Dailu Hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No. 93 Thursday, March 1, 1962 New York Air Crash Kills 95 NEW YORK —(UPI)— An American Airlines luxury jetliner dived suddenly on takeoff for Los Angeles and plunged into an icy tidal swamp at Idlewild airport today, killing all 95 persons aboard in a fiery explosion. It was the worst single-plane disaster in U.S. commercial aviation history, and it cast a sudden shadow of gloom over a city giving a hero's worship to Astronaut John H. Glenn who landed at another airport an hour after the crash. One of the dead was W. Alton Jones, millionaire oilman who was flying to see former President Eisenhower at Palm Springs, Calif. They were intimate friends and had planned to go fishing together in the Gulf of California next week. Eisenhower was notified at once. Ann Whitman, his secretary, said she "just can't bring myself" to ask the former president for comment. Jones was a top official of Cities Service Oil Co. and the Richfield Oil Corp., and a director of Chrysler Corp. The plane, American's "Astrojet Flight One" bound non-stop for Los Angeles, made a routine takeoff in clear weather at 9:07 a.m. It had climbed about 1,000 feet off the end of Runway 31 when it wavered, dropped to earth, flipped over and exploded into what one policeman said was "a thousand pieces." THERE WERE 87 passengers and eight crewmen aboard. It took half an hour for 25 pieces of fire equipment to put down the flames. Then a rescue force of hundreds battled to recover the bodies before a rising Atlantic tide poured in over the seaside swamp. Apparently they all died instantly. Pilot James H. Heist, 58-year-old veteran of 5 million miles with American Airlines since 1940, had no time to signal an emergency. A quirk of fate brought death to 17 of the passengers. They had booked seats aboard a United Airlines flight to Los Angeles and switched to the American Astrojet when the United Flight was canceled. Hoping against hope for survivors, city officials immediately detached squads of police from duty along the route of Astronaut Glenn's ticker-tape parade and rushed them to Idlewild. Helicopters and boats of the Coast Guard and city police arrived within minutes. Three fire alarms were sounded, bringing 25 fire and rescue units to battle the blaze. It took half an hour to put down the flames before crash crews could approach the wreckage. THEY REPORTED back: "No sur- rivers." The crash scene was the swampy bank of Jamaica Bay, an arm of the Atlantic Ocean cutting in between Queens and Brooklyn. Wreckage was scattered over nearly half a mile of a game preserve adjoining the runway end. At this point, planes taking off from Idlewild swing out over the ocean while gaining altitude. Then they are back on their westward course. Several residential communities lie near the crash area but there was no report of damage or injury. This was the first U.S. crash of a 707 in commercial passenger service. Crewmen had been killed in two previous U.S. crashes involving 707's on training flights. Both of these accidents happened on Long Island. The only previous 707 disaster involving passenger fatalities was a Sabena Airline crash near Brussels, Belgium, Feb. 15, 1961. Seventy-two persons died. As soon as firemen put out the flames fed by the plane's full fuel tanks, they joined police and Coast Guardsmen recovering bodies. - * * Four helicopters screened the swamp. Small boats worked up against the burned-out cabin. Policemen and firemen in wading boots covered the immediate area, part of which was shallow water and part of which was deep. A policeman said that of the first six bodies brought to a makeshift morgue, four or five were decapitated. The morgue was set up in an American Legion Post's hall. Control tower sources said the plane took off from Runway 31. Shortly after it was airborne, it made a left turn required by airport noise abatement regulations which takes jet aircraft away from populated areas on the airport fringe. There was no indication from the crew that the jet was in trouble. \* \* \* - * * Witnesses Report Scene NEW YORK—(UPI)—Residents of the area on Long Island where the American Airlines jetliner crashed today said the big craft's plunge into Jamaica Bay was preceded by a shattering explosion. "There was a loud noise like a big cannon," said Peter Wernersbach, 63, operator of a service station. "I saw large billows of smoke and flames and then realized it was a plane crash," he added. HERBERT JOHNSON, 51, superintendent of the wildlife sanctuary at the crash scene, was only 200 feet away when the plane went down. He said the explosion Wernersbach heard was apparently muted where he stood by a stiff, blustery wind. "The flames didn't last long." Johnson said, but the plane was completely disintegrated." "It shook the whole house," said Mrs. Ivan Church of the explosion. "Oh, it was so loud! Such force! I knew it might be a plane because they fly right over the house when the wind is blowing in a certain way." ANOTHER WHO HEARD the explosion was Mrs. Mary B. Carroll. "I thought the boiler in my cellar had blown up," said Mrs. Carroll. "I ran down and saw it was all right. Then I came up and saw flames shooting up from the bay." Volunteer fireman William Martin, who was on duty at the broad channel volunteer fire department about a half-mile from the scene, said "Heavy black smoke—a thick column of it—went 150 feet in the air" after the explosion. Roy Cashion, A Brooklyn, N. Y., construction worker, told of seeing the plane explode in the air. "I WAS WORKING on this housing project in the Rockaways," he said. "It was about 10 o'clock when I glanced into the sky and saw this jet banking while taking off from Idlewild. It's a familiar sight. All of a sudden I saw this white flash. Then dense smoke. You could see a big part of the plane fall toward the bay." Henry Patterson was driving past about five minutes after the crash and rushed into the swamp. "I went in to pull out survivors," he said, "but there weren't any." UPI REPORTER Chet Di Mauro, one of the first newsmen on the scene, described it thus: "The swamp area was heavy with black smoke, but twisted pieces of silvery wreckage glistened in the sunlight. "The plane's tail section rose up from the water. Two of its giant wheels lay on the shore about 50 feet from the wreckage. "The fuselage pointed in the direction of the gleaming Empire State Building some 15 miles in the distance. tance. "There was only one fairly large piece of the plane . . . in frigid white-capped water about 100 feet off the shore line. Police said the plane was literally in thousands of pieces." Hundreds of rescuers hurried to recover the bodies before the rising Atlantic tide, already on the way two hours after the crash, covered up the wreckage. FOR SUCH A FLIGHT the plane was fully loaded with fuel and its impact was explosive. Wreckage was flung in an arc half a mile wide. "Fire very intense," fire department units radioed back. A two-alarm call was sounded for emergency equipment. Coast Guard helicopters and small craft joined fireboats, police patrol boats, copters and land units of the fire and police in a dash to the area in hopes a rescue could be carried out. Friends and relatives of passengers were still in the big new American terminal at Idlewild when news of the crash came back. They were taken to Hangar 10 to await further word. won One of the dead was Hollywood producer Irving Rubine, 51. He was a vice president of Highroad productions, which helped bring Oscar-nominee "The Guns of Navarone" to the screen. Rubine had been a partner of Academy-Award screen-writer Carl Foreman. THE JET CRACKED UP roughly 30 seconds after leaving the ground. It was barely two miles from the runway. An airline source said that it was carrying 80,000 to 90,000 pounds of fuel. CRC Says Wescoe Violated Rights The Civil Rights Council last right said that Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe is violating rights of KU students and suggested that his action in refusing to deal with the CRC indicates an administrative policy of discrimination against students who do not agree with him. The charges were summed up in a resolution adopted last night. The resolution stated: "We, the members of the Civil Rights Council, wish to express our regrets that Chancellor Wescoe has refused to deal directly with us on the matter of discriminatory clauses in fraternities and sororites. "WE FEEL THAT we are a 'recognized' organization—our constitution is filed with the Dean of Students—and that the Chancellor is violating our rights as students of this University when he refuses to discuss matters of University policy with us. (The resolution is referring to Chancellor Wescoe's statement last week that he would not discuss discrimination in Greek organizations with members of the CRC. He said he would meet with the All Student Council's Human Rights committee, which he said is the delegated student committee to deal with such matters.) "He told us, prior to the above incident, that his doors were always open to any student. Does this statement mean that there is now a policy of discrimination and that his doors are open only to those students who agree with him on certain issues? "CHANCELLOR WESCOE joined the committee to discuss matters relating to the