th & Vermont. 5 p.m., Wednesdays, Dan- orth Chapel Catholic Mass; 9, 11 a.m., Fraser Hall Newman, Club). Oread Friends Worship Meeting: 10:30 welcome to this silent Quaker meeting. Religious Exchange Meeting with Canterbury Club: 5 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. Rev. R. S. Turner, speaker. MONDAY Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch: 12 noon, Canterbury House. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. KU Dames: 8 p.m. Watkins Room, Kansas Union, Dr. R. L. Hermes will speak on childbirth. Membership cards will be checked. Want of uniform justice is a crying evil caused by the selfishness and inhumanity of man.-Mary Baker Eddy Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil LUCKY STRIKE presents: LUCKY PUFFERS "It's Yoga— I willed myself up here!" "THE INTELLECTUALS" "...but think of it this way, Gwen, I'm here, and Lord Byron isn't." I CLASS A CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE ITS TONSLED CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. "I tried to be a beatnik, but I couldn't grow a beard." LUCKY STRIKE IT'S TOO TIGHT! CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. A CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE IT'S TOASTED CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. "To lose one's individuality is to lose the meaning of life itself!" IF YOU'RE AN INTELLECTUAL, be thankful you're living at the right time. The climate of our contemporary culture is sympathetic to new voices, new ideas. The new age of enlightenment explains, among other things, the popularity of Luckies on college campuses. Deduce this yourself: Enlighten up a Lucky. As its heady aroma swirls about you, reflect on this profundity: College students smoke more Luckies than any other regular. CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change! A. T. CO Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" 0:30 come with com- Rev. Page 5 KC Star Writer Speaks to SDX Ray Morgan, Kansas Legislature reporter for the Kansas City Star, addressed members of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic society, at a meeting last night in the William Allen White Reading Room. Morgan stressed the need for journalistic independence and asserted that editors and reporters should be able to write and print anything they want, even if they are wrong. He said that objectivity has never characterized the great newspapers of American journalism, and that outstanding editors always have expressed views and taken positions on public issues. Ron Gallagher, Fort Scott senior presided at initiation ceremonies for the following: Arthur Miller, Pittsburgh junior; Jerry Musil, Kansas City junior; Zeke Wigglewsorth, Lawrence junior; Dennis Branstetter, Independence, Mo., junior; John Richeson, Leawood senior; Bill Sheldon, Williamstown, Mass., junior; Steve Clark, Coffey- ville sophomore, and Mike Miller, Independence, Mo., sophomore. Bob Moutrie, Greendale, Mo, sophomore and chairman of the SUA Spring Concert, has announced that his committee is making an effort to get the Limeliters for the annual affair which will be held March 17 in Hoch Auditorium. Limeliters May Come For Spring Concert University Daily Kansan Moutrie said he and his committee were impressed by a national television performance of the group Monday night. Other performers in consideration are the Brothers Four, Four Lads, Ray Coniff, and Johnny Mathis. Boom Town HONG KONG — (UPI) The Portuguese colony of Macao, across the Pearl River estuary from Hong Kong, is acquiring a modern casino and a 100-room hotel to handle the new influx of iet age tourists. Macao also is building three small inns, two nightclubs and a large theater in a bid to rival Hong Kong as an Asiatic tourist mecca. Religious Groups Plan Joint Meeting The Rev. Roy S. Turner, professor of religion, will speak at a Jewish-Episcopal meeting Sunday. Speaking on "The Episcopal Church-Itss History and Character." Prof. Turner will address the B'nai Brith Hillel Counselorship and the Canterbury Club at the Jewish Community Club at 5 p.m. The program is the first of several exchanges planned by the Jewish group with other religious groups on campus. Walter Bgyoa, a freshman from Tanganyika, Africa, will speak to the members of Wesley Foundation on Sunday evening, Jan. 7. He will discuss "An African Student Looks at American Education." The Sunday evening program will be held from 5 to 7 p.m., at Wesley Foundation. Justice without wisdom is impossible. James Froude African Student to Speak Wescoe Named to Board Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has been appointed to the Board of Commissioners of the National Commission on Accrediting by the Association of American Universities. The board of commissioners supervise all accrediting agencies for programs in higher education. Tampa Bans Twist TAMPA, Fla. — (UPI) — City Councilman Bill Myers danced The Twist at a city council meeting last night in an effort to remove a ban on the dance at Tampa's Community Centers. Myers contended The Twist was no more suggestive or unwholesome than dance crazes of other eras, such as the Black Bottom or The Charleson, but the city council voted 4-3 to keep the ban. Spoon, moon, June—epic words in American poetry.—John Charnley Friday, Jan. 5, 1962 Peppermint Lounge TWIST Joey Dee Available now Kief's Records & Hi-Fi Malls Shopping Center Kansan Want Ads Get Results For Delicious Food and Snappy Service Come In To Serving Breakfast, Lunch, & Dinner Margaret's Cafe Open 6:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Closed Sunday W VI 3-9663 1104 W.23rd Just Arrived! 100% Nylon SKI PARKAS Pullover style with drawstrings at waist and on hood In black, red, gold & light blue 8. 95 Men's and Ladies' sizes Town Shop DOWNTOWN THE University Shop Al Hack ON THE HILL Shop Ken Whitenight Learn How to Fly in the Easy to Fly... 107 ... CESSNA 150 Inquire how you can earn academic credit through AE45 and AE47 INVESTIGATE OUR SPECIAL FLIGHT COURSE NOW! Krhart Flying Serviaz INCORPORATED VI 3-2167 1/2 Mile NE of Tee Pee Municipal Airport S. I.P. FRIDAY JAN.5 Last Convention of the Semester Featuring The Vale Dairs ★ BIG BARN 8:30 ★ Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday. Jan. 5. 1962 League Action Starts Here Tomorrow Night Kansas, boosting and depending upon what is probably the finest backcourt combination in the Middle West, opens its chase for the Big Eight championship tomorrow night at 7:30 in Allen Field House as the Nebraska Cornhuskers open the league schedule for Coach Dick Harp's Jayhawkers. THE HAWKERS, now possessing an improved 4-6 season record will be relying upon their exciting brand of scrapy, hustling basketball and the outside shooting of Jerry Gardner and Nolen Ellison as they attempt to show darkhorse possibilities in the conference race. The Crimson and Blue handed Coach Jerry Bush's quintet its seventh loss of the season in the consolation round of the Big Eight Tournament in Kansas City, 69-68, last month. Gardner and Ellison, combining for 55 points in the tourney victory over the Cornhuskers, will be the main weapon against what is considered the finest team under Bush who is in his eighth campaign at Nebraska. GARDNER AND ELLISON lead the KU scoring with 21.9 and 18.3 points per game averages. The other starters for Kansas will be Loye Sparks (6.3) and Jim Dumas (8.9) at the forwards and John Matt (6.3) who hit his season peak in the loss to Oklahoma with 15 courtes at center. Center Tom Russell will be the Husker floor leader. He is averaging 15.1 points per game and tops the Huskers in rebounding and field goal percentage. BEATEN BY KANASS STATE. 60-48, in the opening round at Kansas City, the Huskers edged Oklahoma State, 52-51, then bad Kansas down by 10 in each half before the Jayhawkers pulled it out on Ellison's two late free throws. Two of Nebraska's pre-tourney defeats were one-pointers to Wyoming and California. They sacked SMU, 63-60, in an early December upset. They also beat Notre Dame and Ohio while losing to Wichita, Air Force, and Stanford. Overall, the Kansas guards are carrying 59 per cent of the club's scoring load. This feat can be more clearly brought into focus when it is noted that Wayne Hightower and Bill Bridges, both all-conference selections a year ago, carried 49 per cent. **OFF THIS COMPARISON, it is probable the Gardner-Ellison load is a trifle too weighty to produce consistent success. That's what Coach Harp is talking about when he says, "It is impossible that Jerry and Nolen carry the scoring load forever. They must have help." "Kansas can be real tough if its guards hold up, but I don't see how they can," Coach Bush said. "Our boys, Charlie Jones and Chuck Sladovnick, played them about as good as anyone could and they still scored well. Many times Jones and Sladovnick would get a hand on the ball and it would still go in," the Nebraska mentor added. Bush indicated he would probably start Russell (6-7) at center with Ivan Grupe (6-5) and Shadovnick (6-4) at the forwards and Jones (6-5) and either Daryl Petsch (6-5) or Rex Swett (6-1) at the guards. PETSCH PLAYED only one game at Kansas City after suffering a seige of the flu. He lost 12 pounds Hadl. McClinton. Basham Selected but has regained the weight and should be ready to go tomorrow night. Bush sent his cagers through two workouts Wednesday in preparation for the Jayhawks. He praised Grupe for his play in the tourney and on the western road trip. "Ivan is one of the most improve players on the squad. He has come a long way since last season." Grupe is third in Nebraska scoring with a nine point per game average and is second in rebounds. The number two scorer for the scarlet is Swett with 11.1 points per contest. KU WILL BE TRYING for its second home win of the season, having won on local hardwoods only in the season opener against Arkansas. The Jayhawkers have since lost to St. Louis and St. John's here. Nebraska, undefeated at home, has won only once on the road, that against O-State at Kansas City. John Haddl, Curtis McClinton and Elvin Basham have recently been selected to the first team all-opponent squad selected by the Nebraska Cornhuskers who fell to the Jawhakers. 32-0. Tomorrow's game will be the final home contest of the semester with only road games against Kansas State next Wednesday night and Missouri next Saturday night remaining before the examination break. end Jerry Hillebrand and center Walt Klinker of Colorado and end Corrad Hitchcock of Rocky Mountain and guard Brad Henley of Missouri were clear-cut choices. KU center Kent Staab and end Benny Boydston made the second team. Although there were no unanimous choices, the selection of Hadl, ...lover, you just don't play the Paris Blues... lover-man, you've got to live it! PENNEBAKER PRODUCTIONS AND DIANE PRODUCTIONS PRESENT paul Newman Joanne Woodward Poltier Sidney The next home appearance for the Jayhawkers will be Feb. 5 with Missouri. CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 2:30 The KU Sports Network will again carry the play-by-play broadcast of tomorrow's game and it can be heard over KANU (Lawrence) and KJAY (Topeka) in this area. paris STARTS SUNDAY! blues LOUIS ARMSTRONG DIAHANN CARROLL SERGE REGGIANI JACK SHIRT IRENE KEMP WALTER BERNSTEN UULLA ADLER SAM SHAW DULLE EKLINGTON GEORGE GLASS WALTER WAITER SAM SHAW Kansas City had more tight squeaks than a television western hero last night, but the Steers came out triumphant when all the shooting was over. First of all, the Steers almost did not show up for their game since the plane was held up at Los Angeles by bad weather. Chicago argued that the twopointer came after the contest ended, but the timekeeper said no and the Steers were awarded the 94-93 win. THE STEERS then watched a 13-point lead evaporate in the fourth quarter against Chicago, but pulled out the win as Bill Bridges hit a basket at the final buzzer. collected 26 points for the losers. Although the Jets kept two games behind the Steers, they are fast running out of time. The first-half play ends Jan. 10. Nick Mantis had 20 for the winners and Sobie 23 for Chicago as a turn-away crowd of 9,172 watched the frantic action. By United Press International LOS ANGELES STAYED in second place in the American Basketball League's Western Division with a 107-104 victory over the New York Tapers. Big Bill Spivey hit 9 of 11 field goal tries and 7-for-7 free throws for 25 points. PITTSBURGH MOVED a half-game ahead of idle Cleveland in the Eastern Division chase with a come-from-behind 104-101 defeat of Hawaii. Liquid Treasure Phil Rolls added 26 tallies, including a trio of three-point baskets. Frank Burgess and Dick Brott both hit 20 for the losers, who slumped down to a 12-24 mark after the loss. Again, it was the superlative Connie Hawkins who was the difference. He scored six points in the key fourth quarter surge that put the Rens ahead and totaled 29 points for the evening. Bridges Brings KC Steers Win Sy Blye and Roger Kaiser each MENARD. Tex. — (UPI) — Maps and legends are numerous about the lost San Saba mine, said to contain a rich silver lode. But oldtimers can remember only one reward from the long search for the hidden mine entrance—in the drought years of the 1950s a young man drilled to find the entrance and came up with enough water to irrigate five acres of land. TONITE & SATURDAY Mat. Sat. 2 p.m. Jerry Lewis in "THE ERRAND BOY" Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 SANDY'S THRIFT & SWIFT DRIVE-IN 2120 West 9th Across from Hillcrest SUNSET BAR There Is No Waiting at Sandy's Hamburgers ... 15c Cheeseburgers ... 19c Toasted Cheese ... 15c French Fries ... 10c Milk Shakes ... 20c Coke, Coffee, Orange ... 10c Milk, Root Beer ... 10c MENU Sandy's uses only Gov't inspected beef M. RABATHAHAN AUDREY HEPBURN as that funny...sad...extraordinary... glittering HOLLY GOLIGHTLY! BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S A JURDW-SHEPHERD PRODUCTION "The gayest comedy Hollywood LIFE has served up in years." TECHNICOLOR GEORGE PEPPARD PATRICIA BUDDY MARTIN NEAL EBSEN-BALSAM MICKEY ROONEY Mat. Sat. 2 p.m.; Eves. 7:00 & 9:10 Continuous Sunday From 2:30 BLENK EWINGRID/MARTIN SJURW/CARLOMO BREGHERA A PASSIMANUM CALL & RELEASE HOLLYWOOD SNEAK PREVIEW 8:40 ONLY Be among the first to see the latest Hollywood comedy "Babes in Toyland" before and after. STARTS TOMORROW! Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Granada THEATRE...Telephone V13-5788 Friday, Jan. 5, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $0; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25 Terms cash: All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 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 CONTACT LENSES on Dec 19. Blue- tie calls Bob Thomas, VI 3-4711. 1-11 found call: Bob Thomas, VI 3-4711. 1-11 HELP WANTED SPOTTER SCOPE in vicinity of rife science Dept. Ext 339 - 1-11 RN.'s NEEDED: Full or part time. General duty any shift. Also operating room. Wins. Blasingame. Call collect. Cherry 2-3344 or Cherry 2-2829. Ottawa. Kansas. MIMEOGRAPH OPERATOR-TYPIST: must be experienced, accurate typist, IBM electric typewriters; addressgraph operator, experience with utility operator. State Civil Service positions. See Thos. C. Ryther. 117 Flint Hall. Phone KU-373. tf BUSINESS SERVICES ALTERATIONS, men & women, men's coats, coats refined. CALL VI 1248. 1348. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- grain 933'; Mass. Cali V 3-5263. Ola Snit- pring; Mass. Cali V 3-5263. U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- morning. Phone VI 3-2921. Modern self-service — open weekdays 8 to 6:30 p.m. TYEPWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 8-3644. td RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. ALTERATIONS — Call Call Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. t U. AUTO C—Our complete lines of Pet Supplies — beds — harness — sweaters, & everything in pet field plus Turtles, Chameleons, fish, birds, hamsters, etc. at Conn. Shop — In Pet Center. At Conn. Shop sectionalized — save time and money. **tf** FOR SALE 1955 FORD. Stand, trans. Excellent cond. $450. VI 3-6351. 1-9 '52 CHEVY. 55,000 miles, stick, new tires, new battery, super motor, blue, four-door. Great for winter starting and driving. Cheap. VI 2-0182. 1-9 TERRIFIC LOCATION to KU & Cent- ric hotel. Fully equipped, hoggy kitchen, large living room, dining room, attached garage, utility room, insulated aluminum storms $120.00 I - 8576 1951 FORD 2 door R & H. good tires. 1960 FORD 3 door R & H. good tires. 1970 VICTOR 2 door R & H. good tires. 1980 CV I V 2-3887 up to 11 tpi. 1-11 8" x 42" MOBILE HOME with awning & CALL VI H 2-1422 evening Saturdays 1-11 GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS, New & used guns. Ammo. Professional handguards. See them at 1304 Tenn. rear); Call VI 5-7001. 1-5 GOING TO EUROPE. Will sell 2, good equipment, $750. Will sell 2, good economy car, $350. Also 1958 Jaguar 3.4 Sedan. White with red leather upholstery. Good condition, $2.250. Call V1-10 $755. FOR SALE OR RENT: 2 bdmh. house trailer, 40 x 8' , air cond. & in good condition. Located at Hillcrest Trailer Court or call VI 3-3884. 1-10 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, service, rentals.ence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Printing machines. Reasonable rate business Machines Co., 912 Mass. Phone VI 3-0151 today. 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. 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, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. 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 USED MAGNAVOX 21' table model TV F1-$40, Pengettill Davis, 723 Mass. , tf TUTORING MISCELLANEOUS MATH TUTORING in undergrad, courses of math grad. stud. Reasonable. VI tf teaching. BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks. ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent. she paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 3- 0350. TYPING Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates. VI 3-5833. Experienced typist would like typing in a computer. Must have a reasonable rates. Call VI T-2651 any time. FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Nancy Cain, VI 3-0524. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing mess — call VI 3-9136. Ms. Löbbach. Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION EXPERIENCED TYPIST: 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. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter. Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, articles, and reviews. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, Ph. VI 3-8568. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execu- sion, General Service 5917 B Jackson, Mission, HE 2-7718 Evers or Sat. R 2-2186 "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- tying factor. For excellent typing at standard standards, call Miss Louff Pope, PI 3-1097. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable price. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 19th. V1. tf 1648. Typing: Will type reports, thesic, etc. E-mail: will.typing@ucla.edu Mail: 1351 W. 21 St. Cause VI 3-6440. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, nearly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-6558, 1031 Miss. tf HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. English teacher at MSU. Reports & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3, tt FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, taping paper in pens, rates, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. Mrs. Qualifying tournaments leading to National Intercollegiate competition in BOWLING, BILLIARDS & PING-PONG EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, research papers, neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs Robert Cook, 2000 RI, VI. $3-7485. DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. Bowling Designed with the University in Mind ARE YOU INTERESTED? for men and women will be held at the Jay Bowl during the next five weeks All those interested inquire at the Jay Bowl Daily 8 a.m.-11:30 p.m. Sun. 1 p.m.-11:30 p.m. FOR RENT FOR RENT. PRIVATE rooms for spring classes. Call Martina; VIN 3-8390 - 1-11 Call Martina; VIN 3-8390 - 1-11 FOR GRADUATE WOMEN or University employed. Attractively furn. 2 room apt. Next to clean, off street parking. $48. Avail. Feb. 1. For call VI 3-6966. 1-11 GRADUATE MEN — Why climb the hill? Large rooms available now. 1⁵ block from Union, $25, 1221 Oread. Call for appointment, VI 3-6798 or VI 3-8976. 1-10 LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. FURNISHED APARTMENT. & furnished 2 bedroom home. VI 2-2206. 1-11 Park Plaza South Apartments Are you satisfied where you now live? Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking Central Air Conditioning We will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 2-8253 Office -- 1912 W. 25dh 3 ROOM NICELY furnished apt. 2¹ blocks from campus. Priv. entr., phone & bath. $55 a month, utilities paid. Boys preferred. Phone VI 3-7830. 1-10 ONLY 1% BLOCK FROM CAMPUS Nice access to campus. Mail $26 per month Call VI 3-606-91 1-10 RAILER SPACE for rent. Good location or students. Set up for 8' or 10' widths. Size yard with trees. See at Hillecrest Mailer Court. or call VI 3-3884. 1-10 FOR RENT. Two bedroom cottages garage fenced yard. Call VI 3-8544-1-10 HOME COOKED meals. Served family room for gentlemen. Photos V 3-1467. Lawrence's Only Garden Apartments 3 ROOM APT. nicely furn. priv., bath and house. Built for courtroom. Call VI. 3-5956. 1-8 3 ROOM FURNISHED apt. for 2. Complete private, first floor, all utilities paid. $40 em. Located at 1029 Miss. Inquire at 1005 Miss. VI 2-4349. 1-10 NEW 2 BEDROOM apts. Furn. or unfurn. Elec. range, air cond., garbage disposal. Lower rates to year around tenants. 2331 Alabama. Call VI 5-2346. 1-10 LARGE ROOM with priv. bath for 2 girls Call 1-800-745-7622 after 5 or on weekends. 1-10 ATTRACTIVE ROOM FOR RENT. Priv. entr. 25. Phone VI 3-9231. 1-8 FOR RENT TO MALE STUDENT. Single room with priv. entr., adjacent to bath, large closest. 1122 Kentucky. 1-8 LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 0731. Kansan Want Ads Get Results JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Selling - Buying Need Help For best results, use the University Daily Kansan Classified Page Phone Ext.376 Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Look Your Loveliest This New Year To have a successful year you must start it out right. Come in and let us help you select a hair style that will start you in the right direction for this new social season. For Appointments Call VI 3-3034 Campus Beauty Shoppe 1144 Indiana — 1 Block North of the Student Union Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 5, 1962 Your KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE hopes you had a wonderful Christmas vacation and wishes you a happy and WELCOME BACK HAWKS NEST prosperous New Year. 7:00 a.m.-10:30 p.m.-Breakfast 7:00 a.m.-10:00 a.m Snacks-Drinks-Lunches PRAIRIE ROOM 5:00 p.m.- 9:00 p.m. - Sunday: 12:00 noon- 9:00 p.m. Closed Tuesdays Charcoal Steaks - Sea Foods - Shishkebab KANSAS UNION. places in your A New Year's resolution to make for good eating stop in often at and pleasant any of these three atmosphere is to 11:00 a.m.- 12:20 p.m.-5:00 p.m.-6:35 p.m. Lunch and Dinner CAFETERIA AT YOUR KANSAS UNION --- Herter Appeals to Allies For 'Real Community' PARIS — (UPI) — Former Secretary of State Christian A. Herter appealed to the United States and its allies today to create a "real community" of Atlantic nations. He said the maintenance of world peace depends more and more on the establishment of such a close-knit community in political, economic and cultural fields HERTER ADDRESSED nearly 100 prominent private citizens from 15 NATO countries gathered here for a two-week brainstorming session on strengthening the alliance. The meeting is known as the Atlantic Convention of NATO Nations and all the delegates were named by their governments. Herter, in a speech prepared for the opening session, said the allies should fulfill their destiny of greater unity whether Soviet hostility waxes or wanes. "Until our nations put behind them the illusion that purely consultative relations are adequate in the nuclear era, real political progress will be blocked," Herter declared. "I am confident this illusion is fading and we are witnessing not the possible end of Western Civilization but the growing pains of its youth. HERTER CALLED for these practical steps toward greater Atlantic unity: Adaptation by all NATO countries of their economies to the fast developing European Common Market; "all who support the Atlantic community should accept sacrifices while receiving the benefits" —Development of joint NATO control over nuclear weapons with multi-lateral ownership, financing and control; a substantial increase in mobile conventional forces as expressed at the NATO council of ministers meeting in December. —Strengthening of NATO ties on all levels —political,military,economic and cultural. —Measures to achieve Atlantic unity should not prejudice developing unity among any smaller group of states within the community. HERTER SAID that while the ultimate political framework of the Atlantic community cannot now be foreseen, no approach should be ruled out, no matter how ambitious. A conference spokesman described the gathering as a "strike force" of the movement for Atlantic unity. Among the proposals on the agenda was one to establish an Atlantic assembly or parliamentary body. Another called for a change in NATO rules so that decisions of the NATO council would be taken by a weighted majority instead of by the present unanimous voting system. Foreign Exchange Program Will Remain 3-Study Area KU will not attempt to expand its developing university-to-university foreign exchange programs beyond its present three study areas, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said Friday. "The area study programs at KU (East-Asian, Soviet-Slavic and Latin American) are as much as the University can hope to handle," he told members of the International Club. He was discussing "The University of Kansas in International Affairs." "NO UNIVERSITY can extend its exchange programs beyond three areas" he said. "It would put too much of a strain on faculties and library facilities already overtaxed by international responsibility." The Chancellor said different universities in the Big 8 area would team their efforts in exchange programs rather than have each school to support burdensome programs. Seniors to Present Recital Wednesday Two seniors will give a recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall. Ann Johnson, Parsons, the first oboist in KU's University Symphony and Little Symphony, will play Sonata No. 6 by Loeillet and Phantasy for Oboe and String by Benjamin Britten. Leanna Czincoll, Chapman, pianist, will perform works by Bach, Brahms and Hindemith. “An example of this,” he said, “is the fact that Kansas State and the University of Missouri each have extensive Indian exchange programs. Also, Nebraska is concentrating on a Sub-Sahara African Area program. TURNING TO the university-to-university exchange concept, the Chancellor said wholesale exchanges of students, faculty and staff members between universities provide a continuity of effect benefiting the university as well as the student. "In such exchange programs, (university-to-university) students who have participated in the program are able to inform students who are going to that country next about what to expect and who to come into contact with." HE SAID the same "feedback" principle also applied to faculty and staff members. Again mentioning the Costa Rican program, Chancellor Wescoe said this program was unique and has attracted attention throughout the United States university community. "This program will soon be emulated by other universities," Chancellor Wescoe said. 59th Year, No. 65 Daily Hansan LAWRENCE. KANSAS Sukarno Assassination Attempt Blamed on Dutch Monday, Jan. 8, 1962 JAKARTA — (UPI) — Angry Indonesians today denounced an attempted assassination of President Sukarno as a Dutch plot to break the spirit of the people. The incident intensified the bitterness in the dispute with the Netherlands over West Irian (Dutch New Guinea) which Sukarno has pledged to take by force if necessary. THE GOVERNMENT said three persons, including a child, were killed and 28 persons were injured when a hand grenade burst 150 yards behind Sukarno's car last night as the President drove to an auditorium for an anti-Dutch speech in the Ce- He said members should bring their membership cards. YAF to Hold Election Of Officers Tomorrow Greek Hero Topic Of Humanities Talk Marick Payton, Lawrence resident and temporary chairman, said the group will elect permanent officers. He said the constitution committee appointed at the last meeting will propose a constitution for adoption. The KU chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Parlor A of the Kansas Union. "A Forgotten Hero — Development and Decay of a Greek Myth" is the title of the Humanities Series lecture to be presented at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Fraser Hall by Mary A. Grant, emerita associate professor of Latin and Greek. Miss Grant has not identified the Greek hero other than to indicate he was a foremost warrior in the ancient civilization's mythology and a god who greatly influenced Greek youth. Miss Grant has been selected this year as the sole KU scholar to lecture in the Humanities Series. She retired last year after 39 years as a faculty member. Miss Grant is the author of numerous articles in classical literature. The University of Kansas Press last year published a book by Miss Grant, "The Myths of Hyginus." The lecture is open to the public. lebes city of Makassar. Sukarno escaped unharmed. The speech concluded Sukarno's four-day tour of the Celebes to whip up war fever in his campaign to wrest control of West Irian from the Dutch. None of the correspondents accompanying the 60-year-old President in Makassar saw or heard the grenade blast and did not learn of it until later from a government spokesman. It was the third attempt on Sukarno's life since 1957. ARMY SPOKESMAN COL. Jusuf announced the arrest of several persons whom he identified as Dutch agents. He declined to say whether the actual thrower of the grenade was in custody. Jusuf said, "all the evidence is in our hands." He said that "hand-langers" were responsible. (Hand-langer is a local term for Dutch agent.) "The incident was designed to break the spirit of the Indonesian people." Jusuf said. "HERE IS AN EXAMPLE of the cruelties and immorality of imperialists and colonialists who want to keep on and maintain greatness in their colony," the spokesman said. He said reconstruction of "the crime" was examined by Lt. Col. Sabur, vice chairman of the supreme war council and aide-de-camp to Sukarno. Jusuf's words fell on a nation already brought to a feverish pitch by weeks of attacks on the Netherlands by Sukarno, who last month issued his "final command" to his countrymen to liberate West Irian. THE NETHERLANDS has offered to negotiate without prior conditions on the future of the territory, but Sukarno has demanded a guarantee that the Dutch will hand over administration of West Irian before he will go to the conference table. Ten foreign ambassadors and 13 Indonesian ministers were in Sukarno's motorcade when the grenade exploded. None was hurt. U.S. Ambassador Howard Jones had entered the auditorium before the blast. Makassar was the major stronghold of a revolt that broke out against Sukarno's government in 1958. Troops of the anti-government Mohammed Darul-Islam organization still are believed to be at large in the area. THE CELEBES IS the nearest big island to New Guinea, although they are separated by 1,000 miles of sea. Presumably any Indonesian invasion would be launched from there. In a previous speech at Bonhain, Sukarno said Indonesia wanted to avoid bloodshed but will send "thousands and thousands" of boats to invade the territory unless the Dutch get out. Sukarno, obviously edgy after the explosion last night, went on with his scheduled address and again ripped into the Netherlands for its refusal to hand over West Irian. He heaped sarcasm on the Dutch proposal to grant the Papuan natives self-determination. Weather Turning much colder today and tonight with northerly winds increasing to 25 to 35 miles per hour. Cold wave tomorrow morning with lows 5 to 10. Mostly cloudy with snow flurries today, tonight and tomorrow. High temperature this morning near 30. Much colder tomorrow. Book Store Raises Refunds An increase of one per cent on Kansas Union Book Store refunds was voted Friday afternoon by the Union Executive Committee. The one per cent increase brings the refund on period 30 from seven to eight per cent. Periods 28 and 29 were seven per cent. Students may claim their cash refunds beginning today. Period 30 receipts are redeemable for three years. The increase in the refund percentage represents $38,000. This sum is the student's share of bookstore profit and represents a six month period from July 1 to Dec. 31, 1961. The per cent of refund on period 31 will depend on bookstore operations from Jan. 1 to June 29, 1962. James H. Stoner, director, said: "We hope to continue as long as possible the policy of sharing. There is no indication now that there will be any change. "I am real pleased to see the refund go back to eight per cent," he added. "I hope that it will denote a trend, but I can make no promises." Reapportionment Needed to Halt Inequality By Clayton Keller (Editor's note: This is the last in a attachment of the Kansas Legislature) The practical effects of the present inequality in the Kansas Legislature, according to those who favor reapportionment, include the following: - Breakdown in state government and increasing reliance on federal government. - Partisan political advantage. - Unsolved urban problems. - Discriminatory tax benefits. FOUR NEWSPAPERMEN — John McCormally, J. P. Harris, and Peter Macdonald of The Hutchinson News and Ernest W. Johnson of The Olahe News—are seeking to force reapportionment of the Legislature solely on the basis of population. They have filed a "friend of the court" brief in support of a group of Tennessee citizens who are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to force the Tennessee Legislature to rea- portion itself. The Kansas contend the Kansas Legislature is just as badly apportioned as is the Tennessee Legislature. The four men also have filed a petition for reapportionment in Shawnee County district court. A pre-trial hearing in the case is set for Feb. 2. ASIDE FROM THE obvious partisan advantages of the prevailing political party, gerrymanders of the Kansas Congressional districts have also tended to be influenced by sectional rivalries and the rural-urban conflict of interest," the brief states. "From the political standpoint, it (unequal representation) has enabled full use of that renowned political tool, gerrymander," according to the brief filed by the four Kansas newspapermen. The "unrepresentative state leg islature" has followed two unwritt rules in redistricting Congressional districts, the brief states. The three largest population centers have been kept in separate districts, and the Republican majorities in the legislature have calculated the district so that Republicans will be electe from all the Congressional districts. The brief points out that the most recent Congressional redistricting created a huge district in western Kansas designed to end the political career of Kansas' only Democratic Congressman, J. Floyd Breeding. Mr. Breeding's district was added to a predominantly Republican northwest district, after his strongest county was detached and given to still another district. John McCormally, editor of The Hutchinson News, said in a letter to this reporter that reapportionment would help solve urban problems. "I AM FOR reapportionment because, in practice, Kansas government becomes constantly less representative of the people, as the state becomes more urban," he wrote. "The Legislature not only refuses to solve the problems of urban society; it doesn't even understand them." The brief states that "the steady shift of electoral power to urban and suburban areas, and the progressive industrialization of even rural-orientated states such as Kansas, has resulted in urban needs and problems arising which have been too often ignored or neglected by the rural-dominated state legislatures." "The result has been an increased tendency to bypass state governments and seek assistance directly from the national government," the brief continues. "Continuation of this trend will result in the roles of the states in our Federal system being further subordinated, with serious consequences to our tradition of local self-government." "A continuation of this trend inevitably will contribute to national WALTER E. SANDELIUS, professor of political science at KU, also mentions this effect of inequality in a bulletin published last month by the Governmental Research Center. He said cities, feeling they are not being fairly treated by the state government, have gone to the federal government for help in solving such problems as housing, slum clearance, and sewage disposal. centralization such as to further weaken the self-limiting state governments," he said. "The result is eventual deterioration of that base of democracy which is local self government." Mr. McCormally's letter points out that if problems of urban society such as education, crime control, welfare, housing, labor and public health, are not solved by the states they will be solved by the national government. "But they will be solved, one way or another, because the people will not long leave them unsolved," he wrote. THE BRIEF, discussing the discriminatory tax benefits, points out that "rural area legislators are able to exploit their numerical advantage, for they can grant or deny relief (to cities) in accordance with the solution from which they stand most to gain. "They may curtail city expenditures to prevent urban areas from obtaining better treatment than rural areas in the several programs (Continued on page 8) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Jan. 8, 1962 Castroism in Brazil There are increasing signs that another Castro-style revolution may be in the making for Latin America. The specific country is Brazil, and the Communist revolutionary threatening an uprising is Francisco Juliao. Juliao's admission that he is a Communist came last December 7. At the same time he said that if the government did not press through effective reforms to ease the plight of the peasants in the stricken Northeast area of Brazil where he operates, his followers would have no choice but "to let their beards grow and use their guns." IF JULIAO decides on revolution, he has a substantial number of followers to back him. His basic strength comes from an estimated 3,000 hard-core radicals, but their influence extends to tens of thousands of peasants. Juliao's followers have fertile ground to work on. The depressed Northeast of Brazil is an area larger than the state of Texas and containing nearly 20 million people. The vast majority of those 20 millions are peasants with so little opportunity or sources of help that they are tenant farmers without land or any other possessions of their own. They live on the edge of hunger and when the chronic droughts that strike much of the area come, some of them die of starvation. Even when the area is not suffering from drought, the mortality rate is high due to disease and a lack of doctors to cover the huge area. THE PLIGHT of the peasants is an old story. They have suffered this way for many generations. But they are restless now and no longer willing to accept the poverty and despair they are faced with. One of the reasons they are restless is because of men like Juliao. But he is not the only element working for change in the Brazilian Northeast. Another man, less dramatic, but aware of the dangers in the situation, is working for reform rather than revolution. He is the director of the Brazilian government's Northeast Development Agency, Celso Furtado. Under his direction, the agency has prepared a five year plan for basic reforms and development of the area. It is to take effect this year. THE AGENCY'S reform plan is the result of a recognition by the political leaders of the area that a revolutionary situation exists and that reform is necessary. It is not a paper plan that the government has no intention of carrying out. But it faces serious opposition from conservative landholders who oppose any change. The five year plan would bring land reform, industry and health and education programs to the area. The problem is beginning to take the form of a race between revolutionaries like Juliao and men of evolutionary reform like Furtado. Juliao is reportedly arming his most trusted followers, so his threat of force is not any empty one. It might also be noted that Juliao visited Cuba last year as the personal guest of Fidel Castro. He is known as an admirer of the Cuban dictator. FURTADO HAS the support of men in the Brazilian government (and in Washington) who recognize the need for reform and are prepared to act to meet that need. The question that will be answered in the next few years (or sooner) is whether Furtado and the men working with him can overcome the opposition of the conservative landholders to reform and reach the peasants with some benefits of the program before an explosive situation flares into violence. If this proves impossible, Brazil may have a bloody social revolution to deal with. —William H. Mullins the took world By W. D. Paden Professor of English SENSE AND SENSIBILITY, by Jane Austen, Washington Square Press. 45 cents. Of all Miss Austen's novels, this one seems most particularly written for young women, to the most complete exclusion of men. Elinor and Marianne Dashwood have been brought up in pleasant security, but on the sudden death of their father find themselves, and their impractical mother, with barely enough money to live as gentlewomen. Their difficulties begin when they are nineteen and seventeen and naturally anxious to get married. Their poverty is not their only disadvantage. They are girls of high principles and a delicate taste in conduct, and they wish to solve their problem in accord with their self-respect and within the conventions of society. Any bachelor they meet they anxiously appraise as a possible husband, and they are too apt to interpret his casual remarks and actions as deliberate attentions indicating a possible suitor. As they have led sheltered lives and know very little about men, they tend to judge their masculine acquaintances by criteria more suitable for women, and those they approve are rather passive and hesitant. The one handsome and vigorous young man they meet, whom no woman can dislike for long, they learn to have been involved with less scrupulous women; he has compromised his future, and they draw back in horror. The novel ends happily for them both, but meanwhile there have been many bursts of tears, and mornings spent brooding and weeping over letters, and melancholy walks in the shrubbery in the gathering dusk Their view of life is natural and only too often agonizing for young women. Older women may remember it with sympathy; but men will not find it either intelligible or convincing until they themselves have daughters of nineteen. ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT, by Erich Maria Remarque. Crest (Fawcett), 50 cents. ★★★ Perhaps the very symbol of the anti-war novel is this famous work which first appeared in the late 1920s. It was the basis of a brilliant motion picture, the first of many films that were pacifist in mood and plot. Remarque's story, as is well known by now, is that of German boys fighting in the First World War. They are mere babes, but the brutality of war cannot be spared them. They love, they fight, they drink, they go home on leave, they become dissillusioned, they die. REMARQUE WROTE HIS NOVEL IN A GERMANY THAT had become bitter and pessimistic and ready for the coming of Hitler, though not for another war. His message was one of disillusionment "... the generation that grew up before us, though it has passed these years with us here, already had a home and a calling; now it will return to its old occupations, and the war will be forgotten. . . ." —Calder M. Pickett, Professor of Journalism Short Ones The greatest achievements in history are not the products of group minds. As has been said, nearly everything that has been done for the good of mankind, has been accomplished by a human being working alone in the dark and the cold.-Western Graphic, Colorado Woman's College, Denver, In a period in which symbolism and fantasy have become more and more important, in which any beginner can talk about levels of meaning, he (John O'Hara) has come as close to pure realism as a serious writer can. —Granville Hicks --some to create (earn) more wealth than others. It is absurd to think that the only way to tell if a poem is lasting is to wait and see if it lasts. The right reader of a good poem can tell the moment it strikes him that he has taken an immortal wound—that he will never get over it.—Robert Frost Everything is funny as long as it is happening to someone else. — Will Rogers Dailu Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became bweekly 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 and News service. N.Y.W. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon and the late morning on Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Ton Turner DINTS DEFINE Tom Turner Managing Editor Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Assistant Managing Editor Barbara 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 BUSINESS DEPARTMENT. Tom Brown, Advertising Manager Dan Browne, Advertising Manager; Bonnie McCullough, Circulation Manager; David Wiens, National Advertiser; Alan Lampin, Classified Advertising Manager; Hal Smith, Promotion Manager. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler TEST TODAY P. RER 6-29 "HE'S HOST EVEN TEMPERED MEMBER OF TH' WHOLE FACULTY — HE'S IN A BAD MOOD." Conservative Speaks Back Editor: letters to the editor The article by Gore Vidal, "A Liberal Takes a Look at the Conservatives," in the Sunday. Dec. 31, 1961, Capital-Journal illustrates graphically the economic illiteracy that provides the foundation for contemporary liberalism. His statements that "He (the conservative) wants complete freedom to GET (capitals mine) as such money as possible with no interference from the government" and that "The freedom to exploit others is the cornerstone of his (the conservative's) philosophy," are classical examples of the unintelligible pseudo-logic symptomatic of liberal discourse. What, indeed, do these statements mean: that conservatives want the freedom to thieve? Does it mean that they want the right to counterfeit? Absurd! Perhaps Vidal means that conservatives want the right to EARN all the wealth they can. Is this evil? In a free exchange economy one can only earn wealth by creating it. Is this exploitation? Does Vidal object to the creation of wealth? BECAUSE OF VIDAL'S FAILURE to communicate anything of rational significance, with the exception of his remarks about the inadequacy of the terms "conservative" and "liberal," one is forced to speculation. However, I think I am safe in assuming that he is condemning either the creation (earning) of wealth for personal satisfaction or the ability of It might be thought that the alternative to creating wealth for personal satisfaction would be to earn it for the good of others: one's children, neighbors, charity, etc. However, if this is done willingly, it is ultimately done for personal satisfaction. The only alternative, then, is to create wealth for purposes which one does not approve under the threat of force, which is exactly the manner in which government compels action. Is this what Mr. Vidal desires? IT IS IMPOSSIBLE for the liberals to deny that some can, through greater industry and/or ability, create more wealth than others, but they can deny the consequence of this oversight on the part of God or nature by forcing them, ultimately at the point of a policeman's gun, to relinquish part of this wealth. In doing so, however, they violate the two most important rights of man—his right to use and dispose of his time and labor as he desires and the corollary right to exchange this time and labor freely for the time and labor of others. It is obvious that conservatism is the only philosophy that affords man the simple dignity of freedom and removes from him the constant threat of force and violence for seeking merely to maintain the most satisfactory existence possible on this earth while not denying others the same right. Marick Payton Lawrence junior Worth Repeating There is little doubt that the teacher-student ratio has been a sacred cow. The former president of Fisk University once observed that without a superior teacher, "The small class merely assures the transmission of mediocrity in an intimate environment." Available evidence suggests that mere size of class has little influence on educational efficiency.-David Boroff The effectiveness of teaching varies inversely with the level. High school teachers are usually more skillful as teachers—not as scholars—than college teachers. Undergraduate instruction tends to be better than graduate teaching.David Boroff 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 African Student Tells Problems A KU freshman from Africa gave last night that the African student coming here for the first time runs into several problems—segregation, finances, examinations and unfriendiness. Page 3 Walter Bgoya, Tanganyika, talked to 25 members of Wesley Foundation. His speech was part of an effort of the Foundation to raise money for World Board of Mission's scholarships to African students. He said one of the difficult situations he meets here is that the African student is admitted in some societies that the American Negro is not. DISCUSSING THE unfriendliness, Egoya said the time element is pushed so much here with everyone rushing from one place to another that the foreign student often thinks people are unfriendly. "I think it's a misconception though" he added. He added that the problem arises because of "stupid people who are not educated, although they may know what's in books. They're medieval." HE SAID FINANCES of the African student are often acute because the people at home do not realize the wide disparity between the value of the dollar in America and the much higher value in Africa. Bgoya also touched upon the two universal problems of students—finances and examinations. He said examinations here have caused him trouble because he had thought they would require long, detailed answers instead of trucefalse and multiple choice. "I know of one student who was allocated $167 two semesters (for a school in the United States)," he said. Bgoya told the Foundation about severe dropping of students in African grade and high schools. He said the practice resulted in many excellent students not getting a full education. CPA Exam Review Offered at KU An intensive Certified Public Accountant Examination Review course of 14 sessions will be given beginning February 10 for persons qualified to sit for the May CPA examination. The course will be taught by Sherwood W. Newton, associate professor of Business, who originated the review sessions in 1960. The sessions will be from 10 a.m. until noon on Saturdays from Feb. 10 to March 24 for the law review and from March 31 to May 12 for the auditing review. All sessions will be held in 405 Summerfield Hall. The review is sponsored by University Extension in conjunction with the Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants. The CPA examination will be held May 16, 17 and 18. Samson Heads Dept. Frederick E. Samson, associate professor of physiology, will become chairman of the new department of comparative biochemistry and physiology. The appointment becomes effective July 1 when the department is organized following transfer of some members of the anatomy, biochemistry and physiology departments to the Kansas City campus of the School of Medicine. Prof. Samson took both undergraduate and graduate work at the University of Chicago and has been at KU since 1952. He has been active in research programs and now is coordinator of National Science Foundation research grants to undergraduates in the gifted student program of the college. AAAS Post to Anderson Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, has been elected vice president and chairman of the education section of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Each of the AAAS's 15 sections elects a vice president and chairman for one year. University Daily Kansan McKinney Attends Health Study Section Ross E. McKinney, professor of civil engineering and director of the Environmental Health Research Laboratory at KU is attending a study section meeting of the National Institutes of Health through tomorrow at the Communicable Disease Center in Atlanta, Ga. The meeting is of the Environmental Sciences and Engineering Study Section, to which Prof. McKinney was recently appointed. The section reviews all research grant applications to the federal agency related to water pollution, air pollution, radiological health and general environmental health. Current expenditures for federal support of research in the environmental health field exceed $4 million a year. Advice is like snow; the softer it falls, the longer it dwells upon, and the deeper it sinks into the mind. —Samuel Taylor Coleridge Four Student Soloists Sing In "Te Deums" Four KU students were featured soloists in a presentation Sunday of "Te Deum" by Anton Bruckner and "Te Deum" by Giuseppe Verdi. In the Bruckner "Te Deum," which is divided into five sections with alternating solo and choral passages, Mary Lou Powell, Topeka graduate; Edward Sooter, Wichita graduate; Donald Grant, Kansas City sophomore, and Sharon Tebenkamp, Salisbury, Mo., junior, were featured soloists. Miss Powell was also soloist in the Verdi "Te Deum." The chorus was accompanied by Richard Gayhart, instructor of organ and theory. If the world was to learn the truth about academic incompetence children would be kept at home—John Walnut Most of our realists and sociologists talk about a poor man as if he were an octopus or an alligator. —G. K. Chesterton Official Bulletin Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 & 8 a.m. St John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. French Phi D. Reading Exam: Jan 13, ga-ta-cra-ge been handed to in Moss Craig by Jan 10. Western Civilization Comprehensive Examination: Review Sessions: Jan. 9, 10 from 7:15-9:30 p.m. Bailey Auditorium. Jan. 13 at 1 a.m. rooms to be assigned. TODAY Foreign Students: 4 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union, Mr. Marvin Grimm of the U.S. Internal Revenue Service will speak to you on your responsibilities in filing concerns concerning taxes, please be present unless there is a class conflict. KU Dames; 8 p.m., Watkins Room, Kansas Union. Dr. R. L. Hermes will speak on childbirth. Membership cards will be checked. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion and Breakfast Celtic Cross: 12 noon. Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. The study of worship. Kansas Union. Balances due for trip. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. WEDNESDAY Student National Education Association: 4 p.m., 302 Bailey. Panel discussion: "Student Teachers" with Dr. Karl Edwards. Celtic Cross 12 noon, Westminster Cen- tury, Westminster Center Centrum, 5:30 p.m. Le Cerule Francais célébre la Fête des Rois par un diner mercredel le 10 janvier a six heures et quart dans le Curry à la salle du café des deserts desrient y assister doivent s'inscrire, et payer au bureau du departement avant mardi soir. Civil Service Test Announced Kansas civil service examinations are being given for Histological Technology. Examinations will be held in Chanute, Hays, Salina, and Wichita in February. Further information and application forms may be obtained from the State Personnel Division, 801 Harrison St., Topeka. AUTOMATIC LANGUAGE TRANSLATION ОДНОГО ПОЛЯ ЯГОДА From the same field the berry C'est bonnet blanc et blanc bonnet It is hat white and white hat Six of one half a dozen of the other If computers process data in mathematical terms, how can they be instructed to handle information and applications that are not essentially arithmetic? IBM, in cooperation with the U.S. Air Force, is finding some answers through research in automatic language translation systems. Machine translation of idioms, for example, is teaching us a great deal about information processing. An idiomatic phrase may have a meaning quite different from the sum of its individual words, and a system that merely matches these words won't come close to translating it. One solution is an "expanded electronic dictionary" that contains idioms and grammatical instructions as well as single words. Work is now under way to clarify meaning further by automatic syntactical analysis. Systems research such as this requires its own kind of translation—the translation of an idea into a working system. For people with this ability, who like to travel beyond the boundaries of their specialized areas, IBM offers unusual opportunity. If you're interested in any of the fields in which IBM is making important advances—semiconductors, microwaves, magnetics superconductivity—and your major is in engineering or one of the sciences, you are invited to talk with the IBM representative. He will be interviewing on your campus this year. Your placement office can make an appointment. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, creed, color or national origin. Write, outlining your background and interests, to: Mgr. of Technical Employment, Dept. 898, IBM Corporation, 590 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N.Y. You naturally have a better chance to grow with a dynamic growth company IBM IBM will interview Feb. 7,8. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, Jan. 8, 1962 MIDDLE EAST JAPAN BEARING GIFTS—The third annual Christmas book drive of the William Allen White School of Journalism for Watkins Memorial Hospital collected more than 200 paperback and hardback volumes from students, staff and faculty members of the school. Emissaries of the school, Charles Martinache (left), Pittsburg senior, and Walt Blackledge (right), Lawrence graduate student, made a presentation of the books during the Christmas vacation. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, hospital administrator, and Mrs. Donna Stene, director of nursing, accepted the books. Vera Zorina Will Be in 'Joan of Arc' A summer job has given KU a major star for one of its theater productions. Vera Zorina, dancer and actress, will play the title role in Claudel and Honeygreg's "Joan of Arc at the Stake," to be presented in University Theatre at 8 p.m. Jan. 15-17. Her appearance was made possible by Robert Bausian, associate professor of orchestra, who conducts the Santa Fe Opera Company in its summer season. Miss Zorina appeared with the Santa Fe company last summer in its production of Igor Stravinsky's "Persephone," conducted by the composer. Later in the fall the company went to Berlin and Belgrade for performances of "Persephone" and "The Ballad of Baby Doe," which Prof. Baustian directed. At the conclusion of the tour, Prof. Baustian asked Miss Zorina if she would play Joan in the KU production. Miss Zorina created the part of Joan in the cantata's first American performance with the New York Philharmonic and Charles Munch after Artur Rodzinski had heard and seen her as Ariel in Margaret Webster's production of Shakespeare's "The Tempest." Miss Zorina began her career at age 10 in Max Reinhardt's production of "A Midsummer Night's Dream" and came to the United States to appear in Samuel Goldwyn's "The Goldwyn Follies" after a stint with the Colonel de Basil's Ballet Russe. Since her creation of the Honegger part, Miss Zorina has added to her repertoire of dance-narration Debussy's "The Martyrdom of St. Sebastian," Lukas Foss's "Parable of Death," commissioned for her by the Louisville Symphony; William Walton's "Facade" and Darius Milhaud's "Les Cheephores," which she performed in October with the New York Philharmonic under Leonard Bernstein. Of her performance in "Persephone" with the Santa Fe Opera last summer, Walter Terry, dance critic of the New York Herald Tribune, said: "The event was unforgettable... Miss Zorina not only spoke in a marvelously lifting and almost forgotten style of poetic declaration but also, as a dancer, her actions were exquisitely realized... I don't mind admitting I wept along with others in the audience. For here, in truth, was one of the great performances of our day." The Claudel-Honegger score employs some vivid and imaginative techniques. Joan's trial is recreated with masked animals playing the leading roles in a carnival atmosphere and the Hundred Years War is danced as a game of cards. The unification of France is represented as two giants reuniting as the bread and wine of France in a boisterous frolic. Joan's voices are depicted as glittering Medieval images helping her to understand her life's purpose. Brooking, associate professor of speech and drama. Prof. Baustian and Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of choral music, are the orchestra and choral directors. Students may obtain tickets with ID cards. The certainty of punishment, even more than its severity, is the preventive of crime.—Tryon Edwards The production is directed by Jack He who does not punish evil commands it to be done.—Leonardo da Vinci FREE OFFER KILLER ROBOT! WITH EVERY SENIOR PIC TAKEN AT ESTES STUDIO, 924 VERMONT. PHONE VI31171! ONLY ESTES CAN MAKE THIS OFFER, BECAUSE ONLY ESTES IS THE OFFICIAL 62 JAYHAWKER PHOTOGRAPHER! NO OTHER. THINK OF THE FUN WHEN YOU SET THIS BABY LOOSE ON SAH- HAWK BLVD! WATCH YOUR FRIENDS, TEACHERS, SCATTER FOR THEIR LIVES! HAVE CONTESTS! SEE HOW MANY YOU CAN "BAG" IN A SINGLE HOUR! POLICE WILL TRY TO STOP HUM WITH MACHINE GUNS, GRENADIES, FLAME THROWERS; BUT DON'T WORRY, GANG — THEY CAN'T! JUST TRU TO SHIP OFF! OFFER NO. Teacher to Actor Alexander Mackenzie, who retired from Scotland's classrooms at the age of 61, reaches movie stardom in Walt Disney's "Greyfriar's Bobby." He appeared in his first picture a year ago with the late Paul Douglas. HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — A 75-year-old retired school teacher has been making an entirely new career as an actor. Not For Pay LUFKIN, Tex — (UPI) — Rev. J. A. Dias, who preached 43 years in 14 different Baptist churches in East Texas, boasted on his 93rd birthday that he never was paid for a single sermon. "I wasn't a preacher to make a living. I was a preacher to serve God," said the man who farmed in his spare time to support his family. BULLFIGHTER On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of “Rally Round The Flag, Boys”, “The Many Loves Of Dobie Gillis”, etc.) 'F RING IN THE NEW Are you still writing "1961" on your papers and letters? I'll bet you are, you scamme! But I am not one to be harsh with those who forget we are in a new year, for I myself have long been guilty of the same lapse. In fact, in my senior year at college, I wrote 1873 on my papers until nearly November of 1874! (It turned out, incidentally, not to be such a serious error because, as we all know, 1874 was later repealed by President Chester A. Arthur in a fit of pique over the Black Tom Explosion. And, as we all know, Mr. Arthur later came to regret his hasty action. Who does not recall that famous meeting between Mr. Arthur and Louis Napoleon when Mr. Arthur said, "Lou, I wish I hadn't of repealed 1874." Whereupon the French emperor made his immortal rejoinder, "Tipi que nous et tyler tu." Well sir, they had many a good laugh about that, as you can imagine.) But I digress. How can we remember to write 1962 on our papers and letters? Well sir, the best way is to find something memorable about 1962, something unique to fix it firmly in your mind. Happily, this is very simple because, as we all know, 1962 is the first year in history that is divisible by 2, by 4, and by 7. Take a pencil and try it: 1962 divided by 2 is 981; 1962 divided by 4 is 490-1/2; 1962 divided by 7 is 280-2/7. This mathematical curiosity will not occur again until the year 2079, but we will all be so busy then celebrating the Chester A. Arthur "You, I wish I hadn't of repealed 1874." bi-centenary that we will scarcely have time to be writing papers and letters and like that. Another clever little trick to fix the year 1962 in your mind is to remember that 1962 spelled backwards is 2691. "Year" spelled backwards is "mey." "Marlboro" spelled backwards is "orobram." Marlboro smoked backwards is no fun at all. Kindly do not light the filter. What you do is put the filter end in your lips, then light the tobacco end, then draw, and then find out what pleasure, what joy, what rapture serene it is to smoke the filter cigarette with the unfiltered taste. In 1962, as in once and future years, you'll get a lot to like in a Marlboro—available in soft pack and flip-top box in all 50 states and Duluth. WH theence 1890 Mr. Arthur, incidentally, is not the first ex-president to come out of retirement and run for the House of Representatives. John Quiney Adams was the first. Mr. Adams also holds another distinction: he was the first son of a president ever to serve as president. It is true that Martin Van Buren's son, Walter "Blinky" Van Buren, was at one time offered the nomination for the presidency, but he, alas, had already accepted a bid to become Mad Ludwig of Bavaria. James K. Polk's son, on the other hand, became Salmon P. Chase. Millard Fillmore's son went into air conditioning. This later was known as the Missouri Compromise. © 1962 Max Shulman But I digress. We were speaking of the memorable aspects of 1962 and high among them, of course, is the fact that in 1962 the entire House of Representatives stands for election. There will, no doubt, be many lively and interesting contests, but none. I'll wager, quite so lively and interesting as the one in my own district where the leading candidate is none other than Chester A. Arthur! ** In Missouri, or anywhere else, there is no compromise with quality in Marlboro or the new unfiltered king-size Philip Morris Commander. The Commander does something new in cigarette making—gently vacuum cleans the tobacco for flavor and mildness. Get aboard! You'll be welcome. University Daily Kansan Page 5 'Finest Teachers' Nominated Who were the "finest teachers" in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences during the 70-year period from 1890 to the present? The College recently put this question to approximately 11,500 of its graduates and received some interesting, if inconclusive, answers. The 6,064 former College graduates who answered the question nominated a total of 1,081 faculty members as "the finest teachers I had." LOOKING at this number, the College could draw only one conclusion in its report: "The College, through the years, has had many good teachers." The results of the informal survey are included in the third annual report of the College, released recently by George R. Waggoner, dean of the College. "The point I would make in commenting on this survey in that there is probably no single 'best teacher' for anyone," Francis Heller, associate dean of the College, said. "Somebody likes almost anybody. "Obviously this wasn't a scientific sample, but I think it can be seen that the teaching job being done at KU meets with far more approval than is generally realized," he said. WHILE A NUMBER of faculty members stood out in the balloting, it is impossible to determine the reason for their popularity from the survey, he continued. Certain faculty members probably received large votes because of their excellence in the classroom, he said, while others were popular because of the personal interest they showed in their students outside the classroom. He said it is impossible to determine from the survey whether faculty members who taught large classes had any advantages in the balloting over those who taught small classes. William H. Carruth, professor of German in the 1890s, was mentioned most frequently by graduates of that period. He also was one of 10 faculty members most frequently nominated by students who graduated from 1900 to 1910. Students graduating since 1960 nominated a total of 164 faculty members as their "finest teachers." Receiving the most votes were in alphabetical order George Beckmann, professor of history; Ray Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry; Peter Caws, associate professor of philosophy; Eldon Fields, professor of political science; William Gilbert, associate professor of history; Franklyn Nelick, associate professor of English; C. P. Osborne, professor of philosophy; Ambrose Saricks, associate professor of history; Arnold Strassenburg, associate professor of physics; and Calvin VanderWerf, professor of chemistry. PERHAPS AS INTERESTING AS the balloting itself were the comments made by many of the respondents—who often wrote around the narrow margins of the postcard used in the survey. Typical of the many favorable comments on KU faculty members KU Gets Grant for Institutes The National Science Foundation has made grants totaling $154,600 to the University of Kansas for the operation of three summer institutes for 125 high school and college teachers. The largest sum, $98.8000, will support a program directed by Russell N. Bradt, associate professor of math, for 35 college teachers and 40 high school teachers of mathematics. The high school section will emphasize the new concepts of mathematics at that level. A $19,000 grant is for an 8-week program in radiation biology for 20 high school science teachers. Edward I. Shaw, associate professor of radiation biophysics, is the director. This program also has a commitment for support from the Atomic Energy Commission. The NSF is providing $36,000 for a program directed by Arnold A. Strassenburg, associate professor of physics, for 30 college teachers of physics. This is the first year for this institute at KU. Professor Strassenburg is the first recipient of the $1,000 award for distinguished teaching given at KU by H. Bernerd Fink of Topeka. Teachers selected as members of the institutes will receive stipends of $75 a week plus allowances for travel and allotments for up to four dependents of $15 a week. Their KU fees will be paid by the institutes. included in the report is one by Alyan Couch. 1894 graduate. Each of the institute's directors is accepting applications for membership in the institutes. Applicants must qualify for admission to the Graduate School of KU. It is likely that some applicants may be permitted to enroll in the institutes without stipends. "I am averse at rating one of my teachers above the others," he wrote. "As I see them now, they were all outstanding, devoted individuals whom I remember with the most sincere respect." CLEARANCE SALE PANTS SKIRTS SWEATERS DRESSES GLOVES Mildred Newman, 1905 graduate. agreed. Monday, Jan. 8, 1962 "They were all excellent—each in his own way," she wrote. "I dislike to choose." JUDGING FROM the report, only a few of the respondents regarded their former instructors with something less than enthusiasm. CO The following anonymous statement from a 1938 graduate sums up rather emphatically the viewpoint held by this second group of respondents. COACH HOUSE "Had you asked for 'poorest' professors," the statement reads, "I could have given you a page of names." Co 1237 Oread Kenneth S. Rothwell, assistant professor of English, will assume new duties as Director of Freshman-Sophomore English at the University of Kansas effective July 1. He will succeed David Dykstra, assistant professor of English, who has served as director since 1958. As Director of Freshman-Sophomore English, Prof. Rothwell will be responsible for planning, coordinating, and supervising the curriculum of the required English courses at KU. On the Campus Profs. to Give Recital At 7:30, Pi Mu Epsilon and the Mathematics club, in a combined meeting, will hear Neal Wagner, Topeka senior, speak on "Helley's Theorem of Convex Figures." Refreshments will be served. Two faculty members will present a sonata recital at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall. Marian Jersild associate professor of piano, and Theodore Johnson, assistant professor of theory, will play sonatas by Mozart, Copland and Brahms. Both have studied in Germany with Fulbright grants and have had concert careers. He will also be in charge of the in-service training program for assistant instructors of English, and will serve as the department's chief liaison with high school English teachers in the area. There will be a Pi Mu Epsilon meeting at 7 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. New members will be initiated. PME to Meet Resolve, and thou are free.—Henry W. Longfellow If we permit extremes of wealth for a few and enduring poverty for many, we shall create a social exploiveness and demand a revolutionary change.—Dwight D. Eisenhower Rothwell Is Director EVEN"LOOK ALIKES"ARE DIFFERENT! And so is Lawrence Laundry's dry cleaning different from ordinary dry cleaning. We use Sanitone, the only method of cleaning recommended by clothing manufacturers. Sanitone is kinder to your fine clothing and enables it to keep its original appearance and texture. Drop in or call in soon and let us do your dry cleaning the quality Sanitone way. LAWRENCE "Quality Guarantee launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. VI 3-3711 "Specialists in Fabric Care" Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, Jan. 8. 1962 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Kansas Teams Lose Openers Nebraska's Rex Swett knocked the ball from Jerry Gardner's hands, retrieved it, and hurled it down court to forward Ivan Grupe who laid the ball in with four seconds remaining, giving the Cornhuskers a 69-67 victory in the opener of the Big Eight season at Allen Field House Saturday night. Meanwhile, Colorado, a Big Eight darkhorse, was upsetting fourth-ranked Kansas State 75-61 at Boulder. The Buffaloes built up a 46-32 first half lead, but the Wildcats came back strong to cut the margin to six in the second half. Ken Charlton, led Colorado with 31 points, Mike Wroblewski was the only Wildcat in double-figures with 21. GRUPE WAS FOULED on the game's winning shot by center Buddy Vance, but missed the free throw. Kansas brought the ball in, but was unable to move the ball across the mid-court line and did not even get away a desperation 50-foot shot. NU's Charlie Jones tied the ball game with less than a half-minute remaining. Kansas had possession of the ball and was working for one shot. "When Gardner brought the ball aeros the line (mid-court) I looked up and saw there was 15 seconds left," said Swett. "The next thing I knew the ball was loose, I went over to get it, whirled around, saw Grupe breaking down the court, so I aimed the ball at Grupe's shiny spot (Grupe has a well-recived hairline), he made the basket, and we won the game." KANSAS WAS DOWN at halftime 39-34, but fought back in the second half led, by Gardner's 20 point second-half production to command a 64-61 lead with three minutes remaining. From this point on the Jayhawkers worked their offense around Gardner, the Big Eight's leading scorer, but Gardner missed on two attempts. Nebraska was plagued most of the second half with bad passes, traveling, and rebounds that went out of bounds off the hands and feet of the Cornhusker's rebounders and had trouble in the waning minutes of play setting up their offense With two minutes remaining to play, Tom Russell, the Cornhusker's leading scorer, scored from under the basket to cut the KU margin to 64-63. WITH 1:30 SHOWING on the clock, Gardner missed again. Nebraska, again bobbled the ball, attempting to set up their offensive pattern. KU took possession, but Gardner was fouled by Swett. Gardner made the free throw giving KU a 65-63 margin with less than a minute to go. Gruppe, who was the spark for Nebraska, leading their balanced scoring attack with 17 points and making a "big" difference on the backboards, pulling down 15 rebounds, the game individual high, tied the ball game with 50 seconds left Gardner gave Kansas fans a lift when he scored from the field with 30 seconds remaining, giving the Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Jayhawkers a narrow two point margin. THE GAME'S COMPLEXION changed rapidly in the last 30 seconds. Although the game was tied, Kansas had an opportunity to control the game at that point. They could hold the ball for a last second shot. If they made it, the Jayhawkers would have a good start in Big Eight conference play. If they missed, the game would go into overtime giving both squads an equal opportunity. Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands Of Oil The game see-sawed at the first and at the last but in-between it was Nebraska's ball game. Ironically in the first and last eight minutes of the ball game, the lead changed hands three times, and the game was tied at four intervals. When Kansas bobbled the ball, Nebraska took advantage of the "break" and wrapped up the game, starting conference play off right with a victory on the road. THE KANSAS FRONT LINE kept the Jayhawkers in the game early in the first half. John Matt and Loye Sparks scored six points and four points respectively along with guard Nolen Ellison's four points to lead the Jayhawks. Gardner had a "cold" first half, not scoring a field goal until he dribbled through the Nebraska defense and laid the ball in with 8:05 remaining in the first half. He picked up his scoring production and finished the first half with nine points, high for KU. In other scoring, Ellison, who was averaging 18.3 per game, contributed 13 points to the Jayhawker attack. Jim Dumas hit nine, and Sparks and Matt both scored six. For Nebraska Daryl Petsch scored 14, Tom Russell, 13, and Rex Swett, 12. NU Players Tell About KU Game The Nebraska dressing room was buzzing with excited followers, players and a happy coach Saturday night after the Cornhuskers had defeated Kansas. The players' conversations were spiced with humor, and relief that they had won their conference opener. "This was a great victory for us," said 6-4, 220-pound forward Ivan Grupe, who scored the game's winning basket. "IT'S GREAT BECAUSE it was the first game of conference play, and second, was that the game was on the road. We have a horrible reputation for not being able to win on the road and it feels good to finally win one." How did Grupe feel about making the winning basket. "It was wonderful, but still it was just another basket. They all count two points and one is just as important as the other." Charlie Jones, 6-3 sophomore forward, kept the Cornhusher dressing room in laughter with his quick humor. When Rex Swett was asked about stealing the ball setting up Grupe's winning basket, Jones interjected. "That wasn't Rex who did that, it was, uh, that number 21, oh what's that kid's name, Jones, yea, that's it." WHEN JONES WAS ASKED to comment on his tip-in that tied the ball game up, he said, "Well, I was just doing my job, that's what I'm out there for, yes sir, just doing my job." Grupe related that he had asked Jones after the game who was given credit for the tip-in. Jones candidly replied, "Well the only other person out there capable of doing that was Dumas and since it was on our end of the court, naturally they gave it to me." COACH JERRY BUSH's comments were: "KU will play close every game. We had some real tough ones with them. There is one thing I want to go on record as saying and that is what a marvelous job of coaching Dick Harp has done with these boys." Daryl Petsch, a sophomore from Marysville, whose long arching jump shots aided the Nebraska attack with 14 points, commented upon the hustle of the Kansas squad. "The only other team that gave us a fight like that was Wichita," he said. Cleveland, Kansas City Win in ABL By United Press International The Cleveland Pipers are thank ing their lucky stars today that Johnny Cox and Dick Barnett would rather play in the American Basketball League than the rival National Basketball Association. Cox, who was drafted by the New York Knickerbockers in 1959, scored 39 points and Barnett, who jumped from the Syracuse Nationals after last season, tallied 37 as Cleveland defeated the San Francisco Saints, 140-107, yesterday. In yesterday's only other game, the Kansas City Steers clinched the first half Western Division title with their second triumph in two days over the New York Tapers. 100-30. AUDREY HEPBURN as that delightful darting, HOLLY GOLIGHTLY! BREAKEAST AT TIFFANYS A JUROR SHEERED PRODUCTION MICHAEL STARKING CO BRUNNAN ROBBIE BRUNNAN STEVEN BRUNNAN MATTHEW BRUNNAN GEORGE PEPPARD NEAL-EBSEN-DALSAM MICKEY ROONEY DIRECTED BY PLANE EDMONDS CO-BRUNNAN MICHAEL STARKING MATTHIEU JURROW MICHAEL STARKING CLUNGE ARLISBOO MUSIC HAROLD MAIN TECHNICOLOR Bv Bill Sheldon You'll live every wild wonderful minute of its brash excitement! NOW! At 7:00 & 9:10 Along the JAYHAWKER trail Harry Gibson THEATRE ... Telephone WIKIEN 3-5789 ... PRODUCED BY PRODUCTIONS AND BANK PRODUCTIONS presents paul Newman joanne Woodward sunny Poltler paris blues LOUIS ARMSTRONG DIAHANN CARROLL Released by UNITED UK ARTISTS NOW SHOWING! --things which he brought up which add light to the KU basketball situation. GRANADA Of course, the mere fact of losing would be enough to lower the spirits of any coach, but to have it done in what appeared to be a completely lackluster manner must have been added weight, which, at this point in the season, would be hard to fathom. What Harp meant was that the Jayhawkers failed, for the most part, to run the basic KU offense and employ the various patterns at their command. "Our offense, when recognizable, was good. But, we were never consistently organized," he said. It was a dejected and disconsolate Coach Dick Harp who faced reporters following the disappointing loss to Nebraska Saturday night. MOST OF THE AMIABLE coach's comments were typical of those of a losing coach, but there were three ONE OF THE MAIN reasons why Kansas got more scoring from its front line in the first half than normal (19 points for three forwards and two centers compared with 17 points for two guards) was that the pattern offense was used effectively. In the second half the front line First, Harp said the real falling against the Huskers was a breakdown on defense. This included not hustling and reacting sufficiently and, most important, not blocking under the boards. "We work constantly on screening under the basket on rebounds because we must do this successfully to win; but, this was one of the big faults tonight," said Harp. Gibson scored only two points and got only one rebound but Harp still felt his play, on a lame knee which has kept him out of action since Dec. 9, the outstanding thing of the game. NOW SHOWING! 1974 The one thing about the game with which Harp was most pleased was the play of sophomore Harry Gibson. "Gibson's play was the highlight of the game. Without him we would have been beaten badly. He gave us the lift to keep us in the game. His play was very inspirational," praised Harp. Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 VARSITY produced only six points while the Kansas guards made 27 points. ALTHOUGH HARP felt that the KU offense was good at times, the fact that it consistently lacked organization contributed greatly to the loss. THEATRE ... Telephone Vikhon G 3-1065 --- - SLACKS 5 TIES • SPORT SHIRTS • SWEATERS • BLOUSES • SKIRTS (plain) SALE ENDS CLIP THIS COUPON CONT/ tinted found SPOTT range. tary S REPC Stere matic navo TROUSERS STUDI 9-1 da wares. JAN. 13TH Deluxe Cleaned, Beautifully Pressed MIME must IBM e operat equipr Servic 117 F! STUDI type Uphols BEVE ice co closed Ice P 0350. R.N.'s eral du Contac Cherry Kansa GRAD about Comm Mond. SKIRTS (plain) FOR Firea Profe all st celler Tenn. USED Call N 34℃ Note: No Limit. But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Order 25e SHIRTS NOW ONLY Laundered to perfection! Starched as you like! 19c LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FINISH DeLuxe Dress Shirts SAME DAY SERVICE Fri. & Sat. In by 9 a.m. Drive In and Save - Open 7 A.M. to 7 P.M. Except Sunday 1300 West 23rd St. VI 2-0200 Out by 5 p.m. --- able, con- the mostense as at CLASSIFIED ADS why its than ards sh 17 the vely. line the game leased Harry points Harp knee action thing blight would gave game.onal," LOST CONTACT LENSES on Dec. 15. Blue- found call Bob Thomas, V 3-4711. 1-11 HELP WANTED SPOTTER SCOPE in vicinity of ride Maryland Science Dept. Ext 339 - 1-11 Page 7 STUDENT WIFE to do secretarial work,. student must use MODEL VI w/wares, VI 3-5060 or VI 3-4077 - 1-10 STUDENT PART TIME help with any type of upholstering experience. Soir's Upholstery Shop, 646 W. 23rd. VI 3-6255. 1-19 R. N.'S NEEDED: Full or part time. General duty any shift. Also operating room. Lunch. Blasgame, colleague Cherry 2-3344 or Cherry 2-2292, Omaha Kansas, tff MIMEOGRAPH OPERATOR-TYPIST; must be experienced, accurate typist, IBM electric typewriters; addressgraph equipment; multilith operator. State Civil Service positions. See Thos. C. Ryther. 117 Flint Hail. Phone KU-373. tf USED BAR BELL set. 130 lbs or more. CALL Mike Smith, VI 3-5721. 1-10 WANTED MISCELLANEOUS GRADUATES INTERESTED in learning about Bnai Bril Lodge come to Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive Monday, Jan. 8, 7:30 p.m. 1-8 BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent iced paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. 6th, 6th & Vermont. Party VI 0350 FOR SALE FOR SALE: GUNS, Robert Redding, army ww2 uniforms, Professional re-bluing. Special this week, all steel HI-Standard 22 automatic. Ex- portable. (in. scff.) Cell M 3-7000. 1-12 T6fth. (in. scff.). Call M 3-7000. 1-12 REPOSSESSED MAGNAVOX portable Stereo. Like new. New guarantee. Automatic. 655. Pettengill-Davis, your Magnaxo dealer. 723 Mass. 1-12 '52 CHEVY. 55,000 miles, stick, new tires, new battery, superb motor, blue, four-door. Great for winter starting and driving. Cheap. VI 2-0182. 1-9 MAGNAVOX PORTABLE FM & AM transmitter radio. Reduced to $75.70. Fettenill-Davis, your Magnavox Dealer. 723 phone. 1-12 1055 FORD. Stand, trans. Excellent cond. $450. VI 3-0651. 1-9 1051 FORD 2 door, R & H, good tires. 1052 Ford 2 door, R & H, good tires. or call VI 2-3887 up to 11 p.m. 1-11 8" x 42" MOBILE HOME with awning & Saturday's Call VI-2122 evening 1-11 TERRIFIC LOCATION to KU & Cent- ral kitchen, large living room, dining room, attached garage, utility room, adjustable aluminum storms. $1,000. VI 83-786. 1-21 MAGNAVOX 6 transistor pocket radio. Davis, your Davis, your Magnitude, Dealer. 723 Mass. GOING TO EUROPE. Will sell 2 good collections of leather, suede, economy car, $500. Suit jacket, economy car, $850. Jaguar 34 Sedan. White with red leather upholstery. Indent condition, $2,250. Call 8795. V-11 1-10 FOR SALE OR RENT? 2 bdrm. house trailer, 40 x 8, air cond. and in good condition. Located at Hillcrest Trailer Court or call VI 3-3884. 1-10 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, service, rentals. Venice Typewriter, 733 Mass. VI 2-3644. NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Offset printing and printing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 312 Mass. Phone VI 801-0151 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 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, Collus, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4201 or VII 3-4201. tf PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition: formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf FOR RENT USED MAGNAVOX 21" table model TV $F1-$40, Fettigill Dennis, T23. Mass, M1. LARGE QUIET ROOM for boys. Priv. bath & entrance. Very close to campus, 1617 Oxford Road. Come evenings or Sundays. 1-12 BOARD & ROOM, $55 a month. VI 3 4385. 1-1 ROOMS FOR MEN: ½ block from Union. Available. Floor 1st. One single and 1 double room. Quiet. Call VI 3-4092 or call at 1301 Ln. 1-12 FURNISHED basement upst. Utilities paid. 185-300 month, 720 Miss. VI 2-8902. SILVER, 11月 month. FOR RENT: PRIVATE rooms for spring campus. Send Student Information to: Call Marvin, 3-8390 - 1-11 FOR GRADUATE WOMEN or University employed. Attractively furn. 2 room apt. Neat clean, off step porking $48. Avail. Feb. I. For call VI 3-6096. I-1-11 FURNISHED APARTMENT. & furnished 2 bedroom home. VI 2-2068. 1-11 GRADUATE MEN — Why climb the hill? Large rooms available now. $1/block from Union, $25, 1221 Oread. Call for appointment, VI 3-6798 or VI 3-8796. 1-10 Park Plaza South Apartments LARGE FURNISHED apartment. east side, utilities paid. $50. Call 3-6294-1 Are you satisfied where you now live? Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking Central Air Conditioning will pay local moveeve VI 2-3416 or VI 2-8253 Office — 1912 W. 25th Lawrence's Only Garden Apartments TRAILER SPACE for rent. Good location for students. Set up for '8' or '10' widths. Nice yard with trees. See at Hillcrest Trailer Court. Or call VI 3-3884. 1-10 ONLY 15% BLOCK FROM CAMPUS Nice address to call from campus at $26 per month. Call WI 3-6096. LARGE ROOM with priv. bath for 2 girls Call 811-7522 or 5 on weekends. 1-10 7522 after 5 or on weekends. Monday. Jan. 8. 1962 ATTRACTIVE ROOM FOR RENT. Priv. entr. 25. Phone VI 3-9231. 1-8 3 ROOM NICELY furnished apt. 2½ blocks from campus. Prov. entr., parents & bath. $55 a month, utilities paid. Boys preferred. Phone VI 3-7830. 1-10 FOR RENT Two bedroom cottages garage, fenced yard. Call VI 3-8441-10 garden, fence yard. Call VI 3-8441-10 HOME COOKED meals. Served family room to room for gentleman 3 I-9467 4-10 University Daily Kansan 3 ROOM APT, nicely furn. prif., bath and bathroom. In courthouse. Call VI. 3-5056. 1-8 3 ROOM FURNISHED apt. for 2. Completely private, 1st floor, all utilities paid. $40 ea. Located at 1029 Miss. Inquire at [005 Miss., VI 3-4349]. 1-10 NEW 2 BEDROOM apts. Furn. or unfurn. Elec. range, air cond.气袋 disposal. Lower rates to year around tenants. 2331 Alabama. Call VI 3-2346. 1-10 LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 0731. FOR RENT TO MALE STUDENT. Single large closet. 1122 Kentucky. 1-8 TUTORING TYPING MATH TUTORING in undergrad. courses math. grad. stud. In reasonable. VI 0731 Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates. VI 3-8833. FORMER. SECRETARY with electric co. Laboratories, New York, VT 3-0524. able Mrs. Nancy Cainy, VT 3-0524. MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." — Now at two locations. Call VI 3-5920 or 3-5047. 1015 Lawrence Ave. & $1021\%$ mass. ff EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing in my home — call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lou Gehlbach. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, thesis, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, journals. Ready to meet accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Email: will@cs.ucr.edu Cell: 1511 W. 21 St. Cell V1 5-6440 fax: 1511 W. 21 St. Cell V1 5-6440 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Nent, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattii, VI 3-8297. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. reports accurately. Reports & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. tf 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. Roisonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 19th. VI. tfr 168. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 19th. VI. tfr "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- press typeing vector. For collectors, typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise 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 TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, letters, and reasons. Reasonable Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mt Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0585, 1031 Miss. tt FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Excusee, Medical Service, 9197 A Woodson Mission, HE 2-7718. Evers or Sat-ra 2-2186. FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, typeset papers, rates and dissertations. Reasonable. **Mrs. Marilyn Hail.** VI 3-2318. **Mrs. BUSINESS SERVICES EXPERIENCED MOTHER — would like child to care for, 3 to 4 yrs, old, in her home. Also would like ironing, 15c per piece. 340 Indiana, VI 2-3473. tf ALTERATIONS, men & women, men's coats, coats relied. Call VI 1348. DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns. etc. Ola Smith. 933% Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tt TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 ttf U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- winter. Phone VI 3-2921. Modern p.m-service — open week days 8 to 6:30 pm. RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. Endorsed by PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE American Students Abroad Program Cooperative Transatlantic Charter for the University of Kansas Round Trip Jet-Powered Flight $215 Leaves New York for Paris June 14 (flight time less than 8 hours) Leaves Paris for New York Sept. 4 (same flight time) The University of Kansas, as a member institution of the non-profit Council on Student Travel, now has available all of the world-wide facilities for which the Council has been noted during the past fifteen years. KU is one of the one hundred educational institutions and organizations in the United States exploring these new dimensions in the education of young Americans and their responsibilities as citizens of the world. As a coordinating agency the Council offers a vast program of services to more than 12,000 people whom they send abroad each year—whether it be in the organization of a charter as in the case of KU, or by the other programs and services such as international work camps, study tours, summer schools, and junior years abroad. Presently we are pleased to be able to offer this Cooperative Air Charter (first class service throughout) to the students, faculty, staff (and their families) of the University of Kansas. It is to be noted that this charter is a transportation service only and you will be quite free to travel as you please in Europe. Of course, however, if we may be of service in planning Optional for Flight Members- your trip ctc, we shall be delighted at the opportunity to assist you—FREE OF CHARGE, of course. A variety of (optional) charter services are available providing economical transportation from Kansas City to New York. We hope to be of service to you as you plan your European program. Martin Arlinsky Dept. of Psychology Staff member, Council on Student Travel. Independent European Study Program For flight members desiring independent study abroad, we can arrange extremely low cost study programs for students with no language background as well as for the more advanced, including special programs for language teachers at the leading and fully accredited continental universities. for KU Tuition for 4 Weeks as Low as $11 University or private room and board as low as $10 per week Tuition for 6 Weeks as Low as $19 Complete tuition, room and board for 4 weeks as low as $51 Tuition, room and board for 6 weeks as low as $79. Thus a 4-week European summer session including round trip jet flight can be had for as low as $266. Complete 6 weeks study program for $294. If Interested in Either or Both Plans, Call for Information and Brochures as Soon as Possible as We Cannot Be Sure How Long Spaces Will Be Available Phone VI 2-2614 from 4-6 and 10-12 p.m.; Other Hours, People-to-People Office, Ext. 500 Or Drop in at Strong Hall, Office 5-C Page 8 University Daily Kansan NEA Says Colleges Can Hold All High School Graduates WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The National Education Association (NEA) has reported that there is room in some college for every high school graduate despite increasingly tight competition for entrance to "prestige institutions." In a pamphlet entitled, "A briefing for Parents: Your Child And College," written by experts on college admissions, NEA aimed at allaying fears of parents that their children wouldn't get higher education. "IF FAMILY HOPES are pinned on one of the highly competitive colleges, there may be some cause for concern," the report said. "But you don't need to lose too much sleep for fear that increasing enrollments may crowd your child out of college altogether. "Somewhere in the nation, there is still space in an accredited college Paul Ingemanson, Topeka senior and president of the Interfraternity Council, said recently that the IFC has changed the dates for men's rush week. "The change." Ingemanson said, "is due to the fact that the orientation period is being pushed up, and will begin Saturday, Sept. 8." IFC Changes Rushing Period Next year rush week will begin with train dates on Monday night, Sept. 3, and will conclude Thursday, Sept. 6. IN THE PAST, rush week has started with train-dates on a Wednesday night and ended on Saturday. Orientation period previously began the Monday after rush week. Ingemanson said he did not know why the orientation period had been moved up. DICK KELLER, Lawrence junior, and Mary Fassnacht, Overland Park senior, of the Panhellenic Council, are the general co-chairmen of Greek Week. Other recent IFC activities included the announcing of Greek Week committee chairmen. Greek Week will be Mar. 18-24. QUEEN—Marcia Kyle, Colby junior; Jon Morris, Kansas City junior; and Steve McNown, Lawrence sophomore. The committee chairmen are: RELIGIOUS OBSERVANCE Peggy Martin, Parsons junior, and Steve Stotts, Prairie Village sophomore. SCHOLARSHIP BANQUET Barbara Buecking, Shawnee Mission senior, and Carl Peck, Concordia sophomore. EXCHANGE DINNER — Brooke Curran, Shawnee Mission sophomore, and Dave Cain, Overland Park sophomore. INTERFRATERNITY SING—Betty Carpenter, Kirkwood, Mo., sophomore, and Bob Herchert, Webster Groves, Mo., sophomore. SPECIAL EVENTS — Sarah Graber, Hutchinson junior, and Carl Martinson, De Soto junior. GREEK WEEK PROJECT — Sue Troja, Overland Park junior, and Dave Huffman, Hays junior. Faculty and staff members are invited to attend an information and preliminary organization meeting concerning a University Credit Union at 7 p.m. tomorrow in room 206 Summerfield. Credit Union to Be Discussed CHARIOT RACE - Bill Anderson, Park Ridge, Ill., sophomore, and Jim Warner, Lawrence junior. Eugene Wilson, dean of admissions of Amherst College, Mass., said it was a mistake to put too great importance on getting a child enrolled in a "prestige institution." for every high school graduate," wrote S. A. Kendrick, a vice president of the College Entrance Examination Board. James Jukes of the Kansas Credit Union League in Wichita; M. E. Sunderland of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare in Kansas City; and Charles A. Harkness, staff personnel director for KU, will be present to provide information and answer questions. He said "business firms and graduate schools select students because of what they are and what they have done not because of the collegiate label they wear." Salinger Novel Is Book Forum Topic Mrs. Stuart Levine, instructor in sociology and anthropology, will review J. D. Salinger's latest book, "Frannie and Zooey" at the Modern Book Forum at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. Parents Issue Edict; Son Commits Suicide WEST LOS ANGELES—(UPI)—A 17-year-old adopted boy committed suicide, police said, after being told by his parents he had to move out of the family guest house if he failed to maintain his straight "A" average. Officers said Fred Rauckman, 17, apparently shot himself in the head with a 22-caliber rifle by attaching a piece of string to his toe and the trigger. He was a student at Santa Monica city college. Epiphany Dinner Wednesday The Cercle Francais will hold its traditional Epiphany dinner celebrating the Fete des Rois, or Feast of the Kings, at 6:15 p.m. Wednesday in the Curry Room of the Kansas Union. At this dinner is served the "galette," a cake in which is baked a feve, a tiny porcelain figurine. The person who finds the feve in his cake is crowned king (or queen) of the feast, chooses a consort, and presides over the festivities. The feve and crown used in the Cercle dinner were presented to the club by a former French student on the hill. The price of the dinner is $1.55. Persons should sign for the dinner in Room 103 of Fraser before Tuesday evening. Reapportionment Needed — (Continued from page 1) of grants-in-aid or shared taxes going to local governments; or they may enact special legislation to treat a problem, a practice which facilitates rural dominance in tax control," the brief states. Backers of reapportionment of the state legislature according to population base their argument on the fact that the present inequality denies some citizens the equal voice in government which is guaranteed under a democratic system of government. Examples of tax inequality cite include the retail sales tax, which was enacted to pay the state's share of the cost of public assistance programs. Yet, the portion which is returned to the counties is based 50 per cent on population and 50 per cent on property value. The Hutchinson News, in an editorial, made this statement: THIS MEANS THAT metropolitan counties receive a smaller proportion of funds as compared to their populations than do the rural counties, despite the fact that the tax is derived largely from urban areas and is intended to aid welfare costs experienced largely in the same urban areas. each man should have the same representation. The fact that a man lives on a farm or runs a store in a small town should not entitle him to more power in the legislature than the person who works in a factory, runs a bank, practices medicine or keeps house in a large city." "In a democratic government. Other people feel that the legislature should not be reapportioned according to population in both houses. Whitley Austin, editor of The Salina Journal, maintained that the Senate should be reapportioned according to population but that the House of Representatives should be based on counties. The News, however, does not agree. A News editorial summed up the basic argument of those who favor reapportionment on a population basis. It said: IN THIS WAY, he suggested, the House would be able to represent minority interests, particularly rural, western and agricultural interests. He said this system would go along with the system of checks and balances under which the United States operates. "The people should be given control—people, wherever they live, whatever they do for a living, however much or little property they own. To deny that is to deny the basic premise of democracy." PIONEERING Somewhere out there, beyond the realm of man's present understanding, lies an idea. A concept. A truth. Gradually, as it comes under the concentration of disciplined minds, it will become clear, refined, mastered. This is the lonely art of pioneering. In the Bell System, pioneering often results in major breakthroughs. Planning the use of satellites as vehicles for world-wide communications is one. Another is the Optical Gas Maser, an invention which may allow a controlled beam of light to carry vast numbers of telephone calls, TV shows, and data messages. Breakthroughs like these will one day bring exciting new telephone and communications service to you. The responsibility of providing these services will be in the hands of the people who work for your local telephone company. Among them are the engineering, administrative and operations personnel who make your telephone service the finest in the world. BIRD'S NEST CITY HOTELS BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM N B Mass Insomnia Hits As Students Begin Studying By Art Miller This is the period of mass insomnia. Think not? Well, just look around you at the bleary-eyed students, your compatriots in the pursuit of final preparation. If you have the tendency to eavesdrop, listen to what your baggy-eyed fellow students are saying. "How much sleep did ya get last night Mike?" "I said how much sleep did you get last night?" "Ah Huh." "Huh." TAKE A DRIVE ALONG WEST Campus Road, or Tennessee Street around 3 a.m. How would you like to pay those light bills? Or take a typical KU student, let's call him Steve. In his small room, in a dormitory or fraternity or even an apartment, Steve sits alone, floating on a sea of books and papers. On the floor beside him is a typewriter. Occasionally he pounces on the machine, striking fierce blows on the keys, at last returning to the JOHN BURKMAN William Woodburn, Pleasanton junior, takes a short nap before class. book. His job is nearly complete. IN THIS PERIOD OF "mass insomnia," students are seriously at work, seriously trying to learn in these last two weeks what their professors have been trying to teach them all semester. And do they appreciate what their profs have done for them? Of course. "Why he expects us to know every word in this — book." (Fill in the blank as you see fit.) BUT ISN'T ALL THIS CRAMING part of what makes a college life so interesting? If participa- ion is to be our measure, then surely the answer is yes. And just think of the satisfaction you get when it is all over, and when you consider that you have a fresh, new semester to start over in. Yet it is likely that students will continue the long tradition of cramming, of staying awake night after night, and of frequenting the bar of relaxation and ease when the sad hour has come and gone. If you think not, just look around at the strained faces shortly before final week next semester, or next year or the year after that. Snow to Remain As Cold Wave Hits Cars and students will continue to struggle up and slide down the Hill. at least for the next few days. The Arctic-like weather that has been battering the KU campus the past several days has created its particular problems for two campus service departments, but both report the situation well in hand. The heavy cover of snow — which shows no signs of leaving under current sub-freezing temperature readings — put an added burden earlier in the week on the KU Building and Grounds department and the Traffic and Security office. MEANWHILE. employees of the Buildings and Grounds department and the Lawrence street department are continuing to work to reduce the icity of streets on the bordering the campus. Leo Ousdahl, office manager of Buildings and Grounds, said their employees began working at 5:30 a.m. last weekend to clear campus roads and sidewalks before students arrived The department owns several tractors with front-end blades to clear sidewalks and parking areas and regular road-clearing equipment for campus drives. After most of the snow is cleared. Buildings and Grounds employees use shovels to clear steps, and sand is distributed on icy spots on sidewalks and steps Harry M. Buchholz, superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, reported today all campus streets have been cleared. PARKING AREAS have been cleared of the eight-inch blanket of snow which covered the area over the weekend. Barring fresh snowfalls, Buchholz said, there should be little trouble traveling campus streets and walks. A. T. Hodges, superintendent of the street department, said his department has been using road equipment to get most of the snow off streets in the vicinity. The Lawrence street department also has been working to make the struggle up the Hill easier for cars and delivery trucks. Students who walk to the campus, however, must depend on the kindness of residents to clear walks going up the Hill, as the street department does not work on the sidewalks. He said sand has been spread on steep streets near the campus to make the climb less hazardous. The campus traffic office has reported no serious traffic accidents as a result of the hazardous driving conditions created by the snow and ice. However, streets remain slick in spots and caution is urged for motorists. Streets with steep grades on the east side of the campus remain particularly hazardous. officers warn. Work on the Engineering Building has stopped completely, but workers in Hashinger Hall have not been affected. The building was closed in before the cold weather began, and workers are doing inside work. 59th Year, No. 66 Daily hansan Mary Grant Speaks In Humanities Series The Humanities Series lecture to be presented at 8 p.m. today in Fraser Hall is entitled "A Forgotten Hero — Development of a Greek Myth." Mary A. Grant, emerita associate professor of Latin and Greek will present the lecture. She is the only KU scholar to lecture this year in the Humanities Series. Tariff, Med Care Last On Legislative List WASHINGTON—(UPI)President Kennedy and Democratic Congressional leaders today postponed any immediate tests on the administration's two most controversial proposals—tariff-cutting and medical care for the elderly. The decision was reached at a White House conference summoned to discuss the timetable for action on the program President Kennedy will lay before the election-year Congress which convenes tomorrow. Informants said no timetable was set for action on the medical care program. As matters stand now, the administration doesn't have the votes to get even a skeletonized version of this program out of committee. FOUR MAJOR PARTS of the program, including trade and medical care, must be initiated by the House Ways & Means Committee. The White House conferees agreed the committee would give first priority to the Administration's tax revision program which has been pending since last spring. The group then will turn its attention to improvements in existing welfare programs for the needy. Kennedy will outline his recommendations in this area in a special message, probably early next month. The schedule was outlined at the White House meeting by Committee Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark. Mills talked with the President Saturday and the schedule presumably was agreed upon then. AFTER THAT THE battle will be joined in committee over Kennedy's plea for broad tariff-cutting authority. Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1962 MILLS VOTED AGAINST similar legislation two years ago and there has been no evidence, as yet, that he has changed his mind. The White House meeting produced forecasts by party leaders, however, that the President would succeed in winning approval of most of his program. LAWRENCE. KANSAS Budget Message To Legislature Gov. John Anderson tomorrow will give his KU budget recommendation in his budget address to a joint session of the state legislature. KU has requested $24,164,936 for the period which begins in July. The State Budget Director (James W. Bibb), however, recommended in November that the Governor reduce this figure by more than $1.4 million to $22,874,735. State administrative sources in Topeka, however, indicate that cuts in KU's budget will be considerably less than Bibb's recommendation. IF THIS FIGURE $22.8 million is appropriated for KU "the quality of educational service here will be seriously affected," said Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University. Mr. Nichols said the Director's recommendation leaves out funds necessary for the replacement of Blake Hall. He said the University would need that classroom space badly, considering the number of students expected in the future. (Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced on Oct. 16 that classes next fall would begin at 7:30 a.m. and run until 5:30 p.m. He said at the time the measure was necessary in order to alleviate a predicted classroom shortage in the face of an expected enrollment of 10,700 next fall.) Mr. Nichols also said that such a deletion from the University's budget would put a severe strain on the staff. He said the University would be limited to hiring only 25 of the needed 41 new instructors. CONTINUING, MR. Nichols said the Budget Director's cut would eliminate all funds for faculty salary increases, all special repair funds (such as those necessary to establish stations for the control of campus traffic) and $65,000 from the present routine repair figure. Other action by the State Budget Director was a recommendation of $11.1 million for the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City. This figure was a cut of $2.1 million from the $13.2 million the Medical Center requested. ★ ★ ★ The State Budget Director's recommendations for all state colleges, universities and other institutions were approximately $5.8 million less than requested. Republicans Want No Tax Increase Kansas legislative leaders say they want no tax increases. Rep. William Mitchell (R-Hutchinson) speaker of the house and Sen. Paul R. Wunch (R-Kingman) president pro tempore of the senate say they believe an adequate program of state services can be provided without tax increases. Their statement came after a conference with Gov. John Anderson. Both men, who must drive the Governor's budget program through the Legislature, said they felt sentiment in the Legislature is against further taxation. Military Could Not Stop Plane Crash WASHINGTON — (UPI) — A House investigator said today the military apparently had no way to prevent the crash last November of a non-scheduled airliner which took the lives of 74 Army recruits. Rep. James E. Van Zandt, a member of a special house armed services subcommittee, made the comment as the investigation of the Richmond, Va., crash moved into its second day. Assistant Air Force Secretary Joseph S. Imirie was called as the first witness. Weather Temperature at press time was 4 degrees. The low last night was 1 degree below zero, a seasonal low. Kansans should expect a cold wave which will drive temperatures down to 5 to 15 below and locally lower by Wednesday night. George 31 --- Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1962 Eichmann a Symbol Adolph Eichmann has been sentenced to hang for "crimes against humanity, crimes against the Jewish people, a war crime, and membership in an illegal organization." His trial was not that of a man, but that of a symbol—a symbol of the torture and persecution of the Jews during World War II. THE THEORY BEHIND the trial was an "eye for an eye" to obliterate a memory of horror for the Jews. Yet Eichmann's death sentence by an emotion-ridden court cannot possibly serve this function. Eichmann will become a martyr to all men who believe in due process of law. He was seized in Argentina 16 years after the alleged commission of his crimes. He was tried in Israel by Israeli jurists, under a set of special Israeli laws enacted after his crimes. Four Germans, former members of the SS who were to testify in Eichmann's behalf, were forced to stay out of Israel under threat of arrest. Israeli laws against the SS also were enacted after the war. THE PROSECUTOR, Gideon Hausner, attorney general of Israel, insisted that Eichmann could be tried in Israel because neither the West German government nor any other state had claimed the right. The question of Israeli law providing punishment for crimes committed prior to the establishment of the state of Israel, outside its borders, and by and to persons who are not citizens of the state of Israel also was replied to by Hausner: "Goodhart (an Oxford University professor who wrote about the Nuernberg Tribunal) showed that if judges may not judge their country's enemies, then no spy will ever be brought to justice," he said. THE ARGUMENT THAT EICHMANN was illegally kidnapped was non-essential, said Hausner. He cited British, American, and French legal precedents to the effect that a court is not concerned about the methods used to bring a defendant before it even if it involves kidnapping. The crux of the purpose of the trial was perhaps given by Hausner in one of his speechesreplying to the defense argument that reparationshad been paid to Israel by West Germany, andthat this paid for its war crimes. "I want to say with all the emphasis at my command that reparations are not atonement, their acceptance does not mean forgiveness nor obliteration of the facts in one's memory," Hausner said. EICHMANN'S TRIAL to "obliterate a memory" barely kept up the pretense of a legal proceeding. From the start, mass emotionalism reigned. Survivors of the German concentration camps, visibly scarred by their experiences, went before the court. Others testified about how they had watched tortures and mass burials. Hausner showed movies during the trial of Nazi atrocities. Implicit in every bit of emotional testimony was the causal relationship set up by the prosecution that Eichmann was directly responsible. There was an assumption from the start that Eichmann was guilty. All that remained was to determine the extent of his guilt. THE PROSECUTION CHARGED that Eichmann was the mastermind behind a plot to eliminate European Jewry. Eichmann, a lieutenant colonel in the German army, contended he was merely carrying out orders from above. The trial ended with Eichmann's sentence "to hang by the neck until dead." It is a harsh sentence, but Eichmann is "obliterating a memory." He will not die for his crimes, but the crimes of a nation. Would it not be absurd to give him anything but a death sentence? —Karl Koch Eichmann: Lesson for Humanity The Nuremberg tribunal on the war crimes of nazism found nobody to convict specifically for the most unspeakable crime of genocide — the Nazi extermination of six million Jews. Now the Israeli government has accomplished its grim purpose to fill that gap, by its own capture and trial of Adolf Eichmann. THE CASE raised doubts and fears, shared even by many citizens and friends of Israel. These have generally subsided, or been allayed by the fairness and thoroughness of the trial and of the opportunity for defense. Far from arousing new anti-Semitism, the trial won new admiration. Far from becoming a circus, it leaned the opposite way to the point of tedium. Far from inciting Israelis to hate Germans, they know best of all, now better than ever, how wrong and stupid it is to hate individual members of any people or race for belonging to it. GENUINELY WORRISOME to the legal minded were Israel's abduction of Eichmann from Argentina and its unilateral proceeding against him under retroactive domestic law. But the moral right- LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler NO OFFICE HOURS 1-7 MONDAY ness of bringing him to such justice as there can be for such a crime as genocide is accepted. And the precedent of trying and punishing it is an historic one. "DO IT OVER AGAIN---- I TOLD YOU I WOULD NOT ACCEPT A MESSY PAPER." The four months' trial was the thing, Israel's avowed purpose was to document completely, while records and witnesses could still be had, just how monstrous and barbarous Hitler's pogrom was, to teach for all time its ghastly moral against all race hatred. Another target was Germany's postwar generation, to make sure that they, too, gained full grasp of the enormities of nazism and German master racism. The effect here seems to have been all that could be hoped; West German government and press brought the trial story home in detail and open shame. ONE TARGET WAS ISRAEL'S own postwar generation, who had not themselves been human cattle in Hitler's grisly stockyards. It suited the national purpose of a Jewish state to paint the picture raw to its own people, and it took the machinery of law to impress belief in the unbelievable. But the target was all humanity, too, and not only to assuage Israeli distress that the world, even other Jewry, had seemed too readily to forget how near to the surface of human nature savagery lies. The crime was against humanity itself, and nobody anywhere can quite wash from his hands the stain of it. Even Eichmann's own plea, that a man can find himself a cog in a machine of madness and power lust, his conscience chained and helpless, warns all men everywhere. THE TRIAL HAVING served these purposes, what happens to Eichmann himself is supremely unimportant to any such purpose. —From the Milwaukee Journal Short Ones Marriage is popular because it combines the maximum of temptation with the maximum of opportunity.-George Bernard Shaw The Book World By Mark Dull By Mark Dull Kansas City graduate student DRAGON'S TEETH, by Upton Sinclair. Permabook, December, 1961, publication date. First Viking Press printing published January, 1942. 75 cents. I know they (books) are as lively, and as vigorously productive, as those fabulous dragons teeth; and being sown up and down may chance to spring up armed men. And yet on the other hand unless wariness be used, as good almost kill a man as kill a good book; who kills a man kills a reasonable creature; but he who destroys a good book kills reason itself, kills the image of God, as it were in the eye... From John Milton's "Areopagitica" Upton Sinclair, writing about that explosive era you will remember depicted in Robert Sherwood's drama "Idiot's Delight," has re-created in "Dragon's Teeth" a great panoramic spectacle of the tragic and infamous beginnings of Adolph Hitler's Third Reich. IT IS THE THIRD VOLUME in the story of Lanny Budd, millionaire playboy with a "pink" complexion ("World's End," 1940; "Between Two Worlds," 1941). Lanny Budd is the mouthpiece and conscience of social justice and is working hard at developing some backbone for the cause. It is a revealing portrait of the master propagandist Joseph Goering, of Hermann Goebbels, the master executive with an insatiable vanity, and of the Austrian house painter whose father was an illegitimate Schicklegreuber, ADOLPH HITLER. You might have searched all Europe and not found a more commonplace-appearing man; this Fuhrer of the Fatherland had everything it took to make mediocrity... he might have been a grocery assistant or traveling salesman for a hair tonic. He took no exercise, and his figure was soft, his shoulders narrow and hips wide like a woman's. The exponent of Aryan purity was a mongrel if ever there was one; he had straight stick dark hair and wore one lock of it long and Lanny had done when a boy. Dragon's Teeth is also a very readable history—from 1930 to 1934 of— NAZI GERMANY. SINCLAIR'S OWN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY, written into much of this work, is tempered with the condition of the world following the depression and gives a strong argument for an economic system based on So Lanny, the compromiser, trying to soothe the young people, and persuade them that they could go on eating their food in the Berlin palace without being choked. Including himself, here were five persons condemned to dwell in marble halls—and outside were five millions, yes, five hundred millions, looking upon them as the most to be envied of all mortals: Five dwellers begging to be kicked out of their marble halls, and for some strange reason unable to persuade the envious millions to act! More than a century ago a poet, himself a child of privilege, had called upon them to rise like lions after slumber in unvanguishable number; but still the many slept and the few ruled, and the chains which were like dew retained the weight of lead! SOCIALISM. POSSIBLY MANY MODERN STUDENTS are not very well acquainted with this writer who in 1942 was the most-read American author. There were in 1942,722 translations of his books in 47 languages, and in 39 countries."Dragon's Teeth," which many critics feel is his best work, is his 63rd book. Upton Beall Sinclair was born in Baltimore in 1878 of an unsuccessful branch of an old, wealthy, and powerful family, the son of a liquor salesman who was overly fond of his product. He worked his way through college writing hack novels for pulp magazines. A zealous socialist from the time he was 20, most of the money he earned from his successful novels has been invested in socialist experiments and publishing his works, which other publishers could not be interested in. IN 1934 HE RAN FOR GOVERNOR of California on the Democratic ticket with an "End Poverty In California" platform. Determined opposition and unlimited resources of the business interests barely stayed his election. His books are classified as propaganda tracts and economic reports. His "The Jungle," published in 1906 after an investigation of Meat packing methods were improved following publication of his him one of the best known muckraking journalists of that era. Meat packing methods were improved following publication of his book but the lot of the workers was unchanged for many years. As he said, he aimed at people's hearts and hit their stomachs. On Other Campuses CLEVELAND, O.—Case Institute of Technology will award college credit to high school students on the sole basis of a grade achieved on the Advanced Placement Examinations of the College Entrance Examination Board, according to an announcement by Dean of Instruction Karl B. McEachron Jr. Under the new policy adopted by the Case faculty for Advanced Placement, a student enrolled in such a program in high school can take an examination prepared by the CEEB which may determine his college standing in certain courses. Upon application, Case will grant a full year's credit in several freshman subjects to students who demonstrate proficiency by receiving an acceptable score on the examinations. Credit will be given for first year chemistry, composition, mathematics and physics provided the potential student has received a creditable score. MADISON, Wis.—The University of Wisconsin faculty recently voted to retain its present physical education requirements but to provide periodic tests that will exempt from the compulsory features of the program those students who reach the desired level of proficiency. The faculty action was in line with a majority recommendation from a special faculty Committee on Physical Education which undertook a year-long study of the requirements. Wisconsin men must take a year of physical education, women two years, unless they are excused for medical or other specified reasons. A minority report from the special committee recommended that physical education be compulsory for only six to eight weeks with only those needing remedial work required to continue. LOS ANGELES, Calif.—What our colleges and universities need is less "lecturing" by professors and more "self-motivated" study by students, according to Dr. Richard F. Reath of the Occidental College political science department. "There are few principles better known theoretically, but less observed in practice, than that self-motivation will unleash the potential in every student," Dr. Reath said. Instead of drawing out student potential, "professors have fallen into the habit of doing the work students should be done." He suggested one reason for this may be that it is "easier for the professor to give a lecture than to exercise the imagination and ingenuity required to motivate students." Another may be that "students and faculty alike are prisoners of our training, which has been greatly influenced by the German method of professor oriented classes." From the Newsstand The Distinction Democracy: A government of the masses. Authority derived through mass meeting or any other form of "direct" expression. Results in mobocracy. Attitude toward property is communistic—negating property rights. Attitude toward law is that the will of the majority shall regulate, whether it be based upon deliberation or governed passion, prejudice, and impulse, without restraint or regard to consequences. Results in demagogism, license, agitation, discontent, anarchy. Republic: Authority is derived through the election by the people of public officials best fitted to represent them. Attitude toward property is respect for laws and individual rights, and a sensible economic procedure. Attitude toward law is the administration of justice in accord with fixed principles and established evidence, with a strict regard to consequences. Avoids the dangerous extreme of either tyranny or mobocracy. Results in statesmanship, liberty, reason, justice, contentment, and progress. (Quoted from a United States Army "Citizenship" training manual withdrawn by FDR in 1938 in Human Events, Oct. 20, 1961, p. 627.) Worth Repeating One can hardly resist the fantasy of shuffling the elements or 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 The best American designs have the solid, powerful, tidy, everything-in-place, nothing-superfluous quality of an old sailing ship . . . Another American look is the "Detroit" look. These designers have turned to the development of motorized jewelry, which has not only obscured the fundamental form of the automobile, but has begun to infect other types of products. To see what I mean, visit your local appliance dealer; many of the refrigerators and washing machines give you the feeling that you can drive them away.— Henry Dreyfuss Audrey Hepburn plays a vivid role in her characterization of Holly Golighly in Martin Jurow and Richard Shepard's production of "Breakfast at Tiffany's," now playing at the Granada theatre through Friday. At the Movies By Steve Clark Holly is a frustrated girl who lives in an exquisite apartment with a feline she calls "Cat." She lives luxuriously because of girls from male admirers who give her "50 dollars for the powder room." GEORGE PEPPARD, Miss Hepburn's co-star, plays a hack writer, Paul Varjack, who lives on the subsidies of wealthy women. His one novel, "Nine Lives," was a bust and he has written nothing in six years. Holly was not always a New York social charmer. She was a farm girl at the age of 14 trying to raise a family that wasn't hers and a brother she adored, Fred. Varjack meets Holly when he moves into the same apartment house. At their first meeting the two are attracted to each other, but Holly is afraid of a serious relationship. She feigns a wild, restless person who refuses to believe that people can marry and be happy. She tries to explain to Varjack that "people don't belong to people." In her search for a millionaire circumstance betrays her every time. She is prepared to fly to Brazil for a "proposed" marriage with whom she terms "the next president of Brazil." This does not materialize when she becomes involved in a vicious scandal because of a man she used to visit in prison for 100 dollars per visit. WHEN SHE AND PAUL become implicated they realize that "people do belong to people." Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Providing background for the exquisitely photographed production on location in New York City is Henry Mancini's "Moon River." At dramatic intervals throughout the pictures the music fades in with this romantic theme. The picture changes moods rapidly from ones of seriousness to humor. Mike Rooney demonstrates his versatility as an actor in the role of a Japanese apartment house manager, Mr. Yunioshi, who can not stand the slightest noise. ROONEY PLAYS the role with "buck teeth" and all. He is a nervous individual who gets "shook" easily. In one segment he steps out of his apartment to reprimand Holly in Japanese for her noise. He turns around to head into his apartment and runs into the door. "Breakfast at Tiffany's" is a captivating picture. The viewer can never tell what might happen next and remains in suspense as Holly and Paul search for the real meaning of life. The setting, the skyscrapers of New York, is appealing, the photography is acute, the plot suspenseful, the music magnificent. The combination of these make "Breakfast at Tiffany's" one of the year's top motion pictures, and one you won't want to miss. 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 Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service and United Press International. 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 when examinations are examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. TOM Turner Tom Turner Managing Editor Linda Swander. Fred Zimmerman. As- sistant to the Chief Editors. City Editor; Bill Shetlen. Sports Editor; Barbara Howell. Society Editor. NEWS DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor Bill Mallins and Carrie Merryfield, Assistant Editorial Editors. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Tom Brown, Business Manager Tom Gergick, Advertising Manager; Bonnie McCulloch, Circulation Manager; David Wiers, National Advertiser; Robert Gorman, Classified Advertising Manager; Hai Smith, Promotion Manager. the took world By Martina Eissenstat Assistant Instructor of English FIFTY GREAT POETS, edited by Milton Crane. Bantam Classics, 95 cents. "Fifty Great Poets" fills a need in anthologies. Most anthologies become specialized by either period or country. There is modern poetry, Elizabethan, Victorian, American, classical and so on. "Fifty Great Poets" cuts across this specialization and presents poets as diverse as Homer and Lorca, Burns and Baudelaire. In one convenient inexpensive volume one can thumb through the complete "Prologue to the Wife of Bath's Tale" by Chaucer, Book I of the "Iliad" by Homer, Book I of the "Aeneid" by Virgil and "The Song of Songs." The latter is probably the most welcome addition to the book, for its presence emphasizes the most notable effect the book has: a reaffirmation of the tremendous scope of poetry. From perhaps the greatest love poem in the world which appears in the Bible, one can flip to the modern bitterly ironic poem "The Ruined Maid" by the skeptic Thomas Hardy or the religious "God's Grandeur" by the poet-priest Gerald Manley Hopkins or to the seventeenth century "The Collar" by the metaphysical poet George Herbert. IF THE EMPHASIS IN SELECTION can be said to be on anything, it is on romance or poems of a lighter sort. The general impression one gets is that poems are written about the lighter aspects of life. In addition to "The Song of Songs" (chosen instead of say "Ecclesiastes" or the "Book of Job"), there are love poems of Catullus and Ovid, and the lush, sensual "Hero and Leander" by Marlowe. The Chaucer section contains the boistrous Wife of Bath's description of her escapades, instead of the "Pardoner's Tale" or "The Prioress's." Notably the Spenser choices are the marriage poem "Epithalamion" and the love sonnets "Amoretti" instead of sections from "The Faerie Queene." One noticeable advantage of the book is the attempt to represent as many complete poems or divisions of poems as possible within the limited scope. One noticeable omission—Early Anglo Saxon or early medieval poetry such as "Beowulf" and "Sir Gawain and the Greene Knight"; by these omissions we do not have any example of the romance or of alliterative verse. (A possible explanation for this omission might possibly be that the authors of these early epics are unknown, but even so without "Beowulf" the book does not somehow seem completely representative of what poetry can be. THE TRANSLATIONS are particularly delightful. Although they may not always be the best translations (Rolpe Humphries translations of the Latin rank high in modern translations), they are unique in that almost every one of the translations has been done by some major poet. Rilke is translated by Stephen Spender, Catullus by Thomas Campion, Ben Jonson, Coleridge, Swift, Cowley and Walter Savage Landor. Dryden translates Vergil, and along with Milton, and Pope, Horace and Arnold—Christopher Marlowe translates Ovid. Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Elza Pound take a crack at Heine. Some noted translators are represented—Rolfe Humphries translates Loreca, and Gilbert Highet, many of the classical poets. I do not think Chaucer needs to be translated in order to be enjoyed, but the editor compensates by giving at least one short section of Chaucer in the original. The book is a good buy. *** By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism GREAT PRESIDENTIAL DECISIONS, edited by Richard B. Morris. Premier (Fawcett), 95 cents. Richard B. Morris, in assembling this volume of state documents, took care to present not just speeches and statements of literary and statesmanship value but speeches that, in some way, changed the course of history. So there is a running story of the presidency and what it has meant to the men who have occupied that office. The story starts with Washington's decision to put down the whiskey insurrection, and it continues with Washington's enunciation of American position-to-be in the world—the famous farewell address. We see in these pages why certain presidents are numbered today among the greats, because they took actions that made them leaders, instead of followers, of public opinion. Jefferson bought the Louisiana territory though he doubted his constitutional right to do so. Jackson beat down the nullifiers and ended the National Bank. Polk sent us to war against Mexico. Lincoln acted to preserve the union and to free the slaves. McKinley called for a declaration of war against Spain (though his reluctance to do so was obvious). Roosevelt busted the trusts. WILSON'S STATE PAPERS ARE THOSE WHICH SENT US to war, enunciated the Fourteen Points, and fought for the League of Nations. Franklin D. Roosevelt set the nation upon a new course in economic affairs, Truman launched containment of communism, and Eisenhower set down the need for world disarmament. There are negative documents, too—Buchanan's decision to admit Kansas as a slave state and his considered opinion that he could not halt secession. Taft is here as the president who supported a high tariff. This is an important volume that should be in the library of every University student interested in history and its meanings—and that should include all of them. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1962 Western Civ Test To Be Saturday About 200 KU students will attempt to hurdle a major barrier between them and graduation this Saturday when they take the four-hour-long Western Civilization comprehensive examination. The examination, which will be held from 1 to 5 p.m. in various selected classrooms, consists of three parts: essay questions, short-answer questions and an objective, multiple-choice section. Sample questions: - "In what sense may the U.S. Constitution be seen as an example of the stake-in-society theory of political rights? - "In what sense did Marx see capitalism as its own 'gravedigger'?* "How did Darwin's theory of evolution affect economic and social thought?" ABOUT 270 STUDENTS have registered for the written examination, but last-minute drop-outs will reduce the number taking the test to about 200, said James E. Seaver, director of the Western Civilization program. The examination is mandatory for students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the School of Education, the School of Journalism, and the department of chemical engineering. These students cannot graduate without having passed the examination. Credit for the examination depends upon when it is taken by the student. Students taking the examination immediately after their second semester in the two-semester discussion course will receive four hours of credit. Students waiting until later receive two hours of credit. Two review sessions have been arranged by the Western Civilization department for those students who still feel a little shaky on Locke, Marx or de Tocqueville. The sessions will be held from 7:15 to 9:30 p.m. today and tomorrow in Bailey Auditorium. French Ph.D. Reading Exam: Jan. 13. French Ph.D. Reading Exam: Jan. 14. Hand be handed in to Miss Craig by Jan. 10. Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 & 8 a.m.. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Western Civilization Comprehensive Examination: Review Sessions: Jan. 9, 10 p.m., Bailey Auditorium Examinations: Jan. 13 at 1 a.m., rooms to be assigned. TODAY Celtic Cross: 12 noon, Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. The study of worship. Ski Club: 7:30 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. Balances due for trip. Celtic Cross: 12 noon, Westminster Center Celtic Cross: 5:30 p.m., Westminster Center TOMORROW Tickets for the concert are available at the Kansas Union and the School of Fine Arts for $1.50. Student National Education Association: 4 p.m., 302 Bailey, Panel discussion: "Student Teachers" with Dr. Karl Edwards. Le Carte Francais célébre la Fête des Rois par un diner mercredi le 10 janvier à six heures et quart dans le Curry Room de l'Union; prix: $1.55. Ceux qui desirent y assister doivent s'inscrire et mettent au lieu du département avant davoir voir. Official Bulletin London's Daily Telegraph praised their performance of the Schubert C Major Quintet saying, "The playing was superbly finished, and the fullness and sustained beauty of tone in the slow movement of Schubert's great C Major Quintet were beyond praise." Ham Club Meeting: 7:30 p.m., 2011 EE Lab Labman, Dr. Chapman, speaker on "Class C Learning" Episcopal Holy Communion. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Young Democrats Committee on Research Consolitions: 4 p.m., Pine Kampus, Kansas THURSDAY The KU department of design and University Extension are sponsors of the conference. The department of materials and metallurgical engineering will provide facilities for the pouring of grey iron and other space demanding demonstrations. Kansas Society, Archaeological Institute of America: 7:30 p.m. Room 306. John H. Fisker, M.D., or KU Department of Art History; "Ancient Art's Image and its Metamorphoses." An Italian quintet will perform at KU next week in the Chamber Music Series. Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups A 21-member planning committee from six states includes key personnel in the field. KU to Host Sculptor Meet A national sculpture conference and student competition is scheduled to be held here April 12-14. The second National Sculpture Casting Conference will attract sculptors in education, independent sculptors and commercial founders from over the nation. Last year's attendance of 100 is expected to be more than doubled, according to Eldon C. Tefft, associate professor of design and conference chairman. Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. The useful and the beautiful are never separated.-Periander The Quintetto Boccherini, founded in 1948, will play quintets by Boccherini, Hindemith and Schubert at 8 p.m., Jan 19 in Swarthout Recital Hall. The group was organized by first violinist Pina Carmirelli in Paris after Miss Carmirelli discovered a collection of quintets by Luigi Boccherini, composed and dated in the last years of the 17th century and the first years of the 18th century. Awards totaling $500 will be made by an outstanding sculptor. Entries will be on exhibit in the Student Art Gallery at Murphy Hall. The student art show was formerly a Big Eight competition, with entries in various art media. This year, because of the Sculpture Casting Conference, the competition will be confined to metal sculpture and will be national, and possibly international, in scope. thoroughly explain a single basic concept of chemistry. The series is the first to be published using this approach. The conventional text-book approach is to treat many basic concepts, each one in less depth than in "Selected Topics." Italian Quintet Here Next Week Each of the editors has written one of the texts himself. Prof. VanderWerf wrote "Acids, Bases, and the Chemistry of the Covalent Bond," and Prof. Sisler wrote "Chemistry of Non-Aqueous Solvents." Calvin A. VanderWerf, chairman of the KU chemistry department, and Harry H. Sisler, former KU professor and now head of the chemistry department at the University of Florida, are co-editors of a new series of textbooks. The book, "Selected Topics in Modern Chemistry," uses a new approach to the teaching of chemistry at the undergraduate level. Two Chemistry Professors To Co-Edit New Textbook When completed the series will consist of 20 or more short texts, each one of which is designed to TREVOR B. GRIFFITT See Lucky With Money! Safest way to be sure . . take out enough life insurance today. DWIGHT L. SICKLES Insurance Building (opposite Post Office) Lawrence, Kansas Phone VI 3-5454 or VI 3-2150 NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Life insurance • Group insurance • Annuities • Health insurance • Pension Plans LUCKY STRIKE presents: LUCKY PUFFERS "I'm mad for you Martha." "I'm Hilda." "AT THE PROM" "I'll give a buck to any guy who dances with her." "There must have been garlic in the salad." LUCKY STRIKE YES TOASTED CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. "There must have been garlic in the salad." "Put me down, George... I SAID PUT ME DOWN!" IF TOBACCO COULD TALK (and who is certain it can't?) it would beg to be placed in Luckies. However, we would turn a deaf ear. Only tobacco that can prove its worth will ever get in a Lucky. This may seem heartless—but it pays! Today, college students smoke more Luckies than any other regular. We'd never be able to make that statement if we listened to every slick-talking tobacco leaf that tried to get into Luckies. "Put me down, George...! SAID PUT ME DOWN!" CLASS A CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE Y'S TOMSIE' CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change! JF Th its fi past again part the Th Colo Frid. meet behi and AO all e 440- whi c faile the Tl Mar Hav A. F. CO Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" K T Page 5 Jayhawk Swimmers Take Fourth; Beat CU, Utah State The Kansas swimming team met its first real test of the season this past weekend, swimming meets against Utah State, Colorado and participating in a ten-team meet at the Air Force Academy. The Jayhawkers easily downed Colorado and Utah State, swimming Friday at Colorado. In the larger meet, the KU squad finished fourth behind the host Falcons, Wyoming and Denver. AGAINST COLORADO. KU won all events except the diving and the 440-yard freestyle. The only race which Coach Jay Markley's crew failed to win against Utah State was the 50-yard freestyle. Markley said the competition Friday was not very good and that KU should have won everything against Utah State except there was a line-up change which accounted for the one loss. "Looking back, for the first competition of the year, we did all right," said Markley of the Kansas performance Saturday at the Air Force. First, as is always a problem when swimming in Colorado, the higher altitude was a factor against Kansas. THERE WERE THREE things, Markley said, which hampered the Hawk effort in the Air Force meet. "Friday at Boulder the different air didn't seem to make much difference and we swam real well. But by Saturday we were more tired and although we swam well again, it really hurt to put out the effort. Some of the men could hardly climb out of the pool," said Markley. SECOND. THE PROBLEM which has faced KU swimming teams for several years, lack of depth, again was a detriment. Markley explained that KU had only nine swimmers in the meet and the next smallest squad was 16. Also, every team except KU and the Air Force was able to swim freshmen, thus adding greatly to their depth. KU couldn't enter three events because of a dearth of swimmers. KU Bowling Team To KSU Saturday The University of Kansas bowling team will compete in a quadrangular bowling meet Saturday at Manhattan. Participating schools are Kansas State, Nebraska, Oklahoma State, and KU. The quintet of John Member, Paul Hammar, Terrell Hays, Steve Rybolt, and Jim Kartsonis will represent KU, according to Bascom Fearing, varsity coach. In women's competition between KSU, Nebraska, and KU, Betty Jo Member, Shawnee Mission freshman, and Patricia Folk, Leawood junior, will roll for the Jayhawks. A third member is yet to be selected. Ohio State First NEW YORK—(UPI)—The United Press International major college basketball ratings (with first-place voters and won-lost records in parentheses): Team Points 1. Ohio State (34) (11-0) 349 2. Cincinnati (2) (11-1) 315 3. Southern California (11-2) 241 4. Kentucky (10-1) 233 5. Kansas State (9-2) 183 6. Villanova (12-1) 107 7. Duquesne (9-1) 106 8. Duke (9-2) 60 9. Oregon State (9-1) 46 10. West Virginia (9-3) 41 Third, Markley said the KU team was "tired of traveling." Nothing relieves and ventilates the mind like a resolution.—John Burroughs Having a Party? THE KU TEAM WENT to Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, during the Christmas vacation and worked out there. Markley said the team got back to Lawrence only two days before it had to take a train for the meets in Colorado and then had to move from Boulder to Colorado Springs off schedule because of a transportation difficulty. He said this was one thing which probably hurt KU's chances extensively. Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES University Daily Kansan "We could have beaten every team in the Air Force meet in a dual with the possible exception of Denver," said Markley. Air Force won only one event in capturing the title with 77 points to nudge Wyoming which had 73. Denver had 56, KU 50 and Colorado State had 45. LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 MARKLEY SAID that Colorado State had beaten Air Force badly the previous day, showing, he said, that the competition was again not very good. The highlight of the Air Force meet was the record breaking effort by the Kansas 200-yard medley relay team which broke the existing mark of 1:48.4 with a 1:45.1 clocking. MURDOCK FINISHED a surprising third in a strong field in the 100-yard breaststroke. He finished behind the top two men in the world in this event. Speaking of the recent trip to Florida, Markley said no one did very well in the East-West meet held in Ft. Lauderdale except Bill Murdock. Markley did say the squad got in a lot of good practice, which was the principal reason for the trip, and that this would be important as the team moves into the heavier part of its schedule. The next action for the KU swimmers will be Jan. 20 at Iowa State against Nebraska, Kansas State and the host school. Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1962 WICHIITA — (UPI) — Thirty-seven-year-old Marcelino Huerta is the new head football coach at Wichita University. Huerta, head coach and athletic director at Tampa (Fla.) University Wichita U. Names New Football Coach Game on TV Tomorrow night's Kansas-Kansas State basketball game at Manhattan will be televised locally over WIBW in Topeka. The game starts at 7:30. Everything in the world is good for something.—John Dryden for the past 10 years, received a three-year contract from the Board of Directors here last night which calls for an annual salary of $12,000. He replaces Hank Foldberg, who resigned recently to become head football coach and athletic director at Texas A&M. Tippy Dye, who resigned as Wichita University athletic director to accept a similar position at Nebraska University, has not yet been replaced. Huerta has a lifetime coaching record of 67 wins, 31 losses and two ties in his 10 years at Tampa University. Last year, his team won eight and lost one. Birds on a Branch BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. - Quality Parts - Expert Service - Guaranteed testing... one, two... glub, glub! Some say we go overboard, the lengths we go to in testing Ford-built cars at "Hurricane Road"—our wind-and-weather lab in Dearborn, Michigan. And for practical purposes—we do. You might call it "testing in depth." Ford scientists and engineers have devised a gigantic test tunnel that creates monsoon rains and tornadic winds in a matter of minutes. Super sun lamps boost temperatures from 20 below to 160 above zero. Fog and drizzle, snow and sleet—all at the twist of dials. Huge cylinders beneath test-car wheels imitate every kind of road: from flat, smooth turnpike to rutted mountain trail. Out of it all comes knowledge of how to build better cars—cars that are built to last longer, require less care, and retain their value better. This constant aiming for perfection is just one more way in which research and engineering are earning for Ford Motor Company its place of leadership. Ford MOTOR COMPANY The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan PRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD • NATIONAL INDUSTRY • AND THE AGE OF SPACE Ford Ford MOTOR COMPANY The American Road, Deerborn, Michigan PRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD • THE GRIM • INDUSTRY • AND THE AGE OF SPACE 526% University Daily Kansan Page 6 McCormack,Albert Will Lead Demos WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Party harmony was the official keynote today of a mid-afternoon caucus of House Democrats to choose their first new leadership team in 21 years. The result was a foregone conclusion with unanimous votes anticipated for: - Rep. John W. McCormack, 70-year-old Boston Irishman, to succeed the late Rep. Sam Rayburn of Texas as Speaker. - Rep. Carl Albert, 53, quiet-spoken Oklahoman, to succeed McCormack as Democratic floor leader. The post of Speaker is regarded by many as the second most powerful in American government but it will be filled by an election in which only 429 citizens will be eligible to vote. THE SPEAKER IS the dominant figure in Congress. He has far more power than any other member. He stands next to the Vice President in the line of Presidential succession. Like the Vice President he draws $45,600 a year in salary and expenses — twice as much as Senators and other House Members. The Speaker is the commander of his party in the House. He is expected to, and does, use his vast gavel-wielding powers to advance the interests of his party. McCormack will be the first Roman Catholic to serve as Speaker and the first Northern Democrat to hold the post since the death on Aug. 19, 1934, of Rep. Henry T. Rainey of Illinois. His election will not be official until ratified by the House tomorrow. That ratification is certain. House Democrats outnumber Republicans 258-174. After he is installed as Speaker, McCormack is expected to name Rep. Hale Boggs, D-La., to the no. 3 post of party whip. Albert has held that position since 1955. THE SPEAKER'S LEGISLATIVE power is largely due to his power of recognition—his power to determine 'Spy' Scientist Sent to Ghana CAMBRIDGE, England — (UPI)— Dr. Alan Nunn May, the scientist convicted of passing western atom secrets to Russia, said today he has been named to head the University of Ghana's nuclear thermophysics department. Nunn May, 50, served six years and eight months of a ten year sentence for passing secrets to the Russians. He was convicted in May 1946. He had worked during World War II on an allied atomic energy project at Chalk River, Canada. Released from Wakefield Jail, England, in 1952, Nunn May recently has been working on metal fatigue research for the Brooklyn Crystallographic Laboratory in Cambridge. A report on metal fatigue he made in 1960 was hailed by aircraft industry sources as being of "major importance." Informed sources in the office of the Ghana High Commission in London said Ghana University has been promised a Russian nuclear reactor for research. The sources said Ghanian scientists are being sent to Moscow for training. Nunn May is expected to leave for Ghana next month. The high commission said he probably would remain there about three years. who may speak on the House floor at any particular time. This gives him the power to prevent consideration of any motion or bill. Among other powers, he can, on certain specified days, force a House vote on any motion he favors without permitting amendments. Any legislation called up under this procedure must, however, gain a two-thirds vote to pass. Moreover, as party leader, the Speaker frequently is able to exercise dominant influence on committee assignments for members of his party. Thus, the Speaker can accumulate "debtss" from individual members which may be called for collection when he needs support from the membership. McCORMACK WILL BE the 45th Speaker. The manner in which he exercises power and leadership will be a major factor in determining the outcome of the Kennedy Administration's future legislative struggles in the House. At the outset McCormack inevitably will be a weaker Speaker than Rayburn. No successor could inherit Rayburn's influence and prestige. Despite the outward harmony among House Democrats all was not sweetness and light beneath the surface. Some Northern Liberals were fearful that the McCormack-Albert team would not be aggressive enough in pushing President Kennedy's legislative program. A GROUP OF Democratic Liberals hoped to persuade a later caucus to set up a House Democratic steering committee in hope that it would give them a bigger voice in leadership decisions. McCormack has passed the word he has no objection so long as the new panel does not infringe on the prerogatives of the leadership. Another issue — which may be settled outside the caucus today — was whether a woman, Rep. Martha Griffiths, D-Mich., would be selected to fill one of two Democratic vacancies on the powerful House Ways & Means Committee. The other committee vacancy will be filled by Rep. Clark Thompson, D-Tex. In the Senate's only leadership contest, Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, R-Iowa, appeared favored to win the GOP policy chairmanship vacated by the death of Sen. Styles Bridges, N.H., last November. The election takes place tomorrow. CRC to Show Film 'New Girl' Thursday The Civil Rights Council is planning to show a movie which shows how integration in business can be accomplished with a minimum of difficulty. The movie, entitled "The New Girl" will be shown by the Council at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. "The New Girl" tells the story of a Negro girl who starts working in the office of a company, and the problems and adjustments she makes. Not only does she adjust, but so do her fellow workers — for she is the first Negro ever to be employed. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil At the same meeting Thursday, Ernest Russell, a consultant and lecturer for the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights, will speak to the group. The meeting is open to the public. GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service Around the Campus Theatre Production The three-act play will be the Experimental Theatre's fourth production of the season. It will run Saturday and Sunday this week and also Jan. 18-21. Tickets are on sale for $.50 in the box-office. "Purple Dust," a comedy by Sean O'Casey, is a stinging satire combining elements of farce, burlesque and even Marx-brothers routines, will be presented at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Experimental Theatre. Jay Janes There will be no Jay Janes meeting tomorrow. Catholic Forum Rev. Brendan Downey, KU Catholic student chaplain, will conduct the first in a series of classes included in a "Catholic Information Forum" from 7 to 8 p.m. today. AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 The class, which is open to the public, will be conducted at this time every Tuesday night in the St. Lawrence Student Center, 1915 Stratford Rd. Senior Papers Three senior Summerfield Scholars will present senior papers at a dinner meeting which will be held at 6 p.m., Thursday in the Kansas Room of the Union. ** Papers to be presented include "Resolved: Shall the Sale of Alcoholic Liquors by the Package Be Licensed in the City of Winfield. Kansas?" by Scott Higginbottom of Winfield; "The Fallacy of a Liberal Education," by Ted Batchman of Great Bend; and "The Architectural Void at the University of Kansas," by David DeLong of Emporia. YAF Election The Kansas Chapter of the Young Americans For Freedom (YAF) will elect officers tonight, Marick Payton, Lawrence resident and temporary chairman, has announced. The elections will be held at 7:30 in Parlor A of the Kansas Union. Members should bring national membership cards. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT MOSCOW — (UPI) — The Soviet foreign minister agreed today to release the Belgian Sabena airliner that was forced down in Soviet Armenia yesterday with 27 persons aboard. Moscow to Return Belgian Airliner Deputy Foreign Minister Vassily Kuznetsov told Belgian Ambassador Hippolite Cools that the plane probably would be released tomorrow. Kuznetsov said the French-built twin-tie Caravelle and its 19 passengers and eight crew members were in good condition. (AT TEHRAN, the point from which the plane departed on its flight, Sabena Airlines identified three of the passengers as Americans. The airline said they were Charles and Maria Weimer of New York and a Fred Holden, whose address was not immediately available. Sabena said Mr. Weimer is an employee in Tehran of the Morrison Knudson engineering firm of New York, while Mr. Holden was in transit from the Far East to Istanbul.) When Soviet jets intercepted the airliner yesterday near the tense Soviet-Turkish border, they were reported to have forced it to land at a military airport near Yerevan, capital of the Armenian Republic. He added that the plane and its occupants were now at Groznyi, not far from the Caspian Sea, about 124 miles northeast of Tbilisi, capital of the Georgian Republic. BELGIAN OFFICIALS immediately asked the Soviet government to release the plane, which apparently had been operating with a defective radio compass and wandered across the Soviet frontier. The exact point of interception was unknown. But the plane was on a flight from Tehran, Iran, to Brussels, with scheduled stops at Istanbul, Athens and Frankfurt. The Tehran-Istanbul leg is near the point where the Soviet-Turkish-Iranian frontiers converge in rugged country, and a pilot can wander off course with little trouble. Kuznetsov was reported to have protested orally to the Belgian ambassador that the airliner had vio- BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING WHEEL ALIGNMENT FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP 229 Elm VI 3-2250 as that delightful darling, HOLLY GOUIGHTLY! AUDREY HEPBURN --- BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S A JUROR SHEPPEND PRODUCTION AT THE STUDIO OF GEORGE PEPPARD PRACTICE NATIONAL NEAL-EASL BAYSAM MICKEY ROONEY WORKED BY BLANK ENWARDS WORKED BY RANDALL HOO BASED ON THE BOOK BY WILMA GARDEN MUSIC BY THOMAS C. HOO TECHNICOLOR NOW! At 7:00 & 9:10 GRANADA TWEATRE ··· Telephone VKING 3-5768 You'll live every wild wonderful minute of its brash excitement! PRESENTED BY PRODUCTIONS AND GLOBAL PRODUCTIONS Darl Newman Jeanne Woodward Scottie Poltler paris blues with LOUIS ARMSTRONG DAHANNN CARROLL Released New UNITED UK ARTISTS NOW SHOWING! ACCORDING TO the Belgian embassy here, Kuznetsov said Soviet authorities considered the case closed and that they hoped such an incident would not happen again. The embassy said it was the first time a Belgian commercial plane had been forced to land in Soviet territory. VARSITY THEATRE Telephone: VKING 3-1065 Shows at 7:00 & 9:00 Home Project The incident was believed the first of its kind involving a civilian western plane. But it occurred near the same border area where two U.S. Air Force planes were lost in 1958. lated Soviet air space when it was intercepted. VARSITY CHARLOTTE, Amalie, V.I. — (UPI)—The government has begun a model home project here as the start of a long-range program to rid this capital city of the Virgin Islands of slum-blighted areas. The pre-fabricated, three- bedroom homes, built on lots of 3,000 square feet, are being offered for less than $10,000 on a 25-year payment plan. Free Delivery On Campus Call VI 3-1086 Roberto's Pizza RIDE THE CREST OF THE WAVE! JOIN ELVIS PRESLEY IN A PARADISE OF SONG! HAL WALLIS TECHNICOLOR AND PANAVISION 40 MINUTES PROTECTION JOAN BLACKMAN - ANGELA LANSBURY NANCY WALTERS - NICIAM TAUROO - HAL KANTER A PARAMANIM RELEASE BLUE HAWAII CONT tinted found SPOTT range. tary S Lost: at Tee REWA COMING SATURDAY! GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIALUNG 3-5781 USED Call N Lost: Contact GSP. STUDI 9-1 da wages STUD type Uphol R. N.'seral dContaCherrKanst MIME must IBM operae equip Serviç 117 F Help Call LAR bath 1617 Sund ROO ion. 1 do call. FUR Phor mon FOR seme Call FOR empl on park call CLASSIFIED ADS LOST Page 7 CONTACT LENSES on Dec. 19. Blue- haired boy called Bob Thomas, V 3-4711. 1-19 found call Bob Thomas, V 3-4711. 1-19 SPOTTER SCOPE in vicinity of rifle Mountaintop Extent. 339 - 350 Lary Science Lab Lost: Brown overcoat length cord, coat free. Name and address inside REWARD: 1-15 WANTED Lost: Glad glasses near Fraser Friday. GSP: Room VI 3-9123 - Room 401-1-11 GSP: Phone VI 3-9123 HELP WANTED USED BELL BELL set. 130 lbs. or more. Call Mike Smith, M-3-5721. 1-10 STUDENT WIFE to do secretarial work. 9-1 daily. Shortham desired. Reasonable wages, VI 3-5060 or VI 3-4077. 1-10 STUDENT PART TIME help with any type of upholstered experience. Soil's Upholstery Shop, 646 W. 23rd. VI 3-6255. 1-12 R. N.'S NEEDED: Full or part time. General duty any shift. Also operating room nurses. Blazinggame cohesion Cherry 2-3344 or Cherry 2-292, Ottawa Kansas. MIMEOGRAPH OPERATOR-TYPIST: must be experienced, accurate typist, IBM electric typewriters; addressgraph operator, experienced on power-driven computers; experience with Customer Service positions. See Thos. C. Rythner, 117 Flint Hall. Phone KU-373. tt Help Wanted: Dishwasher. 7 days a week Call VI 3-7810 or come to 1252 Oread. tl FOR RENT BOARD & ROOM, $55 a month. VI 3- 4385. 1-12 LARGE QUIET ROOM for boys. Priv. bath & entrance. Very close to campus, 1617 Oxford Road. Come evenings or Sundays. 1-12 ROOMS FOR MEN: 1st block from Union. Available Feb. 1st. One single and 1 double room. Quiet. Call VI 3-4092 or call at 1301 La. 1-12 EURNISHED basement装机 Utilities paid. 840. 722. 752. $55 paid. month 720 Miss. VI S-3802. FOR RENT. PRIVATE rooms for spring weekends. Send resume to Student Uni- cation Call Marvin, i i 3-3990 I-11 FOR GRADUATE WOMEN or University employed. Attractively furn. 2 room apt, be neat & clean, off street parking. $48, Avail Feb. 1. For apt call VI.3-6099. FURNISHED APARTMENT. & furnished 2 bedroom home. VI 2-2206. 1-11 LARGE FURNISHED apartment east side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. GRADUATE MEN — Why climb the hill? Large rooms available now. ½ block from Union, $25, 121 Oread. Call for appointment, VI 3-6798 or VI 3-8796. 1-10 TRAILER SPACE for rent. Good location for students. Set up for '8' or '10' widths. Nice yard with trees. See at Hillcrest Trailer Court. Or call VI 3-3884. 1-10 ONLY! 1/2 BLOCK FROM CAMPUS KNice $26 per month. Call VI 3-6966 1-10 LARGE ROOM with priv. bath for 2 girls Call 817-456-3900 7642 after 5 or on weekends. 1-10 3 ROOM NICELY furnished apt. 21³ blocks from campus. Priv. env., phone & bath. $55 a month, utilities paid. Boys preferred. Phone VI 3-7830. 1-10 HOME COOKED meals. Served family room for gentleman. 3 V-3 45678 1-10 3 ROOM FURNISHED apt. for 2. Completely private, 1st floor, all utilities paid. $40 ea. Located at 1023 Miss. Inquire at 1055 Miss., VI 3-4349. 1-10 NEW 2 BEDROOM apts. Furn. or un furn. Elec. range, air cond., garbage disposal Lower rates to year around tenants. 2331 Alabama. Call VI 3-2346. 1-10 LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-0731. EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS Rooms for rent: Mature woman or girl. Private entrance and private bath, well heart and air conditioned. First floor block from campus. West Hills Call 1-307-3477 For graduate men, or seniors expecting to enter graduate school. Beautifully decorated furnished apartments one block from Union. Ideal study conditions. Private parking, utilities paid. For appointment call VI 3-8354. 1-11 Park Plaza South Apartments Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you saussed where you now live? Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking Central Air Conditioning VI 2-3416 or VI 2-8253 Office — 1912 W. 25th We will pay local moving expenses Lawrence's Only Garden Apartments Room for Rent: to mature male student. Very private. Shower & semi-bath, well heated and air conditioned. Call VI 3-3077. 1-11 2. MAN APT. $35 a month. Quiet room. 3. Coffee break. Tickets for weekday. Cam I 5-7-370, to us weekly. l-BOOM APARTMENT available next same room as well with arrival and call VI 8-4271. BUSINESS SERVICES EXPERIENCED MOTHER — would like child to care for, 3 to 4 yrs. old, in her home. Also would like ironing, 15c per piece. 340 Indiana. VI 2-3473. tf ALTERATIONS, men & women, men's coats, coats relined. Call VI 1348. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentation by Ola Smith. 399% Mass. Call 3-5263. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3-3644. 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- south. Phone VI 3-2921. Modern self-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. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. tt WANTED -- BABYSITTING. Law student's wife wishes to baby-sit by day or week. Home adjacent to campus. Call VI 3-1846. 1-22 TRANSPORTATION CAR POOL — Need two more congenial nueces to Lawrence delly. Call TA 2-1231. Kansas City or send postal card to John 4501 Fisher Island, Kansas City, Kansas. TYPING Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates. VI 3-5833. FORMER SECRETARY with electric power system of Southern state ranch. Mrs. Nancie Cain, VT 3-0524. MILLIKEN'S 'S.O.S.' Now at two 1020 1020 1020 1470 10 Lawrence Ave. & II's Mass. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typlosing name — call VI 3-9136. Ms. Loren Gebilch. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Type: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Seil, 1511 W. 21 St. CALV I 3-6440 t. Seil, 1511 W. 21 St. CALV I 3-6440 t. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, neat incurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI. 3-7485. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, those, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. English teacher, thesis & reports accurately. Standard tests. Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. Saff. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th. VI 2-1648. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI T-2651 any time. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- typing at standard rates, call Miss Louf Pope, PEI 3-1097. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, books, research reports. Requible rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. M. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001 tt TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, 3-0558, 1631 Miss. tf FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service, SPLT B Worsson, Mission, HE 2-7718 Eves or Satf, RA 2-218, HE 2-718 FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing dissertations. Cheese theses dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs Marilyn Hail. VI 3-2318. Just Arrived! Another Shipment WOOL PLAID pullover style POPOVERS in bold colors 10. 95 small, medium & large Town Shop DOWNTOWN University University Daily Kansan THE Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1962 ON THE HULL Al Hack TUTORING Shop MATH TUTORING in undergrad, courses math. grad. stud. Reasonable. VI 0733 Ken Whitenight MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent clad sed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI . 0350 FOR SALE MAGNAVOX PORTABLE FM & AM transistor radio. Reduced to $75.00. Pettengill-Davis, your Magnavox Desler. 723 Mass. 1-12 '52 CHEVY. 55,000 miles, stick, new tires, new battery, superb motor, blue, four-door. Great for winter starting and driving. Cheap. VI 2-0182. 1-9 FOR SALE: GUNS. Robert Redding Firearms. New & used guns & ammo. Professional Re-bluing. Special this week, all steel Hi-Standard 22 automatic. Excellent selection of used handguns. 1304 Tenn. (in rear). Call VI 3-7001. 1-12 REPOSSESSED MAGNAVOX portable Stereo. Like new, new guarantee. Automatic. $65. Pettigrell-Davis, your Magna-vox Dealer. 723 Mass. 1-12 1955 FORD. Stand, trans. Excellent cond. $450. VI 3-0651. 1-9 1951 FORD 2 door. R & H. good tires. 2006 Ford E-350. Good tires. Call or VI 2-8387 up to 11 p.m. J-11 TERRIFIC LOCATION to KU & Cen- tury Homgy kitchen, large living room, dining room, attached garage, utility room, aluminum aluminum storms. $12,000. 3- IV 8976. 1-10 8' x 42' MOBILE HOME with awning & Saturday's Call VI 2-1422 evening 1-11 FOR SALE OR RENT? 2 bdm. house trailer, 10 x 8', air cond. & in good condition. Located at Hillcrest Trailer Court or call VI 3-3844. 1-10 MAGNAVOX 6 transistor radio, radio. Davidus, your magnavox, Dealer. 723 Mass. M OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. at Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI $1 3644. GOING TO EUROPE. Will sell 2 good economy car, $500. Also 150 Jaguar 34. Sedan. White with red leather upholstery. ment condition, $2,250. Call VI-1 $795. NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters end adding machines. Use of printing machines reasonable rate Business Machines Co., 912 Mass. Phone VI 3-0151 today. 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 3-7533, VI 3-5778. tf WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES; All new and revised, 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. 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 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. ff USED MAGNAVOX 21" table model TV $-47.50 with base, Used Magnavox Hi-Fi-$40. Pettengill Davis, 723 Mass. tt 1937 Triumph TR3-2, radio, henter, marcel cable, Sale I V 3-1007. 1-11 MEN! In plastic! Old Spice DEODORANT N! Here's deodorant protection YOU CAN TRUST Old Spice Stick Deodorant...fastest, neatest way to all day, every day protection! It's the active deodorant for active men...absolutely dependable. Glides on smoothly, speedily...dries in record time. Old Spice Stick Deodorant most convenient, most economical deodorant money can buy. 1.00 plus tax. Old Spice STICK DEODORANT SHULTON University Daily Kansan Page 8 Tuesday, Jan. 9, 1962 Theater Attracts Recent Graduates One month seems to be the magic number for two 1961 KU graduates. Joyce Malicky Castle and Jim McMullan well-remembered for the past four years by University Theatre-goers are on their way up in different fields of show business. After being in New York only a month Joyce was singing in Carne- Kilgore to Speak At WAW Day Bernard Kilgore, president of The Wall Street Journal, will give the thirteenth annual William Allen White Lecture at KU Friday, Feb. 9, after receiving the White Foundation's annual national citation for journalistic merit. Since becoming president of The Wall Street Journal in 1945 Mr. Kilgore has expanded it into a national newspaper with circulation exceeding 800,000. (In 1945 the circulation was 32,000). On Feb. 4. The Journal will publish the first issue of its new national Sunday newspaper, The National Observer. Several years ago Mr. Kilgore sponsored a year-long national survey of opportunities in the field of journalism. The Wall Street Journal has organized and financed The Newspaper Fund Inc., an organization which has provided scholarships for hundreds of high school journalism teachers and has encouraged talented young people to enter careers in journalism. Other events on the day's program will be the William Allen White Foundation board's annual meeting at 10 a.m. in the W. A. White Memorial Reading Room, Flint Hall, and the annual citation of a Kansan editor at a luncheon in the Kansas Union Building. At 6 p.m. Mr. Kilgore will answer questions at a dinner sponsored by the student chapters of Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma Phi, men's and women's journalistic organizations. Ernest W. Johnson, editor of The Olathe News and president of the Foundation, will preside over the day's events. Speech Pathologist To Speak Tomorrow Sigma Alpha Eta, professional speech therapy honorary fraternity, will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Room 306 of the Kansas Union. The speaker will be Dr. Clyde Rousey, who is on a post-doctorate fellowship in Speech Pathology at Meninger Foundation. Dr. Rousey received his Ph.D. from Northwestern University in 1954, did in-service training for 18 months and then served on the staff at the KU Medical Center from 1956 to 1958. From 1958 to 1961 he served as director of the Speech and Hearing Clinic at Humbolt State College, Humbolt, California. He will speak on "A Program at Meninger Foundation." Space Faint CHICAGO — (UPI) — Among other things being orbited in space by the American satellite Tiros III is a new set of paints designed to protect space craft from excessive heat. The American Chemical Society was told here recently that the new coatings, by reflecting radiation from the sun and other extra-terrestrial sources, may help control the temperature of vehicles carrying spacemen. Sportswear at KIRSTENS HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Open Evenings, VI 2-0562 gie Hall and Town Hall. And after Jim had been in Hollywood only a month Hedda Hopper wrote in her column, "We'll be hearing more from this young man." Joyce immediately became associated with the Music Corporation of America and the William Morris Agency, considered one of the most important talent agencies in the country. Since then she has sung under the direction of Leonard Bernstein at Carnegie, the Clarion Concerts of Italian music at Town Hall and again at Carnegie with the New York Little Orchestra. She will be on tour until the middle of March with the Robert Shaw group doing Handel's "Judas Maccabeus." Jim made a successful screen test and signed a 7-year contract with Revue Studios, television program producers. A second lead has been written into the weekly "Wells Fargo" TV series. Jim will soon appear with Dale Robertson on the program. University Theatre viewers will recall Joyce particularly for her roles in "The King and I," "Brigadoon," "The Most Happy Fella" and "Anna Christie." Jim played in the KU productions of "Desire Under the Elms," "Caucasian Chalk Circle" and "The Most Happy Fella." ASC Meeting The All Student Council will meet at 7 p.m. today in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. A resolution for the ASC to investigate the possibility of having Watkins Hospital expansion placed higher on the University's building program priority list is on the agenda. At present Watkins expansion is about halfway down on the list. An ASC member estimated at the last meeting that as the list stands now it will be about five years before the hospital can be expanded. A proposed amendment to establish an ASC presidential veto on legislative matters and a bill on scheduling ASC meetings will also come up. Use alone constitutes possession Jean de La Fontaine Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Ex-Professor Dies in Texas Goldwin Goldsmith, professor and first chairman of the department of architecture at KU died Jan. 3 in Fort Worth, Tex. He taught at KU from 1913 to 1928. Prof. Goldsmith, who was 90 years old last June 12, had lived in Fort Worth since retiring from the University of Texas faculty in 1955. He went to Texas in 1928. At various times he was secretary-treasurer, vice president, and president of the Association of Collegeiate Schools of Architecture. He was a fellow of the American Institute of Architects. A member of Delta Upsilon fraternity, he edited that organization's quarterly publication for seven years. A graduate of Columbia University in 1896, he studied abroad and was a partner in a New York City architectural firm for 16 years before joining the KU faculty. BUSINESS MACHINES CO. 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up SERVICE RENTALS Printing, Mimeographing and Duplicating Pick up — Delivery Goldsmith's ashes will be interred with those of his wife, the late Gertrude Goldsmith, in the Rock Cemetery in Washington, D.C. They had no children. Kansan Want Ads Get Results ] Strong man of the John Birch Society His name is Robert Welch. He bosses a secret society of 60,000 members. In this week's Saturday Evening Post, Senator Young of Ohio speaks out in "The Voice of Dissent" — and tells why he believes the John Birch Society is "the most dangerous in America." The Saturday Evening POST JANUARY 13 ISSUE NOW ON SALE Tareyton delivers the flavor DVAL FILTER DOES IT! "Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!" says Julius (Cookie) Quintus, ace javelin man and B.M.A.C. (Big Man Around Coliseum). "A Tareyton would even make Mars mellow," says Cookie. "Tareyton's a rara avis among cigarettes. It's one filter cigarette that really delivers de gustibus. Pick up a pack today and you'll find there's Pliny of pleasure in Tareyton." ACTIVATED CHARCOAL INNER FILTER PURE WHITE OUTER FILTER ACTIVATED CHARCOAL INNER FILTER PURE WHITE OUTER FILTER DUAL FILTER Tareyton product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" © A.F. Co. DUAL FILTER Tareyton Product of the American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" @ A.P. Cox 59tl G R G the for A LO Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No. 67 Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1962 Million Restored to Budget Governor OK's Blake Replacement, Pay Hike By Scott Payne Gov. John Anderson today asked the State Legislature for $23,808,741 for KU's budget. Though the figure is a 9.6 per cent increase over the $21.7 million being spent here this year, it is $355.19 less than the $24.1 million requested for KU by the State Board of Regents. State Budget Director James W. Bibb in November had recommended a $1.4 million budget cut. Included in the governor's recommendation is a 4 per cent salary increase for faculty members. Mr Bibb had cut this out completely. Expressing mixed feelings about the governor's KU recommendation, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary for the University, said he was pleased the governor had requested the $720,000 needed for replacement of Blake Hall. "However, Gov. Anderson's cut of $120,000 from funds for the hiring of new instructors was a pretty harsh one," he added. "SINCE WE CAN expect an ever-increasing number of students in the next few years, we will need that classroom space badly," he said. (The deletion makes it impossible for KU to hire more than 26 of the 42 new instructors the administration says it requires.) "Because of that cut," said Mr. Nichols, "the ratio of new faculty members to new students will be 1 to about 26 instead of the ideal 1 to 17." HE SAID HE was also disappointed by a deletion of $30,000 from KU's requested funds for routine repair and improvement. "Last year," he said, the amount was $165,000. Now it's been cut to $135,000. This means only one thing—deferred maintenance. "We have spent our full repair allocations here every year on selected projects approved by the Board of Regents. Even at this, we have not been able to accomplish everything. Now it will become a case of defer, defer, defer until the State has to step in and do the projects at a higher cost later." Mr. Nichols said other cuts in the governor's recommendation to the Legislature included: The special repair fund of $45,-000 which was intended for the proposed campus traffic control stations and repaving of Sunnyside Ave. - The faculty salary increase request of five per cent (it was cut to four) - Additional student aid amounting to $25,424 Also resulting from the governor's action was a $1.4 million cut in the recommendation for the KU Medical Center. The institution had sought a budgeet of $13,385,288 for the new fiscal year. THE GOVERNOR, HOWEVER, sawed into the capital improvements request of the Medical Center re- commending $608,000 as opposed to a request for $1,908,000. The request was for funds to construct a clinic and several other buildings. The Legislature has the power to reinstate the request, but sources indicated such action appeared unlikely. In his address to a joint session of the House and Senate, Gov. Anderson recommended a total State budget of $398.7 million. Of this, $63.7 million is intended for the expenditures of the State Board of Regents and all institutions under its jurisdiction. Colleges and universities are included in this. THE FUNDS THE GOVERNOR recommended would, if approved by the Legislature, be appropriated for spending in the 1963 fiscal year which begins July 1. Under this budget, Kansas tax- buyers would not be faced with a PETER ROGERS (Continued on page 5) Gov. John Anderson City Slams, Then Passes KU's Plan The Lawrence City Commission yesterday approved KU's proposed traffic control plan, but members indicated they have reservations because of the plan's effect on city traffic. By Clayton Keller The commission's complaint was that the plan, by closing Jayhawk Boulevard, will block the only east-west through street in a ten-block area. (Note — It was announced today by Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, that Gov. John Anderson had cut the traffic control proposal from his budget recommendations. The Legislature has the power to reinstate the plan.) "THIS (THE PLAN) will force people to go to Ninth or Nineteenth, and both are already too narrow for the traffic they carry," Mayor Ted Kennedy said. The commission's approval was requested in a letter from Chancel- (Continued on page 5) Poll Planned by KU YR Bv Zeke Wigglesworth A student political organization at the University of Kansas is planning to organize a group to poll campus views and reactions. The KU Young Republicans, sponsors of the project, are setting up the polling group to take samples of student thought on national, international and campus affairs. The announcement of the proposed organization was presented to the All Student Council last night by the president of the Young Republicans. Jerry Dickson. Newton junior. "THE MAIN reason it will be established," he said, "is to get a consensus of how students are thinking on campus, national, and international affairs. It should be a help to all. It will make students stop and think about these affairs, and it should help the ASC to get an idea of how KU students are thinking." In a telephone interview after the ASC meeting, Dickson said there are several reasons why the polling group is being started. He explained that the Young Republicans have a purpose in organizing the group. "The Young Republicans will issue these (the students') views. On another sheet, the Young Republican view of the problem, or perhaps the HE SAID that the Young Republicans are interested in what KU students are thinking about, and it will be useful to the club. In addition, he said that the Young Republicans organization undertook the project because it is financially able to underwrite the costs of the polls. views of a national Republican group, will be presented. But the facts themselves will be as unbiased and factual as is possible with such a poll. The polls will be tabulations of questions asked, by telephone, of a "random sampling" of KU students. He explained that the polling group will have a central committee which will be in charge of operation of the surveys. He said that the polls should stir up controversy. "There will always be someone who will disagree with the results of polls. If, for example, the tabulations show that the campus is generally conservative in feeling, there will be liberals who will disagree. The same is true the other way around." "THE CENTRAL committee will ask the telephone interviewees yes and no questions. These questions will be checked by faculty members to see that they are unbiased and not misleading. There will be no questions of the 'Have you stopped beating your wife?' variety. In addition, since one yes or no question is probably not completely adequate, supporting questions will be asked." In the prospectus of the polling group which Dickson read to the ASC, the following examples are given of the type of questions which would be used in the poll: Do you favor a World Crisis Day because you personally are interested? Do you favor a World Crisis Day because you feel the student body is interested? Do you favor a World Crisis Day? If yes. If no: Are you against a World Crisis Day because you are not interested in a discussion of world affairs? The student answers yes, no, or no opinion. Dickson said that the central committee will need help to carry out the telephone interviews. "Of course, six or seven people cannot make 200 phone calls a week. The committee will have to have a secretarial staff. The staff will help make the calls and the committee will tabulate the results. We are hoping that it will issue reports once or twice a week." Budget Highlights TOPEKA—(UPI)—The Kansas Legislature, newly convened in its 1962 budget session, met in joint session of House and Senate today to receive Gov. John Anderson's proposals for State spending. The two chambers were scheduled to convene separately at 10 a.m., and sit jointly half an hour later to hear Anderson's message. Health Gov. Anderson made the following budget recommendations in the field of health and hospitals in Kansas during fiscal 1963: Board of Health, $4,770,653; Kansas Neurological Institute, $2.5 millions; Larned State Hospital, $3.8 millions; Osawatomie State Hospital, $3.8 millions; Parsons State Hospital, $2.4 millions; State Tuberculosis Sanatorium at Norton, $841,070; Institutional Management and Department of Social Welfare, $1.1 millions; Southeast Kansas Tuberculosis Hospital, $501,601; Topeka State Hospital, $7.04 millions; and Winfield State Hospital, $3.2 millions. Public Welfare IN THE REALM of public welfare, Gov. Anderson recommended the following budget allotments in fiscal 1963 which begins next July. Coordinating Council for the Blind, $1,000; Crippled Childrens Commission, $621,660; Employment Security Division, $23,553,676; Children's Receiving Home, $258,717; Pensions, $23,474; State Board of Social Welfare, $46,603,278; and Soldiers Home and Mother Bickerdye Annex, $577,053. Public Safety The governor made the following recommendations for state spending in public safety in fiscal 1963: Adjutant General, $1.04 millions; Attorney General and KBI, $309,212; Brand Commissioner, $68,163; State Fire Marshal, $138,329; Industrial Farm for Women, $166,793; State Industrial Reformatory, $1.41 millions; Kansas Safety Council, $1,400; Director of Penal Institutions, $998,209; Board of Probation and Parole, $245,978; Kansas State Penitentiary, $2.3 millions; and Receptions and Diagnostic Center, $630,131. Prison Funds Despite warnings by Kansas State Prison Warden Tracy Hand that "The lid is going to come off here at any time if we don't get some relief from overcrowding," Gov. Anderson sliced KSP's budget drastically. The prison had asked for $638,000 for new construction and for remodeling existing structures. The governor recommended to the Legislature that a total capital improvements fund of $8,000 be allocated for the prison. Kansas State Prison, an old prison, was built to accommodate 1,200 persons. Warden Hand reported to the Legislative Ways and Means Committee that it was currently housing over 1,800. Cold Wave Hits Nation Most of the nation froze today in one of the bitterest cold waves of the century, and temperatures in Northeast Kansas easily kept up their end of the bargain. The predicted high for today for the area is 5 to 10 above. Tonight's temperatures are expected to drop to 5 to 10 below. Thursday's high will be 10 to 15 above. Cold records were set in at least 12 cities ranging from Michigan to the tip of Texas. The week's toll of weather-blamed deaths climbed to 88. No real relief was in sight. The United Press International count of weather-related deaths since the start of the polar blast last weekend showed 19 in Illinois, 17 in Wisconsin, 9 in Michigan, 8 in Texas, 6 in both Colorado and Iowa, 3 each in Missouri, Montana, Massachusetts and New Hampshire, 2 each in New York State, Ohio and Kansas, and 1 each in Alabama, North Carolina, Louisiana, Minnesota and Oklahoma. The cold wave covered 40 of the nation's 50 states and its toll in terms of misery and property loss was incalculable. The temperature was written in double figures in many areas. It was an unofficial 32 degrees below zero at Leadville, Colo., and it was an official 47 below at Drummond, Mont. Local Temperature of Minus 6 Temperatures at KU in the past several days have been mighty low, but they have set no new records. The KU Weather Bureau reports that the high temperature yesterday was 5 degrees and the low temperature was minus 2 degrees. The bureau said at 8 a.m. today that the low recording last night was minus 6 degrees. These figures are compiled over 12 hour periods. The Bureau said that no records have been established by the cold slump, as a low recording of minus 8 was set last month. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1962 The Student Poll Plan The long uninterrupted inactivity of KU's national political clubs in campus affairs and student issues was broken last night. At that time, Jerry Dickson, president of the KU Young Republicans, presented a plan to the All Student Council (a news story appears elsewhere in today's Kansan) that his group has prepared for a group to poll student opinion on campus, national and international issues. THE BASIC IDEA behind the plan—that the campus needs an organization that can determine the trend of student opinion on important issues is a good one. The Young Republicans group can meet a long neglected need. The Young Republicans have decided to seek the advice of faculty members to insure objective questions on the issues their polls deal with. Dickson said in his statement that on issues on which the Young Republicans or the national party have taken a stand, their viewpoint (identified as such) would be included in the poll report on a separate page. The program is not a completely altruistic one. No one should expect it to be. The Young Republicans will supply the manpower for the poll and finance it. They naturally expect to reap some benefit from it. The inclusion of their viewpoint on the various issues on which polls are taken represents that benefit. However, the strict separation of the poll results and the Young Republicans' own opinions deserves praise. It is an example some of their elders might benefit from. AND, IF THE poll group adheres to the standard it has set for itself, the poll results will be of value to many groups. It can, as Dickson pointed out, aid the All Student Council in determining student interests and needs. This function would also be of benefit to the university administration. The poll committee can also, by long term and consistent work, compile valuable information on trends in student thought at KU. The poll committee may possibly be derided by some of the elements on campus which do not agree with the Young Republicans' political viewpoint and would like to think the organization is merely a propaganda organ. Such elements should stop to consider the basic approach of the program. It provides for objective questions, which are presented in the published report on the poll. Slanted material could be easily detected. A review of poll questions by faculty members is added assurance that the polls will be objective. SHOULD ANY group object merely because the Young Republicans present their own viewpoint (strictly separated) along with the poll results, we can only repeat that the Young Republicans are expending the money and effort needed to make the polls and such action on their part cannot be condemned. Constructive counteraction rather than partisan criticism is obviously the only effective course for any group feeling that they need to present a different viewpoint on some issue than that held by the Young Republicans. Considered as a whole, the plans for the poll committee represent a sound and constructive action by the Young Republicans. It is, we hope, a sign of increasing interest among the political groups on campus in working to present their viewpoints more effectively and provide informative and constructive programs for the student population. —William H. Mullins letters to the editor Conservative Criticized Editor: Marick Payton's letter of January 8 is the best paraphrase of Senator Barry Goldwater since the last time Payton wrote. The temporary chairman of the Young Americans for Freedom campus group (known as "Youth Against Freedom" in many circles) has made an attempt to present Goldwater's ideas for "maximizing freedom." Now, Mr. Goldwater's philosophy has appealed to many, including the Ku Klux Klan, the White Citizens' Council, and the John Birchers. However, many political scientists and philosophers do not think it good mid-twentieth century American political theory. This "conservative with a conscience" is talking about a certain kind of freedom which results in freedom for the few. He is working to eliminate and to reduce welfare programs and social services and to increase constitutional restriction on the government's power to tax. To him, present governmental programs are attempts to bring about an "egalitarian" society; he wants no governmental interference which seeks to allow for equality of opportunity. ALTHOUGH HE claims to be working for "freedom," his approach ironically does violence to some of the assumptions implicit in democracy. Democracy implies the dignity of all men. Goldwater's philosophy would seem to lead to real freedom for the few in his economically and socially "structured" view of society—the freedom to inherit, to make, or to be given as much money as one likes and not to have it heavily taxed (graduated-style) by the federal government. government. In effect, those blessed with money in our society would be at the top in education, in government, and consequently in other areas of life. As he parries the question, "Why tax success?" he apparently rejects what economists consider the three types of unearned income: monopolistic profits, inheritances and gifts, and land rent or profits. AS TO EQUALITY of individuals, no thoughtful person has ever suggested that all men are equal in every respect. No doubt Goldwater would want for everyone equal protection of the law, access to the ballot, and equal opportunity to pursue a chosen vocation or career. However, his approach to the affairs of government suggests that he would do little to eliminate any barriers which allow for equal opportunity of personal development. Many would violently disagree that removing and minimizing welfare programs, outlawing the graduated income tax, and the removal of subsidies for farmers without any allied program would "free" the people. HE SAYS HE is not interested in promoting welfare, but in gaining liberty. Real freedom for Gold-water's few would not be promoting the general welfare of the What Goldwater means by "liberty" would mean "slavery" for many. We can look at the last thirty years and say that Presidents Wilson, Roosevelt, Truman, and to some extent Eisenhower have used their office in support of programs to eliminate some of the restraints on freedom of the individual. Their philosophy of government has furthered the opportunity for fuller development of individual capacities. nation and the people! If he were allowed to implement his philosophy, a man might be jobless, hungry, and without education, but he would be formally free. This is rugged individualism, so rugged that it would be virtually impossible for many to have real freedom of opportunity and individual development. The Arizona senator does not reckon with the closed political, economic, and social system of the mid-twentieth century. Home-steading and exploration of new land areas in the United States are a thing of the past. We are moving from an agrarian to a largely urban and industrialized society. There is more and better communication between people. Because of "collective" living, the needs of the people have changed and new problems have arisen. Many of them have required more unified and concerted action on the part of all government in the interests of the whole nation. Barry Goldwater's and Marick Payton's idea of freedom would do quite well under the Articles of the Confederation! But many Americans (who also have consciences) cannot tolerate this view in the mid-twentieth century. Kenneth N. Closki Lawrence graduate student Kenneth N. Ciboski Daily Hansan Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 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 Mangaging 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. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler CHICHE IN SPECTOR MARCHING JOKES FOR ALL 59 'OH HES OUR MOST POPULAR HISTORY TEACHER ALL RIGHT, BUT I HEAR MY STUDENTS DONT LEARN MUCH FROM HIM.' movies video Bv Bill Charles "Paris Blues;" with Paul Newman, Sidney Petito, Joanne Woodward and Diahann Carroll. Directed by Martin Ritt. At the Varsity. Why in the name of D. W. Griffith does Hollywood insist on rewriting almost every book or play it films? "Paris Blues" has been cut, revised, and added to so much that the original version is almost unrecognizable. The result of this is a bore. "PARIS BLUES" makes one wish Paul Newman would give up jazz and go back to shooting pool. There is not much to his part of Ram Bowen, the 'bone blower. There isn't much to "Paris Blues," either. Two touring lassies from the good old USA attack Paris for two weeks. Each meets and falls in love with a jazzman, and tries to lure her boy back to the states. One succeeds, the other doesn't. This simple tale weaves its way through a very blue mood. When it's over, everyone is probably depressed, including the audience. 