progress to date in integrating minority groups into community activities. A discussion of segregation clauses existing in constitutions of some social sororities and fraternities as well as related matters followed." "Moreover, at a meeting of a committee of the Faculty Senate in December of last year, the minutes state: "We would like to know what the administration's position is. This was the purpose of our plan to meet with the Chancellor. Due to his refusal, we, and many other interested people, do not know what, if any action is being considered. "Since the channels of information are closed to us, we hope the University Daily Kansan will faithfully fulfill its role and provide the students and faculty with a report on (Continued on page 12) Bert Coan Bert Coan Faculty Rules Coan Ineligible By Terry Murphy Bert Coan was ruled ineligible last night by the Kansas University Senate Committee on Eligibility for Student Activities. The decision struck a note o finality as to whether or not Coa See related story on page 9. would be eligible to play football next fall after having taken a December trip to San Diego for conferences with officials of the San Diego Chargers professional football team. A National Collegiate Athletic Association rule prohibits college athletes from accepting expense money or entertainment from a professional sports organization. HIS ELIGIBILITY has hinged on whether or not he had paid his own expenses. Coan said that he had borrowed the money ($613) from his father and paid the bills himself. Earlier Coan had said that prior to making the trip neither he nor football coach Jack Mitchell were aware of the rule. When Coan returned from San Diego, Mitchell had learned of the rule and informed Coan that he would be ineligible unless he had paid his own expenses. IT WAS COAN'S IMPRESSION that the faculty committee ruled against him because "the circumstances of my trip were of such a nature that the school officials could not possibly gather enough information to make a judgment in my favor." Collegiate athletic ruling bodies take the position that a college athlete should not put himself in a position that would raise doubt as to his activities. Dean Laurence Woodruff, chairman of the faculty committee, expressed regret that Coan would not be eligible. "It was the only decision that could have been made. Apparently, Bert Coan compromised his amateur standing by agreeing to travel at the expense of a professional football team. "I REGRET THAT BERT will not be able to compete for us. He is a fine player. But the decision to turn professional was his." The vote of the committee was unanimous. (Continued on page 12) --- Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 1, 1962 A Positive Effort There is a great mass of criticism continually directed at the United States because it does not practice its ideals. It may believe in them, the arguments run, but what does that mean if it does not act on them. In view of this type of criticism, it is especially satisfying to see some of the humanitarian ideals the United States has long expressed being put into practice. The group that is doing this is the National Council of Churches, through its Church World Service. THE CHURCH World service is engaging in a program of resettlement in the United States for Cuban refugees from the Castro regime. There are presently about 100,000 Cuban refugees in Miami and they are arriving at the rate of nearly 2,000 per week. It might be noted here that in other areas of the world where people have fled from a government they hate or fear to a country sympathizing with them, this constructive policy of resettlement has not been carried out. Instead permanent refugee camps with miserable living conditions have been set up. The refugee camps for refugees from Israel are good examples of this. The Cuban refugees have fled from an oppressive, Communist dominated society that they hate. The United States has admitted them because it sympathizes with that antagonism toward Communism and with their desire to destroy it in Cuba. Many groups in the United States, the Church World Service among them, have recognized the basic humanitarian obligation that the United States has toward the Cuban refugees. THE SITUATION is also suggestive of the great difference between the Communist system and the free, democratic countries of the Western world. In every country where the totalitarian system originating in Russia has gained control, a flood of refugees has poured out of that nation until the Communists could seal the borders effectively. In contrast, the main criticism directed at the United States is that it keeps people out. There is no shortage of people who want to live in America. This difference between the Communist governments and the United States is one of the most telling testimonies against the Communists that exists. —William H. Mullins In one of the letters to the editor today there is a plea by the Communist Party Lecture Bureau for organizations to invite Communists to talk about communism. Communist Speakers They say communism is widely discussed and often attacked without Communists present. They say this is like holding a trial without the defendant being present or having a hearing. THEY MAKE A good point, but with some qualification. The defendant—communism—does have a say in the "trial," either by defenders of communism, by Communist publications, by articles in mass media, or by unbiased speakers who talk on communism. But the latter is indeed a rarity. And this is the strongest point of the Communist propaganda plea. Of course, communism is hard to define—it varies from country to country, depending on who is applying the theory of communism to an actual government. Yet a Communist lecturer would at least be parading under true colors. He would give his audience a picture of communism as a Communist sees it. His audience would look for his biases—his motives and ideas could be checked against the firm knowledge that he is a Communist. OPPOSE THIS to the vaporous shouting of groups such as the John Birch Society, the American Legion, the Daughters of the American Revolution and others. The logical conclusion is that a much more valid picture of communism could be gained from a Communist than from groups presenting an irrational, emotional or suspiciously motivated picture of communism. In America, we see democracy from a participant's viewpoint. To make a valid comparison between democracy and communism, we should be able to see communism from a Communist's viewpoint. In a government established and run by the people, we have a right to this comparison. If the American people cannot remain unswayed by this comparison, it is time for a major revamping of the American government. This editor thinks that the American form of government is in no danger from such a comparison. —Karl Koch letters to the editor A Reply to the Kansam Editor: My attention has been called to a recent issue of the Daily Kansan in which one Arthur C. Miller has written concerning membership in national fraternities and sororites. SINCE THE FIRST rule in any good reporting and editing is that of accuracy, I would like to correct the impression left by the article in your paper. February 12, with reference to Alpha Delta Pi Sorority and the withdrawal of its chapter at Lake Forest College in Illinois last year. This withdrawal was not based on discrimination but on the matter of local autonomy which had been voted as College policy by the Board of Trustees. Alpha Delta Pi believes first of all in democratic processes and the right of free assembly (including the choice of one's friends) as guaranteed to our American people by the Bill of Rights. When the Lake Forest Trustees voted for local autonomy in fraternities and sororites on that campus, they also expressed preference that only Lake Forest alumni serve as chapter advisers. To Alpha Delta Pi, a federation of locally autonomous chapters is not acceptable, nor is it synonymous with fraternity. Protest was voiced to the Administration over such policy but to no avail. Accordingly, the local chapter was notified it would not reopen this Fraternities and sororites have contributed richly to the development of the University of Kansas and to the loyalty of its student body over the years. It is hoped they will not be put in a false position upon your campus for all American students are sincerely trying to work together. past fall, as it was felt unfair to hold any students in the face of further harassment such as had gone on at Lake Forest. Maxine Blake Grand President Alpha Delta Pi As you know, Communism is being widely discussed in this country, but in most cases without the Communists. This is not only unfair because Communists are most often the targets of attack at such discussions. It is un-American in tradition. Also it is not due process. It is like holding a trial without the defendant being present or having a hearing. --- Offer From The Communists Editor: MANY SPEAKERS on this topic are either professional anti- Communists or ill-informed persons whose material is based on untrue, prejudiced or outright reactionary sources. Such speakers create the atmosphere of the witchhunt and help ultra-Right fascist elements to the detriment of peace and social progress. Communism is a philosophy and movement which is more than one hundred years old and has many millions of adherents throughout the world. The Communist Party, U.S.A., is in existence 43 years and it has according to objective historians made valuable contributions in the struggles of labor, of the Negro people and for the cause of peace, democracy and social progress generally. Communists have made heavy sacrifices in the course of these struggles. They ought to be given a fair hearing. They will give a truthful view of the Communists on such topics as Communism, Marxism, the McCarran Act, the policies of the ultra-Right, the vital issues of peace, democracy, freedom of speech, socialism and other current topics. Such speakers are available for lectures, symposia, and debates. WE WISH to inform you that we have set up a Lecture Bureau to make speakers available who can speak with knowledge and authority on Communism. It is entirely legal to have Communist speakers, as the Attorney General recently stated. Fees for speakers is not a main consideration. We ask organizations able to do so to cover fees and expenses. May we hear from you? Sincerely yours, Lecture Bureau, Communist Party, U.S.A. Third Floor 23 West 26th St. New York 10, N.Y. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler TEST TOMORROW PICK SMART PAPER DUE WITHOUT FAIL FRIDAY OFFICE HOURS TO 10 A.M. SATURDAY MONDAY OR YOU FAIL BARF R-39 "DID YOUR DRAFT BOARD GIVE YOU AN EXTENSION ON YOUR EDUCATIONAL DEFERMENT." the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism AMERICAN HERITAGE, February 1962. $3.95 a copy, $15 a year. George R. Stewart has contributed a particularly absorbing story of the Old West for the new American Heritage. This author, who compiled the Donner story into a shocking history, tells us of the covered wagon and its contribution to American folklore and symbolism. Stewart gives us a bit of disillusioning detail. He finds absolutely no evidence that covered wagon frontiersmen, from their wagons formed in a circular pattern, ever had to stand off arrow-shooting Indians. One more legend blasted. The article is illustrated beautifully, as could be expected in this publication. The cover is a familiar painting by Frederic Remington, showing a tough-looking old sentinel on the trail west. AMERICAN HERITAGE'S PUBLICITY RELEASE boosts an inside story of Pearl Harbor, but there is little in this article that we don't know already. It does contain the exact words of a Billy Mitchell prediction of a Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Other reading is not quite so familiar. A Marine colonel tells how the United States got Guantanamo in the Spanish-American War. Two writers, one of them Malcolm Cowley, tell of the brutal "middle passage," the slave trade of the 18th century. And 13 posters show us the execrable taste of Americans in the Gay Nineties. Another article describes the train that took the body of Lincoln to Springfield in 1865; another describes that mysterious figure, James Otis, who fought the Writs of Assistance in 1761 and then began to follow a career that was part-patriot, part-tory. This issue brings the second installment of a series on American Progressives, this one dealing with George W. Perkins, a partner in the Morgan firm who backed Theodore Roosevelt. A photograph portfolio shows us "The Face of Maine" of two generations ago, an eloquent series of photographs, accompanied by a Longfellow poem, shows us the Jewish cemetery at Newport, R. I., and an article tells us about Parson Weems, who started that story of the cherry tree and young George Washington. Worth Repeating The Russian Government appears to think that Soviet decrees can change the laws of genetics; the Vatican apparently believes that ecclesiastical decrees could secure adequate nourishment for us all, even if there were only standing room on the planet. Such opinions, to my mind, represent a form of insane megalomania entirely alien to the scientific spirit.—Bertrand Russell Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Viking 3-2700 Telephone Vlking 3-200 Extension 711 news room Extension 111, news room Extension 276, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Ca Pu TOROI invention fiction h by Unite branches eye. The d and sells makes it IT'S O among training naut Jo It als training attracts THE training univers cal clir market The C of which which r ing for. imposed exact sing. It is born s worth who do the Def ratories They pilot's ment p develop have a CON1 The we Associia say the instead board, a draft wearin show w The jet pilot investn 32, hav purpos In av differen an exp and w comes DR. have r and g manuf Fros In Seve the Sponsor cans, I will m the po Each work Thurs in the comm proxii Peto Mo., f poll g Hawk poll Bern Ger Art Germ Muse The press show Germsional the M Canadian Invention Put in Use by U.S. TORONTO — (UPI) A Canadian invention which looks like a science-fiction helmet is being snapped up by United States firms and military branches as a sort of spy-on-the-eye. The device weighs three pounds and sells for a cool $3,900 — which makes it an expensive headpiece. ITS CALLED AN Optiscan and among those who have used it for training purposes is American Astronaut John Glenn. It also has been used, not for training purposes, but to show what attracts and holds the eye. The Optiscan is a helmet on top of which is fastened an 8-mm camera which records what the eye is looking for. A pin-point of light is superimposed on the film to show the exact spot at which the eye is resting. THE INVENTION is used for training aviators and astronauts, in university psychology labs, in medical clinics and to some extent by market researchers. It is the brain child of Englishborn scientist Dr. Norman Mackworth and Dr. Llewellyn Thomas who developed it while working for the Defense Medical Research Laboratories at Downsview, Ont. They wanted to find out how a pilot's gaze flicks over his instrument panel. However, once it was developed, they realized it could have a dozen uses. CONSUMER RESEARCH is one. The world distributors (Mackworth Associates International of Toronto) say the Optisan can save money—instead of turning out a costly billboard, the advertiser can first show a draft of the board with subjects wearing the helmet. The camera will show what catches and holds the eye. The distributors, consisting of exjet pilot Gordon Squires, 32, and exinvestment manager George Moore, 32, have taken some film for test purposes to show to potential clients. In aviation, the camera shows the difference in eve movements between an experienced pilot and a trainee and what can distract him when he comes in for a landing. DR. THOMAS and Dr. Mackworth have resigned from the defense labs and gone to other fields, but the manufacture and marketing of the Frosh Hawks to Help In YR Opinion Poll Seventeen Fresh Hawks will help the Student Opinion Poll Group, sponsored by the Young Republicans, next week. The Frost Hawks will make the telephone calls to ask the poll questions. Each of the Frosh Hawks will work either Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday night from 6:30 to 8:30 in the Kansas Union. The telephone committee members will make approximately 12 telephone calls each. Peter Wellington, Kansas City, Mo., freshman and a member of the poll group, will coordinate the Frosh Hawk telephone committee with the poll group. ___ Bernstein To Give Lecture Gerald Bernstein, Curator of the Art Museum, will lecture to the German Club at 4 today in the Art Museum. helmet is being handled by Moore and Squires. The lecture is on "German Expressionism," and will include a showing of slides and a tour of the German and Austrian expressionism exhibit now showing at the Museum. They set up their firm last September and have sold primarily to the United States because they had a backlog of orders to catch up on. Many of their customers are universities using the helmets in their psychology labs. Others are big-name companies with U.S. government contracts. They say Canadian market researchers and some English firms are interested. The Swedish government has bought one on a closed television circuit to eliminate the time needed about one hour—to develop the film. Fraternity Jewelry MOORE AND SQUIRES figure countries like Germany, Italy and France, all striving hard for world markets, will be interested. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Asked if they would sell to iron curtain countries, Squires said: "We would check with the Canadian and American governments first and if their advice was favorable, we'd go ahead." Balfour 411 W.14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Two modified versions of the helmet are slated for early production. One is to correct "lazy eye" trouble where the viewer has been using the wrong part of his retina for central vision. A second is a remedial reader which could be used in schools to find pupils who are not reading properly. Tight Parking Proves Costly JACKSON, Miss. — (UPI) Two compact cars parked in the same meter space have created a problem for Jackson Municipal Court Judge James L. Spencer. A patrolman this week tagged both vehicles with "double parking" tickets, although they were within the alloted space and the meter was reading correctly. The owners told the judge the purpose of the meters was to help solve the traffic problem and that they were "just trying to help out by using half the space." Spencer says there are two theories: "Some say if the motorist rents for an hour he can sub-rent any part, others say its the first man there and the other man is tres-passing." The prosecutor has been asked to file a brief, and the judge says a decision will be made soon. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 SPAGHETTI DINNER PARTY Get Tickets From Any ARNOLD AIR SOCIETY or ANGEL FLIGHT MEMBER (or at the door) ALL YOU CAN EAT 75 $ ^{\mathrm{c}} $ SUN., MARCH 4 5:00 - 7:00 P.M. ALLEN FIELD HOUSE This Weekend in the Dance CAVE Friday — HI FI'S . . . . 8-12 Saturday - HI LINERS . . . 8-12 VI 3-9640 D CAVERNS N 644 Mass. Blind Boy Translates Book Thursday. March 1, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 TYLER, Tex. — (UPI) — Rober K. Peters, a blind 20-year-old lay reader of the Protestant Episcopal Diocese of Texas, has transcribed the complete Book of Common Prayer in Braille. Peters, a member of Christ Church here, has been blind since he was 13. His Prayer Book contains 950 pages and weighs seven pounds. Members of his family recorded the material on tape and he then transcribed it in Braille. New Use for Diamonds NEW YORK — (UPI) — A new use has been found for diamonds, both natural or man-made, according to E. H. Hull. of the General Electric Co. Research Laboratory, Schenectady, N. Y. Hull told a recent meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers that diamonds are a useful material for burnishing — one of the oldest methods for improving the surface finish of metals. This Weekend Only 1c SALE Buy one dozen Spuddies at regular price and get 1/2 dozen ___ for only 1c 1 dozen Spuddies ___ reg. price 55c ½ dozen Spuddies ___ for only 1c 1½ dozen Spuddies ------ only 56c THE Spudnut SHOP 1422 W. 23rd. VI 2-3255 U.S. Keds LOOK FOR THE BLUE LABEL U.S. Keds The Shoe of Champions The newest sneaker in the Ked family. Brand new square toe Ked made of hopsacking in seven delightful colors: Leafgreen, Sun Orange, Cord Beige, Ocean Blue, Gold, Black, and White. $4^{95} McCoy's 813 Mass. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 1. 1962 Jayhawks Lose In Last Second Center Stan Morrison scored a field goal a split-second before the game ended to give Oklahoma a 63-62 win over the Kansas Jayhawkers last night at Norman. With KU leading 62-60, Morrison's shot was still in the air when the horn sounded. NINE SECONDS earlier, KU's Loye Sparks scored what at the time appeared to be the Jayhawks' winning basket. But, after a series of Sooner passes, the ball was fired to Morrison who provided the Sooner victory. The Jayhawks, who once trailed by nine points in the second half, led 60-59 with 1:45 left to play. Sooner guard Eddie Evans stole a KU pass and scored, giving the Sooners a 61-60 advantage with a minute left. After Evans' basket, the Hawkers moved into scoring position and missed five consecutive shots. Evans, 5-9 and shortest player in the KATS 32 PERSONAL HIGH—Lee Flachsbarth, Jayhawker starting center, hit a personal scoring peak of 14 points last night against the Oklahoma Sooners. Flachsbarth's previous high was 10 points. EVANS MISSED his chance from the free throw line, and Jayhawker John Matt rebounded. Big Eight, rebounded with 44 seconds of play left and was fouled by KU's Nolen Ellison. Once again Evans took the ball away from the Hawkers and was fouled by Jerry Gardner. The officials ruled that Gardner intentionally fouled Evans and awarded Evans two free throws. Evans missed both attempts. THE SOONERS retained possession of the ball and for the second time in five seconds, Gardner intentionally fouled Evans. Evans missed his fourth and fifth consecutive free throw attempts. The score was still 61-60 before Sparks scored for KU and gave the Hawks the one-point lead with nine seconds left. Morrison, besides scoring the winning goal, led the Sooners with a 23-point performance and was the game's leading scorer. OU's Evans scored 19 points, 14 coming in the second half. KU GUARD Jerry Gardner, who fouled out, scored 15 points for KU. Lee Flachsbarth set a new personal game career high as he scored 14 points. The 6-5 center's previous best was 10 points. The other half of KU's backcourt duo, Nolen Ellison, scored 13 points. THE GAME marked the third straight time the Sooners have downed KU by the slim one-point margin. OU nudged KU 61-60 in the Big Eight pre-season tournament and won in a contest here nine days ago by a 67-66 score. A crowd of about 1,200 persons watched the game. OU held a 27-25 half-time advantage. Harry Gibson opened the second half with a field goal to tie the score. THE NEXT TIME Kansas tied the score late in the second half with only four minutes remaining to play. During an eight-minute Sooner scoring attack early in the second half, the Sooners maintained leads of five, seven, and nine points. With ten minutes left in the first half, KU established its biggest lead, 23-15. The Sooners' accurate free throw shooting closed this gap. The Sooners hit nine of 12 free throw chances in the first half. The loss dropped the Hawkers further into the conference cellar. Coach Dick Harp's team holds a 6-15 record for all games and a 2-7 mark for league play. BATON ROUGE, La.—(UPI)—Four Masters champions and three of the all-time money winners of golfdom were set to tee off today in the opening round of the 72-hole $20,000 Baton Rouge Open golf tournament. Sport Briefs Entries from Arnold Palmer, winner of the Baton Rouge Open for the past two years, Cary Middlecoff, Doug Ford and Jackie Burke caused one open official to boast it was the best field ever to play ir a golf tournament in Louisiana Middlecoff, not a regular on the winter pro circuit, served notice Tuesday that he'd finish in the top money, firing a six-under-par 66 to take top pro money on a pro-am warmup. Other top favorites include Bo Winniger, winner of the New Orleans open last week. Howie Johnson, Doug Sanders and Bob Goalby. Pahner missed with pro-am event. His private plane was grounded at Mobile, Ala., with engine trouble. He was ill when he arrived, suffering from nausea and loss of equilibrium, and had both ears lanced to relieve pressures caused by abcesses. Qualifying rounds limited the field to the top 140 pros and 10 amateurs. Eighteen holes will be played today, Friday, Saturday and Sunday, and the field will be cut to the top 60 pros and 10 amateurs at the midway point. KANSAS CITY. Mo.-(UPI) Kansas guard Jerry Gardner has replaced teammate Nolen Ellison as the leading scorer in the Big Eight conference. * * Gardner, in 11 conference basketball games, has scored at a 19.4-point clip. Ellison dropped to 18.4 points, the same as Nebraska's Tom Russell. And in fourth place is Colorado's Ken Charlton at 17.9 points, followed by Missouri's Ken Doughty at 17.7 points. Rounding out the top ten: Mike Wroblewski, Kansas State, sixth, 16.8 points; Wilky Gilmore, Colorado, seventh, 15.5 points; Eddie Bunch, Oklahoma State, eighth, 13.3 points; Pat McKenzie, Kansas State, ninth, 12.9 points; and Vinnie Brewer, Iowa State, 10th, 12.8 points. Kansas State boasts the best offense, both for the season and in loop play, with 70.5 and 69.4 points, respectively. Defensively, Oklahoma State is the leader with 56.2 points for the year and 56.4 points in the Big Eight. * * BOSTON, Mass. — (UPI) — The Boston Celtics have won six straight Eastern Division titles because there's always a take-charge guy. The National Basketball Association champions had two such personalities last night when Frank Ramsey and Bob Cousy spearheaded Boston to a 129-123 overtime victory over Cincinnati. Ramsay, the greatest "sixth man" in pro basketball history, came off the bench to lead a Celtic charge in the fourth quarter that overcame a 15-point deficit. He scored 18 of Boston's 37 points in the period to end regulation play at 116-all. Included was the tying basket with 16 seconds to go. Wilt Chamberlain scored 61 points as Philadelphia defeated Chicago, 128-119, and Richie Guerin led New York to a 119-109 win over Detroit with a 34-point barrage. Cousy tallied seven of Boston's 13 overtime points. Oscar Robertson of Cincinnati had a game high of 41 points, while Ramsey collected 30. * * WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — (UPI) — Ace right harter Jerry Walker yesterday became the first casualty in the Kansas City Athletics spring training camp and will be out of service a few days. The 23-year-old pitcher hurt his back and was taken to a nearby hospital for X-rays, but no dangerous injuries were found. A physician diagnosed the injury as a pulled muscle in the lower back and said Walker will be out of action four or five days. Manager Hank Bauer is counting on Walker to be one of the main-stays of his pitching staff. Walker broke into the major leagues in 1957 with the Baltimore Orioles, right out of high school. Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Steve Clark Kansas track coach Bill Easton expects this year's Big Eight indoor track meet to be a "cut each other's neck" affair. He expects the meet which will be held tomorrow and Saturday at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo., to have the best overall balance its had in years. "THEERE ARE too many top performers in the league this year for one team to walk away with the meet." Easton said. "We're going into the meet in pretty good shape, but we're going to have to be 'up' for the meet. "Last week against Oklahoma State and Kansas State we were 'down.' We wanted to be 'down' however, because we were 'up' the week before. It's not good for a team to try to be 'up' for every meet. So, there was a reason in our being 'down.' Easton looks for Nebraska and Missouri to have the strongest teams among his competitors. He cites Colorado, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Iowa State as being "tough" because they have "competitors who can cut up the opposition." NEBRASKA, Easton relates, has its best team in many years. The Cornhuskers have a strong team balance in comparison to teams with a few outstanding individuals which they have had in past years. He lists Missouri, one of KU's conquests this year, as another top contender for the crown. He credits Missouri also with overall strength Easton says the Cornhuskers have a better team than when they had Jamaican spinner Keith Gardiner. HE LISTS the Jayhawkers' strong events as the 600, 890, 1000-yard dashes, the mile, the high jump and the pole vault. He expects points in the hurdles and the dashes hard to come by. Charlie Smith gained some confidence which he has been needing for some time last Friday. Smith won the 60-yard high hurdles defeating Kansas State's Jerry Hooker. treating Kansas State's Jerry Hooker. Smith has all the tools to be a good hurdler, but he has never quite reached the frame of mind to become a champion. Some observers believe Smith defeats himself before the race starts. RICH ANDERSON, another hurdler, is a person to watch. Anderson is improving continuously and may be up with the big boys soon. $$ * * * $$ Easton believes that Yul Yost can place in the shot put if he can get the iron ball out over 54 feet. IT LOOKS as if the hard-running halfback is headed toward San Diego. With his ineligibility decided he can concentrate on landing a professional contract. Jottings from the note pad: It was kind of sad to hear that Bert Coan was found ineligible for further collegiate competition. Coan has had more than his share of tough luck and perhaps things will start picking up for him. John Uelses, world record-holder in the pole vault, had to cancel his Kansas City appearance tomorrow because a Knights of Columbus track meet was rescheduled for Friday instead of Saturday. We will never forget his debut as a Jayhawker here against his cxteammates from Texas Christian. Coan was one of the most skillful runners we have seen. Beta Theta Pi did it again in intramural "A" competition. The Betas captured the Hill Championship defeating the Harriers 41-39 in a close-fought contest. Our capsule summary of intramural basketball will run sometime next week. Intramural volleyball will swing into action soon. Team applications are due tomorrow in the intramural office. The Kansas State-Colorado basketball game will be televised Saturday night on WIBW-TV, Topeka, Channel 13. Sonny Liston Declines Patterson's Fight Offer NEW YORK — (UPI) — Now it's Sonny Liston who is rejecting the big June fight with heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson, for which he could sign today if he would accept terms. It's Liston of Philadelphia who is yelling "No, no! no!" It was learned authoritatively. It's big Sonny who, for the past week, has been rejecting terms offered by Championship Sports, Inc. and has been demanding 20 per cent of all net receipts for what may be a $10,009,000 fight. Championship Sports has offered 27-year-old Sonny $12½ per cent, backed by a $200,000 guarantee, it was learned. Listen and attorney Morton Witkin in Philadelphia insist that they want no guarantee but they do want 20 per cent of all net receipts. The vehemence of protests by Liston and Witkin and the number of meetings in New York among Patterson, attorney Julius November and the promoting brothers Tom and Al Bolan of Championship Sports indicate a deadlock that may extend beyond Patterson's March 13 deadline. Although Liston received his largest purse of $80,000 for knocking out Albert Westphal of Germany in the first round on Dec. 4, it is the contention of Sonny and attorney Witkin that neither the $80,000 purse nor the offered $200,000 guarantee has any bearing upon what the challenger deserves for the June extravaganza with Patterson. No one connected with the negotiations would comment today — no one connected with the promotion or with either fighter. KU Frosh Play MU Frosh Hoping to reverse last year's season record, the KU Freshman basketball team meets the University of Missouri fresh tonight at Columbia. Mo. Tipoff time is 8 p.m. However, it was learned that attorney Tom Bolan, president of Championship Sports, and Patterson's attorney, November, are positive that the NBA will not vacate Flovd's championship on March 13 should he fail to sign by then for a defense against Liston—if big Sonny rejected the $200,000 guarantee as challenger. That was the deadline re-established last Sunday by the National Boxing Association's executive committee when 27-year-old Patterson must sign for his eighth defense against an approved challenger, preferably Liston. Last year the Freshmen, who now have a 2-1 mark, compiled a 1-3 record. THE JAYHAWKERS, who have have Kansas State twice by scores of 69-49 and 61-52 and lost to Coffeyville Junior College in a 54-52 game, face a team of equal height tonight. Both teams' starting lineup averages 6-3 per man. Probable starters for Coach Ted Owens are center George Unseld, 6-7, forwards Mike Shinn, 6-5, and David Brill. 6-5, and guards Wayne Loving, 5-11, and David Schichtle, 6-2. Missouri's starting lineup includes players 6-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-3, and 5-11. Coach Owens who saw the Tigers beat Iowa State in overtime, considers the Missouri team "good." Thursday, March 1, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Liberal Arts Major Can Choose Various Vocations Lucky is the woman who knows just what she wants to do after graduation. After an expensive and extensive four-year education she is ready to test her training and see if it can support her in the same manner in which she has become accustomed. So the first problem the graduate meets is finding a job. The education major is sure to teach, of course, and the lucky home-economics major will probably wind up as a home economist in business. "Eut." wails the liberal arts graduate, "what will I do?" A B.A. DEGREE can mean one in art history or physics or English. And fortunately some vocations desire these kinds of background. An English major is the preferred major for a radio continuity writer. A woman in this field might expect to file, type and announce (when a woman's voice is needed), A woman with short hair reads a newspaper. Our Constitution is in actual operation; everything appears to promise that it will last; but in this world nothing is certain but death and taxes. —Benjamin Franklin as well as write commercials. But the continuity writer might go on to head the continuity department for a station or be a dramatic script writer for a network. THE WOULD - BE continuity writer will find college radio station and publication experience invaluable. And she should remember employers want to see samples of published writing. The art history major may be sought as a museum aid. A museum aid arranges displays, helps schedule traveling exhibitions, catalogues, conducts groups on tours or helps become assistant curator and plan exhibits, do research on paintings or artifacts the museum purchases. She can become curator of the department with a Ph.D. and be in charge of programing exhibits and purchasing. The economics major can look forward to a job as financial analyst. And the girl who makes it to the top, can look forward to a $20,-000 salary plus a share of profits, high bonuses and company benefits. visitors identify relies. She will probably begin her job by typing letters. EMPLOYERS of economists like the woman with an analytical mind who can write. They prefer a stable, self-contained woman who works well alone. And many firms want applicants with graduate school plans. THE MUSEUM AID is limited without an advanced degree (which she can get in night school). With an M.A., the museum aid might The analyst will probably begin work by totaling figures on adding machines but will eventually write reports for her associates in their work or for investors in deciding where to invest. THE CHEMISTRY or physics major has probably already decided to become a research assistant until she can get a master's degree or a PhD. These degrees are very Science Kay Kelly Wins Trip to Hawaii When Gidget went Hawaiian, Kay E. Kelly, Prairie Village freshman, did not dream she would follow. Miss Kelly will leave for Hawaii Thursday where she will play a minor part in Charleton Heston's next picture, "Diamond Head." She said she was surprised to learn that she was the winner. "It was such a long time after they investigated us," she said. "I forgot about the contest until they told me I had won." Miss Kelly won a two-week's trip for two and a part in the movie by completing