武 THE FILM IS based on a story which explores a Negro's decision to leave prejudiced America and enjoy equality in Paris. The movie all but ignores this idea by adding a white musician to the plot and emphasizing his devotion to that modern incongruity, written jazz. Newman and Miss Woodward are good, which is to be expected, but not exceptional. The two important (albeit small) roles are expertly and sensitively filled by Poitier and Miss Carroll. Jazz buffs might enjoy the film for the music, which is by Duke Ellington. It is antique, but good. The picture is neither antique, nor good. This book is a good introductory study of Brazil. The author is a prominent Latin American specialist who handles his materials well. The material is up-to-date. Everything about the country is covered—from its political and economic problems to its geography, races, religion, health, schools and wild life. It is a good survey for the reader who knows little about Brazil. BRAZIL- THE INFINITE COUNTRY, by William Lytle Schurz. E. P. Dutton and Co., 1961. $6.00. Books in Review For the specialist on Latin America, however, the book is frustrating. It contains a great deal of information written in a readable style and is full of provocative ideas. The author, however, rarely develops his material to any great depth. One feels that the author was impelled to touch on every conceivable subject. Just when the reader gets interested in one subject the author jumps to something else. By Robert D. Tomasek Assistant Professor of Political Science ** ** By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism TORTILLA FLAT, by John Steinbeck. Signet, 35 cents. Oh how one can become disenchanted when college days are long past! In 1942, we had been reading "Tortilla Flat," and then along came that lovable movie about the lovable paisanos of Monterey. We called our room in the fraternity house "Tortilla Flat." We had a sign above the door advertising the fact. We even smuggled in red wine (quite cheap) to keep up the pretense of living like Danny, Pilon and Pablo. "Tortilla Flat" doesn't look so good any more. Maybe these are lovable folk, as so many of Steinbeck's people are, but they also are tedious. They'll cut squid in the local cannery, but only long enough to buy another gallon of wine. They do glamorous and romantic things like getting sodden drunk and smashing store windows, stealing the neighbors' chickens, loudly singing and, in a grand climax, burning down the house where Danny, their hero, had lived and died. Maybe it's the literal translation from the Spanish, the lack of contractions, the thee's and thou's, that is so frustrating. But Danny and Pablo and Pilon and Portagee Joe and Pirate and his lovable dogs no longer offer the old thrill. s. t. y. n. n. y. n de d g t re u t t ly a d h e r Wednesday. Jan. 10, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 YAFElectsOfficers Gets Constitution The KU chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom last night elected the "aggressive" slate of candidates without opposition as permanent officers and approved a constitution without discussion or dissension. The newly elected officers are: Marick Payton, Lawrence resident, chairman; Tim Woodbury, Kirkwood, Mo., junior, vice chairman; Sally Chandler, Holton junior, corresponding secretary; Leanna Koehn, Dodge City freshman, recording secretary, and Kenneth Hobbs, Kansas City, Mo., junior, treasurer. TEMPORARY OFFICERS were elected in a stormy two-hour meeting on Dec. 18. During the meeting one faction tried several unsuccessful attempts to block elections until a later meeting. Fayton said after the meeting that he was surprised there was no opposition by the other faction within the organization. "YAF has a united front with the end to promote conservative views. The difference between the two groups was a disagreement on means," he said. k ofannyable "WE ADVOCATED A MORE ag-gressive program and I was happy to see an endorsement of our slate and program." He also said he saw only about five members of the other group present with no leaders present except Jim Williamson, Hutchinson junior. Williamson later said he did not know the other group would have a complete slate of candidates. The Committee for an Effective KU-YAF. Payton's group, offered a complete slate of officers and passed out a printed handout with YAF's national symbol, a lighted torch of liberty, as background on the handout. "WHEN WE (the constitution committee) met last Saturday to draft the constitution, we were working in a big happy group and I thought all the dissension had dissolved. I didn't think they would have a slate of candidates," he said. "But I am very happy with the officers and I think YAF will do a lot more good in the future than if we had tried to further the split." Williamson was nominated for vice chairman, but declined the nomination saying "this team works good together." He declined in favor of the slate offered by the Committee for an Effective KU-YAF. THE CONSTITUTION WAS APPROVED without discussion or dissension. Payton said it was drafted so amendments could be made in the future after it had been used a while and needed changes could be seen. The group discussed plans for several projects and appointed three committees. One project is to coordinate action between all conservative clubs and Young Republicans organizations in Kansas behind Robert Dole, Republican candidate for Congress from the first district which includes all of Western Kansas. CoachSaysDebate Season Successful KU's debate squad "enjoyed moderate success" and picked up plenty of experience in the fall debate season. Wilmer Linkugel, assistant professor of speech and drama, and debate coach said Saturday. Members of the squad attended five major tournaments and walked off with honors in debate, extemporaneous speaking and poetry reading, John Neal and Donald Worster, both Hutchinson juniors, defeated more than 20 schools in debate at the Central State tournament in Wilberforce, Okla. Dean Salter, Garden City junior, won the extemporaneous speaking competition at the State University of Iowa tourney in Iowa City, Iowa and Donald Currey, Banning, Calif., graduate student, won the poetry reading competition at the Southwestern College Tourney in Winfield. Debate squad members also attended tournaments at the Kansas State Teachers College in Emporia and the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs. Colo. A practice team will attend a debate tourney at William Jewell College in Liberty, Mo., on Jan. 17. Next semester's first two competitions are scheduled for February at Northwestern University and the University of Nebraska. Pavton said the conservative groups would establish campaign headquarters in small towns, conduct telephone and door-to-door campaigns and demonstrations. HE APPOINTED Miss Koehn chairman; Harold House, Douglass freshman; Jay Deane, Kansas City junior; Miss Chandler and Debbie Galbraith, Wichita freshmen. Bob Gaskins, Wichita freshman, reported on a possible conservative club in Lawrence high school. He said he had talked with several student leaders in the high school who showed interest in forming the club. Deane raised doubts about the membership of high school students in YAF. Gaskins said national YAF is making the necessary changes and is encouraging the formation of high school clubs. Payton then appointed Gaskins chairman of the committee with Suzanne Robbins, San Pedro, Calif. junior; Deane, Williamson and Bill Whiting, East Hampton, N. Y., freshman, as members. The group also discussed the possibility of getting three feet of shelf space in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union for conservative books and pamphlets. PAYTON SAID THEY WOULD be contacting Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union, in the next few days. "We assume the Union is a service institution which will aid us in furthering an exchange of opinion and views in the interest of academic freedom," he said. Payton also appointed a public relations committee composed of Williamson, Miss Robbins and Chuck Burin, Imperial, Pa., junior. Mysterious Note Tells of Replica A 17th century replica of Bufo vulgaris (toad), stolen before Christmas vacation, has been returned to the Museum of Art. The toad, 8 inches long and $51 \frac{1}{2}$ inches high, was attached to a cement foundation in the museum patio, by six inch bolts. The bolts had been cleanly sheared off, apparently filed. "Dear Sirs: The 17th century Italian baroque toad may be found in locker No. 106 at Union Station in Kansas City, Mo. This is no prank, for enclosed is key for said locker. The writer of this did not realize the magnitude of the mistake. It is hoped that no permanent damage was done to such an exquisite piece of art. Signed X." Soon after the discovery of the theft, Marilyn Stockstad, director of the museum, received a letter. It said: "It wasn't the best piece of art out there," she said, "but it is my favorite." The toad was the second case of theft from the museum last year. Last spring two Rembrandt etchings were stolen and have not been recovered. Prof. Stokstad was happy to have the toad back. She said the toad was insured for $500, but that the resale value for bronze toads is quite low. Mrs. Levine Says - Salinger Stories 'Christian' A sociology instructor yesterday described J. D. Salinger's new book, "Franny and Zooey," as a book which is not as good as Salinger's "Catcher in the Rye," but one which will be widely read. Mrs. Stuart Levine, in discussing Salinger's latest work, said that "his stories are more Christian than oriental in outlook." The "fat lady," who is discussed by most of the characters in "Franny and Zoeye," is revealed to the reader as God, she said. "God is a very present force to his characters, even though they are not particularly religious," she added. The author deals with "a combination of oriental mysticism with a modern-day outlook — much like Jesus Christ going to an Ivy League college," she continued. "HIS GREAT characters are the very young people, who are seeking to find good in everyone, and not the older people who appear irrational and foolish in a realistic world," she said. Mrs. Levine said Salinger works his theme into the novel through his vivid "Ivy-League, prep-school" characters. "These young characters, through whom Salinger attempts to convey his objective, are continually suffering, however, because they are able to see things too clearly in the realistic world in which they live," she said. "The author's point here is almost simple-minded, as he merely says that everyone has a little bit of Jesus Christ in them—the Transcendentalist theory reduced to the simplest form," she said. MRS. LEVINE LISTED several reasons for Salinger's appeal to his readers. In the first place, she said, "You read Salinger and enjoy it to be in Changes Planned In 2 Departments SANDY'S THRIFT & SWIFT DRIVE-IN 2120 West 9th Across from Hillcrest Dr. Cyrus De Coster, professor of Romance Languages, has been named new chairman of the KU department of Romance languages, it was announced by Dean George H. Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Prof. De Coster will assume his duties as chairman July 1, 1962, when Prof. J. Neale Carman will give up the chairmanship according to University regulations regarding the age of administrators. Prof. Carman will continue teaching. Dr. Ronald Olsen, assistant professor of economics will become acting chairman of the department of economics Feb. 1, 1962. He will replace Dr. Leland Pritchard, who has resigned the chairmanship to devote his full time to teaching and to research. 北川羌族自治县曲山镇白家村村民委员会 Prof. Pritchard has been chairman of the department since 1956 when it was established as a department of the College and separate from the School of Business Television Tip CHICAGO — (UPI)—Insufficient lighting or no lighting at all can make night-time television viewing tiring and boring, according to the American Home Lighting Institute. One dim light doesn't solve the glare problem and sometimes adds an annoying reflection from the screen, the Institute said. It suggested a so-called "TV Wall," used by many homeowners who light up the entire wall behind the TV set by installing a cornice or valance along its top. 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 Can't Inspected beef the know, even though you may not understand him." Also, she said, "Salinger's wonderfully complete observations appeal to us. His prep school and Ivy League characters are all mixed up in a rational world. His older characters are humorously and typically rational in a superficial way." Sandy's uses only Gov't inspected beet She said that part of the author's popularity also stems from the fact that readers will attempt to "psychologize and sociologist," trying to understand why his characters act as they do. SALINGER'S STYLE is another of the bases for his popularity, she said. "His slangy, wonderful presentation of Franny's pretentious friends and her mother, and the comedy incidents he creates, are excellent," she said. Mrs. Levine explained that the humor used in "Framny and Zooey" is a reflection of the same style he uses when writing for the "New Yorker." "Salinger," she said, "is a fine craftsmaker. He compresses his work in time and space, but his characters are developed to the fullest extent. "He creates a contrast in sensibilities between his characters—for instance, Franny and Lane. They create a kind of harmony which is almost painful," she said. Sportswear at KIRSTENS HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Open Evenings, VI 2-0562 Submarine Sandwiches A MEAL IN ITSELF Pancake - MEATS - CHEESE - LETTUCE - DELICIOUS SAUCE COLD POP ICE COLD MILK Joe's Bakery VI 3-4720 412 W. 9th 12 MONTH Certificates of Deposit now earn 4% A recent government ruling has raised the ceiling on bank interest rates. In accordance with our policy of sharing earnings, it gives us great pleasure to pay this higher rate to our customers. MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence Certificates 746 Mass. University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1962 - Glory of Greek Figure Restored The Greek mythological figure Peleus last night was restored to some of his former glory in a KU Humanities Lecture at Fraser Hall. Mary A. Grant, emerita associate professor of Latin and Greek, performed the task in sharp, crisp narrative in her lecture "A Forgotten Hero — Development and Decay of a Greek Myth." Miss Grant said a vast and rich amount of folklore, both of the Greek and later civilizations, is derived from the Peleus legends, though these legends have apparently been minimized by the epic writers and classical scholars. Not a god himself, Miss Grant said, but the grandson of a god and destined to marry the Nieried Thetis—of whom the Fates prophesied that any son born to her would be far greater than his father—Peleus was still an important personality in Greek mythology. MISS GRANT, CHOSEN as the KU lecturer for this year's Humanities series, received warm applause for her presentation from the more than 200 persons who ignored the bitter cold night to attend the lecture. The son who filled that prophesy was Achilles. PELEUS, MISS GRANT SAID, became the embodiment of "the sturdy morality of the woodsman." Though he was the center of no great episode, he was a participant in several important mythological ventures. The pure vitality of the epic was pushed from the center of focus, particularly in events concerning Peleus, and emphasis came to be placed on the general problems of good and evil by the time of fifth century drama. Miss Grant explained. Thus, both Sophocles and Euripides had plays based on or suggestive of Peleus' life, but the emphasis was on his old age, his despair, and his exile from Aegina, she said. THE END OF THE VITAL PERIOD of the epic came with the skeptical philosophers, and in the Hellenic-Roman period, myths were no longer capable of growing but were viewed only as "marvelous falsehoods of the poets of old," the lecturer said. Though the vigorous period of the Peleus legends had ended, Miss Grant said, they continued to show an influence and reflect developments in the Hellenic period through various adaptations. At least one indication of his significance to the Greeks is reflected on a vase in a museum in Florence, Italy. Discovered in an Etruscan grave, the large vessel shows five multi-figured bands representing mythical occurrences. The most prominent of these, located on the fullest diameter, Miss Grant said, portrays the wedding procession of Peleus. Six KU faculty members have been selected to participate in the 1962-63 Costa Rican Faculty Exchange program. The six are: Donald McCoy, associate professor of history; Robert Casad, assistant professor of law; Charles Michener, professor of entomology; D. Don Haines, associate professor of civil engineering; and Elden Tefft, associate professor of design. Faculty Named for Exchange The six participants and their families will go to Costa Rica University for one month this summer and three months next summer. Fore! HAMILTON, Bermuda — (UPI) Bermuda probably has more golf courses per square acre than any other country. There are three 18-hole links, including the widely-known Mid-Ocean Club, and two nine-hole courses. One hundred KU students will spend their summer in Europe sponsored by KU's second Modern Foreign Language Institutes. Students May Spend Summer in Europe Fifty-seven students spent last summer in Europe under the program, and due to its success, the program has been enlarged to accommodate additional students this year. The students will leave New York by chartered aircraft on June 6 and return Aug.9. In Europe students will be separated into three groups head-quartered in Paris, France; Barcelona, Spain, and Weynary, Germany. Home Economics Club Meets The Home Economics Club will meet at the home of Edna Hill at 7 p.m. tomorrow. There will be a Twelfth Night Party, and an initiation will follow. Those requiring transportation should call VI 2-2504. Robusto's Pizza French Ph.D. Reading Exam: Jan 13. 9-14. be handed in to Miss Cragie by Jan 10. Official Bulletin Free Delivery On Campus Call VI 3-1086 Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 & 8 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. TWIST CONTEST $5.00 Cash Prize Per Couple Live ROCK and ROLL Band FRIDAY — 10:00 P.M. at the WHITEHOUSE 24-40 Highway COUPLES ONLY Western Civilization Comprehensive Examination: Review Sessions: Jan. 9 to 10 p.m., Bailey Auditorium. Examinations' 15 at 1 a.m., rooms to be assigned. TODAY Ham Club Meeting: 7:30 p.m., 201 EI Lab, 825 Dahlman, speaker, on Class G Lab Student National Education Association: 4 p.m., 302 Bailey. Panel discussion: "Student Teachers" with Dr. Karl Edwards. LUCKY STRIKE TOASTED CIGARETTES Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch: 12 noon, Canterbury House. Celtic Cross: 12 noon, Westminster Center, 1204 Dread. Westminster Center, Minneapolis, MN. Young Democrats Committee on Res- sultations 4 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union PAIL MAIL PARIS CIGARETTES SMOKED MARSHAL FIRELIGHT COMPANY SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m. 306, Kansas Union. Instructor, Larry Bodie. Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 11. Januar, um fuern uffent den Schule des Landes. Eine Grupe Schueler aus der Oberschule in Lawrence wird fuer uns singen. Le Cercle Francaise célèbre la Fête des Rois par un diner mercredi le 10 janvier à six heures et quart dans le Curry Room de l'Union; prix: $1.53. Ceux qui jouent au assister du département avant père au bureau du departement avant mardi soir. PAUL YALL TRADITIONAL CIGARETTES SINCE 1920 LUCKY STRIKE 173 TOASTETS CIGARETTES Tareyton DUKAT FILTER SAVE Tareyton Tareyton DUAL FILTER TOMORROW SAVE YOUR EMPTY PACKAGES PALL MALL, LUCKY STRIKE DUAL FILTER TAREYTON EXCITING CONTEST STARTING SOON VALUABLE PRIZES WILL BE AWARDED FOR EMPTY PACKAGE TURN-INS WATCH THIS NEWSPAPER FOR DETAILS START COLLECTING NOW "Products of THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY — Copyright A. T. Co." Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 p.m., Southern Baptist Activities Building, 1221 Oread. Bible study and devotional. LUCKY STRIKE 133 GAS2207 CIGARETTES Tareyton Tareyton DUAL FILTER LUCKY STRIKE 117 TAREYTON CIGARETTES PALL MAIL PARIS CHEMICAL CORPORATION Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. PAIL N'ALL PREMIUM CIGARETTES HANDCRAFTED BY THE MALAYSIA COUNTY OF BANGKOK PARIS Tareyton Tareyton DNAIL FILTER Kansas Society, Archaeological Institute of Kansas Union, Speaker, Dr. Klaus Berger, KU Department of Art History; "Anim- morphoses." All invited. Weavers Our 105th Year of Service WeaverS Entire Stock! SALE VENUS car coats FAMOUS NAME 1/3 off lor bell con pla buo C reg. 25.95...now $17.30 reg. 29.95...now $19.97 reg. 39.95...now $26.63 Weaver's Coat Shop—Second Floor Page 5 City Slams, Then Passes- (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) lor W. Clarke Wescoe. He said he believes a letter expressing the commission's approval will help the plan in the Legislature's current budget session. The plan, announced in August by Chancellor Wescoe, provides for five traffic control stations on streets entering the main portion of the campus. Traffic would be halted between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. on weekdays. FUNDS FOR CONSTRUCTION of the control stations were recommended by the Board of Regents for this year, but were eliminated by James W. Bibb, budget director. The plan cannot go into effect as planned in September unless the funds are approved during the Legislature's current budget session. "WE WOULDNT DO IT (control traffic on the campus) this way, but we'll approve the plan," he said. Commissioner Fred Cooper summed up the commission's feelings. Mayor Ted Kennedy said joking ly: "The University's going to put it into effect anyway, so we might as well give them a pat on the back." Commissioner Ben Barteldes said the traffic problems will continue to grow as the city and the University grow. "The University campus is an awfully big chunk of land for people to drive around," he said. COMMISSIONER Don McConnell, however, said he believes the plan will not cause too much trouble. "Lawrence is small enough that people won't be seriously inconvenienced," he said. The commission instructed Harold Horn, city manager, to write the letter of approval to Chancellor Wescoe. The commissioners also discussed a possible new east-west route, which would be an extension of Sunnyside avenue to Tennessee Street. City Engineer George William said the city already owns part of the right-of-way for the street which would go behind the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house, and turn northeast to intersect Tennessee Street between the Sigma Chi fraternity house and the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority house. Mayor Kennedy said the University probably would not like this plan because of proposed construction of buildings along Sunnyside. "They (the KU administration) are afraid Sunnyside Avenue might become another Jayhawk Boulevard," he said. Governor OK's - (Continued from page 1) tax hike when the 30-day Legislature session closes. The Legislature, however, is not bound to follow the governor's budget proposals and may, as in past years, exceed his recommendations in some areas. In his message, Gov. Anderson chopped about $300,000 from Kansas State University's request of $20,-951,140. The request included development of K-State's experimental stations. The governor did not cut deeply at any one item of the institution's requests but deleted relatively small amounts from the overall budget. SALLISAW, Okla. — (UPI)—A doughnut crumb sent a Sallisaw woman to the hospital. Crumb Was Dangerous MIS. Grady Farmer was rushed to a Fort Smith, Ark., hospital after she started choking on the crumb. Specialists used hot lemon juice to dissolve the crumb. Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1962 University Daily Kansan Smith En Route To South America William P. Smith, professor and chairman of the electrical engineering department at the University of Kansas, is en route to Bogota, Colombia, on an assignment for the Institute for International Education. For the remaining three weeks of January and for a month next summer he will consult with engineering faculty at the National University of Colombia at Bogota and at the University of Valle in Cali, Colombia. At the former he will assist in the setting up of electrical and mechanical engineering laboratories. At Valle he will confer with the dean on matters of curriculum. Prof. Smith, a member of the KU faculty since 1950, has been chairman of the electrical engineering department since 1953. He will return to Lawrence January 31. Sixty Currier & Ives prints are on display in the south lounge of the Kansas Union. The exhibit will close Jan. 27. Today the importance of these Currier & Ives prints lies in the pictorial record which they furnish of 19th Century America. Currier and Ives Prints on Display They portrayed Indians, pioneer life of the West, fires, wrecks, battles, steamboats on the Mississippi, clipper ships, whaling, railroads, hunting, fishing, boxing, horseracing, religion, home life, marriage, temperance, feminine beauty and clothing. The prints on display in the Kansas Union are on loan from the Prints and Photographs Division of the Library of Congress. The display is being circulated throughout the United States under the auspices of the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. ASC Grants President Veto The All Student Council last night granted the student body president power to veto all ASC bills. Melvin Saferstein, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student, proposed the amendment to the present ASC legislative bill. He said the president should have the power to veto bills because "he represents the whole student body," while the ASC members represent "special interests" such as fraternities, sororities, dormitories, etc. THE AMENDMENT met no opposition and passed unanimously. It provides for a two-thirds majority vote to overrule the student body president's veto. At present, the student body president has only the right of discussion at ASC meetings. Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior, Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior, is president of the student body. In other action, the ASC set spring election dates. Primaries will be held April 17-18, and the general elections will be held April 24-25. A resolution setting a permanent time and place for ASC meetings was also passed. Hollace Cross, Kansas City, Mo., junior, proposed the resolution. He said that at present students who want to come to ASC meetings are confused about when and where it will meet. Gene Gaines, Joplin, Mo., junior, resigned from the ASC last night. He was replaced by Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission sophomore. The resolution on the possibility of expanding Watkins Hospital sooner than the KU building program calls for did not come up. Justice is the bread of the nation; it is always hungry for it — Chateaubriand Portraits of Distinction 摄影师 HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 AZZIP .ssaM 446 0469-3 IV NED EHT ?SNREVAC MAN, LIKE FINALS ARE NO SWEAT! Cool your finals with college outlines and study aids from The Kansas Union Book Store by Barnes & Nobel by Barnes & Nobel outlines of . . . Economics Accounting History Chemistry Physics Psychology ... and many other subjects by Schaums theory & sample problems worked in . . . Chemistry Physics Calculus Trigonometry Algebra Analytic Geometry WEAT! S KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1962 Jayhawks Meet Wildcats At Manhattan Tonight By Steve Clark The Kansas Jayhawkers' opponent tonight will be like a mad bull who sees a red flag waving in front of him. KU travels to Manhattan to meet the fifth-ranked Kansas State Wildcats who were upended in their conference opener Saturday night by Colorado 75-61. The Wildcats will be seeking revenge for their smarting loss against a Jayhawker five who has been able to muster only a 4-7 record thus far and, like the Wildcats, lost their opener to Nebraska 69-67. THE WILDCATS have rolled to a 10-2 record and won the annual Big Eight pre-season tournament. Kansas State's other loss was to Adolph Rupp's perennial basketball power, the Kentucky Wildcats, at Lexington. The Wildcats, although unanimously the pre-season favorite to win the conference title, have not fared well against league opponents. The Wildcats handled a cold-shooting Nebraska five with complete ease, but had trouble with Missouri and Iowa State in winning the tournament crown. Iowa State gave the Wildcats a big scare in the tourney finals when it pushed the nationally-ranked five down to the wire before bowing 69-67. The Wildcat's conqueror, Colorado, had been unimpressive pre- Betas, 'B' Champs, Lose to Phi Gams Phi Gamma Delta dampened Beta Theta Pi's hopes of retaining its Fraternity "B" basketball championship by defeating the Betas 36-26 in intramural league action yesterday. In Fraternity "A" league play Sigma Phi Epsilon edged byLambda Chi Alpha 35-32, Sigma Alpha Epsilon walloped Tau Kappa Epsilon 57-35, Delta Upsilon rolled over Kappa Sigma 61-40, and Phi Delta Theta handled Phi Kappa Theta 38-21 Alpha Kappa Lambda defeated Lambda Chi Alpha 27-22 in the only other Fraternity "B" game. In Independent "B" play; the Gunners 51, the Defenders 29; MBA 43, Ace Pearson 26; Chemistry 35. Liakona 27; V-I-C-E won by forfeit from Delta Function. Daddy PITTSBURGH — (UPI) — Big Daddy Lipscomb of the Pittsburgh Steelers who got his name because he called everybody else "Little Daddy" would like to be a real Daddy after his playing days. "I'd like to open a boys' camp after I retire," says the massive defensive tackle. V. Ramanathan America's Nazis: are they really a threat? The American Nazi Party is a nest of hatemongers. And it's only one of 1,000 radical right-wing groups. In this week's Post, a U.S. senator speaks out in "Voice of Dissent." He rips into home-grown fascists. And tells why he thinks they're even more dangerous than Reds. The Saturday Evening POST JANUARY 13 ISSUE NOW ON SALE vicious to its meeting Kansas State at Boulder. The Buffalooes ended a four-game losing streak at Kansas City when they defeated Oklahoma State 76-67 in consolation play. THE BUFFALOES went into the Kansas State game with a 5-5 record but let "bygone be bygones" as they played chin.pionship ball rolling to a 46-32 halftime lead. The Wildcats, like K-State teams of the past, roared back in the second half, but instead of overtaking their opponent as they usually do, they could not "pull the game out of the fire." The Wildcats did cut Colorado's margin to six, but could not build enough momentum to pass the Buffers. The Kansas rivalry will pit the conference's number one scorer against the number three scorer. The Jayhawker's Jerry Gardner leads the Big Eight with a 22.5 average. Wildcat Mike Wroblewski is averaging 20 points per contest. WROBLEWSKI, a 6-8 senior center, was the only Wildcat scoring in double figures against Colorado. His 21 points was overshadowed by Ken Charlton, the league's second-high scorer, who scored 31 points. Wroblewski currently holds every individual mark in the 1961-62 Kansas State record book. His 31 points against Xavier is a scoring high for the Wildcats; his 17 rebounds is tops in that department. His other records are 13 field goals against Xavier and 12 free throws against Missouri. THE WILDCATS will throw a stable starting lineup backed by capable bench strength against the Jaghawkers. Coach Tex Winter will round out his quintet with guards Al Peithman, the only other Wildcat with double-figure scoring average, 11 points, and Richard Ewy, and forwards Gary Marriott and Pat McKenzie. Ready to rest the starters will be Phil Heitmeyer and Joe Gottfrid at the forward spots, Warren Brown at guard, and seven-foot Roger Suttner at center. The Jayhawker attack will be centered around Gardner and Nolen Ellison who is pushing the league's top scorers with a 17.8 scoring average. THE KANSAS front line will yield several inches to the Wildcats. John Matt is the Jayhawkers tallest starter at 6-6, and Jim Dumas, starting forward, stands only 6-1. Marriott, McKenzie, and Heitmeyer all are 6-5. A sell-out crowd is expected to watch the arch-rivals meet for the 145th time. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Dotson, Hayward and Hadley Honored at Awards Banquet Bill Dotson, Charlie Hayward, and Herald Hadley were honored at the annual cross-country awards banquet held last night in the Kansas Union. Dotson, a senior, received the Mark's Jewelry trophy given annually to the captain of the cross-country squad. Hayward, a junior, was selected by his teammates as captain of next fall's team. Hadley, a freshman, received a trophy given annually to the most outstanding freshman cross-country runner. Cross-country coach Bill Easton presided at the banquet honoring both the varsity and freshman cross-country squads, and attended by KU athletic department officials, alumni, and members of press and radio. A review of the season was given by Don Pierce, KU sports publicity director. Assistant coach Bob Lawson presented members of the freshman squad. Easton recognized the varsity squad members and presented the awards. An oddity of the banquet was the presence of four Kansas cross-country captains. Besides Dotson former captains Wes Santee, Al Frame and Bill Mills were present. The Jayhawker squad this year returned the Big Eight cross-country crown to Kansas after a year's moratorium. Oklahoma State dethroned the Jayhawkers in 1960. Every man who observes vigilantly and resolves steadfastly grows unconsciously into genius. — Edward Bulwer-Lytton CORRECTION NOTICE Co-operative Transatlantic Charter for KU Departure from Paris AUG. 22 REA E.E.SENIORS - LOOK into the engineering opportunities open in rural electrification and telephony - ASK your Placement Office for pamphlets telling what the Rural Electrification Administration offers for a challenging career with all advantages of Federal Civil Service - SIGN UP for a personal interview with the RSA Recruiting Representative who will be at your Placement Office February 16, 1962 电力 NOW SHOWING! 3 At 7:00 & 9:10 Features At 7:10 & 9:20 AUDREY HEPBURN in BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S A JUROR SHEPARD PRODUCTION MICKEY STAMFORD GEORGE PEPPARD PASCENO ABUCT NEAL DESEN BASAM MICKEY ROONEY TECHNICOLOR DISTributed by SALESMAN DOWNS ELVIS PRESLEY GUIDES YOU THROUGH A PARADISE OF SONG ! BLUE HAWAII HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION TECHNICOLOR® AND PANAVISION® 14 TERRIFIC SONGS JOAN BLACKMAN·ANGELA LANSBURY·NANCY WALTERS STARTS SATURDAY! Granada THEATRE...Telephone V13-5785 STARTS TOMORROW! DOUBLE FEATURE! THE EXCITING MOVIE ABOUT THE SENSATION! "HEY, LET'S TWIST!" With the stars and the music that started it! DEEP STARLITERS CAMPBELL' RANDAZZO AIMEN LAHPERT & LOUIS THE PEPPERMINT LOUNGERS Directed by HARRY KOMM CICS GARDNER FHL HACKADY A PARAMOUNT RELEASE PEPPERMINT CAVAGE Right out of New York's famed Temple of the Twist! PEPPERMINT LANCAUSE CARRIAGE Right out of New York's famed Temple of the Twist! ENDS TONITE Plus Co-Feature — "BLUEPRINT FOR ROBBERY" "PARIS BLUES" VARSITY REATIVE ... Telephone VARSITY 2507 BACHELOR IN PARADISE CAPTION CONTEST! (The winners were judged by a committee of film distributors in Kansas City) 1st PLACE WINNER PLACE WINNER Mrs. Robert Teel, Columbia, Mo Caption: "Bing never had it so good" CONTA tinted found 2nd Robert Bartung, Columbia, Mo. Captain: 'Ye Gods! Me with my hands full!' 3rd PLACE WINNER Josephine Rogers, 816 West 22nd Terrace, LAWRENCE, KANSAI Caption: "I bought book, bread and burgundy! I'll be that man." Lost: at Tee REWA 4th PLACE WINNER Charles Furman, Manhattan, Kansas Caution: "So they're using plastic in spike heels now, huh?" Lost; Conta GSP. 1954 heate drivir VI 3- 1951 clean or ca 1959 C er. G o tires at N e a n a, 2941. 8' x other Satur TERI tenni hoga room comb VI 3- FOR Firea Profe all st celler Tenn CLASSIFIED ADS LOST CONTACT LENSES on Dec. 19. Blue- tinted in a flat, white case. Reward. If found call Bob Thomas, VI 3-4711. 1-11 LOST! SPOTTER SCOPE in vicinity of rile tissue Ext. 339 - 1-11 mary Science Dept. Page 7 Large brown briefcase with smaller black briefcase inside. Both have initials "R. S.". Lost near Building 5, Stouffer Place. Business papers inside needed badly. $10 Reward. David Suttle, Building 5, Apartment 12 or VI 3-3833. Lost: Brown overcoat length cord. coat Name and address input. REWARD: 1-15 Lost: Glad glasses near Fraser Friday. GSP: Red glass - Room 40-1-11 GSP: Phone VI 3-9123. FOR SALE 1859 OPEL REKORD, 2 dr. radio & heatr. Good condition with 2 near new snow tires included. Low mileage. See or call at Nel's & Buck's Bury, 23rd and Louisiana. IV 3-4081. After 5 p.m. call VI 3-2841. I 1-19 1954 DODEG: 4 door, V-8. stick, radio, heater, new snow tires. Great for winter driving. Excellent condition. $300. Call VI 3-1584 until 9 p.m. 1-12 Anastasi, Psychological Testing — $3.50 Terman and Merrill, Measuring Intelligence, $2.25. Marjorie Earring, Box 83, Olathe, Kansas. 1-16 FOR SALE; GUNS, Robert Redding girarms. We are offering special re-building Special this week, all steel Hi-Standard 22 automatic. Ex- portation fee is $395. Tehn. (in rear). Cali V1 3-7001. 1-12 REPOSSESSED MAGNAVOX portable Stereo. Like new. New guarantee. Automatic. $65. Pettengil-Divis, your Magnavox dealer. 723 Mass. 1-12 1951 FORD 2 door, B & H. good tires, or CHEVROLET 2 door, B & H. good tires, or CV I 2-3887 up to t11 pll. 1-11 MAGNAVOX PORTABLE FM & AM transistor radio. Reduced to $75.00. Pettengill-Davis, your Magnavox Dealer. 723 Mass. 1-12 8" x 42" MOBILE HOME with awning & call VI 2-1422 evening Saturdays. 1-11 TERRIFIC LOCATION to KU & Centennial School, 3 bedrooms, rancher, matherogy kitchen, large living room, dining room, attached garage, utility room, combination aluminum storms. $12,000—VI 3-8976—1-10 FOR SALE OR RENT: 2 bdrm. house trailer, 40 x 8', air cond. & in good condition. Located at Hillcrest Trailer Court or call VI 3-3884. 1-10 MAGNAVOX 6 transistor phone radio, Davis, your Magnau- Dealer, 723 Mass. M 1-12 GOING TO EUROPE. Will sell 2 good cars,豪车 car, $550. Also 1958 Jaguar 3.4 Sedan. White with red leather upholstery. Condition condition, $2.259. Call V-1-108795. OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, service, rentals. Venance Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-3644. NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Printing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 912 Mass. Phone: 3-0151 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. GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $3.50. free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7553. VI 3-5778. tf 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 IV 3-4201. tf PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition: formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. USED MAGNAVOX 21" table model TV -$47.50 with base. Used Magnavox HiFi- $40. Pettentelli Davis, 723 Mass ft 1957 Triumph TR-3, radio, heater, marcel sale. Sale! YS-1 5017-1 1-11 Kansan Want Ads Get Results MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cream. Crushed ice in water repellent ed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies i plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI. 0350. FOR RENT VACANCY AVAILABLE for one or two men at 1037 Tenn. Twin beds, everything on campus, all students on same floor. Available now. Call VI 3-5137 after 5 p.m. or weekends. BASEMENT APARTMENT, suitable for two men students. Everything furnished is electric. Private. Available now. Call VI 3-5137; after five or weekends. FURNISHED APARTMENT: Private bath, within walking dist. of KU. Suitable for or single students. Phone VI 3-6158 during noon hour to tween 5 and 6 p.m. 1-19 NICE SINGLE ROOM: Well furnished, next to Union, Telephone & off-street addresses graduating, Available Feb. 1, and $22.50 per month, Call VI 3-6696. 1-28 LARGE QUIET ROOM for boys. Priv. bath & entrance. Very close to campus. 1617 Oxford Road. Come evenings or Sundays. 1-12 BOARD & ROOM, $35 a month. VI 2- 4385. 1-12 ROOMS FOR MEN: $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from Union. Available Feb. 1st. One single and 1 double room. Quiet. Call VI 3-4092 or call at 1301 La. 1-12 URNISHED basement implant. Utilities paid. month 720 Miss VI 3-8302. $5 - 10 month 725 Miss VI 3-8302. $5 - 10 OR RENT. PRIVATE rooms for spring Salt Marvin, VI 3-3390 1-11 FURNISHED APARTMENT. & furnished 2 bedroom home. VI 2-2206. 1-11 FOR RENT. Two bedroom cottages garage, fitted en suite. Garage garage, fitted yard. Call VI 3-8434. 1-10 3 ROOM FURNISHED apt. for 2. Completely private, 1st floor, all utilities paid. $40 ea. Located at 1029 Miss. Inquire in 105 Miss., VI 3-4349. 1-10 NEW 2 BEDROOM apts. Furn. or unburn. Elec. range, air cond., garbage disposal. Lower rates to year around tenants. 2331 Alabama. Call VI 3-2346. 1-10 LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2, rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 0731. Rooms for rent: Mature woman or girl. Private entrance and private bath, well equipped air conditioned. First-floor ½ block from campus. West Hills. Call I 3-1077. Call I 1-11 For graduate men, or seniors expecting to graduate from college, decorated furnished apartments one block from Union. Ideal study conditions. Limited study paid. Point of view pointment call VI 3-8534. 1-11 Park Plaza South Apartments Are you satisfied where you now live? Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Curved Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking Central Air Conditioning We will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 2-8253 Office - 1912 W. 25th Room for Rent: to mature male student. Very private. Shower & semi-bath, well heated and air conditioned. Call VI 3-3077. 1-11 Lawrence's Only Garden Apartments 2. MAN APT., $55 a month. Quiet room, Cafe. 3-1700, ask for treasurer. CI 3-1700, ask for treasurer. GRADUATE MEN — Why climb the hill? Large rooms available now. ½ block from Union, $25, 1213 Oread. Call for appointment, VI 3-6798 or VI 3-8767. 1-10 TRAILER SPACE for rent. Good location for students. Set up for '8' or '10' widths. Nice yard with trees. See at Hillcrest Trailer Court. Or call VI 3-3884. 1-10 3-ROOM APARTMENT available next to 2-ROOM entrance and entrance Call. ViT LM 3-4271 - 1-15 LARGE ROOM with priv. bath for 2 girls Call Vale 7642 after 5 or on weekends 1-10 7642 3 ROOM NICELY furnished apt. $2½ blocks from campus. Priv. entr., phone & bath $55 a month. utilities paid. Boys preferred. Phone VI 3-7850. 1-10 LARGE FURNISHED apartment. e a s t s, utilities paid, $50. Call VI 3-6294. HOME COOKED meals. Served family room for gentleman. Phone 3-1-4567. Kansan Want Ads Get Results TUTORING PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS MATH TUTORING in undergrad. courses by math grad. stud. Reasonable. VI 2-0731. tf TRANSPORTATION WANTED — ride between KC and KU Call Bill Vale or Bill White. V1-12 CAR POOL. Need two more congenial neighbors to help. Mail to Lawrence daily. Call TA 2-1233. Kansas City or send postal card to John 4510 Fisher Ave., Kansas City KS. Kanssis. I-11 USED BAR BELL set. 130 lbs. or more. Call Mike Smith, VI 3-5721. 1-10 WANTED HELP WANTED STUDENT WIFE to do secretarial work, and wrote reports on patient wages, VI 3-5060 or VI 3-4077. 1-10 STUDENT PART TIME help with any type of upholstering experience. Soir's Upholstery Shop, 646 W. 23rd. VI 3-6255. 1-12 3. N.S. NEEDED: Full or part time. General duty any shift. Also operating room contact 475. Blasingame. Car collect. Shelter 2-3344 or Cherry 2-2922, Ottawa, Kansas. MIMEOGRAPH OPERATOR-TYPIST: must be experienced, accurate typist. IBM electric typewriters; addressgraph operator, experienced on power-driven hard drives. Job duties and Service positions. See Thos. C. Ryther, 117 Flint Hall. Phone KU-373. tf Help Wanted: Dishwasher, 7 days a week. Call VI 3-7810 or come to 1225 Oread. tf TYPING Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates. VI 3-8833. FORMER SECRETARY with electric writer wishes to do typing. Reason- able rates. Mrs. Nancy Cain, VI 3-0524. 1-10 MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." - Now at two 470,125. 10/20/2020 14:10 Lawrence Ave. & 1021½ Mass. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-9136. Ms. Lloyd. Gebihsch. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, research articles, neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Shelf 1511, Wl 21, St. Ct. VI 3-6440. rf 1511, Wl 21, St. Ct. VI 3-6440. 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 would like typing in many languages, a seasonally rates. Call VTi 3-2651 any time. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable. Mr. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, V1 - 21648. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, Electronic typewriter. Reasonable Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. TYPIST. experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type heses, term papers, and themes, neatly in new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper neede typing. Special rates to students. Execu- tive Medical Services. S917 B Woods Mission, HE 2-7718. Eves or Sat- RA 2-2186. FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing papers, rumes, rates and distortions. Reasonable rates. Mrs Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. Mrs tf DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1962 BUSINESS SERVICES WOMAN WOULD LIKE TO DO IRONING for students or baby sitting with child under 1 year of age. Call VI 2-2368. 1-12 University Daily Kansan RAY WILEY TEXACO, 23rd & La. Tune Up & brake adjustment. Service calls. Pick up & delivery. Phone VI 2-0381. 1-16 EXPERIENCED MOTHER — would like child to care for, 3 to 4 yrs. old, in her home. Also would like ironing, 15c per piece. 340 Indiana, VI 2-3473. tf ALTERATIONS, men & women, men's coats, coats relied. CALL VI 1348. U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-in Pet Center - most complete shop in midwest. Phone VI 3-2921. Modern service — open week days 8 to 6:30 fm TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding rows, etc. Ola Smith, $939 \frac{1}{2} $ mills. Call VI 3-5263. 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. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. tf ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- cation of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN: CAMPUS WANTED — BABYSITTING. Law student's wife wishes to baby-sit by day or week. Home adjacent to campus. Call VI 3-1846. 1-22 Jay SHOPPE 12th & Oread JANUARY SALE Thursday - Friday - Saturday - SKIRTS - TAPER PANTS - SWEATERS FALL and HOLIDAY DRESSES REDUCED 40% 1/2 PRICE - PURSES REDUCED - GLOVES 40% COSTUME JEWELRY WOOL SUITS 1/2 PRICE Seven size 8's Eight size 10's One size 12 Two size 14's WINTER SLEEPWEAR 1/2 PRICE REDUCED 30% Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1962 Thursday, Jan.11 9:30 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 11, 9:30 a.m. January Clearance Sale! Suits $50 Values - Now 39.95 $60 Values - Now 47.95 69.50 Values Now 55.50 $85 Values - Now 72.25 $95 Values - Now $80.75 "Door Buster" Special! One Group 68 Suits $60 Values - While They Last $39.95 Dress Shirts Dress Shirts One Group $5.00 Values - Now $3.79 3 for $11.00 Raincoats Fine For Dress Newest Styles $15.95 Values - Now $11.95 $22.95 Values - Now $17.20 Jackets and Outercoats Entire Stock 25% Off Entire Stock Topcoats Latest Styles Latest Patterns Cord and Suede Cloth Suits and Sport Coats 1/2 Off 1/3 Off Only about 60 pair Cotton Wash Pants One Group 1/2 Off Reg. Price $4.95-$6.95 Sport Shirts New Styles New Patterns $5.00 Values - Now $3.99 $5.95 Values - Now $4.75 Sweaters Entire Stock One Group One-Third Off One Group One-Half Off Dress Slax One Group Reg. $12.95-$16.95 Now 25% Off Sport Coats $30 Values-Now 22.50 $35 Values-Now 26.25 37.50 Values Now 28.50 39.95 Values Now 29.95 Daily hansan 59th Year, No.68 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, Jan. 11, 1962 Kennedy Asks Power To Cut Taxes and Tariffs WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Kennedy asked Congress today for an array of new economic tools, including discretionary power to cut tariffs and reduce personal income taxes to strengthen the free world against the Communist offensive. In his State of the Union message to the newly convened lawmakers, President Kennedy said a cold war armistice "seems very far away." He noted particularly the critical problems posed by Berlin, Laos, and Viet Nam. He cited with obvious pride, however, U.S. military progress during his first year in the White House and said his new defense budget provides for more missiles, men and substantial increases in air force fighter units. PRESIDENT KENNEDY'S wideranging economic, defense and foreign policy proposals were keyed to the theory that prosperity must be maintained at home to counter successfully the constant threat of military, political and economic aggression by the Communists. This country, he said, has "rejected any all-or-nothing posture which would leave no choice but inglorious retreat or unlimited retaliation." His 6.000-word message, delivered in person to a joint session of the House and Senate, was carried to the rest of the country and overseas by radio and television. - The President renewed his request for health insurance for the aged financed through the social security system — a plan opposed by the American Medical Association and many conservative members of Congress. - HE RENEWED IN STRONG terms his request for federal aid to education for public school construction, teacher salaries, loans for new college buildings, federally-financed college scholarships and a new nationwide attack on adult illiteracy. ★ TOP ITEM on the President's foreign agenda was trade. He proposed a new five-year plan to replace the expiring Reciprocal Trade Act. It would gradually eliminate certain tariffs in return for similar concessions by the European Common Market. Tariffs in other areas would be reduced by as much as 50 per cent. $\bullet$ HE SAID HIS DEFENSE blueprint called for 300 additional Polaris and Minuteman missiles, two new army divisions replacing national guard units now on duty, plus "substantial other increases" to boost Air Force fighter units, procurement of equipment and the continental defense and warning systems. The first half of the message dealt with the domestic scene. Many of his proposals were in capsule form, to be developed in greater detail later in the winter through a series of special messages to Congress. Included in his domestic plans: ● A 12-POINT PROGRAM for strengthening the economy and fighting inflation. This embraced an 8 per cent tax credit for investment in machinery and equipment to spur plant modernization; standby authority to pump federal funds into public works and other projects should unemployment rise to a specified level, and training programs to meet the manpower upheavals of automation. - HIS FISCAL 1963 budget will be balanced if Congress increases postal rates, adopts certain tax reforms including a withholding tax on dividends and wages, and extends present excise and corporate tax rates. Later this year he will send Congress a special transportation message which will recommend some forms of tax relief for public carriers. - A NEW, COMPREHENSIVE farm program to replace the present "patchwork accumulation of old laws" with "new, realistic measures." The government must cope with mounting surpluses before they lead to "a national scandal or a farm depression." - NEW LAWS TO FIGHT crime, air pollution and mass transit problems of the nation's cities. He called again for creation of a new department of urban affairs and housing, a proposal left pending in the last Congress. He promised forthcoming detailed recommendations for legislation to boost the federal penalties against illicit sale of habit-forming drugs and mislabeled products. (Continued on page 8) Nichols Thinks Legislature May OK Recommendations The Kansas Legislature can probably be expected to pass Gov. John Anderson's State budget recommendations a KU administrator said today. "I didn't have a chance to ask any questions yesterday in Topeka," said Raymond Nichols. (Mr. Nichols was in Topeka yesterday for Gov. Anderson's budget recommendations and address to the Legislature.) "But I think there is a good deal of harmony between the Legislature and the Governor especially since the governor and the majority in the Legislature are of the same political party. Mr. Nichols and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe along with C. Arden Miller, dean of the medical school will go to Topeka next Tuesday for hearings on the KU and KU Medical Center budgets. Asked if the groups would attempt to bring up the matters there in which KU took a loss in the governor's recommendations, Mr. Nichols said it had not been decided. Senators yesterday hailed the governor's budget message, according to a United Press International poll, but several saw points they said were inadequate. Sen. William C. Farmer (R-Wichita) said, "The governor faced Sen. Wade Myers (D-Emporia) said, "It was a very good message. I heartily agree on the governor's statement on reapportionment. However, I think we should increase the school aid to $30 per pupil rather than $20. (He was referring to emergency state aid to public schools. The governor refused to ask for more than the present statutory rate of $20 per pupil.) the reality of the situation, certainly. It takes more money than we have to operate most of the time. Twenty dollars a pupil in school aid is not adequate but that is a good example of where we need more money than we have." "It looks like the program of former Gov. George Docking will finally be enacted," Sen. Joseph McDowell, senate minority leader (D-Kansas City) said. "I am happy the Republicans have decided to go along with us." "It was on the whole a constructive message," Sen. Charles B. Joseph (D-Potwin) said. "But the weakest part was the area relating to aid to schools. The Legislative council, it is apparent, has been making no progress on solving that problem." (Editor's note. See page 5.) Baby, It's C-C-Cold... When it gets this cold, a few degrees one way or the other makes little difference, except for conversational purposes. But, in case you are interested, the temperature dropped to 15 below last night in the Lawrence area. Bv Walt Blackledge Low marks ranging from 16 below at Garden City to 4 above at Wichita were recorded in the state. Yesterday's highs—from 14 above at Russell and Wichita to 5 above at Garden City and Olathe—were not high enough to melt any snow—obviously. THE UNITED STATES WEATHER Bureau injected a cheery note, however, in releasing the statement that no cold air masses or southwestern storm centers appear to be heading for our area. Most Lawrence residents seemed to feel that the cold air had arrived For what comfort it is worth, the rest of the country is also shivering in frigid temperatures. Records lows were recorded in Texas, where below-freezing weather was cold enough to kill fruit in the Rio Grande valley citrus orchards. Dallas and Fort Worth reported lows of 8 degrees with two inches of new snow before dawn. in sufficient quantity this morning as they bundled up in overshoes, coats, gloves and odd assortments of scarves and caps, making little effort to appear chic. The fashion in outerwear is dictated by the desire to remain warm enough to get to one's chosen destination. IN STUBENVILLE, Ohio, deputy sheriffs heard glass breaking below the second-floor office in the Jefferson County Jail. They found Jerry Brewer, 19, Toronto, Ohio, trying to break into the jail "because it was Though the freezing weather may be occasioning hundreds of cases of cold feet and sniffles, KU students appear to be a hardy lot. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, hospital administrator, this morning reported three cases of pneumonia and several bad colds among the 25 patients on the hospital roster. too cold outside." Brewer was given a chance to get warm as he was held for investigation of intoxication and destruction of property. BUT THE total number of patients represents only about 50 per cent of the hospital capacity and admissions far from indicate a general run of illness on the campus, the administrator said. He said despite continued requests that students and faculty members obtain a flu vaccination there has been no rush for the shots. BRRR. Nothing can be seen of Zeke Wigglesworth, Lawrence junior, but his nose. Students at KU are making like turtles, as the cold wave continues.The temperatures are expected to rise, however. P-T-P Plans Student Ambassador Trips KU's People-to-People program has big plans for a few thousand American students—plans to send them overseas as student ambassadors. William Dawson, Prairie Village junior and KU chairman of People-to-People, said today that the program will give American students an opportunity to speak with their school alumni who now live abroad. It will also give the students a chance to visit and welcome foreign students planning to attend American colleges next year. Dawson said, "Each of the students (American) will have a list of foreign students planning to attend their universities next Fall. The students will also have a list of alumni overseas whom they can contact. Many of the alumni will probably be interested in hearing about their alma maters and it will give our students a chance to hear about the countries they are in." Before the students leave, however, they will attend orientation programs conducted by foreign students. On each campus foreign students will discuss travel in their countries. DAWSON SAID that letters had been sent to the KU alumni abroad asking them if they would like to be contacted by a KU student this summer. From the replies, he added, a list of people to visit will be compiled and given to the students. Although the students will be traveling on their own, they will assist and receive assistance from the People-to-People-sponsored program. Arrangements for these trips are underway at KU and the other Big 8 schools. It is expected that over 2,000 students will participate in the program. THE RELATIVELY low travel cost, $215 round trip New York to Paris, Dawson explained, is the result of work being done by Maupintour. They are making all the arrangements for chartered planes on a non-profit basis. This is for all Big 8 schools, not just KU. Dawson also said that People-to-People is trying to arrange free transportation from the various universities to New York where the chartered flights will leave. There is nothing definite on this plan yet. There is also a good possibility that other schools outside the Big 8 will have similar programs. That is, if they begin People-to-People programs on their campuses. Beginning in February Dawson, Rafer Johnson, Olympic decathlon champion, and Richart Barnes, Lawrence first-year law student, will begin a program to establish People-to-People on campuses throughout the nation. THE TENTATIVE PLAN, Dawson said, is to work through the federal government and Joyce C. Hall, president of Hallmark Cards, Inc., and the National People-to-People chairman, to contact the governors of each state. Through the governors they hope to contact the heads of colleges and universities. The college administrators will then be asked to arrange a state convention of student leaders concerning the program. Dawson said that he and Johnson will do most of the traveling. Barnes will work in the Midwest and serve as coordinator of the activities while stationed in Kansas City, the national People-to- People headquarters. Weather TOPEKA—(UPI) A warming trend was expected to be felt over shivering Kansas today, tonight and tomorrow. Highs today were due to reach the low 20s in most places, with lows tonight ranging from 15 to 20. Slight cloudiness was expected to move into the state tonight and tomorrow, but no precipitation was forecast. --- Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 11, 1962 Freedom and the Wall Two girls, university students, walk along the still streets. It's dark. They're talking and laughing now and then as they play a children's game of hop-sketch with the shadows. In another city, two more girls are walking along a street — a quiet street because there is a curfew. There is no laughing. The few words spoken are almost whispers. There are shadows, but no hop-sketch. THE DIFFERENCE? Two girls are students at the University of Kansas, USA, and two are students at Humboldt University, East Berlin. Without further explanation, we recognize immediately that between these girls there is more than distance, more than a language barrier, and more than a mere variety of professors and textbooks — there is a world. A world now separated by a wall. If education and the zeal for knowledge is inherent, if questions are the natural outcome of studying, then would a wall really make any difference to these students? Won't people always want to learn—regardless? Or is it possible that the wall can itself change education? Can a wall rewrite histories, can it tell people the answers before they have questions—can a wall change thought? YES, IT CAN, it does, and it did. The girls receive different educations, one curriculum slanted to the west, one to the east. Humboldt University was once among Europe's greatest and had a history rich in the tradition of Kant, Hegel, Goethe and Leibnitz. It no longer exists as more than a grave for spirited German thinkers and philosophers. The Nazis buried it, and at the funeral buried also the mandate to free education. Humboldt now survives as a dreary institution with about 10,000 students, many of whom have vanished into East German jails along with their professors. Ordered to sign up for the East German army or be expelled, the students recently wrote to the Free University of West Berlin, "Help us! We do not want to shoot at you!" Two girls walk along the streets, no laughing, no hop-sketch. KANSAS UNIVERSITY also has about 10,000 students. Though not as old, it is rich in vitality and spirit, the desire to accomplish. It breeds questions, nurtures competition and depends on individuality. Instead of a grave, its professors and students are resurrecting the thinking minds of history and philosophy, and creating the inventing mind of tomorrow's histories. Two girls walk along Jayhawk Boulevard laughing. Can students learn anywhere? Is there such a thing as academic freedom, or it is only an ambiguous ideal existing without violation? WE TALK ABOUT THE "LIMITED, tersely selected material" available to students on the other side of the wall. We talk and complain about the fact that two girls cannot laugh as freely on one campus as on another. We talk about the restrictions of students behind the wall. But what do we do about it? Nothing. And what can we do? We can educate ourselves more aptly and fully. We can learn that there is a difference in degrees of academic freedom, and we can learn that those differences produce two kinds of people—Communist-inspired and democratic-inspired. WE CAN LEARN that freedom of the mind cannot be harnessed within a wall if given a chance to break the chains, and we can learn that one person, one student body, one country is enough to break the vacuum seal over the student, any student, anywhere. Two girls walk along the street—laughing? —Kelly Smith Editor: ... Letters ... Thankfully two editorials were presented relative to the Eichmann trial, for the inherent symbolism involved is presented in a narrowed short-sighted view by Mr. Koeh for the Kansan. The broader view is more closely approximated by the quoted editorial from the Milwaukee Journal. A quick review of the following few points is only an attempt to illuminate some of the many points which bear review by Mr. Koeh and must be considered to put the trial in proper perspective. THE THEORY BEHIND the trial was definitely not "an eye for an eye" since no punishment of an individual could atone for Germany's national guilt and the heinousness of Nazism; he was tried to show that justice and retribution will be forthcoming regardless of the span of years and that the world will, though slowly, enforce justice. What type of justice or trial did the Germans or Eichmann offer for their victims to entitle them to martyrdom? This trial was not for personal vengeance since a quiet murder in LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Columbia discovered Anc. in 1412 He skipped 3 ships: Pinto, the Santa Barbara He was seeking: The Mutual of Youth P.39 Argentina without any international implications would have served for that purpose. The difficulty of bringing Eichmann to trial in Israel in open view of the world was done to support international law — not in defiance of it — in the same manner of the Nuremberg Tribunal. Eichmann and the Nazis did their work as secretly as possible for even they knew they were doing wrong and feared public reaction. "LOOK=IF I KNEW ALL THE RIGHT ANSWERS I WOULD NOT BE TEACHING!" TO PREVENT OR LESSEN emotionalism — who wouldn't be stirred at hearing a recounting of the barbarous torture and slaughter of mothers, fathers, wives, husbands, children, etc. — the court was closed or brought to order upon any initiation of a disturbance. Unanimously all syndicated and private reporters remarked at the fairness and decorum of the trial despite the content of the overpowering testimony. In contrast Eichmann and the Nazis took pride in their lack of emotion. In addition, all monies associated with the trial, for example from the news media, are being donated to charity by the Israeli government so that only good would be forthcoming from the trial. Eichmann's sentence was to die — a just sentence and not a harsh one. Were he to live he'd be in daily fear of meeting a "Nazi type court." ISRAEL AND THE JEWS, 17 years after the worst episode of genocide and inhuman actions the world records, have in accordance with prophecy indeed acted "as a light among nations" by acting as just and righteous men and adhering to the Law of Moses even when confronted with one of the main instruments of their possible extinction. Truly this is in keeping with the Book. Would other countries or religious groups, if in a similar situation have acted similarly? Would Catholic France, Protestant England or Southern Baptists act similarly if Hitler and the Germans decided to remove from the world all Catholics, Protestants or Baptists? Milton Diamond Lawrence graduate student the took world By James E. Gunn Administrative Assistant to the Chancellor for University Relations SLAN, by A. E. van Vogt. Ballantine, 35 cents. NOT AVAILABLE 2 WITHOUT SORCERY, by Theodore Sturgeon. Ballantine, 35 cents. 60 cents. PASS TO OTHERNESS, by Henry Kuttner. Ballantine, 35 cents. THE LOVERS, by Philip Jose Farmer. Ballantine, 35 cents. Ballantine Books, one of the leading publishers of science fiction in paperbacks, has brought out two classic science fiction novels and collections by two classic science fiction authors. "Slan" burst upon the science fiction world in 1940 like a supernova. In a poll conducted by a critic almost two decades later it still was ranked as the best science fiction novel of all time, if my memory serves me right. It also is one of the few books whose titles have introduced new words into the English language. You may not find "slan" in your dictionary, but after 1940—at least in science fiction circles—a mutant superman was a "slan." Not a great writer nor a great thinker, van Vogt is a great storyteller. He was part of the sudden eruption of science fiction talent that lit up science fiction in the late 1930s and early 1940s, an eruption that included Robert Heinlein, Theodore Sturgeon, Henry Kuttner, Isaac Asimov, and a few others. Van Vogt discovered a narrative gimmick that served him well: every scene of 600-800 words he tossed in a new idea. Often this led him into plot predicaments from which there was no way out; he is accused of leaving his conclusions as loosely wound as a kitten's ball of yarn. But the device also kept his stories driving ahead at a pace which allowed no reader to drop off. "Slan" starts with a little boy and his mother, telepaths, being hunted down the streets of the world's capital city by its police, of the mother being brutally killed, and of the boy struggling desperately to escape the massed forces of a world. It builds up from there. $$ ** ** $$ From that period of about 1939 to 1949—to which science fiction fans look back with longing—come two collections, one by Theodore Sturgeon, "Not Without Sorcery," and the other by the late Henry Kuttner, "Bypass to Otherness." The Sturgeon collection, as the title suggests, contains some fantasies, including the classic "It." (Science fiction, I might insert here by way of explanation, has been defined as "explained" fantasy; to science fiction fans it makes a difference.) Not as technically skillful as Sturgeon's later work, the stories nevertheless have a youthful vigor that writers seem to lose as they learn more about their craft. Henry Kuttner, who wrote so prolifically that he used a dozen pen names, including some like "Lewis Padgett" which became more famous than his own, created some of the truly classic works of short science fiction. Often they were about children, like "Mimsy Were the Borogoves" and "When the Bough Breaks." "Bypass to Otherness" contains some more classics: "Call Him Demon," "The Piper's Son," "Absalom," and "Housing Shortage," among the eight. Ballantine promises that this may be the first of three volumes. $$ ** ** ** $$ Philip Jose Farmer belongs to that group of writers whose first published story blazed them into public awareness. That story, published in 1952 in one of the lesser magazines, was "The Lovers." The phenomenon has happened often enough in science fiction to be worth an anthology of "famous firsts." When I read the story in 1952 I thought it, though compelling, awkwardly, almost painfully, written. Here, after almost as great misadventure as a space opera hero (including winning first prize in a publisher's contest and never being published), is the much smoother and still striking story of a rigid, theocratic society seen through the eyes of one tormented man—and how he finds an unhuman kind of love. Here was where Farmer began to blaze his trail of sex-themes through the Victorian forest of science fiction. A little light has begun to filter through. Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, trivweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Facebook 276, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. 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 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. Appeals Requested for Saving Life of Kansan KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UFI) — Americans have been called upon to send "a flood of letters" to save the life of a Kansan sentenced to die for the murder of two Greek sailors. Cris Gugas, a Los Angeles criminologist, said he presented an appeal containing more than 2,000 signatures recently to the Greek ministry of justice asking a new trial for Roger Ramney, 26, Chanute, Kan. He asked for more appeals as soon as possible. Raney was convicted on circumstantial evidence. Greek officials have refused to allow a lie detector test by an American group on the grounds that Greece has a law forbidding any experiments on prisoners condemned to die. RANNEY WAS CONDEMNED to death after a trial at Pireaus, Greece, the port for Athens, some months ago. He is being held at Aegina Island Prison nearby and conferred with Gugas for several hours on two separate occasions. Gugas arrived here yesterday enroute to Chanute, Kan., where he will meet with the Roger Ranney Defense Committee. He leaves today via Omaha for his home. "The kid is innocent, there's no doubt about it," Gugas told United Press International. "If anybody lost the kid's trial, it was the attorney. There really was no defense at all for Ranney. He really got a royal 'rookin.'" AN APPEAL FOR A NEW TRIAL comes before the Greek Supreme Court Jan. 20. Gugas asked for letters from "all over the United States" addressed to the Greek Prime Minister, Athens, asking that Ranney be given another chance. The 2,000 signatures presented were from residents of Chanute, Wichita and Topeka. Kan. Ranney was presented in the trial by Andreas Vacliotis, the lawyer to whom Gugas was referring. Vachlioti was discharged recently and replaced by another lawyer, Andreas Pouleas. Gugas said Pouleas is one of the "brightest criminal attorneys in Greece." He assisted in the Ranney defense during the trial, although Vachlioti did all the investigating, Gugas said. VACHLIOTIS WAS ACCUSED of squandering some $3,500 Ranney's mother sent for her son's defense. Vachliotis said he spent the money for food and other help for Ranney. Vachliotis also claimed he spent $1,500 on the press so that Ranney would get "favorable publicity in the newspapers," Gugas said. He added that he talked with top newsmen of Greece who were infuriated at Vachliotis' statement and volunteered to take lie detector tests. Gugas spent almost a month in Greece on the case. "I want to flood the Greek government with appeals for Roger," Gugas said. "This guy Vachliotis really put the kid in jail—by not doing a thing. "THERE REALLY ISN'T MUCH Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER "A report that Roger is faking a hunger strike, simply is not true. He has lost a lot of weight." time for appeals to be sent. The hearing for a new trilix is coming up soon. I think the trial was highly prejudicial in that area (Pireaus). Ranney has been reported to be fasting because of his protest over Vachliotis. Max Reiter toured unsuccessfully through the eastern United States, finding that area devoid of possibilities to build an orchestra. Too many well-known European musicians were already there. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. — (UPI)—The San Antonio symphony orchestra, ranked now as one of the 10 leading U.S. symphonies, started as the dream of a war refugee when he fled Europe in the 1930s. Refugee's Dream Librarians Raise Student Aid Grant The Kansas Library Association has increased the amount of its Grant for Study in Librarianship from $600 to $1,000 for 1962. The application deadline for the 1962 award is Feb. 1. Applicants will be judged on the basis of scholarship-a grade average of B or better for the last two years of undergraduate study is required and interest in the profession, emotional maturity and personality. The grant, awarded annually to the applicant "most likely to make the greatest contribution to librarianship," is designed to encourage persons to enter the library profession. Gugas said people in Greece were surprised that there were no defense witnesses for Ranney during the trial, while the prosecution had 40 witnesses. Gugas said there wasn't even a letter from Ranney's mother and others in Chanute because Vachliotis had told them not to say anything. The recipient may use the scholarship in attending the library school of his choice. Applicants are judged by a three-man scholarship committee including at least one college and one public librarian. The winning applicant will be announced by March 15. Application forms are available in the Watson Library office of John L. Glinka, chairman of the Kansas Library Association Scholarship Committee. Finally Reiter found reception in San Antonio, and began the task of building a successful symphony. He died in 1950. Pizza Roberto's 1 Block North of Student Union Pizza Lunch Now serving hamburgers in evenings except Sunday Free Delivery on Campus VI 3-9640 For Good Pizza The Pizza Den Located at 644 Mass. (The Old Pizza Hut) Caverns? Caverns? Comeback in Comics NEW YORK — (UPI)—The comic book publishing business has scored an enormous comeback from the setback it received in the Congressional juvenile delinquency investigations of 1953 and 1954. Two-thirds of the publishers disappeared in a shakeout. But in 1961, sales jumped to about 300 million copies, up 50 million from 1960. Page 3 Thursday. Jan. 11, 1962 University Daily Kansan WASHINGTON — (UPI) The House by a party-line vote has elected Rep. John W. McCormack its Speaker. He promptly warned that the world is in crisis, but said a strong Congress and a strong President, working together, guarantee the survival of freedom. McCormack Elected Speaker Flaming Time NEW YORK - (UPI)—A gas clock which strikes the hours with bursts of flame will top the gas industry's building at the 1962 Seattle World's Fair. Time will be indicated by the number of spokes of the clock which are lighted. For Lazy Fireside Lounging . . . Nite-Aires® LEISURE LOVELIES For Lazy Fireside Lounging . . . Nite-Aires® LEISURE LOVELIES FIRESIDE SNUGGLERS As Seen in MADEMOISELLE 1234567890 You'll love this fluffy ball of fur that encircles $5.00 your foot...promising.you a warm winter. In luscious colors: Red or Gold ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP 1 HOBO by pedwin. young ideas in shoes pedwin Here comes the HOBO ...Light-hearted, Light-footed Brushed Pigskins! NOW we've got the brand new Pedwin HOBO, best things for your feet since the elevator. They're the easiest wearing, softest walking shoes you've ever worn, a perfect casual that's soft but not sloppy in appearance. And wait till you see the new brushed pigskin material. It keeps your feet happy and casual all year 'round, is treated with Scotchgard® leather protector to resist water, dirt and stains, and insure long, long wear. Why not try on the brand new HOBO? You can meet him at your nearest Pedwin dealer. And don't forget Pedwin's other modern shoe styles ... they're all designed to meet the updated demands of today's youth. HOBO by pedwin. young ideas in shoes pedwin 1 Tan, Grey, Green $9.95 ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP University Daily Kansan Page 4 Thursday, Jan. 11, 1962 Twins Discover Tricks Can Be Embarrassing By Sue Subler A spunky pair of twins can play tricks, but the Graber girls from Hutchinson don't recommend it. Anne and Sarah Graber, junior twins studying English here, said they "tried to switch dates" when they first came to KU and people didn't know them very well. When the boy they were trying to fool returned to his seat, the twins had changed places. The resumed conversation later revealed his plight; and his embarrassment was enough to make the girls agree that "switching dates just isn't worth it!" Anne and Sarah are an active team on a number of campus committees, and they say, "The reason we work so well together is that we can say what we have to without worrying about offending the other person." The Grabers say they don't try to dress and act like twins, but "often have similar clothes and react the same way because we're so close we can't help but have similar tastes." They also think quite a bit alike and mentioned their amazement at the number of times they "both think of the same brainstorm at exactly the same time." Among the many advantages mentioned was keeping "each other on our toes in school, but we're so equal we don't actually compete." Both Anne and Sarah both have "made the same grades both semesters at KU. . . . Though we're not consciously trying to get the same marks, it almost always works out that way." They feel very fortunate that these like tastes and ideas have not once led them to any "antagonism about boys." They say they never have dated the same boys. John W. Pozdro, associate professor of organ and theory, will be a juror for the Rhea A. Sosland Chamber Music Award Competition sponsored by the Jewish Community Center of Kansas City. This is his third year as a juror. "Our kindergarten teacher once told Mom to put names on our pigtails so she could tell us apart in class," they recall. Anne, older by 15 minutes, said, "We quit dressing alike when our mother quit buying our clothes!" Pozdro Named To Music Jury Other jurors are Hans Schwieger, conductor of the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra, and Darius Milhaud, composer and conductor. A $1,000 prize will be awarded to the person submitting the winning original composition for string quartet. Hate no one; hate their vices, not themselves—John Brainard The girls are members of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and are in their second year at KU. They attended their freshman year at Bradford Junior College, Bradford, Mass. League President Bernard Workman said a study of the transcript of a magistrate's court hearing in Windsor, Ont., last Sept. 21 has led him to believe an appeal against the sentence would be successful. New & Used Parts and Tires The League was called in by Italian-born Mrs. Amantea Masotto, 33, wife of a Windsor, Ont., dental surgeon, after she fled Canada with her German Shepherd dog, Lance, LONDON — (UPT) — The Canine Defense League announced today it will battle to save the life of a dog condemned to death by a Canadian court for biting a man. Auto Wrecking & Junk League to Fight for Dog East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 BOWLING is FUN! Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 32 AUTOMATIC LANES to save him from being put to death for allegedly biting a Windsor citizen. Mrs. Masotto flew Lance to the Milan home of her mother after winning a three-day stay of execution for the 95-pound dog. Things do not change; we change. -Henry David Thoreau COMPLETE OPERAS On LP These Prices While in Stock Carmen (Rise Stevens) ... $8.98 La Traviata (Leonard Warren) ... $8.98 La Gioconda (Zinka Milanov) ... $8.98 II Trovatore (Price, Tucker Warren) ... $8.98 Turandot (Bjoerling) ... $8.98 Masked Ball (Toscanini) ... $8.98 I Puritani (Callas) ... $9.98 Mignon (Brussels Opera) ... $9.98 Madame Butterfly (Gigli) ... $6.98 Louise (Paris Opera-Comique) ... $9.98 JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Acme LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Downtown VI 3-5155 WE ALWAYS DO QUALITY WORK ON YOUR CLEANING The Next Shipments Will Be Priced at $14.98 BELL'S Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 VI 3-2644 925 Mass. St. For that delightful look of freshness and neatness... Let us give your clothes the very best of care. Ask about our many special services. Acme C Pickup & Delivery Service K Item New Salar Oper (lib Studu Geold Exter Speci Rout Repl Malo Tw Y Tw expre action publi The yeste obtai opi ident said tions attac to th "I call kind man I'm i woul one on n publ BR ior a Dem the a Re To Page 5 KU Budget Breakdown University Daily Kansan Item KU Request Gov.'s Recommend New Positions Classified amount $75,000 $9,570 number 23 7 Teaching amount 311,250 191,250 number 42 26 Salary Increases, faculty 5% 4% Operating Expenses 145,000 145,000 (library operation included) (40,750) (40,750) Student Help 25,424 none Geological Survey 11,900 11,900 Extension 14,500 14,563 Special Repairs traffic control plan 30,000 none repave Sunnyside Ave. 15,000 none Routine Repairs 165,000 135,000 Replacement of Blake Hall 720,000 720,000 Malott Hall lecture room 90,000 90,000 air conditioning 20,000 Two Demos Disagree on Young GOP Poll Plans Two Young Democrats at KU have expressed varied but positive reactions to the proposed Young Republicans polling organization. The polling group, as described in yesterday's Kansan, is a scheme to obtain random samplings of student opinion at KU. Jerry Dickson, president of the Young Republicans, has said that on certain political questions, the Young Republicans would attach the Republican point of view to the poll data. "I don't know about this telephone call poll idea," he said. "It was this kind of poll that showed that Trumman would be defeated in 1948. Also, I'm not completely sure that the poll would be non-partisan. And I for one would be unwilling to comment on my views so that they would be published in a Republican news sheet BRUCE WRIGHT, Lawrence junior and vice president of the Young Democrats expressed doubts as to the accuracy of the poll. Reception Sunday To Honor Strothman A reception by faculty and students honoring Dr. and Mrs. Maynard Strothman will be held from 2-4 p.m. Sunday at the Presbyterian Student Center, 1204 Oread Ave. Dr. Strothman, the new Presbyterian pastor at KU, assumed his duties here Jan 3. Previously he was pastor at Colorado State University in Fort Collins since 1956. Safety Belt Sales NEW YORK—(UPI)—Ford Division of the Ford Motor Co. reports deliveries of safety seat belts to dealers have jumped more than 255 per cent, from an average of 6,000 a month last year. The current rate is about 21,300 per month. Page - Greighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil GUY'S GUY'S POTATO CHIPS GUYS POTATO CHIPS Be Wise — Buy Guy's for the purposes of the Young Republicans." Be Wise — Buy Guy's He said that the idea of a poll was a good one, however. "I THINK that it would serve a purpose, but I think another group could handle it better." Michael Thomas, Ft. Riley junior and one-time candidate for the Young Democratic presidency, said that the poll was a good idea. "If they (the Young Republicans) handle it the way they should, the way it was written up in the Kansan, it should be pretty good. I would like to see how many radicals we have at KU." Thursday. Jan. 11, 1962 Official Bulletin Western Civilization Comprehensive Education. Jan. 13, 1 p.m., rooms to be assigned. Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 & 8 a.m. St. John's Church, New York City French Ph.D. Reading Exam: Jan. 13. French Ph.D. Reading Exam: Jan. 13, 11 a.m.. Fraser. Young Democrat Committee on Resections substitutions 4 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union TODAY Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 11. Januar, um fuem führt in 11 Fraser, Wahlen und ein Programm bei der Vollzug des Schule in Lawrence wird fuer uns singen. Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 p.m., Southern Baptist Activities Building, 1221 Oread. Bible study and devotional Kansas Society, Archaeological Institute Kansas Union, Speaker, Dr. Klaus Berger, KU Department of Art History; "Animorphoses and its Metamorphoses." All invited. Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion and Breakfast: 7 a.m. Cantonship House Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship; 7:30 p.m. Cottonwood Room, Union. 12:45 p.m. The University of Michigan European Mission in Finland will speak on the Hope for a Christian and Its Significance. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Trust not yourself, but your defects to know, make use of every friend and every foem.-Alexander Pope KU-Y MEMBERS Please remove your name and address from the questionnaire before returning it Wedding Bells Ringing? If you're soon to be married, don't miss Higley's Sale of sample wedding gowns 25% - 50% Discount Discount ON SAMPLE GOWNS This Thurs., Fri., Sat. only 5% New Spring and Summer Gowns are pouring into our stockroom. To make room, we're offering these samples at special prices. DROP IN AND SEE US TODAY. PHONE FOR AN APPOINTMENT IF YOU PREFER Hiqley's 935 Mass. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers "Looks like last week's snow was kinda hard on your car, buddy" CLYDE'S LAMP WICKS REWIRED CHEAP APPLES 10¢-DOZ Zero weather is the worst enemy of your car. Cold weather has a way of drawing weaknesses out in any car - new or old. Come in this week and let us check your car. Ask about our BUDGET PLAN . . almost like not paying at all. . . UNIVERSITY FORD SALES 714 Vermont VI 3-3500 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 11, 1962 Page 6 'Cats Stop Gardner; Defeat Hawks, 70-45 the fifth-ranked Kansas State Wildcats held the Big Eight Conference's leading scorer, Jerry Gardner, to seven points and humiliated the Kansas Jayhawkers 70-55 at Manhattan last night. Gary Marriott had a hot hand for the Wildcats, scoring 16 points in the first half to lead them to a 38-27 halftime margin. He added five in the second half before being removed because of a knee injury, and wound up with 21 points as the game's individual high. WILDCAT GUARD Richard Ewv put a glove-type defense on Gardner holding him to only four shots in the first half. Gardner made one field goal the first half and went zero for nine in the second stanza. The entire Kansas team had cold The Jayhawkers especially had trouble in the second half, shooting 33 times and making only four for 12 per cent. Kansas did not connect on a field goal until 7 minutes and 55 seconds had elapsed in the second half. hands. The Jayhawkers put up 54 shots, and made only 13 for a 24 per cent shooting average. The Wildcats shot 39 per cent for the contest. NOLEN ELLISON led the Kansas scorers with 16 points. Buddy Vance hit his personal high for the season with 10 points. Harry Gibson led the Jayhawkers in the first half, connecting on four long jump shots for eight points. Gibson could not connect in the second half and finished with eight. Along the JAYHAWKER trail On the brighter side for the Jawhaws was Vance, a sophomore center. He held Mike Wroblewski, Kansas State's leading scorer with a 20 point average, to 11 points. Lee Flachsbarth, a 6-5 converted football player, provided the Jayhawker's other ray of sunshine. He entered the game with 10 minutes remaining in the second half, and filled a big gap in the Kansas rebounding department. He pulled down nine rebounds to tie with Jim Dumas for the KU high. KANSAS WAS NEVER in the ball game. Marriott connected on two field goals and Wroblewski one in the first minute and a half of play to give the Wildcats a comfortable margin. At the end of five minutes of play KU was down 12-4. The Wildcats came out strong in the second half, padding their margin to 44-28 in the first six minutes. From this point on the Wildcats were unstoppable and rolled easily to their 25 point margin of victory. By Steve Clark Coach Dick Harp's Jayhawkers hit their low ebb of the season last night in Ahearn Field House at Manhattan. Many KU fans thought the Hawks gave a miserable showing in their 79-65 loss to St. Louis, but compared to the Wildcat encounter, their St. Louis play was NCAA championship caliber. What happened to the Jawhawkers was what every Kansas fan has feared for some time. Jerry Gardner would have to have a cold night sometime. The fears materialized at a most inopportune time. Gardner was carrying a 22.5 average at the time, and a team just can't win when almost 23 points are jerked out from under them. "I WAS VERY PROUD of my boys," said Kansas State coach Tex Winter. "They did much better than I expected. A lot of credit must go to our guards Ewy and Brown (Warren) for the fine defensive job they did on Gardner." Many have wondered why Kansas State coach Tex Winter has stayed with Richard Ewy at a starting guard. Ewy's box score showings are not impressive. He does not score very much and averages about five points per game. Winter's reasoning was demonstrated last night. GARDNER WAS TRYING hard. He realizes his position, but fulfilling it is not easy. Once a player reaches the peak where Gardner is, he is expected to perform like that consistently. When he doesn't then the wrath of sports fandom is wrought upon him. Ewy is a defensive player and while offense is king today, the old fashioned "floor" men are still needed. Ewy clung to Gardner so closely that the KU ace had to force shots. The win gave the Wildcats a 11-2 season record and 1-1 conference record. The Jayhawkers slipped to a 4-8 season record and are in the league's cellar with an 0-2 record. ONE PROMISING NOTE came of the game and that was Lee Flachs-barth's possibilities of helping the Jayhawk squad. Flachsbarth proved that he might be a key to KU's basketball fortunes. Nebraska beat the Javhawkers Saturday on the strength of its board play. Ivan Grupe, 6-5, 200-pounder, has his own way underneath the baskets, using his size and brute strength to clear the boards for the Cornhuskers. KU has been ailing all year because of its lack of rebound strength and height. Jim Dumas, at 6-1, has shouldered almost the entire load by himself. Dumas has done this despite the serious handicap of his size. FLACHSBARTH IS no midget. He stands 6-5 and weighs 200 pounds. Flachsbarth is a football player, who just this year started varsity basketball. He is rugged, and big men like Grune will find he is no easy match. The Kansas rebounding is what has been holding the Jayhawkers back this year. Their opponents are assured of several shots at the basket, while KU knows it most likely will have only one. Flachsbarth made rebounding easy last night. He pulled down nine rebounds in about 10 minutes. He seemed to be at the right place at the right time. He hit the boards hard and overpowered his competitors for the ball, bringing it down himself. The most difficult thing in life is to know yourself.—Thales NEW YORK — (UPI) — Place-kickers are tough enough to defend against but when they turn the tables it's almost too much. In 1961 games played on the same day, Roger Place Kickers Tough on Defense. Too After Inventory Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION Bowling Designed with the University in Mind After Inventory CLEARANCE Pen & Pencil Sets 50% Disc. Buxton Billfolds 40% Disc. CARTER'S STATIONERY 1045 Mass. VL3-6123 Leclerc, who does the Chicago Bears kicking, intercepted a Green Bay pass and ran it back 29 vards for a touchdown, and Baltimore kicker Steve Myhra stopped a Washington drive with an interception. OPEN BOWLING Following the wind-up of Fall semester leagues this Fri., and the play-offs Sat. and Sun., open bowling will be available at all times until next semester. Take advantage of this opportunity to enjoy BOWLING, BILLIARDS, and PING-PONG, morning, afternoon, and evening. Daily 8 a.m.-11:30 p.m. Sun. 1 p.m.-11:30 p.m. VIVIEN LEIGH IN TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' "THE ROMAN SPRING OF MRS. STONE" COSTARRING WARREN BEATTY with LOTTE LENYA JILL ST. JOHN CORAL BROWNE JEREMY SPENSER adapted from the novel by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS screenplay by GAIN LAMBERT produced by LOUIS GROUCHMONT directed by JOSE QUINTENO SEVEN ARTS PRESENTATION TECHNICOLOR® from WARNER BROS. After Inventory CLEARANCE Pen & Pencil Sets 50% Disc. Buxton Billfolds 40% Disc. CARTER'S STATIONERY 1045 Mass. V13-6133 NOW SHOWING! DOUBLE FEATURE! "HEY, LET'S TWIST" "BLUEPRINT FOR ROBBERY" VIVIEN LEIGH IN TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' THE ROMAN SPRING OF MRS. STONE" COSTARRING WARREN BEATTY with LOTTE LENYA JILL ST. JOHN CORAL BROWNE JEREMY SPENSER adapted from the novel by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS screenplay by GAVIN LAMBENT produced by LOUIS D'ORCHEMONT directed by JOSE QUINTERO SEVEN ARTS PRESENTATION TECHNICOLOR® from WARNER BROS. COMING SUNDAY! VARSITY VIVIEN LEIGH IN TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' "THE ROMAN SPRING OF MRS. STONE" CO-STARRING WARREN BEATTY WB [Image of a man and woman lying in bed, kissing each other.] VARSITY THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-1045 HURRY! Ends Friday! "BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S" Shows At 7:00 & 9:10 Features 7:10 & 9:20 RIDE THE CREST OF THE WAVE WITH ELVIS YESLEY LA PARADISE RIDE THE CREST OF THE WAVE WITH ELVIS PRESLEY IN A PARADISE OF SONG! BLUE HAWAII HALWALLIS TECHNICOLOR® AND PANAVISION® 14 TERRIFIC SONGS IN RCA'S BLUES-CHASING "BLUE HAWAII" ALBUM! HALWALLIS TECHNICOLOR AND PANAVISION 14 TERRIFIC SONGS IN RCAS BLUES-CHASING "BLUE HAWAII" ALBUM! JOAN BLACKMAN • ANGELA LANSBURY • NANCY WALTERS • NOEMMIA TAUROUG DISTRIBUTED BY STARTING SATURDAY! GRANADA THEATRE INTERNATIONAL VIEW 1420 One day, All CONTACT intested in found cal SPOTTEL range. Rotary Scale Large small side. "R. S Stout pers Rewa ing VI 3- Lost: Brat Tee I REWARI Typing typewrit Lost: R Contact GSP. Ph EXPERI in my h Gehlbach MILLIK locations Lawrenc EXPERI theses, d and neat ac Mrs. Ro Typing: on elect sell, 151 EXPERI tion etc. Nea- rces. C HAVE punctu major & report Mrs.Co Experi her ho rates. C Experie thesis a writer, rates. 1 1648. "GOOD PAPERSION typing Pope, TYPING secreta reports rates. Eldowr Experie Interes Studen Call V TYPIS' papers able ra 4409. EXPEI theses, on ne fulche FROM typing tive S son, M RA 2- FORM electric Experi dissert Marily Thursday, Jan. 11, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Bears Bay for aickerington SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS 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 25e for billing All ads must be called or brought to the University Dahl Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 8 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. LOST CONTACT LENSES on Dec 19. Blue- tinted in a flat, white case. Reward. If found call Bob Thomas, VI 3-4711 1-11 LOST! SPOTTER SCOPE in vicinity of rifle hole. EXPOSURE Ext. 339 - 1-111 mary Science Dept. Large brown briefcase with smaller black briefcase inside. Both have initials "R.S." Lost near Building 5, Stouffer Place. Business papers inside needed badly. $10 Reward. David Suttle, Building 5, Apartment 12 or VI3-3833. Lost: Brown overcoat length cord. cont REWARD: Name and address indirc 1-15 Lost: Glad glasses near Fraser Friday. GSP: Phone VI 3-9123 - Room 4-10 1-11 TYPING Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates. VI 3-8833. MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." Now at two Lawrence Ave. & 1021's Mass. 10 Lawrence Ave. & 1021's Mass. 10 EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-5136 Moe L. Gebhich. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, research articles, neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc., thesis of the dissertation. selh, 1511 W 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. telfc 1511 W 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. telfc EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Next, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-839 HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng- lish teacher, Sara Foster. Respe- ts & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mr. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonless rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, and research. Rasonable Electric typewriter, Mrs. Mt Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression with the actors." For excerpts on standard rates, call Miss Missel Pope, VI 3-1097. tf Experienced Typiist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates, Betty Vequilst, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Ms Fulcher. VI 3-6558, 1031 Miss. tr FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution, Technical Service, 5917 J. Woodson, Mission, HEL 2-7718. Evers or Sat, RA 2-2186. FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, typespersers types, dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. Mrs tf Kansan Want Ads Get Results WANTED TWO BOYS to share large furnished recreation room apartment with third boy. Linens furnished. 2417 Ohio. VI 3-7734 FOR RENT VACANCY IN FEBUARY for young man in contemporary home. Home cooked supper — swimming pool. $65 per month. VI 3-9635. tf VACANT SINGLE ROOM for male student. Shower bath, ref., & tele. Two blocks from campus. $30 per month. 1316 Tenn. VI 2-3390. 1-17 FURNISHED 4 rooms & bath All mod- 15th & Iowa VI 3-3956. 1-17 NICE COMFORTABLE ROOM for boy. Near campus and town. Also near 2 bus lines. Linens furn. VI 3-3429. 827 Miss.1-17 VACANCY AVAILABLE for one or two men at 1037 Tenn. Twin beds, everything else included. Students on same floor. Available now. Call VI 3-5137 after 5 p.m. or weekends. BASEMENT APARTMENT, suitable for two men students. Everything furnished now, pay electric power, available able now. Call VI 3-5137 after five or weekends. Park Plaza South Apartments Are you satisfied where you now live? Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Carpeted Garbage Disposal TWIST CONTEST $5.00 Cash Prize Per Couple FRIDAY 10:00 P.M. at the Central Air Conditioning We will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 2-8253 Office - 1912 W. 25th Live ROCK and ROLL Band FURNISHED APARTMENT: Private bath, within walking dist. of KU. Suitable for single students. Phone VI 3-6158 during noon hour tween 5 and 6 p.m. 1-19 NICE SINGLE ROOM: Well furnished, next to Union, Telephone & off-street teams. Students graduating, Available Feb. 1. $28 and $22.50 per month. Call VI 3-6696-1-16. Lawrence's Only Garden Apartments at the BOARD & ROOM, $55 a month. VI 3- 4385. 1-12 LARGE QUIET ROOM for boys. Priv- bath & entrance. Very close to campus. 1617 Oxford Road. Come evenings or Sundays. 1-12 WHITEHOUSE ROOMS FOR MEN: $1\frac{2}{3}$ block from Union. Available Feb. 1st. One single and 1 double room. Quiet. Call VI 3-4092 or call at 1301 La. 1-12 FOR RENT: PRIVATE rooms for spring Students from Student University Call Marvin, VI 3-3390 1-11 FURNISHED APARTMENT. & furnished 2 bedroom home. VI. 2-2064 1-11 LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-0731. Room for Rent: to mature male student. Very private. Shower & semi-bath, well heated and air conditioned. Call VI 3- 3077. 1-11 For graduate men, or seniors, expecting decorated furnished apartments one block from Union. Ideal study conditions. Bachelor's paid. Point of view. pointment call VI 3-8543. F 1-11 Rooms for rent: Mature woman or girl. Private entrance and private bath, well heated and air conditioned. First floor, off from campus, West Hill. Call VI 3-3077. Call 1-11 2 MAN APT. $55 a month. Quiet room. 3 TUCKER. ask for treasurer. Call V-7-370, ask for weekly. 3-ROOM APARTMENT available next night. Lai Cell VI 3-127-1 and entrance 1-15. LARGE FURNISHED apartment, e a s t side, uilties paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. 24-40 Highway COUPLES ONLY BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Plicnic, party supplies. Ice Plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI. 't 0350. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED — ride between KC and KU CALL Bill Vale or Bill White, 1-12 7415 TRANSPORTATION CAR POOL — Need two more congenial nee to Lawrence daily. Call TA 2-1213, Kansas City or send postal card to John 4510 Fisher Ave. Kansas City Kansas. 1-11 BUSINESS SERVICES RAY WILEY TEXACO. 23rd & La Team. Fick up & delivery. Phone VI 6-0541. 1-16 WOMAN WOULD LIKE TO DO IRONING for students or baby sitting with child under 1 year of age. Call VI 2-2366. 1-19 Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. VI 3-0152 EXPERIENCED MOTHER — would like child to care for, 3 to 4 yrs. old, in her home. Also would like ironing, 15c per piece. 340 Indiana. VI 2-3473. tf U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- least—Phone VI 3-2921—Medium self-service — open week days 8 to 6:30 p.m. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 725 Mass., VI 3- 364f DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentation. Ola Smith. Ola Smith. 939% $^3$ mass. Call VI 3-5263. RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. tf WANTED — BABYSITTING. Law student's wife wishes to baby-sit by day or week. Home adjacent to campus. Call VI 3-1846. 1-22 TUTORING MATH TUTORING In undergrad, courses math. grad. stud. Reasonable. VI 2-5- 0731 HELP WANTED STUDENT PART TIME help with any type of upholstery experience. Farr's Upholstery Shop, 646 W. 23rd. VI 3-6255. 1.19 R. N.'s NEEDED: Full or part time. General duty any shift. Also operating room. Training. Blasingame. Collect Cheery 2-3344 or Cherry 2-2992, Ottawa Kansas. MIMEOGRAPH OPERATOR-TYPIST: must be experienced, accurate typist, IBM electric typewriters; addressgraph operator, experienced on power-driven computers. Contact Microsoft Service positions. See Thos. C. Rythner, 11 Flint Hall. Phone KU-373. tf Help Wanted: Dishwasher, 7 days a week. Call VI 3-7810 or come to 1252 Oread tf FOR SALE 1859 OPEL REKORD, 2 dr. radio & heater. Good condition with 2 near new snow tires included. Low mileage. See or call at Nel's & Buck's Garage, 23rd and Louisiana. VI 3-4081. After 5 p.m. call VI 3-2941. 1-19 GUNS, ROBERT REDDING Firearms, professionally re-blued. Special this week, all steel Hi-Standard 22 automatic. Ex- portable. Tenn. (in rear). Call VI 3-7001. 1-12 1954 DODGE: 4 door, V-8, stick, radio, heater, new snow tires. Great for winter driving. Excellent condition. $300. Call VI 3-1584 until 9 p.m. 1-12 MAGNAVOX 6. transistor socket radio. Davis, your Magna- Dealer, 723 Mass. 1-12 1951 FORD 2 door, R & H, good tires, and call QV 2-3887 up to 11 p.m. 1-11 REPOSSESSED MAGNAVOX portable Stereo. Like new, new guarantee. Automatic. $65. Pettengt-Davis, your Magna-vox Dealer, 723 Mass. 1-12 MAGNAVOX PORTABLE FM & AM ransistor radio. Reduced to $75.00. Pet- engill-Davis, your Magnavox Dealer. 723 Mass. 1-12 8" x 42 MOBILE HOME with awning & Saturdays. Call VI 2-1422 every 1-11 Anastasi, Psychological Testing -- $3.50 Perman and Merrill, Measuring Intelligence $2.25. Marjorie Earring, Box 83, Mathe. Kansas. 1-16 NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Offset printing and business Machines at reasonable rates. Business Machines at, 912 Mass. Phone V1-26-0151 today. OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright, typewriter sales, service, rentals, Lance Typewriter, 735 Mast. VI 3-3f 3L644 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. GENERAL BIOSILOGY 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. ff HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonia, Colius, night blooming Cereus, Philodendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or VI 3-4201. tf PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. USED MAGNAVOX 21" table model TV -$47.50 with base, Used Magnavox Hf- $10.-F40. Pettengil Davis, 723 Mass. hf 1957 Triumph TR-3, radiator, heater, marcel floor cover, new tires. Sale: Cail VI 3-3047. 1-11 ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- sion OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 - Quality Parts CAR RADIO - Guaranteed 908 Mass, - Expert Service This is A FLAT-a-push F is for Flat-a-push — What you do to your car when your battery is "flat." Need a Re-Charge? Then let Fritz Co. give your battery a slow-full-charge (not a "quickie"). Rental batteries available while we recharge your battery. CITIES SERVICE Downtown — Near Everything Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire FRITZ CO. CITIES SERVICE Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 11, 1962 Kennedy Asks Power- (Continued from page 1) - WITHOUT RECOMMENDING specific new civil rights legislation, he pointed out that among proposals pending when Congress adjourned last summer were "appropriate methods" for strengthening present laws. The chief executive also pointed out that in the first year of his administration there had been unprecedented exercise of executive powers to assure "full and equal rights" for all citizens. As for the future, he thought the right to vote "should no longer be arbitrarily denied through such iniquitous local Governor Asks For Re-zoning Gov. John Anderson told the Kansas Legislature yesterday he believes it should consider the problem of reapportionment during its current budget session. Gov. Anderson, in his budget message, said he hopes the Legislature will consider the amendments proposed by the constitutional revision committee. One of these recommendations calls for automatic and self-enforcing reapportionment of the Legislature. THE GOVERNOR SAID: "In many states today the problem of reapportionment in the Legislature is the subject of litigation and sincere concern of the people. Kansas is numbered among them. "This is an important and pressing problem dealing with the basic principal of equal representation in government," he continued. "It would be better for the Legislature to remedy the problem on its own motion." THE STATEMENT drew praise from state senator Wade Myers, Democrat from Emporia. United Press International quoted Sen. Myers as saying: "I think it was a good message. I heartily agree with the governor's statement on reapportionment." Walter Sandelius, professor of political science at KU, is chairman of the constitutional revision commission. He could not be reached for comment by the Daily Kansan before the press deadline. devices as literacy tests and poll taxes." Other major items on Kennedy's international agenda for Congress: - A NEW LONG-TERM fund of $3 billion for his Alliance for Progress Program in Latin America. Combined with the Food For Peace Program and activities of the export-import bank, more than $1 billion will be spent annually in “new support” for the alliance. He found U.S. relations with hemispheric neighbors on the upgrade, and an area of “great promise.” - ● HE COMMENDED THE United Nations and urged Congress to back U.S. participation in the new U.N. bond issue. The U.S. share as previously announced by the state department will be $100 million. - HE PLANS TO SEND Congress soon a bill providing for U.S. participation, financially and otherwise, in an international communications satellite system. Stanford Professor To Teach Here Daniel Cubiceotti, head of the High Temperature Liquids Department, Stanford Research Institute, will be a visiting professor in the KU chemistry department for the spring semester. His chief interest is in the field of high temperature chemistry. Prof. Cubicciotti has written and collaborated in the writing of many books, the most recent of which is "The Energies of Gaseous Alkaline Earth Halides," published in 1961. He has taught at New York University, University of California at Berkeley and Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago. In industry he was supervisor of the Inorganic Section, Atomic Energy Division, North American Aviation. He received his B.S. degree at the University of California at Berkeley, 1942, did graduate study at Cornell University, 1942-43, and received his Ph.D. degree at the University of California at Berkeley, 1946. Prof. Dance To Speak On "Brainwashing" Frank E. Dance, assistant professor of speech and drama, will speak at the Current Events Forum at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. Prof. Dance's topic will be "Brainwashing." The only way to double your money is to fold it and put it in your pocket. —Linder Morris. Edwards to Direct Conference Group Karl Edwards, professor of education, will serve as a discussion leader at the regional conference of the Commission on Teacher Education and Professional Standards to be held Jan. 29-30 at Des Moines, Iowa. The theme of this year's conference will be New Horizons: Moving from Ideas to Action. The purpose of the convention is to discuss "action to mobilize the teaching profession to assume responsibilities for achieving and maintaining high standards of preparations and practice for its members." Kansan Want Ads Get Results Typewriters sales - service - rentals Olympia Portables Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 B. N. Everyone loves power, even if they do not know what to do with it.— Benjamin Disraeli Chesterfield KING CIGARETTES 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD - THEY SATISFY "Now, now Susan...everybody can't be the Homecoming Queen!" Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana All human power is a compound of time and patience.—Honore de Balzac HEY,BUDDY! Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. SO YOU HAVEN'T HAD YOUR SENIOR PIC TAKEN YET, EU? BEEN OUTTING IT OFF, HUH? WELL THE MOB HAS WAYS OF TAKING CARE OF GUYS LIKE YOU! ROUBLE-MAKERS LIKE YOU GET THE CEMENT BATHING SUIT IN POTTER'S LAKE 4, KNOW? NOW WE WOULDN'T WANT THAT SO WHY DON'T YOU HUSTLE ON DOWN TO ESTES STUDIO, 924 VI. PHONE VI3/171, HUM, BUDDY? AND NO OTHER STUDIO, EITHER! ESTES IS THE OFFICIAL JAYHAWKER PHOTOGRAPHER: WE HAVE WAITS OF FIXING GIRLS WHO TRY TO COUIT THE MOB, YOU KNOW, BUDDY? AND, BUDDY—DO IT, LIKE QUICK, HUN? THE Big Boy Chesterfield SIC FLICS AND BUDDY—DO IT LIKE QUICK HUN? THE Big Boy IS GETTIN' IMPATIENT... SHOE SALE LADIES'SHOES Heels, Sport, Dress, Flats All Styles & Colors 2 99 to 7 99 MEN'S SHOES A Very Good Selection 4 $ ^{9 9} $ to $ 9^{9 9} $ CHILDREN'S SHOES Now's The Time To Save 2 $ ^{9 9} $ to $ 3^{9 9} $ Table of Ladies' CANVAS SHOES 1 $ ^{9 9} $ to $ 2^{9 9} $ Reg. to 4.99 HOUSE SHOES & PURSES On One Table, Only 187 REDMAN'S SHOES 815 M. 815 Mass. OPEN THURS. TILL 9 Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No. 69 Friday, Jan. 12, 1962 Europeans Welcome Kennedy's Union Speech LONDON — (UPI) — West Europeans today generally welcomed President Kennedy's state of the union message and closely studied his remarks on trade to determine the American impact on the Common Market. Typical of the editorial comment here was the reaction of the Daily Telegraph which said the speech was "inspiring but soberly worded." THE DAILY MAIL SAID "far too much" had been expected of President Kennedy when he took office a year ago but "in spite of this handicap his achievement has been notable." The Guardian called the message "sober, tough-minded and cautiously progressive." "The hopes of the world are to a large extent centered on this young romantic figure," the Mail said. "We don't think he will betray them." There was widespread interest in the President's remarks on the European Common Market. A spokesman for the six-nation economic bloc in Brussels said "Kennedy's message is an historical act in respect to the relationship between the United States and Europe and also in respect to world trade." He welcomed President Kennedy's appeal for tariff cuts. THE LONDON DAILY Express, which opposes Britain's entry into the Common Market, criticized these portions of President Kennedy's remarks. The Daily Herald called the Kennedy message "liberal and calm." The newspaper said it was a "sober" President who reviewed his first 12 months in office and it applauded his support for the United Nations. The foreign editor of the Daily Mirror said Kennedy "smartly cuffed the British government and called for all-out support for the United Nations." Many Britons are lukewarm toward the world organization. The influential London Times said the President's speech was not dramatic but added up to "gradual improvement in the quality of American foreign policy and government. COMMENTING ON Kennedy's "splendor of ideals" remark, the Times editorial concluded: "It is healthy to think in terms of moral leadership at a time when America's military strength is becoming less unchallengeable." In Bonn, West German Government sources said the message proved the United States is willing to assert its "leading role" in the world. Reapportionment Bill Satisfies K.U. Prof. A KU professor of political science said today he is very satisfied with the proposed constitutional amendment on reapportionment introduced yesterday in the Kansas Senate. Walter E. Sandelius, chairman of the state Constitutional Revision Commission, said the proposed amendment "is substantially what we (the commission) recommended." The amendment introduced yesterday calls for reapportionment of the state Senate so that the larger counties could have up to four Senators. At present no county has more than one Senate seat. The Senate membership would remain at 40, according to the resolution, meaning that more smaller counties would comprise each district than is the situation at present. The House membership would remain at 125, with each county guaranteed one seat. The twenty extra seats would continue to be divided among the more populous counties as at present. The proposal also requires the Legislature to reapportion the Senate every 12 years, beginning in 1963, according to U.S. census figures. If the Legislature does not act, a reapportionment board, composed of the secretary of state, attorney general, and state auditor, would reapportion the Senate. If the resolution is passed by a two-thirds vote of the Senate and House of Representatives, it will be voted upon by the people in November. Sponsoring the proposed amendment were Senator Clark Kuppinger, Prairie Village; Senator Clifford R. Hope Jr., Garden City; Senator William C. Farmer, Wichita; Senator Robert C. Taggart, Topeka; Senator Howard Harper, Junction City; Senator Frank S. Hodge, Hutchinson; and Senator Ernest W. Strahan, Salina. All are Republicans. "This proposal differs from the commission's mainly in the provision for the reapportionment board," Prof. Sandelius said. "Our proposal had the governor on the reapportionment board rather than the secretary of state." The commission recommended the amendment at last year's session of the Legislature. It called for automatic and self-enforcing reapportionment of the Legislature. Gov. John Anderson, in his budget message Tuesday, recommended that the Legislature consider reaportionment because "it would be better for the Legislature to remedy the problem on its own motion." He was probably referring to two current court actions regarding reapportionment. Four Kansas news-papermen — J. P. Harris, John McCormally, and Peter Macdonald of the Hutchinson News and Ernest W. Johnson of The Olathe News—have introduced a "friend of the court" brief in a reapportionment case before the U.S. Supreme Court. They also have filed a petition in Shawnee County district court asking the court to force the Kansas Legislature to reapportion itself. Dormitory Rates Increase Bv Mike Milier Students living in the five men's residence halls will see a $5 a month increase in their dorm bills effective next fall. - An increase in the interest rates on student loan agreements by 3/4 of 1 per cent. Mr. Middleton pointed out that, "this is quite a bit on a million dollars or so." Mr. Middleton said this was the greatest one increase. James G. Middleton, program director of the dormitories, enumerated the major increased operational costs as follows: The increase is brought about by operational costs plus the need to maintain present standards in various divisions of the halls. The present rate for room and board is $315 a semester or $630 a year. The $5 a month increase will raise the yearly total to $675. - An increase of 4 per cent by the Kansas Power & Light Company, which provides the electricity for the dorms, and the Kansas Public Service Co., which provides the gas have effected sizable increases in rates. - An increase on the cost of replacing furnishings in the dormitories and furnishing new ones. The study lights furnished to some of the JRP residents cost $8 each when the dorm was built; at present the cost of the lamps is $10. The scrubbing machines - Wages for the students working in the dorms has increased 10 per cent. Mr. Middleton pointed out that the base pay has raised from 60 to 70 cents an hour to 70 to 80 cents. used by the janitor cost $287 in 1959 and now cost $315. Bed sheets have gone up from $20.80 per dozen to $22 a dozen. A similar increase has occurred in pillow slips. the last raise on dorm fees five years ago. the salaries of the maintenance personnel have increased. - The cost of living index has increased in the last five years. Since THE REACTIONS of the men living in the five men's residence halls, Joseph R. Pearson, Templin, Carruth-O'Leary, Grace Pearson, and Oread, vary from mild to strong disapproval. Repton "What, more money!" Merle Pattengill, McPherson sophomore, said, "It seems to me that $365 per semester is an ample amount, considering existing dorm food and study conditions." Jerry Slayton, Independence, Mo. sophomore said. "It seems to me that each semester brings a rise in the cost of living here. Don't tell me inflation is this critical." "I DON'T LIKE IT," said Steve Toth, Trenton, N. J., sophomore, "but with costs going up all the time, they have to have the money." Lance Jessee, Kansas City, Mo. freshman said, "If the cost gets much higher, it will be as high as living in a fraternity house." Bill Neeley, McPherson sophomore, said. "If the additional rates would provide more funds for better meals, it would be worth the increase." Some students saw justification in the increase. The Dean of Women's office reports a possible increase in women's dormitory rates will not be known until the dormitory contracts come out next month. Weather Clear to partly cloudy today and tonight. Increasing cloudiness tomorrow with some snow mostly along the northern border. Warmer today and tomorrow with the highs today in the 30s and lows tonight in the 20s. KANSAS 23 Bert Coan NCAA Questions Bert Coan's Trip By Fred Zimmerman The most wanted student on the University of Kansas campus today is a soft-spoken junior from Pasadena, Tex. He is Elroy Bert Coan, who without his football equipment can run the 100-yard dash in :09.6. Wearing the equipment, he can run well enough to inspire several football coaches to call him a "potential Heisman trophy winner." The speedy halfback came to KU under a cloud of illegal recruiting that involved "excessive entertainment." As a consequence, the University was placed on athletic probation for a year. That was in October 1960. The University is no longer on probation, but Coan is again under the cloud of "excessive entertainment," this time for visiting the San Diego Chargers of the American Football League last week. COAN WAS seen in the presence of Charger officials at the AFL All-Star game. Somebody coupled this news with a statement Coan made a few days earlier that he was considering an offer to play for the Chargers next season, instead of remaining at KU for his final year of eligibility. The result is that the president of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, Henry Hardt, and the executive director, Walter Byers, said yesterday that Coan's trip may fall under the "excessive entertainment" rules of the association, in which case he would be no longer eligible to play football at KU. When Coan turned up in San Diego, Coach Jack Mitchell seemed resigned to Coan's apparently-imminent departure from KU's ivy-covered halls of learning. But this has changed. This reporter went to see Mitchell this afternoon. Mitchell was seated at his desk, a telephone receiver in one hand, a copy of the NCAA regulations in the other, and the inevitable cigar in his mouth. "It's right here in black and white," he said, hanging up the receiver and handing me the rules. "Heck," he began, "I don't know anymore about this than you do." He was genial but puzzled. "IF THE HUY (Coan) paid his own way, he's okay. But I just don't know what he did. I've got my opinion, but I'm not going to speculate for the press. "Heck, we could reimburse them," Mitchell said, referring to the money Coan may have received from the Chargers to make the trip. "Or I wonder if maybe he could pay them back. That's what I don't know. I'm just as much in the dark as anybody else "I think I'll call this Byers fellow right now (Walter Byers is executive director of the NCAA). MITCHELL PLACED a call to Byers at the Hilton Hotel in Chicago, where he is attending a meeting of college football officials. The operator could not reach Byers, so Mitchell asked her to get A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg, KU athletic director, who is in the same hotel. Placing his hand over the receiv- Placing his hand over the receiver, Mitchell said: "Dutch is up there. He can talk to those people and find out what the deal is." But Lonborg could not be reached either so Mitchell left a request that he call, and then hung up. Will Coan play football at KU next fall if the NCAA rules that he is ineligible? "Oh no," Mitchell answered. "We won't play him if there turns out to be the slightest question." Mitchell added that although Coan has said he wants to continue at the university, he probably will leave to join the pros if he cannot play football for KU next season. "I DONT THINK he'd stay here if he were ineligible and couldn't play football for us. He'd lose his scholarship and everything. "The guy wants to stay here. He's told me that. I just hope he can. This trip has got him into trouble, but heck — everybody's been doing this kind of thing for years." In Chicago yesterday, Byers told the Associated Press that from what he had heard, Coan's trip constituted a definite violation of NCAA rules, adding that in such a case, Coan would be ineligible for college play. UNABLE TO TALK to Byers or Lonborg, Mitchell decided to go home to eat lunch. Leaving, he remarked; "I'm sorry I couldn't help you anymore than this. I just don't know what's going to happen." (See earlier story page 6) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 12, 1962 A Point of Difference It is interesting to reflect on the reasons for Khrushchev's de-Stalinization program and the quarrel between the Soviet Union and Red China on this matter. The de-Stalinization program in Russia has many causes. Among the most important is that the tactics of Stalin are no longer necessary to consolidate and maintain a revolutionary government and carry out a forced program of development. The rising class of party and industrial leaders is a group that did not take part in the revolution. It has grown up in the society it established. The revolution is history to them. BUT THE EVIDENCES of change are many. The secret police armies were disbanded after Stalin's death. Political opposition does not necessarily carry the death penalty now, as it did in Stalin's time. A party leader may suffer exile or demotion, but he is not likely to be killed for causing Khrushchev trouble. The Red Chinese leaders, however, feel that they need a regime like Stalin's to carry out their program of forced development. It should also be remembered that the revolution in China is only a little over a decade old. It is still aggressive and has not had the time to consolidate its control to the degree that would make it feel safe. RED CHINA IS characterized by many of the things that marked Russia under Stalin. Political opposition or resistance to a government program may well mean death. Force is being employed to make the peasants accept the government's agriculture programs. Thus the Soviet government has, in a sense, matured. It is an accepted element on the world scene. The Red Chinese government, however, is still a revolutionary one. The Soviet Union is still strictly controlled by Khrushchev and his colleagues, but the turn from the more violent methods of the Stalinist era is a sign of change in the Soviet system. It has been a change for the better. William H. Mullins It Looks This Way... (Editor's note: Several members of the International Club have raised objections in the past to the present organization of the club. Some of the members have proposed changes. Their proposals are presented here so that the members of the club may study them. The club will hold an election meeting tonight.) We are proposing this program as a constructive alternative to the way the International Club is being run. With 400 members the club is larger than it has ever been before and it must be run dynamically to meet the challenge of the increasing international interest. Organizational 1. Committee meetings must be held regularly every week, so that the previous club meeting can be reviewed and improvements made where necessary. 2. The committee meetings shall be held in public and shall be open to the press and to the members of the International Club; time shall be set aside so that the latter can make criticisms or suggestions. 3. The committee shall be enlarged for greater efficiency by appointment of a Program Director and Publicity Director, as regular officers. 4. The Mexico Trip organizers must report regularly to the Executive Committee on the progress of the arrangements. Practical 5. Money should be appropriated for improving the music facilities of the club. 6. There should be communication with other International Clubs and guest programs should be encouraged. 7. The organized houses should be invited to present skits and talent shows 8. The club should encourage panel discussions on international topics with the cooperation of other campus groups. 9. The committee should always be prepared to present a good substitute program if the planned program should fall through. 10. The club should try to present a short program along with refreshments if the University Films end by 9:30 p.m. (any kind of short and light entertainment). In summary, we would like to emphasize that the objections of the signatories who have taken an active part in the club for the last 3-4 years, are not based on personalities, but are simply concerned with issues. The Executive Committee does not have our confidence, and the program which we are presenting for the revival of the International Club is the measure of what they have failed to do, and of our discontent. Christos Constantinides, ex-president Denis Kennedy, ex-vice president Luis Mayor, ex-vice president Petra Moore, ex-secretary Augustine G. Kyei, ex-financial sec Augustine G. Kyei, ex-financial secretary Daily Hansan Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 University of Kansas student newspaper 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 $$ 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. Unification In Europe Q: Please hazard a guess as to the possibility of a unified Western Europe during our lifetime. A: I...I would have thought the chances are extremely good. We are entering into this particular negotiation to enter into the Common Market which will lead to a strengthening of the unity of Western Europe, in all good faith ... We have come to the conclusion, as I said in my remarks, that the danger that is threatening us in the world is so great that even though it may cause a certain amount of uneasiness within the United Kingdom, uneasiness among other members of the Commonwealth, we have got, all of us, to make certain sacrifices for the general good... Now, it is my impression that if we succeed and if the other countries who are applying for membership succeed in their applications, we will have established a unified Western Europe... And I would think that this would come about not only in our lifetime but in the next five years. (From a question and answer period in which reporters were questioning Sir David Ormsby Gore, British ambassador to the United States) Anti-Isolationism One of the primary functions of the elementary school teacher is to give the students a meaningful picture of the United States. But many teachers, especially those who have attended state universities, have only academic knowledge of the character and regional differences of vast sections of the country. An attack on this problem of provincialism has been launched by the University of Massachusetts, Florida State University and the University of New Mexico. A program started this last will enable juniors majoring in elementary education to spend an entire semester at one of the cooperating universities. Professor Vincent Rogers of the University of Massachusetts, who has been instrumental in starting the program, noted that there has been increasing pressure on state universities to enroll "home-grown kids." Few of the students attending these institutions are from out of state. The exchange students will not only have an opportunity to learn about contrasting areas. They will also be able to take advantage of special offerings, such as Florida State University's program of foreign language instruction for the elementary school, the University of New Mexico's program of teaching retarded children and the University of Massachusetts' program for children with speech and hearing problems. EATON'S FRIDAY CARTOON (From Nov. 12 New York Times) EMA ENCHON the took world In utopian literature, "Looking Backward" occupies a significant place, and some even argue that it was a forerunner of the science fiction of today. Of the latter view, possibly so, but it is doubtful that Edward Bellamy had a Buck Rogers bent. He was writing a message, as Howells was to do a few years later with "A Traveler from Altruria," as Huxley was to do in our time with "Brave New World" and Orwell with "1984." "Looking Backward," in fact, should be read, along with these books, as commentaries on American civilization. Bellamy's book appeared in 1887, and it was the imaginative depiction of society in the year 2000. But it also was a strong commentary on life in the Gilded Age, for Bellamy's hero awakens in 2000 after going to sleep in a specially sealed-off room, and looks back on the world of 1887. LOOKING BACKWARD, by Edward Bellamy. Doubleday Dolphin, 95 cents. When the novel appeared, it caused a considerable sensation. Sales were rapid and widespread, and societies grew up establishing a kind of cult around the work. Its importance to its own time and to the history of American literature can hardly be understated.—Calder M. Pickett, Professor of Journalism THE WORLD INTO WHICH HE EMERGES is an idealistic world, a socialistic world. If the world of 1961 becomes Bellamy's world of 2000 (and it scarcely seems likely) it will be a world free of commercial and pecuniary influence. There will be no advertising. There will be considerable leisure. There will be happy, contented, adjusted people, and More's "Utopia" will have come true. ***** INVISIBLE MAN, by Ralph Ellison. Signet, 75 cents. As far away from Booker T. Washington's "Up from Slavery" or the idyllic tales of Uncle Remus as a book can be is this amazing novel that appeared in 1952, won the National Book Award, and established Ralph Ellison as one of America's finest writers. The novel has held up much better than did those of Richard Wright, and it still is an enormously effective tale of a Negro in the white man's world. Ellison's hero is simply called "Boy," or "Brother," a young man up from the South, an ousted student from a good Negro college, a boy who already has undergone disillusionment about the white world. New York he serves to open his eyes further. He is honest and idealistic and he wants to work for his people, and not as an "Uncle Tom," for he does not agree with his grandfather's idea that Negroes should "overcome 'em with yesses" and "undermine 'em with grins." Harlem becomes the world of "Boy," and the Communist party—the "Brotherhood"—his career. Like Richard Wright, this Negro hero eventually learns that he is being used. And the book comes to a violent climax in a Harlem race riot. Final truth comes to "Boy" when he comes to realize that to many he is a faceless individual, no "spook like those who haunted Edgar Allan Poe," no "Hollywood-movie ectoplasm." He is invisible because people refuse to see him. Ellison's feeling for language and his ability to probe inside the mind are amazing. His description of a Negro messiah, "Ras the Exhorter," is vivid and stirring—"A new Ras of a haughty, vulgar dignity, dressed in the costume of an Abyssinian chieftain; a fur cap upon his head, his arm bearing a shield, a cape made of the skin of some wild animal around his shoulders."—CMP Page 3 Zorina Terms KU Production'Exciting' Miss Vera Zorina said yesterday that she thinks KU's stage production of "Joan of Arc at the Stake" will be more exciting than concert hall versions. Miss Zorina, who has starred in the oratorio by Claudel and Honegger many times in concert settings, said this will be the first time she has played Joan in a stage production. "I think it's meant to be staged," she told students in an informal discussion. The Norwegian-born actress said that the role of Joan calls upon all her talents as a dancer, singer and actress. HER KU PERFORMANCE will be given at 8 p.m. Jan. 15-17 in University Theatre. Asked if she becomes deeply involved in the character of Joan, Miss Zorina said, "Because of the music involved, I have to keep very alert as to the cues... I can't afford to lose myself at all." Miss Zorina played Joan in the first American performance of the oratorio with the New York Philharmonic orchestra. SHE SAID SHE ONCE lost herself momentarily at a point where she was to sing, speak a few lines, and begin singing again, relying only on memory for pitch. "I do feel it very strongly...I respond very strongly to the music," she said of the role. Miss Zorina said in practicing a part, she likes to get away from the confusion of a rehearsal hall. "I work best of all on long walks," she said. "I'm often taken for a mad woman," she commented. Her acting career began, Miss Zorina said, when she was offered a part in a musical comedy. She previously had been in ballet and had joined the company of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo when she was 16. SHE HAS WORKED in movies, musical comedies, Shakespearian productions and dance-narration roles. Of her motion picture work, Miss Zorina said, "I personally disliked the movies I made intensely." University Daily Kansan Although she said her great love is the theatre, she said, "I do not look down on any form of entertainment." Performances are either bad or good, she said, regardless of where they are done. Miss Zorina said that the great opportunity for training in acting in America was in the universities. She indicated that European actors have an advantage in the training offered by repertory companies. In talking of the training needed to help the actor move properly on the stage, Miss Zorina encouraged practice in ballet, fencing, gymnastics, or similar disciplines. Thirteen volumes of the Encyclopaedia Britannica were given an impromptu airing last Sunday. The whys and wherefores are still a matter of speculation at the campus security office and Carruth-O'Leary Hall. Your Books Musty? Then Air Them! The volumes, taken from the dormitory lounge, were found stacked in the snow in front of the men's hall shortly after 2 a.m. Sunday by campus police. This leaves the possibility that someone thought the volumes musty and in need of fresh air. "It could be that someone was trying to steal them," said Maurice Anders, dormitory director, "but that's a lot of trouble to go to and not follow through." One man's word is no man's word; we should quietly hear both sides. —Goethe He was also skeptical over a prank theov. Elections of International Club officers for the spring semester will be held tonight in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. The elections will be held after the 7:30 showing of "Kiru," a Japanese film with English sub-titles, in Hoch auditorium. Only card-carrying members of the club will be allowed to enter the meeting. Candidates must be International club members of six weeks standing. Refreshments will be served. International Club Elects Chemist to Speak Paul Story, organic chemist with the Bell Telephone Laboratory, Murray Hill, N. J., will speak at a chemistry colloquium, 4 p.m. today in 233 Malott, on "Chemistry of Nonclassical Reactive Intermediates." Earnest resolution has often seemed to have about it almost a savor of omnipotence. — Samuel Smiles Friday, Jan. 12, 1962 KU Christian Fellowship REV. ZIMMERMAN From Finland speaking on "THE HOPE OF A CHRISTIAN" I For years Shirley Jones was typed as "the girl next door." Yet she won an Academy Award in the role of a rough, tough trollop. In this week's Post, you'll learn how Shirley plays harlots and homebodies with equal conviction. And why many of her friends didn't want her to win an Oscar. The Saturday Evening POST TONIGHT, 7:30 P.M. in Cottonwood Room of Kansas Union Shirley Jones: sexpot or sweet young thing? JANUARY 13 ISSUE NOW ON SALE Kansan Want Ads Get Results Krhart Flying Service Learn How to Fly in the Easy to Fly... INCORPORATED 1240 INVESTIGATE OUR SPECIAL FLIGHT COURSE NOW! ... CESSNA 150 Inquire how you can earn academic credit through AE45 and AE47 ½ Mile NE of Tee Pee Municipal Airport VI 3-2167 n Check your opinions against L'M's Campus Opinion Poll.16 $\textcircled{1}$ How would you spend a $5000 inheritance? Vrijheid Wandering Vrienden Zoo Kundengetting □ more education □ European tour Electrician stocks 2 Should the faculty have the power to censor campus newspapers? Yes No sports car What's your favorite time for smoking? 男士拿着手表 during bull sessions while studying □ during a date anytime there's stress & strain 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. THE MIRACLE TIP L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. HERE'S HOW 1029 STUDENTS AT 100 COLLEGES VOTED! bull sessions...28% studying...27% date...10% stress & strain...35% £ Yes ... 12% No ... 88% 2 more education ..35% European tour ..31% stocks ...24% sports car ... 9% 1 L&M's the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke University Daily Kansan Page 4 Friday, Jan. 12, 1962 KU-KSU Earn Nearly Half of Their Budgets Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and President James A. McCain of Kansas State University said yesterday that nearly half of the universities' budgets are earned by the schools themselves. The two men appeared on "Controversy," a monthly public affairs program on WIBW-TV. Chancellor Wescoe explained that only $9.2 million of last year's $17.5 KU budget actually came from state tax money. The remainder was earned by KU, and the University actually was asking to spend what it has earned. The administrative heads also discussed the traveling they do to promote education and to explain what is being done with the taxpayers' money. Pres. McCain said Kansans should take more interest in what is being done with tax money and what should be done for the state colleges. Chancellor Wescoe and Pres. McCain commended the private colleges in Kansas and agreed that first-rate private colleges are needed by any state. However, they criticized the belief that students get more individual attention at small colleges. Pres, McCain pointed out that KSU students get more attention than students in private colleges because of the advising and counseling programs, aptitude tests, health service, and small living groups. Chancellor Wescool agreed, saying that "no one is lost in the shuffle at a large school unless he wants to be." He pointed out that large lecture classes are divided into smaller laboratory and discussion groups, and said students who would be in small classes at private colleges are often in the honors program at larger institutions. Harold Ball Injured Harold Ball, assistant manager of the Kansas Union Book Store, is still in serious condition in Kansas City's Bethany Hospital from injuries suffered in a Turnpike traffic accident over the holidays. Mr. Ball received injuries when another auto veered across the turnpike medial strip and bounced off the guard rail into the path of his north-bound car. He was alone in the vehicle going to Kansas City to catch a flight to California to join his wife and daughter for the holidays when the accident occurred. Ball has been assistant manager of the KU bookstore since October. He formerly was assistant manager of the student bookstore at Western Michigan University at Kalamazoo. Love must triumph over hate. — Mary Baker Eddy The awards are for research and study in the fields of engineering, economics, international studies, sociology, anthropology, public health, forestry and tropical agriculture. Additional information may be obtained at the Office of the Dean of Students. Deadline for applications is March 1. ___ Difference OPPORTUNITIES FOR EE, ME, PHYSICS AND MATH MAJORS AS FIELD SERVICE ENGINEERS IN THE MISSILE SYSTEMS FIELD AC, the Electronics Division of General Motors, presently has positions available for Electrical Engineers, Mechanical Engineers, Physics and Math majors to work as Field Service Engineers on missile systems. You will work on AC's all-inertial guidance system utilizing digital computers for the TITAN II missile. WEAPONS SYSTEMS • THEORY OF GYROS • THEORY OF OPERATION OF GYROS IN A STABILIZED PLATFORM • STABILIZATION AND MEASUREMENT LOOPS OF A PLATFORM • THEORY OF OPERATION OF ERECTION LOOPS • THEORY OF AIRBORNE DIGITAL COMPUTERS • OVERALL SYSTEM CONCEPTS When you join us you will be given a three-month training course that includes these interesting subjects: Two scholarships of $4,000 each are being offered for graduate study in Venezuela in 1962-63 by the Cordell Hull Foundation. Applicants must be proficient in Spanish and have received a bachelor's degree by June of 1962. Following this training period you will be assigned to installation and check-out of the guidance system for the TITAN II. Assignments will include positions at military Installations or in Milwaukee. Contact your College Placement Office regarding a General Motors-AC campus interview or send the form below to Mr. G. F. Raasch, Director of Scientific and Professional Employment, Dept. 5753, 7929 South Howell, Milwaukee 1, Wisconsin. An Equal Opportunity Employer AC SPARK PLUG THE ELECTRONICS DIVISION OF GENERAL MOTORS MILWAUKEE • LOS ANGELES • BOSTON AClever Inertial Guidance Systems for the FITAN II, THOR and MACE aircraft. . . ACHLEverphone mobile radiotelephones For more information regarding Field Service Engineering opportunities with AC, send this form to: Mr. G. J. Hawes Degn. 5753, AC, Spark Plug Division Milwaukee 1, Wisconsin Graduate Study in Venezuela Offered NAME STREET PHONE CITY AND STATE SCHOOL DEGREE AVAILABILITY DATE HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — Paul Newman and his wife, Joanne Woodward, don't see eye-to-eye on acting. Newman says his Academy award-winning wife is an intuitive actress and he's just the opposite. "I have to dissect a role, analyze it and put together the jig-saw of its personality before I can say its lines and feel its emotions with conviction." he said. ___ Thought is, perhaps, the forerunner and even the mother of ideas, and ideas are the most powerful and the most useful things in the world. George Gardner Prof. VanderWerf expects from 60 to 70 teachers to apply for the program. "We are especially interested in finding teachers who would, on the basis of their experience here, be In its third year, the program will be held from June 11 to August 24. It is designed to further research in colleges and, besides providing independent research opportunities, it will offer lectures and seminars. Calvin A. VanderWerf, chairman of the chemistry department and the program's director, said the grant, $6,000 more than last year's, will enable 12 college teachers from over the nation to participate in research under senior KU faculty members for 11 weeks. Last year's program involved 10 teachers for 10 weeks. The University of Kansas Research Participation Program for College Teachers of Chemistry will be expanded next summer with a $30,740 grant from the National Science Foundation. "Nine out of the 10 participants from the first summer of the program now are directing research at their schools under outside support," he continued. All of last summer's participants are beginning or continuing research and two have been granted support from national agencies, he said. KU Will Expand Program qualified and equipped to initiate a strong research program at their own colleges," he said. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT It is well to give when asked, but it is better to give unasked, through understanding—Kahil Gibran Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO 摄 Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 ∞ Learning never stops for engineers at Western Electric There's no place at Western Electric for engineers who feel that college diplomas signify the end of their education. However, if a man can meet our quality standards and feels that he is really just beginning to learn . . . and if he is ready to launch his career where learning is an important part of the job and where graduate-level training on and off the job is encouraged - we want and need him. At Western Electric, in addition to the normal learning-while-doing, engineers are encouraged to move ahead in their fields by several types of educational programs. Western maintains its own full-time graduate engineering training program, seven formal management courses, and a tuition refund plan for out-of-hours college study. This learning atmosphere is just one reason why a career at Western Electric is so stimulating. Of equal importance, however, is the nature of the work we do. Our new engineers are taking part in projects that implement the whole art of modern telephony, from highspeed sound transmission and solar cells to electronic telephone offices and computer-controlled production techniques. Should you join us now,you will be coming to Western Electric at one of the best times in the company's history. In the management area alone, several thousand supervisory jobs are expected to open up to W.E. people within the next 10 years. And our work of building communications equipment and systems becomes increasingly challenging and important as the communications needs of our nation and the world continue to increase. 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 6206, 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 Eng Ha The and a has b larger olical e mecha Cha annou said t by th Archi Board "Th to re space the N Admi Nowr neerin been the I Bot neerir to be labor struc The utilize equiir Dr facul coor progr engin elude medi grad ginee Dr. of er chairics a partn The York Huy istry acti Che Principal manufacturing locations at Chicago, I.I.; Kearny, N. J.; Baltimore, Md.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Allentown and Laurelide, Pa.; C. B.; Buffalo, N. V.; North Andover, Mass.; Omaha, Neb.; Kansas City, Mo.; Columbus, Ohio; Oklahoma City, Okla. Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J. Teletype Corporation, Skokie, Ill., and Little Rock, Ark. Also Western Electric distribution centers in 33 cities and installation headquarters in 16 cities. General headquarters 195 Broadway, New York, N. Y. Engine School Has New Dept. Page 5 The new department of mechanics and aerospace engineering at KU has been created through the merger of the departments of aeronautical engineering and of engineering mechanics. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe in announcing the new department said the merger had been requested by the School of Engineering and Architecture and approved by the Board of Regents. Both the aeronautical and engineering mechanics departments were to be in the $1,900,000 engineering laboratory building now under construction west of Naismith Road. The merger will effect maximum utilization of the new facilities and equipment. Dean McNown said. "This action is an early response to recent observations of lagging space technology in the Midwest by the National Aeronautical and Space Administration," said John S. McNown, dean of the School of Engineering. "However, the move had been considered for some time and the NASA interest accelerated it." Dr. Kenneth C. Deemer, chairman of engineering mechanics, will be chairman of the single new mechanics and aerospace engineering department. Dr. Deemer said talents of the faculty in both departments will be coordinated to strengthen the new programs. The graduate program in engineering mechanics already includes the Ph.D. degree and the immediate objective is to create strong graduate programs in aerospace engineering. Courses such as rocket ballistics and rocket propulsion already are being taught in the aerospace curriculum and will be supplemented by additional courses in space technology next year. Chemistry Prof. Gets Grant The Research Corporation of New York has granted $2,500 to Earl S. Huyser, assistant professor of chemistry, to continue his studies of reactions in polymers and plastics. The grant supports the third year of research by Prof. Huyser in "Kinetics of Free Radical Chain Addition Reactions." He is also conducting research under three other grants. He will name a research assistant next semester. CAMPUS Jay SHOPPE 12th & Oread JANUARY SALE 'Speech and Public Control' to Be Topic Ends Tomorrow Reduced Prices James E. Dance, assistant professor of speech and drama will speak at the Current Events Forum this afternoon on the topic, "Speech and Public Control." The brief presentation followed by discussion will be held at 4 p.m. in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. Ise, McCoy to Talk At Forum Tomorrow - Skirts - Sweaters - Taper Pants John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, and Donald McCoy, associate professor of history and director of correspondence study, will discuss "Conservatism and Liberalism on and off the College Campus" at the Seminar on Crucial Issues at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. University Daily Kansan - Dresses - Purses Sponsored by University Extension, the program will include an 8 p.m. performance of "Purple Dust," a KU Experimental Theatre production. There will be an admission charge of $1.00 for each of the two events. Both are open to the public. Scholarship Deadline Set for Feb.15 - Gloves The deadline for filing completed applications for undergraduate scholarships at KU for the 1962-63 academic year is Feb. 15, 1962. - Costume Jewelry - Wool Suits - Winter Sleepwear Applications are available upon request at the Office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong Hall. Gradulating Seniors and Graduate Students: Questionnaires and informational materials from the Peace Corps are available at the office of the Dean of Students: 228 Strong. Official Bulletin Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m. Southern Baptist Student Union, 1221 Oread. Speaker, Dr. Bill Schweer, missionary professor. Baptist Seminary. TODAY Hillel Services: 6:45 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Dr. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: Inter-Varsity mission to the Greater Rev. Enz Zimmerman of the Greater European Mission in Finland will speak on European Christian and Its Significance in His Life. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Dunford Chapel International Club Meeting: Movie at master masters. Only members may vote, so bring your membership card. Big 8 busas Union. Dancing and refreshments. German Ph.D. Reading Exam: 9 a.m. 103, Bailey. SATURDAY 303 Bailey Ph.D. Reading Exam: 9-11 a.m. 11 Fraser 11 Western Civilization Comprehensive Exam: 1.p.m., rooms to be assigned. SUNDAY Lutheran Church Services: 8:30 and 11 a.m., Immanuel Lutheran Church, 17th & Vermont, 5 p.m., Wednesdays, Danforth Chapel. Catholic Mass: 9, 11 a.m., Fraser Hall (Newman Club). Westminster Center: Faith & Life Seminars: 8:45-10:30 a.m., breakfast and Bible study; Morning Worship: 11 a.m. Dr. Maynard Strothman, preaching; Reception: 2-4 p.m. to introduce Dr. and Mrs. Maynard Strothman for small community; Evening Fellowship: 5:15 p.m., supper and program, 1204 Oread. Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch: 12 noon, Canterbury House. Oread Friends Worship Meeting: 10:30 a.m. Danforth Chapel. Analytical Chemistry Seminar; 4 p.m. 122 Malet. John Zimmerman; Absorp- ment; 7 p.m. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Friday, Jan. 12, 1962 Patrolmen Train Here Kansas Highway Patrol officers from throughout Kansas are currently attending an In-Service Training School being held in the Kansas Union. The school is held every 18 months in eight week sessions. Purpose of the school an officer said is to "refresh the officer in his training rules and regulations." Such things as spelling, police public relations, rules and regulations, making better accident investigations and first aid are discussed. Each week approximately 25-30 officers attend the meetings. Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 REA----E.E.SENIORS - LOOK into the engineering opportunities open in rural electrification and telephony - ASK your Placement Office for pamphlets telling what the Rural Electrification Administration offers for a challenging career with all advantages of Federal Civil Service - SIGN UP for a personal interview with the R&A Recruiting Representative who will be at your Placement Office February 16, 1962 PACO NORMAL Career Cues: "Whatever your major, make sure to include a course in 'people'!" W. Emlen Roosevelt, President National State Bank, Elizabeth, N.J. "If my college adviser had prophesied that studying psychology would some day help promote my career in banking, I'd have scoffed. Yet that is exactly what has happened. And when I think about it now the reason seems obvious. The facts and figures of banking, or of any other field, are mechanical devices. They take on real meaning only when related to people. "Good psychology is also the basis of all teamwork. And, since most of today's business and scientific problems are too complicated for 'one man' solutions, teamwork is essential. If you want to be a valuable team player, and a likely candidate for captain, be the person who understands people. Learn what it takes for people to work together in harmony. Learn how to win trust and confidence. Learn basic human psychology. "Bear this in mind, too. World tension, community tension, business tension, even family tension are the facts of everyday life. The more you know of human behavior, the better prepared you will be to deal with these problems. "So, if you have the chance, take a course devoted to 'people.' Your class adviser can probably help you fit a psychology elective into your schedule. I don't think you'll regret it...I know I didn't." W. Emlen Roosevelt first became a bank president while still in his early thirties. Today he heads still another bank and is a leader in New Jersey financial circles. Em's been a CAMEL fan ever since his undergraduate days at Princeton. If flavor is your major satisfaction in smoking... Have a real cigarette-Camel CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CLEARANCE THE BEST TOBACCO MAKES THE BEST SMOKE R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Winston-Salem North Carolina University Daily Kansan Page 6 Friday, Jan. 12, 1962 Coan's Eligibility Being Questioned DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI) The question of the future eligibility in college athletics of Kansas' Bert Conn and Mississippi's Bookie Bolim may not be getting much outward attention from the NCAA, but Dallas newspapers are keeping the story alive daily. Coan, a halfback, and Bolin, a guard, became the center of attention when they accepted expense-paid trips from the Dallas Toxons and San Diego Chargers to the American Football League all-star game in San Diego last weekend. Coan had been drafted by Sim Diiego and Bolin by Dallas, both as "futures" although they have another year of eligibility remaining because they had been held out of competition, or "red-shirted," for a season. DR. HENRY HARDT of Texas Christian University, president of the NCAA, told the Dallas Times-Herald that while it would be up to the NCAA rules infraction committee "to act on such cases . . . it is my personal opinion that these cases would fall under the language of our (NCAA) excessive entertainment rules and in severe cases these rules could cost a player his eligibility." The Times-Herald also quoted Wayne Duke, assistant to NCAA Executive Director Walter Byers, as saying that he was "unaware" of the trips. The Times-Herald said, however, that Mr. Duke quoted from the NCAA constitution's article III, section I on "Principles of Amateurism" which says among other things that a person violated the amateur code if he receives expenses in reporting to or visiting a pro team. MEANWHILE. THE DALLAS Morning News today quoted Coan as saying that he wasn't freeting over the matter and that he didn't feel he had done anything wrong. "My feeling at the moment is that I'd like to stay here (Kansas) and play next year," the News quoted Coan as saying, but Coan also admitted he had been thinking about skipping his final year to play with San Diego. "YES, THERE'S A possibility of it," he replied to a question. "I don't want them to think I'm bargaining but I might change my mind about staying anyway. The Chargers didn't try to sign me . . . they wanted me to finish my education first. I guess I'll probably stay, if they'll let me." Both the Chargers and Texans pointed out their treatment of Coan and Bolin was "nothing new," that it had been going on by pro clubs for years. Winning Willie NEW YORK — (UPI) — Willie Shoemaker set an all-time high when he won the riding championship in 1953 with 485 winners. Sportswear at KIRSTENS The Kansas Jayhawkers will attempt to keep from diving further into the cellar of the Big Eight conference when they meet Coach Sparky Stalcup's Missouri Tigers at Columbia tomorrow night. Coach Dick Harp's crew has a 0-2 league record and are 4-8 overall. The Missouri Tigers finished third in the Big Eight pre-season tournament, but like KU, have been winless in conference play. They lost to Oklahoma State 72-57 and Oklahoma 56-52. HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Hawks Play Tigers There This was supposed to be a rebuilding year for Stalcup as he lost a potent scoring punch in Charlie Henke and Joe Scott. Henke carried a 24.6 average and finished as the best point-maker in Tiger annals. Open Evenings, VI 2-0562 I Rich Negroes: a new force in American life America has about 25 Negro millionaires. And hundreds more are in the $50,000-and-up bracket. In this week's Saturday Evening Post, you'll meet these new Negro leaders. Learn how they made their fortunes. And how they're fighting discrimination in highest society. Scott averaged 16.5 and ranked fourth on Missouri's all-time charts. The Saturday Evening POST TAKE IN 12 NOON AND THE SAT The Tigers sport a starting lineup with every man over six feet. At post is Gary Dye, 6-7. He is supported on the front line by Ray Bob Carey, 6-6, and Walt Werebing, 6-5. On the back line are Ken Doughty, 6-0, and Bruce Mills, 6-1. Coach Dick Harp is expected to make one change in his starting lineup. Harry Gibson, who seced all of his eight points in the first half against Kansas State, will start at forward. The remainder of the lineup will include Buddy Vance, center, Jim Dumas, forward, and Jerry Gardner and Nolen Ellison at guards. Let us never negotiate out of fear. But let us never fear to negotiate. —John F. Kennedy DOING IT THE HARD WAY by hoff (GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!) (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, so feels refreshed. Use FITCH Dandruff Remover SHAMPOO every week for positive dandruff control. Keep your hair and scalp really clean, dandruff-free! FITCH FITCH SHAMPOO SHAMPOO TONIGHT & SATURDAY "Hey, Let's Twist" AND "Blueprint For Robbery" VARSITY THEATRE...Telephone VARSITY 1065 STARTS SUNDAY! Continuous Sun. From 2:30 His name is Paolo. He has no job. He waits, handsome, sleek, charming, for the American widows to come to Rome. Of this boy and one American widow named Karen Stone, of the glittering decadence of modern Rome, TENNESSEE WILLIAMS wrote his only novel. It is now a powerful and provocative motion picture. VIVIEN LEIGH IN TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' "THE ROMAN SPRING OF MRS. STONE" CO-STARRING WARREN BEATTY LOTTE LENYA JILL ST. JOHN CORAL BROWNE JEREMY SPENSER adapted from the novel by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS screenplay by SCIENTIST LUANI LAMERT directed by QUISION JOURNEY AND SVEV NETS PRESENTATION TECHNICOLOR® from WARNER BROS. --- FUN IS FUNNIER WITH- DEBBIE and ANDY "The Second Time Around" WB . IN 8 DAYS YOU'LL FIND OUT AT THE GRANADA THE BIG FUN-TIME SONG-TIME BEST-TIME SHOW OF YOUR LIFE! ELVIS PRESLEY Dancers slicing the sand ... singers belting the blues ... couples cooing in bliss ... lift you high as the skies with Hawaii's happiest love beats! 14 TERRIFIC SONGS IN RCA'S BLUES-CHASING "BLUE HAWAII" ALBUM! BLUE HAWAII Thrill to Elvie' biggest musical—filmed amid the wonders of Waikiki! HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION Breathtaking Hawaii in eye-filling TECHNICOLOR A PARAMOUNT RELEASE PANAVISION JOAN BLACKMAN·ANGELA LANSBURY·NANCY WALTERS NORMAN TAUROUS·HAL KANTER One da STARTS TOMORROW! Mat. 2 p.m., Eve. 7 & 9 Cont. Sun. From 2:30 Lost: at Tee REWA STUDENT type of Uphols WANT daily. 7415. Last Times Tonite — "BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S" R. N.'seral dContactCherryKansa GRANADA TREATRE ... Telephone VIRGINIA 3-5782 MIME must IBM equip Servic 117 F Help! RCA ton a tion. 40 in 8844. 1959 C er. Ge tires at Ne ana. 2941 GUN: New profe all st celler Tenn REPC Stere- matic navox Friday. Jan. 12, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP YOUR One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms cash: All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25e for bills. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by p.m. on the day before publication is desired. LOST Lost: Brown overcoat length cord, coat toe. Name and address in receipt. REWARD: 1-15 HELP WANTED TRANSPORTATION WANTED — ride between KC and KU daily. Call Bill Vale or Bill White, VI 3-7415. 1-12 STUDENT PART TIME help with any type of upholstery experience. Farr's Upholstery Shop, 646 W. 23rd. VI 3-6255 1-12 R. N.'S NEEDED: Full or part time. General duty any shift. Also operating room. Contact Mrs. Blasingame. Call collector. Contact 2-3344 or Cherry 2-2329, Ottawa Knapa's. MINEOGRAPH OPERATOR-TYPIST; must be experienced, accurate typist, IBM electric typewriter; addressgraph operator, experienced power; service support. State Civil Service positions. See Thos. C. Rythor. 117 Flint Hall. Phone KU-373. tf Help Wanted: Dishwasher, 7 days a week. Call VI 3-7810 or come to 1225 Oread. tf FOR SALE RCA 3/4 ton air-cond. $50. Philteo 3/4 ton air-cond. $85. Both in good condi- tion. Very good 1500 2 door Chev. $36. 40 inch G.E. electric range. $75. VI 1- $844. 1959 OPEL REKORD, 2 dr. radio & heat- ter included. Cooled. Low mileage. See or call at Nel's & Buck's Garage, 23rd & Louis- 13 v. 3-4081. After 5 p.m. call v. 1-191 2841. 1954 DODGE: 4 door, V-8, stick, radio, heater, new snow tires. Great for winter driving. Excellent condition. $300. Call VI 3-1584 until 9 p.m. 1-12 MAGNAVOX 6, translator pocket radio. Davis, your Davis, your Magnitude, Dealer. 723 Mass. GUNS. ROBERT REDDING Firearms. New & used guns & ammo. Handguns professionally re-blued. Special this week, all steel Hi-Standard 22 automatic. Excellent selection of used handguns. 1304 Tenn. (in rear). Call VI 3-7001. 1-12 MAGNAVOX PORTABLE FM & AM transistor radio. Reduced to $37.50. Pettengil-Davis, your Magnavox Dealer, 723 Mass. 1-12 REPOSSESSED MAGNAVOX portable Stereo. Like new. New guarantee. Automatic. $65. Pettengil-Davis, your Magnaxavox Dealer, 723 Mass. 1-12 Anastasi, Psychological Testing - $3.50 Terman and Merrill, Measuring Intelligence, $2.25. Marjorie Earring, Box 83, Olathe, Kansas. 1-16 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright, typewriter sales, service, rentals, lance Typewriter, 733 Mass. VI 3-3644. NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding new types of graphing or graphing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 912 Mass. Phone VI 3- 0151 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. 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. 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 VII 3-4201. tf PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition: formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. USED MAGNAVOX 21" table model TV $F1-$40, Pennsylvanie Davis, 723 Mass. 585, 920. MISCELLANEOUS COME AND EAT home cooked meals Mettker, 721. Mo St. VI 3-4067 1-19 Mettker, 721. Mo St. VI 3-4067 1-19 BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent claus paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI. tf 3250. BUSINESS SERVICES RAY WILEY TEXACO. 23rd & La. Tune Pick up & delivery. Phone VI 2-0381. 1-16 WOMAN WOULD LIKE TO DO IRONING for students or baby sitting with child under 1 year of age. Call VI 2-2368. 1-12 EXPERIENCED MOTHER — would like child to care for, 3 to 4 yrs. old, in her home. Also would like ironing, 15c per piece. 340 Indiana, VI 2-3473. tf U. R. WELCOME at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in mid- morning. Phone VI 3-2921. Modern- self-service — open weekdays 8 to 6:30 p.m. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. tt DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentation. Ola Snitr. Ola Snitr. 939% M39%. Call VI 3-5263. RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V. 3-1267. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. tf WANTED — BABYSITTING. Law student wives wish to baby-sit by day or week. Home adjacent to campus. Call VI 3-1846. 1-22 FOR RENT TOWN MANOR'S PENTHOUSE APT. Private entrance. Available Jan 29. Also, Studio Apt, available now. Both are beautifully furnished. Complete kitchens, steam heat, air conditioned, TV. Private parking. Lovely patio with cookout equipment. Couples or mature students. No small children or pets. Call VI 3-800- 3 ROOM FURNISHED apt. Private bath RF Available Jan. 15. VI 3-3966) 1-19 GRADUATE MEN — furn. apt. Available Jan. 20, 1224 Miss. I V 3-4282 1-19 TOWN MANOR COTTAGE. Beautifully furnished for gracious living. Good gas furnace. Completely air-conditioned. TV. Wood fireplace. 2-bdrms, utility room. Gymnasium. Patio. Large yard and patio for entertaining. Private parking. Ideal for family or mature students. Inspection now, available Jan. 17. Call VI 5-8000. 1-19 LARGE LOVELY SLEEPING room in bath. linens furnished and room kept. $15 per month includes everything 5 days to campus. Available 1-19 VI 3-T7-830 VACANCY IN FEBRUARY for young man in contemporary home. Home cooked supper - swimming pool. $65 per month. VI 3-9635. tt PRIVATE ROOMS for rent at 901 Maine. One available now. Reasonable. Can see after 6 or on weekends. VI 3-6810. 1-19 LEAVING FOR EUROPE, completely available to 1. sept. 1. Cail VI S-3278. 1-19 VACANT SINGLE ROOM for male student. Shower bath, ref. & tele. Two blocks from campus. $30 per month. 1316 Tenn. VI 3-2330. 1-17 VACANCY AVAILABLE for one or two students furnished for the room. Four other men students on same floor. Available now. Call Vi 3-5127 after 5 p.m. or weekend. -146 Dixon's Are Back NICE COMFORTABLE ROOM for boy. Neer campus and town. Also near 2 bus lines. Linens furn. VI 3-3429. 827 Miss. 1-17 BASEMENT APARTMENT, suitable for two men students. Everything furnished except they pay electric Private. Accommodation Call VI 3-5137 after five or weekends. FURNISHED 4 rooms & bath. All mod- ities. 16th & Iowa. VI 3-9596. I-17 1-17 Discover the Big Difference Quality Makes TWO BOYS to share large furnished rec Lilhs furnished. 2417 Ohio. I V-37438 FURNISHED APARTMENT: Private bath, within walking dist. of KU. Suitable for single or single students. Phone VI 3-6188 during noon hour tween 5 and 6 p.m. 1-19 Drive-In Restaurant DIXON'S Park Plaza South Apartments OPEN 4-12 SPLIT LEVEL, or semi basement apartment — 2½ blocks from Union. 3 rooms completely furnished. Shower bath, private bathroom, off street parking. Jan 27, 2015 - one user classroom or graduate student. $48 per month. For appt. call VI 3-6696. 1-19 Are you satisfied where you now live? 2500 W. 6th Now Delivering 6-11:30 Weekdays 8-11:30 Sundays Brick Constructed Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking Carpeted Central Air Conditioning VI 2-3416 or VI 2-8253 Office - 1912 W. 25th We will pay local moving expenses Lawrence's Only Garden Apartments BOARD & ROOM, $55 a month. VI 3- 4385. 1-12 LARGE QUIET ROOM for boys. Priv. bath & entrance. Very close to campus, 1617 Oxford Road. Come evenings or Sundays. 1-12 ROOMS FOR MEN: 1/2 block from Union. Available Feb. 1st. One single and 1 double room. Quiet. Call VI 3-4092 or call at 1301 La. 1-12 LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-071f 2 MAN APT. $55 a month. Quiet room. 3 SYSTEMS. ask for treasurer. Cali V-S-7370, ask for treasurer. 3-ROOM APARTMENT available next to bath and entrance 1-15 La. Call VI 3-4271 NICE SINGLE ROOM: Well furnished, next to Union. Telephone & off-street addresses graduating, Available Feb. 1. $28 & $25.50 per month. Call VI 3-669-16. I TUTORING TYPING MATH TUTORING in undergrad. courses math. grad. stud. Reasonable. VI 2 0931. LARGE FURNISHED apartment. e a s t side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. electric type- writer, neat accurate work, reasonable notes. Thesis, reports, themes, etc. Phone VI 2-1678. 1-16 Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates. VI 3-8833. MILLIKEN'S 'S.O.S.' — Now at two 105, 147, 150 Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass. EXPERIENCED TYPLIST will do tyling name — call VI 3-9136, Ms. Lloyd Gebilshoff EXPERIENCED TYPEIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, articles. Must have at least one neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000, RIL VI, VI 3-7485. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI S-2651 any time Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Phone: 1511 W 21 St. St. CAI VI 3-6440. . tf email: tf@ufw.edu "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1087. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8371 TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, etc. Accepted by. Reasonable fee. Ph. Attn: Accountant. M. Mc-Edowney, Ph. VI 3-8568. experienced typist. 6 years experience in basis and term papers. Electric type- er fast accurate service. Reasonableness. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 18th VI, 21~ 1648. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter. Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. CALL VI 3-2001. ff TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tt HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. candidates are required. Reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. 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. Execu-sion, Mission, HE 2-7718 or Eat or Sat. R-2-186 FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, checks and dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marijan Hai. VI 3-218. Kansan Want Ads Get Results TWIST CONTEST Live ROCK and ROLL Band FRIDAY 10:00 P.M. $5.00 Cash Prize Per Couple WHITEHOUSE Weaver 24-40 Highway COUPLES ONLY Our 105th Year of Service sale starts tomorrow! Hanes annual sale one week only Jan.13 thru Jan.20 save up to $1.05 on every box of those irresistible seamless stockings! Weavers Hosiery Shop - Street Floor University Daily Kansan Page 8 Friday, Jan. 12, 1962 Navy Officers to Be in Union Landslide Danger Still Present in Peru LIMA — (UPI)—Authorities here said today there is danger of a repetition of Wednesday's tragic, 6-million-ton avalanche, which wiped out nine villages in the Peruvian Andes. They said there are masses of ice poised dangerously on the slopes of towering Mt. Huascaran, Peru's tallest peak, which might break away and plunge at any moment into picturesque Huaylas Canyon, scene of Wednesday's disaster. OFFICIALS ON THE SCENE were reported "working at top speed" to prevent another snowslide, but it was not certain whether their efforts would succeed. Bad weather and blocked roads hampered relief efforts, making it difficult to reach the scene of the mountain disaster by air or by land. The government launched a massive effort today to provide shelter and relief for scattered survivors of the devastating avalanche, but they were working against heavy odds. A particular problem was posed by the town of Yungay, north of the slide area. Yungay's 20,000 people suffered no direct injury from the avalanche, but their town was completely isolated and its water supply was cut off. GEN. LUIS F. URRELLO, chief of the relief operation, arranged to tour the area by helicopter today to try to find out how many people he must provide for. No accurate count had been made of the number of people killed by the slide — estimated at 3,000 to 4,000 — or the number of homeless survivors. Most of the bodies, entombed in the millions of tons of rock and earth that cascaded down the mountainside, may never be recovered. About a dozen bodies had been fished out of the rain-swollen Santa River, and a watch was set on the river-bank downstream from the slide area. Grad Student Sells Gem Book Samuel L. VanLandingham, Midland, Texas, graduate student, recently sold the rights to a book entitled "Ornamental and Gem Rocks." The book will first be published in serial form as 10 to 14 articles in Gems and Minerals Magazine and The Mineralogist. After the completion of the series of articles, the book will be published in 1 to 4 volumes, sometime in 1963 by the Gemac Corporation of Mentone, California, leading publishers of gemological literature. "Ornamental and Gem Rocks" deals with instructions on how to find naturally occurring rock materials suitable for use in jewelry, novelty and stone industries. Van-Landingham has spent five years in research on the book which contains descriptions of rock gem localities in all 50 states of the United States and eight Canadian provinces. Over 1,200 localities are described in detail. In addition there is an atlas of over 60 large scale maps. VanLandingham is presently engaged in research on fossil diatoms in the department of botany. He has published a number of articles in various journals. His most recent publication was a bulletin on coal flora which was published in the University of Kansas Science Bulletin. Roberta's Pizza One of Gen. Urrello's most pressing concerns was the task of finding shelter and arranging care for about 200 Indian children left homeless by the avalanche. About half of them were orphaned. Free Delivery On Campus Call VI 3-1086 The difficulty of determining the number of survivors was heightened by the fact that many of those able to walk fled the Huaraz Valley Wednesday night or early yesterday, fearing a repetition of the disaster. A Navy Officer Information Team will be in the Student Union today and tomorrow to brief students interested in the Naval officer programs. Included in these programs are officer's candidate school, pilot, navigator, and supply training, and civil engineering. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Getting Married? Take Advantage of Higley's Sale of Sample Bridal Gowns 25-50% DISCOUNT on SAMPLE GOWNS Today and Tomorrow New spring & summer gowns are coming in daily. We must clear our stockroom, so we're offering our sample gowns at these tremendous savings. Come in soon, or phone for an appointment if you prefer Higley's 935 Mass. CORDUROY SPECIAL 3 Piece CORDUROY SUITS With Reversible Vests Reg. 29.95 Now 21.95 CORDUROY WASH SLACKS Piper or Post Grad Style 3 Colors Reg. 6.95 Now 5.00 THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN THE University Shop ON THE HILL Al Hack Ken Whitenight Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Liveliness and luxury at a low,low price! CHEVROLET CHEVY II NOVA A top-down picture in January? Sure! We simply couldn't wait to show you the easiest-to-own Chevrolet Convertible you ever flipped a top over! Get a load of that broad-loop carpeting, the elegant instrument panel, and the leatherlike vinyl on those bucket seats* up front. We call it Fisher Body finesse. What else will you find? Plenty of zip, for one thing, from a spunky 6. Plenty of room, too. And the ride's firm, but ever so gentle, thanks to new Mono-Plate rear springs. Go see how inexpensively your Chevrolet dealer can put some June in your January with Chevy II! Chevy II was put to the test but the men who know cars best— WINNER OF THE CAR LIFE AWARD FOR ENGINEERING EXCELLENCE CHEVROLET *Optional at extra cost. Also available in Nova Sport Coupe. See the new Chevy II at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's One-Stop Shopping Center Belief Is Defense Prof. Dance Says The best individual defense against brainwashing is a strong commitment to some idea, institution or person, an assistant professor of speech and drama said Friday. Prof. Frank E. Dance told about 60 students at the Current Events Forum that "it's not enough to be anti-Communist or anti-an anything. We must be pro-something before we can move from the defensive to the attack in the fight against Communist brainwashing and propaganda tactics." In his talk, Prof. Dance outlined the "brainwashing cycle" and the defense against it, then turned to a description of Communist propaganda techniques. THE "BRAINWASHING CYCLE," he said, is based on the discoveries of Ivan Petrovich Pavlov, a Russian physiologist who won the Nobel Prize in 1904 for his experiments concerning conditioned responses in dogs. The cycle, Prof. Dance said, consists of four steps: - Emptying the individual's mind of previous beliefs and loyalties. - Exploiting the resulting vacuum in the individual's mind. - Refilling the individual's mind with altered beliefs and loyalties. - Reinforcing these altered beliefs and loyalties. He read from a statement by the Russian scientist explaining the process used to empty an individual's mind: ‘A strong negative stimulus to a long-standing loyalty results in the negation of the long-standing loyalty.’ "The Soviet did this in the Korean War," he continued, "by controlling the mail system and by breaking up the American 'buddy' system in Korean prisoner-of-war camps. "THE AVERAGE AMERICAN prisoner of war did not get the letter from his parents saying 'Your father and I are depositing $100 a month in the bank for you, and hope you will come home soon to spend it.' But he did get the letter from the bank saying 'You are overdrawn and we have re-possessed your car to meet your bills.' "He did not get a letter from his girl friend if she wrote: 'I still love you and miss you very much,' but he did get her letter if she wrote: UDK Celebrates 50th Birthday Tomorrow Tomorrow's issue of the Kansan will commemorate the 50th year of daily publication for the UDK. This issue will contain a background of the history, the policies, the professors and the students who have helped to operate and publish the Daily Kansan since 1912. 'Dear John, I've met a boy—one of your friends—who has been entertaining me lately. We hope that when you get back, you will come to visit us sometime.' After the previous loyalties of the prisoner-of-war had been destroyed, Prof. Dance continued, the Commu- (Continued on page 8) Snow Melts, Streets Slick About five and one-half inches of new snow has compounded the problems of the campus police and the buildings and grounds department, and added to the woes of KU students who, with final week approaching, already have enough to worry about. The new snow is the result of a storm which swept an area all the way from New Mexico to Michigan. Snow began falling here early Sunday morning. THE NEW SNOW was added to the two inches already on the ground when the storm hit. Lawrence recorded a low temperature of two degrees last night. Five minor traffic accidents occurred on the campus since Saturday night, most of them due to the extremely slick condition of campus streets. Campus police blocked off 13th and 14th streets at their intersection with Oread Drive when it became impossible for cars to maintain traction on the steep grades of these two streets. "I imagine that these streets will remain closed at the top of the hill until we get some thawing," Joseph Skillman, Campus Police chief, said this morning. "We advise people not to use the two streets, as they are very dangerous." EMPLOYEES of the department of buildings and grounds, meanwhile, have been busy since early yesterday morning clearing campus streets with four blade-equipped tractors and one heavy-duty maintainer. All available men have been put to work clearing campus sidewalks, according to Harry M. Buchholz, superintendent. Students can take heart in the latest weather forecast, however. The forecast calls for decreasing cloudiness and colder weather today, but for warmer weather tomorrow. High temperatures today should be in the mid 20s, with lows tonight of from 10 to 15. High temperatures tomorrow should be in the 30s. Until then, when the snow should begin to melt, students are advised to drive slowly, walk carefully and to use the blocked-off 13th and 14th streets for sledding only. 59th Year, No. 70 Daily hansan LAWRENCE. KANSAS Dutch, Indonesian Ships Clash Near New Guinea Monday, January 15, 1962 DUTCH NEW GUINEA — (UPI) — Dutch and Indonesian naval vessels clashed in waters off Dutch New Guinea today, and Dutch Naval Headquarters announced that two Indonesian motor torpedo boats were destroyed. The Dutch announcement said a third Indonesian motor torpedo boat fled in the brief engagement off the southern coast of West New Guinea. (IN THE HAGUE, the Dutch cabinet met in an emergency session to Dutch Naval spokesman Capt. R. M. Elbers said, "It looks as if we frustrated an Indonesian invasion attempt." discuss the battle. A defense ministry spokesman, however, said "no comment" when asked if the clash meant a state of war between the two nations.) It was not immediately known how many vessels took part in the battle, which Dutch sources said took place in Dutch territorial waters south of the Buru Mountains of New Guinea. (The defense ministry in The Hague said Dutch naval units had no choice but to open fire. It said the Indonesian vessels were heading for the New Guinea coast and ignored a Dutch challenge.) HOLLAND currently has two Building Hosts Fire Twice in Two Months An assistant fire chief with the Lawrence Fire department was driving to work on Sixth Street this morning when he noticed a large white "cloud" hanging over the business area. FRITZ SANDERS, fire chief, estimated the damage at around $15,-000 and said the cause was unknown. An investigation inquiring into the cause of the fire is to be made this afternoon. The fire in a second floor apartment at 734 Massachusetts Street, was the scene of another fire less than two months ago. "It's just a low cloud," he thought to himself. "It can't be a fire." John Kasberger, assistant chief, rushed to the station and put on his equipment. "The trucks had been at the fire six or seven minutes by this time," he told the Kansan later. As he came closer to the city, he began to have doubts. The alarm was received by the Lawrence Fire department about 7:30 a.m. Charles Cassity, captain, said the fire had broken through the roof when the trucks arrived. At about 6th and Michigan Streets he thought, "It's the real thing." Police cars blocked off Massachusetts Street between 7th and 8th Streets. Hoses snaked across the street in a ball of warmed around trying to keep warm. Mrs. Ruby Malott, owner of the building, said the fire two months ago had destroyed the roof and caused extensive damage to the business office downstairs. She said the new roof had just been completed and work was progressing on the new ceiling both in the second floor apartment and on the first floor. The damage after the first fire was estimated at $20,000 and the cause has not been determined. MRS. MALOTT said she was first aware of the fire when she awoke in her smoke filled room. She said the alarm had been sent in by someone on the street. 2,400-ton frigates, the Eversten and Kortenaer, and a 2,200-ton submarine, the Utrecht, in New Guinea waters. These are backed up by Dutch Air Force "Firefly" jet fighters and about a dozen Neptune fighter bombers. Capt. Elbers said in announcing the sea battle: "Our radar carried both by ships and an aircraft picked up blips which seemed to indicate that a large number of Indonesian warships were on their way to the coast. "A second vessel of the same type was sunk shortly afterward. A third motor torpedo boat was seen fleeing with the rest of the invasion fleet. "WE FIRED at what turned out to be a motor torpedo boat. Fire broke out on board and it sank. "According to our information, the largest of these ships could carry about 60 men and the total number of troops carried by this fleet could presumably have staged an invasion." ELBERS SAID NO Dutch war- ships were hit. He refused to say which Dutch units took part in the battle, but he said they were backed by Neptune fighter bombers. The Dutch aircraft carrier Karel Doorman left Rotterdam today for what was described as a training cruise to the Netherlands possessions in the Caribbean. It is accompanied by two destroyers and two submarines. Political Terms Vague Conclude Ise, McCoy John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, and Donald R. McCoy, associate professor of history, took different routes to arrive more or less at the same conclusion Saturday afternoon at a Crucial Issues Seminar. The scholars concluded there is no sure way to tell what or who is a Conservative or Liberal, Reactionary or Radical. KU Student Government Traced By Jerry Musil (Editor's note: This is the first of a four-part series on student government and politics at K.U.) Campus government at KU has survived nearly 53 years of factional fights, voting irregularities and re-organizations. Student government came to KU on May 6, 1909 with the first election of the Men's Student Council. The Council's first action was to regulate campus politics which had become a fight between fraternity and non-fraternity factions. "I don't think either group under- stands what they are talking about (when they use the terms)," Prof. Ise said. In 1912, the University Senate withdrew much of the MSC's power because of factional fights. It was not returned until 1920. THE GOVERNING BODY of the students at this time was divided between the Men's Student Council and the Women's Self-Government Association (WSGA), which was organized not long after the MSC. The MSC and the WSGA worked separately on most issues. But they did work together on projects which affected both men and women such as all-University dances. Class elections at this time were also on a male-female division. The men nominated and elected the president and treasurer and the women elected the vice president and secretary. In 1926, the class elections were removed from political party control. The tickets then took on such colorful names as "Crimson and Blue," "Representative Ticket," "Fairin-square," and "Cake-Eater." The plan allowed for a Senate composed of representatives elected from the schools of the University on a proportional basis. The house was composed of living district representatives elected the same way. The proportional election means the number of valid votes cast determines the number of representatives elected according to a fixed schedule. THE DIVISION between councils continued until the Second World War cut into the male population and the women gained a majority. By their vote in 1943, the two councils were combined to form the All Student Council, a unicameral or one house legislative body. The Constitution was rewritten to include the combined council. But this was not the last change made in KU's student government. In March, 1953, the ASC submitted a plan for student vote which created a bi-cameral or two house student government. THE USE of an IBM system in balloting, one central polling area instead of a poll in each school and the division of men's and women's dormitories and scholarship halls into four districts are examples. The unicameral or one house system of government was readopted in 1957. Various small changes have been made also; each helping to eliminate corruption in student elections. Today the student government is composed of the three traditional branches of government executive, legislative and judicial. The executive branch is broken into three departments: Student Welfare, Student Activities and Public Relations. Each department has several committees directly responsible to it. The executive branch of government consists of the student body president and vice president. They are elected by popular vote of the student body in the spring of each year. (Continued on page 8) THE PUBLIC Relations department has Statewide Activities committee and the Public Relations committee. The Student Welfare de- IN THE SEMINAR format of a free-wheeling debate and discussion between the two men and about 50 persons from the floor of the Big Eight Room. Prof. McCov added: "I'm not sure you can define them (the terms). I can't give any definition, except as I use them, and that has no common currency." Discussing the general theme "Conservatism and Liberalism on off the Campus," Prof. Ise said a Liberal to him is "a man with no preconceived ideas for or against government increase of power." On the other hand, he said, "a conservative wants the status quo." PROF. McCOY challenged these two attempts at a definition. He asked if it is not true that the Liberal invariably concludes that more and not less government power is the answer. He pointed out that seldom is government power parred. Prof. Ise answered yes to the question, but added it was usually the right conclusion. This statement was challenged by several members of the audience. One man asked by what "superior knowledge" did the government know a better use for the people's money. Prof. Ise continued his defense of what he considered the Liberal position by saying the money taken by the government in taxes is usually put to a higher use than the people themselves could put it. PROF, ISE answered by noting that schools, museums, recreation facilities and preservation of natural resources required government investment. To this Prof. McCoy countered: "Far more museums have been set up by private philanthropy in this country than by the government." One man in the audience decided to try again for a definite statement of the meaning of the terms under discussion. "Your problem," Prof. Ise said, "is that you don't realize if you study economics and political science you'd be more confused — confusion is one of the good effects of a liberal education." THE DISCUSSION turned to what forces might shape a person's attitudes in leaning to one side or the other of political thought. Prof. Ise attributed most of the influence to what was read. He said the strong conservatism of Kansans was explained by the state's overwhelming conservative press. Prof. McCoy pointed instead to factors of environment such as home, church, work and social relationships. Prof. McCoy accepted the challenge of answering the question of whether students today are more concerned over public affairs and whether there is a great conservative movement on the campus. HE SAID college students of the 1950s were not apathetic. "They were perhaps a little more mature than the students today who swing out in all directions with neatly turned declarations of principles and aims. Because they were more mature, they were more willing to admit they didn't know all the answers." But, he added, "I don't see any great mob of students rushing to join the YAF — or so-called Liberal groups." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday. January 15, 1962 LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler On Reapportionment The proposed constitutional amendment introduced last week in the Kansas Senate should not be regarded as a solution to the problem of mal-apportionment of the state Legislature. It is, however, one step toward eliminating the under-representation of urban residents under the present apportionment. THE BEST PART of the proposed amendment is its provision for a reapportionment board composed of the secretary of state, attorney general, and state auditor—which would reapportion the Senate each 12 years if the Legislature does not act. At present, nothing can be done if the Legislature does not initiate proceedings for reapportionment; it has done so only twice since 1900, and neither apportionment came close to giving the urban counties fair representation. But the proposed amendment falls down when it limits a county to four Senators. At the present time, this limit would affect only Sedgwick County. The total state population, according to the 1960 federal census, is 2,178,611. Each of the 40 Senators should, therefore, represent 54,465 people. Sedgwick County, under the proposed amendment, could not have the six Senators which its population of 343,231 would entitle it. But this limit will affect more counties if the population continues to increase more rapidly in the urban areas than in the rural areas. Before too many years, other fast-growing counties may find themselves under-represented in the Senate. ACTUALLY, THIS section of the proposed amendment is a step backward. Under the present constitution, there is no limit on the number of seats a county can have in the Senate. In practice, no county has ever had more than one seat, but this is not limited in the constitution. It is unfortunate that the seven Senators who introduced the proposed amendment found it necessary to include the limit of four Senators to a county. But they may have felt such a limit would be necessary for the proposal to have any Even with its faults, the proposed amendment offers the best hope in years that representation in the state Legislature will at least approach equality for the growing urban centers. Obviously, the present situation cannot continue. Some people, while they agree that the Senate should be apportioned according to population, contend that the House should continue to be based on geography. They maintain that the House would then be able to represent regional, local, and minority interests, such as rural and western interests. A SERIES OF articles in the Daily Kansan last week pointed out that the majority of Senate seats is controlled by only one-fourth of the state's population. The four most populous counties—Sedgwick, Wyandotte, Johnson, and Shawnee—have 813,804 residents, nearly 40 per cent of the total population; yet these four counties have only four Senate seats, 10 per cent of the membership. chance to be passed by the Legislature and the people of Kansas. FOUR KANSAS newspapermen have filed court actions to force reapportionment of both houses according to population. It is probably true that such a reapportionment would be made only upon orders from a court. The proposed amendment does not affect the state House of Representatives, which has 125 members. Each of the 105 Kansas counties is guaranteed at least one seat, and the 20 "floating" seats are divided among the more populous counties. In any case, the proposed constitutional amendment offers a chance for all Kansas residents to be more equally represented in the Senate and is the first step toward complete equality in both houses. It is hoped that the amendment will be approved in the Legislature this session and by the people of Kansas in November. —Clayton Keller A Legion Officer on Communism ... Letters Communists WANT acceptance on our campuses because this HELPS communism. Such acceptance serves to lend credibility and respectability to the BIG LIE that communists are only members of another political party—and not the servants of an international conspiracy pledged to destroy every value of our Judeo-Christian civilization. The communist who appeared as an invited and honored guest of KU is an agent of the same conspiracy which defied a United Nations team sent to unite Korea by an All-Korean election; and then engineered a war of aggression which killed over 50,000 Americans. The reception of the Soviet Counsel reveals the tragic and amoral "double standard" which is applied in dealing with our com- own country: The great issue is not: should the communists speak—but where? munist enemies. WOULD THE MANAGEMENT OF KU HAVE RECEIVED AN IMPORTANT NAZI OR FASCIST OFFICIAL AFTER FORCES UNDER THEIR SPONSORSHIP HAD KILLED OVER 50,000 AMERICANS? Our universities are a MAIN TARGET of communist operations. Hundreds of communists agents have been recruited and conditioned on American university campuses. Communists are masters of deceit. They claim rights in free nations which they deny to their own socialist slaves. The right of free speech is not involved in Fomin's case. He is not a U.S. citizen. As a matter of fact, he has no more right to free speech here than he does in his own country! We contend that American tax-supported colleges are no place for communists or their fellow-travelers. For this principle, the Patrick Henry Post shall continue a forthright and unwavering fight! Daily Hansan Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 University of Kansas student newspaper Vernon L. Williams Vice-Commander Patrick Henry Post No. 144 150 North Oliver Wichita, Kansas Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office 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 (Editor's note: The Patrick Henry American Legion post in Wichita raised strong objections to the two speakers at KU's World Crisis Day last December, Alexander Fomin, a Soviet embassy official, and Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. an adviser to President Kennedy. The post is a splinter group that formed because it could not practice its program of "Americanism" in the post its members formerly belonged to. Its criticism of World Crisis Day was condemned by many public officials and such newspapers as the Kansas City Star, Hutchinson News and Wichita Eagle.) 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. 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. Short Ones I know I would be different if people only called me by my inside name. Spike. —Bernard (from a panel by Jules Feifer) The insecure academician is more dangerous than the myopic deer hunter. It is possible to refuse to license the hunter. But nobody protects the students from the man who is not strong enough to lead them, not convinced enough to teach them. —William Gerald Manley .. .. Harry Truman once had a sage word of advice for statesmen and politicians who fretted under the stings of partisan criticism and the responsibilities of public office: "If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen and let someone else do the cooking." —William D. Patterson PROOF SQUARE - SO TIKED TODAY I ALMOST FELL ASLEEP IN CLASS. the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism THE DAMNATION OF THERON WARE, by Harold Frederic. Doubleday Dolphin, 95 cents. Though it lacks the finesse of some other books of its time. "The Damnation of Theron Ware" may be put down as an underrated novel of the naturalistic movement and one that compares favorably with Garland, Howells, Crane and Dreiser. It is a foreshadowing of "Elmer Gantry," but it holds up much better than that latter-day attack on the ministry. Theron Ware, like Elmer, is a minister out of the revival tradition. When he is assigned by the Methodist Church to a position in a small town in upper New York state, Ware slowly degenerates, morally and spiritually. HE IS AN UNLEARNED MAN who, like Sinclair Lewis' Carol Kennicott, blames the smallness and meanness of his village for the weaknesses within himself. He comes to know the sophisticated Catholic priest in the town of Octavius, and then the doctor friend of the priest and a rich Catholic girl who plays Chopin in the moonlight and gives Ware some false and materialistic values. Ware also becomes a close friend of a woman hired by the Methodists to come around at revival time and raise money. He finds that she has no special belief in the church, and he gradually drifts away from his wife and from the church and places all the blame upon Methodism instead of upon Theron Ware. Whether Frederic is condemning his hero or condemning society is unsure. He has a disturbing practice of shifting momentarily from the central focus of Theron Ware to other characters in the novel, so that we momentarily are allowed to look into other minds. But never for long. All this aside, "The Damnation of Theron Ware" remains an honest and penetrating study of man and his society. *** UP, INTO THE SINGING MOUNTAIN, by Richard Llewellyn. Cardinal. 50 cents. Llewellyn has been off his stride since "None but the Lonely Heart," and that was back around 1943. He has tried with this book, which appeared first in early 1960, to give us a sequel to "How Green Was My Valley," but except for the sometimes expressive lilt of the Welsh idiom the book fails. lift of the Welsh idiom the book runs. Its setting no longer is Wales. Huw Morgan has become a cabinet maker, and his fortunes take him to the new world, not to the United States but to Patagonia in southern Argentina, to a Welsh colony. Huw is still the fiercely independent person his parents taught him to be, and all he gets from the people in Patagonia is trouble. One might suggest, though, that Huw worked overtime at being a nonconformist. He picked the defrocked minister of "How Green Was My Valley," Mr. Gruffydd, as his best friend. He lived in the home of a widow and soon shared bed as well as breakfast table with her. He made enemies with the most powerful people in the area. He preferred to read the English Bible over the Welsh, and he was quite outspoken about going to church at any time. And he made a coffin for a nonbeliever. All bad things, of course, to some people, at any rate, and we can cheer Huw for his independence and honesty as we become annoyed at his churlishness. The trouble is, we also can get lost, for Llewellyn is trying so hard with the Welsh touch that he frequently loses the reader. It is a dramatic tale, but not an important one, and, even sadder to relate, it probably isn't even good enough for Hollywood. Page 3 Recollections of a UDK Editor (Below is a letter from former UDK staffer George DeBord now with the University of Montreal's tomorrow's anniversary edition will carry reminiscences of many former editors.) It was my turn to play managing editor, that winter morning in 1990, and I was walking across the wind-wheipped snow field that in other seasons was known as Parking Lot X. I was about an hour late getting to the newsroom in Flint and had visions of finding one of the new sophomores caught in the teletype machine. The window slid down and young Douglas Yocom, the UDK's personal affairs editor, leaned out. The girl beside him was a former homecoming queen, the one on the far side an officer in the liberal Hedonists for Freedom society. Nearing the gates at the entrance to the lot. I came across an old Chevrolet. There were three people in it and I thought I recognized the driver. "HEY, IN THERE," I said, knocking on the frosted window. "Is that you, Doug." The PA editor grinned, then held up an old envelope that had a couple of words scribbled on the back. "Writing a feature story. We've been working on it all night." The girls more or less looked out the far window. I guess there was something going on over there that I couldn't see. "What ya doin'" I asked, knocking the snow from my coat. "Anything we can use on page one?" I asked. "I got the paper today." "I doubt it," he said, "I haven't got it developed far enough yet. Probably be a couple of weeks." FROM THE LOOK in his eyes, I figured Doug was laying the ground-work for something big, and that if probably would be better if I didn't interfere. "Maybe I'll see you up at the hall later," I said, and turned toward the driveway leading to the street. "I doubt if I'll be in today," he said. "This will probably take more time than I thought." I thought I heard one of the girls gigging as I walked away, but it probably was the wind. Doug was one of our better staffers. He always had something going for him. THE HEAVY green doors separating the winter air from the world of Flint Hall slammed shut behind me a few minutes later and the sound of howling wind was replaced by the pounding, clicking noises of typewriters, Teletypes and Linotypes. I glanced at my watch, threw back my shoulders, and turned into the corridor leading to the news-room. I stepped at the door to remove my coat. Mel Mencher, faculty adviser, glanced up from a stack of proofs. The fire in his eyes would have melted the ice from every sidewalk on campus. "You're late again, DeBord," he yelled. "You get an A for the day." I glanced around the room hoping to find something with which to change the subject. One of the new students was leaning over the teletype, his right arm reaching down inside the cover. Great rolls of yellow paper were wrapped around his feet. "He's always fouling something up," Mencher said, still grinding away at the proofs. "What have you got for page one?" "SAY." I said, in an informative tone, "it looks like Gabby Wilson's caught in the machine again." I walked over to where Gabby was standing, and he gave me a sort of hopeless, confused nod. The flying keys of the UPI Special were typing out a bulletin from Topeka on his wrist. "Looks like Docking is about to slice another million from the building fund," I said. "That ought to give us a top head." "GOOD," the FA said, his pencil making furious slashes at the last of the proofs. "Who you got on it?" I thought a moment. "Ray Miller." I hadn't seen him in a week and hoped, silently, that he still was in school. "He told me yesterday that he would be right on top of this as soon as he got the word." I shut the machine off and pushed the release button on the rollers, freeing Gabby's arm. He looked at me apologetically, then began collecting the sports wire from the floor. Gab was our sports editor and worked pretty hard at it. I walked over to the slot of the kidney-shaped desk which dominated the newsroom and sat down in my chair. After clearing the desk with a sweep of my arm, I sat back and lit a cigarette. Mencher threw the stack of butchered proofs down in front of me and started from the room. "You ought to put someone on that building fund story," he said "How about using Miller?" I SAID that sounded like a real good idea and that I wondered why I hadn't thought of it. He left and I reached for the telephone book, turning slowly to the listings under M. That's pretty much the way it went with the UDK in the first year of the Soaring Sixties. Ours was not what you would call a tight operation and few people ever bothered to show up before 10 o'clock. Somehow or other, we always managed to get the paper out and we succeeded in making a few authorities mad at us, but these achievements always were considered secondary to the maintaining of a stern code of individual freedom among members of the staff. AND OLD John Husar, the permanent editorial editor. If he got to crusing on something a little bit delicate, you just let him rip it up a few days until the Chancellor called or the Board of Regents threatened to close the school. After awhile, it would all blow over, and everyone would be glad that John had done it, and there would be a victory celebration at the Jayhawk-toasting the fact that they couldn't put us down. A FACULTY member knew better than to attempt to bust up a baseball game in the newsroom even if it was press time and the page one dummy lay unattended on the desk. With an eraser for a ball and a ruler for a bat, the crew used the game as a means of letting off steam. Jack Harrison proved to be one of the better hitters. Ron Butler probably the best chucker. Or when Janet Juneau would write something about sororities. You just ran a pencil over it lightly to remove the pizza stains, laughed at the double meanings, and sent it out to the back shop. Janet, like the others, had a particular way of doing things, and if you tried to change that, the copy turned out badly. Like I said, we made a few people mad. We didn't believe in putting out the usual sugar-coated college publicity sheet and eventually, made theists of everybody from the governor right on down the line. By this I mean we respected each other and tried to get the job done without upsetting a person's way of life. For instance, an editor was frowned upon if he expected anything from Doug Yocom while he was on one of his research projects. If you would wait him out, he would decide there were other things in the world besides girls, show up for work one day and do the work of three men. All this might sound as if we didn't do much work, but that isn't the case at all. I'm trying to show the way things were and that there was an attitude among us that contributed to the success of what usually was a pretty fine college paper. It was an attitude of mutual respect for each other's abilities and of understanding for whatever shortcomings should appear. Or like the time Dick Crocker decided to bring his dog to live in the newsroom. Nobody fooled around with that. "Thirty" just sort of sat down and from then on, he belonged. Harry Ritter, Carol Allen and a few of the others had been among the group that had more or less been thrown out of Gov. George Docking's office the year before, and they worked pretty hard at keeping tabs on his activities. They spent a lot of time calling to Topeka and listening for the click when the secretary up there found out who was on the other end of the line. IN OUR TIME, we worked in a relaxed atmosphere and laughed a lot. ON CAMPUS SUBJECTS, we stirred up controversy with our treatment of the loyalty oath requirement, the outdated disciplinary procedures at KU, suppression of news, death of the "Fowl" humor magazine, actions of the All Student Council and the lack of more than one political party on the Hill. One time, after I had written an editorial knocking the ASC for the secretive way in which its end of disciplinary cases were handled, the student body president paid me a visit. "Accusing us of being secretive." "Oh," I said, "maybe I'd better write a retraction." JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT "You're all wrong," he said, propping his feet on my desk. "Good idea," he said, lighting his pipe. "WHILE I'M AT IT. I might as well explain how the disciplinary setup works," I said, "so everyone will understand. What's the procedure?" "Oh," I said again. "Well, then, who's on the committee?" "Can't tell you. We're not authorized to give out that information." "That's classified, too." "And the names of the students brought before the committee?" "The by-laws do not permit us to reveal the . . ." "BUT THERE'S nothing secretive about it. You've got us all wrong there," he said, getting to his feet. "That retraction is a good idea." "I see," I interrupted. I told him I'd think about it and pulled the blank sheet of paper from my typewriter as he was putting on his coat. We didn't run too many retractions that year. We said that we were seldom wrong, but actually, there was another reason. Jack Morton, the overall managing editor and the UDK's answer to Yul Brenner, thought they were bad for morale. ON THE OCCASION when a typographical error accidentally linked a woman professor romantically with a visitor from Iran (actually she had only introduced him at a meeting of the Foreign Affairs club — I think that's how the typo came about) Jack stood firm and would not listen to complaints of injury. Jack simply told her that what she did was her business, but that if she wanted to keep her name out of the papers, she ought to be more particular about whom she was seen with. Other than that one incident, though, we were pretty accurate, as I recall. We called 'em as we saw 'em. Chancellor Murphy used to call Mr. Mencher up to his suite in Strong Hall every once in awhile, and MM could be heard cursing under his breath for several days following, but he never told us to lay off anything, and we hung right in there. I've often credited whatever confidence I have in myself as a reporter to the fact that my faculty adviser believed in me. THERE WERE some people working in the newsroom at the turn of the decade whom I haven't mentioned, among them Robert Harwi, who sharpened axes with the elderly women of the Kansas State Censor Board, Joanie Jewett, probably the best woman writer ever to quit the school, Larry Miles, resident student, Saundra Hayn, Brenda Starl-like beauty from the West, and several others, but I just can't remember them all. None of the people I've mentioned had showed up at the newsroom by 10 o'clock on that winter day I was writing about at the beginning. I was sitting at the desk more or less wondering what to do with the four blank page dummies that were left (Continued on page 5) Portraits of Distinction Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 建筑工人 Monday, January 15. 