a jingle in the "Gidget Goes Hawaiian" contest sponsored by three grocery store chains in conjunction with Columbia Pictures. Her father will accompany her on the trip. Miss Kelly has had no previous acting experience. After entering the contest, she and her family were investigated to make certain none of them was employed by the sponsoring grocery chain in the Midwest. Then her picture was submitted. SABO TAGE His alias: "Dr. Moriarty." His job updied in fireflies plots for U.S. spies. After 20 years of silence, Stanley Lovell reveals the true story of his adventures in the O.S.S. In this week's Post, he tells about the "Hedy Lamarr"—a device that panicked a roomful of generals. About a devilish weapon for wrecking Nazi supply trains. And about a "mistake" that might have blown up the White House. WAS MY BUSINESS The Saturday Evening POST MARCH 1, 1982 ISSUE NOW ON SALE Couple Announces Engagement TOMMY Patricia Dodson Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Dodson of Kansas City announce the engagement of their daughter Patricia Ann, to Jerome A. Musil, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Aloysius M. Musil. Musil is a junior in journalism and a member of Sigma Delta Chi, professional fraternity for men in journalism. Miss Dodson is a secretary in Kansas City. India Club Officers The India Club recently elected spring officers. They are: president, Vinod Patel, Baroda, India, graduate student; vice president, Ranib Singh, Delhi, India, junior; secretary, Shirish Shah, Dohad, India, graduate student; and treasurer, Vadakkvppattu Gnanapurani, Bombay, India, graduate student. X A man needs Jockey support Jockey is for men. Made from 13 separate pieces to give the support and protection every man needs A man needs a special kind of support for true male comfort. And only Jockey builds a brief from 13 separate, tailored pieces to give that support—plus comfort. No other brief has such a firm, long-lasting waistband to hold the brief up for constant support, and no other brief has the Jockey assurance of no-gap security. Get the real thing . . . it can't Jockey If it doesn't have the Jockey Boy often important for advancement in research, in industry the researcher doubling her salary in a few years. But the junior members of a research team will probably run tests and conduct lab experiments with a senior scientist. With a Ph.D. she might head her own research team and guide her own project. 125 Jockey BRIEFS A profession that can be considered for any major is retailing, although retailers prefer a woman to have courses in economics, retailing or clothing and textiles. MOST STORES have their own retailing training program. But in small stores, the trainee starts out selling and eventually works into a junior executive position. Salaries in this field start at $50 to $100 a week and can go as high as an annual $50,000. (It might be comforting to note there are more women presidents in retailing than in any other industry.) An economics or government major and preferably a planning major can look forward to a career in city planning. Courses in architecture and public administration will help to get this job, but most good jobs require a master's degree. There are jobs in planning wherever cities are growing or going to ruin. Frequent skirmishes into politics will keep the job vibrant. The junior planner can first expect to collect and summarize data on population trends or land use. Or PICASSO she might prepare charts or exhibits for community exhibitions. From here her only way is up, up into the $20,000 a year bracket. A woman of elegance knows when to add, when to take away. She is always understated in her use or makeup, accessories, even perfume. fish are angel sword jelly only Capezios are d'apezio Catch the Spring spirit with Capezios before they slip off and away to the most chic places day and night, flashing the most original fashion. Black or Red. $8.95 fish are angel sword jelly only Capezios are Capezio Catch the Spring spirit with Capezios before they slip off and away to the most chic places day and night, flashing the most original fashion. Black or Red. $8.95 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 1, 1962 [1] 1962 ROCK CH Particip 819 Massachusetts VI 3-3470 ARENSBERG'S Shoe Store Fine Footwear for Men & Women FRANCIS Sporting Goods 731 Massachusetts VI 3-4191 One Stop Headquarters for All Athletic Equipment COMPLETE AUTO REPAIR Tune Up Overhaul Brake Service Wheel Balancing MOTOR IN BROYLES & SON Texaco Service 827 Vermont St. VI 3-4955 6th & Florida DANIEL'S JEWELRY 914 Massachusetts VI 3-2572 Vi 3-9785 Free Check and Estimate WATCH REPAIR SPECIAL Your watch cleaned for as little as $4.99 DIXON'S Drive-In 2500 West 6th BUILDERS INVESTMENT COMPANY, INC. 802 Massachusetts Phone VI 2-0099 ROUND CORN DRUG Larry S. Plummer, General Manager 801 Massachusetts APARTMENT RENTALS Furnished and Unfurnished REDMAN SHOES 815 Massachusetts RUSTY-COI HILLCRES' IGA Supermarkets Thursday. March 1, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 tulations CHALK REVUEcipants ND CORNER DRUG VI 3-0200 DIXON'S Drive-In V13-7446 1237 Oread Specialists in Campus Wear for Coeds REDMAN SHOES On the Campus COACH HOUSE GA Supermarkets STY-COLES HILLCREST 846 Iowa S VI 3-5016 SOUTHERN PIT Barbecue VI 3-9808 BILL'S Apco Service Open 11:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Monday thru Saturday 1834 Massachusetts VI 3-9481 V13-2575 BRIEN and BALES Licensed, Bonded and Insured Contractors 304 West 6th Plumbing-Wiring-Heating Company ERHART FLYING SERVICE Complete Flying Service VI 3-2167 INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY and Dry Cleaners 3 Convenient Locations 740 Vermont 9th & Miss. 1903 Mass. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 1, 1962 Socialists to Govern Italy By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst Barring unforeseen developments. Italy's first left-of-center government since the war takes office this week, its success dependent upon a stocky, moon-faced man in heavy glasses who once called Former President Truman another Hitler. The man is Left-Wing Socialist Leader Pietro Nenni who applied his epithet to Truman in opposition to Italy's membership in NATO. NENNI, FOR YEARS A CLOSE collaborator with Italy's Communists still opposes NATO but his ties with communism have loosened considerably. Nenni's left-wing Socialists will hold no cabinet seats in the new government formed by Premier Amintore Fanfani. Amirore Tahiri Those went to the coalition of Fanfani's own Christian Democrats, the anti-communist Social Democrats of Glusepe Saragat and to the moderately left Republicans. Pro-NATO Defense Minister Giulio Andreotti kept his old job, as did Foreign Minister Antonio Segni, a strong supporter of the Communist-opposed European Common Market. AMONG THOSE NOT INcluded in the new government is Mario Seelba, who as interior minister frequently sent his headhumping riot police against the Communists. In return for the government's leftward shift domestically, Nenni promised to support government measures his party approved, and more imporantly, to abstain on those measures which were not approved. He also agreed to a reluctant neutrality toward NATO. The idea of an "opening to the left" in Italian politics has been discussed for years. THE CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATS, Italy's largest party, are bound together by a common religion but are deeply split among themselves, left, right and center. Attempts at coalition with other center and rightwing parties proved unstable and short-lived. For example, this is Italy's 23rd postwar government. The alliance with the Socialists provides Fanfani with time and the solid majority he believes he needs to accomplish needed reforms. THESE INCLUDE A CRASH program to build schools, tax reforms, anti-trust legislation and easier farm credits. Also on the program is nationalization of Italy's private power industry. The Roman Catholic Church opposes the alliance which also is regarded with great misgivings by many in the political center. The center and rightwing fear that Nenni could be the Trojan Horse to lead Italy increasingly to the left and therefore away from NATO. The Common Market and close ties to the West. At best, the "opening to the left" is regarded as a necessary calculated risk. A gain might be a final break between Nenni and the Communists. 'Preserved' Vacation On View at Dyche Museum By Janice Pauls How would you like to take a North American "safari" in 30 minutes? You can do it in sight and sound by visiting the KU Museum of Natural History where a panorama of wildlife, natural vegetation and beautiful scenic colors surround you. At the push of a button, a narrator will explain the silent motionless world before you. A walrus and Polar bears stand pested against the forbidding snow and ice of the Arctic north as the pale sea merges with the sky against the horizon. Towering rocks in the foreground protect the animals from the icy blasts. From the coniferous forests of Canada the caribou and snowshoe rabbit emerge side by side. They stand sheltered by bog willows while a lynx crouches menacingly above them. THE TUNDRA RECION with its mosses and lichens mixed with colorful flowering vegetation serves as a stomping ground for the muskox. Mountain sheep stand as statues on high mountain cliffs overlooking the tundra. Their great curved horns circle around their small white heads. From the Canadian forests, you move into the Northern Rockies where moose and mountain goats abound. Tiny white-tailed deer gather at a sparkling water-hole unaware of the grizzly bear lurking in the mouth of a canyon. Beavers work energetically on a partially completed dam while mink watch from the bank. short, brown grass of the Colorado prairie. Prairie dogs peck cautiously out of their burrows at the coyotes hiding nearby. Huge bison roam and feed on the A BOBCAT LIES silhouetted against an autumn landscape as a squirrel and woodchucks play in and around the trees. A sly fox fads softly into the underbrush while a cardinal swings high on a limb. The dry, sandy desert is accented by enormous cacti reaching toward the sky. A tarantula and rattlesnake creep over the surface among the floral desert shrubs. Finally, at the end of the journey, you enter the swamplands. The hanging vines provide a playground for the monkeys who swing over a small forest deer roaming below. High among the foliage, one can spot the brilliant colors of a parrot while a fluorescent blue butterfly flutters nearby. All this is a preserved vacation-land to be enjoyed all year round. SNACK BASKET 2 Pieces of Chicken Roll Choice of One — Slow, Fries, Potato Salad, Beans 75c BIG BUY men recommend it to other men Old Spice BRAND LICENCE Old Spice BALSAM. LOS ANGELES Cool, clean Old Spice After Shave Lotion always gets you off to a fast, smooth start. Feels just as good between shaves as it does after shaving. Rates A-OK with dates. Old Spice SHULTON AFTER SHAVE LOTION Tasteful Twist, "Gida" VIENNA, Austria — (UPI) — A new twist-like dance called the "Gida" is catching on fast in Hungary, the Budapest newspaper Esti Hirlan reported yesterday. "It is similar to the twist but more tasteful," the newspaper said. "The couples jump and circle around each other but without touching or embracing." JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Kansan Classified Ads Get Results A On Campus with Max Shulman 1 (Author of "Rally Round The Flag, Boys", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) UNITED WE STAND C The entire academic world is agog over the success of the Associated Colleges Plan—ACP, for short. I mean, you go to any campus in the country these days and you will see students and faculty dancing on the green, blowing penny whistles, grabbing each other by the elbows and yelling, "About that ACP, Charley-like wow!" And who can blame them? The ACP is a plan not only simply brilliant, but also brilliantly simple. All it is, is a loose regional federation of small colleges. Let's say, for example, that in a given region we have a group of small colleges, each with its own academic specialty. Small College No. 1, let's say, has a fine language department; Small College No. 2, let's say, has a fine science department; No. 3 has a fine music department; etc., etc. Well sir, under the ACP these various colleges federate. A student in any one of the colleges can take courses in the specialty of any of the other colleges and—here's the beauty part!—he will receive credit for the course at his home college. Thus he enjoys all the advantages of a big university without losing the comfy coiness of a small college! Well sir, you can see what a good idea the ACP is. I respectfully submit, however, that just because a thing is good is no reason not to try to make it better. Like, for instance, Marlboro Cigarettes. Marlboros were good from the very beginning, and people found out quickly and sales zoomed. But did the makers of Marlboro say, "Okay, we've got it made. Let's relax"? Well sir, if that's what you think, you don't know the makers! They did not relax. They took their good Marlboros and kept improving them. They improved the filter, improved the blend, improved the pack. They researched and developed tirelessly, until today Marlboro is just about the most admirable cigarette you can put a match to. There are, in fact, some people who find Marlboros so admirable they can't bear to put a match to them. They just sit with a single Marlboro in hand and admire it for ten, twelve years on end. The makers of Marlboro are of course deeply touched by this—except for E. Rennie Sigafoos, the sales manager. But I digress. The ACP, I say, is good but it can be better Why should the plan be confined to small colleges? Why should it be confined to a limited region? Why not include all colleges and universities, big and small, wherever they are? Let's start such a federation. Let's call it the "Bigger Associated Colleges To Encourage Richer Intellectual Activity" — BACTERIA, for short! OCLOCK CLASS HAWAII 10 OCLOCK CLASS HAWAII What a bright new world BACTERIA opens up. Take, for example, a typical college student—Hunrath Sigfafoos (son, incidentally, of the Marlboro sales manager). Hunrath, a bright lad, is currently majoring in burley at the University of Kentucky. Under the BACTERIA plan, Hunrath could stay at Kentucky, where he has made many friends, but at the same time broaden his vistas by taking a course in constitutional law at Harvard, a course in physics at Caltech, a course in frostbite at Minnesota and a course in poi at Hawaii! there are still few bugs in BACTERIA I admit there are still a few bugs in BACTERIA. How, for instance, could Hunrath attend a 9 o'clock class at Harvard, a 10 o'clock class at Hawaii, an 11 o'clock class at Minnesota, and still keep his lunch date at Kentucky? It would be idle to deny that this is a tricky problem, but I have no doubt American ingenuity will carry the day. Always remember how they laughed at Edison and Fulton—and particularly at Walter Clavicle who invented the collarbone. - * * © 1962 Max Shulman Three cheers for American ingenuity, which gave us the ACP, the collarbone and MGM... that's the Mighty Good Makin's you get in Marlboro, the filter cigarette with the unfiltered taste. Settle back and enjoy one. You get a lot to like Thursday, March 1, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Coan Takes Ineligibility Ruling Calmly By Terry Murphy It was 9 o'clock. Bert Coan and his wife Dora Lee were sitting in the living room of their campus student housing apartment when the phone rang. He was sitting in an arm chair dressed in a pair of pairt-spattered levis and his feet were shod in a pair of red slipper socks. Turning from the television he reached for the phone on a table next to the chair. "It was Dean Woodruff. They've ruled me ineligible." AFTER LISTENING for a few minutes he hung up. His wife looked to him expectantly. That is how Bert Coan received the news which officially ended his collegiate football career. The controversial halftback from Pasadena, Tex., has played in only eight college games. An hour later in an interview at his apartment, he was asked what his reaction to the news had been. DOES HE FEEL any resentment towards the University or anyone connected with the controversy? "I am relieved that some decision has finally been made. Of course, I'm sorry that it turned out as it did, but both of us are relieved." "No, I'd be lying if I said that I did. Everyone has been wonderful and they've done everything possible to help me. After Dean Woodruff told me the news, the first thing that he did was urge me to go ahead and finish school. They've always backed me in the past." What is he planning to do now? "They pretty well made the decision for me. I'll sign with the pros; probably with the Chargers" (San Diego of the American Professional Football League). COAN'S TRIP TO San Diego in December gave rise to the controversy that lead to the ineligibility ruling by a Kansas University faculty committee. The committee has jurisdiction over whether Coan can compete in KU collegiate athletics. U.S. Makes Plea For Youth's Life CHANUTE — (UPI) — The U. S. government has requested a stay of execution for convicted slayer Roger Ranney of Chanute who is in death row at a Greek prison, Ranney's mother, Mrs. John Lowen said today. Mrs. Lowen said she received a telegram last night from Lee C. White, assistant special counsel to the President, who reported the State Department has interceded in the case. WHITE SAID the State Department asked the Greek embassy in Washington to request a stay of execution pending an appeal on grounds of inadequate counsel and a review of the trial transcript Ranney was convicted by a Greek court last fall in the deaths of two seamen. The Greek supreme court last Saturday rejected his appeal. White said the White House will be kept informed on developments in the case. MRS. LOWEN SAID she was "heartened by the action." She sent an urgent telegram to President Kennedy Saturday asking for help to save her son. She said the outlook for help from the President was her last hope. GUY'S GUY'S POTATO CHIPS GUYS POTATO CHIPS Be Wise --- Buy Guy's A National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) rule prohibits college football players from accepting expenses or entertainment from professional football organizations. The controversy centered on whether Coan paid his own bills or if the San Diego team paid them. Coan says that he paid his own way. "Dad loaned me the money ($613) and I