1962 University Daily Kansan HIXON STUDIO A. A. Abdul-Rahim, Syria graduate, defeated Brian Cleave, East-bourn, Sussex England graduate, 80 to 66 for the presidency of international club in a lengthy, dissension-filled meeting Friday night. In other elections Cleave was chosen vice president; Suzanne Runnells, Greeley, Colo., sophomore, secretary; Arthur K. Spears, Kansas City freshman, treasurer and Patricia Price, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, social chairman. THEY CONTENDED the club is ineffective and disorganized because it has only one business meeting a semester. They said the problem was worsened because the club's executive committee (the officers) meet too infrequently to accomplish anything. International Club Elects Officers As Shafiq Hasan Hashmi, Hyderabad, India, graduate and out-going president of the club, opened the meeting, three members jumped to their feet demanding discussion and action on club business procedures. His statement was greeted with jeers and groans from the club. Hashmi refused the discussion motion saying time was short (the meeting began late after a film at Hoch auditorium) and that elections were the main order of business. Hashmi asked for a voice vote. After the chorus of yeas and nays, he announced the club would proceed with election of officers. HE WAS hoooted from the floor again and was informed the matter must be decided by a counted vote and that a two-thirds majority was necessary to change the agenda. Hashmi consented and the club voted. The vote to change the agenda was defeated 81-30. Hashmi then announced Manouchehr Pedram, Tehran, Iran, graduate student, would take charge of the elections and the remainder of the meeting. THE APPOINTMENT argument was carried out in the face of so much talk and laughter it was nearly impossible to understand what was being said. A member of the club challenged Hashmi's right in appointing Pedram the international Club's All Student Council representative. (Pedram's ASC appointment was made earlier in the semester — the challenge had nothing to do with Pedram's temporary chairmanship Friday night.) Hashmi's antagonist finally conceded that Hashmi had been acting within his rights as president. Finally the meeting was restored to order and the elections were concluded by midnight. 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. 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 minted, 1.00. Old Spice SHULTON University Daily Kansan Monday, January 15, 1962 Page 4 Kise Krueger - 'Dean for a Day' The dean of women and a sorority president traded places last Friday. The result: new rules in the sorority and a confused new dean of women. Kise Krueger, Laramie, Wyo, senior and president of Pi Beta Phi, won the right to trade places for a day with Emily Taylor, dean of women, when Pi Beta Phi raised the most money per member in an Associated Women Students Memo- rial Scholarship drive last fall. The two traded places from Friday noon until Saturday noon. A VIGOROUS HOUSE president, Dean Taylor issued a sweeping revision of house rules shortly after assuming her new office. Included in the new rules were: - A rule requiring sorority members to wear name tags at all times. * Stricter controls over senior boys. "TD SAY THE HOUSE was one step behind the dean of women all the time," added Miss Krueger. "They had a lot of fun although, of course, nobody did too much studying over the weekend." "We tried to keep in mind that I was president," commented Dean Taylor. While Dean Taylor appears to have assumed her new duties with relative ease, Miss Krueger found her duties as dean of women rather exhausting—due, no doubt, to some elaborate planning beforehand by her predecessor. While in office, she attempted to deal with the following problems, all staged: - A woman student from the University of Chicago (actually a KU drama student) seeking admit-tance to KU after she had been dismissed from the Chicago school for unexplained disciplinary reasons. - A KU sorority president seeking advice on how to depledge. - A telephone call from a KU housemother who announced that she was going to Europe the next day. "BY ABOUT FOUR o'clock Friday, I began to realize that all this was a joke," Miss Krueger said. "But the transfer student from Chicago really had me fooled." "About 1:30 Friday afternoon, Carl Fahrbach (assistant director of admissions) called to say he was sending this girl up to see me about being admitted to KU. He said the girl was a straight-A student, but that she had been dismissed for disciplinary reasons. "The girl wouldn't tell me why she had been dismissed from school. She said she had flown here just to see about being admitted, and she was very angry that she had happened to come on a day when Dean Taylor and I switched places. She said she had to leave for Chicago at five o'clock." Miss Krueger summed up the experience as follows: "I can certainly sympathize with all the problems that the dean of women has to face." IT WAS ONLY LATER, after Miss Krueger had held an urgent problem conference with Janet Noel, assistant to the dean of women, that she learned of the hoax. "No," she said, "I think I'd rather be a sorority president." Wayne Records HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — John Wayne has been signed to a non-exclusive recording pact by Liberty Records. His initial recording will be "Walk With Him" and "I Have Faith." BUSINESS MACHINES CO. 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 & 8 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky Official Bulletin SERVICE RENTALS Printing, Mimegraphing and Duplicating Pick up — Delivery Teacher Interviews; Jan. 17 & 18. Club Sports; Jeff. Co. Schoolbooks, Lakewood, Colo. TODAY Analytical Chemistry Seminar; 4 p.m. 1234567890 Zimmerman, "Absorption Spectroscopy." Angel Flight Meeting: 7 p.m., Military Science Building. Episcopal Holy Communion and Breakfast: 7 a.m. Cotterbury House. TOMORROW **Humanities Forum:** 8 p.m. Oread Room, Kansas Union. Dr. William O. Scott, Assistant Professor of English, Teens, and Methods in the Analysis of "Poetry." Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. WEDNESDAY El Ateneo. El programa de hoy consitera en cinco películas en colores sobre la naturaleza del mundo, torno Fontecito (Sound Lab) a las cuadritos de la tarde. Refrescos. Todos invitados. AUSTIN, Tex. —(UPI) — Texas' cattle population is about the same size as the human population, the University of Texas Bureau of Business Research reports. The Bureau said there are 9.5 million head of cattle and about the same number of people. However, the cattle population in 1900 was about what it is today, but the human population has risen sharply in the past 60 years. Population Note Traffic Fines Indicate Watchful Campus Police KU's somewhat elaborate parking arrangement could easily deteriorate into mass chaos except for the efforts of a small group of men who patrol the campus. If figures representing the number of parking violation tickets issued since the fall semester began are any indication, these men do their jobs well. The campus traffic department has issued a total of 5,817 tickets for parking infractions since the current semester opened. In the six month period from July to the end of December the University business office collected $11,141 in student parking fines alone. INCLUDED IN the total number of tickets issued are 3,006 to students, 464 to staff members, and 1,809 to visitors, all since September. An additional 171 tickets are being processed to identify the owner of a car that does not include 367 tickets issued by violation of city, parking, ordinances. The mass of figures suggests that without a system of parking zones such as the University has set up, the result would be a motorist's "free-for-all" to the accompaniment of crinkled fenders. The number of parking tickets issued to date this semester, though seemingly high, reflects no startling increase, however. For a comparable period last year, the total was slightly higher at 6.287. This total included 3,400 to students, 432 to staff members, 1,153 to visitors, and 724 unidentified. The unidentified tickets are eventually traced through motor vehicle registration offices of Kansas and Missouri. Students who fail to pay the parking infraction fees, along with library penalties and Kansas Union fees, will have trouble carrying out their enrollment for the second semester. A studer can not enroll, receive a copy, his transcript, THE MATTER of parking tickets has a particular significance at this time of year to students who have neglected their monthly notices that fines are due. graduate or transfer colleges unless the fees have been paid. There is little correlation between the number of parking tickets issued and fines collected since the first ticket issued is in the form of a warning. Only subsequent tickets require payment of a penalty fee. This year the traffic office has instituted a new system of billing for parking violations each month in order to give several reminders to violators. Previously, billing was twice a semester, according to Joe Skillman, chief of campus police. Animal Actors HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — How many animal actors are there? The American Humane Association says more than 8,000 animals performed for motion picture and television cameras during the first half of 1961. In July, on television alone, there were 465 working horses, 76 sheep, 12 chickens and 8 dogs. During the same month the movies employed 206 horses, 65 sheep and 58 cows. THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: NORM SHERER Norm Sherer joined Ohio Bell two years ago. He hadn't been with the company long when he had an imaginative idea for speeding up customer billing. This idea and others won Norm an important promotion to Sales Supervisor for the Columbus Office. Now, with six engineers who report to him, Norm keeps Columbus businessmen informed on advances in telephone service and equipment. Norm Sherer of the Ohio Bell Telephone Company, and other 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. BELL SYSTEM BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES TELEPHONE MAN-OF-THE MONTH Wir come have The fluid winter and s intere The C impot nate and inchi less, Re when seen oppos "Hi were gent "Wha TH comp from Menc this r on th I g first well "How to yo I. my s "O she t Th barr she "S the had help at th I and Yocc matc said, over Monday, January 15, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5 KU Winter Fashion Scene 1234567890 KU LOOK—Marcia Myers, Topeka junior, proves the outfit holds first place in KU fashion. Favored is this sleeveless dress and jacket in double-knit weave by Bobbie Brooks. Couturier-Look Came to KU Liked It, and Stayed Winter fashions have not just come from couturier to KU. They have enrolled here, too. The look of gentle fit and of fluid movement distinguishes KU's winter fashion silhouette. Dresses and suits are softly fitted with flare interest at the skirts. and often carry their own suit-look jackets. The classic look in sportswear is retained in long-legged pants and casually worn tunic overblouses. Easy to wear capes, often reversible, lend a dash to the casual way of life. Skirts are gently flared. And pleats are evident everywhere. The costume look is everywhere. The dress and coat costume is more important than ever using coordinate colorings, compatible textures and harmonious cut. Jackets are inching down. Dresses go sleeveless, even in smart daytime wools The hottest fashion color this winter is magenta, a blue-red that becomes everyone. Burnished browns and reds are also big. Greens change from mouldy, mossy, cool woodland shades for day to blazing acid tones for evening. KU Men Offer Fashion View At the beginning of each season, women all over the world scrutinize fashion magazines to decide whether to raise or lower hem-lines and choose the latest wardrobe colors. Then they dash to the hair-dresser to experiment with the newest hair styles. By Pam Christiansen The world of women's fashion depends on men's opinion and here are those of five KU men on women's fashions on this campus. Rogers Worthington, New York junior; "I don't like those funny little ribbons girls wear above their foreheads." He also said he does not care for "beehive" hairdres. Short knee-dresses appeal to him providing the woman wears heels and doesn't have "knobby knees." Clarence Awaya, Honolulu, Hawaii, junior: "I dig jumpers and the French hairdo." He likes women to wear slimjims and overblouses with ropes around the waist. He doesn't like the "behave." Herb Smith, Memphis, Tenn. sophomore. "I don't like short dresses. They make most girls look like Robin Hood." He prefers slimjims, sheath dresses, and long hairdos. "I just like girls to look tail and slim," he said . Bill Hargrave, Kansas City senior: "I like short, short skirts and leotards if the girl looks nice in them." He doesn't like full skirts on any woman. He thinks more women should dress in becoming clothes whether or not they happen to be in style. Dan Ashbaugh, Shawnee, Ohio, junior: "I haven't had much time to notice women's clothes. Naturally, everyone likes short skirts, though." He does like the "beehive" and thinks that women "know what they're doing" in the fashion world. Recollections of a UDK Editor — (Continued from page 3) (Continued from page 3) when a couple of girls I had never seen before walked in and sat down opposite me. "Hi there," I said, thinking they were sorority messengers with urgent news of a recent pinning. "What can I do for you?" I glanced over the copy and the first of the articles appeared to be well done. Looking up, I asked, "How did he happen to assign this to you?" THE TALLER ONE looked at her companion, then produced a folder from behind her handbag. "Mr. Mencher told me to have this in by this morning. It's a three-part series on the University budget." "I work here," she said. "This is my second semester." "Oh," I said. "And your friend. Is she a reporter to?" The other girl was a little embarrassed. "I'm one of the editors," she said. "I graduate in June." "SAY." I SAID, looking over by the door where several of the others had appeared, "I could use a little help. Why don't you try your hand at this?" I gave her the other girl's article and walked over to the new arrivals. Yocom, Husar and Harrison were matching for coffee. "Hey Doug," I said, quietly. "You know those girls ever there?" He glanced toward the desk. "Seen Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Harrison, who usually knew a little more of what was going on, said he was pretty sure both of them were in our class and that he thought this was their second year on the paper. 'em around, but I don't know their names. I thought the short one worked for you. I saw her there last week and was going to ask you who she was." I NEVER DID find out who they were, although they always did a lot of work on the days I played editor in the following months. I had intended to ask their names as I was walking back to the desk, but Miller came running in with the building fund story and I got busy. article, I managed to get page one filled, and the other girl, the editor, came up with some stuff for the inside. By 1:30, everything was wrapped up and I was standing around waiting for the paper to be brought in. With Miller's story and the girl's Mencher came in with a proof of page one, dropped it on the desk, and turned toward the door. "THAT'S A HELLUVA good page," he said. Walking off down the corridor busily looking over a new stack of proofs for the following day, he yelled back over his shoulder, "I gave you an A for the day. Try getting here on time next week." Like I may have said earlier, ours was not the taughtest ship on the seas, but it never went under. Sale HANES HOSIERY Entire Stock Reduced THIS WEEK ONLY C ACH HOUSE 1237 Oread On the Campus Milady Prefers Her Fashions Wild No doubt about it, wild animals have never been tamer than this year. Women are demanding bird, beast and reptile as permanent companions (that is, of course, as companion pieces). Milady finds the bird a companion in feathered hats, feathered trims and feathered accessories. The much heard "maribou" is the soft and elongated tail and wing feathers of the stork, Mr. Stork thus delivering to madame glamour by the yard as well as you-know-what. Ostrich feathers can be found on hats or, especially attractive and feminine, on the hemline of a chiffon dress. But any way that it is worn, one knows Milady must have feathers this winter, else the feathers will be flying. Fur is either one of Milady's household or outdoor pets. Fur can be worn in any way. As coats, jackets, accessories or trims, it is limited only by one's imagination. Fake fur is especially smart for lounge wear in the new sophisticated long skirts. Milady has found another escort she would never have thought could dress fashionably enough to accompany her to the theater. This is Mr. Practical Pig who is joining the weightless suede, the mat-finish kidskin, snake skin, antelope and sueded calfskin on the fashion scene. Milady likes leather. The suede pigskin has resiliency, body and Scotchgard finish to lend it to many dashing interpretations of the dressy or sporting look. Dresses form completed costumes with leather jacket toppers or coats. Shapes are primarily relaxed and liquid. Look-Alikes Extended to Include Pets A canine putting his best paw forward now must wear a coat matching his owner's. The matchmates were shown by New York's leading feminine and canine models during a fashion show at the recent Newspaper Food Editor's Conference. A pattern company designed 14 coats for chic pets to match its fall collection of women's fashions. Among best dressed dogs were a Russian wolfhound sporting a mon- grammed red fleece coat with black braid trim and a Scottie dressed in a fringed clan plaid coat. It is smart to plan a winter in laminated coats. Look ahead to Kansas' unpredictable weather—laminates cannot be fooled. What a nice keep-me-warm look. There are currently 60 shades of mink with new mutations being bred each year. --ed. Beautifully Pressed SALE ENDS CLIP THIS COUPON ANY CLOTH Men's-Child's-Ladies' COAT JAN. 20th CAR COATS FUR TRIMMED ZIP-IN LININGS OVERCOATS RAINCOATS ANY COAT! 59c ea. NOTE: No Limit—But you must bring this coupon in WITH your order. TROUSERS ● SLACKS ● 5 TIES ● SPORT SHIRTS ● SWEATERS ● BLOUSES ● SKIRTS (plain) 39 ℃ ea Note: No Llmit. But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Order 25c SHIRTS NOW ONLY Laundered to perfection! Starched as you like! 20°c Dress Shirts 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 1300 West 23rd St. VI 2-0200 --- Page 6 University Daily Kausan Monday. January 15, 1962 Kansas Plays Poorly But Defeats Missouri Bv Steve Clark Kansas and Missouri both made numerous mechanical errors but the Jayhawkers shot a torrid 45.6 percentage from the field and sloppily defeated the Tigers 65-54 at Columbia Saturday night before 3,200 fans, their largest crowd of the year. The ball was consistently loose on the court and changing hands. Both teams double-dribbled, traveled, had the ball stolen, and lost rebounds underneath the basket. The ball changed hands and ends Dumas Cites Kansas Fans "Everyone from Kansas is here," said forward Jim Dumas in the dressing room after KU's game with Missouri Saturday night. This reporter informed him that there were only about 10 KU students in Columbia for the game. "IS THAT ALL?" Dumas asked. "It seemed to me like there were a lot more." "The cheerleaders were even here tonight," said Dumas to Loye Sparks. "Yea, I saw them," Sparks replied "It REALLY FEELS GOOD to see some KU students come over for the game." Dumas said. "It makes you feel like someone cares. You can get beat on the boards all night, but if you know there are some KU students that are pulling for you and really care, it makes it worthwhile." The Kansas dressing room was filled with conversation, but nevertheless, a quiet air prevailed. There were several groups of players talking among themselves. Coach Dick Harp had Jerry Gardner over in a corner. The pair were serious much of the time, but every once in awhile they would start laughing. Nolen Ellison who hit his career high in scoring with 28 points was dressing quietly by himself. Ellison played the entire ball game as he has every game this year, and seemed content just to rest. HE WAS ASKED about KU's not slowing the ball game down in the final minutes of play instead of continuing to play "run and shoot" basketball. "We're not a slow-down ball club." Ellison replied. "We like to go out and run and shoot with a team. If we can't run and shoot with a team then we don't deserve to beat them We're just not the kind of team to play slow ball." The first half of the KU-MU game was almost entirely a slowed-down, control game. Not until late in the first half did KU open up the game. "I THINK THE REASON the game went so slowly was that both teams were tense." Ellison continued. "Each was trying to feel the other out and as a result, the game was slowed down. I don't believe Missouri wanted a slowed-down ball game either, but that was the way it started out and it was hard to get away from it." Meanwhile in the Missouri dressing room, there was a locked door. On it read, "Coaches' Locker Room." Behind the door was MU coach Sparky Stalcup. He didn't come out. The people that had waited a half-hour to see him, slowly drifted away. Each had in his own mind, how a coach feels after his team loses. SUMMER JOBS IN EUROPE of the court so often that the game seemed more like a "ping pong" contest than that of basketball. THE FOOTING WAS even hard to keep. In the opening moments of play MU's Phil Doughty was running down court and for some unknown reason, slipped and fell about midcourt. The game was delayed while the MU trainer treated Doughty. Moments later even the referee lost his footing. The turning point of the game for Kansas was in the last minute-and-a-half of play in the first half. Kansas and Missouri, after playing a control ball game to that point, were tied 27-27. NOLEN ELLISON, who was the game's high scorer with a career-high of 28 points, tied the game 27-27 when he rebounded Jerry Gardner's shot, and hit from underneath the basket. The Jayhawkers then burst into a six-point spree while holding Missouri scoreleer to "twist the Tiger's tail" and hold a 33-27 halftime edge. KU brought the ball down court and set up their offense. Ellison saw Dumas unattended beneath the bucket and fired a high pass to him. Dumas scored all in one motion. He caught the pass and tipped it into the basket at the peak of his jump giving the Jayhawkers a two point margin. WRITE TO: AMERICAN STUDENT INFORMATION SERVICE, 22, AVE. DE LA LIBERTE, LIFXEMBOURG Jim Dumas, who tied with Ellison as KU's top rebounder with nine, gave Kansas possession when he blocked a Tiger player's shot. Lee Flachsbarth followed with another defensive gem when he took the ball out of the Missouri center's hands. He fired downcourt to fast-breaking Gardner who laid the ball in with 38 seconds to play. MISSOURI BROUGHT the ball downcourt but lost control. Loye Sparks picked up the ball and fired to Gardner, who again led a fast break down the court to score with 15 seconds remaining. Kansas controlled the opening tip in the second half and Gardner connected on a long jump shot to start the Jayhawkers rolling. The Tigers never threatened in the second half and at one point went six and a half minutes without scoring a field goal. It was Ellison who was a big factor in the Javhawker's victory. The junior guard started the Jays rolling in the opening moments of play by scoring eight of the Hawkers first nine points. He led a Jayhawker barrage in the second half scoring nine consecutive points while Kansas built up a 13 point lead over the Tigers. ELLISON PLAYED "steady" basketball. He scored, he rebounded, and did not make the mechanical errors that plagued the other nine men on the court. Gardner recovered from his subpar scoring performance of seven points at Kansas State and scored eight field goals and two free throws for 18 points. Gardner's ball handling, however, like at Kansas State, was erratic. The senior guard hurt the Jayhawkers at many crucial points in the game with bad passes. Early in the second half his bad passes lost Kansas the control of the ball three consecutive times. Gardner did come up with one sensational play and that was late in the second half when he led a Kansas fast break and whipped a behind his back 15-foot pass to Harry Gibson in the corner who hit on a long jumper. BOTH COACHIES substituted freely throughout the game. Coach Dick Harp shuffled Dumas, Harry Gibson, who started the game even though he has a bad knee injury, Buddy Vance. LAMSAS 25 Nolen Ellison Flachsbarth and Sparks in and out of the game trying to find a combination that would click. Missouri coach Sparky Stalcup tried to find a center who could do the job but was without success. Steve Wyostek, who did not plan to compete in basketball this year but was, so to speak, "drafted" into competing, started the game. Malery Bass and Gary Dye were both given shots at the position, but were unsuccessful. Finally, Stalcup inserted a forward, Lyle Houston, into the post position, and he finished third high in scoring for the Tigers with nine points. The win moved the Jayhawkers out of the Big Eight cellar and left the Tigers occupying last place by itself. Kansas now has a 1-2 conference record and is 5-8 overall in season play. The loss left Missouri with an 0-3 conference record and a 6-8 season slate. Right halfback Curtis McClinton overcame Forrest Griffith, the great fullback of the 1948 Orange Bowl club, and placed fourth on the all-time rushing list at 1414. McClinton thus secured a station behind Charlie Hoag (1914), Homer Floyd (1954), and Ray Evans (1931). McClinton's seasonal net of 553 also is the seventh-best onslaught in Kansas history. McClinton Fourth in Rushing BOSTON — (UFI) — Fitcher Don Schwall of the Red Sox, the American League's 1961 Rookie-of-the-Year, was a star basketball player at the University of Oklahoma. Shines Again Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Bill Sheldon A year ago last November Kansas defeated Missouri at Columbia in football and the Tiger supporters retaliated by attacking the KU band and causing several fights in the stands. A year ago last December Kansas lost the Big Eight football championship to Missouri at the conference meeting in Kansas City. At that time there were frequent and caustic comments made by the KU fans about the probability of Missouri forcing the relinquishment of the title and also the action which had been taken by the NCAA. A YEAR AGO this month the caustic comments were turned into boos and derogatory remarks at the basketball game here. A year ago next month the Kansas basketball team was involved in what can probably be called the worst fight in conference history as members of both squads scuffed on the court and the Missouri students swarmed to the court to aid in punishing the KU players. "This is the gol-darnedest comedy ya' ever did see... I sure had a lot of fun making it and ya' all are going to have fun when ya' do it" The SECOND TIME AROUND ANDY GRIFITH • DEBBIE REYNOLDS • STEVE FORREST JULIE PROWSE • THELMA RITTER Last October there was an unsuccessful attempt by some leading Kansas students to reach a definite agreement with the Missouri leaders concerning relations between the two schools. LAST NOVEMBER Missouri came to Lawrence and won in football but the only incident was the fans crowding about the goal posts to see the dogs stationed there to discourage roudiness Last Saturday night Brewer Field House the scene of last year's debacle of deportment, harbored the best show of friendship between the two schools in at least a full year and probably a great deal longer. The Kansas players were not spit upon as last year, there were no names emanating from the stands insulting the Kansas Negroes, there was no debris flung onto the court aimed at the Crimson clad players, there were no clenched fists, and the only boos were on very rare occasions at the referees over a disputed call. Even Missouri Coach Sparky Alcunup failed to rant and rave and tread the sidelines berating the KU team. All in all, it was a very calm night. Maybe a little national television could have spiced things up some. MANY PEOPLE FELT that much of the problem created last year at Columbia was the presence of several Negroes on the Kansas squad. There were no comments of any fashion about the two Negroes on the Kansas squad Saturday. And, much to this writer's amazement, after the Missouri band had burst forth at half time with the inspiring chords of "Dixie," a Negro baton twirler entertained the crowd and was tremendously well received and applauded more than the Tiger team. At this time a year ago there was considerable talk among some of the Kansas players about never returning to Brewer Field House to play. STARTS SATURDAY AT THE GRANADA VIVIEN LEIGH IN TENNESSEE WILLIAMS THE ROMAN SPRING OF MRS. STONE CO-STARRING WARREN BEATTY TECHNICOLOR*from WARNER BROS. It appears at present that most of the past animosities between the student bodies of the two schools have been covered over and forgotten. This is not to say that another incident in the near future, somewhat of the scope of those of the past 14 months, is not possible. If this were to happen, the progress which appears to have been made will be wiped out and the threats of fights and the necessity of "peace pacts" will come forth once again. There was even some discussion, on the administrative level, of a discontinuance of athletic relations between the two schools if the situation existing at that time grew any further out of proportion. NOW! Shows At 7:00 & 9:00 VARSITY THEATRE...Telahnya VOLUME 3-1965 ALTHOUGH THERE IS no soft spot in this writer's heart for the University of Missouri, any of its people or anything it stands for, it was a pleasure to be able to go to Columbia this past weekend and never have the feeling there would be an outbreak similar to those of the past. It is especially satisfying to know that the students of the schools have retired their bad feelings to the backs of their minds and have set favorable examples for each other at the last two athletic engagements. The Missouri basketball team comes to Lawrence the night of Feb. 5 which is the Monday on which classes start for next semester. It was proven Saturday that Coach Harp's team is superior to their Missouri counterpart. Certainly there is no reason why a student led student body from Kansas cannot prove itself, once more, capable of conduct equal to or better than that shown by the Missouri students Saturday, which was a fine example, CHICAGO —(UPI)— Tippy Dye, University of Nebraska Athletic Director, said recently Wyoming coach Bob Devaney remained his only choice for the Nebraska football coaching post. "The decision rests with the University of Wyoming athletic board." Dye said. "The board meets the first week in February and at that time will consider whether to release Devaney from his Wyoming contract." Bob Devaney Is Top NU Prospect Dye said he conferred with Devaney at the National Collegiate Athletic Association meeting here, but "everything remains status quo." Devaney still has four years left on a five year contract at Wyoming on a five year contract at Wyoming. "At this time I am considering no other football coaching candidate for Nebraska." Dye said. You can't help wondering how the Big Ten keeps all its dirty line covered up—because you know it's there.—Bill Mayer PIDE THE CREST OF THE WAVE WITH ELVIS PRESLEY IN BLUE HAWAII HAL WALLIS PRODUCTION JOAN ANCELA NANCY 21 LUNAR 1973 BLACKMAN • LANSBURY • WALTERS • NORWALT • FAULGROV HAL MANTER • TECHNICOLOR • PNAVISION™ A PARANORMAL RELEASE Lost: Hat Tee REWAI GRAN'T Conn' — one birds, gulnea pet sau INVISI woven aretie repaire RAY V Up & Pick u HAPPY Drive- shop in 2921. M p.m. n EXPEI child t home. piece. NOW! At 7:00 & 9:00 GRANADA THEATRE...Telephone VINING 3-5785 RENT machin rented Sewin TYPEW Office Typew 3644. WANT dent's week. VI 3-1 TOWN Privat Studic beauti steam parkir equipl No sm TOWN furnis furnea Wood New Private Privature t Jan. 0 1 Monday, January 15, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS ion, f a ions sit-rew t of the pools for- an- nure, e of bble. press ade seats peaceain. soft the its r, it to and would of lying the steel and each 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 Business Office, in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. team Feb. which It coach heir inly ident can- able than ents ample. Dye. Di poach only tball De- diate nere, uore, "uo" Uni- ard, "uni" first time De- act. left. ing, no for LOST how inen it's Lost: Brown overcoat length cord. coat face. Name and address inside REWARD 1-15 BUSINESS SERVICES ROG VVV GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Personal service — sectionalized — one stop — save time & money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, etc. plus complete lines of pet supplies. tf INVISIBLE REWEAving. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf EXPERIENCIED MOTHER — would like child to care for, 3 to 4 yrs. old, in her home. Also would like ironing, 15c per piece. 340 Indiana, VI 2-3473. **tf** RAY WILEY TEXACO. 23rd and Lt. Tunec Flick up & delivery. Phone VI 2-0531. 1-16 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet store in West Pet Phone W 2921 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. 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. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. tf TYEPYWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3-3644. tf DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- ormers. Owl Smith $939.9%$ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. WANTED — BABYSITTING. Law student's wife wishes to baby-sit by day or week. Home adjacent to campus. Call VI 3-1846. 1-22 FOR RENT TOWN MANOR'S PENTHOUSE APT. Private entrance. Available Jan 29. Also, Studio Apt, available now. Both are beautifully furnished. Complete kitchens, steam heat, air conditioned. TV. Private parking. Lovely patio with cookout equipment. Couples or mature students. No small children or pets. Call VI 3-8000. 3 ROOM FURNISHED apt. Private bath ROOM 5 FURNISHED apt. RL Available Jan. 15, IV-5-3566 1-19 GRADUATE MEN — furn. apt. Available Jan. 20, 1224 Miss. I. 3-4928. 1-19 TOWN MANOR COTTAGE. Beautifully furnished for gracious living. Good gas furnace. Completely air-conditioned, TV. Wood fireplace. 2-bdrmts, utility room. New deluxe Gate and suite for entertaining. Private parking. Ideal for family or mature students. Inspection now, available Jan. 17. Call VI 2-8000. 1-19 LARGE LOVELY SLEEPING room in bath, bihs furnished and room kepl S15 per month includes everything. 5 min direction to campus. Available 1-19 VI.3-7830 LEAVING FOR EUROPE, completely replaced by a valuable 1 to Sept. 1. Call VI 3-3278. 1-19 PRIVATE ROOMS for rent at 301 Main. Lake after 6 or on weekends. VI 3-6810. 1-19 VACANCY IN FEBRUARY for young man in contemporary home. Home cooked supper - swimming pool. $65 per month. VI 3-9635. tf VACANT SINGLE ROOM for male student. Shower bath, ref., & tele. Two blocks from campus. $30 per month. 1316 Tenn. VI 3-3390. 1-17 FURNISHED 4 rooms & bath. All mod- fice of 15th & Iowa. VI 3-9396. 1-17 NICE COMFORTABLE ROOM for boy. Near campus and town. Also near 2 bus lines. Linens furn. VI 3-3429. 827 Miss. 1-17 VACANCY AVAILABLE for one or two men at 1037 Tenn. Twin beds, everything on the same floor on same floor. Available now. Call VI 3-5137 after 5 p.m. or weekends. BASEMEN T APARTMENT, suitable for two men students. Everything furnished and every pay electric. Private, available now. Call VI 3-5137. visit 1-16 weekends. SPLIT LEVEL or semi basement apartment — $2½ blocks from Union. 3 rooms completely furnished. Shower bath, private entr., off street parking. Available in upper classroom or graduate student. $48 per month. App call vi 3-6696. 1-19 FURNISHED APARTMENT: Private bath, within walking dist. of KU. Suitable for single or double student. Phone VI 3-6158 during noon hour or 5 and 6 p.m. 1-19 TWO BOYS to share large furnished recreation room apartment with third boy. Linens furnished. 2417 Ohio. VI 3-7734. Park Plaza South Apartments KIRSTENS Sportswear at HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Are you satisfied where you now live? Are you satisfied where you now live? Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking Central Air Conditioning will pay local moving expen Open Evenings, VI 2-0562 Lawrence's Only Garden Apartments LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-0731. tf 2 MAN APT, $55 a month. Quiet room. 3 TEAM APT, $20 a month. Treasurer. Ga- Ti 5-7370, ask for treasurer. 3-ROOM APARTMENT available next 1-15 Lai. Call VI 3-4271. 1-15 VI 2-3416 or VI 2-8253 Office - 1912 W. 25th LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. NICE SINGLE ROOM: Well furnished, next to Union, Telephone & off-street dents graduating. Available Feb. 1. $28 & $22.50 per month. Call VI 3-6696-1-61 HELP WANTED MIMEOGRAPH OPERATOR-TYPIST: must be experienced, accurate typist, IBM electric typewriters; addressgraph equipment; multilink operator. State Civil Service positions. See Thos. C. Ryther, 117 Flint Hall. Phone KU-373. tt RN's NEEDED: Full or part time. General duty any shift. Also operating room chairs. Blasingame, Collec: collect Cherry 2-3344 or Cherry 2-2292, Ottawa Kansas. MISCELLANEOUS Help Wanted: Dishwasher, 7 days a week. Call VI 3-7810 or come to 1252 Oread. fff COME AND EAT home cooked meals Metsker, TJ. Mo. St. M, V 3-1967) 1-19 BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks. 冰 crushed. Crushed ice in water repellent. clay paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. lant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 3- 0350. **31 CHEVY, IMPALA, 280 hp. Four speed** **2-door hardtop, $1600. Call VI 3-8944.** **2-door hardtop, $1600. Call VI 3-8944.** FOR SALE 5 ROOM HOUSE, furnished for students. Boys preferred. Call VI 3-1966. 1-19 COZY MOBIL HOME for sale, 1955 Safecare MOBILE; CAI 3-9571 after 5. RCA 3/4 ton air-cond. $50. Philco 3/4 ton air-cond. $85. Both in good condition. Inch good 1850 2 door Chev. $15. inch G.E. electric range. $75. VI- 3/844. 1959 OPEL NEKORD, 2 dr. radio & heat- tres tires included. Low mileage. See or call at Nel's & Buck's Garage, 23rd & Louisi' 291, VI 3-4081. After 5 p.m. call VI 1-191 Anastasi, Psychological Testing — $3.50 Terman and Merrill, Measuring Intelligence, $2.25. Marjorie Earring, Box 83. Olathe, Maureen. 1-16 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 733 Mass. VI S-344. NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter. 95 up and service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Offset printing and minigraphing at reasonable rates. Businesses at 912. Mass. Phone VI 0151 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 GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES. Definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference delivery. Phi VI 3-7581 VI 3-7578 HOUSE PLANTS FOR pots, boxes, or bedding. Including Cactus, flowering Maple, Begonias, Collus, night blooming Cercus, Pinnidendrons & several others. Some shrubs. Call Mrs. Van Meter, VI 3-4207 or IV 3-4201. tf PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tt USED MAGNAVOX 21" table model TV F-140 Pettigill tank. Daz3. Mass 1 F-140 Pettigill tank. Daz3. Mass 1 TYPING Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. 1511, 511 W. 21 St. Ctl VI 3-64400 iftf 1511, 511 W. 21 St. Ctl VI 3-64400 iftf Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates. VI 3-1883. MILKENIK "S.O.S." Now at two 4710 Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass. Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name - call VI 3-9136. MoL Gebhach. Glebehach. EXPERIENCED TYPIST!: Term papers, and application letters. Prompt service, neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R.I., VI 3-7485. EXPERIENCED TYPIST, electric typewriter, neat accurate work, reasonable rates. Thesis, reports, themes, etc. Phone VI 2-1678. 1-16 Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI T-3-2651 any time HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher of the English classes, uses these & reports accurately. Standard tests. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. See tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs Barlow, 408 W. 19th, VI 2i-16. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- typing factors, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service. S317 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7718. or Sat. E 2-2186. TYPING; Experiented typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, journals, and reports. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mc- Edlowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter. Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. **tt** TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf FORMER SECRETARY with pica type electric typewriter wants to do typing, typeset papers, uses dissertations. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Marilyn Hay. VI 3-2318. Miss EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. **tf** ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- sse of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. IBM WILL INTERVIEW FEBRUARY 7-8 IBM Candidates for Bachelor's or Master's Degrees are invited to discuss opportunities in; Engineering and Sales 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 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. 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. Across-the-Country Operations: Laboratory and manufacturing facilities are located in 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. 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 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 IBM You naturally have a better chance to grow with a growth company. University Daily Kansan Monday, January 15. 1962 l'age 8 Belief— (Continued from page 1) nists took advantage of his resulting confusion and loneliness and refilled his mind with new, pro-Communist loyalies. "The vacuum left by the emptying of the individual's mind of previous beliefs and loyalties itself becomes a positive factor in the individual's search to refill the void," he said. "Studies have shown," he said "that the greater the amount of self-commitments, the harder it is for the individual to recant. "In the controlled environment of the prisoner-of-war camps, the only 'friends' the prisoner had were the Communists." AFTER THE COMMUNISTS HAD indoctrinated the prisoners, Prof. Dance said, they forced him to reinforce his new loyalties. Prof. Dance told his audience that an individual's defense against brainwashing is based upon three factors: knowledge, truth and maturity. "The Communists forced the prisoner-of-war to re-affirm his new allegiances by constantly getting him to 'confess' and to sign various anti-American petitions." Brainwashing has probably been used since the days of the Inquisition, he said, but it has become widely known only since the Korean War. Now that it is known, he continued, defenses can be designed against it. In addition to knowing the brain-washing cycle, he said, Americans must be "mature in democracy and in their private lives." THEY MUST SEARCH for truth, he said, and then be willing to "engage in individual propagandizing themselves, to their neighbors, family and friends." The Communists are very effective in propagandizing, Prof. Dance said, and owe much of their success to this factor. As an example of Communist propaganda, he read the following 1950 Christmas message from Communist guerrillas in North Viet Nam to the Catholic population of South Viet Nam: "One thousand, nine hundred and fifty years ago, a simple infant of the people was born with the name of Jesus. His mother, the Bible said, was a landless peasant, oppressed and robbed by the landowners and was obliged to give birth in a cold and desolate stable. "During his infancy (and) until the day he became a man, Jesus had neither money, nor property, nor rice fields, and only lived by his hands. During all his life he struggled with all his force against the landowners, feudalists, bourgeoisie and exploiters. During all his life he defended the people and was resolutely ranked with the working class... "Unfortunately, among his 12 cadres of confidants there was a man called Judas who sold him for a few cents to the clique of reactionaries, all like the (reactionaries) of today, (who) under the mask of religion, (betray) God and their fatherlands to serve the Colonialist imperialists. "Jesus, making a sacrifice of his life, died on the cross, but his precepts of love for the fatherland, equality of men and fraternity still echo throughout the world. All our compatriots . . . are united for resistance. We support the agrarian policy in order to give the land to the person who cultivates it. Thus we apply exactly the precepts of Jesus and we sincerely respect his will..." Roberta's Pizza Free Delivery On Campus Call VI 3-1086 KU Student Government Traced (Continued from page 1) partment is in charge of the committee of health, Leaf and Housing. The Student Health committee is composed of faculty and students, the other two committees are student only. The department of Student Activities has the Social committee and the Publications committee. The membership of the former is all student while the latter is a faculty-student committee. A few of the other faculty-student committees which control activities are Commencement, Freshman Week (Orientation) and Eligibility, the Athletic Seating Board and the Union Operating Board. SEVERAL student committees are the Campus Chest, Traditions, and the Student Athletic Seating Board. The student body president also appoints the members of the student court, the student-run judiciary division of government. The ASC is composed of two delegates — one man and one woman — from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, one representative from each of the other nine schools and representatives from the student living districts. The student living districts are represented proportionately to the number of ballots cast in a general election. The ASC has three standing committees — Committee on Committees and Legislation, Elections and the Finance and Auditing committees — composed of ASC members. The Finance and Auditing committee has general supervision of all financial records of all student organizations subject to the ASC. The Elections committee is charged with conducting the primary and general elections, which includes setting dates and counting ballots. Student government, through these committees, regulates the extra-curricular activities of the students by selecting the films and speakers for the film and lecture series, conducting the Campus Chest campaign, and working with the faculty on the semester calendar of events. Campus politics is the segment of University life which offers the student opportunities for practice and application of the principles of government through student organizations. (The second part of the series will appear in tomorrow's UDK.) Milk Machine Looted A milk vending machine was reported broken into recently at Carruth-O'Leary men's resident hall with an estimated loss of more than $25 in money and merchandise. Women's Dorm Fees Increased $5 Rates in women's residence halls will increase $5 a month next fall. The UDK reported Friday that a $5 increase would be effective for men's halls. Emily Taylor, dean of women, has stated the rates for men's and women's dormitories will both go from $630 to $675 a year. Tear Jerkers HOLLYWOOD - (UPI) - Director Peter Glenville has a surefire success formula for actors and movies - make the female audience cry. "The more tears one extracts from female patrons, the more dollars he attracts to the box-office. "Show me a soggy (hand) kerchief and I will show you a satisfied movie-goer." Glenville directed Tennessee Williams' "Summer and Smoke." Hatred is self-punishment.—Hosea Ballou Girl Watcher's Guide Presented by Pall Mall Famous Cigarettes ble men Girl watchers are honorable men LESSON 6-Who may watch Any male is eligible to become a girl watcher. There is no age limit, although most girl watchers are over ten and under one hundred and four. There are no height or weight requirements, although taller men enjoy an obvious advantage at crowded parties. The only strict requirement is one of character. The girl watcher is a man of honor. Since he can't possibly take notes, as the bird watcher does, we must rely on his word. Therefore, when an experienced girl watcher tells you he saw nine beautiful girls while on his way to class, he saw nine beautiful girls. And when he tells you his Pall Mall is the cigarette of the century, believe him. It is. 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: Eldon Dedini. Reprinted by permission of Harper & Brothers. Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" PALL MALL FAMOUS CIGARETTES IN NOE DU ROAD BERLIN WHEREVER PARTICULAR PEOPLE CONGREGATE Pall Mall's natural mildness is so good to your taste! So smooth, so satisfying, so downright smokeable! 50th U. W Bc State pulli from Fried the c Th its a impr force Ob a les der, and only the AT armo mile At 5 mile point gan So from ago, a fid strik stras wall Th tank, carri Char the I Th into tank Russia yard Sl the num temp jurie Vi juni by I fresh Cres was Wat leas TH repo a tw isian car ter was D $100 ton in a way ty. 1 part 50th Year Anniversary Edition UNIVERSITY Daily hansan 59th Year, No. 71 Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 LAWRENCE, KANSAS U.S. Army Tanks Withdraw From Berlin Border BERLIN — (UFI) — The United States Army announced today it is pulling its tanks and armored cars from the area around the key Friedrichstrasse crossing point on the divided East-West Berlin border. The Army said it was withdrawing its armor to Tempelholf Air Base "to improve the dispositions of the U.S. forces in the American sector." Observers felt the move indicated a lessening of tension along the border, where at one time American and Soviet tanks faced each other only a few hundred feet apart when the crisis was at its height. AT FRIEDRICHSTRASSE, THE armored force was about a half-mile from the border crossing point. At Tempelhof, it will be about a mile and a half from the crossing point. The Army said the move began yesterday. Soviet armor was pulled back from the crossing point some time ago, but last was reported hidden in a field in East Berlin still within striking distance of the Friedrich-strasse hole in the Communist-built wall that divides the city. The force was sent to the border when Communist police began to interfere with official American traffic through the crossing point. AMERICAN AND Russian tanks faced each other virtually gun barrel-to-gun barrel on Oct. 27 and 28. The armored force of about 10 tanks and five armored personnel carriers has been near "Checkpoint Charlie" on Friedrichstrasse since the last week in October. The Russian tanks were moved into East Berlin after the American tanks moved up to the border. The Russian armor still is about 1,200 yards from the crossing point. Earlier in the day, West Berlin police reported increased Russian patrols on the border. The Army said "the task force will be stationed at Tempelhof Air Base. The purpose of this change is to improve the disposition of the U.S. forces in the American sector." Slick Streets Cause Accidents Slippery streets and highways in the Lawrence area have caused a number of bashed fenders and tempers, and have caused minor injuries to one KU student. Virginia E. Vaughn, Cincinnati junior, was struck by a car driven by William H. Stepp, East St. Louis freshman, near Strong Ave. and Crescent Rd. Friday evening. She was treated for minor injuries at Watson Memorial Hospital and released. Damage was estimated at about $100 to a car driven by John Arrington Head, Neodesha junior, involved in a collision Sunday on K-10 highway near DeSoto in Johnson County. He struck a parked highway department sand truck. The traffic and security office also reported that Stepp was involved in a two-car collision at 11th and Louisiana Sts. Sunday morning with a car driven by Dennis Shay, 215 Foster Drive. Total damage to both cars was about $250. Lester A. Jennings, Basehor sophomore, was the driver of a car that skidded into a parked car owned by Richard Ramsey Burnham, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, near 11th and Indiana Sts. Sunday. Damage was estimated at $25 to each car. FIVE WORKERS IN A TABLE BENEFITING FROM THE MARKET. The Daily Kansan staff at deadline ★★ Happy Birthday To have functioned for fifty years as a daily newspaper is an achievement in itself for any newspaper, much less a student publication. On this anniversary I extend my congratulations and my hope that the University Daily Kansan will continue its efforts to fulfill its important functions not only as a laboratory for students in journalism but as a major campus source of information and as a focus for student opinion. W. Clarke Wescoe Chancellor Political Parties Give Color To KU for 52 Years (Editor's Note: This is the second article in a four part series examining campus politics at KU. This article discusses the histories of the various parties.) By Jerry Musil The Greeks and Independents have been on opposite sides for most of the 52 years of politics at KU. And with the coming of student government, politics and its offspring, rival political parties, arose. The first election in 1909 was a fight between fraternity and non-fraternity men. Political parties gained impetus from the 1912 presidential election when a pro-Wilson club was organized. Pro-Taft and pro-Roosevelt clubs quickly followed. THE ORIGINAL difference in interests between fraternity and non-fraternity men was the cause for the failures. The two factions would combine to win, but after the victory, each faction tried to impose its own interests over those of the other and the split was only a matter of time. There have been coalitions of rebellious and dissatisfied Greeks with Independents in an effort to gain control, but each has dissolved after a few years. THE PRO-TAFT group formed the Society of Pachacamac and adopted the rising sun as its emblem. It was to remain the dominant political party for 43 years until 1954 at which time it dissolved into two parties, the Allied Greek-Independent (AGI) and the Party of Greek Organizations (POGO). The leadership or "Inner Circle" of Pach went underground and is now a secret organization of considerable influence in Greek fraternities. The first election in 1909 was not a battle between parties but between factions. This situation remained for three years. In 1912, Pach members decided they needed a clubhouse. They bought an old Civil War livery stable in the Beta Theta Pi fraternity's backyard (now the Don Henry Coop), redecorated the interior, boarded the windows and padlocked the doors. Beta Theta Pi was the only fraternity not represented in the almost exclusive Greek organization. And it has been in most of the anti-Pach parties formed since then. PACH WAS never known to observe clean politics in its years of existence. In a 1935 campus debate, they were compared to the Tammany Tiger of New York fame. The Kansan on Jan. 15, 1919, carried the headline "Arrangements Complete for Anti-Graft Voting at Elections Tomorrow." Council members were stationed at the polls "to prevent crooked electioneering and voting." One of the poll guards was a Fachacamac named Arthur Lonborg. For the next 31 years, the Pach "Inner Circle" was made up of both independents and Greeks, but it was always dominated by the fraternities. Other parties accused the Pach machine of poll blocking, double and triple voting, ballot stuffing and even (Continued on page 7) Weather Generally fair and continued cold this afternoon and tonight. Increasing cloudiness tomorrow with occasional snow northwest portion. Low tonight zero to 5 above north to 10 extreme south. High tomorrow 15 to 25. Half-Century Old, But Still Sassy By The Daily Kansan As Told to Tom Turner I'm fifty years old today—me—the Daily Kansan. Fifty years of excitement and tears, wars and crises. Many, many people have worked on my pages since I first appeared as a daily Jan. 16, 1912, but I have a confession to make. A lady is not supposed to reveal her age, but I'm actually older than fifty. For nine years prior to 1912 I ran at intervals as a weekly and semi-weekly. MY BIG, bustling offices were in the basement of Fraser Hall in 1912. The next year I moved to expanded facilities in the "Shack"—next to Watson Library. Then, in 1952, they moved me into Flint Hall where I am now. Today I have all my own facilities. I am set in type and printed by the University Press, also located in Flint. Two UPI teletype machines keep my office humming and a huge Fairchild Scan-a-Graver allows me much flexibility in handling pictures. Those first offices were pretty cramped. We had a darkroom smaller than the average broom closet, no engraving equipment and no presses to really call our own. It was two years before I was able to carry the United Press News Service on my pages. MY FIRST edition as a daily appeared on four pages—much bigger than these. There were no photographs—not for awhile anyway. Rather, I carried a cartoon on my front page every day. The campus issues between 1912 and now aren't really so different. They were pretty excited about the first unit of the medical center in Kansas City (Rosedale, then) which opened in October of 1911. They were considering all sorts of new courses in order to meet the every demand of the whopping 2,000 student enrollment. The seniors were petitioning to eliminate final examinations for that Spring semester and I boasted that I would carry a special column dealing with the news of Kansas high schools—to keep the folks in touch with the home grounds. ON MY second day of daily publication, my editorial page carried an optimistic editorial that claimed national greatness for the Kansan someday. I guess those youngsters were right. The William Randolph Hearst Foundation awards of last year stand as realities of their foresight. I'M ENTIRELY student operated, you know. Students work (day and night) in my newsroom and business office for one hour of credit. It gets a little burdensome at times, and they get yelled at a lot—but what better training could a journalism major have? The Kansan affords a student the opportunity to bear the responsibility of putting out a daily paper. If the students don't do their job, the paper doesn't appear and money is lost. Of course, no one ever dreamed that the University would ever get as big as it is today—in fact I don't think many people really wanted it to. Efforts were made through the years to keep KU small and conservative. In 1914 the administration ruled out any kind of activity on Sunday which somehow cramped the style of the Oread Golf Club. That same year, Chancellor Frank Strong seriously considered banning all smoking on the campus. It never went through, however. I'm stricly departmentalized now. I have separate staffs to handle my news columns, my sports page, my society page and my editorial page. I have a city editor to make sure that all campus events are reported, and I have a staff of nearly 21 reporters to pound the beats. I have a man in charge of every phase of my advertising services, general business manager and 11 busy ad salesmen. A business committee handles my budget problems, an editorial (Continued on page 13) Indonesia 'Attempted' New Guinea Invasion THE HAGUE, Holland—(UPI)—The Defense Ministry said today Indonesia attempted to invade Dutch New Guinea yesterday. An official communique said the number of captured Indonesians aboard a motor torpedo boat that was sunk by Dutch naval units off the Island's south coast was many more than would have been aboard the vessel under normal conditions. "IT IS COMPLETELY clear from this fact and the equipment which was impounded that an invasion attempt has been made," the communique said. (In Jakarta, Maj. Gen. Achmad Jani, chief of the special operational command for the "Liberation of West Irian," scoffed at Dutch charges that Indonesia had tried to invade West New Guinea. {"text": "("Everybody understands three motor boats don't constitute a convoy for landing," Jani said. He added that Indonesia will inform the United Nations about the attack.)"} THE DEFENSE MINISTRY said the number of Indonesians captured still is not definitely known. A government information office spokesman in Hollandia said 59 Indonesians were pulled out of the water after their motor torpedo boat was sunk. He said they will be regarded as prisoners of war. "There is at present no evidence that further aggressive actions will be undertaken by Indonesia," the Defense Ministry communicated said. The communique said two other Indonesian vessels escaped pursuing Dutch warships. The incident was the first armed action in the dispute over Dutch New Guinea (West Irian) since Indonesian President Sukarno announced earlier this month that the area would be taken by force unless Holland agreed to turn it over to his country. The Dutch have offered to negotiate the future of West Irian, but Sukarno has demanded that its incorporation in Indonesia be a precondition for any talks. --- Page 2 University Daily Kansas Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 A Changing Profession There have been many changes in American journalism in the 50 years since the University Daily Kansan became a daily publication. They have deeply affected the way news is reported and how it is presented to the reader. The basic reason behind most of the changes is rooted in the journalist's changing concept of his responsibility to the public. FIFTY YEARS AGO. the good journalist considered his primary function to be a strictly objective presentation of the news. His purpose was to present only the cold, hard facts of an event to the reader. This objective approach as the ideal has faded. It has faded because, like many other things, it has proved inadequate for the needs of modern society.The new breed of journalist is the interpretative reporter who digs into the background of the event to learn its causes and its significance. The reasons for his rise are many. The world has become increasingly complex and the reader is no longer able to decide on the basis of his own background the causes and significance of many events. THE RISE OF the interpretative reporter was hastened by the need for some method that could be used effectively to counter the tactic of the big lie and the half truth that have become so common in the world today. The Communist bloc is the outstanding most flagrant user of these methods. But men like the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy also used them to inflict great damage on innocent people in the United States. The use of background material to explain the history of a man like McCarthy and the event or person he is dealing with is vital to neutralize the effects his statements might have, and it is because of this that the interpretative reporter's role gained in importance. Coupled with the rise of interpretative reporting has been the development of numerous columnists who attempt to clarify and explain the news. Some of them work for great metropolitan newspapers like the New York Times and some are syndicated writers. OTHER CHANGES have come to the journalism profession. The hectic pace of modern life put a premium on the citizen's time. The news media responded with tightly written stories that push the significance and main facts of an event into the first few paragraphs of the story. The Daily Kansan itself has changed. It has changed in much the same way that journalism itself has been changing over the years. It has also grown larger and enlarged its scope to include any subject that comes within the scope of its readers' interests. This process of development and change is a continuing one, both for American journalism in general and the Kansan in particular. The end is not in sight, and it never has been. The future will undoubtedly continue to bring new concepts and methods in journalism under the pressing needs of the coming decades, and the Kansan will always attempt to meet those needs. —William H. Mullins Many Famous Newsmen Served on the Kansan By Burton W. Marvin Dean, the School of Journalism Dean, the School of Journalism In the last half century something of the University Daily Kansan has "rubbed off" on numerous men and women who have risen to top rungs in Kansas and American journalism. Among these alumni on the national scene have been Ben Hibbs, who recently retired from a successful career as editor of The Saturday Evening Post; Chet Shaw, for many years editor of Newsweek magazine; Haymond Clapper, an immortal among Washington correspondents who was killed in a plane crash on the Pacific front during World War II; Louis LaCoss, the first editor of the Kansan after it became a daily in 1912 and now retired as Pulizer-prize winning editorial editor of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat; Doris Fleeson, internationally-famous Washington correspondent; Richard Harkness and Bill Downs, renowned commentators for NBC and CBS respectively; James E. Bell, bureau chief for Time magazine at Hong Kong; Joy M. Miller, women's editor of Associated Press; and Earl Johnson, general news manager of United Press International. MEN WHO PRECEDED the day of the University Daily Kansan as journalism students at the University of Kansas but who contributed to the tradition undergirding the Kansan include Roy A. Roberts, president of The Kansas City Star; the late Marvin Creager, editor of The Milwaukee Journal and as such a principal creator of one of America's greatest newspapers; and Oscar S. Stauffer, publisher of the Stauffer Newspapers in Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, and Oklahoma. A roll call of present-day Kansas publishers would be liberally sprinkled with Kansan alumni such as Clyde M. Reed, Jr., Parsons Sun; Herbert A. Meyer, Jr., Independence Reporter; Ralph Hemenway, Minneapolis Messenger; Charles Sturtevant, Cimarron Jacksonian; John D. Montgomery; Junction City Union; Dolph Simons, Lawrence Journal-World; Chelland Cole, St. John News; Sam Shade, Sedan Times-Tar; Max Moxley, Sterling Bulletin; R. E. Robinson, St. Mary's Star; Harry Valentine, Clay Center Dispatch; Drew McLaughlin, Jr., Miami County Republican; George Clasen, Florence Bulletin; John J. Conard, Kiowa County Signal; Larry Funk, Oakley Graphic; Leon Sanders, Manhattan Mercury; Richard L. Hale, St. Francis Herald; and John P. Clarke, Jetmore Republican. In the management end of publications there are such men as Frederick W. Giesel, business manager of The Post and Times-Star, Cincinnati, Ohio; Eugene T. Lowther, retired after many years as general manager of The Emporia Gazette; Milton L. Peek, advertising manager of The Ladies Home Journal; Robert B. Hill, manager of the field marketing division of The Farm Journal; and Lester Suhier, vice president and subscription manager of Look magazine. AMONG THE NEWS executives, most of them graduates in recent years, are Joseph V. Knack, city editor, The Toledo Ohio (Blade) Paul V. Miner, managing editor, The Kansas City Star; Jay Simon, sports editor, The Oklahoma City Oklahan; Charles G. Pearson, Sunday editor, Topека Capital and Journal; Paul R. Conrad, editor, Great Bend Tribune; Bill Mayer, managing editor, Lawrence Jour- 10 on the Kansan are such persons as Harold E. Addington, chief editorial writer, Syracuse (N.Y.) Herald-Journal; Clarke M. Thomas, Oklahoma City Oklahanom; James W. Scott, Kansas City Star; and Alan Jones, Wichita Eagle. Reporters of considerable stature include J. Murray Davis, special writer for the New York World Telegram; Charles R. Roos, The Denver Post; Allan W. Cromley, Washington correspondent for Oklahoma City Oklahoman; James L. Robinson, chief of the state capital bureau for Detroit Free Press; Herbort Cooper Rollow, sports staff, Chicago Tribune; Richard H. Boyce, Washington correspondent for The Houston (Texas) Press; Joseph A. Lastelic, Washington correspondent for The Kansas City Star; Joseph A. Taylor, prizewinning Latin American correspondent for United Press International; John R. Corporon of WDSU-TV, New Orleans, one of the first Washington correspondents for a television station; Kenneth Coy, KCMO-TV, Kansas City, Mo.; John Herrington, WDAF-TV, Kansas City, Mo.; and Allen Dale Smith, news director of KMBC radio station in Kansas City. nal-World; Fred Brooks and Ralph Coldren, day and night managing editors, Hutchinson News; and John McMillion, managing editor, Clovis (N.M.) News-Journal. Earl J. Johnson Carrying on as editorial writers after early experience in this field UNIVERSITY DAILY K ALUMNI OF THE Kansan who made good in advertising include Burt E. Cochran, vice-president of McCann-Erickson agency in Los Angeles; James L. Barrick, national advertising manager, Kansas City Star; Morris H. Straight, director of advertising, Spencer Chemical Company, Kansas City; Tom Jones, advertising manager, Cushman Motors, Lincoln, Neb.; Bill Beck, advertising manager, Henry's Store, Wichita; Louis Sciortino, advertising manager, Fort Scott Tribune; Donivan Waldron, national sales manager, KAKE-TV, Wichita; James E. Lowther, advertising manager, The Emporia Gazette; James W. Murray, advertising supervisor, Spencer Chemical Company, Kansas City, Mo.; Gerald L. Mosley, account executive, Potts-Woodbury agency, Kansas City, Mo.; Ron Phillips, with N. W. Ayer and Sons agency, Philadelphia; and Bob Trump, account executive, Foote, Cone and Belding, Chicago. The public relations field is well represented by such men as Paul Fisher, public relations director of United Aircraft Corp., Hartford, THIS CORNING EVENT CASTS SOME SHADOW (Continued on page 4) VOLUME IX Crael Truth Must Be Told If It Does Cause Heart-Burns UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, TUEDAY APTERNOON, JANI ART 10:15:28 BRAMINATION SCHEDULE OUT EARTH AWAY FROM ME Undergraduate Design of Tervor to Begin Week From Saturday and End Friday Following. It's ironic and that all that has been done to her is just work from a beautiful improved interior. But she still hasn't had anything about cleaning and shampooing and skincare, so she must be expected to marry. dinner, birthday, and final divorce! We will place of birth January 17 if they begin, on April 25 if they begin, on February 31 if they begin, on Monday February 19 if they begin. more grazing and wagting of sheep and cattle, and more breeding in studies of the College. We but after analysis the science that we need to study will help lay award a better future. The schedule for examinations is out. there is the list of events: 10-12 classes, Saturday morning, Jan. 27. EVERY 20 **Charles W.** (1846-1927) *The Adventures of Charles W.* *Everyday in the Life of Charles W.* *The Adventures of Charles W.* *The Adventures of Charles W.* **Mary Ann J.** (1835-1918) *The Adventures of Mary Ann J.* *The Adventures of Mary Ann J.* *The Adventures of Mary Ann J.* **William C.** (1851-1932) *The Adventures of William C.* *The Adventures of William C.* *The Adventures of William C.* **The two stories of John F.** *The two stories of John F.* *The two stories of John F.* *The two stories of John F.* **Tuesday's** *Tuesday's* *Tuesday's* *Tuesday's* *Tuesday's* *Tuesday's* "They'll be stinked when they eat who 'ch.' HIGH SCHOOL NEWS TO BE A FEATURE 0:00 classes, Monday morning, 10:30 classes, Tuesday morning, Jan. 6th 0:00 classes, Tuesday afternoon, Jan. 9th 11:15 classes, Wednesday morning, 12:30 classes, Wednesday afternoon, 12:45 classes, Thursday morning, Feb. 7th 0:00 classes, Friday morning, Three hour classes (and one hour or Friday) will be examined for the meeting from 1:30 to 1:45 before for the meeting from 1:30 to 1:45 before for the meeting from 1:30 to 1:45 before for the meeting from Laboratory sciences are also in use. The laboratory worksheets are the official guide to the first laboratory exercise or at last for the entire laboratory. A book on an hour a week is available at a local library. FOR SAFETY, HAI TECH CO. "And the drinking water" is the matter of concern for Mr. Prof. R. B. H. Boly, head of the Chemistry department, this mo- ture is toxic." "BOIL DRINKING WATER FOR SAFETY," SAYS TOUNG Daily Kansen Will Have a First week: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in two days; commencement with first week. Second week: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in two days; commencement with second week. Third week: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in two days; commencement with third week. If you have any questions, please contact the appropriate person. A department of high school and college tutoring is located at 1050 Kingston Avenue near northwest of the city. The department is majority of the high schools in the city, the schools of which are the vehicles enrolled by the University ary Schools. FREE and FREE bone classes, will be held on Sunday, May 31 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the member's chosen classroom for the semester. The Dealer Union will go to Berkshire Hathaway for a between the benefits for the dealer and the benefits for the University informed to have the University informed to have the university great guests. Herbert S. Bailey, MS, Will Star Citric Acid Plant at Los Angeles, Cal. The United States government is responsible for protecting the lives of American soldiers from harm and do away with the water in the battlefield at present. The U.S. government is in support of the improvement of water supply in Lima, Peru, and Las Ampelas. It must also stage a military operation to locate and destroy a first plant of the life in this region. Angeles. Cal. THE DUR A film about a college graduate's life. A film that gives good advice but harms it in the end. A film in Wimshurst. A film in Woodward. Tuwai to Bukhari Adda. C. U. Tenggong of the deposition of the Kashmir Confederation will will attend at the Technical Convocation of the Kashmir Confederation. Eak, January 19. Dr. A. B. Khalil, January 19. Dr. A. B. of the power of the state. SENIORS PETITION AGAINST FINALS Want Faculty to Exempt al "2" Students from Spring Exams. The Stations of the Coliseum are a set of seven stables designed for a maturation of exquisite specimens. The stables are located near the courtyard and they advertise their ability to store and preserve specimens before the term expires. The potential adversary admits, "I will not allow the admirer of the china redressal to be allowed until the china redressal has been completed, before work will be done elsewhere a whistle will be granted for an admiring witness before the end of the month weeks before the end of the year. The admirer will have to do all his own research and be prepared to present himself before the admirer the answer is very likely to be do no harm." This is the front page of the first issue of the Daily Kansan. IN GOOD OLD TIMES IT WENT BY RHYMES Students Taught in Verse erospirity. "Treatbook of fifty years ago," the subject of a chapter held by his wife, the department of mathematics, and the department of geography. By George Van Winkle, Postmaster Geography. By George Van Winkle, published in KANSAS. The people asked the poetry teacher about a question about some words would touch about someone that particular person will thank for (Those were the kind of crises we manfully struggled with back in the halcyon days of 1950.) He Ate His Words Bv Fred Brooks In the long history of the University Daily Kansan, its fearless editorial writers have been threatened, cursed and maybe even horsewhipped, although the archives may not record the latter. These are but occupational hazards all pundits worth their salt must face. I learned as a sometime UDK editorial writer 12 years ago that the perils of pundity also include gastric disturbances, namely indigestion. The printed word, I can testify, literally is hard to swallow, with or without condiments. MY STRANGE MENU was the result of a smart-alekey editorial which at the time I thought amusing. if not enlightening. I thundered into print one afternoon with what was supposed to be an expose of a Kansas State basketball giant, one Clarence Brannum, whom Phog Allen affectionately called Grandpa. In a way it was a vindictive piece provoked by the caterwauling of the skeptics at Manhattan insinuating dear old KU was fibbing about Clyde Lovellette's actual height. The Manhattanites thought Clyde was nine feet tall. SO I CHALLENGED Kansas State to produce documents proving that Brannum was only 23 as listed in the publicity brochures, I was convinced that Kansas State was concealing Brannum's true age. I had heard rumors that the big fellow, who indeed looked years older than his contemporaries, would be drawing social security shortly after graduation. If it had stopped there, all would have been well. But impulsively I added a postscript of sorts offering to eat my words if proved wrong. The offer, of course, was made rhetorically, but, alas, was taken literally. I lost and had to go on with the ludicrous show in the enemy's camp. I was led out onto the floor of Niehols gym, deposited in a chair and served editorial-under-glass. The piece de resistance, a tidy two-by-eight inch morsel, was cradled in a spotless glass cassere. I ate. Fittingly, the spectacle was part and parcel of the K-State-KU basketball game, co-starring Clarence Brannum (age 23) and Clyde Lovellette (height, 6-9). It was a bitter editorial to swallow. (Mr. Brooks, Class of '59, is night editor of the Hutchinson News.) Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone VIkng 3-2700 Extension 375 business office Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $$ 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 Shieldon, Sports Editor; Barbara Howell, Society Editor. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher...Editorial Editor Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield. Assistant Editorial Editors. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Ka 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. I kne a high i character Too r colleges old news reporting their che heaven t WHE a few n shamef u student. rate job and the . I tool what was the Dai elastic e copy and appease copied t das City The heard fr news so how to For inst ber the one like himself always a On a He repo cutlines Where e WE worked no better small to a man (There port a sources learned and imp I sal it is on the qua portant (Mr. United LITT NI 19 THE NE WE MOVED OU MISAL irty. cnt. Page 3 Freedom Built Kansan Reputation part bas-ence Lo- wal- By Earl J. Johnson ress. k 22. rates: noon persity. Editor Kelly , So- Editor I knew the Kansan well in 1919 and 1920 and have always had a high regard for it as an independent campus newspaper. This characteristic sets the Daily Kansan apart. nagerlation charles notion Too many campus newspapers are no more than puff sheets for colleges or universities. Sometime in the early days of this 50-year-old newspaper the board established it as a newspaper dedicated to reporting the news; also to offering journalism students practice in their chosen profession under the guidance of wise tutors. Thank heaven that concept has never been abandoned. WHEN I WENT up to Lawrence after the first world war, I had a few months of experience on the Winfield Courier, but I was shamefully deficient in academic credits. I had to enroll as a special student. I also was deficient in logistical support. So I got a space-rate job on the Lawrence Gazette and later on the Journal-World and the Kansas City Journal and Post. I took a course in editorial practice given by Samuel O. Rice in what was then the journalism department. This gave me access to the Daily Kansan newsroom which I used as liberally as rather elastic ethical standards would permit. That is to say, Daily Kansan copy and proofs soon became one of my campus news sources. To appease my own conscience I frequently put on head-phones and copied the United Press news report as telephoned daily from Kansas City to the Daily Kansan and the Gazette, a joint call. The Rice course was as down-to-earth as anything I've ever heard from a practicing city editor. He lectured on how to cultivate news sources (especially policemen), how to write effectively and how to read copy. He was full of memorable tricks and examples. For instance how to know when to use "as" and "like." Just remember the phrase, "He lived as he died, like a dog." Who could forget one like that? And Samuel O. Rice would go out and cover a story himself occasionally to show us how it should be done. His stuff was always admired by us amateurs. WE HAVE MANY KANSANS in U.P.I., and most of them worked on the campus paper when they were in school. There is no better training for a news service man than a few years on a small town daily. There he learns the problems that are common to a majority of U.P.I. subscribers, the majority being small papers. (There are not enough metropolitan dailies in the country to support a world-wide news service.) There he stands close to his news sources and learns things about responsibility that are not as easily learned on big papers where news sources are often more remote and impersonal. On a small paper a man has a chance to do a little of everything. He reports, writes news, writes heads, edits telegraph copy, writes cutlines, helps make up pages and sometimes takes classified ads. Where else could he practice all the basic skills? I salute the University Daily Kansan for the good newspaper it is on its 50th anniversary, and more importantly I salute it for the quality of its alumni, who are working so effectively in important journalistic posts around the world. (Mr. Johnson, class of '21, is Vice President and Editor of the United Press International.) LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler The STUDENT NEWSPAPER AS SGN BY COLLEGE BLAST MINIMUM RIGHTS The EDITOR THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER AS SEEN BY THE EDITOR THE FACULTY ADVISOR THE DEAN VERBO A DIECTIVE GEOUND TISK - TISK THE ENGLISH PROF THE PROFESSORS TRASH THE GROUNDS KEEPER Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 University Daily Kansan The DEAN VEGG ADJECTIVE GEUND TISK TISK BREW ENGLISH PROF The PROFESSORS TRASH THE GROUND'S KEEPER Editor Recalls Kansan Days Last June I was on the Hill to celebrate the Golden Anniversary of my Class of 1911; now I am reminded that the Daily Kansan, with which I was associated, will celebrate its 50 years of prosperous and aggressive life. A half century may not be long for nations and cities, nor even for the University itself, but for one who has been newspapering since long before 1912 and who is now in retirement, it is a considerable span with many things and persons to remember. By Louis LaCoss I HAVE TOLD this story many times but it illustrates the truth of the non-existence of faculty supervision which was a by-product of the School of Journalism when Prof. Merle Thorpe came to the University. Shortly after I became editor, Gov. Stubbs veted $70,000 out of an already skimpy KU appropriation by the state legislature. I believed he did it to further his political ambitions and I said so in an editorial. I wrote it and had it published without consulting any faculty member, certainly not Chancellor Strong. The Kanans then — it went from a tri-weekly to a daily — had its quarters in the basement of Fraser Hall, a rather dismal abode for young folks who aspired to join the professional ranks. We "played it by ear" for the most part because, except for the kind and wise advice of Prof. "Daddy" Flint, faculty control of its contents did not exist. The Governor was angry, believing that it had been inspired by the faculty, Chancellor Strong disclaimed any connection with the editorial, so the Governor requested a full investigation by the Board of Regents of which William Allen White was chairman. Mr. White investigated and discovered the editorial was the sole product of a newspaper youth who doubtless would not have published it had he consulted anybody in the upper echelons. SO, HE WROTE a letter to the Kansas which was published. I answered it, and then ensued an exchange of correspondence which was duly printed. I still have the letters in my files. All this was grist for the fellows who were writing at space rates for the Kansas City Star and the Topeka Capital. Years later I discovered that Mr. White was merely having a chuckling good time with this Kansan youth who had the audacity to cross swords with one of the outstanding newspapermen in the country. I relate this to emphasize how divorced we were from faculty supervision. Time marches on. In those days we had no wire news services. We were not concerned with international, national or even city of Lawrence news. But we covered the Hill which, of course, was easier than today because of the concentration of buildings, faculty and students. We did many feature stories and we had good writers to do them. ONE I RECALL was "Pug" Ferguson who did a drama criticism of the current play by the Thespians, who were rather proud of themselves. He was devastating in his deflation of the actors and actresses. The latter called at the office in tears, the former even threatened libel suits which would have been fatal to them because it could be proved that they were "hams" with not a potential Barrymore in the bunch. I had my personal bouts with the Women's Student Government Association which I admired not at all. This aversion to groups of busy-body women has remained with me, and during my many years on the Globe-Democrat I had many hassles with the League of Women Voters. NAMES OF KANSAN workers crowd my memory. Joe Murray, Paul Harvey, Earl Fischer, "Cub" Baer, J. Earle Miller, George Marsh, Homer Berger, Ike Lambert among the many. Harry Kemp, the Trump Poet, although not on the staff used our typewriters and stationery. Frank Motz, who has just been elected to the Kansas Newspapermen's Hall of Fame, read our proofs and got tips on stories which he sold to outside (Continued on page 5) A Reporter From The 'Cenozoic Era' By Murray Davis Looking back from here, I seem to recall that the Department of Journalism was housed in a little frame building that sat back in the shadows of Fraser Hall. It faded deeper into the shadows as each year added more grime to its exterior. The original plant could have been either yellow or mustard. The whole appearance of the building in the early '20s seemed to emphasize that we were a stepchild among the other schools and departments which were housed in buildings of stone or brick. THERE COULD have been some comfort to us journalism students, if we were aware of our dubious status, in the fact that those studying astronomy were equally unimportant in the family of schools and departments of learning. In dredging up the past, I fail to feel any resentment for our tenement of journalism Perhaps we all felt the decore of our plant was entirely in keeping with the low-pay, journeyman profession we were seeking. The building did prove that it either was aesthetically perfect or genius will not be denied, because there have been a number of outstanding figures in all phases of the publication field who got their first lessons in the old building at the knee of Prof. Flint. I'll not undertake to name any of these famous products of the old building for fear I'd overlook some, but your rolls carry them all, I'm sure. While in the Department of Journalism I must have been in a continual fog; a condition which I have not yet entirely overcome, for I'm unable to recall anything that I did personally. Perhaps I just didn't do anything. HOWEVER, I DO recall a talk William Allen White gave us on various types of coverage. I'll never forget his suggestion that in covering opera, a good lead might be: "Why do prima donnas eat potatoes?" I recall also, in a vague way, of frustration and elation in almost equal parts. The frustration came — and still does — when some editor who obviously is an idiot because all editors are idiots, rewrites one of my pieces. The elation came when the editor was less an idiot than usual! — or vice versa — and ran my stuff without rewrite. Regardless of my lack of recollections, I did learn the basics of newspaper work, although there was one disagreeable incident that seems to contradict this. It was an incident when I made the really horrible discovery that I wasn't a good reporter. What made it even worse was that everyone on the Daily Kansan shared my discovery. A ROBBERY occurred in my own fraternity house and I found out about it by reading the story in the University Daily Kansan, written by a "real" reporter on the Kansan staff who had picked it up from the Lawrence Police Department. Time is kind, so I don't recall whether it was Prof. Flint, Chet Shaw or some other instructor or editor — probably it was all of them — who really ate me out. I don't even remember what they said, but my face still is red. If I'm a good reporter now, I'm sure the turning point came in the little old Journalism building from the instructors and editors who pounced on me that day. Certainly they impressed on me: Never sleep soundly in a fraternity house that is going to be robbed. (Editor's Note: Murray Davis, Class of 1925, works for the New York World Telegram & Sun. Editor & Publisher described him as a "nationally-known reporter . . . big in physique, big in courage, big in friendship, big in community consciousness, big in the will to crusade for the public's welfare . . . his real love is reporting..." By James W. Scott (In commenting on being asked to look back three decades, he wrote the Kansasan: "Your letter appeared innocent enough. Then it turned into a horror letter after I calculated the distance, in years, from then to now. I must have been a student in the Cenozoic Era—37 years ago.") Hears 'On the Job' Echoes Last week a copyreceiver fixed a cold eye on me and said, "You say here that Kansas had 544 traffic fatalities in 1961 and 512 in 1960. Then farther down you say that 42 more persons were killed last year than the year before. Now which is right? They can't both be right." At moments like these a vision of Elmer Beth floats up. I can see him staring through those thick glasses and hear him in a Reporting III class of 12 years ago: "Verify, verify, verify!" Or I can see his crabby, red-pencil writing on a story: "Sloppiness like this will get you in trouble on the job." He was always talking about "on the ioh." Or I remember an editorial I wrote for the University Daily Kansan in 1949 or 1950 in which "the late" Senator Wagner of New York was mentioned. Wagner had been an invalid for a number of years, but of course he didn't die until 1953. A classmate, Marvin Rowlands, framed a large sign, "WAGNER LIVES!" and hung it above my desk. Working on the Kansan is good preparation for the inevitable pit-fails that occur "on the job." The student reporter learns to be wary of his own slips of the mind and begins early to collect a fund of excuses and alibis. (Mr. Scott, Class of '50, is an editorial writer with the Kansas City Star.) Gone With the Shack Journalism students in the 1950s lost a chance at a special memory with the move into the new Flint Hall facilities. No longer would KU graduates be able to recall experiences in "the shack." Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 16, 1962 We Were There-Or Were We? By Arthur C. Miller How has the University Daily Kansas handled the big national and international news stories of the past 50 years? Ironically, it has had the opportunity to report three big breaking stories of 14 examined to its readers. Because a number of the important news events happened during periods when the Daily Kansan was not being published—periods such as week ends and vacations—the newspaper has been limited to the following three big world stories. ON OCT. 24, 1929, the great stock market crash startled the world. On that day there was no mention of the crash, probably because the paper was already printed before the event occurred. But the Oct. 25 Kansan carried a review of the situation as explained by John Ise, professor of economics. Then on Oct. 28, a story headlined, "Plunge In Market Today Takes Toll of $5,000,000" was run. The Oct. 29 issue carried a wire story that said, "Stock Market Break Causes Little Alarm Among High Officials." World War I ended on Nov. 11, 1918. The Daily Kansan ran a false United Press dispatch on Nov. 7 which stated that the armistice had been signed. On Nov. 8 the Kansan continued its coverage of the war with no mention of the false report. The Kansan was not embarrassed, however, for nearly every paper in the country ran the false UP report. When the actual end of the war came on Nov. 11, the Kansas made no mention of the signing except to say that "peace was had." THE LAST BIG STORY the Kansan was able to cover was the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt on April 12, 1945. A Kansan Extra was published on that day. The special edition carried a large headline, "ROOSEVELT DIES." Other headlines said: "Suffers Cerebral Hemorrhage At Warm Springs; Burial Sunday," and "Significance of Democratic Battle Now Realized as Harry S. Truman Takes Over Presidential Duties." The 11 stories that the Kansan was unable to cover follow. On April 6, 1917, President Woodrow Wilson announced that the U.S. would enter the first World War. The Kansan did not carry the story until April 11. Prohibition went into effect on Jan. 16, 1920. No mention of the story can be found in the Daily Kansan for Jan. 16, 17, 18 or 19. Charles Lindbergh's trans-Atlantic flight on May 20-21, 1927, happened at a poor time for the Daily Kansan and the story was given modest coverage. ONE OF THE BIG TRIAL stories of the past 50 years was the case of criminals Saco and Vanzetti. The trial took place during the summer vacation and consequently there was no Kansan coverage. In the 1930s Germany saw the rise of the Nazi party and Adolf Famous Newsmen Served on Kansan (Continued from page 2) Conn.; J. Alan Coogan, public relations director of Creole Petroleum Corp. Caracas, Venezuela; Phil McKnight, public relations director of Beech Aircraft Corp., Wichita; Jack Morris, public relations director of Republic National Life Insurance Company, Dallas, Texas; and Dale O'Brien, president of his own company in Chicago. AMONG WOMEN graduates who have attained high standing in the field are Muriel Mykland, who has an advertising agency in Panama City, Panam; Mary E. Turkington, editor, The Kansas Transporter magazine, Topeka; Cloe Norris, executive news editor, General Practice magazine, Kansas City, Mo.; Anna Mary Murphy, editor, Kansas Teacher magazine, Topeka; Mrs. James F. (Lois Lauer) Wolfe, publisher of the Jackson County Democrat, Blue Springs, Mo.; Patricia Jansen Doyle, education editor, Kansas City Times; and Jacqueline Jones, director of publication promotion, National Education Association, Washington, D.C. Hitler who became chancellor of that nation on Jan. 30, 1933. There was nothing about it in the Daily Kansan, for there was no Kansan on that date. The German army marched into an undefended Paris on June 14, 1940. There was no Daily Kansan. Perhaps one of the biggest war stories was the Japanese sneak attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. This was a Sunday, and although there was a Sunday issue of the Kansan, it was probably printed before the attack occurred. There was no paper on Dec. 8, and the Dec. 9 Kansan mentioned the attack on page 3. THE WAR NEARING ITS END, the United States released the power of an atomic bomb against man. But on April 6, 1945, when the bomb was dropped, there was no Daily Kansan. The first mention of the new weapon was on Aug. 10 in a story about a KU physicist who reportedly was on the team of scientists working on the bomb. His name was never known to reporters here. Another step in the development of nuclear weapons was taken on May 21, 1956 when the U.S. dropped its first hydrogen-bomb. There was no story of the event in the daily Kansas. The big story on that day was, "Baker Sorority Hit by KU Panty Raid." The Soviet Union launched the first earth satellite on Friday, Oct. 4, 1957. This announcement came late that evening and since there was no Saturday Kansan, the paper missed another big story. A second big space story was the launching of the first American satellite on Jan. 31, 1958. This event happened during semester break and thus there was no Kansan, and no story. UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY KANSAS EXTRA On Feb. 22, 1912, the Kansan hit the streets of KU with an Extra saying that Woodrow Wilson would speak here. GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 The campus newspaper has one obligation, to speak for its student readers.—Allen Karman Pizza Roberta's 1 Block North of Student Union Lunch Now serving hamburgers in evenings except Sunday Free Delivery on Campus A Quality Product Lawrence Sanitary Milk SALUTES for 42 years A Quality Newspaper University Daily Kansan 50 years of service as a daily for L.S.M.F.P LAWRENCE Sanitary ALL STAR VITAMIN D HOMOGENIZED LAWRENCE Sanitary ALL STAR Grade A VITAMIN D PASTEURIZED HOMOGENIZED Milk FLAVOR CONTROLLED BY SCLA PROCESS 400 M S P UMITS OF VITAMIN D ACTIVATED (ROOSHERS ADDED PER QUART) HOPPY'S FAVORITE MILK LAWRENCE Sanitary MILK AND ICE CREAM CCA 914-735-2000 Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR .DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co. 202 West 6th VI 3-5511 'Ex "Extra will spee Friday m missed." This v one page Daily Ka THE A New Je elected year, was that day extra aft publica On Jas san celé as a dai eight-pa readers in the p The Daily K new. Th GOO a Ka cham Sunday gun eig 1923. The day of 1942 w afternoothrough INCL of Sunck edition versary univers column tabloid of the U develop Letter Delano ner, gov the Dai ing the ments But other sr Duris sity Ka and se battle f THE view w sisting clipped from th san. Elmer nalism, copies each v service friends. strong — [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] Page 5 'Extra' News Rates UDK Extras By Richard Currie "Extra! Governor Woodrow Wilson will speak in Robinson Gymnasium Friday morning. Classes will be dismissed." This was an announcement in a one page, seven column University Daily Kansan on Feb. 22, 1912. THE ANNOUNCEMENT about the New Jersey governor, who was elected President later the same year, was the only item in the paper that day. This was the Kansan's first extra after only one month as a daily publication. On Jan. 16 in 1932 the Daily Kansas celebrated its 20th anniversary as a daily in a Sunday edition. The eight-page, two-section edition told readers of the news it had contained in the previous twenty years. The Sunday appearance of the Daily Kansan, however, was nothing new. The practice of publishing a After the war the Daily Kansan scooped every college newspaper in America. It was the only college paper to have an accredited reporter to sit in the press corps at the United Nations conference in San Francisco in 1945. ELOISE KNOX, a secretary in the Kansan's business office, had planned a trip to San Francisco about the time the conference was to convene. The news department here saw a chance to capitalize on her visit and wired San Francisco to have Miss Knox accredited as a reporter. She wrote articles in San Francisco and sent them by wire to the Kansan. KU WINS EXTRA Daily Kansas EXTRA Extras have rolled frequently from the Daily Kansan's press. During World War II the Kansan hit Lawrence streets first with news of D-Day, President Roosevelt's death, V-E Day, the Russian declaration of war on Japan and V-J Day. GOOD READING—Dr. Franklin D. Murphy and Phog Allen read a Kansan extra put out when KU won the NCAA basketball championship in 1952. Sunday Daily Kansan had been begun eight years earlier on Sept. 23, 1923. University Daily Kansan The Kansan continued its extra day of publication until March of 1942 when it became the present afternoon daily published Monday through Friday. INCLUDED IN THOSE 19 YEARS of Sunday papers was a May, 1939 edition celebrating the 75th anniversary of KU's establishment as a university. Four sections of seven column news pages and a pictorial tabloid (five column) section told of the University's early days and its development. But the Daily Kansan has ha other special issues. During World War II the University Kansan Review was published and sent to KU students at the battle fronts and in army camps. Letters from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Payne Ratner, governor of Kansas appeared on the Daily Kansan's pages commending the University on its achievements and wishing it well. THE UNIVERSITY KANSAN Review was a weekly publication consisting of campus news stories clipped by a Kansan Review editor from the daily editions of the Kansan. The D-Day issue, June 6, 1944, was put out almost entirely by women and was on the streets at 5:30 a.m., after a night's work which began at midnight. Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, recalls that more than 500 copies of this paper were run off each week and sent air mail to servicemen by parents, wives and friends. Prof. Beth says there was a strong demand for this paper. "We printed a map of Europe which covered the left half of the front page showing where the invasion had begun," Prof. Beth recalls. "We had thought the invasion would come through Italy, so we had to drill a hole through the plate to mark the start of the invasion in France with an arrow." SPEED IS ESSENTIAL in publishing an extra. On March 27,1943, the old anatomy building, a frame structure behind Watson Library, caught fire at 7 p.m. News of FDR's death was given to Kansan readers one hour after the first flash came late in the afternoon and 15 minutes before the print shop was to close. The Daily Kansan had an extra on the streets at 9 p.m. with the news and reactions to the disaster. Another of the Daily Kansan's extras hit the street early on the morning of March 27, 1952—one of the University's finest hours. The headline on the one-page sheet was only two words "KU WINS" in letters fours inches high. KU's basketball team had become the NCAA champion by defeating St. John's of Brooklyn 80 to 63 in the national championship tournaments in Seattle. Wash. The election issue in November, 1960, published after an agonizing night of indecision caused by ex-Vice President Nixon's rising vote count. The Dally Kansan had planned to be first on the streets with the election results. Despite the uncertainty, the Kansas went to press with a banner headline saying "Kennedy Close Winner." The presses rolled at 6:30 a.m. and the paper was on the streets at 7:30 a.m. Murphy Wires Congratulations Two birds on a branch with grapes. CONGRATULATIONS TO THE DAILY KANSAN'S 50TH BIRTHDAY. NO STUDENT LABORATORY WAS EVER MORE PRODUCTIVE AND THE DISPROPORTIONATE NUMBER OF DISTINGUISHED KU GRADUATES IS PROOF POSITIVE. BIRD TV - RADIO Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 908 Mass. FRANKLIN D. MURPHY (Dr. Franklin D Murphy left KU in 1960 to become chancellor of UCLA.) VI 3-8855 - Guaranteed - Quality Parts - Expert Service HI-FI Editor Recalls Kansan (Continued from page 3) newspapers. He was a "string" man, (Guest note by Dean Burton W. Marvin; Louis LaCoss was the first editor-in-chief of the Kansan after it became a daily in January, 1912. Through hard work and ability— And I must mention Guy Pennock who operated our only linotype machine. Guy was the best editor in the office, editing our copy as he set it. He did a good job too. Had he been around when I wrote that Stubbs editorial I am sure he would have talked me out of it, and rightly so. Reminiscing can become a vicious habit, so I will say "30" with a nod of congratulations to those who have made the Daily Kansan today one of the best on any college campus. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT and by what KU journalists like to think was natural process—he rose from this beginning to the top level in American journalism. As editorial page editor of The St. Louis Globe-Democrat he won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing in 1951 about the West Point cheating scandal. He retired in 1959 as editorial editor and vice president of the Globe-Democrat.) Who shall report on the reporters? —Melvin L. Jaskey Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Final Shoe Clearance Thursday Only Dress Suedes T & C Fiancee Were to $5.95 $500 Loafers Viner Trampezes Broken Sizes trotters Were to $10.95 $500 Town & Country Selected Patterns Dress Were to $8.95 Selected Patterns Casuals $500 Entire Stock Not Included All Sales Final Royal College Shop Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Jan. 16, 1962 PRE UDK tom-1924 enton Crusading Part Of Kansan's Past By Richard Bonett A newspaper is many things to many people. But one thing it must be to be worthy of the title "newspaper," and that is an instrument for the betterment of society. This concept lies deeply implanted in the tradition of the University Daily Kansan. THE EARLIEST STUDENT staff members of the Kansan established their paper as a courageous fighter in the public interest. And whatever criticism may be leveled against the Kansan, provincialism is not one of them. The men and women of her staff have seldom hesitated to reach out into the community, the state, the nation, or the world to uncover issues and present them to their readers. Among the student editors were Roy A. Roberts, now president of the Kansas City Star Company; Jerome Beatty, a noted free-lance writer; and Brock Pemberton, who later became famous as an actor. The Kansan's crusading tradition had its start when, on April 25, 1908, a group of students comprising the "Scoop Club" exposed an extensive bootlegging operation in the Lawrence East Bottoms. In the Lawrence Daily Journal, which had been turned over to them for a one-day "laboratory" exercise, the students reported the operation of a series of beer and whiskey "joints," much of whose business was "transacted with University students." The same night the article appeared, police raided four of the liquor establishments, arresting proprietors and patrons. Subtle intimidation came from the Lawrence mayor who said publicly "I have charity for such youthful indiscretion and am opposed to making unnecessary police court records which may annoy them in the future." A local judge, owner of one of the houses rented by a bootleger, was more emphatic. He reportedly said any student brought before him on charges of disorderly conduct could expect 10 days on the rock pile. THE STUDENTS ANSWERED the officials with a long editorial in the Kansan and distributed it in downtown Lawrence. It called for a "dry town" and castigated officials. Four men were prosecuted and each entered pleas of guilt. The defense attorney later said the students had accumulated enough evidence in their campaign to send the bootleggers to jail for 20 years. In recent years, the Kansas has devoted most of its efforts to improving conditions at the University, fighting for civil rights, and backing what the student editors have considered worthwhile programs. The Kansan has won numerous national collegiate press prizes for its efforts. One of the most important, the All America rating of the Associated Collegiate Press was won in 1947- '48 and '49 by the Kansan. THE SAME AWARD or first class honor rating has been won by the Kansan the past three years. Last year, largely on the strength of its campaigns for a faculty retirement program and coverage of local sit-in campaigns, the Kansan and the William Allen White School of Journalism won first place in the William Randolph Heenst National Journalism contest against 45 other accredited journalism schools in the nation. The school received $5,600 in prize money and two students, Frank Morgan and Fred Zimmerman, won prizes of $1,800 and $800, respectively, for separate entries. Traffic safety campaigns waged by the Kansan resulted in second place prizes in 1952 and '53 in the National Safety contest sponsored by the Lumberman's Mutual Casualty Company. IN FEBRUARY, 1959. KANSAN reporters had an exclusive interview with the then Gov. George Docking. The resulting articles had state-wide repercussions when Docking was quoted as saying KU was a "trouble spot" where a "clean up" was long over due. In reporting that the governor opposed any budget increases for the school, the Kansan turned up an issue that plagued Docking through his 1961 campaign for a third term as governor. Some believe the school issue played a major role in Docking's defeat. Concern over disciplinary proceedings began when three students were suspended summarily for allegedly painting Theta Nu Epsilon (a secret drinking fraternity) signs around Lawrence. The students later were released from the city charges in police court, but their suspension remained in force. Since 1958 the Kansan has waged an almost continuous campaign over student discipline procedures and matters affecting civil rights. WHEN THE KANSAS BOARD of Review prevented the showing of a Swedish film, "Smiles of a Summer Night," for being "obscene," the Kanas criticized the board and censorship in general in a series of stories and editorials. Complaints of ineffective fire protection and high rates brought the (Continued on page 13) Weavers Our 105th Year of Service Weaver's Our 105th Year of Service OLD-FASHIONED SAVINGS for FAIR YOUNG LASSES annual sale Hanes seamless stockings save up to $1.05 on every box service sheer —— (reg. $1.35) $1.15, 3 prs. $3.30 reinforced sheer —— (reg. $1.50) $1.25, 3 prs. $3.60 micro-mesh—————(reg. $1.50) $1.25, 3 prs. $3.60 stretch sheer——(reg. $1.65) $1.35, 3 prs. $3.90 sheer heel demi-toe — (reg. $1.65) $1.35, 3 prs. $3.90 all sheer sandalfoot — (reg. $1.95) $1.65, 3 prs. $4.80 short, medium, long Colors: south pacific, bali rose, barely there ONLY 5 MORE DAYS! Sale Ends Saturday CONGRATULATIONS to the DAILY KANSAN on its 50th YEAR of PUBLICATION Hosiery Shop --- Street Floor Tuesday. Jan. 16. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Many Parties- (Continued from page 1) booth peeking, but the phrase "insufficient evidence" always made its appearance, especially when the council was Pach controlled. Since the ASC was organized in 1843, Pach has been exclusively Greek. Member fraternities had a way of pledging independents who showed political promise with other parties. Once, a freshman ASC representative elected on another ticket later became vice president of Pach. AFTER THE 1954 division of Pach, the organization has been secret. It appeared for the first time in several years in the 1960 edition of the "Jayhawker." The members wore black hoods to protect their identities. The Society feels the fraternity system is the most efficient way to accomplish the goal of high standards of Greek leadership at KU. There have been unsubstantiated rumors of Pach's activities in the last few years. One Hill fraternity violated a regulation concerning treatment of pledges. The Inter-Fraternity Council debated the violation and a stiff penalty was placed on the fraternity. ANOTHER RUMORED Pach activity occurred during the spring election campaign last year. The University Party nominated an independent to oppose Vox Populi's fraternity man. Rumors of Pach's pressure on UP Greek houses were voiced with no evidence being uncovered. At another meeting of the IFC the next week, a member quickly asked for repeal of the punishment against the fraternity. The motion passed with very little discussion. Rumors of Pach's involvement were heard. In 1922, a student named Chet Shore was tired of empty political platforms and organized the "Dollars and Cents" party. The first party to oppose Pachacamac was Black Mask. It was a Greek-independent coalition and lasted from 1915 to 1926. At that time it dissolved and reformed into the "Independent coalition." "My understanding is that the other two parties (Fach and Black Mask) promise reforms in student government and the like," he said. "My idea is that, regardless of who is elected, classes will not be made any shorter, and that we will all come to school the rest of the year, the same as formerly. "Thus, it is my plan if elected to conduct a price-slashing campaign. I will start a campaign to establish a rest and smoking room for men; to raise the price of Bull Durham and lower the price of Camels." He created enthusiasm for his new party by campaigning with a three-piece jazz band and passing out salted peanuts and Eskimo pies, Pach won the election anyway. SIMILAR schemes were devised by several parties but the Pach machine proved too tough. And Pach has lost only six elections since 1926, each time to a newly-organized party. Football players were allowed to participate in political parties until the KU defeat by Kansas State in 1926. On the following Monday, Chancellor E. H. Lindley said player interest in politics caused the loss and the athletes were forced to withdraw. In December, the election was finally held and by this time Pach decided it was not worth the trouble. The Independent coalition won the election. This caused the elections to be postponed until October. When the next election date rolled around, 800 names were discovered missing from the election rolls. Another postpone-ment. Pach settled back and waited. The coalition lost the next four elections and was dissolved in 1931. A Big Blow In 1952 Journalism students practically had a story drop into their laps on March 12, 1952, when 75 mile-anhour winds toppled five stories of steel girders during the construction of Malott Hall. It was perhaps one of the most spectacular accidents in KU history. The gale sent the girders crashing into a matchwork jumble. There were no injuries, however, and damage was estimated at only $18,000, since much of the material was salvageable. J-Student Today More Serious than Before By Dennis Farney The journalism student of 1912 cheerfully cut classes when something more important—like work on the Daily Kansan—came along, was often a 24- or 25-year-old "pro" with previous newspaper experience and prided himself on the number of routine campus news stories he could find for the paper. THE JOURNALISM STUDENT of 1632 still cuts classes—sometimes—but he does this a bit more reluctantly than his 1912 counterpart. He seems more serious and more inhibited than his predecessors. As late as 1954, for example, two senior journalism students erected a pup tent and lived in the wilds of Fowler Grove (the J-school lawn) for a week to publicize the campus centennial celebration held that year. Yet, paradoxically, he is expected to handle stories far more complex than did the student of 1912. Nothing like that happened this year. He is younger (most of the 91 KU journalism students are from 20-22 years old), and he has little, if any, previous newspaper experience. The reasons for this change? The growing complexity of the modern world and a thing called interpretative reporting. THE JOURNALIST OF TODAY. operating on the theory that complex news stories must be interpreted, not merely reported, finds that he must first acquire a broad background in the liberal arts and sciences. That's why today's journalism student resignedly trudges up the hill to class after spending most of the night working on a particularly difficult news story. And that's why, in the opinion of some observers, both the journalism student and the journalism profession as a whole have improved in the past 50 years. John Ise, professor emeritus of economies, recently commented on the changing journalism student. "I think they've changed for the better," he said, "They're more careful and better trained. In the old days, journalists would get some ungodly reports on things because they didn't know enough to get things straight. "THEN, YOU COULD read the Kansan in a few minutes, because there was very little of importance in it. But today's Kansan is trying to educate the students on the issues of the day. Journalists today have a social attitude, and that's good." Two KU administrative officials, Fred Ellsworth, executive secretary of the Alumni Association, and Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, were also asked to compare the journalism student of today to the student of 25 or 30 years ago. Mr. Elsworth graduated from the KU School of Journalism in 1922. Mr. Nichols graduated from the school in 1926. "To me, the big change is that students in the school today are younger," Mr. Ellsworth said. "When I was in school, we had students who had already edited small papers before coming to school. Some of them were making their way through school by selling articles and feature stories to papers like the Chicago Tribute and the Christian Science Monitor. "WHEN I WAS CAMPUS editor, I hardly went to classes at all. But the situation has changed today. Students today have a much harder time keeping up in their studies." Mr. Ellsworth said that journalism students were older and more mature in 1920 than now, because a large number of them were World War I veterans. He added, however, that "it's probably the tendency of every graduate to think that the best students graduated with him." "When I graduated in January, 1922," he said. "I could see how the staff had enough manpower to put out the Kansan that Spring, but I couldn't see how they had anyone to get it out in the fall. The whole staff was terribly green." But as it turned out, he related, his worry was unnecessary. The "green" staff of 1923 included Ben Hibbs—who recently retired as editor of the Saturday Evening Post—and Donis Fleeson, today a successful Washington news analyst. Mr. Nichols noted the emphasis placed today on a broad education for journalism students. "Today's student is better informed than was the student in my day," he said. The entire student body shows a better understanding of national and international affairs. "What we need today is the reporter who can explain what the news means. This kind of reporter must have a good background." "An estimate of repair costs? Sure-I'd say ... about $1.50 a pound!" CLYDE'S GAS FOR ANYTHING SMOKES EATS EN SOME GAS HOMEWORK DONE NEATLY At this time of year everyone is short of cash and time. But this is no reason to neglect your car. STUDY NOW-PAY LATER PLAN Drop in this weekend and take advantage of our This unique budget plan lets you put your car in top shape and still leaves you free from money worries during Final Week Cold weather is hard enough on any car-but a trip home between semesters increases the wear and tear tremendously Come in today . . . oh yes, GOOD LUCK ON THOSE FINALS ... Good luck to you Clyde UNIVERSITY FORD SALES V13-3500 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 50 YEARS OFF FINE DAILY SERVICE Your Kansas Union Food 50 years ago the didn't have a daily cellent campus paper over 10,000,serving Stop in anytime and enjoy good in the Cafeteria, Hawk's Ne 50 years ago K.U. students didn't have a Now,students can find good service,pleasant and excellent food in a modern,non-profit un Actually,the Kansas Union Food Service is on ing its 36th anniversary,but we are,however ward 50 years (and more) of quality service fine service the University Daily Kansan has Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Food Service Congratulates the Daily Kansan the students at the University of Kansas daily newspaper. Today they have an exs paper whose circulation has grown to well serving alumni & friends as well as students. good service and good food 's Nest, or Prairie Room. ave a union either. easant atmosphere ofit union building e is only approach- wever, striving to rvice-to equal the san has given K.U. KANSAS UNION Page 10 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 ACME Laundry and Dry Cleaners Congratulates the University Daily Kansan for its 50 years of fine service to K.U. students. We hope that we too can serve the students of K.U. with the same very best in service for many years to come. ASK ABOUT OUR MANY SPECIAL SERVICES We give every garment our meticulous individual attention, from the first careful mark-in to the final check-out. Why not let us serve your cleaning needs. Acme Acme LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Hillcrest Downtown Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0928 VI 3-5155 Shopping Centre VI 3-0895 CONGRATULATIONS to the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN on its 50th Anniversary KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE Page 11 Congo's Gizenga Held for Deaths University Daily Kansan LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo — (UFI) — Congo Premier Cyrille Adoula said today he had received reports that 11 white missionaries and seven African Roman Catholic nuns had been massacred by troops loyal to Stanleyville strongman Antojine Gizene. Adoula also announced that he had fired Gizenga as vice premier of the Central Congo government. Gizenga was captured yesterday at Stanleyville, capital of Oriental Province and center of his power, by Central Congolese and United Nations' troops after a weekend of fighting. He is now being held there. Adoula said a judicial investigation has begun into Gizenga's activities. He was seized after he defied a demand by the Congolese Parliament for him to return to Leopoldville to answer charges of "secessionist activities." Adoula said he had reports that troops led by Col. Joseph Pakassa, Gizenga's cousin, had massacred 11 white missionaries and seven African Roman Catholic nuns. ADOULA SAID that a decree ending Gizenga's term as vice premier would be signed at "any moment now" by Congolese President Joseph Kasayubu. But the premier denied rumors that pro-Gizenga troops, led by Pakassa, were marching on Stanleyville to free Gizenga. Informed sources here said earlier today that secret charges had been filed against Gizenga. Diplomatic sources said the investigation likely would center around the deaths of several of Gizenga's political opponents shortly after former Premier Patrice Lumumba was killed in Katanga 11 months ago. Adoula indicated Gizenga might also be charged with the deaths of Congolese soldiers killed in the weekend fighting at Stanleyville. "He is personally responsible for the deaths of this past weekend and an attempt to remove him (to Leopoldville) before the end of the inquiry could lead to riots among the population." Adoula added. Official Bulletin Catholic Daily Mass; 6:30 & 8 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Graduating Seniors & Graduate Students: Questionnaires and informational booklet, on the U.S. Peace Corps are at the U.S. Department of the Dean of Students 273 Strong Hall. Teacher Interviews; Jan. 17 & 18 Clyde, Carly; Jeff, Jett. Cooksey, Lakewood, Colo. Schoolies. TODAY Angel Flight Meeting: 7 p.m. Militar Selena Building Humanities Forum: 8 p.m. Oread Room, Kansas Union, Dr. William O. Scott, Assistant Professor of English, and Methods in the Analysis of Poetry. TOMORROW Analytical-Inorganic-Physical Chemistry Colloquium: 4 p.m., 122 Malott, Dr Ernest Griswold, "Conductance Studies in Tetrahydrurafuran." El Atenco. El programa de hoy constiera en cinco palacios en colorros sobre el mismo tondo. El director Fonctico (Sound Luh) a las cuatro de la tarde. Refrescos. Todos invitados. Episcopal Holy Communion. 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. American Society of Tool & Manufacturing Engineers Meeting: 7 p.m. THURSDAY Fowler Building, Speaker, Mr. Tom Negro, Supervisor of Chemical Fabrication, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. on "Photography for Small Tool Tooling." All engineers invited. Steel Strike Causes Delay In Move to Field House William M. Inge, college '35, won the Pulitzer prize in 1953 for "Picnic." Other of his Broadway plays are "Come Back, Little Sheba," "Bus Stop," and "The Dark at the Top of the Stairs." The 1950s finally saw Kansas basketball teams moving from the cramped quarters of the famous opera house — Hoch Auditorium — to the spacious confines of Allen Field House—but not before players and fans were forced to cool their heels for an additional two years because of the steel strike in 1953. Pulitzer Prize Winner Grad Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 Simons Recalls KU of '20s The memories of KU in the Twenties are happy memories, many of them centered around the old Journalism Building and innumerable glorious hours both in and out of classrooms... College newspaper training provides a valuable service not only in preparing young people to be better newspaper workers but also in causing students generally to be more aware of the important role of the newspaper in society. It is desirable for young student journalists, early in their training, to recognize the primary purposes of a newspaper and the serious responsibilities of those who are entrusted with conducting a free press. The editor should never regard his newspaper as a personal plaything because the newspaper primarily is a public service loaded with the responsibility of properly and honestly reporting and interpreting the news of the day. The people have the right to know the truth; not just a distorted report a clever editor may want them to see... If the journalism faculty today is developing a feeling of respect and appreciation from students, and if graduates have the skill, and a serious and sound evaluation of their responsibilities and opportunities, college journalism is serving a good and worthy purpose. Congratulations to the Kansan on 50 good and rewarding years, and best wishes for continued success. (MR. SIMONS, CLASS OF '25 JIS THE PUBLISHER OF THE LAWRENCE DAILY JOURNAL-WORLD.) In truth, the journalist is merely the scapegoat of all professionals who put pen to paper.—Alistair Cooke Congratulations To The Daily Kansan From LAWRENCE TIRE & OIL CO. 1000 Mass. VI 2-0247 Open Every Night Until 1:00 Look Your Loveliest This New Year To have a successful year you must start it out right. Come in and let us help you select a hair style that will start you in the right direction for this new social season. For Appointments Call VI 3-3034 Campus Beauty Shoppe 1144 Indiana 1 Block North of the Student Union 12th & Oread Jay SHOPPE $24.95 Jam Compton 835 Mass. RUFFIAN Fabric ------------ Rayon, Flax, and Cotton Colors --- Natural, Turquoise, Bronzine, and Orange Sizes ------------ 6 to 16 Fashion news "IN THE ROUGH" — fabulous new never-before texture By FABREX Page 12 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK Lawrence's Most PROGRESSIVE Bank 中華書院大阪本館 9th & Kentucky CONGRATULATES THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Bank at Our CONVENIENT, NEW Location 'Hell Raising' Is A UDK Virtue By Alan Jones Being on time has always been my weakness. I'm probably the only J-school student who ever showed up late for Prof. Beth's 11 o'clock—five times. No one could forget Prof. Beth. He teaches required courses. And his inquisitions are a thing to behold. It was very simple, really. If you knew the answers, you were safe. If you didn't you'd be fielding questions the rest of the hour. NOT ALL THE experiences at The Kansan were so edifying. One Easter vacation a campus politician wandered into the newsroom with a suspiciously bulky jacket under his arm. "What you have there, a bottle?" we asked. And believe it or not, he did. But for discipline, the Kansan work was best. I wanted the editorial page job and got it—and spent the semester working until midnight four or five nights a week. John Husar and I had to produce two editorials a day. It sounds easy to think up one idea a day, but sometimes it takes five or six hours to do it. In turning out editorials on demand, I got a lot of juvenile writing out of my system (far from all of it, I'm afraid), and learned about producing regularly under pressure. A few minutes later, I was relaxing in the slot man's chair, with a paper cup of champagne. Just then Dean Marvin came wandering in. He talked with us a bit, and noticed the cup. "What's in that—Seven-up, or Champagne?" he asked with a broad grin. "Champagne." Still smiling, he bent down to sniff the cup. He came up with an indescribable expression on his face—still wearing the smile as if he'd forgotten to remove it, eyes doubtful and questioning, and his body stiffened in utter disbelief. He said something inaudible in a baffled tone, turned around, and left. We heard nothing more about it. I think he didn't really believe it was champagne, no matter what his nose told him. IVE LEARNED A LOT about college journalism since leaving it. The arguments that the college press should be disciplined and controlled. I've found, are only part of the whole pattern. You hear the same arguments on a city daily from advertisers, educators, police, officials, and every literate who can scrape up the price of a postage stamp. I also found that despite everything, the UDK had a surprising amount of freedom. Established city papers tend to take the long view of things, and let issues resolve themselves, rather than rear back and raise hell about them. The reporter's only defense is to dig out the stories and the scandals and write about them anyway. Sometimes they get past the desk, and at least the reporter has done his job The time to worry about The Kansas is not when it raises too much hell, but when it raises too little. Most journalists get fat and happy all too soon anyway; they shouldn't get that way in college. (Mr. Jones, Class of '59, is an editorial writer with the Wichita Eagle and Beacon.) Crusading - (Continued from page 6) Kansan into a controversy over the old Sunnyside Housing development for married students in 1958. (Continued from page 6) Along similar lines was a short Kansas campaign pointing out the lack of street lighting at Louisiana and Oread Streets and the potential danger it presented to women walking in the area from molesters. QUICKLY, THE LAWRENCE city administration approved the installation of four street lamps in the area. Page 13 Perhaps the concepts involved in the Kansan tradition of public service were best summed up by John Peterson, Kansan managing editor in 1961, on the occasion of the Hearst award; "The awards were for stories that investigated and reported the problems of the University. . . . This superior reporting is only possible in a crusading, liberal and free press." committee handles matters of policy and a news committee is on hand for efficiency's sake. My over-all administration is a body called the Kansan Board, made up of students from both sides of the operation. THE CONSTITUTION that governs my publication states general purposes of the Kansan in twelve points. Let me relate just three: Half-Century Old- (Continued from page 1) "The Daily Kansan maintains a semi-conservative tone in display of news and editorial material and strives for dignity of expression and appearance. "As the official student paper of the University, the Daily Kansan stands for the students. It supports all moves for bettering student conditions and all actions to further good student government. "All matters of public record are published on the basis of news value. Information given to groups of sufficient size or in such manner as to become general knowledge among a considerable number of students is not confidential information. It is subject to publication with or without approval of the persons furnishing it. Every effort is made, however, to obtain information and permission of publication from the original source. It is through the faithfulness of the Daily Kansan in printing news of all student activities that it serves the students as they have a right to be served." Details of my history and recollections fill the inside pages of today's issue. There's no need to go further here. I will see this though. I've got a lot of good years left in me yet—I shall never acquire the sensitility of age. 1 nope I'm immortal. University Daily Kansan Congratulations To The Daily Kansan From Margaret's Cafe Open 6:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Closed Sunday DINE IN BETTER PLACE 1104 W. 23rd VI 3-9663 Serving Breakfast, Lunch, & Dinner Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 BERLIN — (UPI) — Two American students who spent four months in a Communist East German prison said today they were looking forward to seeing their California girl-friends and getting decent hairstuds. Boys Headed Home After German Prison "They want to get home as fast as possible." Pankey's father, Edgar, said. They hope to catch the first plane out of London for home. Blessed are they who have the gift of making friends, for it is one of God's best gifts.—Thomas Hughes Well and happy, Victor Pankey, 18, and Gilbert Ferrey, 20, both of Tustin, Calif. booked passage on a flight back to their home by way of Hamburg and London. They showed no signs of the months they spent in prison for trying to smuggle an East Berlin girl past the Communists' anti-refugee wall. — HOT SPUDNUTS — at 12 noon — 6 p.m. — 9 p.m. SPUDNUT SHOP 1422 W. 23rd Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W.14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Special Purchase SALE Jack Winter Corduroy Pants All Sizes Many Colors $490 COACH HOUSE 1237 Oread On the Campus Penguin reading a book. C is for CRAM You will soon be busy with finals. Let Fritz Co. take over your car worries we have "worry specialists" to help you. Congratulations to the Daily Kansan on its 50th Anniversary. CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE Page 14 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 'LMOC' Cartoon Born at KU "Little Man on Campus," the collegiate cartoon which appears in the Kansan and many papers throughout the country, was born here in 1946. Dick Bibler, creator of the cartoon and a student at Kansas from 1946 to 1950, won a Daily Kansan drawing contest and became the Kansan's regular cartoonist. Soon after this, "Little Man on Campus" was born. Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, noticed the demand for the cartoon from other colleges and suggested that the cartoon be syndicated. Since this beginning with the Kansan, "Little Man on Campus" has become one of the most widely syndicated campus cartoons in the nation. Happy LMOC Worthal Ebler's characters, the sawtoothed perpetual freshman, Worthal's strict, though often-fluorested Prof. Snarf, and the sexy lovelies have become part of the life of millions of people, not only at KU but throughout the country. "My idea with Worthal," he explained, "was to create a face anyone could be sorry for." While he was drawing cartoons for the news department of the Kansan, he was also drawing advertisements for the advertising department. Bibler's ads soon became another point of enjoyment for KU students. Bibler was anything but a "little man on campus" while a student. He came to Kansas as a freshman in commercial art in the spring of 1946 after serving 34 months in the army. He was discharged as a technical sergeant. During his four years at KU he was president of the senior class; a member of Sachem, senior men's honorary organization; Owl Society, junior men's honorary organization and Kappa Sigma social fraternity. AFTER LEAVING KU, he studied at Colorado State College and Stanford University. He taught for a time at Monterey Peninsula College at Monterey, Calif. Bibler is now a professional cartoonist and makes his home in Monterey, Calif. Bibler's cartoons have been collected and numerous books of these cartoons have been published. The first of these cartoon books was printed in the spring of 1946 in an attempt to bring needed revenue to the Kansan. RIDE THE CREST OF THE WAVE WITH ELVIS PRESLEY IN BLUE HAWAII HAL WALLIS PACIFIC JOHN ANGELA BLACKMART LANSBY-BURY WALERS HALWATER TECHNICOLOR PANAVISON MONICA BLINK NOW! At 7:00 & 9:00 NOW! At 7:00 & 9:00 GRANADA (THEATRE) Telephone VIKING 3-5763 GRANADA TWEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788 Mrs. Elizabeth Flint, widow of L. N. "Daddy" Flint, is 84. She lives in a two-story home at 16th and Louisiana. This is her home. This is where she reared her family. Mrs. Flint Active at 84 Active and energetic, she does all her housework. Intelligent, she talks on any subject brought up. Alert, she looks for a chance to joke. Mrs. Flint came to KU in 1906 with her husband, then a "lecturer on journalism" in the department of English. Mr. Flint and she had sold their paper, the Manhattan Nationalist, to come here. She had metMr. Flint while she was working for his paper. Mr. Flint, owner and editor, had hired her as a reporter, and three years later they were married. "When I married," Mrs. Flint says today, "I became a housewife. I didn't work any more. My three sons became my career." But Mrs. Flint could never forget some dates. In 1911 the journalism courses in the department of English were collected into a department of journalism under Prof. Merle Thorpe as chairman. When Prof. Thorpe left in 1916, Prof. Flint became chairman. He retired from this position in 1941 but taught until 1946. The present School of Journalism building, Flint Hall, was named in his honor in 1955, shortly before his death. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor-Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Mrs. Flint did not go on campus often in those early years. But she does recall going to "the shack" for a meeting of Theta Sigma Fhi (honorary fraternity for women in journalism). "We met in the loft," she says, "and going upstairs I noticed some words high on the northwest wall. They were "speed, brevity, truth" in letters a foot high. This was the students' rule, their yardstick to write by. "AND THOSE STAIRS!" Mrs. Flint was referring to the narrow, high stairs in the old journalism building cast of Watson Library, now used for anatomy classes. "I remember thinking if I could just make those. I wouldn't have any fear of climbing the golden ones." VIVIEN LEIGH IN TENNESSEE-WILLIAMS THE ROMAN SPRING OF MRS. STONE CO-STARRING WARREN BEATTY TECHNICOLOR\* from WARNER BROS. NOW! Shows At 7:00 & 9:00 VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VXN 3 1065 "This is the gol-darnest comedy ya ever did see. I sure had a lot of fun making it and all we are going to have fun when ya see it" The SECOND TIME AROUND ANDY GRITFITH ❶ DEBBIE REYNOLDS ❷ STEVE FORREST JUILLET PUBWE ❸ THE MELATIR REMARK STARTS SATURDAY AT THE GRANADA NOTHING EQUALS THE CONVENIENCE OF A BANK Where every financial service human ingenuity can devise is available at one stop, under one roof. ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Lawrence 746 Mass. Ben Hibbs Sends Greetings I wish the University Daily Kansan well on its golden anniversary—and I hope and believe it will continue to provide as good training for ambitious young journalists as it did during my student days at KU. I had a hell of a lot of fun on the Kansan, and I also learned quite a lot. I have never ceased to be grateful to "Daddy" Flint and his faculty crew for the tough but understanding way in which they pounded some of the elements into our thick skulls during those wonderful years. Ben Hibbs (Mr. Hibbs, Class of '23, is the former editor of the Saturday Evening Post.) Congratulations to the Daily Kansan on Its 50th Anniversary '62 is also our 50th year in service to KU students. Come in soon and see us for all art supplies, briefcases and stationery CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. VI 3-6133 Submarine Sandwiches A MEAL IN ITSELF --- MEATS CHEESE LETTUCE DELICIOUS SAUCE COLD POP ICE COLD MILK Joe's Bakery VI 3-4720 412 W. 9th TRAVEL AND BE PAID FOR IT TOO! Be a STEWARDESS for UNITED AIR LINES If you are between 20 & 26,between 5'2" & 5'8" and single, you may qualify for this challenging and rewarding career. As a United Stewardess, you will be living in some of the country's most exciting cities—San Francisco, Miami, New York, Seattle, Denver, Los Angeles and others. Train in the new two million dollar Stewardess Training Center in suburban Chicago. Recreational facilities for trainees housed in the dormitory includes a year round pool. - Salary $325.00 per month. - Vacation and trip passes for you and your parents. - Other extensive benefits UNITED AIR LINES Please send additional information to: University ... Miss ... Address ... City State Clip and mail to United Air Lines Employment Office, Denver 7, Colo. CLASSIFIED FOR RENT LARGE SINGLE OR DOUBLE room with cooking privileges and refrigerator. Near KU and downtown. Available Feb. 1. Phone VI 3-9257 after 2. INTERNATIONAL HOUSE, large sleeping rooms for boys. 3 blocks from Union Call VI 3-7642 after 5 or on weekends. 1.10 APARTMENTS FOR RENT at Moody Apartment House. 3 rooms furnished & priv. bath. Call VI 3-5182 or VI 3-6103. Vacancy for male student. An apartment one block from Union. Also room for two. Private bath and entrance. Ph. VI 3- 6723. 1-19 For Rent To Graduate Women; 2 rooms. Phone VI3-3106 1-19 VACANT SINGLE ROOM for male student. Shower bath, ref., & tele. Two blocks from campus. $30 per month. 1315 Tenn., VI 5-3390. 2-5 3 ROOM FURNISHED apt. Private bath & & entr. 1st floor, off street parking. 1046 R. I. Available Jan. 15, VI 3-5956. 1-19 GRADUATE MEN — furn. available Jan. 20, 1224 Miss. VI 3-4928. 1-19 LARGE LOVELY SLEEPING room in bath, linens furnished and room Kept. $15 per month includes everything, a dormitory to campus. Available VL 3-7890. LEAVING FOR EUROPE, completely living on the grid. 1 to Sept. 1. Call VI 3-3278. 1-19 PRIVATE ROOMS for rent at 901 Maine. One available now. Reasonable. Can see after 6 or on weekends. VI 3-6810. 1-19 VACANCY IN FEBRUARY for young man in contemporary home. Home cooked supper — swimming pool. $65 per month. VI 3-9635. tt VACANT SINGLE ROOM for male student. Shower bath, ref. & tele. Two blocks from campus. $30 per month. 1316 Tenn. VI 3-3390. 1-17 FURNISHED 4 rooms & bath. All modern. On Jenny Wren Road. 1 mile west of 15th & Iowa. VI 3-9596. 1-17 NICE COMFORTABLE ROOM for boy. Near campus and town. Also near 2 bus lines. Linens furn. VI 3-3429. 827 Miss. 1-17 VACANCY AVAILABLE for one or two men at 1037 Tenn. Twin Room. Call 512-268-9000. Four other men students on same floor. Available now. Call VI 3-5137 after 5 p.m. or weekday. 1-16 BASEMENT APARTMENT, suitable for two men students. Everything furnished except they pay electric power. Call VI 3-5137 after five or weekends. SPLIT LEVEL or semi basement apartment — 2½ blocks from Union. 3 rooms completely furnished. Shower bath, private entr., off street parking. Bachelor's degree or graduate student. $48 per month. For appl. call VI 3-6696. 1-19 TWO BOYS to share large furnished recei- tions. Linen furnished. 2417 Ohio. IV 3-7734. FURNISHED APARTMENT: Private bath. within walking dist. of KY 4172. Two study students. Phone VI 3-6158 during noon hour or between 5 and 6 p.m. 1-19 Park Plaza South Apartments Are you satisfied where you now live? Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Central Air Conditioning We will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 2-8253 Office — 1912 W. 25th Lawrence's Only Garden Apartments LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-071f. 2 MAN APT. $55 a month. Quiet room. 6 MAN APT. $15 a month. Less frequent. CVI 3-7-370, ask for secretary. MISCELLANEOUS LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid, $50. Call VI 3-6294. NICE SINGLE ROOM: Well furnished, next to Union, Telephone & off-street phone. 402-765-1389. Dedicated dents graduating. Available Feb. 1. $28 & $22.50 per month. Call VI 3-6961-1-66. COME AND EAT home cooked meals served family style Contact Mrs. Metsker, 721 Mo. St., VI 3-4967. 1-19 BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks. ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent clsed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. alth. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 31- 0350. TRANSPORTATION BUSINESS SERVICES GIRL WANTS RIDE weekdays. Stouffer Place to K.C. Mo. in vicinity of 35th & Main starting Feb. 1. Will share expenses. Call VI 3-1054. 1-81 University Daily Kansan GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1213 Conn. Personal service — sectionalized — one stop — save time & money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, etc., plus complete lines of pet supplies. **tf** INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric reoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. — VI 3-0152 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete options 2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. weekdays. tt I WILL DO IRONING in my home. Pick on 110 N. J. Cali VI 2-2467 or bike to 110 N. J. RAY WILEY TEXACO. 23rd & La Tune Pick up & delivery. Phone VI 2-031-1-16 WILL BABY SIT in my home, 19 bik phone VI I 3-2263 40 per day referen 2-12 EXPERIENCED MOTHER — would like child to care for, 3 for 4 yrs, old, in her home. Also would like ironing, 15e per piece. 340 Indiana, VI 2-3473. tf PERSONALIZED IRONING & bundle washing, also alterations on men's & women's clothing. All work guaranteed. Merr. Earl Shaw, 308 N. Sth. 2-5 TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3-8644. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- orming 392% Mass. Ola Smith. Ola 392% Mass. Call VI 3-5263. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. tf '59 CHEVY, IMPALA, 280 hp. Four speed transmission, posttraction rear end, black. 2-door hardtop, $1600. Call VI 3-8504. 1-19 FOR SALE WANTED — BABYSITTING. Law student's wife wishes to baby-sit by day or week. Home adjacent to campus. Call VI 3-1846. 1-22 GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Please note that these notes are revised comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3725 Free delivery. 5 ROOM HOUSE, furnished for students. Boys preferced. Call VI 3-1966. 1-19 RCA 3/4 ton air-cond. $50. Philco 3/4 ton air-cond. $85. Both in good cond. Very good 1050 2000 1600 40 inch G.E. electric range. $75. VI 3- 8844. 1-19 Anastasi, Psychological Testing - $3.50 Terman and Merrill, Measureful Intelligence, $2.25. Marjorie Earring, Box 83. Oiate, Kansas. 1-16 1959 OPEL REKORD. 2 dr. radio & heat- ter. Good insulation. Low mileage. See or call at Nel's & Buck's Garage. 23rd & Louis'. V 3-14081. 5 p.m. call V 1-191 2941. NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriter, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machine. Being able at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 912 Mass. Phone VI 3-0151 today. tf OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, service, rentals. Enance Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-1644. 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. GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $3.50, free delivery. Ph. VI 3-7533. 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 USED MAGNAVOX 21" table model TV FI-400, Pettengill Davies. T23 Mass. $ ADS TYPING Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequil, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf TUTORING WANTED GERMAN TUTORING at reasonable rates. Call Patty Burling at VI 3-8505- --- MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." — Now at two locations. Call VI 3-5920 or 3-5947. 1015 Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass. tf ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi- sation of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing experience — call VI 3-1316. Mrs Lol- gibbach. EXPERIENCED TYPEST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, journals. Receive neat accurate work. Responsible rates Mrs. Robert Cook 2000 R.I. VI 3-7485. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng case studies & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. tf Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable price. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 19th. VI 2-17. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. electric typewriter, neat accurate work, reasonable rules. Thesis, reports, themes, etc. Phone VI 2-1678. 1-16 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, rates. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rate. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8375 Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable times. Call VI T-2641 any time. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression on vectorors. For execlleve at standard tables, call Miss Lou Pope, VI 3-1097. EXPERIENCED TYFIST; Will type thees, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher. U 3-0558, 1031 Miss. Irf. Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates VI 3-183-1-18 Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc., on electric typewriter. Mrs. Ams Russ-1511 W. 21 St.Call VI 3-6440 tf TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger. VI 3-4409. tf TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, research papers. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mc. ifc Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper, needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service. S917 B Wescon. Mission, HE 2-7718. Evers or Sat. R 2-2168. HELP WANTED R. N.'s NEEDED: Full or part time. General duty any shift. Also operating room. Nails. Blanking game. Cherry 2-334 or Cherry 2-2292, Ottawa. Kansas. MIMEOGRAPH OPERATOR-TYPIST: must be experienced, accurate typist. IBM electric typewriters; addressgraph operator, experienced typist. Operator. State Civil Service position. See Thos. C. Ryther. 117 Flint Hall. Phone KU-373. If Help Wanted: Dishwasher, 7 days a week. Call VI 3-7810 or come to 1225 Oreadt ff Congratulations to the Daily Kansan... DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. HILTON PARK, FLORIDA Flint Hall NORTH CAROLINA HISTORY SOCIETY ...on 50 Years of Daily Newspaper Operation ... Business Office SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1957 News Room ... May the Next 50 Years Be as Successful LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners --- 10th & N.H. VI 3-3711 "Specialists in Fabric Care" Page 16 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Jan. 16, 1962 'The Shack' Becomes Kansan's Home Fifty-one years ago, a year before the Kansan became a daily newspaper, the faculty members and students in the department of journalism moved into their new home in "The Shack." There were minor problems at first. For example, odors often drifted into the Kansan newsroom from the third floor, where the medical students who formerly occupied the building had stored their laboratory animals. On the whole, however, the building was a big improvement over the Kansan's former home in the southeast basement of Fraser Hall, and the expanded quarters made it possible to publish a daily newspaper. FOR THE NEXT 40 YEARS, the Kansan stories were written in a large room with a high ceiling on the first floor of "The Shack." The printshop was located directly under the newsroom, and the Kansan business office was located in the basement next to the printshop. This arrangement had one big advantage. Copy was dropped down a chute from the newsroom to the printshop, and when the linotype operator needed some more copy he would merely bang on the pipes. would merely bang on the pipes. The second floor contained a large lecture room, and the third floor, or "sky parlor" as it was called, contained an office, meeting room, and women's lounge. THE PRESS IN THE basement dominated the entire building. When the Kansan went to press each afternoon, the press caused the entire building to vibrate. Other disadvantages came from the fact that the newsroom was also used as the laboratory for the reporting classes, and the class would often be meeting at the same time UDK staff members were working on the paper. In addition, students and faculty members had to pass through the newsroom to get from one part of the building to another. The worst handicap in "the Shack" was the heating system. The uncovered pipes popped and banged as they filled with steam, and the heaters in the classroom also gave a boiler-room effect. In 1952 the Kansan moved, with the School of Journalism and the University Press, into remodeled Fowler Shops, now known as Flint Hall. At the same time, the equipment of the Daily Kansan was improved. A new $25,000 Model E Goss press was installed, doubling the number of copies which could be printed each hour. The old press, installed in 1924, printed 3,000 copies per hour; while the new press printed 5,500 per hour. "There was a closer relationship among the students and faculty members in the old building," Prof. Beth recalls today. In addition, $10,000 worth of new equipment was purchased for the typography laboratory, and new photography equipment was purchased. The new photography laboratory was a vast improvement over the old facilities in "The Shack." Facilities also were included for KU's new FM radio transmitter, which had been given the School two years earlier by John P. Harris and S.F.Harris, Kansas newspapermen. ALTOUGH FACULTY members and students undoubtedly were glad to move into the new building, they continued to have a sentimental attachment to "The Shack." Clarke Keys, instructor in journalism, was a member of the UDK staff UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS "I think the lack of space and equipment in 'The Shack' gave the students a common point to complain about," Mr. Keys said. "This seemed to bring about closer relationships." during its first year in the new building. He agreed with Prof. Beth on the closer relationships in "The Shack." "Lots of the sentimental stories have grown through the years," he added. "People remember 'The Shack' not as it really was but as they like to think it was." The Shack Ten years ago, when the University Daily Kansan, the School of Journalism and the University of Kansas Press moved from "The Shack" east of Watson Library into Flint Hall, one nationally prominent journalism alumnus exclaimed in a letter of congratulations that the "shoestring" of 1912 had grown into a full-scale "tannery" in 1952. Daily Kansan: A Big Business His figure of speech was quite correct, for in his day the Kansan was a small operation in contrast to the $60,000-per-year business that it is today. But in another respect things had not changed between 1912 and 1952, nor have they changed in this respect between 1952 and 1962—the Kansan in 1912 was a laboratory newspaper for students majoring in journalism and it remains so today. In 1906 the University Kansan, then a semi-weekly, became a laboratory newspaper for students taking journalism courses in the department of English. When Merle Thorpe was appointed chairman of the new department of journalism in 1911 the Kansan was converted to daily publication, he added new courses, and the university printing plant was expanded under his direction into what long since has become the large University press operation. Ever since then journalism students have had what journalism students at few universities have possessed — a complete newspaper production plant under the same roof with classrooms and laboratories. During World War II, under the direction of Prof. Elmer F. Beth, who was acting chairman of the department of journalism at that time, direct laboratory experience on the Kansan was incorporated in a number of courses in which it had not existed before. Before then, for instance, the editing class had been primarily a discussion course; since then editing students have had, in addition to classroom discussion and exercises, many hours of work editing reporters' work and writing headlines in the Kansan newsroom. Advertising courses also were tied in more closely with the Kansan, and today students in Retail Advertising sell all of the large volume of local display advertising appearing in the newspaper. Immediately after the department became the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information in 1948, detailed plans for remodeling of Fowler Shops were completed under the direction of Dean Burton W. Marvin, and in 1952 the Kansan moved into the larger and more modern quarters it occupies today. During the last 10 years emphasis in the Kansan's function as a laboratory has been placed upon modernization of business management procedures; increase in specialized cultural content such as book reviews and outstanding writing by students throughout the university; expanded participation by students and faculty in the exchange of opinions through letters to the editor and guest articles; and a trend toward more reporting in depth on campus subjects both controversial and non-controversial. Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Dixon's Are Back D FEATURING DELIVERY SERVICE DIXON'S 2500 W. 6th OPEN 4-12 Closed Tuesday VI 3-9640 Now Delivering 6-11:30 Weekdays 8-11:30 Sundays VI 3.7442 Kansan Want Ads Get Results For Good Pizza The Pizza Den LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES Located at 644 Mass. VI 3-7442 Caverns? (The Old Pizza Hut) Carry-Out Service Caverns? "Congrats" As Dennis would say: "Good ol' KU has been served by the good ol' Daily Kansan for 50 whole years." We sincerely want to thank the Kansan for its help in bringing so many of you to our place. By the way Stop in anytime at good ol Spudnut Shop for delicious spudnuts. Spudnut Shop V12-3255 1422 W. 23rd THE BARTELDES SEED CO. Home of TNT Popcorn TENDER - NUTRITIOUS - TASTY Congratulates THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN on 50 Years of Service as a Daily 904 Mass. Lawrence, Kan. THE BACKYARD INNER CITY OF MADRID, ON THE RIO DEL RIO. A MEMORIAL EVENT FOR THE FATHER OF ANTHONY DE LA HAYA, WHO LOST ALWAYS TO SUCCEED IN THIS GREAT JOURNEY. John Ise: 76 and Witty By Arthur C. Miller "I never was worth much, but I do think there is one way I was valuable — I have been here (at KU) and have been able to live and function as a radical." SITTING HIGH on the east ridge of Oread valley, towering above Mississippi street, Prof. Ise's home overlooks part of what he calls "one of the prettiest campuses in the nation." This self-evaluation is of John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, who was named in a recent poll of outstanding professors in the 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, and in the 1950s. The selections were made by graduates during those years. Prof Ise said· "All the years I have been here I wouldn't have considered a job at 59th Year, No. 72 Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe appeared before the joint House and Senate Ways and Means Committee in Topeka yesterday to argue for restoration of items cut from the KU budget by Gov. John Anderson. Wescoe Asks More Funds From State THE SPECIFIC ITEMS CUT from the KU budget, but recommended earlier by the State Board of Regents; - $30,000 from a special repairs and improvement fund. The original request was for $165,000. - $30,000 for traffic control stations to eliminate traffic congestion on the campus. - A SALARY INCREASE of 5 per cent, cut to 4 per cent. - Twenty three classified staff, cut to 16. - Forty-one more instructors, cut to 25. - $15,000 eliminated for the resurfacing of Sunnyside Avenue. - Denial of a 5 per cent increase in student help. THE UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL reported Chancellor Wescoe did not "specifically ask for the extra 1 per cent" in salary increases. He said it would help KU if it got the necessary money for the raises, however. According to press reports, the chancellor told the committee members the additional increase would be desirable but that he "understood the difficulty of financing state government and would not make the specific request." Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, who appeared with the chancellor at the hearing, explained that Chancellor Wescoe was the last of the several state school heads to appear before the joint committee. "THE CHANCELLOR THINKS this is a good budget. He feels we can live with it, though he still thinks the 5 per cent pay increase is justified." Nichols said. "Coming at the end of the line as he did." Nichols said, "the chancellor deliberately did not attempt to duplicate arguments that had Cuban Refugees On Hunger Strike Recent arrivals from Cuba said the refugees are protesting the Castro government's delay in granting them safe conducts, and the fact that armed Castroite guards are outside the embassies to prevent their families from bringing them clothing, medicines and various delicacies. MIAMI—(UPI)—More than 200 Cuban refugees who have waited for as long as nine months in Latin American embassies in Havana for permission to leave the country have started their second hunger strike in little more than a month, it was reported today. Harvard, Yale, or even Chicago (the University of Chicago). already been presented by the other school heads." "Some outsiders," he continued "can't understand how such a conservative state can have such a liberal university. I guess we've just been fortunate in that respect." For this reason, Nichols said, the chancellor made his strongest pleas for items cut specifically from the KU budget. EARLIER, DR. JAMES McCAIN president of Kansas State University, urged restoration by the committee of the 1 per cent cut from faculty pay increases. He told the group KSU is falling further behind the national average for faculty pay. NICHOLS SAID the chancellor's requests for restoration of other budget cuts were directly related to present and anticipated increases in enrollment. In asking for restoration of the $30,000 for repairs and maintenance, Chancellor Wescoe pointed out that the cut would result in deferred maintenance that would only cost more in the future, Nichols said. The executive secretary said he had no idea if the hearings will result in restoration of any budget cuts. Normally, he said, when the governor and control of the legislature are of the same party, the governor's budget is accepted. Wednesday, Jan. 17, 1962 He was born on June 5, 1885, in Downs, Kansas, where he attended high school. At 76, Prof. Ise is still busy at self-education. He says he regularly tries to read several magazines from front-to-back. Among these are Progressive, Harper's, The New Republic and a small pamphlet, Between-the-Lines. PROF. ISE taught over 12,000 KU students from 1916 until his retirement in 1955. Weather Increasing cloudiness this afternoon and tonight with occasional snow spreading over most of state tonight and continuing Thursday. A little colder west tonight and south Thursday. Low tonight zero to 10 below north to near 10 south. High Thursday 15 to 20. Sometimes it doesn't pay to answer the telephone. Randy Austin, Salina junior, ran out of gas this morning near the campanile. He called a Delta Upsilon fraternity brother, Charles Kramer, Mankato junior, to pick him up. Brotherhood Brings Woes Kramer than called another fraternity brother, Larry Gamble, Pittsburgh sophomore. Gamble and four other DU men climbed into Gamble's car, and went to rescue Kramer's car. They pushed the car on the street, and discovered it had a flat tire. KRAMER STARTED OVER, but he could not quite make it up Eleventh street because of the snow. He slid backwards into a telephone pole. Prof. Ise is known for his ability to provide an original viewpoint on nearly any subject. A Sample: GAMBLE GOT IN HIS CAR to return home, glad that he had been of service. He backed into Kramer's car. ON GROWING OLD—"I think age is to some extent laziness. If a man continues working and learning he won't really grow old. There are three ways to keep from growing old. First, you've got to work like hell. You've got to be a liberal. The reason for this is that a liberal says there is a lot yet to be learned and thus he keeps seeking knowledge. A conservative, on the other hand, is dead; he says everything has been solved. Why hell. I knew three conservatives who died of insanity because there was nothing left for their minds to do. "And finally, one ought to cultivate some sense of humor. I've seen fellas get old and stagnant because they thought they knew everything. "Once in a while I look at myself and ask, how in hell has anyone who has pulled as many boners as I have, made a success of it." He says that a person has to keep his health, both mental and physical. Although he says his eyes are failing and he has to use a walking cane, Prof. Ise says he is in "pretty good health." As for keeping ones' mental health, he advises: "THE ONLY WAY to keep the mind healthy is to give it lots of exercise. A person ought to read a lot of liberal journals, because liberal journals pose problems that tax a man's mind." Through the years, wit and humor have so characterized John Ise that whenever he appears for a public speech, students nearly always fill the room. Even those students who disagree with him politically, break into laughter when he begins his satirical display. Standing or sitting behind the podium, his stock of iron-gray hair usually awry, he sets his pipe aside and begins to discuss the issues of the day. On comparative Russian and American education systems, he says: "The Russians seem to have respect for educators and education. A professor is something in Russia. Here, he's a damn fool." ON POLITICAL parties — "Some people think that there are only two parties in the United States. One party consists of Republicans, and the other of Democrats, Socialists, and Communists." On small towns — "In America, every little town looks like every other little town, and every little town looks like Hell." On conservatives — "A dull person does not want to be bothered with improvement. Everything for him is just 'bully,' I think a rock in the field would be a perfect conservative. Sure is bully out here, the rock would say." However, this usual light side of Prof. Ise can be misleading. On many subjects at many times he is serious and reflects the attitude of a man truly concerned with some problem. If you visit Prof. Ise at his home you must climb a mountain of stairs before finally reaching the door with its welcome mat that proclaims, "The Ises." ONCE INSIDE, there is a small hallway, to one side are the stairs leading to the main part of the house, to the other is a small room walled with books and rocking chairs. At the far end of that dimly lighted room is a large desk covered with books, magazines, pipes, Granger rough cut tobacco, and canned odds and ends. To begin the conversation Prof. Ise might say something about the weather. "When Roosevelt was at it why didn't he change this damn weather." And then changing suddenly from his light, somewhat humorous attitude, he plunges into a serious discussion. "I wonder if climate has something to do with peoples' incentive and sanity. I've been reading recently about..." Or he might strike out at the educational system here, and across the country. "IN GENERAL our institutions have too many side-shows. Franklin Murphy, (former chancellor), was all sold on the school of education. He poured lots of money into it, and I'm not sure it's worth it. Can they really teach a person how to teach. "All our departments give courses hat aren't worth a damn. The history department once had a course called 'Generals of the Civil War.' That was a worthless one. To do good work the University (Continued on page 4) Interest Shown in City Renewal Mayor Ted Kennedy of Lawrence said today that several Lawrence groups are interested in a program of urban renewal for this city. He predicted during an interview with Daily Kansas reporters that Lawrence voters would support such a program—which is barely in the planning stage now—if it were put before them. HE OUTLINED three major city improvements which could be gained by adopting such a program: - The downtown business section could be revitalized so that it could better compete with outlying shopping districts. - Areas might be set aside within the city to attract new industry. - New public buildings could be constructed. ABOUT FIVE GROUPS in Lawrence have asked me about an urban renewal program in the last month," he said. In addition, he said, the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce will discuss ways of initiating such a program when they meet with the director of the Topeka urban renewal pregram this week. He named two of the groups: the Lawrence Business Association and the Cosmopolitan Club. EXPRESSING CONFIDENCE that the majority of Lawrence voters want such a program, he said: "In Atchison a program of urban renewal passed by a 4-1 vote. I think the same thing would happen here. "Such a program," he added, "could be implemented in Lawrence without voting, but in my opinion it will not be. "If I were an owner of downtown property," he said, "I would be one of the greatest proponents of urban renewal imaginable. By driving around the periphery of Lawrence, anyone can see the new shopping districts which will draw trade from the downtown area unless something is done." IT IS IMPORTANT that the downtown business district remain prosperous, he said, because this area carries the major tax load of the community. He singled out the county courthouse while commenting on the need for new public buildings in Lawrence. "The courthouse was built in 1803, and has settled a little every year since then," he laughed. "Last year I think it settled four inches." If a program of urban renewal were adopted, he said, certain areas within the city might be razed and set aside for future industrial sites. PARTS OF NORTH Lawrenci might be reserved for this purpose he said, because of the nearness of this area to the river and the railroad tracks. "Lawrence today has less downtown theaters and less restaurants than it had a few years ago," he said. "Additional recreational space, including new park developments, should be a part of any urban renewal program for Lawrence." An additional benefit that might be gained from a program of urban renewal, he said, is more city recreational space. At present only two through streets—9th and 19th—exist for eastwest traffic in Lawrence, he said. HAROLD E. HORN, city manager, added that the city street system would probably also be revamped under any redevelopment program. Under a plan already drawn up by the city, he continued, 15th Street would be linked to Sunnyside Avenue to provide a third route for east-west travel. THIS COULD BE DONE, he explained, by first connecting 15th Street with Tennessee Street. Then Tennessee Street would be connected to Sunnyside Avenue by means of an extension of Sunnyside Avenue through city-owned right-of-way behind the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house and between the Sigma Chi fraternity house and the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority house. Under the plan, Tennessee Street would be used for four away traffic. WHILE STRESSING that both the urban renewal program and the street program are far from being initiated, both Mayor Kennedy and City Manager Horn agreed today that steps will have to be taken in the future to repair blighted areas within the city and to relieve city traffic problems. would be used for two-way traffic. (KU officials, who plan to close KU Airport 500 between this year have reportedly objected to this plan. They are afraid, it is reported, that Sunnyside Avenue would become as hazardous to pedestrians as Jayhawk Boulevard is now if the plan is put into effect.) "Once a particular area of town becomes blighted the blight spreads like cancer," Mr. Horn said. "There isn't any easy way of stopping this, because everyone in the area just seems to give up. "LAWRENCE IS AN old town for the Midwest," Mayor Kennedy said, "and it's a town that 'just grown.' "I think we would have much to gain from a program of urban renewal, but I wouldn't want to single out any one area in the city as being blighted. There are areas in every single part of town that are imperfect in some way." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 17 1962 The Sunday Blue Law "Every person who shall sell or expose to sale any goods, wares, or merchandise, or shall keep open any grocery, on the first day of the week, commonly called Sunday, shall on conviction be adjudged guilty of a misdemeanor, and fined not exceeding fifty dollars." So reads the "Sunday blue law" of the state of Kansas. It is accompanied by another Kansas law stating that no person shall labor or compel "his apprentice, servant, or any other person under his charge" to perform labor other than "household offices of daily necessity, or other works of necessity and charity on Sunday." For violating this law, the offender can be fined a maximum of $25. For instance, in Missouri, which has similar "blue laws," the state attorney general has been criticized for enforcing the laws. Last week, the state association of prosecuting attorneys voted to prosecute only "gross and flagrant" violations of the law. THESE "BLUE LAWS" are archaic. Enforcement of them provides a ludicrous spectacle for anyone who cares to read about it. In Kansas City policemen in plain clothes entered stores to see if sales were being made properly. Yet a Kansas City sheriff said his men were not checking Sunday sales. He said major crime has increased and that he did not think his men should devote their time to Sunday violations, and that heavy snow kept most people at home. on the constitutionality of the Kansas "blue laws" provoked an attorney into the discussion of the fact that the sale of dog food for a city dog did not constitute a violation of the Sunday closing law but that sale for a country dog did. IN THE KANSAS Supreme Court, a hearing The "blue laws" are too vague to be of any good whatsoever. A Lyons county court has declared the Kansas Sunday closing law to be inoperative. The decision was appealed and at present is before the Kansas Supreme Court. THE LAW IS inoperative not so much because of its vagueness, but because it is not supported by the people. It sprang from the territorial statutes of 1855. It was meant for another era with different attitudes and a different way of life. People who favor the statute argue that the Sunday closing law gives people a chance to take a day off, to rest at home with the family. They say he can easily buy his goods on a day other than Sunday. But this argument is an anachronism in the hectic pace of modern American life. It is not the place of the law to tell people when they must work and when they must stop. A LAW SUCH as the Kansas Sunday closing law which is contrary to the mores of the people it seeks to regulate has no function. The law must be supported by the people. The failure of prohibition should have made this clear. The Kansas Sunday closing laws have no place in the statutes of Kansas. —Karl Koch Editor Found '30s Exciting By Joseph E. Doctor LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler When I came to KU as a second semester junior in 1934, it was mid-Depression, and the dust was still blowing. Times were tough and I suppose I was one of the poorest students, at least financially, on the campus. I arrived in February and after I'd paid my room rent for two weeks, my student fees, and bought a couple of notebooks I had $5 left and had no idea where my next buck was coming from. My father, who was barely finding, enough work to support himself, and my brother, who was practicing medicine in Phillips county and was being paid in off in hog meat, chickens, eggs, and firewood, managed to come through with a few bucks now and then and I got some work planting shrubs and shoveling snow on the campus. A really square meal was a big event. I transferred from UC to KU because Cal had no journalism department and I wanted to major in journalism. USC and Stanford were financially impossible, and I was able to get in KU without paying out of state tuition because my father was still living in Kansas. Another attraction was the small journalism department and the fact that it ran the Daily Kansan. I had only a year and a half left to make my major. I figured that I would have a better chance to get some college newspaper experience and perhaps a title which would count for something when I had to go job hunting after graduation, for jobs of any kind were extremely scarce in those days. By the greatest good fortune I happened to land in a rooming house with Bill Blizzard, a sharp guy from Gunnison, Colo., who was earning his way through college from prize money he received by exhibiting seeds at fairs all over the world. Bill was editor of the Kansan, a good politician, and a fine fellow. He is now publisher of the paper at Lake Oswego, near Fortland, Ore. I was a fair student of journalism and Bill managed to pull the proper political strings to get me the job of editor when I came back to school the following year. I also landed a job in the campus cafeteria, and it was wonderful to eat again. That wonderful person, Mr. Flint, was head of the department and others of the faculty whom I remember as great inspirations were Dr. Helen Mahan, William Allen White's biographer, and Mr. Dill, a salty character who was also the AP representative in Lawrence. Between family troubles, poverty, a big study load, and lack of experience, I was in no condition to do a good job for the Kansan, and one day I sat down and wrote a hot editorial against the Peace Strike the campus librals had fomented. Pappy Flint told me I'd catch hell if I ran it, and sure enough, I did. It turned into quite a teapot tempest but Chancellor Lindley and some others were on my side. However, the student board that ran the Kansan voted by one vote against my stand and I resigned as editor and Bill Blitzard as chairman of the Kansan board. We couldn't get the board to accept our resignations, so we went down to the press room and pulled our names out of the monument just before they locked up the forms on the next day's Kansan. We turned up in the AP reports as the "first casualties" of the Peace Strike and received letters and phone calls from all over the country, Caroline Harper, a tall, nice looking Phi Beta Kappa from one of the Carolinas, was my managing editor, and AP took pictures of Bill and me giving our resignations to Caroline, who was in the middle. By the time the photo reached the East Coast, Bill and I had been trimmed off, leaving only Caroline. While I was hanging around after the close of school waiting for Commencement (at which William Allen White was the speaker) the big flood of 1935 took place, and I went out with Mr. Dill to cover it. The Kaw really put on a show and I, a devoted coward, found out that newspaper reporting can be cold, wet and hazardous I brought Bill Rodgers of Porterville, Calif. back to school with me during my senior year. We had attended junior college together. He was a year behind me in school and finished at KU with the class of 1936. He, too, was editor of the Kansan. Kansas. I have not seen Mt. Oread since I left in a rainstorm the night of graduation. I remember it as the most beautiful campus I have ever seen. I liked everybody, even Sammy Helper, who gave me such a bad time in the peace strike. My eldest daughter is a sophomore at UC. I am sure she will never have the rich experiences the hundreds of students at KU had working our way through in the heart of the great Depression of the early 1930s. What a great relief it was when Blizzard, Rodgers and I could scrape up a few extra bucks and relax with a few bottles of "pale and A." the principal ingredient of which came from a chain drug store up in Kansas City. We managed to get up to KC once in a while to hear Duke Ellington and Cab Calloway, and we had a real swinging band on the campus. I learned to love good jazz at KU and still do. but still so. But I have written far too much about me, and that's the great failing of old beatup newspaper men. (Mr. Doctor, Class of '35, is editor of The Sequoia Publishing Co.) Dailu Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Vlking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 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. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... Editorial Editor Bill Mullins and Carrie Merryfield. Assistant Editorial Editors. 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. X-RAY STUDENT PHYSICALS BOYS 1-3 TUESDAY GIRLS 1-3 THURSDAY START HERE FOLLOW ARROW KEEP IN LINE 5:2 "We BETTER RUN BACK AND CHECK THAT SCHEDULE." The Theater Scene A 'First' Scores Big By Richard Currie A production which grew in emotional intensity stunned the audience in University Theatre Monday night at the opening of Paul Claudel, and Arthur Honegger's "Joan of Arc at the Stake." With Vera Zorina, guest artist who created the title role for the New York Philharmonic in 1955, the University Theatre performance was the first ever staged by a university. Divided into ten scenes with no intermission, the oratorio soars in intensity as the flames engulf Joan and she proclaims her faith in God. Claudel conceived the work by selecting "a high point, a summit," in the life of Joan. "The summit of Joan's life was the moment of her death. It is from this vantage point... that Joan views the whole procession of events which led her there." IN MISS ZORINA'S hands Claudel's intentions are fulfilled magnificently. She is admirably aided in her accomplishment, though some unfortunate defects displayed themselves irritably in the performance. Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra, has interpreted Honegger's score masterfully, almost too masterfully. For on several occasions the orchestra was blatantly loud, obscuring the chorus and blotting out the dialogue of Miss Zorina. The orchestra's tone superbly fostered the mood set by Miss Zorina, but often it dominated the performance rudely. ASIDE FROM THESE and other small defects, the production was flawless. Beautifully staged by Jack Brooking, associate professor of speech and drama, "Joan of Arc at the Stake" flows smoothly and recounts Joan's life almost effortlessly. There is no disunity here. Every one on the stage knows what he is doing, and when there are as many as 100 people on the stage at one time, the achievement is considerable. Elizabeth Sherbon, instructor of physical education, has choreographed the production bredly. The chorus, directed by Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of chorus music, was not always understood. Dramatically, it approached its task beautifully, the music passion rising swiftly and resolving itself succinctly. The steps and phrases were handled expertly and the group knew what it was doing, but its diction was poor, far below what the University Concert Choir should do. The costumes, designed by Caroline Kreisel, instructor of speech and drama, were exquisite, perfectly appropriate for the production's theme. But the lighting and the set were the superior technical aspects. Jed Davis, associate professor of speech and drama, has anticipated every move, every scene precisely. Colors flash from royal blue to stark white and crimson red in breath taking fashion. Without the effective lighting I doubt the dramatic tension "Joan of Arc at the Stake" reached could have been achieved. The set, a Roman Catholic cathedral, designed by Robert Chambers, Lawrence senior, added to the growing emotional intensity with its rugged simplicity soaring into the sky, the set provided an effective contrast against the alternating grandeur and farce which took place on the stage. TREMENDOUS AS these aspects were, they are dwarfed by the Olympian heights Miss Zorina ascends. Beginning slowly, Miss Zorina creates Joan and makes her an utterly tragic yet supremely victorious figure. The first scenes mock her and she is bewildered and horrified. But as the assurance of her voice returns, Miss Zorina lifts Joan from the depth of sorrow to a tower of strength, bravely facing her doom. Miss Zorina is ably assisted by the student cast. The most notable of whom were Edward Sooter, Wichita graduate student, who played Poreus and Marva Lou Powell, Topeka graduate student, who played St. Margaret. --- --- --- Page 3 Many Political Parties Bow Before Pachacamac Power (Editor's Note; This is the continuation of the second article in a four part series examining campus politics at KU. The third and third article appeared in yesterday's Kansas.) Pachacamac still retained power after the 1831 collapse of the Oread Party and remained in power until 1954. By Jerry Musil Three parties followed the collapse of the independent coalition. The Cread Party was composed of anti-Pach fraternities while the Kayhawk Club consisted of anti-Pach independents. The KU Progressives were "pledged to the interests of the non-fraternity man." THE GREAD party hinted that the KU Progressives were just another Fach trick to split the independent vote. Accusations were traded by both sides about the allegiance of the Kayhawk Club. During this time the Progressives' president remained aloof, saying this was his first semester at KU. The Oread Party and Kayhawk Club later entered into a coalition and won the student body presidency and 15 of 24 council seats. In 1934, a Kansas story said, "Political vandals using eggs as bombs and brown paint to spread 'terrorism' turned the MSC election Kansas Cityish today as they attacked the strongholds of the Oread-Kayhawk party. "The houses of Delta Chi, Beta Theta Pi, Acacia and Sigma Alpha Epsilon, leaders of the coalition, were 'bombed' by rivals, who the members said were Pachacamac sympathizers." BUT LIKE Black Mask and the Independent coalition, the Oread-Kayhawk machine had pushed across a victory its first year. The Oread-Kayhawk coalition won in 1931 and lost the next three elections. In 1935, the Progressive Student Government League (PSGL) was formed and won the spring elections. It lost the next three to Pach, tied one and lost three after that. Then the war came and the political situation quieted down. The women then saw an opportunity to overthrow the domination of the Men's Student Council. They combined the two Councils in 1943 to form the All Student Council. The women's combines (coalitions were illegal for women) flowered into the WIGS which allied with Pach, and PWCL which allied with PSGL. The latter group won the spring election that year and split almost even with WIGS-Pach in 1944. In 1945 the independent women pulled out of WIGS and PWCL and formed the Independent Women's Party. PSGL immediately split with PWCL and allied with the new party. They won eight council seats, WIGS-Pach won seven and the depleted PWCL won one. IN 1946, the men returned. PWCL and WIGS were dissolved and NOW was formed and joined with Pach. In December, 1946, a new progressive party was formed and achieved a large measure of cooperation with Pach. Even though the independent party won six council seats in 1947, Pach's five seats and the Progressive's four provided Pach control of the council. Also in 1947, the League of Student Voters was organized. The group, according to Chairman Bruce Bathurst, was organized by disappointed office holders from several parties. The group did not run their own candidates or endorse candidates from other parties. Lois Thompson said they should not endorse anyone, "but rather publicize the qualifications of each candidate." Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, told the league to be a "continuing group," a gadfly, without party representation. "Forget about your political parties," he said. "They don't amount to a hill of beans." PACH WON five elections in a row after the war before the First Actually Constructive Ticket Society (FACTS) won in 1951. Pach never really recovered from this defeat although they won a slim majority in 1952. The Allied Greek-Independent Party (AGI) and the Party of Greek Organizations (POGO) split Pach which went out of existence in 1954. The "Inner Circle" of the party went POGO disbanded in 1957 after some ballot stuffing was discovered. The party was fined $75 in Student Court for the offense. underground and even today continues its influence from behind the scene. In 1958, Vox Populi was organized by Jim Austin, Bob Linn and Bob Wilson to bring two party politics back to KU. They swept the spring elections, winning the student body presidency and 17 council seats. early in 1959, AGI disbanded. Later in the year, Vox changed the election bill so that elections are held twice a year. The representatives from the living districts were elected in the fall, with the school representatives, the student body president and vice president and class officers elected in the spring. IN 1960, two party politics again returned to KU when the University Party was organized by Fred Morrison. Charles Menghini and Mike Thomas. In the 1960 fall elections, UP won ten council seats to Vox's six, but Vox still had a majority on the council. In the spring elections, 1961, Vox won the presidency and eight of the ten seats on the council by a large majority. The fall elections saw UP winning ten seats out of the 19 elected. The present leaders of the two parties are Jim Anderson, Lawrence senior and Greek co-chairman, and Tom Hardy, Hoisington junior and independent co-chairman of UP and Ted Childers, Wamego senior and president of Vox Populi. Trujillo's Killing Teeters Republic By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst When gunmen cut down Dominican dictator Rafael Leonidas Trujillo on the moonlit night of May 30, 1961, the country already was teetering on the verge of bankruptcy. There were shortages of food and clothing, the tourist trade was at a standstill and of the country's luxurious hotels, all but one were closed. In that one, scarcely a dozen guests were registered. THE DESPERATE straits in which Trujillo left his country by his enforced departure were the direct results of an economic and diplomatic quarantine imposed by the United States in company with its fellow members of the Organization of American States (OAS). THE IMMEDIATE task is to fill the vacuum left by 30 years of Trujillo dictatorship and to prevent any Castro-type revolution which might attempt to upset the country's new middle-of-the-road government. The action, taken on Aug. 20, 1960, was based on a charge that Trujillo master-minded an assassination attempt against President Romulo Betancourt of Venezuela. Now, 16 months later and with the Dominican Republic restored to the American family of nations, the United States will try to help pick up the pieces. Of benefit was the fact that the Dominican Republic now would be able to sell to the United States about 420,000 tons of sugar at premium prices over and above its normal allotment of 110,000 tons. The return from this should run about $45 million. To help the country set up a long-range policy were Teodoro Moscoso, recently named by President Kennedy to oversee the Alliance for Progress program in Latin America, and experts from Puerto Rico. WHEN THE OAS voted sanctions against Trujillo it was the first such collective action in the history of the inter-American system. These holdings included leading hotels, shipping, radio and television facilities, sugar mills, cement work, automobile agencies, banks, breweries and other ventures and were estimated to represent half to two-thirds of annual national income. Of immediate concern is the Dominican Republic's widespread unemployment and the fact that political chaos already has put the sugar harvest a month behind schedule. MOSCOSO PLAYED an important role in Puerto Rico's phenomenal economic development. Also of concern is the future of we have been taken over, by the state. On Jan. 22, the OAS will meet again in Punta del Este, Uruguay, to consider what action, if any, to take against communist Cuba. As of today, it seems possible there also will develop in the OAS that curious double standard of morality which the United Nations exhibited toward India's attack on Goa. The organization which voted sanctions against a right-wing dictatorship will refuse to vote sanctions against an equally bloody one on the left. Their Business Better Grades Bv Mike Miller The Reading and Study Skills laboratory is a free service offered to students who wish to improve their reading ability and their general study habits. The clinic offers three types of services to the student. The classes in reading and study methods are designed to review the aspects of good study habits for the students who have missed them in their previous education. The classes offer nothing new, but simply a review, explained Vernon E. Troxel, assistant professor of education and administrator for the reading and study methods. SUCH TOPICS as preparing for examinations, reading for comprehension, taking notes, improving examination marks, developing vocabulary and preparing term projects are discussed in the classes. Groups of approximately 25 students meet for eighteen 50-minute sessions. The rapid reading classes are aimed at increasing the students reading speed without sacrificing his comprehension. Prof. Troxel explained that the clinic attempts to correct "sloppy habits of reading." He said that the clinic can improve the students reading speed from 50 to 100 per cent. Individual counseling on study methods is also offered. This technique is unique to KU, Prof. Troxel explained. The student is able to make appointments for weekly conferences to consider his individual problems. University Daily Kansan STUDENTS MAY ENROLL by picking up an enrollment card in the clinic's office, 102 Bailey, or by stopping at the desk located on the stairway outside the pen during enrollment. The student will be worked into the program as soon as room for him becomes available. Prof. Troxel explained that the student remains enrolled in the program as long as he is benefitting from the clinic. Wednesday. Jan. 17, 1962 P Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil Congressmen Probe Many Subjects WASHINGTON — (UFI) — A full-dress inquiry into the alleged muzzling of military officers highlights a host of new congressional investigations this year, ranging from the beaches of Normandy to violence on TV screens. Armed with fresh evidence after a four-month layoff, investigators already have staked out about a dozen inquiries for the new session of Congress. Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss., chairman of a special Armed Services subcommittee, has announced that the first of three phases of the long-awaited hearings will start Jan. 23. OTHERS MAY BE announced if committees see the need to expose evidence of deceit and wrong-doing in the affairs of government, business or labor. The biggest show promises to be public hearings into charges that civilian Pentagon officials censored anti-Communist speeches, articles and seminars by military leaders. THE MILITARY HEARINGS, which have domestic political overtones, promise to be long. A subcommittee aide said more than 100 witnesses might parade to the microphone before the record is closed. Star witnesses were expected to include Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara, high state department -HOT SPUDNUTS- at 12 noon — 6 p.m. — 9 p.m. SPUDNUT SHOP 1422 W. 23rd officials, members of the joint chiefs of staff, and former Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker. Legislation could result from any of the hearings. Here are some of the prospective committee inquiries: HOUSE JUDICIARY COMMITTEe-Chairman Emanuel Celler, D.N.Y., has promised to look at mergers and consolidations in the newspaper, TV and radio industries for possible anti-trust violations. - The Senate antitrust and monopoly subcommittee opens hearings on five bills designed to tighten up laws against collusive bidding and market-sharing by big business. - The Senate constitutional rights subcommittee plans an inquiry into complaints that soldiers were ordered to charge across the Normandy beaches for a movie about D-Day. - The Senate juvenile delinquency subcommittee will continue its hearings on violence in television shows. Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 图 Jazz Musicians Interested in Performing in Public Jam Session in Connection With SUA Jazz Forum Contact Tom Thompson at VI 3-2655 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Jan. 17, 1962 Sex Ratio Mystery May Be Cracked in'62 NEW YORK—(UPI)—One of the brightest scientific prospects for 1962 is a really accurate determination of the primary sex ratio of human beings. Only when they are maturing into men and women is there approximately the same number of males and females. But that's not the primary sex ratio. Indeed, it is at least twice removed from the primary. AT BIRTH THERE ARE 106 boys for every 100 girls. This birth ratio is firmly established and is accepted everywhere as accurate. But still it is not primary. It is once removed, and so secondary. What science has wanted to know for many years is the sex ratio at conception. That's primary. And now, for the first time, thanks to newer scientific techniques, it can be determined. The fact is a start has been made. In the Hungarian university town of Szeged the newly but tentatively established ratio at the very beginning of human life is 122 males to 100 females. WHAT REMAINS to be done is for scientists in all parts of the world to do what the Szeged University scientists headed by Dr. F. E. Szontagh did. Then all the figures can be put together and the average will indicate the ratio for the human race. It has been known for a long time that more boys enter this world than girls. What seems to make the sexes eventually equal in number is the greater toughness of the female. But nothing science had known up to now had suggested that the ratio in the remote beginnings of us all, could show such a predominance of the male. THIS ADDS to the scientific mysteries of human conception rather than lessening them. Theoretically it couldn't happen because, theoretically, the sexes at conception should be precisely equal. The female contribution to human life, the ovum, contains only the "X" chromosome which is the chromosome of femaleness. Thus the female contribution has no part in sex determination. But the male contribution, the spermatozoon which fertilizes the ovum, may carry either an "X" chromosome or a "Y" chromosome which is the chromosome of male-ness. When two "X" chromosomes come together in the fertilized ovum a girl will be the eventual result, and when the maternal "X" combines with a paternal "Y" the determined sex is male. SZONTAGH AND his associates could offer no explanation for the challenge which their tentative work offers to the theoretical. They merely remarked on it in reporting to the technical journal, "Nature," adding that should this ratio of Halls Plan High School Weekend About 115 top Kansas high school students have been invited by the Men's Scholarship Hall Council to learn more about the University in general and the men's scholarship hall system in particular during a "Scholarship Hall Weekend" planned for early next semester. High school principals in various Kansas high schools have been asked to nominate senior students ranked academically in the upper one-fourth of their class for the event, which will be held Feb. 9 and 10. After the students arrive Friday afternoon, the 9th, they will be assigned to one of KU's five men's scholarship halls: Battenfeld, Stephenson, Pearson, Foster, and Jolliffe. While at the University, they will participate in informal discussions with students and faculty members, tour the campus, see the Iowa State-KU basketball game and hear Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe speak at a dinner in their honor Saturday night. Throw fear to the wind. — Aristophanes 122-100 be maintained in worldwide studies, science would be confronted with a really hard question. The Hungarians examined embryonic cells derived from very early and apparently normal pregnancies which had been terminated for medical reasons. The newer techniques they employed permit the determination of the chromosomal materials which cells concentrate before dividing. THESE TECHNIQUES are available and in use throughout the world. Since the question of primary sex ratio is so basic, it can be assumed similar investigations are under way in many places. This should be the year when there will be enough statistics to determine the ratio. John Ise- (Continued from page 1) should have a good faculty, good salaries, and fewer courses so that students would take solid stuff and not frills. "You can't blame the Chancellor for too many courses, it's the faculty." HAVING BEEN connected with the University since 1904, what one characteristic does Prof. Ise believe to be the most important? "The liberalism of the administrations is the best characteristic in the nature of KU's history. "I often wonder how Kansas could have this type of liberal administration. When you consider the political nature of this state, it's one of the most conservative in the nation, it's striking that we have such a reputation as a liberal place." NOW IN HIS sixth year of retirement, Prof. Ise says he is not doing too much, just trying to "keep up intellectually." This he does by reading numerous magazines. Is Prof. Ise writing any articles or is he writing another book? He has already written eight books. He answers: "I if I had good eyes I might start another book. But there is one article I'd like to write. I'd like to make a study of the National Association of Manufacturers and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce as compared to labor unions. "I have this theory that unions have more enlightened views than the others. I often find NAM and the Chamber following close to Birch lines. "YOU COULDN'T really draw any precise conclusion, but it would make an interesting study." When leaving Prof. Ise's small office it is impossible not to glance about, catching the title of one book here and another there. "Living-stone's Last Journey," "The God That Failed," "The Age of Terror," are one one shelf. On another side of the room is a book entitled, "Poultry in Kansas," and laying inconspicuously behind his desk one notices a paperback edition of "More Trash From Mad." Time飞sy swiftly by and before time, sit it, the conversation has lasted hours. FORT MADISON, Iowa—(UPI)—Americans either are writing more or becoming more careless about losing things. Statisticians at the Sheaffer Pen Co., here predict that the industry will produce a record one billion fountain pens and ball-points in 1962. That's six pens for every man, woman and child of writing age. Lost or Used? Sportswear KIRSTENS at Teacher Interviews: Jan. 17, Louis H. Park, III.; Jan. 17 & 18, Charles Romine, Asst. Supt. (sec only), Oks Pers. Dr. (Jeff C. Co. Schools), Lakewood, Colo. HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Analytical-Iorganic-Physical Chemistry Colloquium: 4 p.m., 122 Malott. Dr. Ernest Griswold, "Conductance Studies in Tetrahydrofuran." Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 & 8 a.m. John s Church, 13th & Kentucky. Official Bulletin TODAY Open Evenings, VI 2-0562 SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m., 206 Kansas Union, Instructor, Larry Bodle. Episcopal Holy Communion & Lunch: 12 noon, Canterbury House THURSDAY Organic Chemistry Colloquium: 4 p.m. 233 Malott, Martin Tessler, "Entropy Factors in the Control of Organic Reaction Rate." Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 p.m., Southern Baptist Activities Building, 1221 Oread. Bible study and devotional. American Society of Tool & Manufacturing Engineers Meeting: 7 p.m. Fowler Building, Speaker, Mr. Tom Negro, Supervisor of Chemical Fabrication Laboratories, Collins Radio Co., Cedar Rapids, on "Photography for Small Lot Tooling Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m. Danforth, Chapel Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Hadl Joins Elite Quarterback John Hadl joined Ray Evans, Kansas' first varsity All America (1947) as the only players in Jayhawker annals to surpass 1000 yards in both rushing and passing. Hadl finished with 1016 ground lengths, 10th-high on the all-time roles, and 1342 through the air, fifth-best on that table. Robetta's Pizza Fear has many eyes.—Cervantes Free Delivery On Campus Call VI 3-1086 JOIN YOUNG AMERICANS FOR FREEDOM Senator Barry Goldwater says, "Young Americans for Freedom is more important than being by providing a medium by which our young people can express their devotion to the sound principles of con- dition and government and individual freedom." Fill out the form below and join with Senator Barry Goldwater, Senator Strom Thurmond, Senator John Warner, Watter Judd and thousands of others who support America's leading conservative youth organization. Join today and help elect conservatives to public office. Name ... Address ... City & State I enclose: $1.00 dues... age Mail to: YAF, 79 Madison Ave., New York 16, N.Y. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Shop Till 8:30 Tomorrow the town shop 839 Mass. St., Lawrence Annual WINTER SALE Starts Thursday, Jan.18 SUITS VALUES $75.00 TO $49.95 REDUCED TO $58.95 - $39.95 SPORT COATS VALUES $42.50 TO $29.95 REDUCED TO $33.95 - $22.95 TOPCOATS VALUES $69.50 — $49.50 REDUCED TO $54.95 - $39.95 SWEATERS, SPORT SHIRTS WINTER JACKETS DRASTICALLY REDUCED Town Shop Wednesday, Jan. 17, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5 An Open Letter to Jayhawkers WHAT ABOUT BOOKS? We realize you don't appreciate being reminded that finals are coming,but since final time is also used book buying time we thought we should discuss our policy for buying and selling used and new books. Used Books-What Can I Sell? How Much Can I Get? At each buy back period we are able to buy only those texts the teaching staff has indicated will be used again next semester. With this commitment we are able to offer 50% of the publisher's current list price for the title. We then sell the book for 75% of the current list price. For example, if the book lists for $4.00 new, we buy it back for $2.00 and resell it for $3.00. Our major problem is how many to buy. If we overbuy on used books it usually represents a loss to us. If we can't sell them to another store for the same price we paid for them or sell them to a wholesaler at the regular market wholesale price we must write them off as a total loss. Our used book policy stated simply in figures is as follows: Let's take a book which sells for $5.00 new and $3.75 used. You paid We buy back Current Patron refund Total you get back For New Book $5.00 $2.50 or 50% .40 or 8% $2.90 or 58% For Used Book $3.75 $2.50 or 66 2/3% .30 or 8% $2.80 or 74 2/3% What About Books No Longer Used at KU? During this same period (final exams) we arrange to have a buyer from a used book wholesale jobber on duty who will make an offer on most books no longer being used at KU. The best offer he can make on good current books is about $25\%$ of the current list price. He must pay the transportation costs to his warehouse, his warehouse overhead and take the chance on selling these books to some other store at $45\%$ of the current list price. The extra $5\%$ allowed the stores is for freight costs which actually means the store pays him the same price, $50\%$ list, that it pays the students for used books. What Do Other Book Stores Do? The buying back at 50% and selling at 75% of current list price is the policy in most college stores. This policy has worked successfully in a large number of college stores and makes for economical and easier means of exchange in used books. What Are Old Books Worth? We indicated above that the book jobber can pay a top price of about 25% of current list price. This is for a book that has considerable use across the country and is not likely to be revised in the near future. An old edition is almost worthless, while a book that is in the process of being revised has some value. The jobber will make an offer on some of these, but the student must decide if the book is worth more to him than the jobber. Many students feel their books are worth more to them for their personal library than the amount either the store or the jobber can offer. This he must decide for himself. Even though we like to get all the used books we can in order to offer them to the next group of students at a saving, we have great respect for those students who keep their books to build a personal library. New Books We would like to point out that we have no control over publishers and their decisions to bring out new editions, or the price they set on textbooks. The publisher sets the price on a textbook and then allows us a 20% discount from this list price. In other words a book we buy new and sell for $4.00 costs us $3.20. With respect to the decisions to change texts being used on the campus, we firmly believe the faculty honestly and sincerely tries to select the best available text for their courses and that they take all factors into consideration when they do so. The faculty would be dilatory in their duty and obligations to you if they did not keep up with changing facts and developments in the selection of textbooks. We hope our explanations have been clear, that the book situation is now better understood and that we have given enough information to help you decide whether or not you will want to sell your used books. Your Kansas Union Book Store is a self supporting profit sharing division of the Kansas Union. It is the desire of your Union through its Book Store division to continue to offer you your books and supplies at a savings as long as it is economically sound to do so. The following chart showing how each dollar of income of the Book Store is divided and how it is used is based on the actual percentage figures appearing in the annual financial report. From Each Dollar Income: Paid to Manufacturers ... 72.7c Operating Expenses ... 18.3c Patronage Refund to Customers ... 8.0c Reserve for Emergency & Expansion ... 1.0c Total ... 100 cents Net Income ... 0. KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Jan. 17, 1962 Indoor Track Starts Feb.2 9. Coach Bill Easton's Jayhawker track squad, the Big Eight's defending indoor champions, starts a new season when it meets the Pittsburgh State Gorillas in Allen Field House, Feb. 2. The Jayhawkers, though returning the same team that won the Big Eight last year with the exception of five, are nevertheless at half-strength for the meet. The five are shot-putters Jerry Foos and Bob Albright, halfmiler Gordon Davis, and distance runners Billy Mills and Bob Lindrud. COACH EASTON is playing a role of infirmary manager these days instead of that of track coach. "Just about everybody's been out at one time or another," Easton sighed in disgust. Slowly though his charges are reporting back and his hopes are that the Jays will be at full strength for the 1962 Big Eight indoor. Most prominent of the disabled is Larry McCue, the Big Fight indoor 60 yard dash king. McCue, after finishing brilliantly in the indoor season, injured his leg in the first outdoor meet last year and practically sat out the rest of the season. McCue turned in a 523.440-yard dash in time trials last week, but coach Easton reports that McCue's leg was stiff and sore afterwards. Easton's eyeing McCue for the short sprints but said, "He's not quite ready for that. He will be well enough to run a pretty fair 440 though." Easton reports that Kirk Hagan, indoor 1000 champion, is recovered from his tendonitis and that Jack Stevens, the KU record holder in the pole vault, is fully recovered from pneumonia. YUL YOST, a shot-putter who has thrown $53'10''$ this year, and cross-country stalwart Dan Ralston are still disabled. Yost is recovering from a broken hand and will not start putting the shot until next week. Ralston is running again but is still bothered by a bad knee. Coaches Easton and Lawson (Bob) were pleased with the performance of Richard Calloway, Gary, Ind. freshman, in time trials. Calloway tied the freshman record of 60.2 m the 60 yard dash. He is co-holder of the record with Charlie Tidwell (1956) and Bert Coan (1960). The varsity schedule: Feb. 2 Pittsburg State at Lawrence Feb. 9 Southern Illinois at Lawrence Feb. 16 Oklahoma-Missouri at Lawrence Feb. 23 Oklahoma State-Kansas State at Lawrence March 2-3 Big Eight at Kansas City, Mo. On the Ball NEW YORK — (UPI)—Hall o Famer Grover Cleveland Alexander, pitching for the Chicago Cubs in 1923, set a major league record when he pitched 52 consecutive innings before allowing his first walk of the season. By Roy Miller The Jim Beam Sleepers intramural bowling team nailed down their third men's title in four semesters in the first semester playoffs held Saturday and Sunday in the Jay Bowl. Jim Beam Sleepers Win Title Intramurals The Lewis Hall team captured first place in the women's division. Out of a field of 12 teams, the top six teams in the men's division were as follows: 1. Jim Beam Sleepers, 2. Acacia No. 2, 3. Stephenson, 4. Sigma Nu No. 1, 5. Alpha Tau Omega, 6. Phi Kappa Psi. The first place Jim Beam Sleepers posted a total of 5750 and a game KU-TCU First National TV Tilt THE SIX ENTRIES in the women's division finished as follows: 1. Lewis, 2. Gertrude Sellars Pearson, 3. Pi Beta Phi No. 1, 4. Pi Beta Phi No. 2, 5. Alpha Phi. The Kansas-Texas Christian football game in Memorial Stadium in 1952 was the first collegiate game ever to be televised nationally. Announcers Mel Allen and Russ Hodges—with the aid of KU workmen—were able to conceal the fact that huge TNE letters were burned into the stadium turf the night before. high of 888 pins. The team members were Jack Russell, Lawrence graduate student, Ken Korsorog, Muncie junior, Ted Sexton, Leavenworth junior, Jim Pusateri, Kansas City Mo., sophomore, Bob Beall, Leavenworth junior, and Chris Atchison Leavenworth freshman. Lewis, the women's division winners, included Jill Copeland. Cherryvale junior, Fran Edgeworth, Garnett freshman, Lynda Hermann, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, Jane Sengpielh, Parsons sophomore, and Bobbie Braden, Wichita sophomore. INDIVIDUAL TROPHIES wer Men's high game--Dick Groner, Ovetland Park freshman, 268. Men's high series—Jim Kartsonis, Hutchinson senior. 692. Men's high average-Paul Ham- "This is the gol-darnest comedy ya' ever did see... I sure had a lot of fun making it and ya' all are going to have fun when ya' see it" "The SECOND TIME AROUND" ANDY GRIFFITH • DEBBIE REYNOLDS • STEVE FORREST JULET PROWSE • THEMA RITER mar, Overland Park sophomore, 192. Women's high game—Marilyn Anderson. Lawrence junior, 205. Women's high series Patricia Folk. Leawood junior, 525. Women's high average-Bobbie Jo Hember, Shawnee Mission freshman. 152. VARSITY BOWLING NOTES: A three-member women's team took first place in a meet at Manhattan Saturday. The team of Patricia Folk, Bobbie Joe Hember, and Nancy Mullinix nudged Kansas State by 27 pins. Nebraska was third. Sunday the Jayhawk keglers rolled against Missouri in the Big Eight postal league. Missouri is currently in first place with the Hawkers in second. John Hember, top KU bowler, claims the league's third best series with a 653 effort. HELD OVER THRU SATURDAY STARTS SATURDAY AT THE GRANADA HELD OVER THRU SATURDAY VIVIEN LEIGH IN TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' THE ROMAN SPRING OF MRS. STONE CO STARRING WARREN BEATTY TECHNICOLOR* from WARNER BROS. NOW! RIDE THE CREST OF THE WAVE WITH ELVIS PRESLEY IN BLUE HAWAII HAL WALLIS PRESENTED BY NOW! Shows At 7:00 & 9:00 VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VKING 3-1065 JOAN ANGELA BLACKMAN LANSBY WALTERS NORDMAN FAURUS HAL MATTER TECHNICOLOR PANAVISION A PAMPHONT BLAIR NOW! At 7:00 & 9:00 GRANADA (THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5783) International Travel With a Purpose... COUNCIL ON STUDENT TRAVEL Transatlantic Charter Flight for K.U. Endorsed by K.U. People-to-People Program $215 Round-Trip Jet-Powered Flight LEAVE New York-Paris June 14 (Flight time less RETURN Paris-New York August 22 than 8 hours) Optional Opportunities for Flight Members- Independent Study Program European - All levels of language instruction available, from beginning courses to seminars for language teachers; as well, many other AREAS of study are taught in English. COMPLETE PROGRAM, TUITION, ROOM AND BOARD FOR 6 WEEKS AS LOW AS $73.00 for K.U. People-to-People Student Ambassador Program - Meet prospective K.U. international students and former K.U. students living in the countries through which you travel. Know the people, customs, and cultures of the countries you visit. Contact MARTIN ARLINSKY, Flight Chairman-Staff Member, Council on Student Travel VI 2-2614 After 9 p.m. or Drop by Strong Hall 5C COMB served Metsk ROOM ion. 2 1 dou call a SMAL kitche nishee classn 5-7 p. 192. An- ricia ie Joresh- S: A tookattanariellaanancye bySun-collosedEightfrequentlyarsinKUthird CLASSIFIED MISCELLANEOUS COME AND EAT home cooked meals METER, Tk210. St. VI. 3-4967. 1-19 FOR RENT SMALL HOUSE — Living - bedroom, kitchen, shower bath, completely fur- ried, kitchen cabinet, classroom. $45 per month. See between 5-7 p.m. at 1023\*\* Vermont, rear. 1-19 ROOMS FOR MEN: ½ block from Union. Available. Fob. 1st. One single and 1 double room. Quiet. Call VI 3-4092 or call at 1301 La. tf FOR GRADUATE WOMAN or University completely furnished. 1st floor, next to the Union building. $47 per month. For appointment call V1 2-683 between 1-9 TIRED OF LIVING IN AN APT? One bedroom house for rent, good location, very efficient. Call VI 3-0554 after 7 p.m. APT. FOR RENT. Furnished. bills paid. or small family. 4 rooms. VI 3-2433. ROOM FOR RENT to upperclassman for second semester. Call VI 3-0256. 1-19 1 SINGLE ROOM available. Linen furnished weekly. 1328 Ohio. $20. 1-19 LARGE SINGLE OR DOUBLE room with cooking privileges and refrigerator. Near KU and downtown. Available Feb. 1. Phone VI 3-9027 after 5. 2-5 INTERNATIONAL HOUSE, large sleeping rooms for boys. 3 blocks from Union. Call VI 3-7642 after 5 or on weekends. 1-19 APARTMENTS FOR RENT at Moody Apartment House. 3 rooms furnished & priv. bath. Call VI 3-5182 or VI 3-6103. 1-19 Vacancy for male student. An apartment one block from Union. Also room for two. Private bath and entrance. Ph. VI 3-6723. 1-19 For Rent To Graduate Women: 2 rooms. Phone VI 3-3105. linens 1-19 VACANT SINGLE ROOM for male student. Shower bath, ref., & tele. Two blocks from campus. $30 per month. 1315 Tenni. VI 3-3390. 2-5 2 ROOM FURNISHED 3ptr. Private bath 4 ROOM CABINED 3ptr. Private bath RL. Available Jan. 15, VI 3-596-1-19 LARGE LOVELY SLEEPING room in a spacious suite with bed, bath, linens furnished and room kept. $15 per month includes everything. 5 months free to campus. Available. IV VI-3-7830 1-19 LEAVING FOR EUROPE completely from Sept. 1 to Sept. 1. Call VI.3-3275. 1-19 4-206. Call VI.3-3280. 1-19 PRIVATE ROOMS for rent at 901 Maine. One available now. Reasonable. Can see after 6 or on weekends. VI 3-6810. 1-19 VACANCY IN FEBRUARY for young man in contemporary home. Home cooked supper — swimming pool. $65 per month. VI 3-9635. tf VACANT SINGLE ROOM for male student. Shower room, ref., & teal. Two blocks from campus. $30 per month. 1318 Tenn. VI. 3-3390. 1-17 Park Plaza South Apartments Are you satisfied where you now live? Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking Central Air Conditioning we will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 2-8253 Office — 1912 W. 25th FURISHED 4 rooms & bath. All mod- 15th & Iowa VI 3-5996. 1-17 FOR SALE NICE COMFORTABLE ROOM for boy. Near campus and town. Also near 2 bus lines. Linens furn. VI 3-3429. 827 Miss. 1-17 SPLIT LEVEL or semi basement apartment — $21½ blocks from Union. 3 rooms completely furnished. Shower bath, private toilet, off street parking. Avail. Room 27¹, 27², 27³ per user classroom or graduate student. $48 per appt. For appt. call VI 3-6696. 1-19 FURNISHED APARTMENT: Private bath, within walking dist. of KU. Suitable for small room with telephone. Phone VI 3-6158 during noon hour or between 5 and 6 p.m. 1-19 TWO BOYS to share large furnished rec lumnis furnished 2417 Ohio. Vi 3-7754 Lunnis furnished 2417 Ohio. Vi 3-7754 LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath. ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. $20 La. VI 2- 0731. 2 MAN APT. $55 a month. Quiet room. 3 PET. $100 a month. CVI. 4 V-3-730, ask for treasurer. LARGE FURNISHED apartment, e a s t i l e, s i l u t i f i e n g, pay $50. Cali V 3-6244. Kansan Want Ads Get Results NEW SNOW TREAT FINAL CLOSE OUT. 600-13 tbs, new $13.00, whites $1 more. Other sizes at close out prices. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Free installation, come through city parking lot behind Kress store. 2-13 ELECTRIC GUITAR, strap, case and mu- bility. $5. Call D. Johnson. D. 3436 1-19 GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New and used guns, and ammo. Handguns professionally trained (rear French). Special See 1304 Tenn. (in rear). Call VI 3700-1. 261 5'CHEVY, IMPALA, 280 hp. Four speed 2-door hardtop, $1600. Call VI S-804- 8 GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. These notes are revised and comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 21-25 Free delivery. COZY MOBIL HOME for sale. 1955 Safes- canner, will sell. Willis call VI 3-9711 after 5. 1-19 5 ROOM HOUSE, furnished for students. Boys preferred. Call VI 3-1966. 1-19 RCA 3/4 ton air-cond. $50. Philco 3/4 ton air-cond. $85. Both in good condition. Very good 1950 2 door Chev. $19. G.O.E. electric range. $75. V.I.-19 $384. 1959 OPEL REKORD 2 dr. radio & heater Good condition, good keyboard and low mileage. See or call at Nel's & Buck's Garage, 23rd and Louisi' 2841. VI 3-4081. At 5 p.m. call V1-19 1959 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriterists, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, services, rentals, at 3644. Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI. tf 1844. NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and mimeographing at reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 912 Mass. Phone VI 3-015 today. 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 Page 7 GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. f 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 USFD MAGNAVOX 21" table model TV FJ-840 Pettillon edi, Taz. Mass. ff. USFD MAGNAVOX 21" table model TV FJ-840 Pettillon edi, Taz. Mass. ff. HELP WANTED PART TIME SALESMAN. Apply Redman Shoe Co., 185 Mass. 1-19 R. N.'s NEEDED: Full or part time. General duty any shift. Also operating room Cherry. Blushingg. Gall collect Cherry 2-3844 or Cherry 2-2892, Ottawa Kansas. Hallmark Cards - Permanent position for experienced secretary - Typing and shorthand required. - Five day week. Many company paid benefits including medical insurance. GIRL, WANTS RIDE weekdays from Stouffer Place to K.C., Mo. in vicinity of 35th & Main starting Feb. 1. Will share expenses. Call VI 3-1034. 1-19 TRANSPORTATION ADS TUTORING WANTED - Apply 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. HALF-TIME SECRETARY. Prefer mature, experienced worker. General office work. Should be able to spell, take shorthand dictation and the type of evil work you do. Will not pay for job service Good pay. No novice need apply. Elmer F. Beth. 108 Flint Hall. t GERMAN TUTORING at reasonable rates. Call Patys Burling at VI 3-8055. LOST Hallmark Cards Lawrence, Kansas **Heap Wanted:** Dishwasher, 7 days a week Call Hi V 1-7810 or come to 1235 Oread. t t WOMAN'S WALLET: Gold with black strips. Faint, with a tiny dot. and Flint. Call: SJI 3-7841-1-19 DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. RING — GOLD SIGNET RING. Victimity of Student Union Bldg. Ring has Red Sardonyx stone with crest. Reward given. Call Bob Fitzsimmons VI 3-4058. 1-19 MAN'S GOLD WEDDING BAND. CONTACT VERNON HAVEN. VI 3-1944, 1-194 BUSINESS SERVICES U. HAUL TRAILERS for rent. Local or 1. way. Barnes Rental Service, 7th & Michigan. Call VI 2-0401 or Kilburn Texaco Service, 2447 W. 6th, VI 3-9799 Wednesday, Jan. 17, 1962 University Daily Kansan GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Comm. Personals service time & money, Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, guides etc., plus complete lines of supplies. Kansan Want Ads Get Results INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tt HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet center. Pet phone VI 83-2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6pm, weekdays. ff I WILL DO IRONING in my home. Pick louisville. Call VI 2-2467 or bryan 1011 N J. 9 PERSONALIZED IRONING & bundle washing, also alterations on men's & women's clothing. All work guaranteed. Mrs. Earl Shaw, 308 N. 8th. 2-5 WILL BABY SIT in my home, 1'5 bk phone VI 3-2863500 per day, referent Phone VI 3-28635 EXPERIENCED MOTHER — would like child to care for, 3 to 4 yrs. old, in her home. Also would like ironing, 15c per piece. 340 Indiana. VI 2-3473. tf TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange. 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- cision 939 g, Mass. Call VI 3-5263. Ola Snith 939 g, Mass. Call VI 3-5263. RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V 3-1267. tf ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-154, or 921 Miss. tf WANTED — BABYSTITTING. Law student's wife wishes to baby-sit by day or week. Home adjacent to campus. Call VI 3-1846. 1-22 TYPING MILLIKEN I. "S.O.'S." Now at two 100 Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass. Lawrence Ave. & 1021% Mass. Experienced Typtist; Electric typewriter. Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student dates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker, Call VI 3-2001. ff EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typ ing name - call VI 3-1126. Mo. Lost Gelibhach. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, report manuscripts. Prompt service, neat accurate work. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 RL, VI 3-7485 Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typesetter, fast accurate service. Resumes officer, Barlow. 408 W. 13. V1 2-1648. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING, punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. & Spanish teacher. Frequently & reports accurately. Standard rates. Ses. Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates. VI 3-18-18-1-18 Experienced typist would like typing in her home. Accurate, neat, reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. tf "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression with instructors." To excellent standards, rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. CARL'S Annual Winter CLEARANCE SALE Starts Thursday, Jan.18 HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO GET TOP QUALITY MEN'S WEAR AT BIG SAVINGS Come Early, These Specials Won't Last Long Suits – One Group ___ Discounted 25% to 331/3% Topcoats – Entire Stock -- Discounted 25% to 331/3% Sport Coats – One Group Discounted 331/3 % to $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price Sport Shirts - One Group ... Discounted 25% Jackets & Car Coats - One Group - Discounted 331/3% Sweaters – Entire Stock ___ Discounted 33 1/3 % Corduroy Suits - Entire Stock, Were to 32.50, Now 19.95 Corduroy Pipers, Were 6.95 ---------------- Now 3.95 Pajamas - One Group ---- Discounted 25% to $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price Raincoats - One Group ___ Discounted 331/3% Carl's GOOD CLOTHES Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 17, 1962 Thursday, Jan.18 9:30 a.m. diebolt's men's diebolt's wear 843 massachusetts st. Thursday, Jan. 18 9:30 a.m. January Clearance Sale! Suits $50 Values - Now 39.95 $60 Values - Now 47.95 69.50 Values Now 55.50 $85 Values - Now 72.25 $95 Values - Now $80.75 "Door Buster" Special! One Group 68 Suits $60 Values – While They Last $39.95 Dress Shirts One Group $5.00 Values - Now $3.79 3 for $11.00 Raincoats Fine For Dress Newest Styles $15.95 Values - Now $11.95 $22.95 Values - Now $17.20 Jackets and Outercoats Entire Stock 25% Off Entire Topcoats Stock Cord and Suede Cloth Suits and Sport Coats 1/2 Off Latest Styles Latest Patterns 1/3 Off Cotton Wash Pants One Group Only about 60 pair Reg. Price $4.95-$6.95 1/2 Off Sport Shirts New Styles New Patterns $5.00 Values - Now $3.99 $5.95 Values - Now $4.75 Sweaters Entire Stock One Group One-Third Off One Group One-Half Off Dress Slax One Group Reg. $12.95-$16.95 Now 25% Off Sport Coats $30 Values - Now 22.50 $35 Values - Now 26.25 37.50 Values Now 28.50 39.95 Values Now 29.95 10202367950544 --of people who wanted to check out books for term papers. HITTING THE BOOKS—Sharon Hayes, Hutchinson junior, hits the books in preparation for final examination week. Puzzled Martians Ask: Why the Big Change? By Dennis Farney Martians observing KU earthlings must be puzzled. Attendance at local taverns has fallen off. Ironically, the same thing has happened at campus libraries. All over the campus, lights burn late and coffee consumption soars. THE CAMPUS IS preparing for final examination week. And if our typical student is, in fact, typical, he's reacting to the impending threat in a manner something like this: In contrast to the Martians, the typical KU student surveys the scene—still groggy, perhaps, after creating a term paper in a single night—and knows perfectly well what's happening. First of all, he decided about a week ago that his nightly forays in search of beer and beer-drinking companions would have to go. The fact is, you can waste—or rather, spend—a helluva lot of time drinking beer. That done, he decided to spend less time in the campus libraries. Libraries, he reasoned, are too noisy for the man who wants to get some serious studying done. HE WITHDREW TO his noiseless, beerless—comparatively speaking—room or apartment. And he'll stay there, except for brief trips outside to attend classes, take tests or eat, until his last final is over—most likely sometime next Thursday or Friday. Local librarians and tavern owners have noticed the change. "We're getting a steady flow of books being checked out to students, but no corresponding rise in library attendance," said Donald Redmond, director of the KU science library. HE COMMENTED on the outflow of books. The day after classes resumed (Jan. 3) we had a tremendous rush These books are beginning to be returned now, he said, but students are checking out other books for use in final week cramming. "WEVE HAD QUITE a run on books," said Miss Eva Morrison, director of the engineering library. "We always have a room full of students here in the morning and early in the afternoon." Paul Sinclair and Jim Large, owners of the Jayhawk and Wagon Wheel Cafes, respectively, note a decrease in business. "Students are reacting as they always have in the past—if anything, they're studying harder," Mr. Sinclair said. "Our meal business has increased this week, because students living in apartments don't want to take the time to cook their own meals. "This is always a quiet time for us," Mr. Large said. "Students are hitting the books now." "BUT OUR EVENING business is fast and short. We don't get much business until about 10 o'clock, and the students who come in then don't stay very long." Tavern owners are not unduly concerned about the slump in business, however. They expect the picture to change early next week. ABOUT THAT TIME. when final week is one-half over, entrenched students will begin to leave their stations—for brief periods, of course—to refresh themselves. A few days later, when final week is over, they'll begin to desert their rooms for entire nights at a time—to celebrate. Lights will dim. Coffee consumption will drop. Taverns will be full. Only the libraries will remain empty. The Martians will look on—still puzzled. Daily hansan 59th Year, No. 73 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, Jan. 18, 1962 U.S. Plans Moon Rocket The Ranger-3 shot, if it gets off on time, will kick off what shapes up as one of the most spectacular weeks in U.S. space history. The nation hopes to put its first astronaut into orbit Wednesday, and has scheduled an attempt to put five satellites into orbit with a single rocket during the week. CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) — The United States is planning to launch a 10-story rocket Monday in an attempt to "crash land" a television-carrying space capsule on the moon. The flight of Ranger-3, America's gold-plated hope for ending nearly four year of frustrating failures in lunar exploration, is expected to produce the most detailed photographs ever taken of the moon. If all goes well, Ranger-3's package of instruments will soar 240,000 miles through space in about 60 Emporia Students' Enrollment Barred By Fred Zimmerman Several students at the College of Emporia who have strongly protested recent "unjust" actions of the school's administration and board of trustees have not been allowed to enroll for second semester classes, the Kansan learned today. In a telephone interview, Pemberton said in Ottawa that the resolution of the National Executive Committee of the NSA charged that Rev. Mr. Butterfield was fired without formal charges or a fair hearing. The resolution urged the persons responsible to reconsider their action. Bruce Pemberton, vice chairman of the Missouri-Kansas region of the National Student Association, said this afternoon that a recently-released report based on findings of an NSA investigator concludes that the NSA "wholly disagrees with the methods used in firing the Rev. David A. Butterfield." In a telephone interview this afternoon, a reliable source in Emorpha said that although he is not sure how many students are involved, he thinks the number is eight. NSA Opposes Butterfield's Firing academic dean, saying that the Admissions and Advanced Standing Committee at the College "urged" them to enroll at another institution at the end of the semester. THE REFUSAL TO ALLOW these students to enroll follows letters that were sent them recently by Dr. Hugh I. Myers, acting The letters stated the students Pemberton said the NSA hoped to work with the American Association of University Professors in order to "find a way of dealing with this problem" at the College. were "not finding a compatible environment at C, of E." the letters gave no specific reasons for the request. Dr. Myers could not be reached this afternoon for comment. The Kansan on Dec. 11 printed a full story of the abrupt dismissal of the Rev. David A. Butterfield, assistant professor of religion and dean of the chapel at the College. The students who have been prevented from re-enrolling are among a student and faculty group at the College that has objected to the Rev. Mr. Butterfield's firing, which it contends was without notice or just cause. THE PROTECTORS ALSO SAY the board has "oppressed student and faculty discussion" of the strange situation that has arisen at the school since the firing of the Rev. Mr. Butterfield. In another development, the editor of the student newspaper, Marjorie Grafke, resigned last week, after printing an editorial in the newspaper, College Life, in which she said the College was "probably one of the most inane educational institutions in America," and that a minority of students and faculty members have "found themselves the objects of militant ostracism." Miss Grafke said she was resigning because she needed more time for studies and because she wanted to "retain my self-respect and dignity." In a telephone interview today, Miss Grafke made this comment regarding her resignation: hours and will televise 180 or more pictures in the last 40 minutes of the journey as it plunges toward the lunar surface. "WE HAVE HAD A PROBLEM with censorship. We have had to express the administration view-point." Some of the students who were not allowed to re-enroll are known to have circulated copies of a petition last month, requesting the National Student Association (NSA) to investigate the firing of the Rev. Mr. Butterfield and the (Continued on page 8) A $961_{2}$-pound capsule is designed to burst from the main section of the 727-pound Ranger-3 and slowed by a retrorocket for a landing at a speed of about 100 miles per hour on the moon—a crash it is specifically built to survive. There the rugged ball of instruments should labor for at least a month relaying to Earth information that will be valuable in selecting landing places for manned flights to the moon later this decade. Ranger-3 will be aimed at the familiar side that always faces Earth. But it is expected to continue televising pictures until it plunges to an altitude of 15 miles. The difference between Lunar photographs taken by the probe and those taken through telescopes on Earth, scientists said, "will be comparable to the ability to distinguish between an object the size of a large battleship and an object the size of a compact automobile" if both were on the moon. Kennedy Sends Congress Budget WASHINGTON — (UPI)—President Kennedy today sent Congress a $92.5 billion budget for the 1963 fiscal year—biggest ever in peace-time—but said he still hoped to eke out a "modest" $200 million surplus. He called it a blueprint for national "growth and strength." Kennedy's first complete budget called for repeal of the 10 per cent tax on train and bus travel, and a 1-cent increase on both regular letter and air mail stamps. Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon said the administration also hoped to cut income taxes early in 1963. Initial Congressional reaction to the budget generally followed party lines. Republicans rapped it as another pattern for big spending and scoffed at the forecast of a surplus, but most Democrats praised it as a model of fiscal responsibility. The new budget assumed that the Berlin crisis would be over by the end of June and that the nation's economy would expand steadily and fairly briskly for at least 18 months. Unless these assumptions are realized, Kennedy's projected surplus could be wiped out. Weather Heavy snow and glaze warning. Snow mixed at times with freezing rain today with heavy snow up to 4 inches or more. Snow tonight, ending Friday. Friday mostly cloudy and cold. High today and Friday in the teens. Low tonight 5 to 10 above. Hill Activities Regulated by Student Council (Editor's Note: This is the third article in a four part series on campus materials). By Jerry Musil If the political parties have been following the Constitution, major contributions cannot be expected. Article II of the Constitution says the purpose of the Associated Students of the University of Kansas is: Student government has been on campus 52 years but major contributions are few. - To unite in a single, self-governing body the students of the University of Kansas and to promote and regulate their extra-curricular activities. - To coordinate student activities with the program of the faculty and administrative governing bodies. - By so doing, to promote the highest interests of the University of Kansas and to cultivate loyalty Article IV says, "This Association shall have all powers necessary to carry out the purpose set forth in Article II, and any other powers in the government of the students of the University of Kansas delegated to it by the Chancellor, the University Senate, the State Board of Regents or the laws of the State of Kansas." to the University among its students THESE ARTICLES show that the All Student Council regulates all student extra-curricular activities in professional, religious or social organizations. This includes dances, lectures, films, publications, and organizations such as Associated Women Students and KU-Y. The student body president appoints 22 committees which regulate, plan and investigate the activities of students. Student Councils in the past have been mostly regulatory bodies for student activities with few major accomplishments. Past councils spent much time organizing varsity dances, participating in political maneuvers and judging the scholastic eligibility of their members. BUT THE COUNCIL still retains considerable power over student organizations. It has control of a budget in excess of $3,000 and this year it decided to withdraw from the National Student Association. Past councils chose the bands for two varsity dances each year. They also checked for gate crashers and punished the students who were caught. The punishment was usually the loss of credit hours. Or the Councils spent much time between elections hearing evidence and looking into voting irregularities of the previous election. For example, in 1929 a law student was caught stealing ballots IN 1956, POGO was convicted in Student Court of violating the ASC Constitution and was fined $75. The Constitution says no political party can endorse a candidate for class office. The court action led to POGO's collapse. The most controversial eligibility case occurred in 1932 when Pachacamac ran an advertisement in the Kansan asking why the Oread-Kayhawk controlled Council allowed three ineligible members to serve. The O-K leaders did not know how Pach discovered the alleged ineligibilities. from the law school election. He was docked three hours credit. "Neither the registrar's office nor the eligibility committee will release the names of ineligible students to other students," a Kansan news story said. Pach evidently had ways of getting almost any information. Most major legislation acted In an editorial published Nov. 8, 1943, the Kansan opposed the bill. In Chapter 4 of the bill, the editorial said, the Kansan would be governed by the Kansan Board. But an ASC committee also would sit on the Board. CHANCELLOR Deane W. Malott vetoed a Publications bill in 1343 which would have resulted in possible censorship of the Kansan by the ASC. The editorial said it did not quarrel with having the committee and invited the committee to see how problems are handled on the Kansan. upon by the Council has been in recent years. BUT THE KANSAN opposed the phrase, "providing that such activities shall not infringe upon the established policy of the All Student Council in the protection of (Continued on page 8) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Jan. 18, 1962 A Step Forward A Senate subcommittee of the Kansas Legislature is holding hearings on the proposed Prairie National Park north of Manhattan. The committee is preparing to make a recommendation on whether the state should appropriate $250,000 for the park "as a token gesture of good faith." The attorney for the proponents of the national park said the $250,000 would amount to only about 5 per cent of the total cost of the park, but that the gesture would be a "clincher" in gaining Congressional approval. He also said that in the entire proposed park area of 57,000 acres only about 50 families (about 200 persons) reside. IT IS DIFFICULT to see any sound reasons against the creation of this park. Yet strong sentiment against it has arisen in Kansas. Most of it probably springs from that trait of American life, "I'm for the little guy." A Pottawatomie County rancher, Carl Bellinger, symbolizes the little guy. He recently gained distinction by ordering Stewart Udall, Secretary of the Interior, from his land. It's only natural that sentiment would then be erected against the park. Most Americans ache for the chance to tell the Federal government to go to hell, and quickly identify favorably with anyone who does. They see this Kansas rancher as one of the last of the rugged individualists still holding out against the pervading force of government. They figure he deserves their support. BUT THERE IS a bigger issue involved. The park offers Kansas a chance to preserve a price less American heritage. The Kansas prairie land was an intimate part of the growth of America. Through this prairie land came the pioneers of the American West. The generations of the future deserve the preservation of this area. Another argument in favor of the Prairie National Park is that it will bring tourists into Kansas. Areas around the park will benefit from increased revenues through fringe area development and tourist attractions. THE PRINCIPAL argument against the park is that it will dislocate about 50 families. This is unfortunate, but the significance of a national park preserving the prairie land overrides it. The people will be paid for their land. The Federal government will build the park and maintain it. Kansas can take a step forward by having this park. It is a step Kansas should take. Karl Koch By Bill Charles "The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone" with Vivian Leigh, Warren Beatty, and Lotte Lenya. Directed by Jose Quintero. At the Varsity. The film adaptation of Tennessee Williams' only novel, "The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone," is loaded with fine acting and sensitive direction. If one happens to agree with Williams' opinion of human nature, "Roman Spring" is a movie of the highest quality. If not, it is still a very good film which presents a somewhat twisted view of life. Vivian Leigh plays a fading actress who establishes residence in Rome upon the death of her husband. Being very wealthy, she attracts a young gigolo (Warren Beatty) who soon becomes one of the necessities of life. THE WILLIAMSONIAN touch is present in the person of Lotte Lenya, a society madame who dispenses boys to rich, lonely women. She and her stable of studs split 50-50 any gifts the women bestow on their playmates. The film's ending is not pleasant, but it is very logical and very effective. The film technique of director Jose Quintero is subtle and penetrating. For the scenes which tell the real story of "Roman Spring" he uses a highly cinematic method. His camera is always moving, and manages to be in just the right place at the right time. The major characters are acted with a great degree of competence. It would be difficult to decide between the two women for the best performance. Miss Leigh utilizes everything at her command, from her walk to her raised eyebrow, to make Mrs. Stone come alive. Miss Lenya creates a character in whom one wants to believe. When the picture is over you realize such belief is impossible because the character wasn't a person at all, but a symbol. WARREN BEATTY has a tough job for an inexperienced actor; he has to hold his own with the two ladies while playing an Italian. He holds well. Even his accent seemed reasonably accurate. At the Movies "The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone" is not sweetness and light or hearts and flowers. It's rather depressing, but still a good way to spend two hours. By Steve Clark The photography is good, but other than that, "Blue Hawaii" starring Elvis Presley, now playing at the Granada is a bust. The featured attraction, of course, is Elvis Presley. He supposedly is the whole show. However, the characterization of Maile Duval, played by Joan Blackman, often challenges Presley as the center of attraction. There is a small remnant of a plot. What there is, is thrown loosely around 14 "hit" songs by Elvis. EVERY device conceivable is used to work these "hit" songs into the plot. For instance, Elvis is rejoined with some native island boys who are good friends of his. Upon seeing them for the first time in two years, he says, "I picked up a new number. Wanta hear it?" The answer of course is yes. The plot is filled with loopholes. Elvis clad in his army uniform steps off an airplane, sees Maile, takes off his hat, and there it is, a full head of hair. That army crewcut must have grown fast! The show really isn't bad if you are a Presley fan. His music, if one cares for it, is well-performed. "Blue Hawaii" is essentially a musical production. Elvis becomes the star of the show at a birthday gathering for Maile's grandmother. He just happens to have brought her a present from Austria. It is a music box and just happens to play "falling in love," one of Elvis' "hit tunes." THE MOVEGGER will be pleased to know that the show has a "they lived ever happily" ending. It is such a weak story that one couldn't expect anything else. The background is beautiful, inviting, and well-photographed. There are a lot of scenic shots of Hawaii, the newest and certainly the most beautiful state in the Union. One could, I'm sure, get a much better look at Hawaii if he Elvis, as in his other pictures, rocks and rolls, and is still a teenage idol. would watch a travelogue on television or at a ladies aid meeting. Daily Hansan Letters Defends World Crisis Day Editor, (Dear Mr. Williams.) In your letter which appeared in the Daily Kansan, Jan. 15, 1962, you presented several reasons for your condemnation of KU's World Crisis Day held last December. It was stated in your letter that Mr. Fomin, a Soviet embassy official, should have been denied the privilege of speaking in front of an audience of college students for fear that his speech might have harmful effects upon those present. IT IS MY OPINION that your criticism is highly unwarranted for several reasons. Anyone who would advocate treating the communistic movement as if it were something to be avoided is living in the wrong century. On the contrary, the more the American people can find out about communism, the easier the job of conquering it will be. Mankind has not conquered tuberculosis by avoiding the germs which cause it because they are deadly. Why then should we, the people of the United States, cringe from communism and try to isolate ourselves from it. COMMUNISM THIRIVES on ignorance. It gives people something to believe when they have nothing else. No, Mr. Williams, a program such as presented at the KU Crisis Day does not destroy democracy; it enhances it. We must have faith in the American people to recognize the falsity and evil of communism when they hear it presented or see it published. We must know about communism before we can successfully conquer it. It has been stated very eloquently that "communism will not win the world, democracy will lose it." This is the very problem with which we are faced if we allow you and your type of "patriots" to exert influence on our nation. University of Kansas student newspaper 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 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 $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. Mr. Williams, empty barrels make a lot of noise when they roll around, but they don't contain much. Assuming that your intentions are good, I advise that you rechannel your efforts. We'll all be better for it. Kenneth C. Lyle Coffeyville senior (Editor's note: Mr. Williams is the vice-commander of the Patrick Henry American Legion post in Wichita. His post objected strongly to KU's World Crisis Day.) the took world By Melvin Mencher Assistant Professor of Journalism THE PRESS, by A. J. Liebling, Ballantine Books. 75 cents. (Paperback.) The other day in the city room of the Los Angeles Mirror a well-dressed man was reading aloud an obituary. The speaker was Norman Chandler, the president of the Times-Mirror Publishing Co., and he was reading the death notice of the Mirror to its employees. The news accounts relate that Mr. Chandler removed his eyeglasses to dab his eyes with his handkerchief when he finished reading. It's too bad A. J. Liebling wasn't there. It would have been a scene worthy of reproduction in the Wayward Press, a continuing series on the pecadilloes and predicaments of the press which he has been turning out for the New Yorker for the past 15 years. Over this period. Liebling has been the obstreperous mourner at the death of a score of big city dailies. But it's just as well he wasn't around. The sight of one of California's wealthiest men weeping while a few blocks away the Hearst press was at the same time interming the Examiner, the opposition paper to Chandler's Times, might have made him cackle. MOST OF THESE PIECES appeared in the New Yorker and though many of the incidents he describes (meat rationing, Chiang's flexible batallions) have passed into the dim beyond, the Liebling deftness remains. Furthermore, he has written new introductions to many pieces, including one which prefaces an article on the New York newspapers' diligent search for "chiselers" on the welfare rolls. "The crusade against the destitute is the favorite crusade of the newspaper publisher, because it is the safest," Liebling writes. Liebling's criticisms of the press are considered old hat to the new generation of press critics because he happens to have some quaint notions about newspapers. He's old fashioned enough to believe that a newspaper should print news, not treat acne, or build the female form, or pick all-league halfbacks, or advise the teenager how to handle his pubescent playmate, or unclog kitchen drains. He clings to the out-of-date concept that competing newspapers can do a better job of informing the public than a single newspaper. "A city with one newspaper," he writes, "or with a morning and evening newspaper under one ownership, is like a man with one eye, and often the eye is glass... Each newspaper disappearing below the horizon carries with it, if not a point of view, at least a potential emplacement for one." THE DIVERSITY OF viewpoint he seeks is not restricted to the editorial page. Liebling's most telling point is that the newspaper reader has access generally only to the wire service's view of things in Washington and abroad. Few newspapers, probably no more than 50 out of 1,500 dailies, have a Washington correspondent, and fewer have foreign correspondents. (They cost money, Liebling explains.) Consequently, the news from these key news spots which most Americans read comes from two sources only, the Associated Press and the United Press International. Liebling does not say that press association reporting is distorted. The point is that news is so complex the more perspectives from which it is viewed, the closer the reader can come to seeing the event in its full dimensions. To many of his critics, Liebling does not understand the economics of newspapering. Newspapers must print non-news, they argue, because the newspaper is in a battle for the reader's time against the seductions of television, PTA meetings, night baseball and the other diversions we're heir to. Let's meet titillation with titillation, they argue, and perhaps sandwich some news between the advertisements, columns and gimmicks. Thus, many newspapers have 6 to 10 per cent news and surrender the rest of their space to something else. LIEBLING DERIDES this counting-house mentality. When the publisher-merchant shapes newspaper policy, the results are disastrous, he says. The California situation would seem to support Liebling's point. That vast journalistic wasteland, with the exception of the McClatchy Newspapers and a few small dailies, abounds with gimmick-laden newspapers. Two of the worst have gone under. Significantly, the new dailies there (west coast editions of the Christian Science Monitor, the Wall Street Journal and, soon, the New York Times) print news. Virgil Pinkly, the founding editor and publisher, until 1957, of the recently-defunct Mirror, pins the blame for the disappearing daily on the publisher with no newspaper background. Too many newspapers, he said recently, are directed by former bankers, lawyers, promoters or people who "watch the box office returns." They have little feel or flair for news, "the basic content of any newspaper," he said. This brings up the question that constantly devils the press: Can an enterprise operated for profit maintain its dignity and independence? Until the newspaper reader is willing to pay 25 cents for his daily newspaper, or until a cheap production process is available, newspapers will have to rely on the community's business interests for their support — which makes all the more telling Liebling's dedication in his first collection of Wayward Press pieces: "To the foundation of a School for Publishers, failing which, no School of Journalism can have meaning." New Dominican Junta Gives Harsh Penalties United Press International The New Dominican military civilian junta, trying to restore order in the perennially troubled Caribbean nation, decreed harsh penalties on strikers today. Radio Caribe announced a decree providing that private employees who take part in political strikes and public employees who try to "sabotage normal operations" may be fined up to $1,000 and jailed for six months. ANTI-GOVERNMENT STRIKES called by opposition politicians have been a major source of the often anti-American violence which has occurred almost daily in the Dominican Republic in recent weeks. Private reports reaching New York said troops and police killed at least four persons yesterday in scattered clashes with supporters of the opposition's latest walkout. At least five were killed and 20 injured in fighting Tuesday. THE RADIO REPORT announced also that known Communists have been barred from the Dominican Republic. Any transportation company which brings a known Red to that country may be fined up to $5,000. The provisions of the new decree presumably will be applied to strikers who fail to return to work today. Laotian Princes Meet in Geneva Right-wing Prince Boun Oum, Communist Prince Souphanouvong and neutralist Prince Souvanna Phouma met with co-chairmen Malcolm MacDonald of Britian and Georgi Pushkin of Russia to discuss what a western spokesman termed "international aspects of the Laos question." GENEVA — (UPI) The three rival Laotian princes met the cochairmen of the 14-nation Laos conference today in their first get-to-together since their arrival in Geneva earlier this week. THE SPOKESMAN'S insistence that the three princes did not intend to discuss formation of a coalition government under Souvanna Phouma — the main question which has been holding up agreement between them — appeared to give little hope that the conference would be successful. But informed sources said MacDonald and Fushkin hoped to steer the conversation around to the question of a cabinet and control of the key ministries of defenses and the interior. After the meeting with the cochairmen, the princes were scheduled to attend a reception to meet representatives of 14 nations attending the Laos conference here. ON ARRIVAL AT the Palace of Nations, none of the three princes would comment on the negotiations. Page 3 The junta imposed censorship on all means of communication and decreed fines up to $1,000 for violators. From New York, the inter-American press association appealed to the Dominican regime to end press censorship "so freedom of information may be immediately restored." The New Dominican Junta was formed Tuesday night after a palace coup apparently engineered by armed forces secretary Gen. Pedro Rodriguez Echavarria. It followed a day of wild rioting by opposition demonstrators who demanded the immediate resignation of President Joaquin Balaguer, a holdover from the old Trujillist regime, and the ouster of Echavarria himself. The demonstrators charged Balaguer was trying to perpetuate himself in office despite his promise to resign soon. IAPA PRESIDENT Andrew Heiskell made the plea "for the good name of the Junta and of the country which is supposed to have abolished 32 years of tyranny." Named as president of the Junta, which ousted Balaguer and four other members of the council of state, was Huberto Bogaer, But Gen. Echavarria appeared to be the behind-the-scenes strongman. BOGAERT TOLD THE nation in a radio address last night that the Junta was installed to foil an "international conspiracy" aimed at making the Dominican Republic another Cuba. Chief effect of the palace coup was to eliminate the big opposition national civil union from its majority position on the recently formed council of state. U. S. officials in Washington said the United States has not recognized the Junta "because it came to power by unconstitutional means." They said large-scale U.S. economic aid which had been promised to the Dominican Republic may be withheld as a result of the change of government. The State Department described the installation of the Junta as a "step backward." If the United States withholds recognition from the new regime, it would be a stronger step than any it took against the government of assassinated ex-President Rafael L. Trujillo, which was never denied recognition even when U.S. diplomatic relations were broken off. A bill calling for $11,695,114 for operation and construction expenses at KU for the coming fiscal year was introduced in the state Senate yesterday. The amount is included in a $65-$54,927 appropriations bill for operation and construction in all state-supported schools. THE $11.6 MILLION is the extent of actual state funds which will go to the University. KU itself, through student tuition, fees and dormitory payments, will earn approximately $12 million more total the $23.8 million it will use next fiscal year. KU Construction Operations Bill Given to Senate A breakdown of the state appropriations figure of $11.6 million shows the University is receiving: $ 725,000 for replacement of Blake Hall. - Funds for faculty salaries. - A four per cent increase in faculty salaries. Also included in the bill is a provision which would permit the University to use parking fees to establish traffic control measures on the campus. This was a project Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced in his address to the student body at the first of this semester. ORIGINALLY, the state budget director and the governor had recommended that funds for this project not be allocated. Commenting on the appropriations bill, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said: Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires "I think the University has been treated pretty well. The only regret I have is that faculty salary increases could not have been five per cent instead of four. We were justified in asking for that increase." East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 Children's Shoes Ladies' Shoes Other portions of the appropriations bill provide $5,333,112 for the University of Kansas Medical Center and $11,164,749 for Kansas State University. SHOE SALE Heels 2.99 Flats to Sports 7.99 Men's Shoes Oxfords 4.99 & to Loafers 9.99 2. 99 to 3.99 ALSO We Have Ladies' Snow Shoes 8.99 to 11.99 Included in the allocation for the Medical Center are four per cent faculty increases and $600,000 for an outpatient center there. REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. University Daily Kansan R Thursday. Jan. 18. 1962 Organic Chemistry Colloquium; 4 p.m. 233 Malett. Martin Tessler, "Entropy Factors in the Control of Organic Reaction. Rate." Teacher Interviews; Jan. 18, Charles Woods; Dr. Jeff (Jeff Co Schools); Lukawicka, Colo. Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 & 8 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky. Official Bulletin American Society of Tool & Manufacturing Engineers Meeting; 7 p.m. Fowler Building, Speaker, Mr. Tom Negro, Supervisor of Chemical Fabrication Laboratories, Collins Radio Co., Cedar Holts, on "Photography for Small Lot Tooling." Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 p.m. Southern Baptist Activities Building, 1221 Oread. Bible study and devotion. Ham Club Committee Meeting: 7:30 p.m. pmo. 9:15 p.m. Fan our attempt to win KANI BC1 Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: 7:30 p.m., Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union. Tenemeen Church of the Church of Nazareth Lawrence speaking on "The Bible, Truth or Fiction?" Special Chemistry Colloquium: 4 p.m. 233 Maiott, Dr. Donald Dittner, Central Research Dept., DuPont, Wilmington, Del. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. FRIDAY Episcopal Holy Communion and Breakfast: 7 a.m., Canterbury House. GUY'S GUY'S POTATO CHIPS GUY'S POTATO CHIPS Be Wise — Buy Guy's Students to Review Theater Four foreign students will discuss the theater in their countries tomorrow at 3 p.m. in the Faculty Lounge of Murphy Hall. William Kuhike, instructor in speech and drama, will be moderator. The students are Horst Muller, Tirschenseuth, Germany, graduate student; Dorothy Callahan, Manchester, England, special student; Celia Candlin, London, England, junior, and Jose Lacomba, Puerto Rico graduate student. The public is invited. Kansan Want Ads Get Results M. MORGAN Goldwater blasts radicals in top U.S. jobs "The real danger to our nation," says Barry Goldwater, "comes from the leftists in our midst." And he charges that radicals hold 37 key jobs in Washington. In this week's Saturday Evening Post, Sen. Goldwater rips into left-wing extremists, and tells why their ideas play "right into the hands of the Kremlin." The Saturday Evening The Saturday Evening POST JANUARY 30 ISSUE NOW ON SALE Birds on a branch VI 3-8855 BIRD TV - RADIO 908 Mass. TV - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service SIC FLICS Chesterfield "The Dean will see you now." --- 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD - THEY SATISFY Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 18, 1962 But Where's a Parking Place? Christmas Is Different For International Club By Roy Miller Patsy Burling, Stockholm, Sweden, special student, considers last Christmas Eve "quite a change from any Christmas Eve I've ever spent." Miss Burling has good reason for such a statement. She was one of a group of KU students who went swimming outdoors on Christmas Eve. THE OUTDOOR DIP was one of many activities experienced by 49 members of the KU International Club who toured Mexico during Christmas vacation. The club members left Lawrence Dec. 19 in a chartered bus, a motor car, and a scheduled bus. In Mexico, the students spent three days in San Miguel, four days in Mexico City, and two days in Acapulco and Oaxaca. THE STAY IN Mexico City was a highlight for most of the Jayhawker travelers. "Mexicans are fantastic drivers," said Brian Cleave, Sussex, England, graduate student. "Mexico City is worse than New York." The KU students also spent New Year's Eve in an unusual way—in a bus. Miss Burling said she enjoyed hearing "all those nationalities singing." Cleave said he liked the buildings and cultural activities in Mexico City. The Mexican capital is more European than any American city, he said. Claus Buechmann, assistant instructor in western civilization and co-organizer of the trip, liked the weather the most. Buechmann, who was on his second visit to Mexico, said it was 83 degrees at 10 one night in Acapulco. P-T-P Plans Visit To State Buildings Members of People-To-People will take a state industrial tour to Topeka Jan. 31. They will visit the State Capitol and the Kansas State Historical Society. Students will leave the Kansas Union at 9:30 a.m. and return at 4:30 p.m. Any foreign student interested in going should sign the sheet on the door of the People-To-People office. FRIEDERIKE WOROUNIG. Klagenfurt, Austria, graduate student, had a new experience during the tour—she was serenaded through a bus window. Cafe menus printed only in Spanish caused an embarrassing incident for one international Jayhawker. for one international Jayhawker. The menu said "friijoles fritas" and he thought it meant French fried potatoes. HE DISCOVERED that "frijoles fritas" are not French fried potatoes, but a bean dish. Wolfgang Keim, Hamburg, Germany, graduate student, said he was fascinated by the Mexican bargaining. He also voiced a complaint: "The way the weather was, it just didn't seem like Christmas." One thing the 49 International Club members learned from their trip is the fact that it's a small world. The Jayhawkers saw Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe in a San Miguel church on Christmas Eve. Business Frat Initiates 23 Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity, recently initiated 23 men. The new members are Stan Andeel, Wichita wintia; Pete Aylward, Ellsworth junior; Gene Barnard, Hutchinson sophomore; Bob Benz, Bartlesville, Okla., junior; Roger Broger, Kansas City, Kan., junior; Sam Bruner, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore; John Bumgarner, Tulsa sophomore; Tom Collinson, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Carl Deane, Kansas City, Kan., junior; Jerry Dickson, Newton junior; Kirk Hagan, Oklahoma City sophomora; Dick Haithbrink, Salina junior; Larry Heeb, Lawrence junior; Tom Hunter, Des Moines sophomore; Chris Jensen, Kansas City, Kan; senior; Bill Monty, St. Joseph, Mo.; junior; Bud Porch, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Mike Rathbone, Wichita sophomore; Jack Ross, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Stephen Ryan, Salina sophomore; Scott Senne, Topeka junior; Mike Thomas, Kirkwood, Mo., senior; and Vernon Voorhees, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore. The kazoo is employed frequently in "Philip von Macedon," and although music critics are hesitant this is to me a major breakthrough in the arts. — I. Stadam Round the clock SELF-SERVICE LAUNDRY @ Wash 20c Dry 10c DO ALL YOUR WASH HERE IT'S A BREEZE If you can drop a coin in a slot and pour soap into a machine . . . you will find washing here a breeze — because, that's all there is to it! We've plenty of washers and driers too, so come on in today. SMITH'S LAUNDROMAT 6th & Arkansas Average length of time is 32 seconds. But this varies greatly depending on the ability of the driver. Some people can execute the maneuver in less than seven seconds while others make repeated attempts, taking as long as 100 seconds. BERKELEY, Calif — (UPI) How long does it take you to maneuver your car into a parallel parking space? These findings were reported by Bryan K. Johnston, graduate student in transportation engineering at the University of California. He made a study of the respective merits of parallel and angle parking. Johnston found that a street with parallel parking can handle up to two more lanes of traffic than it can with angle parking. But angle parking has the advantage of accommodating more cars per unit of curb space—up to two and a half times as many, depending on the angle at which they are parked. Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES Having a Party? LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION Bowling Designed with the University in Mind YES, WE'LL BE OPEN Final Week, Between Semesters Every Day TAKE A BREAK FROM FINALS AND ENJOY BOWLING, BILLIARDS, AND PING-PONG AT THE JAY BOWL Daily 8 a.m.-11:30 p.m. Sun. 1 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers OBER'S Semi-Annual CLEARANCE SALE Substantial Reductions on SUITS TOPCOATS SPORTCOATS SLACKS SWEATERS SPORT SHIRTS JACKETS DRESS SHIRTS SHOES ROBES HATS SOCKS Entire Stock Not Included 821 Mass. Ober's Lime KU S The L come to annual S Greenda chairman mittee, s Moutr form at in Hoch OPEN THURS. EVE. TILL 8:30 Really Phone VI 3-1951 The I Alex b hrough through recent Slightly PHIL Pitcher ville co the baln was tag league by the University Daily Kansan Page 5 Limeliters to Give KU Spring Concert The Limeliters, a vocal trio, will come to KU next semester for the annual Spring Concert, Bob Moutrie, Greendale, Mo., sophomore and chairman of the SUA concert committee, said today. Moutrie said the group will perform at KU either March 17 or 24 in Hoch Auditorium. Thursday, Jan. 18, 1962 PHILADELPHIA — (UPI) — Pitcher John Wadsworth of Louisville couldn't have had too much on the ball, Aug. 17, 1894, because he was tagged for an all-time major league record of 36 hits in one game by the Philadelphia Phillies. The Limeliters — Lou Gottlieb, Alex Hassilev, and Glenn Yarbrough — sing folk music from throughout the world. Their most recent album is entitled "The Slightly Fabulous Limeliters." Really Socked Red Jail Releases Students LOS ANGELES — (UPI) Two thankful California college students were back home today after serving four months in a Communist East Germany jail for trying to smuggle an Eastern girl to freedom. of trying to help a girl they had known for such a short time, Ferrey replied: "For the same reason that if U had a sister in that position I would try to help her out." The U.S. Naval Research Company will meet tonight at 7:30 in 411 Summerfield. John Higginson of the KU Medical School will speak on "Cancer Research." Victor Pankey, 18, and Gilbert Ferrey, 20, both of Tustin, Calif. arrived at Los Angeles International Airport last night aboard a jet airliner from Berlin via London. The two were jailed for trying to smuggle a girl they had known for only five hours into the West in their small car while touring Europe last summer. They were released Monday from their two-year sentences. Navy Group Meets Tonight Asked why they risked the trouble Gale R. Adkins, assistant professor of speech and journalism, has been appointed to the advisory committee of the National Tape Recording Service. They said they believed the girl got a sentence of about a year. Neither intended immediately to try to contact her. The National Tape Recording Service is sponsored by a department of the National Educational Association in cooperation with the National Association of Educational Broadcasters and the University of Colorado. Prof. Adkins is one of three NAEB representatives on the advisory committee. Adkins Named to Committee 'Problems in Korea Current Events Topic Felix Moos, instructor in sociology and anthropology and a member of the East Asian Studies Group, will speak on "Problems in Korea" at the Current Events Forum at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Music Room. Free coffee will be served. NEW YORK —(UPI)— Going to bed isn't always a snap for tots, says the National Baby Care Council. Small children rarely know when they're tired. Even when obviously exhausted, many do not recognize that sleep will make them feel better. To them, going to bed means being separated from grownups and fun. Parents who understand this, the Council said, are better able to help baby accept a snooke as a "must." Pizza Roberto's Block North of Student Uni Lunch Now serving hamburgers in evenings except Sunday Free Delivery on Campus Kansan Want Ads Get Results SELL YOUR USED BOOKS When you finish your exams, sell us those used books you no longer need that have been readopted for next semester. We will buy those titles the University has advised us will be used again during Spring Semester,1962 Monday thru Saturday, Jan.22-27 KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 18, 1962 Big Eight Squads Study for Finals Two more conference games remain to be played before all Big Eight basketball squads take a two week break to prepare for and take final examinations. There won't be much rest afterwards as the teams have only a week to prepare for their gruelling February schedule. Saturday, the Nebraska Cornhuskers travel to Ames, Iowa to take on fifth-place Iowa State. Tonight the Kansas State Wildcats, currently tied with Nebraska and Oklahoma for second place, meet last place Missouri, which was given a 65-54 shellacking by the Kansas Hawkwaters. Saturday. One thing has been established after two weeks of conference play; it's not going to be a cake-walk for Kansas State, as predicted by nearly everyone before the season began. The Wildcats have yet to show any degree of consistency. They were impressive against the Jayhawkers, but played poorly in their 50-44 win over crippled Oklahoma State. Although the Wildcats are averaging 69 points per game, Coach Tex Winter was not pleased with their offensive showing Saturday. "Our offense didn't click against Oklahoma State, although we worked the ball well and the boys played good defensive ball. We need to improve on our offense," he said. Ken Charlton of Colorado is the Big Eight's leading scorer through Saturday's games with a 23.5 average Nolen Ellison moved into second place with his 28 point performance Saturday. The junior guard is averaging 19.0, one ahead of back-line mate Jerry Gardner with 18.0. Nebraska's Darryl Petsch is fourth with 16.3 and Kansas State's Mike Wroblewski and Missouri's Phil Doughty are tied for fifth with 15.3. Big Eight Standings Team W L Pts Op Colorado 3 0 133 117 Nebraska 2 1 182 191 Oklahoma 2 1 175 158 Kansas State 2 1 181 164 Iowa State 1 2 96 105 Oklahoma State 1 2 158 154 Kansas 1 2 177 193 Missouri 0 3 163 193 Frosh Harriers Are Third, Fifth The Track and Field Newsletter has announced that the KU freshman cross-country team's times were fast enough to place it third in the North American three-mile competition and fifth in the freshman-junior college two-mile competition. Herald Hadley, winner of the most outstanding freshman cross-country runner award, finished ninth in individual two-mile competition. Hadley's 9:30.8 inched him ahead of Kansas State's Carl Hodges who placed tenth with 9:31.4. Southern Illinois' Bill Cornell posted the top time of 9:11.4. The Kansas squad was composed of Hadley, Bill Cottle, Gary Janzen, Gary Ace and Jack Connell. The Kansas three-mile time was 78:36.6. It's two-mile clocking was 48:36.9. Sports in Brief Compiled from United Press International MIAMI BEACH. Fla.-The NCAA Football Rules Committee which wound up its three-day annual meeting last night has announced there will be four changes in the rules of college football next fall- all but one of them minor--but there will be no change in the substitution rule. About the only rule change which might materially alter football strategy next fall is one which will permit punting teams to down a kick within their opponents' 10-yard line. WICHTIA, Kans. — Richard Dean Pryor, 31, yesterday was named backfield coach at Wichita University. Pryor was hired by newly-appointed football coach Marcelino Huerta. The new backfield mentor was head football and track coach at Colfeyville, Kan., Junior College and tutored his gridders to a 9-2 record the past season. His teams won state track championships in 1959, 1960 and 1961. In 1960, Coffeyville Junior College was the national junior college track titlist. LOS ANGELES, Calif. — The odds are darn good — especially with Elgin Baylor in the Army — that when Wilt Chamberlain drops in 62 points in a game no one in the National Basketball Association is going to outscore him that night. But the odds didn't hold true last night. Jerry West, only a second-year - HOT SPUDNUTS - at 12 noon — 6 p.m. — 9 p.m. SPUDNUT SHOP 1422 W. 23rd Typewriters sales-service-rentals Olympia Portables Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 New & Used Now Available 1962 MGA 1600 MK-II Black disc rdstr. SPORTS CARS 1962 MGA 1600 MK-II Red wire drstr. 1962 MG Midget Blue deluxe 1962 MG Midget Black deluxe 1962 MG Midget White Dlx. Demo. 1960 Jaguar YK 150 Blue, chrome wire wheels 1960 Pontiac Spt. Cpe. 348 HP - 4 speed 1959 MGA 1500 White disc rdstr. JAGUAR XK-E 1960 Renault Dauphine 1960 Renault Dauphine 1955 Austin Healey 100 Coming Soon British Motors "WHEN NO IMPORTED CARS IS FORSARED" Jazz Musicians Interested in Performing in Public Jam Session in Connection With SUA Jazz Forum Contact Tom Thompson at VI 3-2655 Folks never understand the folks they hate.-James Russell Lowell player — and a guard, no less — scored 63 to lead the Los Angeles Lakers over the determined New York Knickerbockers 129-121 at the Sports Arena in Los Angeles. Chamberlain got his 62 in leading Philadelphia to an overtime 130-130 win over the St. Louis Hawks at Detroit. Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana According to Barry Goldwater, 37 key Washington jobs are held by members of a "strange organization"—a leftist group that wields great power. In this week's Post, Senator Goldwater lashes out at left-wing extremists. And tells how their ideas play "right into the hands of the Kremlin." ot or olilom Washington riddled with leftists-says Goldwater Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. The Saturday Evening LOST JANE JUDY ROGERS NEW ON SALE JANUARY 20 ISSUE NOW ON SALE COMING SATURDAY! THE BUTTON-POPPINGEST COMEDY IN YEARS! Andy says... "This is the got-daridest funniest comedy ya' we did see. I saw her a lot of fun making it and you all are going to have fun when ya' see it!" ANDY GRIFFITH DEBBIE REYNOLDS ANDY GRITHM • DEDIE RENNOLDG with STEVE FORREST JULIET PROWSE THELMA RITTER 20th Century Fox presents "The SECOND TIME AROUND" in Cinemascope and COLOR FROM THE FIRST MINUTE THE LAUGHS START... YOU'LL KNOW YOU'LL WANT TO SEE IT A SECOND TIME AROUND! NO BULL! IT'S ALL FUN! Produced by Jack Cummings. Directed by Vincent Stevens. Screenplay by Oscar Saul and Leslie Don Timberline with STEVE FORREST JULIET PROWSE THELMA RITTER 20th Century Fox presents "The SECOND TIME AROUND" in Cinemascope and COLOR with STEVE FORREST JULIET PROWSE THELMA RITTER 20th Century Fox presents "The SECOND TIME AROUND" in cinemascope and ( FROM THE FIRST MINUTE THE LAUGHS START . YOU LL KNOW YOULL WANT TO SEE IT A SECOND TIME AROUND! NO BULL! IT'S ALL FUN! Produced by Jack Cummings. Directed by Vincent Shirmann. Screenplay by Oscar Soul and Evelyn Dan Hinterstein. TONITE & FRIDAY Elvis Presley in "BLUE HAWAII" GRANADA TREATRE ... Telephone VIKINS 3-5720 STARTING SUNDAY! THE ROMANTIC DITHER OF THE DECADE! PETER USTINOV SANDRA DEE JOHN GAVIN CO-STARRING AKIM TAMIROFF Romanoff and Juliet TECHNICOLOR NOW thru SATURDAY NOW thru SATURDAY "THE ROMAN SPRING OF MRS. STONE" VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VKMG 3-1085 day, 5 One day, 5 All a WOMAN'S Flap. Mon.. and Flint. RING - C of Student Sardonyx s Call Bob F M MAN'S GO FACT VER GERMANrates. Call BEVERAG cold. closed par- Plant, 350. COME AN served 1 Metsker, 7 PART TIN Shoe Co., H RN'S NE oral duty Contact 1 Cherry 2- Kansas. - Tyre - Fi co clu - Pe fo A Ha Help Wk CaII ViI HAFJ-LE ture, exwr. chorthan course, Gc Elmer U. HAU I way. Michiga Texaco GRANT Conn. — one birds, guinea suip INVISI woven arette repaire TR FIRS 746 HAPP Drive- shop 1921. pim. PERSO men's/ Mrs.' EXPE child home piece. Thursday. Jan. 18, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS sts- 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 Data Center on the day before publication is desired. per, 37 bld by anizana- wields Post, out at is how o the ening T ON SALE A GS 3-578 LOST 七 VOMAN'S WALLET: Gold with black and Flint. Reward: Call VI 3-7847-L19 TUTORING MAN'S GOLD WEDDING BAND. CONTACT VERNON HAYES, VI.3-3494, 1-14 RING — GOLD SIGNET RING. Vicinity of Student Union Bldg. Ring has Red Dardonyx stone with crest. Reward given. Call Bob Fitzsimmons VI 3-4050. 1-10 GERMAN TUTORING at reasonable rates. Call Patsy Burling at VI 3-8505. MISCELLANEOUS BEEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cream. Crushed ice in water repellent £25 paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. Plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI if 3250 COME AND EAT home cooked meals Metsker, 721 Moe. ST, VI 3-4967. 1-19 PART TIME SALESMAN. Apply Redman Shoe Co., 815 Mass. 1-19 HELP WANTED RN.'s NEEDED: Full or part time. General duty any shift. Also operating room. Mail in enclosures. Blasingame office. Cherry 2-3344 or Cherry 2-2292, Ottawa, Kansas. tt Hallmark Cards - Typing and shorthand required. - Five day week. Many company paid benefits including medical insurance. MG 3-1065 - Permanent position for experienced secretary Lawrence, Kansas - Apply 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Help Wanted: Dishwasher, 7 days a week Help V-3-7810 or come to 1235 Oread. t u Hallmark Cards HALF-TIME SECRETARY. Prefer mature, experienced worker. General office work. Should be able to spell, take shorthand dictation, and type. Must have at least civil service Good pay. No novice need apply. Elmer F. Betn. 108 Flint Hail. tt BUSINESS SERVICES U. HAU TRAILERS for rent. Local or a way. Barnes Rental Service, 7th & Michigan. Call VI 2-0401 or Rikin Texaco service, 2447 W. 6th, VI 3-199 1-158 GRANTS Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Hamsters one stop -- save time and money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chomleons, turtles, etc. etc. plus complete items. pet supplies, tf INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re- invene so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf Complete HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grants Drive-In Pet Center — most complete shop in the midwest — Pet phone VI 2- 135-806-7400 service. Open 8 to 6 tue- mon weekdays. Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. VI 3-0152 PERSONALIZED IRONING & bundle washing, also alterations on men's & women's clothing. All work guaranteed. M ears, Earl Shaw, 308 N. 8th. 2-5 EXPERIENCED MOTHER — would like child to care for 3, or 4 yrs, old. in her home. Also would like ironing, 15c per piece. 340 Indiana. VI 2-3473. tf I WILL DO IRONING in my home. My house to 110 N. J. Call VI 2-2467 or visit www.mydesign.com 1-19 WILL BABY SIT in my home, 15 blk phone VI 3-2264. 100 per day, referrer 2-12 TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange. 735 Mass., V1 3- 3644. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mance 93%; Mass. Calf VI 3-5263. Ola Smith 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. tjclub.com ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-1651, or 921 Miss. tt WANTED — BABYSITTING. Law student's wife wishes to baby-sit by day or week. Home adjacent to campus. Call VI 3-1846. 1-22 FOR RENT NICELY FURNISHED 3 room apartment. Priv. entr., bath. air room. Newly deco- nified near campus. $2.50 per month. Utilities paid. Available Feb. 1. Call V-1 7830. 4 ROOM FURNISHED house. Couple or teachers prefixed. Call V 3-8483-1-19 MEN'S SLEEPING rooms. 1 block from Call VI 5-3066 or see at Miss. ROOM FOR GRADUATE WOMEN 1245 Oread, Phone VI 3-1018 or VI 2-1538 FURNISHED APARTMENT for 3 boys 1 block from campus. Utilities paid. Washer & Dryer service available. Call VI 3-5777. 1-19 SMALL APT. 1/3 block from campus. Well furnished, living-bedroom, kitchen, bath. To 1 or 2 graduate girls. Reasonable rent. For appointment call V 3-6969. 1-19 SMALL HOUSE — Living - bedroom, kitchen, shower bath, completely fur- ried, furnished, classman. $45 per month. See between 5-7 p.m. at 1023% Vermont, rear. 1-19 Park Plaza South Apartments Are you satisfied where you now live? Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking Central Air Conditioning We will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 2-8253 Office — 1912 W, 25th Lawrence's Only Garden Apartments We will pay local moving expenses FOR RENT, AVAILABLE FEB. 1. 3 room furnished basement apartment. Private bath and entrance. 1400 Ohio. Mrs. E. W. Westgate, 1400 Ohio. 1-19 FURKISHED APARTMENT for one economy minded student. $30 per month includes kitchen and utilities. 1045 Tenn. Call VI 2-3251. 1-19 ROOMS FOR MEN: ½ block from Union. Available. Floor. 1st. One single and 1 double room. Quiet. Call VI 3-4092 or call at 1301 La. ff BOARD & ROOM, $55 a month. VI 3- 4385. 1-19 FOR GRADUATE WOMAN or University employed. Attractive 2 room apartment, completely furnished, 1st floor, next to the Union building, $47 per month. For appointment call VI 2-3683 between 5-8 p.m. 1-19 TIRED OF LIVING IN AN APT? Two bedroom house for rent, good location, very efficient. Call VI 3-0554 after 7 p.m. 2.6 SENIOR MEN. Beauti- furnished apartments. Ideal study conditions call VI 3-8534. 1-19 APT. FOR RENT: Furnished, bills paid, or small family 4 rooms 3-12455 ROOM FOR RENT to upperclassmen for second semester. Call VI 3-0256. 1-19 1 SINGLE ROOM available. Linen furnished weekly. 1328 Ohio. $20. 1-19 LARGE SINGLE OR DOUBLE room with cooking privileges and refrigerator. Near KU and downtown. Available Feb. 1. Phone VI 3-9027 after 5. 2-5 INTERNATIONAL HOUSE. large sleeping rooms for boys. 3 blocks from Union. Call VI 3-7642 after 5 or on weekends. 1-19 APARTMENTS FOR RENT at Moody Apartment House. 3 rooms furnished & priv. bath. CLI V1-3182 or VI 3-6103. Vacancy for male student. An apartment one block from Union. Also room for two. Private bath and entrance. Ph. VI 3-6723. 1-19 For Rent To Graduate Women: 2 rooms, Phone VI 3-3105, lhens 1-198 VACANT SINGLE ROOM for male student. Shower bath, ref., & tele. Two blocks from campus. $30 per month. 1315 Tenn., VI .3-3390. 2-5 3 ROOM FURNISHED apt. Private bath 4 ROOM 5 ROOM 6 ROOM 7 ROOM RL. Available Jan. 15. VI 3-5968. 1-19 LARGE LOVELY SLEEPING room in new home. 2 beds furnished and room furnished. $15 per month includes everything, 5 rooms to campus. Available VI.3-7830. 1-19 LEAVING FOR EUROPE completely to Sept. 1 Call VI 3-3278 1-19 PRIVATE ROOMS for rent at 901 Main, LANE. after 6 or on weekends. VI 3-8: 810 - 1-19 VACANCY IN FEBRUARY for young man in contemporary home. Home cooked supper - swimming pool. $65 per month. VI S-3635. tf SPLIT LEVEL or semi basement apartment — 2½ blocks from Union. 3 rooms completely furnished. Shower bath, private vate room, off street. $48 per month. 27 rooms or two upper classman or graduate student. $48 per month. For appt. call VI 3-6896. 1-19 FURNISHED APARTMENT: Private bath, within walking dist. of KU. Suitable for adults during noon hour or between 5 and 6 p.m. LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2, rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 971f. 2 MAN APT. $55 a month. Quiet room. 6 MAN APT. $70 a month. Quiet room. Cvi I 3-7370, ask for treasurer. Cvi I 3-7370, ask for treasurer. DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. LARGE FURNISHED apartment. east side, utilities付费, $50. Pay VI 3-6294. Nylon Ski We Have Just Received a New Shipment of the popular Nylon Slip-over Parkas PARKAS TYPING Raffelock's SURPLUS STORE 820 Mass. TYING, paper tests, 5 years ex- cellence, secretary, Reasonable赔 Call VI 2-2305. 2-7 MILKLEN'S "S.O.S." — Now at two 102.5, then 102.20 or 102.40? 167 Lawrence Ave. & 1021½ Mass. Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker, Call VI 3-2001. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscripts, research articles. Great accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 RL. VI. 3-7485. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing in my home — call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lou Gehlbach. tt HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng thesis, reports accurately. Standard tests. Ms. Copton, 1391 Vt. apt. 3. Sa. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Resonnatee. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 19th. V1 2t-168. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 19th. V1 2t-168. Typing by experienced typist, electric typewriter, reasonable rates. VI 1-5283 1-18 Experienced typist would like typing in asian languages on reasonable rates. Call VI T-3-2651 any time. TYPIST. experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tf FROM TERM TO TERM a paper, needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service. SI37 B Wrexson, Mission, HE 2-7718. Eves or Sat. 2-2186. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8370 TYPING: Experimented typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, books, research reports. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. M. Edlowney. Ph. VI 3-5686. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. on electric typewriter. Mrs. Amos Russell- 1511 W 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. tf FOR SALE EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt BASS FIDLDLE, new strings -- $85. Call VI 3-5078, ask for Ed Eubank. 1-19 ELECTRIC GUITAR, strap, case and mu- tiple for it. $35. Call D. Johnson. VI-10 5436 GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New and used guns, and ammo. Handguns, rifles, shotguns, rifle batches, week 32, Astra (French) $24.95. See at 1040 Tenn. (in rear). Call VI 3-7001. 2-6 '59 CHEVY. IMPALA. 280 hp. Four speed transmission, posttraction rear end, black, 2-door hardtop. $1600. Call VI 3-8504. NEW SNOW TIRE FINAL, CLOSE OUT. 600-113 tills, now $139.00, whites $1 more. Other sizes at close out prices. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. Free installation, come through city parking lot behind Kress store. 2-13 GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I. Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDIO STUDIES are now comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752. Free delivery. 5 ROOM HOUSE, furnished for students. Boys preferred. Call VI 3-1966. 1-19 COZY MOBIL HOME for sale. 1955 Safecy Cavalira CV 3-9571 after 5. 1-19 1-19 RCA 3/4 ton air-cond. $50. Philco 3/4 ton air-cond. $85. Both in good con- tion. Very good 1980 2 door Chev. $150. G.E. electric range, $75. VI 30- 8844. 1959 OPEL REKORD, 2 dr. radio & heater. Good condition with 2 near new snowtires included. Low mileage. See or call at Nel's & Buck's Garage. 23rd and Louisiana. VI 3-4081. After 5 p.m. call VI 3-2941. OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, services, rentals. at lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI jf NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225. Portable typewriters, $49.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. Washable with reasonable rates. Business Machines Co., 912 Mass. Phone VI 3-0151 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. 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 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. USED MAGNAVOX 21" table model TV HI- FJ-$40, Pettittgell D22. Tass. 325 Mass. t TRANSPORTATION Fraternity Jewelry GIRL WANTS RIDE weekdays from Stouffer Place to K.C., Mo., in vicinity of 35th & Main starting Feb. 5. Will share expenses. Call VI 3-1034. 1-19 Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER PIZZA HUT 14 & Tenn. Murphy Just Off the Hill proudly extends the chain of Pizza Huts which bring you the FINEST PIZZA in the 5-state Midwest area Fast Delivery - VI 3-0563 Sun-Thur: 4-12 Fri & Sat 4-1 P PIZZA HUT Wichita - Tulsa - Salina - Emporia - Kansas City - Tempe Norman - Topeka - Lawrence - Great Bend - Hutchinson Manhattan - Columbus - Denver - Carthage 10. 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Jan. 18, 1962 Hill Activities Regulated- (Continued from page 1) student rights." The editorial said, "This could be used to give the ASC arbitrary power over the Kansan's policies." A more recent example of major legislation was wa. the Reserved Athletic Seating bill adopted last spring. The Council passed the plan after indirect pressure from the administration. James Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, attended the meetings and said indirectly that the plan would be put into effect by the administration if the Council defeated it. THE COUNCIL defeated part of the plan but passed the bill in the end. Some Council members felt they might as well have some control over the plan; if the administration put the plan into effect, the Council would have no control over it. Also, Council members did not feel reserve seating was necessary at basketball games. They defeated the section which would have financed a new intramural gymnasium with revenue received from the sale of the tickets, and they cut out reserve seating at basketball games. According to the Constitution, the Council has no power to override a veto of the Chancellor. The Constitution does say that if the Chancellor does not return the bill with a message of veto within two weeks, not including time spent out of town, the bill is considered approved. IN 1950, the Kansan asked students whether the Chancellor should have veto power over the All Student Council. Carol Crow said, "Yes, I think the Chancellor should have the power to veto the All Student Council bills. So many of the proposals that are put before the ASC are so trivial and unimportant, and so many of them would be passed if there were no one to check on them, that I am glad there is a power of veto. "Besides, I'm sure that Chancellor Malott must have good reasons for vetting the bills," she added. "Students are not as likely to use good judgment in matters concerning themselves as an adult is." MRS, SHIRLEY BANNIGAN, a special student, opposed the issue, saying, "With the absolute veto that is now in effect, the Council is a farce and 'rubber stamp' instead of representing the will of the student body as it should. Any absolute veto is dictatorial and has no place in a democratic institution. If the Chancellor is to retain this power, let's dissolve the Student Council and stop being hypocritical. Of course, the junior politicos will be frustrated, but I think the school will be better off." Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil POLICY The seething Arab world The Saturday Evening The Arab nations are hotbeds of hatred. They hate Israel, The U.S. And even each other. In this week's Post, you'll read a frightening report on the Middle East. You'll learn why America has become the Arab's scapegoat. And what we can do to keep this poison from spreading. The Saturday Evening POST JANUARY 20 ISSUE NOW ON BALE Therefore, the Council is more or less a regulating body for student activities which prepares a budget for several student organizations receiving funds from it. The Councils in the last few years have continued to regulate extra-curricular activities but also have tried to pass more constructive measures to benefit the students. To Read T. S. Eliot Poems by T. S. Eliot will be read by The Reverend Roy S. Turner, Episcopal chaplain, in today's Poetry Hour at 4 p.m. in the Music Room of the Kansas Union. Coffee will be served. College to Offer Greek A course in beginning Greek will be offered for the first time in the spring semester at KU starting in the 1962 spring semester. It will be a five-hour course taught by Dr. Austin Lashbrook, assistant professor of classics. The course will count toward the 16-hour language requirement. Emporia Students' Enrollment - (Continued from page 1) subsequent "oppression" of student and faculty expression. The students who have received letters from Dr. Myers requesting that they attend another school are the following: Keith Barnett, John Beard, Rod Borlase, Rod Gibson, Mike Klapak, John Settle, Holly Van Horne, and Eugene Warren. In a development yesterday, William L. White, editor and publisher of the Emporia Gazette, was hanged in effigy, apparently as a result of the extensive coverage the Gazette has given to the Butterfield controversy and subsequent events. THE DUMMY WAS SUSPENDED from a tree in front of the Gazette office. On it was a placard bearing the words, "William L. White." Mr. White has been in New York on business since Dec. 20. The source in Emporia said this afternoon he understands there may be disagreement among the school's administrators on how to deal with the eight students to whom the letters were sent. not letting the students re-enroll," he said. "Apparently Myers and Arrasmith (Hermon, dean of students) are adamant in their intention of "BUT I UNDERSTAND THAT Laughlin (Joseph R., interim president) may want to give the students another chance. He wants the letters to constitute a warning. But as far as I know he has not committed himself." This source — who asked that he not be named — and Miss Graffe both have said that the eight students are of generally high academic standing. The source said that at least half of them have been on the honor roll. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Last month, when this reporter asked Laughlin, Arrasmith and Elvin D. Perkins, chairman of the board, why the Rev. Mr. Butterfield had been fired, they refused to comment. Perkins said: "The board and I consider that the case of Butterfield is closed." Ellert Dahl's "Merlin of Glastonbury" had its premier before 72 persons but has steadily gained popularity so that it stands today as one of the monuments to that familiar failing, late-blooming popular taste. M. D. Atskots BOWLING is FUN! Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 32 AUTOMATIC LANES KING SIZE Winston Winston FILTER · CIGARETTES FINER FILTER OR FINER FLAVOR It's what's up front that counts FILTER-BLEND gives you the real flavor you want in a cigarette. Rich golden tobaccos specially selected and specially processed for filter smoking that's Filter-Blend. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N.C. 59tl PI FI The electo to tha Elec contrence in th "Th ballot of the The candi WINSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should! TH notic mem silen copy he d Bu facul sista expe both Daily hansan Friday, Jan. 19, 1962 59th Year, No. 74 Prof. Harry Shaffer Fights Intolerance By Dennis Farney The speaker was comparing the electoral system of the Soviet Union to that of the United States. Elections in the Soviet Union are controlled, he was telling his audience of faculty members. Elections in the United States are free. LAWRENCE, KANSAS "There is only one name on the ballot in Russia," he said, "the name of the Communist Party's candidate. The voter who writes in his own candidate is rare." THE SPEAKER continued. If he noticed the gray-haired faculty member with the red-rimmed glasses silently taking notes — sometimes copying parts of his talk verbatim— he did not appear disturbed. he did not appear. But later, the speaker met the faculty member—Harry Shaffer, assistant professor of economics. The experience, for him, proved to be both disconcerting and enlightening. After the talk, Prof. Shaffer raised his hand. "A while ago," he began, "you spoke of the secret ballot provision in the Russian constitution as being unreal. How about voting in Mississippi? Is the voting there carried on as it is guaranteed in our constitution?" The speaker, visibly embarrassed, admitted that some voting discrimination does exist in the United States. Then he listened to a lecture. Comparing the actual practice in one country (Russia) with the theoretical practice in another (the United States), he learned from Prof. Shaffer, is not the way to impart unbiased knowledge. "I think that what you have in mind during your lectures is to condition your audience so that they reject the Russian constitution and accept ours," Prof. Shaffer told him. "But should we not have faith that the people will make the right choice if we present them with the objective truth? "WE IN THE UNITED STATES today realize that there is a difference between our constitution on paper and the way it is applied—just as there is a difference in the Russian constitution..." Surprised as he was by this opposition to what he later admitted was a one-sided speech, the speaker might have been even more surprised had he known that his lecturer was not a native-born American, but instead a 1940 immigrant to this country from Austria. country. But had the speaker known more of Prof. Shaffer's background, he might have prepared himself for a question about Negro voting rights in the South. He would have known that Prof. Shaffer resigned from the faculty of the University of Alabama in 1956, after the Alabama Board of Regents dismissed Antherine Lucy, the first Negro student to attend classes at that university. RECENTLY PROF. SHAFFER sat in his crowded office in Summerfield Hall and traced the developments PETER G. BARRIE Harry Shaffer leading to his immigration to this country and his coming to KU in 1956. He placed both hands behind his head and leaned back in his swivel chair, reminiscing. "I'm Jewish, you know," he said. In 1940 the Jews who could get out of Austria were the lucky ones. "I was one of the first Jews to register for immigration to the United States after Hitler came to power. After I registered, I went to Italy to wait my turn." THE WAIT LASTED about three years, he said, with the time being divided between Italy, France and Cuba. "In France I sold business supplies," he said, "carbon papers and pencils, mostly. In Cuba I taught Spanish to other refugees. I didn't know a word of it when I stepped Having only the equivalent of a high school education, Prof. Shaffer tried a variety of means of supporting himself during this period. Skillman Asks No Campus Driving Students are urged not to drive on Jayhawk Blvd. or its adjoining streets tomorrow and Sunday unless it is absolutely necessary, Joe Skillman, campus police chief said today. He explained that crews will be out with snow plows and other equipment those days and that cars would add unnecessary hazards. More Snow Covers KU On the eve of final examinations, students had to face more cold, more wind and more snow again to hear the bitter-sweet parting words of teachers. And it was cold! Temperatures have dropped to two degrees in the wake of yesterday's storm. Another eight inches of snow sifted onto Mt. Oread's icecap during the storm. There is now an accumulation of nearly 20 inches on the Hill for the month. Fair to partly cloudy here this afternoon. Occasional snow beginning extreme West tonight and spreading over West and Central Saturday. Not much temperature change. Low tonight zero to 5 below. High Saturday 10 Northwest to 20 Southeast. No immediate relief is in sight for the first three days of final week, either. Little more snow is expected but the temperature, after an expected slight rise Sunday, is due to go perverse again. Down—in other words—right back to where it is now. In Kansas City, Kan., and Mo., they've turned smart. After a deluge of 14 inches of the white stuff they've closed nearly all schools. They've got nearly two feet of snow lying around in there. They caught it in Wichita, too. After a fall of a foot of new snow they are shoveling out of a 17 inch accumulation. This has broken a 12-inch record of 53 years standing. The word from the Highway Patrol is that roads throughout most of the state are hazardous but that maintenance crews have managed to keep major routes open. This is the last issue of the University Daily Kansan for this semester. The Kansan will resume publication Monday, Feb. 5. Today's Kansan Last Issue of Semester Gizenga's Prison Escape Is Likely LEOPOLDVILLE—(UPI)—United Nations officials attempted today to ascertain the whereabouts of leftist leader Antoine Gizenga, who was ousted from the Central Congo government and placed under house arrest in Stanleyville. They said they had had no contact with him since Wednesday. Doubts about Gizenga's whereabouts sprang from reports saying his Congolese captors had disappeared from around his house in Stanleyville without explanation. There was speculation Gizenga might have escaped, that his Congolese guards might have taken him to a nearby army camp or simply that they might have moved inside the house. maa's cousin and ally, Col. Joseph Pakassa, was reported at ed Nations sent a plane over Kindu and it sighted an unidentified twin-engine Beechcraft on the runway, leading to speculation that Gizenga might have flown to meet Pakassa. THERE WAS NO FURTHER word from Albertville, in northern Katanga, where Central Congolese troops were reported to have mutinied. A Swedish interpreter for two Red Cross officials arrived in Elisabethville yesterday and said the soldiers had started shooting in the streets. Another report said that their officers had shot seven of the soldiers for refusing to obey orders. Pakassa is the man whose troops are believed responsible for the New Year's Day massacre of 19 Roman Catholic missionaries at Kongolo and the slaughter of 13 Italian U.N. flyers at Kivu last year. Kivu is in Kindu Province. HOWEVER, THE Red Cross, the Congolese government and U.N. officials were discussing sending a commission there to investigate the reported torture, slaying and dismemberment of the priests. Earlier, a U.N. source had said the world organization was leaving the investigation in the hands of the Congolese government. Tshombe protested to Central Government Premier Cyrille Adoula yesterday against a reported attack by Congolese troops on Katangese Gendarmerie stationed in the Kisele region of Northern Katanga. There was speculation the Katanga president might be laying the groundwork for another meeting with Adoula to finally unify the faction-torn Congo. Adoula has said he might appoint a Katanga official to succeed Gizenga as vice premier in the central government. It also was thought Tshombe might want to report on why the Katanga assembly has not yet ratified the Kitona agreement, which was aimed at ending the mineral-rich province's secession. $32,000 In Gifts Given Museum A total of $32,000 in gifts has been given to the KU Art Museum this semester. Recent art gifts have been evaluated by New York appraisers at approximately $30,000. The 1961 senior class gave $2,000 toward the purchase of "Avenger," by Seymour Linton. Lipton. A group of paintings given to the museum by John Latshaw, Kansas City, are of major importance, Marilyn Stockstad, director of the museum said. She added that they are important because modern French paintings are difficult to acquire. Other gifts came from the National Academy of Design, New York, from Joseph Cantor, Carmel, Indiana, and from Hugo Emmerich. The Latsaw collection included: a contemporary French oil, "Place Pigalle" by Albert Andre; "Chateau Abandonne" also a modern French oil by Maurice Prianchon; a contemporary watercolor, "Paysage de la Marne" by Hippolyte Petitjean, and an 18th century oil, "Le Comte de Brionne" by Nicholas Bernard Lenicie. The National Academy of Design gift was a collection of drawings by Kenyon Cox and a landscape oil by William Stanley Haseltine. Mr. Cantor's gift was two contemporary Cuban paintings, "Cathedral" by Rene Portocarrero and "Composition" by Paul Milian. Mr. Emmerich gave a 16th century Italian piece by Giavanni Martini de Udine, "St. Joseph." Miss Stockstad said that the piece is one of a pair and that the companion piece is already in the museum's collection. More ASC Power Is Answer to Student Apathy (Editor's Note: This is the last article in a four part series on campus politics at KU.) By Jerry Musil At and before every election, party leaders discuss means of increasing student interest and participation in student government. But they have not succeeded to any great extent. Student leaders say if they had more power and more control in student affairs, more students would be interested. This question was asked of the faculty, administration and student political leaders. LAURENCE C. WOODRUFF, dean of students, said giving more power to student government could be one way to increase interest among students. "But, student government should handle all the responsibilities it now has before trying to gain more," he said. He said that some committees and laws of student government are not functioning or have not been used since they were passed. since they were passed "The All Student Council (ASC) passed a bill a few years ago to have student organizations register their charters with it. An organization has yet to register under the provisions of this bill," he said. HE SAID ONE PROBLEM in student government is the lack of continuity. A student leader usually has two years of work and leadership in campus affairs which restricts the amount of experience, interest and desire he brings to the job. desire he brings to John Grumm, associate professor of political science, said more power would very likely increase student interest. He said students here feel campus politics does not affect them. He said the University of California's student government has complete control of the union building, the football stadium and the athletic program. "Of course, they are a licensed corporation under California law and have a permanent secretary which gives them someone who carries on during changes of leaders," he added. HE SAID STUDENT INTEREST was higher at California than at KU, but not as high as it could be. "One reason for the lack of interest there is the administration will not allow campaigning on campus." When asked why the students at California have such power, Prof. Grumm said the administration did not want to bother with it and turned it over to the students. He said campus politics is good, practical experience in the workings of a party, conducting a campaign and elections, and the legislative process. TED CHILDERS, Wamego senior and president of Vox Populi, said the problem with student government is very characteristic of KU. "The ASC is great for legislating bills on paper, but putting them into effect is another thing. The Council establishes a committee and says the problem is solved when the committee is named." he said. committee is thankful He said another problem could be traced back in the history of campus politics. He said the problem is taking care of itself. If student government continues going at the same level for two more years, the Council can then pressure for more responsibility, he said. "QUITE OFTEN the important matters which could have been handled, were not because students lacked confidence. The last ten years have been a farce," he said. "The initiative must come from the Council," he said. the Council, he said. He said the split elections at KU tend to magnify the problem of student apathy. The political parties want ideas and issues, and ten-point platforms. They come up with five concrete issues and have to write in five trivial ones, he said. In discussing the Chancellor's authority of absolute veto over any ASC or student body decisions, Tom Hardy, Holsington junior and cochairman of the University Party said he was doubtful of the need for such a power. "The ASC recently has given the veto to the student body president," he said, "but the Council can override it with a three-fourths (?) majority. But, of course, they can't override the Chancellor's veto." HE SAID THE CHANCELLOR and the student body president could possibly work together. If both agree a bill should be vetoed, the Council could not override, but if one of them disagrees, the Council could override, he said. (Continued on page 12) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 19, 1962 A Busy Semester Final examinations are almost here. Another semester, with all its activities and difficulties, is drawing to a close. The activities this semester have been many and varied. They range from the formation of a chapter of Young Americans for Freedom and the disaffiliation with the National Student Association in the political arena to the controversy over KU's World Crisis Day. Discrimination continued to be an issue and many of KU's Negro students took part in a protest march to Strong Hall to present a petition asking that discriminatory renters be dropped from the university housing list. KU's budget was checked by Gov. Anderson and he made substantial cuts from the funds requested by the university administration. Funds for the traffic control plan that was designed to regulate traffic entering the campus were eliminated. A new class schedule plan was decided on by the university and this fall classes will begin meeting on the half hour, beginning at 7:30 in the morning. It will be interesting to see how many of the 7:30 classes can muster a majority of their students at that hour in the morning. There were many other changes and events, both large and small. Activity will be virtually suspended except for final examinations during the next week, but the second semester will bring new issues and a renewal of some of the old ones. —William H. Mullins laughing face By Richard Currie theater A superbly played farce opened in the Experimental Theatre last weekend. "Purple Dust" by Sean O'Casey is the comedy, and it slashes hilariously at the British readiness to bow to tradition. O'Casey slaps his Irish folk for a similar tendency, but finds in them the hope and lilt which distinguishes these irrepressible people. m Two British gentlemen go to Clune na Gerra, Ireland to renovate Tudor Manor, as they call it. Their Englishness (Basil who passed through Oxford, says, "The people here (Fish) are helpless, superstitious and arrogant") is constantly ridiculed by O'Cassey through the Irish charm, especially that of Philip C'Demusey, played by Robert Shoffner, Charlottesville, Va., sophomore. 'ODEMPEY REPRESENTS the grand, gloriously legendary past of Ireland. He is well-versed in its mythology and hotly resents the imperiousness of the Englishmen who disdain him. His words (God himself is the Englishman's butler) bite sarcastically. Yet in his hostility O'Dempey offers life and love to those who benefit from the past, not sink in it. Cyril Poges and Basil Stokes, the ancient Englishmen, played by Janni Lindbaeck, Oslo, Norway, graduate student, and James Heaton, Ealdwin special student, are O'Dempsey's opposites. While Cyril intends "Efficiency, efficiency, that's English, I'm English!" Basil lectures with a dissertation on a primrose, designed to demonstrate his tedious scholasticism. Both are hilarious clowns and their every act is satirized with accuracy and wit. But the joy and worth of "Purple Dust," for this reviewer, lies in the magnificent dialogue it employs. In this, Shoffner in his first KU performance, excels. His control and mastery of the Irish tongue speak virtuosity. The words flow lovingly from his mouth to delight the ear. Devotion to the wonders of the Irish tongue is in the play, and it is brilliantly demonstrated in a stunning soliloquy about Ireland's historic hatred of the English. The same is done by O'Killigian, the construction man, played by Robert Bettcher, with Basil's mistress, Avril, played by Karen Pyles, Wichita graduate student. But here the run of the hills of Irish lore is more like the descent of a subway train; it fades away because of weak characterization. Miss Pyles tries but it seems pretended and with little meaning. Bettcher lacks the buoyancy to make O'Killigian real. SHOFFNER IS ADEQUATELY matched by Souhuan, Cyril's mistress, played by Julia Callahan. Souhuan is entranced by O'Dempsey's magic. He leads her away from the pomposity of the English cobwebs, which she denounces "English yare indeed, God help you." LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler TEST BARRY HAYES On Religious Indoctrination There is widespread concern among foreign students in the United States that, generally with the kindest intentions, Americans attempt to indoctrinate them in matters of religion. This is reported by Dr. Richard C. Mills, executive director of the International Student Center in Los Angeles, in the current issue of the newsletter of the National Association of Foreign Student Advisers. *MASTERFULLY WRITTEN PROFESSOR SNARF—ITS SELLOD MY PLEIAGUE TO SEE A TEST WITH SO MANY ANIMOUS QUESTIONS* Foreign students have registered surprise over what they consider an American tendency to fail to distinguish between secular beliefs and religious faith. As an example, Dr. Mills cites the frequent popular equation of the atheist with the enemy of the state. Althouh many Americans clearly abstain from any such indecision attempts, he adds "the fact remains that with our Judeo-Christian heritage, and our growing tendency to interchange religious convictions with political theory, we may all be guilty sooner or later of making demands upon our friends and acquaintances." In extreme cases, he reports, American hosts have tried to dissuade Indians from maintaining their religious vegetarianism. Cordiality Cited Dr. Mills believes that the most serious objection to the combination of lack of understanding and an attempt at even friendly indecision is that it breaks down communication between the Americans and their visitors. He feels that such communication is best furthered by an understanding and acceptance of differences, not by an attempt to erase them. Ignorance is often as much a problem as zeal. The report quotes an Indian student in Los Angeles: "I feel quite at home here. People are quite cordial and they have great sympathy for foreign students. One thing I can say is that the Americans with whom I have talked about religion have quite preposterous notions about other religions." UNIVERSITY Dailu Hansan (From the Oct. 29, 1931, New York Times.) Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East Sooke New York, NY. Represented 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. University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became bweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Tom Tupper DEFS America Managing Editor Linda Swander, Fred Zimmerman, Asst. 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 An Editor's Farewell American news media today do not always present the truth in its purest form. This is not a mute cry. Officials, politicians and names in the news complain the loudest about news distortion. Oddly enough, it is these same officials and politicians that do the warping. Is press distortion a throwback to the days of the Spanish-American War and the gigantic New York one-man presses of Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst? Or is it perhaps an extension of the "jazz" journalism that characterized tabloids in the early twenties, climaxed by a full, front-page picture of the execution of a woman? MAYBE IT WOULD be best here to review the maze of complicated channels that a piece of news follows, according to the textbooks, before it reaches the public—from the news source, be it original or slightly abstracted from someone involved, to the reporter, to the re-write man, to the editor's pencil, to the mechanical department, to the proofreaders and finally to the front page or the man behind the microphone. In the days of the one-man press the distortion came most likely through the re-write man and the makeup department. The old-time editors directed distortion in order to sell papers. The racier they could make the news appear, the better the paper could sell. Competition was murder. But, through the years, paper after paper has sunk in overwhelming debt, and the one-man editors have abandoned ship. Papers are more often corporations today. No one man or several men have the power any longer to distort the news. There is no one man who can be bribed or duped by shady interest groups. No price is high enough to derail these multi-million dollar manufacturers. Newspaper executives of larger metropolitan dailies today tend to be as practical thinking and as coldly logical and objective as the executives of—oh, the Coca-Cola Bottling Co., for instance. Operating expenses are high and competition is mostly nil. The idea is to stay alive. There isn't time to play silly "yellow" games. NO, THE TEXTBOOKS have failed us in a way. They continue to ignore the most predominant figure in the modern news process—the publicity man. Herein lies the distortion of the news. If the truth be warped, it is most likely because the real truth is unavailable. Each and every day a flood of "public relations" mail crosses the desk of the Daily Kansan. But public relations are not what they used to be. Agencies used to ask for space; they used to ask editors to look into their subject matter or write for information. Now the material tells us not only what to print, but where to place it in the paper, how to set it in type and what kind of headline to use. "Flash" releases are issued about everything—in glowing terms. MOST OF IT is filed in the proverbial round file We are verbally told—by spokesmen—exactly what to print—without change. We are told that in covering a speech we should allow the speaker to change his text before it gets into print. We are told that we should give no public device a “bad” press—stretch it just a little bit. The Kansan generally goes a little bit further than what we're told, but not without trouble. You see, we're a funny lot over here. We honestly believe that journalism has some sort of future. We've been led to believe that the truth is more important than a "good" or "bad" press for our friends. We've learned to doubt the words of myriads of "spokesmen"; we've been taught to dig deep for the truth when it doesn't appear to be available. Often the truth must be covered for mere ethical reasons, yes—but that's our decision—no one else's. THIS TIDE TOWARD government by publicity is not a minor trend, but a nationally sweeping gloom. Think about it. How many times have you seen: "a spokesman for Fred Freeb told reporters today . . . ," or "according to informed Capitol Hill sources." Have you ever wondered how much the "spokesmen" have changed the facts—to avoid a "bad" press. And how many times do the names actually concerned in the news refuse to talk to the people through their news media—preferring instead to speak through their vociferous, verbose mouthpieces—those geniuses, well-educated in speaking a lot and saying nothing. Unfortunately, there are editors who are weakening under the barrage. BUT WOE BE the day that all editors succumb; woe be the day when the truth and the publicity blurb become confusingly blurred into one; woe be the day when history can be altered by a flick of the spokesmen's typewriters, for this will be the day when George Orwell's horrifying Ministry of Truth will be a reality. Most important of what we've been taught behind these ivy walls is the terrifying responsibility we take on as journalists—not to the "spokesman," not to the public relations directors, but to you—and you and you—the reader. Rest assured we'll try to continue to be responsible only to you long after we walk down from the Campanile. We'll dig, and dig and dig, trying our best to give you the pure truth. -Tom Turner Worth Repeating A small group of KU girls, mostly self-supporting, learned about people when they prepared a basket for a family recommended to them as a "needy" family. The girls made a real financial sacrifice to pack what they considered an excellent basket of food. When it was delivered by the grocer the woman who received it checked the fruit, meat and canned goods and said: "I didn't want all this junk. I wanted cake."—Ed Abels The Editor: Kent uary 1 some tions. poverty. one, will sc In that nately ageleess liberty States valid b tainly are not eighteen ples changi MET be ch limit compr still r believ ed the we s support of the a char tion, that sociali means Mr. Senat ting to "freee Mr. C. New polici what to co boski he is power mono to ot gain hand ernm Mr dents and have inate ual," has fuller capac IN geniur farm busir Labo eral thou- ment furth Cibo deve bure of B by world welle ices tioned men will mani polio argue of equate disa Friday, Jan. 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page THE PEOPLE letters to the editor minor any ters have themes though heird initors urned com- mical fi esket to re- d: "I day arred k of orge ivy -not ut to ty to own st to The Conservative Viewpoint Editor: Kenneth Ciboski's letter of January 10 most effectively points up some typical liberal misconceptions. We all wish to eliminate poverty from the lives of everyone, but redistribution of wealth will solve nobody's problem. In the same token, it is inordinately foolish to suggest that the ageless principles of individual liberty embodied in the United States Constitution are made invalid by the passage of time. Certainly the needs of people today are not the same as those of the eighteenth century. But principles cannot be altered to meet changing circumstance. METHODS NATURALLY can be changed, though there is a limit beyond which one cannot compromise one's methods and still remain true to principle. I believe we have most surely passed that limit when, for instance, we say that placing the support of education in the hands of the federal government is only a change in method or interpretation. Somehow I cannot believe that republicanism and welfare socialism are merely differing means to the same end. Mr. Ciboski is fond of charging Senator Goldwater with attempting to implement a philosophy of "freedom for the few." However, Mr. Ciboski seems to welcome the New Deal-Fair Deal-New Frontier policies of slavery for all. This is what Senator Goldwater is trying to combat. He is not, as Mr. Ciboski implies, a monopolis, since he is opposed to concentration of power anywhere. Huge business monopolies were indeed a menace to our freedom. But there is no gain in breaking them up only to hand the same power over to government. Mr. Ciboski says that "Presidents Wilson, Roosevelt, Truman and to some extent Eisonhower, have used their office...to eliminate restraints upon the individual," and that "their philosophy has furthered the opportunity for fuller development of individual capacities." IN MY OPINION, it is not lessening of restraint to put the farmers under a quota system, business under the thumb of Big Labor, and all the people in general under the thumb—benevolent though it may be—of Big Government. The only development, furthered by the programs Mr. Ciboski mentions, has been the development of bigger and more bureaucratic government. THE ONE CORRECT statement of Barry Goldwater's policy made by Mr. Ciboski is that "He is working to eliminate and to reduce welfare programs and social services and to increase Constitutional restriction on the government's power to tax." This policy will, of course, be rejected by many modern philosophers and political scientists, since they are arguing for the Marxian equality of condition, while Senator Goldwater maintains his belief in equality of opportunity. Their disapproval will never detract from Goldwater's greatness. As for the implied insult of comparing Manick Payton to Barry Goldwater, I am sure Mr. Payton regards it as a high compliment, and rightly so. Leanna Koehn Dodge City freshman A Student Speaks on Fees Editor: A situation exists, in the matter of assessment of fees, which leads to confusion and possible overpayment of fees by some students. The general information bulletin contains a statement on page 20 which leads one to believe that a decision of the KU Committee on Residency cannot be appealed. THIS IS not true. If a petition is turned down by reason of the committee's interpretation of the residency statute, the student can send a copy of the petition, including all the facts of the case, along with a letter of explanation, to Mr. Max Bickford, Secretary of the SOAP SOAP JONNY RICKER Kansas Board of Regents, who will refer it to the Attorney General for an opinion. A recent result of such an appeal is the following reinterpretation of the residency statute: The student entered KU as a resident, and neither was suspended nor left the university as a student. The Attorney General ruled that the student did not lose his status as a resident (as far as fees are concerned) even though his parents moved from the state while he was still a minor. Other students in this category should check with the registrar to see if a refund is due them. Robert R. Redding Lawrence senior and certified Kansas resident ... Thoughts on the KU International Club Editor: I was sorry to hear that some American students were so thoughtless as to capture three offices in the (International) club this last election. I was also sorry to hear that some foreign students feel that an American should not ever be a president of the KU International Club because an American would not know the problems or understand foreign students. I agree that no one group should dominate the KU International Relations Club, yet I feel that all should have equal opportunity to win any office for one semester, but not be permitted to run for the same office for at least four (4) semesters. I suggest also that the social committee have representation on it from all the countries represented on the KU campus—as it usually has. Remember the KU International Relations Club reflects to the campus the feelings of your and my countries' attitude toward world Government of Tomorrow. N. R. K. SUNILA Henry Cleaver Safest way to be sure . take out enough life insurance today. Lucky With Money! DWIGHT L. SICKLES See Insurance Building (opposite Post Office) Lawrence, Kansas Phone VI 3-5454 or VI 3-2150 NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Sound & Fury 8ffe Insurance • Group Insurance • Annuities • Neath Insurance • Pension Plans Sir: Like Confused, Man If there's anything I can't stand it's phonies. I mean it. You know the guys who think they're terrifically intelligent and parade their brains. They kill me. Like the other night we were sitting around and one guy starts in on me. "Who are you, really?" Well, for crissake, who am I? Your real name is Holden, isn't it? Boy, who would want a name like that. Not that you can do anything about it when you're just born, you know. But a guy's parents would have more sense than to give him a name like that. I mean I could stand a name like Bernard, or Oswald, or maybe even Herbert. Then he says, S. F. and laughs and shouts until I feel like giving him a poke. I wouldn't do it, but I felt like it, because he starts shouting J. D. at me, and I may be a real wastrel—I think I am, if you want to know—but I'm sure as hell no juvenile delinquent. SO I ASK him to cut it out, everyone knows who I am. But he keeps it up. You know, the persistent type. You should see him go at it. A real phony if I ever saw one. I know who you are, he tells me. And then he starts playing games with me. WHO AM I TO seek an answer to the perpetually persistent question which all of us, whether we confront our true selves, in a reflected eye of our conscience or through the words of others, or deliberately avoid confronting, foolishly seek? the look world S. F. Rude (a pen name) By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism THE RISE OF SILAS LAPHAM, by William Dean Howells. Doubleday Dolphin, 95 cents. Among "the more smiling aspects of life" is the fact that people are reading Howells again. In fact, as one reads Howells' novels he might be puzzled as to why this has been an almost forgotten name. "The Rise of Silas Lapham," in particular, is absorbing, believable, understanding, meaningful and even, at times, entertaining. As a purveyor of the realistic in writing and one who scoffed at the romantic it is to be expected that Howells would not indulge in romantic touches. This is only partly true. "The Rise of Silas Lapham" has conventional romance and it has contrivances. But it has bright commentary, as well, on literary fashions. Take one passage in which the characters are discussing a new novel called "Tears, Idle Tears." The daughter of Bromfield Corey comments that the book should be called "Slop, Silly Slop." SOON A MINISTER OBSERVES: "THE NOVELISTS might be the greatest possible help to us if they painted life as it is, and human feelings in their true proportion and relation, but for the most part they have been and are altogether noxious." "The Rise" of Howells' title is not just a rise in the predictable sense. Silas Lapham has arisen out of poverty and social ignominy to become a man of wealth in the paint business, though he has no aristocratic pretensions. The real "rise" is a moral and symbolic one, when Silas comes to the realization that his financial rise had been due to chicanery.—Calder M. Pickett, Professor of Journalism PIZZA HUT 14 & Tenn. 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NAME ADDRESS CITY AND STATE *The Aids and Awards office KU is prepared to answer your questions about College Funds, Inc. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 19, 1962 Harry Shaffer Fights- (Continued from page 1) (Continued from p. 127) off the boat, but I picked it up fairly easily." Finally entering the United States in 1940, Prof. Shaffer served about 14 months in the Army during the war. He then earned his B.S. and M.A. degrees in economics at New York University. AFTER TEACHING for a year and a half at Concord College, W. Va., he joined the faculty at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. "... Tuscaloosa ... is as nice and clean a town as can be found anywhere," he wrote in a 1956 magazine article for Ebony, the Negro equivalent of Life magazine. "... it is a town that grows on a person—and it did not take long until I, as many others, felt at home. . . There is interest in issues of national and international importance (in Tuscaloosa), a strong belief in democratic processes ... and the right of each individual to be the master of his own destiny. . . "Yet one cannot help but feel that somewhere . . . there is a point at which it all stops, the love for one's neighbor, the 'Southern hospitality', the right of the individual. After a while one learns what it is. The color line cannot be crossed. . . " IN THE ARTICLE, Prof. Shaffer describes the sequence of events leading to his resignation from the University of Alabama faculty in University of Alabama 1956. He describes the student demonstrations and the violence following the enrollment in February, 1956, of Miss Lucy, the subsequent decision by the Alabama Board of Regents to bar the girl from classes "until further notice" and the Board's decision a month later to dismiss her from school. In his office, Prof. Shaffer looked back on the Miss Lucy incident and commented on his resignation. "In the beginning," he said, "we (faculty members) resigned because we felt we just couldn't take the way the Board of Regents handled the situation. But later we began to question ourselves as to whether this had been the best course to follow." Reading the 1956 magazine article one senses this conflict. "MANY OF US (the faculty members) felt that we could no longer honorably be associated with the University of Alabama (after the Miss Lucy incident)," Prof. Shaffer wrote. "We started to look for other jobs... ("But) there was so much to be done and I was pulling out. . . . I didn't know whether I had done the right thing. But . . . it was too late now. . . . There was just one last detail to be taken care of. A letter to the editor of the Tuscaloosa News to bid my friends farewell. I sat down to write it: "The editor, Tuscaloosa News: I want to take this opportunity to say good-bye to all my many friends in Tuscaloosa. This town . . . has come to mean a lot to me during that sixth of my life that I spent here. . . And yet I have to leave. 'When a man decides on the teaching profession . . . he is willing to forego many things that life has to offer. Most of us university professors decided on teaching for a career because we have certain beliefs, certain ideals (and) certain convictions. . . . Alabama that I do not feel I could remain . . . To me, these ideals . . . are the basic principles of our American democracy, the equality of all human beings before the law and before God, the right of every individual to make his way in this nation . . . as best he can, irrespective of the color of his skin. These principles, holy to me, have been so badly violated at the University of IN HIS OFFICE, Prof. Shaffer stirred a cup of instant coffee, then commented on the future of the Negro in the South. "We realize that prejudice will take generations to wipe out—if it can ever be wiped out," he said slowly. "But we can eliminate the outward symbol of prejudice—segregation. "Integration is just a question of time. But if people say 'just wait, it will come,' nothing will be done. We must light along democratic lines to accomplish something." Prof. Shaffer lost little time in putting this philosophy—"we must fight along democratic lines"—into practice after arriving in Lawrence in 1356. Here, he said, he found Negroes discriminated against in downtown restaurants and denied access to the swimming pool. HE JOINED the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy—a civic group seeking to combat racial and religious discrimination in Lawrence, and became president of the group in 1960. That year, the League attempted to end discrimination against Negroes at the swimming pool here. "We felt it was horrible that little Negro children could swim in the river but nowhere else in Lawrence." Prof. Shaffer explained. While the League as a whole voted against using picket lines in its campaign for integrating the pool, individual League members joined a group of KU students picketing the pool in July, 1960. THE ATTEMPT was unsuccessful, and Prof. Shaffer—as League president—made enemies in Lawrence as a result of participation in the picketing attempt. "Once during the picketing, we got a load of fish on our front porch, once garbage and once an effigy hung on my front door," he recalled He smiled: "For some time after the campaign, I got blamed for almost everything that happened in Lawrence." HE SUMMED UP his view of the community: "I have found the University community to be very liberal and fair," he said, choosing his words carefully. "I have found a large part of the town community not to be so. The town community is quite unreasonably prejudiced and treatment of the Negro here is still unfair in many respects." But, he continued, progress has been made, much of it due to the state Public Accommodations Act of 1960, a law which makes it illegal for an owner of a restaurant or a place of recreation to discriminate on the basis of race or creed. "I like KU and plan to stay here," he said. "Writing my book ('An Economic History of the American People') will take some time—I always get sidetracked when something interesting comes up. During the last three months, I've taken time out from the book to write a book review and a magazine article for the American Economic Review. FEW LAWRENCE eating establishments now discriminate against Negroes, he said, although downtown businesses have been slow to employ Negroes. Prof. Shaffer leaned back in his chair and outlined his future plans. "But once the book is done, I plan to keep busy by starting on something else." All the world loves a lover.—A G. Spaulding Felix Moos, instructor in sociology and anthropology and a member of the East Asian Studies Group, will speak on "Problems in Korea" at the Current Events Forum at 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Music Room. Coffee will be served. 'Problems in Korea' Current Events Topic Wins Right To Build Shelter Bv Leo Soroka United Press International ST. LOUISE (UPI) — Bespectacled Abraham David Kaner is building his family fallout shelter under the front lawn exactly where he tried to put it three years ago when, he said, "bureaucratic officials" in suburban University City wouldn't let him. "They wee me an apology," said Kaner. He told UPI he had been "shunted from pillar to post" seeking a permit "for a fallout shelter Civil Defense wanted people to build." Kaner, 64, said the city officials gave him the "proverbial run around" because "they didn't want the shelter in front of the house." He said he was told to build in back of his house, but he pleaded that excavating machinery couldn't maneuver in the limited backyard space. put "But that would cost an additional $200, so I said 'no.'" "I even sent telegrams to the Civil Defense in Washington and President Kennedy," Kaner said. Things are different now. Kaner has won his case. The crux in the matter was the University City zoning laws, which banned obstructions in front of residences. "But they said 'no' again." Kaner said. "Finally, they said it was all right to build underground on the front lawn if I would extend the pipes to the back of the house. Kaner complained that "they were even making fun of me." Kaner, a construction man, explained to officials that the only obstructions would be "two exhaust pipes" which he offered to reduce in height from 10 to 3 feet and that he would even disguise the black steel pipes to make them look like lanterns. He said during one of the many times he pleaded for a building permit, an office secretary greeted him "do you think we are going to be bombed?" "So I told her it's not what I think but I do not know what Khrushchev thinks." Kaner said. All the time, Kaner said, he hopeo officials would see his thinking in the matter. the matter. "My wife Ruth," he said, "wanted to give up. She said 'let's move to another community.'" Kaner told her that "men cannot change houses as they exchange a pair of gloves." "What made them change their minds about building in front of the house?" Kaner was asked. "Time changed their thinking," he said "and I didn't give up." Of his three-year fight, Kaner said "I don't want to be a slave." "The world is divided into two ideologies," he said. "Not just Russian and American. It's the free man or the conquered man." NEW YORK — (UPI)—The Diaper Service Information Bureau reports there are eight babies born every minute in the United States —one about every seven seconds. Last year's total: 4,068,000. Baby Boom Dixon's Are Back FEATURING DELIVERY SERVICE Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil D DIXON'S 2500 W. 6th OPEN 4-12 Closed Tuesday Now Delivering 6-11:30 Weekdays 8-11:30 Sundays WI 3 7442 "IT'S BEEN A GOOD SEMESTER. I GOT FINNED ONCE, LAVALIERED THREE TIMES, WENT TO NINE BAB PARTIES AND SEVEN WOODSIES, AND VENT TWISTING EVERY SINGLE WEEKEND! "FINALS WILL BE KIND OF AN ANTICLIMAX!" LISBON, MASS. AUGUST 1928. THE WOODEN FIGURES IN THE NORTHWEST ARE SEEN FROM A HOUSE WITH A GARDEN, WHERE AN ATTENTION IS Given TO THE TWO FIGURES, WHICH HAVE BEEN STUDIO-CREATED. THE BOOK CONTINUES WITH A PROMPTIVE REASONING OF THESE FIGURES, INCLUDING THE EXPLANATION OF THEIR DIMENSIONAL CAPACITIES. VI 3-7442 Gas War Continues Few realize it, but the current "gas war" now going on in the Lawrence area is "the lowest ever" according to a number of Lawrence service station attendants. The "gas war" has entered its seventh month and no one, not even the men who make this work their profession, know when it will end. One attendant, asked when he thought it might end said, "That's the $64 question, I have no idea." THE "PRICE FIXING." AS IT was called by one station operator, started last July, and the prices have been continually falling until they have reached the present price. (Regular gasoline is now selling for 20.9 cents a gallon at most service stations.) "I've been on this corner for 26 years," one attendant said, "and I can never remember the prices this low. A few years before the war, he continued, "gasoline was selling for 15 or 16 cents a gallon, but the tax was only two cents a gallon. Now the tax is nine cents a gallon and that seven cents makes a lot of difference." Competition among the Lawrence service stations is the primary reason for the low prices, one attendant said. "Until a compromise is reached among all Lawrence stations, the prices will remain the same." How do the station operators feel about the debased prices? "I love it," said one station manager, "I'm making more money than I ever made in my life. People are filling their tanks up more and we are doing more business than ever before." But the feeling wasn't uniform. "It's just a bunch of nonsense," another station manager commented. "The 'gas war' has no effect on my business." Out of town folks are taking full advantage of the slashed prices. One attendant noted that a large number of Topeka citizens stop in Lawrence and have their cars filled with gas. A variety of answers were given when attendants were asked if the cold, snowy weather had any effect on the gasoline business." More people fill the tanks up during cold weather." "Nah, the weather doesn't make any difference in this business." "Business hasn't slowed down anymore than normal, so you can't blame the weather." "Any change in weather helps business," were a few of the comments made. Wass Awarded Scholarship Hugh Wass, instructor in the department of the history of art, has been awarded the Louise Wallace Hackney Scholarship for research in Chinese Painting by the Freer Gallery or Art, of Washington, D.C. Mr. Wass's appointment is for the calendar year of 1962. He plans to return to KU in 1863. "I HAD A CUSTOMER FROM Kansas City stop and buy 75 cents worth of gasoline," a downtown station operator said. The purchaser said he couldn't pass up a bargain like that. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Exams? Here's the easy and safe way to keep mentally alert: It's the safe stay awake tablet—NoDoz $ ^{\circ} $ . And it's especially helpful when you must be sharp under pressure. NoDoz helps restore mental alertness in minutes. NoDoz keeps you alert with the safe awakener found in coffee and tea. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutely not habit-forming, NoDoz is so safe it is sold everywhere without prescription. Take it while driving, studying, working, or entertaining. NQDOZ SINCE 1936 ADVERTISING SAFE MILK COFFEE ANOTHER FINE PRODUCT OF GROVE LABORATORIES Friday. Jan. 19. 1962 THE AT CHEESE 1. before." uniform. se," an-mented. t on my es Page 5 University Daily Kansan king full faces. One number Lawrence with gas. R. FROM 75 cents own sta- turchaser bargain ere given if the any effect More peo- larning cold colder doesn't this busi- sied down you can't change in a few rship in the de- f art, has the Wallace research in Freer Gal- ley, D.C. Mr. the calen- t to return Results ert: especially NoDoz ound in reliable. TORIES COFFEE 1946 Diane M. CHRISTEL SANDERS 1930 Alpha Omicron Pi announces the pinning of Lois Reynolds, Hays junior to Roger Root, Shawnee sophmore, Phi Gamma Delta. Nine Men Lose Fraternity Pins Alpha Omicron Pi announces the pinning of Mary Ann Howard, St. Joseph, Mo., senior, to Newton King, Topeka junior, Delta Tau Delta. Alpha Omicron Pi announces the pinning of Rebecca Shier, St. Joseph, Mo., senior, to Thelbert E. Childers, Union Star, Mo., sophomore, at the University of Missouri, Beta Theta Pi. ARLENE WEITZ Mary Sue James, Lawrence freshman, to Kent Atkins, Fort Scott senior, Phi Mu Alpha. TOMMY JONES Gretchen Lee, Hays junior, Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Ben Marshall Lincoln junior, Beta Theta Pi. . . . MARIE WAGNER Bonnie Bettcher, Wilmette, Ill., senior, Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Gary Osborn, Council Groves senior, Kappa Sigma. Janie Crouse, Kansas City sophomore, Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Bill Flynn, Kansas City senior, Lambda Chi Alpha. It is, quite simply, indecent for a man to interrupt himself talking about the future of the world to allow someone to sell underarm deodorant—Robert Paul Smith Linda Houston, Wichita freshman, Gertrude Sellars Pearson, to Steve Stuckey, Newton sophomore, Phi Kappa Tau. Elected as Men's Scholarship Hall Council representative for the coming year was Bill Breckenridge, Louisburg junior. Overloaded With Unwantables? A MAN WITH BOOKS AND A BAG. Pearson Hall Selects Officers Mary Ann Harris, Independence, Mo., senior, Delta Gamma, to Tom Jennings, Kansas City, Mo., senior, Phi Kappa Psi. Pearson Hall recently elected officers for the spring semester. Elected were Robert Berryman, Larned junior, president; James Little, Prairie Village senior, vice president; Donovan Train, Lindsborg sophomore, secretary; Gordon Hager, Hepler sophomore, treasurer; and Jim Taggart, Wellington sophomore, social chairman. Try Kansan Want Ads Get Results CAROL TETHEROW Dr, and Mrs. G. E. Sanders of Excelsior Springs, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Christel Irene, to Richard Frank Olmstead, son of Mrs. Faye Olmstead of Iola. Sanders-Olmstead Miss Sanders is a senior in psychology. Olmstead graduated from KU in January, 1961, and is currently employed as a mathematician in California. Students Announce Engagements A March wedding is planned. Crouch-Janzen Miss Kaufman is a senior in the School of Education and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Mr. Werner is a graduate student and a member of Delta Tau Delta. Kauffman-Werner Mr. and Mrs. Carl M. Tetherow of St. Joseph, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Patricia, to Jack Nelson Allen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Allen of Overland Park. Mr. and Mrs. W, W. Crouch of Bartlesville, Okla., announce the engagement of their daughter, Junie Kay, to Jay Janzen, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Janzen of Bartlesville, Okla. Miss Crouch is a sophomore in the College, a member of Delta Delta Delta, and an assistant counselor at G.S.P. Mr. Janzen is a senior majoring in chemistry at OU and is a member of Lambda Chi Alpha. Mr. and Mrs. V. E. Kauffman of Lawrence, announce the engagement of their daughter, Nancy, to Mr. Stan Werner, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Werner of Topeka. Tetherow-Allen Miss Tetherow is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Both she and Allen are juniors. SUE ELLYN KNIGHT Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Knight of Neodesha announce the engagement of their daughter, Sue Ellyn, to Fred Hohnbaum, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest W. Hohnbaum, Hiwatha. Knight-Hohnbaum Miss Knight is a senior in education and a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Hohnbaum graduated from KU in February and is now serving in the Navy at Long Beach, Calif. He was a member of Triangle fraternity. How powerful are bankers and brokers when a city or financial editor has the confidence of millions of readers who are also investors and shareholders?—Melvin J. Lasky An April wedding is planned by the couple. Weitz-Klomp Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Weitz of Denver, Colo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Arlene, to Russell D. Klomp, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Klomp of Detroit, Mich. Miss Weitz is a graduate of Iowa State University and is teaching in the Denver Public Schools. She was affiliated with Kappa Kappa Gamma, Omicron Nu, and Phi Kappa Phi. Klomp is a senior, majoring in the classics. A June wedding is planned. Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Porter of Sterling announce the engagement of their daughter, Kaye Arlene, to Douglas William Kilgore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Kilgore of Salina. ... Miss Porter is majoring in occupational therapy at the KU Medical Center. Kilgore, a member of Sigma Nu, is a senior in radio and television. Porter-Kilgore An April wedding is planned. Wagner-Franklin Miss Wagner is a junior in art education and a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Mr. Franklin is a graduate student in aeronautical engineering. Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Wagner of Lawrence announce the engagement of their daughter, Marie Elaine, to James A. Franklin, son of Mr. Burnett Franklin, Kansas City. A summer wedding is planned by the couple. Turtle-neck swimsuit? Why not? Turtles have them. At popular request Jantzen is reviving the style of a few years ago. A halter top front with buttons at the neckline gives the turtle look. Mrs. Nils W. Hedlund of Overland Park announces the engagement of her daughter, Jenelyn, to Peter Block.. Hedlund-Block Miss Hedlund is a junior and a member of Sigma Kappa sorority. Block, a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity, graduated from KU in 1961. He is present at Yale University doing graduate study on a fellowship in industrial administration Jan. 26 has been chosen as the wedding date. F. H. W. CHRISTINE HANSON Hanson-Cabot Mr. and Mrs. Raymond L. Hanson of Hillsborough, Calif., announce the engagement of their daughter, Christine Frances, to Mathew August Cabot, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Mathew A. Cabot, Sr., of Honolulu, Hawaii. Miss Hanson graduated from Occidental College in Pasadena, Calif., with a degree in French and political science. She is presently attending the San Francisco Academy of Arts. Cabot is a junior in the School of Business. The best newspapermen I knew were poor boys. - Herbert Loftin Sportswear at KIRSTENS HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER Open Evenings, VI 1-0562 DANCE SANDY'S DRIVE-IN 2120 WEST 9TH Across from Hillcrest THANKS K.U. Your patronage has been deeply appreciated during the FALL semester. We will continue to serve you throughout the year. See you next semester. The Management Page 6 University Daily Kansan Turner Reads Eliot's Poetry An Episcopalian priest read "an unfamiliar but one of T. S. Eliot's more significant poems" yesterday at the Poetry Hour in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union. Roy S. Turner, professor of religion and Episcopal students' chapain, read Eliot's "Choruses from the Rock" and called it the work of "the mature Eliot, the prophet speaking rather than the harbinger of doom" present in "The Wasteland," one of Eliot's dreary poems. The Rev. Mr. Turner said "Choruses from the Rock" is Eliot's epic poem because it covers 20 centuries and interprets them as leading to a world blessed with God's mercy. The poem begins with a scathing criticism of modern man, but ends with a beautiful doxology praising "O Light Invisible, we give thanks to Thy glory," the Rev. Mr. Turner said. Man is questioned, "but you, have you built well? . . . What life have you if you have not life together" and implored "all that was good you must fight to keep." Man is castigated, "Much is your reading, but not of God. Much is your building, but not of God," and alerted "Be prepared for the coming of the stranger." "Be prepared for him who knows how to ask questions," you who divide the stars into common and preferred, the Rev. Mr. Turner said. The coming of God is prophesied, "The man that is will shatter the man that pretends to be. And the choruses of the workers and the unemployed shall be relieved of their misery and self-created being, We build the meaning," the Rev. Mr Turner said. Skiers Leave Jan. 27 For Colorado Vacation The sixth annual KU-Y ski trip to Colorado has been set for Jan. 27-Feb. 1. Departure will be the afternoon of Jan. 27. This year's KU-Y. ski trip will be to Arapahoe Basin, Colo. The trip is open to anyone interested in skiing and is especially for those who never have skied before. Two buses will be provided with room for 66 people. The KU-Y will provide instructors to give lessons to beginners. Included in the cost of $59 will be insurance, transportation, two meals a day, and the tow ticket. Not included are noon meals and rental of ski equipment. Students will stay at the Arapahoe Lodge. Recreation, including dancing in the evenings, will be provided. Anyone interested in going on the ski trip may contact Al Feinstein at VI 2-1211, Tom Moore at VI 3-8926, or the KU-Y office on the second floor of the Kansas Union When you rise in the morning, form a resolution to make the day a happy one to a fellow-creature. —Sydney Smith Fridav. Jan. 19, 1962 UNIVERSITY THEATRE Presents THE VIEUX-COLOMBIER THEATRE in Ionesco's "BALD SOPRANO" and Sartre's "NO EXIT" Students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences can speed up the enrollment process if they meet with their advisers one-half day before enrolling. They should arrange to meet their advisers in their offices, says Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the college. The College will have no advisers on the floor of the Kansas Union during enrollment, he said. Early Student-Adviser Meetings Are Urged Quintetto Boccherini In Swarthout Tonight He added that before seeing their advisers, College students should pick up their folders in 102 Strong Hall, instead of the College Office, as they did in the past. The KU Chamber Music Series will present the Quintetto Boccherini at 8 o'clock tonight in Swarthout Hall. Sunday, Jan. 28, 8:00 p.m. University Theatre Murphy Hall The Quintetto will play Boccherini's Quintet in E major, Quintet, Op. 44 by Hindemuth and Schubert's Quintet in C maior. Each member of Boccerini Quintet has been a soloist in his own right. The members are Pina Camerelli and Filippo Olivieri, violinists; Luigi Sagrati, violist, and Nerio Brunelli and Arturo Bonucci, cellists. Musical Athlete OLEAN, N. Y. — (UPI) — Orrie Jirele, captain of the St. Bonaventure University basketball team for the 1961-62 season, plays the violin in the school orchestra. Louis Lee Williams, hit and run driver involved in the death of two KU students in December, was recharged last week with two counts of first degree manslaughter. He had been previously charged with fourth degree manslaughter, but he was recharged after additional investigation by the County Attorney's office. Hit-run Driver Final Week Views Recharged Williams admitted at his preliminary hearing in County Court that he was the driver of the car that hit a small motorcycle just south of Lawrence on U.S. 59; early Dec. 10, 1961, killing John Allen Tamasi, 22, a senior in the School of Fine Arts, and his wife, Alice Lillian Wiegand Tamasi, 20, a junior in the College At the time of the accident, the four passengers told Trooper Whitaker, they warned Williams about driving too fast and had asked him to slow down. They estimated his speed just before the accident at 80 miles an hour. Williams, according to Highway Patrol Trooper Gary Whitaker, stopped his car long enough to remove the motorcycle from the front of the vehicle, then drove away. He was arrested about two and one half hours later in Ottawa. Four passengers in the car identified Williams as the driver. Williams told officers he and his friends were en route to a club in Lawrence to celebrate his birthday. Reprove your friends in secret, praise them openly-. *Pubilius Syrus* Final week is breathing down our necks. For some students it will be their first final week, for others it will be their last. Whatever the case, final week always has been subject to the biggest complaints from KU students. In an interview today by a reporter for the Daily Kansan, the question, "What do you think of final week at the University of Kansas—good or bad?" was asked of 12 different students on campus. From freshman to senior, the following replies were received: STEVE RANDALL, WICHTA FRESHMAN, FELT THAT FROM what he had heard of final week, "It should be eliminated. The student has to begin studying three weeks in advance." He felt the university should find a better alternative. When asked if he could offer a better plan, he said, "The tests should be split up during the school year instead of throwing it all into one week. Do away with final week and have three week tests during the year." Another freshman, Jan Bowen of Hays, said she had heard it was a "hell week where everyone lives on no-doz." She said it was "the fear of all freshmen." When sophomores were asked the same question, the voice of experience spoke. Aletha Curtis, Falls Church, Va., said, "I definitely feel that final week is handled well. It is not much of a strain. All you have to do is give yourself a good critical review." Susan Condell, El Dorado junior, said, "Get rid of final week. It is not a true measure of a person's knowledge." Sam Stone, also an El Dorado junior, agreed with Susan and added that "a three day break should be given students to provide ample time to study. There should be no more than two tests given in one day." MARY MISCHER, JUNIOR TRANSFER FROM TROY, OHIO, said she felt two or more tests on one day should be eliminated. She said the examinations are good but, "a better schedule should be arranged. Final week is very nerve-racking." A lone senior, Jim Meyers of Kansas City, Kan., feels that "by the time final week arrives, you either know it or you don't. Cramming doesn't help," he said. Tareyton delivers the flavor... DVAL FILTER DOES IT! "Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!" "Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!" says Titus (Pretzel Bender) Ursus, darling of the Coliseum crowd. Says Pretzel Bender, "After the amphitheater I relax and have a Tareyton. Amo, amas...everyone amat Tareyton. Et tu will, too. Tareyton's one filter cigarette that really delivers de gustibus." ACTIVATED CHARCOAL INNER FILTER PURE WHITE OUTER FILTER ACTIVATED CHARCOAL INNER FILTER PURE WHITE OUTER FILTER DUAL FILTER Tareyton Product of The American Tobacco Company—"Ruben is our middle name" © A.T.C. 9 Page 7 Physicians Announce Common Cold Find CHICAGO — (UFI) — An intestinal virus has been found to cause the common cold, a group of doctors said today. The virus, Coxsackie A-21, they said, is one of a group of "hardy agents of small size," which commonly inhabit man's intestinal tract. THE VIRUS WAS RECOVERED from the throats of cold sufferers among Marine personnel at Camp Lejeune, N. C. Prior to the discovery, group A Coxsackie viruses had been associated with mild fevers and neurological diseases. The importance of the Coxsackie A-21 virus in producing cold symptoms and the possible role of other intestinal viruses in causing colds The discovery was reported by Drs. Karl J. Johnson, Maurice A. Mufson and Robert M. Chanock, all of the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md., and Lt. Cmdr. Henry H. Bloom (USN), Camp Lejeune, in the current journal of the American Medical Association. The KU Endowment Association has pledged $100,000 worth of support to KU's program of international education, it was announced yesterday. KU Receives $100,000 The money will come largely from private donations and from income provided by Endowment Association investments and land holdings. IN ANNOUNCING THE PLEDGE, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said the money will be used to further the University's present international programs and to aid in developing new programs. The pledge, he said, "is an estimate of the commitment of the University to its leading role in international education affairs and is another example of how private support of the University allows it to do those things not otherwise possible." Present KU internationally oriented programs include: - The KU-University of Costa Rica faculty and student exchange program, which is now entering its third year. Under the program, KU faculty members exchange places with their counterparts at the University of Costa Rica for three summer months and selected KU junior years students study at the Costa Rican university for one year. - Three centers on the campus for the study of Slavic and Soviet, East Asian and Latin American areas. - An exchange program between the schools of medicine of KU and the Philippines University. - A Summer Language Institute under which more than 100 KU students will fly to Europe for two months next summer to study language in France, Spain, or Germany. - The People-to-People program which has helped KU's 301 foreign students to adjust to their new environment. - Of the $100,000 contributed by the Endowment Association, $40,000 still remains to be contributed during the coming year. Robusta's Pizza Free Delivery On Campus Call VI 3-1086 remain to be determined, they said. But if Coxsackie A-21 is found to contribute substantially to the incidence of colds, they said, there are indications that a preventive vaccine would prove effective. The report said there were indications the virus was spread primarily through the respiratory tract. BUT THE AUTHORS noted that not all of the respiratory illness which occurred during the study period could be associated with the Coxsackie virus. It was impossible, they said, to link any pattern of physical complaints with the presence of the virus. In an accompanying editorial, the AMA Journal said that although large obstacles might be encountered in any attempt to prevent respiratory illness by vaccination, the Coxsackie A-21 findings indicate that "important new information" about the nature of cold in adults will be forthcoming. It is "not unlikely," the editorial added, that intestinal viruses may prove to be the cause of a certain percentage of colds. "Antigone," by Jean Anouilh, will be presented February 12-20 in the University of Kansas Experimental Theatre. 'Antigone' to Play Here in February "Antigone" is a modern adaptation of the Sophocles tragedy of the same name. The play will be directed by Eleanor Susan Dillman, Independence graduate student. Assistant director will be Sylvia Schwarz, Solomon junior. University Daily Kansan Sara B. Maxwell, Columbus senior, will play Antigone. Other cast members are: The Nurse; Kav Carroll. El Dorado junior, Patti O'Berg, Leawood junior, John C. Welz, Webster Groves, Mo., senior, and John H. Magill Jr., Merriam sophomore, Stephen Callahan, Independence graduate student. Others are Terry Kovac, Wichita sophomore, Kenneth Baker, Hellmetta, N. J., graduate student, Carl A. Bentz, Peabody junior, Richard Friesen, Prairie Village freshman, and Francis Cullinan, Springfield, Mass., graduate student. NEW YORK — (UPI) The Diaper Service Information Bureau reports there are eight babies born every minute in the United States — one about every seven seconds. Last year's total: 4,068,000. Baby Boom Friday, Jan. 19, 1962 Ham Club Committee Meeting: 7:30 Pam Hall our attempt to Ham池 KANE, BC1 TODAY Official Bulletin Special Chemistry Colloquium: 4 p.m. 233 Malott, Dr. Donald Dittmer, Central Research Dept., DuPont, Wilmington, Del. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: 7:30 p.m. Cottonwood Room, Kansas Uni- tory School of Law Church of the Nazarene, Lawrence, speaking on "The Bible: Truth or Fiction?" Hillel Services: 7:30 p.m. Jewish Community, 917 Highland Dr. Baptist Student Union: 7.30 p.m. Baptist Student Activities Building, 1221 Johnson Street studies and fellowship Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9.30 p.m Danforth Chapel. SUNDAY Lutheran Church Services: 8:30 & 11 a.m., Immanuel Lutheran Church, 17th & Vermont. 5 p.m. Wednesdays, Danforth Chapel. Catholic Mass: 9. 11 a.m., Fraser Hall (Newman Club). Oread Friends Worship Meeting: 10:30 a.m. Danforth Chapel. MONDAY Episcopal Holy Communion & Lunch: 12. poon, Centbury House. Shafiq Hashmi, International Club president, announced that the club will not meet this Friday evening because of finals. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. No International Club Toniacht Thoughts are but dreams till their effects be tried. —Shakespeare Medical School Given $2 Million The University of Kansas School of Medicine will use a recent $2 million grant to supplement studies of various human ills with bedside clinical research. The grant enables full costs of patient care to be added to previous programs which laboratory, animal and investigators' basic research did not include. THE AIM OF bedside research is to link effects of modern drug, chemical, and other medical advances on human physiology to actual patients. This will be done through studies of the composition of fluid, tissue, muscle and bone compositions of the body. The grant of $2,215,110 is from the National Institutes of Health, which two years ago began subsidizing a clinical program that now includes 40 of the nation's 85 medical schools as cooperators. C. Arden Miller, dean of the Medical School said the grant is significant to this area in that it adds impetus to transmitting and applying new medical knowledge faster. Dr. Robert E. Bolinger will direct the project and Dr. Paul R. Schloerb, surgeon, will assist as associate project director. which button for Buffalo? Automatic cars with button and lever controls may seem far out right now. But Ford Motor Company scientists and engineers are busy prying out and buttoning down some fantastic computer-controlled guidance systems for future Ford-built cars. Among the controls now under study at Ford is a radar system that warns a driver when he gets too close to the vehicle ahead. Another is a short-range radio frequency device that extends the limits of drivers' senses by giving advance information on road surface and weather conditions, evaluating and appraising obstacles in the driving path ahead. When developed, control systems like these will enable drivers to enjoy safer, faster driving without fatigue. When devoid of these will enable drive faster driving without fatigue. Advanced studies of this nature are but a part of a continuous and wide-ranging program that has gained Ford its place of 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 Ford Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 19, 1962 100% To Thank You for Your Patronage During the Past Semester, the Hawk's Nest Offers HAMBURGERS 2 for 25c 10 a.m.-10:30 p.m., Tuesday, Jan. 23 That's right, two of our regular size 25c hamburgers for the price of one. We are doing this to express our sincere thanks for the patronage you, the students, staff and faculty, have given us during the past semester. We hope we may have the privilege of serving you all again during the remainder of the year. Remember, Tuesday --- at Your HAWK'S NEST in the P KANSAS UNION Page 9 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Steve Clark "All's quiet on the western front," as there has been nothing more said about KU's Bert Coan signing a professional football contract with the San Diego Chargers for next season. Coan has definitely been offered a contract. He has admitted this to reporters. He also says he turned down the offer but is still considering it. A MAJOR FACTOR that will probably influence Coan is the NCAA. Coan has been mixed up with this collegiate athletic organization once before, and it is likely that he wouldn't want to lock horns again. The last time Coan was involved with the NCAA, his name was smeared in bold headlines in newspapers across the country. The NCAA is very slow in accomplishing matters brought before them. For example, they were late in making the decision that Coan was ineligible in 1960. Another example is that Colorado was supposed to get slapped with a probation at each of the past two sessions, but all that last week's gathering produced was more rumors. COAN HAS to consider what action the NCAA will take. The organization will not meet again until July and certainly the KU halfback would rather have plans made by then. If the NCAA does not examine and pass on the Coan case, then Jack Mitchell is in a tight corner. As the NCAA meets during football season, Kansas could be put on probation again if they played Coan. There is one question mark concerning Coan as a professional football player, and as a KU player. Has his broken leg sufficiently recovered? This question the sports world will not know until after his first game whether it be TCU or a pro team. WILL BERT be as fast as he was? These are all vital questions that both Mitchell and Sid Gillman, Charger coach, are considering. There is one person, if anybody, who knows the answer as to how the leg feels and that is Coan himself, and he's not talking, probably because he is not sure himself. Next to the NCAA's decision on Coan's eligibility, the condition of his leg is a second important factor. IF COAN'S LEG is fully recovered, then the Texas speedster should remain at Kansas. If he should have a successful season, which would be most likely, then the professional teams would have to make their bids high to get Coan to sign. Right now, Coan is a question mark. A professional team should get him cheap because they don't know the condition of his leg. If Coan feels that his leg won't be sufficiently recovered, then the best thing possible for him to do would be to sign a professional contract. Although all logic would indicate that the pros would be trying to get Coan cheap, it has been rumored that San Diego offered him the same amount John Hadl received. The NCAA could clear up a lot of question marks by declaring Coan either eligible or ineligible, but they won't. Since their next meeting is over five months away, the Jayhawker football fan will just have to sit tight...and wait. Sports in Brief MILWAUKEE, Wis.—(UPI)—Warren Spahn, 40 years old and one of the greatest left-handed pitchers in baseball history, got a raise when he signed his 1962 contract with the Milwaukee, Braves, but very few of his teammates can look for the same treatment. President John McHale of the Braves, whose club finished fourth in the National League last season for its worst showing since moving here from Boston in 1953, confirmed today his Milwaukee players will be paid "only what they have earned." Spahn, who created his own place in Baseball's Hall of Fame when he won his 300th game last season, was in good humor after coming to terms Thursday. He jokingly conceded the Braves "saw fit to hire me again." DES MOINES, Iowa—(UPI) —Chet Walker is demonstrating again this year that as he goes so go the Bradley Braves. A 1960-61 All America in his junior season, the 6-foot, 6-inch Walker combines cat-like grace with perhaps the deadliest shooting eye in the country to make the Braves the current leaders in the strong Missouri Valley conference and the nation's seventh-ranked college basketball team. Walker, who has made good on 60 per cent of his field goal tries this season, showed again last night how he can break open a game almost single-handedly with a spectacular display of shooting in Bradley's 77-65 victory over Drake here. The victory was the Braves' fourth straight in league play, keeping them ahead of both 10th-ranked Wichita and second-ranked Cincinnati in the league standings. It is not enough to do good; one must do it the right way.—John Morley Wildcats Shade Missouri 69-66 In League Play PETER MIDDLEY Basketball fixes, says Kentucky's Coach Rupp, the fault of a few badegems. But, according to a former NCAA president, athletes "have learned to be dishonest... from the very men who recruited them." In this week's Post, you'll read a hot debate between these two experts. COLUMBIA, Mo—(UPI)—Fourth ranked Kansas State used a freeze the last $3^{\frac{1}{2}}$ minutes last night to skim past Missouri 69-66 in a Big Eight Conference basketball game. Why some college basketball players cheat! Kansas State, led by Mike Wroblewski and Gary Marriott, had its hands full with the cellar-dwelling Tigers, who played an inspired game that saw the lead change eight times. The Saturday Evening The Saturday Evening POST JANUARY 20 ISSUE NOW ON SALE Kansas State led 33-32 at the half. The biggest lead was seven points, reached midway through the first half and again half way through the second half. Missouri was ahead seven times, but never more than two points. Wroblewski and Mariott had 17 points apiece, as did Missouri's Walt Grebing. Wroblewski, the 6-8 center, was held to three rebounds in the first half by sophomore center Gary Dye, and in the last two minutes the ball was stolen from him twice. Kansas State hit 27 of 62 field goal attempts for 43.5 per cent, while Missouri made 26 of 63 from the field for 41.3 per cent. Marriott held the K-State Wildcats together in the last seven minutes, when Kansas State Coach Tex Winter pulled Wroblewski out of the game because of four fouls. Hawks Swim At Iowa State Kansas will be meeting one of the Big Eight's top swim teams tomorrow when the Jayhawkers travel to Lincoln, Neb., to battle the Cornhuskers and Iowa State in a triangular. Iowa State is being accorded a good chance at unseating Oklahoma as the conference champion in the Big Eight meet March 1, 2, and 3 at Ames. The Cyclones normally have been the "best of the rest" in the efforts to overtake the Sooners, but are much improved this season. Kansas holds a triangular victory over Utah State and Colorado and a fourth place finish in the Air Force Relays for the season thus far. The Jayhawkers entered only nine men in the 10-team meet at Colorado Springs. SPORTS CARS 1962 MGA 1600 MK-II Black disc rdr. 1962 MGA 1600 MK-II Red wire rdstr. New & Used Now Available 1962 MG Midget Blue deluxe 1962 MG Midget Black deluxe 1962 MG Midget White Dlx. Demo. 1960 Jaguar YK 150 Blue, chromic wire wheels 1959 MGA 1500 White disc rdstr. 1960 Pontiac Spt. Cpe. 348 HP - 4 speed 1960 Renault Dauphine 1955 Austin Healey 100 University Daily Kansan Coming Soon JAGUAR XK-E Friday. Jan. 19. 1962 British Motors "WHERE NO INDUSTRY CAN BE FORGIVEN" Long Stretch BALTIMORE — (UPI) Since Pimlico changed its finish line a couple of seasons back, the length of the stretch is 1,170 feet, one of the longer home lanes in the country. Friendship is the only cement that will ever hold the world together. Woodrow Wilson JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Kansan Want Ads Get Results On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "Rally Round The Flag, Boys", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) IS STUDYING NECESSARY? Once there were three roommates and their names were Walter Pellucid, Casimir Fing, and LeRoy Holocaust and they were all taking English lit. and they were all happy, friendly, outgoing types and they all smoked Marlboro Cigarettes as you would expect from such a gregarious trio, for Marlboro is the very essence of sociability, the very spirit of amity, and very soul of concord, with its tobacco so mild and flavorful, its pack so king-size and flip-top, its filter so pure and white, and you will find when you smoke Marlboros that the world is filled with the song of birds and no man's hand is raised against you. Each night after dinner Walter and Casimir and LeRoy went to their room and studied English lit. For three hours they sat in sombre silence and pored over their books and then, squinty and spent, they toppled onto their pallets and sobbed themselves to sleep. This joyless situation obtained all through the first semester. Then one night they were all simultaneously struck by a marvelous idea. "We are all studying the same thing," they cried. "Why, then, should each of us study for three hours? Why not each study for one hour? It is true we will only learn one-third as much that way, but it does not matter because there are three of us and next June before the exams, we can get together and pool our knowledge!" Oh, what rapture then fell on Walter and Casimir and LeRoy1 The wax in their ears got melted They flung their beanies into the air and danced a gavotte and lit thirty or forty Marlboros and ran out to pursue the pleasure which had so long, so bitterly, been missing from their lives. Alas, they found instead a series of grisly misfortunes. Walter, alas, went searching for love and was soon going steady with a coed named Invicta Breadstuff, a handsome lass, but, alas, hopelessly addicted to bowling. Each night she bowled five hundred lines, some nights a thousand. Poor Walter's thumb was a shambles and his purse was empty, but Invicta just kept on bowling and in the end, alas, she left Walter for a pin-setter, which was a terrible thing to do to Walter, especially in this case, because the pin-setter was automatic. Walter, of course, was far too distraught to study his English lit, but he took some comfort from the fact that his roommates were studying and they would help him before the exams. But Walter, alas, was wrong. His roommates, Casimir and LeRoy, were nature lovers and they used their free time to go for long tramps in the woods and one night, alas, they were treed by two bears, Casimir by a brown bear and LeRoy by a kodiak, and they were kept in the trees until spring set in and the bears went to Yellowstone for the tourist season. So when the three roommates met before exams to pool their knowledge, they found they had none to pool! Well sir, they had a good long laugh about that and then rushed to the kitchen and stuck their heads in the oven. It was, however, an electric oven and the effects were, on the whole, beneficial. The wax in their ears got melted and they acquired a healthy tan and today they are married to a lovely young heirs named Ganglia Bran and live in the Canal Zone, where there are many nice boats to wave at. © 1962 Max Shulman * * * In case you worry about such things, their wife is a Marlboro smoker, too, which adds to the general merriment. Marlboro is ubiquitous, as well as flavorful, and you can buy them in all 50 states as well as the Canal Zone. Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 19, 1962 Ego-Bursting Can Be Dangerous By Merriman Smith UPI White House Reporter WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Back-stairs at the White House: Balloon-busting or ego deflation has long been a Washington hobby of the raffish and irreverent, largely because there are so many balloons to pop and egos from which to let the air. The high "T" level of government frequently is populated by socially and professionally ambitious figures of some ability, but from their viewpoint, not enough status. Whenever possible they use the first person pronoun in connection with those of undisputed status such as President Kennedy, Secretary of State Dean Common Market is Forum Top A panel of four KU professors will discuss "The Common Market and the United States" at the Presidential Forum next Wednesday. The public is invited to the discussion, which will begin at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The floor will be open for questions from the audience after the discussion. Panel members are Oswald P. Backus, professor of history; Vaclav Mudroch, assistant professor of history; A.W.Kuchler, professor of geography; and Charles E. Staley, assistant professor of economics. Our thought is the key which unlocks the doors of the world.—Samuel Crothers Rusk or Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson. THE PRESIDENT IS A gregarious sort and a man of consuming curiosity. Consequently, he is in surprisingly frequent contact with persons who appear neither in the top listings of the congressional directory nor the social register. Thus, there is occasion for a perfectly murderous parlor game which can send an overly ambitious assistant secretary mumbling into the night, his wife trailing along, crying, "What's wrong, Ashmeade?" The game is best played by a complete stranger, or at least a party guest unknown to the assistant secretary in question. The official is found standing in an admiring circle of those who rank slightly below him. Properly encouraged, his little anecdotes from inside the administration begin to soar. IF CONDITIONS FOR this confection of devilment are right, the fawned-over fellow, to prove that he's not just an ordinary assistant secretary, may find himself saying, "I happen to know — and you mustn't ask me how I know — har, har — but the President got off a perfect gem the other day. It seems that Caroline ..." When he finishes his little goodie and appreciative laughter has tinkled away, this is the moment for the comparative stranger. He says in a loud, clear voice, "frankly, he didn't tell it to ME that way." Since the President in truth does Tonite & Saturday Mat. Sat. 2 p.m. Eves. 7:00 & 9:00 VARSITY Vivien Leigh — Warren Beatty "The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone" STARTING SUNDAY! THEIR ROMANCE WILL TENDERLY TOUCH YOUR HEART... while it gleefully fractures your funnybone! WITH A KOOKY CUPID LIKE THIS... HOW CAN THESE LOVERS MISS!!! Peter USTINOV ACADEMY AWARD WINNER—BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR FOR "SPARTACUS" Sandra DEE · John GAVIN The rollicking Stage success that rocked Broadway and theatres across the Nation! Romanoff and Juliet CO-OWNING AKIM TAMIROFF TECHNICOLOR' STARTING SUNDAY! THEIR ROMANCE WILL TENDERLY TOUCH YOUR HEART... while it gleefully fractures your funnybone! WITH A KOOKY CUPID LIKE THIS... HOW CAN THESE LOVERS MISS!!! see and talk with so many friends and acquaintances not well known to the public or the rest of the government, for that matter, the impaled President-dropper does not dare challenge his tormentor. The rollicking Stage success that rocked Broadway and theatres across the Nation! Romanoff and Juliet CO-STARRING AKIM TAMIROFF TECHNICOLOR Having done his damage, the rude one should change scenery, too, before the trilling ladies want to know what the President really did say. The beauty of this game is that the role of deflater may be played by one who never has set eyes on any member of the Kennedy family. And in Washington today, even that is a most unusual qualification. THE VICTIMS ONLY course is speedy change of scenery. As he bolts for the door or the sanctity of the men's room, his rude accoster may then drive the final blow by saying, "in fact, the President never even mentioned it to me." More often than not, it is the news-papermen who serve as the watchdogs of democratic institutions, rather than the traditional government committees who offer too little too late. -Melvin J. Lasky Screenplay by PETER USTINOV, Based on his stage hit - Produced and Directed by PETER USTINOV A Pavla Production - A Universal-International Release CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 2:30 ON ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — (UPI)—A total of 80 college football games were played indoors at the local Convention Hall between 1930 and 1939. Indoor Football For Best Results Use Kansan Classifieds GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VINING 3-5763 THE BUTTON-POPPINGEST COMEDY IN YEARS! FROM THE FIRST MINUTE THE LAUGHS START... YOU'LL WANT TO SEE IT A SECOND TIME AROUND! ANDY GRIFFITH DEBBIE REYNOLDS with STEVE FORREST JULIET PROWSE THELMA RITTER in 20th Century Fox's DEBRIE... PETTICOAT RANCH-HAND.Her Funniest Comedy Since Tommy "The SECOND TIME AROUND" THELMA... DON'T ALLOW ANY TOM-FOOLERY ON HER RANCH CINEMASCOPE and COLOR JULIET... WHY MEN GO WEST! Produced By Jock Cummings Directed By Vincent Sherman Screenplay By Oscar Soul and Cecil Dan Hansen STEVE... HE'S A GAMBLING MAN... BUT LOVES PETTICOAT RANCH HANDS! No Bull! It's All FUN! INDY . . . HE'S A DEPUTY BUT ONLY 34 YEARS OLD . . . TOO YOUNG FOR MARRIAGE! STARTS TOMORROW! MAT. AT 2 P.M. EVE. 7:00 & 9:00 CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 2:30 ENDS TONITE ENDS TONITE At 7 and 9 Elvis Presley "BLUE HAWAII" Friday, Jan. 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 11 CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP YOUR One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms cash: All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 35c for billing All ads must be called or brought to the University Dally Kansan BusinessOffice in order on the day before publication is desired. BUSINESS SERVICES U HAUL TRAILERS for rent. Local or I way. Barnes Rental Service, 7th & Michigan. Call VI 2-0401 or Kilburn Texaco Service, 2447 W. 6th, VI 3-9799 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Personal service — sectionalized — one stop — save time & money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, etc., plus complete lines of pet supplies. tf INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re- woven so damage cannot be seen. Cig- arette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete shop in the midwest. Pet phone V vending self-service 8 to 6:30 pan. week days. EXPERIENCED MOTHER — would like child to care for, 3 to 4 yrs. old, in her home. Also would like ironing, 15c per piece. 340 Indiana. VI 2-3473. tf PERSONALIZED IRONING & bundle washing, also alterations on men's & women's clothing. All work guaranteed. Merr. Earl Shaw, 308 N. 8th. 2-5 I WILL DO IRONING in my home. Pick 101 N, J. Call VI 2-1467 or 181 101 N, J. WILL BABY SIT in my home, '15 bik phone VI 1-2-2863 per day referr- 2-12 TYEPWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. $ 939 \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tf ALTERNATES — Call Gail Reed, VI 8- 7551, or 921 Miss. **tf** WANTED — BABYSITTING. Law student's wife wishes to baby-sit by day or week. Home adjacent to campus. Call VI 3-1846. 1-22 TYPING TYING. TYP, term papers, 5 years 1965- secretary, Reasonable ra- Call Vi 2-2305. 2-7 MILLIKEN'S 'S. "O.S.", at Now at two 10-22-10 12:20 1022-14 170 Lawrence Ave. &. 1021% Mass. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing in my home -- call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lou Gehlbach. tf Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates, Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker. Call VI 3-2001. tf HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng- major see section 9.8.3. See Eng- lisher accordingly. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, reports, manuscript service neat accurate work. Reasonable rates Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R.I. VI. 3-7485. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric type-writer, fast accurate service. Requires Mr. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 2-1648, Mrs. Barkow, 408 W. 13th, VI 2-1648. 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 would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI T-3-2651 any time. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. on electric typewriter. Mrs. Amos Russell, 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. tf EXPERIENCED TYPEFIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Ms. Fulcher. VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt TYPIST. experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tt TYPING: Experimented typist. Former secretary will type these. term papers reports. Electric typewriter. Reasonable Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mt Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8686. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Service, $317 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7718 Evers or Sati R 2-2168 TRANSPORTATION GIRL WANTS RIDE weekdays from Stouffer Place to K.C. Mo., in vicinity of 35th & Main starting Feb. 5. Will share expenses. Call VI 3-1034. 1-19 --- PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS LOST WOMAN'S WALLET. Gold with blaces. On the left, the flank of the and Flint. Reward. Call V 3-7847. 1-19 MAN'S GOLD WEDDING BAND. CONTACT VERNON HAYES VI. 3-3944. 1-19 RING — GOLD SIGNET RING. Vicinity of Student Union Bldg. Ring has Red Sardonyx stone with crest. Reward given. Call Bob Fitzsimmons, VI 3-4050. 1-19 TUTORING GERMAN TUTORING at reasonable rates. Call Patsy Burling at VI 3-8505. MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks. ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Ice Plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 0350. COME AND EAT*home cooked meals* Metsker, 721 Mt. St. VI 3-4967. 1-19 HELP WANTED PART TIME SALESMAN. Apply Redman Shoe Co., 815 Mass. 1-19 R. N.'s NEEDED: Full or part time. General duty any shift. Also operating room. Mrs. Blasingame. Call collect Cherry 2-334 or Cherry 2-239, Ottawan Kansas. Hallmark Cards - Permanent position for experienced secretary - Typing and shorthand required. - Five day week. Many company paid benefits including medical insurance. - Apply 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Help Wanted: Dishwasher, 7 days a week Call VI 3-7810 or come to 1252 Oread. t f Lawrence, Kansas Hallmark Cards HALF-TIME SECRETARY. Prefer mature, experienced worker. General office work. Should be able to spell, take shorthand dictation, and type well. Work in office or community service. Good pay. No novice need apply. Elmer F. Beth, 108 Flint Hall. tt NICELY FURNISHED 3 room apartment. Priv. entr., bath, air cond. Newly deco- nial, near campus $62.30 per month. Utilities paid. Available Feb. 1. Call MI-1 7830. FOR RENT 4 ROOM FURNISHED house. Couple or teachers preferred. Call VI 3-8483. 1-19 MEN'S SLEEPING rooms. 1 block from Union. Call VI 3-8066 or see at 1140 Miss. 1-19 Park Plaza South Apartments Are you satisfied you now live? Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking Central Air Conditioning we will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 2-8253 Office — 1912 W. 25th Lawrence's Only Garden Apartments 'URNISHED APARTMENT for 3 boys. block from campus. Utilities paid. Washer & Dryer service available. Call 1-3-5777. 1-19 SMALL APT. $1\beta$ block from campus. Well furnished, living-bedroom, kitchen, bath. To 1 or 2 graduate girls. Reasonable rent. For appointment call VI 3-6696. 1-19 SMALL HOUSE — Living - bedroom, kitchen, shower bath completely furried, cleaned up, managed $45 per month. See between 5-7 p.m. at 1023J; Vermont, rear. 1-19 FOR RENT. AVAILABLE FEB. 1. 3 room furnished basement apart. Private bath and entrance. 1400 Ohio. Mrs. E. W. Westgate, 1400 Ohio. 1-19 FURNISHED APARTMENT for one economy minded student. $30 per month includes kitchen and utilities. 1045 Tenn. Call VI 2-3251. 1-19 BOARD & ROOM, $55 a month. VI 3- 4385. 1-19 FOR GRADUATE WOMAN or University employed. Attractive 2 room apartment, completely furnished. 1st floor, next to the Union building. $47 per month. For appointment call VI 2-3683 between 5-8 p.m. 1-19 ROOMS FOR MEN: $ _{1/2} $ block from Union. Available Feb. 1st. One single and 1 double room. Quiet. Call VI 3-4092 or call at 1301 La. tt GRADUATE OR SENIOR MEN. Beautifully decorated, furnished apartments. Private parking. Ideal study conditions. For appointment call VI 3-8543. 1-19 TIRED OF LIVING IN AN APT.? One bedroom house for rent, good location, very efficient. Call VI 3-0554 after 7 p.m. 2-6 1 SINGLE ROOM available. Linen furnished weekly. 1328 $0.20. 1-19 APT. FOR RENT: Furnished. bills paid. or small family. 4 rooms. 9:24-253 ROOM FOR RENT to upperclassman for second semester. Call VI 3-0256. 1-19 LARGE SINGLE OR DOUBLE room with cooking privileges and refrigerator. Near KU and downtown. Available Feb. 1. Phone VI 3-9027 after 5. 2-5 INTERNATIONAL HOUSE large sleep- room with balcony Call VI a 7642 or s on weekends. Call VI a 7642 or s on weekends. APARTMENTS FOR RENT at Moody Apartment House. 3 rooms furnished & priv. bath. Call VI 3-5182 or VI 3-6103 ROOM FOR GRADUATE WOMEN 1245 Oread Phone VI 3-1018 or IV 2-3584 Vacancy for male student. An apartment one block from Union. Also room for two. Private bath and entrance. Ph. VI 3-6723. 1-19 For Rent To Graduate Women: 2 rooms, addresses, linens Phone VI 3-3105 1-19 VACANT SINGLE ROOM for male student. Shower bath, ref., & tele. Two blocks from campus. $30 per month. 1315 Tenn., VI 3-3390. 2-5 1 ROOM FURNISHED apt. Privilege bath 2 RL Availability Jan. 15. V 3-1966. 1-19 LARGE LOVELY SLEEPING room in new home. Private entrance, telephone, bath. linens furnished and room kept. $15 per month includes everything. 5 minute drive to campus. Available Feb. 1. VI 3-7830. 1-19 VACANCY IN FEBRUAFY for young man in contemporary home. Home cooked supper — swimming pool. $65 per month. VI 3-9635. tf PRIVATE ROOMS for rent at 901 Maine. One available now. Reasonable. Can see after 6 or on weekends. VI 3-6810. 1-19 LEAVING FOR EUROPE, completely available 1- to Sept. 1. Call VI 3-3278. 1-19 SPLIT LEVEL or semi basement apartment — 2½ blocks from Union. 3 rooms completely furnished. Shower basin, private entr., off street. Two upper classman or graduate student. $48 per month. For appl. call VI 3-6696. 1-19 FURNISHED APARTMENT: Private bath, within walking dist. of KU. Suitable for married or single students. to tween 5 and 6 p.m. 1-19 LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 073f. LARGE FURNISHED apartment. east side, utilities paid.$50. Call VI 3-6294. DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. Nylon Ski PARKAS We Have Just Received a New Shipment of the popular Nylon Slip-over Parkas A double and 2 single rooms available very convenient location. Vl. 3-4058 1-19 Raffelock's SURPLUS STORE Two room, furnished, second floor apt. Suitable for two men students. I pay all house bills. Call for appt. to five p.m. or weekends. Call VI 3-5137. 2-8 820 Mass. One or two boys to share large furnished recreation room apt, with third boy. Refrigerator, stove, private bath. Call VI 3-7734 or see at 2417 Ohio. 1-19 One block from campus. 2-room suite. Students at B25 each. Call VI 3-669-1-10 students at B25 each. Call VI 3-669-1-10 3 bedroom, air conditioned apt, with at- tenance appointment call 67575 after 5 p.m. 1-19 FOR SALE BASS FIDLDLE new strings — $85. Call III 3-5078, ask for Ed Eubank. 1-19 ELECTRIC GUITAR. strap, and mu- fice for it. g35. Call D. Johnson. 3436 1-19 '59 CHEVY, IMPALA, 280 hp. Four speed transmission, posttraction rear end, black. 2-door hardtop $1600. Call VI 3-8504. 1.19 GUNS: ROBERT REDDING FIREARMS. New and used guns, and ammo. Handguns peeked 32 Astra (French) $248.95. See at 1040 Tenn. (in rear) Call VI 3-7001. 2-68 GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Note additional notes on comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752 Free delivery. NEW SNOW TIRE FINAL CLOSE OUT. 600-13 tbs. now $130.00. whites $1 more. Other sizes at close out prices. Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. Free installation, come through city parking lot behind Kress store. 2-13 5 ROOM HOUSE, furnished for students. Boys preferred. Call VI 3-1966. 1-19 COZY MOBIL HOME for sale. 1955-Safe- call VT 3-9571 after 1-19 RCA 3/4 ton air-cond. $50. Philco 3/4 ton air-cond. $55. Both in good cond. Very good 1950 2 door Chevrolet 40 inch G.E. electric range, $75. VI - 8844. 1959 OPEL REKORD, 2 dr. radio & heater. Good condition with 2 near new snow tresses included. Low mileage. See or call at Nel's & Buck's Garage, 23rd and Louisiana. VI 3-4081. After 5 p.m. call VI 3-2941. NEW, FULLY ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER $225 Portable typewriters, $40.50 and up. Service on all makes typewriters and adding machines. In printing and reading Machines Co., reasonable rates. Machines Co., 912 Mass. Phone VI 3- 151 today. tt OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright typewriter sales, service, rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mast. VI 2-1644. 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. If 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 WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised, 100 pages, mime-graphed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. USED MAGNAVOX 21" table model TV -$47.50 with base. Used Magnavox HF- $40. Pettengill Davis, 723 Mass. ti 120 Bass Nose Accordion in excellent condition. Seven bass switches, 10 treble switches, plus master switch bar. Call VI 3-0144 after 5 p.m. or see at 910 Lilac DOING IT THE HARD WAY by he (GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!) FIREMAN HANDS HOT WATER ON A MAN'S HAIR. 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 ionic 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 HAMPON Tear of milk Formula Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, Jan. 19, 1962 ASC Power Is Answer- (Continued from page 1) He said the Council could possibly begin working with the University Senate on some problems. He said more student interest would come when the students know more about student government. "The committee system has a lot more to do with their daily lives than they realize," Hardy said. "When elections are being held, we could let the students know more about the students who will be appointed and not so much the council." MAX EBERHART, Great Bend senior and student body president, said more dedicated people were needed on the Council. "We need a Council member who is not just a Tuesday night Council member. He must be proud of being elected and proud of his office. "And there ought to be a better program for integrating freshmen and sophmores into KU politics," he said. "And after we take on more projects, we can prove we can take on more students funds and administer them," Eberhart said. He said student government ought to take on more responsibility. JIM ANDERSON, Lawrence senior and co-chairman of the University Party, said students lack interest in campus politics because not enough of them have taken the time to study its functions. "Two strong, active parties are needed," he said. "If more students were educated in the functions of student government, they would Dazed Staff Sits, Stares The final deadline has come and gone for members of the Daily Kansas's staff this semester. Lights have not been dimmed in the newsroom for almost a week, as students in Reporting II and Editing II have hurriedly been trying to meet deadlines. This group of fatigued journalists now leave the newsroom to cram for final examinations. Let's drop in and see how the long hours have affected members of the UDK staff. The new managing editor had to go home at 1:30 o'clock this morning after three nights without sleep. The new city editor came in the newsroom at 8 o'clock last night and left at 5:30 a.m. to clean up before an 8 o'clock class. The new editorial editor worked until 4:30 a.m., walked outside and into a snowdrift, promptly came back and stretched out on a desk to sleem. The new assistant managing editor stayed up until 3:30 a.m., went home, shaved, showered, and was back by 4:30 a.m. He stayed until 2 o'clock this afternoon. This is all part of a newspaperman's job. Long hours and little sleep are not uncommon in the field of journalism. Now that it is all over, the last paper is out and the newsroom pressure is off, apathy has hit. "J" students are sitting around staring aimlessly. To Play KU Prof's Symphony The Third Symphony, by John Pozdro, chairman of the KU music theory department, will be played by The National Symphony Orchestra of Washington, D.C., in its Jan. 30 and 31 concerts. It will be at least the third professional orchestra to include the symphony in a concert. Portraits of Distinction "Therefore, we should have better political educational campaigns,' Anderson said. realize the limitations, and also the advantages, of student government. He listed three necessities for this - Adequate newspaper coverage. - Active political parties. Rolling Towards a Better Future Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 - More active student government committees. Jack Roberts, Lawrence senior and president of Vox last year, said the leaders of the political parties should set up a list of goals for which the party must strive. He listed the goals as: - Acquate political parties - Active political parties - Selection of responsible and qualified candidates. - Campaigning for the candidates. - Keeping the party's interest centered on the Universitv. - Presenting platforms requiring actual constructive thinking on the part of platform drafters and party members. - Roberts said the Kansan was a "vital organ in alleviating apathy." - Handing down information party leaders have gained from year to year. He said that other than this, however, he is not certain there is a solution to student apathy. Shafiq Hashmi, International Club president, announced that the club will not meet this Friday evening because of finals. Meeting Canceled Gift to Aid KU in International Role International education at KU will be expanded under a new program providing additional funds. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced today that the KU Endowment Association is providing $100,000 in unrestricted funds for international programs. The money will be used to further the University's present activities and to begin others. Funds will be allocated upon the recommendations of the KU Committee on International Educational Affairs, appointed last fall by Chancellor Wescoe to promote and coordinate the University's activities in the field. Among new programs which may be supported by the fund are student and faculty aids, increased exchanges, book and document purchases, services to other Kansas institutions, and others now in the planning stage. A 14-page booklet evaluating the Model U.N. at KU written by Frank T. Stockton, Dean Emeritus of the KU School of Business and former Dean of University Extension, has been published by the University Extension. Kansan Want Ads Get Results Dean Stockton concludes in his work that the programs were successful, except financially. The interest generated by these early conferences were at least partly responsible for the development of another Kansas project, the Governor's Conference on World Affairs, which began in 1953, the booklet states. Booklet Published on Model U.N. The booklet, titled "The United Nations Conferences at the University of Kansas, 1949 to 1956." is a survey of the programs, the first to be conducted by a university on a state level. The Model U.N. sessions are now held in the spring. The one-day conferences were held in Lawrence the day preceding the "Kansas Day" activities each January 29 in Topeka. The Jean de Rigault le Treteau de Paris will present a one act play by Jean-Paul Sartre, "Nuis Clois" or "No Exit," and an "anti-play" by Engene Ioneso, "La Cantatrice Chauve" or "The Bald Sorprano." Two modern French plays will be performed in French at 8 p.m. Jan. 27 in University Theatre. The programs were designed as workshops for local community leaders and students from all levels to stimulate interest and provide general information about the U.N. Man O'War Records NEW YORK — (UPI)—The last of the five world records credited to Man O'War at the end of his career in 1920 have been erased from the books. The final one was broken in the New York Handicap by Wise Ship last year when he ran $^{1 \frac{3}{8}}$ miles in 2:14 over a turf course. Man O'War was timed in $2:15 \frac{1}{2}$ on dirt. Two French Plays Open P-T-P Series The presentation is the first in a series of People-to-People Theatre Projects designed to increase KU's theater audiences' knowledge of foreign plays. No connection with KU's People-to-People organization is involved, although plans are being made with the national organization in Kansas City for cooperation in future theater projects. LUCKY STRIKE presents: LUCKY PUFFERS LUCKY STRIKE presents: LUCKY PUFFERS "THE FACULTY TEA" LUCKY STRIKE "Ah, Dean! Won't you join us in a cup of tea?" "He's upset because he was made the butt of a student joke." "Sherwoodie has been insufferable since he got his Ph.D." "They say he has the largest book collection on campus." LUCKY STRIKE IT'S TOASTER CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. THE PROFESSORIAL IMAGE. It used to be that professors, as soon as they were 28, took on a father image—rumpled tweeds, tousled hair, pipe. But these days, the truly "in" professor has the "buddy" look—Ivy suit, crew cut, Lucky Strikes. It seems that students learn more eagerly from someone with whom they can identify. Alert teachers quickly pounce on the fact that college students smoke more Luckies than any other regular. Have you pounced on the fact yet? CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change! A. T. Co. Product of The American Tobacco-Company-"Tobacco is our middle name" THE END