paid them (the bills) myself." Coan says that prior to taking the trip to San Diego, he checked with KU football coach Jack Mitchell who told him to go ahead and make the trip. At that time neither of them were aware that there was a ruling forbidding this. "I was acting in good faith. As far as I knew I was not breaking any rules." "WHEN I GOT back Coach Mitchell got hold of me and told me that I would have to pay my own way. I assured him that I already had Asked why the committee ruled as it did, Coan said, "the circumstances of my trip to San Diego were of such a nature that the school officials could not possibly gather enough information to make a judgment in my favor." REASONABLE SUSPICION is often enough to rule an athlete ineligible in cases such as Coan's. The ruling bodies take the position that a college athlete should not put himself in a position that would raise doubt as to his activities. Coan says he plans to go home this summer and finish the work for his degree. Coan needs to complete a period of practice teaching as a social studies teacher and two other courses to earn his degree. Now that his collegiate football career is finished, he says: "My only regret is that I didn't make news with what I accomplish on the football field instead of what I did off the field. "WEVE MADE LOTS of friends here in Lawrence, at least I hope that we have, I know that I've profited by my association with Kansas University. Anybody would that has come in contact with men of the caliber of Jack Mitchell and his staff." Does he have any advice for a high school athlete that is being recruited? "The only suggestion that I would have to make is for him to get acquainted with the rules and regulations. I could have saved myself lots of misery if I had." Any advice on how to pick a school? "IF EVERYTHING ELSE is equal, go to the school where you think you will be the happiest. Pick the The New CRESTAURANT Located in the Northwest Corner of Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa Free Parking BOWLING is FUN! BOWLING is FUN! Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 32 AUTOMATIC LANES NEW WIN TIME FOR WORK 文件 You may forget about your income tax deductions but your cancelled checks won't. If you don't pay by check you would be wise to do so before another week goes by. S FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 746 Mass. coaching staff that you think you can get along with best." Now that the decision has been reached, how does he feel about going back to Texas? "There was lots of comment in the papers and stuff like don't turn your back on Texas because the doors will be shut when you get back. But they can believe it or not, I honestly have no regrets. I'm sorry that it turned out as it did, but no regrets otherwise." No regrets even when he was lying in the hospital with a broken leg that still threatens to end a promising career? "No sir, no regrets." Barrel of Chicken 25 pieces,10 hot rolls $5.00 BIG BUY SUA Jazz Blow Featuring The Best Sunday, March 11 7:00 p.m. Campus Musicians Big 8 Room in the Kansas Student Union COFFEE WILL BE SERVED THE LIMELITERS THE LIMELITERS “SING OUT!” ON MONO AND STEREO THE LIMELITERS WILL APPEAR AT KU MARCH 17 BELL'S ON MONO AND STEREO --- 925 Mass. BELL'S VI 3-2644 Page 10 100ml University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 1, 1962 Rightist Political Influence Significant in GOP Elections By Dennis Branstiter An assistant professor of political science said Wednesday night that the influence of right-wing splinter groups on the Republican Party in the coming Congressional elections is the "great imponderable." This is how Prof. Earl A. Nehring, former adviser to the Republican National Committee, described the political influence of the John Birch Society and the Young Americans for Freedom. He spoke at the Young Republicans meeting Wednesday night. He said right-wing influence would be of "considerable significance in the close elections." There is an "inevitable association between the two (right-wing organizations and the Republican Party) in the public mind," he said. NEHRING SAID IT is the 'image of the Republican Party that suffers most . . . because of the antics of some of the leaders of these (right-wing) groups." He said he suspects the motives of some leaders and is glad the groups are not in the Republican Party. State Sen. Donald Hults, R-Douglas County, another speaker at the meeting, said he does not think the John Birch Society and YAF harm the Republican Party. He said the two would like to use the Republican Party to implement their policies, but they will not become sufficiently influential unless party members become apathetic. Nehring continued, saying that much of the money which would normally go into the Republican Party is going into right-wing organizations instead. He said for example that Richard Nixon is having difficulty raising campaign funds for the coming California Nazi Leader Predicts Coup LOS ANGELES — (UPI) —American Nazi Party leader George Lincoln Rockwell, dressed in a tan uniform with gold swastika insignias on each collar, predicted yesterday that he would come to national power within 10 years. Rockwell, here for a week, announced plans to appear locally on television and to address the local Black Muslim organization. Rockwell, upon his arrival at Los Angeles International Airport, said he plans to organize about 300 Southern Californians who, he said, are active in the American Nazi Party. He said he expects to achieve power in Virginia, where the party is headquartered, within five or six years, and national power within a decade. THE GREATEST HUMAN DRAMA THAT THE WORLD HAS EVER KNOWN! Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents Samuel Bronston's Production King of Kings JOMM SUPER TECHNIRAMA • TECHNICOLOR® NOW SHOWING Week Day Mat. 1:30; Adm. $1.00 Week Nites 7:45; Adm. $1.25 Sat. & Sun. At 1:30 - 4:45 - 8:00 Adm. $1.25 No Passes, Please! VARSITY King of Kings He said YAF has taken control of the Young Republicans in Southern California. He said, "These groups and this kind of action are of no help to the Republican Party because they have their own ends beyond those of the party." gubernatorial election because of opposition from such groups. ALTHOUGH THERE IS NO official connection between YAF and the Young Republicans, Nehring said, YAF is trying to get control in some places in order to have an established party organization to implement YAF policies. VARSITY Nehring continued, saying: "I hope these efforts (to take over the Young Republicans) will fail because extremeties in either direction have no place in the practical operation of government, the real job of the parties." Hults was more concerned about the effect of newspaper slogans and arbitrary labeling. He said, "If you do something the newspapers want, then you are a liberal, because that's good. If you do something the newspapers do not want, then you are a conservative, because that's bad." HE SAID KANSAS Republicans are liberal in the sense that they have made many constructive changes. He said blanket labels of "liberal" and "conservative" for the Democratic and Republican parties, respectively, are unfair. Wine Shall Lead Them JACKSON, Miss. — (UPI) — State Sen. T. M. Williams proposed yesterday that whisky and wine brought into legally dry Mississippi be taxed to provide funds for the treatment of alcoholics and the education of children concerning the "evils of alcohol." BILLY WIDER'S EXCLUSIVE NEW COMEDY ONE TWO THREE James Cagney TONIGHT & FRI. BILLY WILDER'S EXPLOSIVE NEW COMEDY ONE TWO THREE James Cagney STARTS SATURDAY! Distinguished Adult Entertainment F. SCOTT FITZGERALD'S CELEBRATED LOVE STORY! 20 Century Fox presents JENNIFER JONES JASON ROBARDS, JR. JOAN FONTAINE TOM EWELL F. SCOTT FITZGERALD'S Tender is the Night CINEMASCOPE COLOR BY DE LUXE CESARE DANOVA • JILL ST. JOHN • PAUL LUKAS TONIGHT & FRI. BILLY WILDER'S EXPLOSIVE NEW COMEDY ONE TWO THREE James Cagney STARTS SATURDAY! Distinguished Adult Entertainment F. SCOTT FITZGERALD'S CELEBRATED LOVE STORY! 20 Century-Fox network He said the public is not sufficiently concerned with details. He said that "Newspapers have sold bills on slogans and on liberal and conservative labels." STARTS SATURDAY! Distinguished Adult Entertainment F. SCOTT FITZGERALD'S CELEBRATED LOVE STORY! 20 Century Fox Hults attributed much of the recent success of the Democratic Party to careful handling of minority groups. JENNIFER JONES JASON ROBARDS, JR. JOAN FONTAINE TOM EWELL SCOTT FITZGERALD'S Tender is the Night CINEMASCOPE COLUMBIA DE LUXE EXPRESSED DAVIDOWA, ULL ST. JOHN, PAUL LUKAS F SCOTT FITZGERALD'S Tender is the Night CINEMASCORE COLOR BY DELOUX CESARE DANOVA JLL ST JOIN- PAUL LUIGAS HENRY T. WEINSTEIN HENRY KING IVAN MCOFAI "Most of the money that the government is dolling out is to influence minority groups, teachers and the aged." He described the teachers' lobby as the most powerful in Washington at the present time. He said that "The Democratic Party has been made up of an association of minority groups. We do not get out and promote our side of the picture. We are all lax. Granada THEATRE...Telephone W1 3-5788 "If you get enough minority groups you're going to win any election, and that is what the Democratic Party has done," he said. FRI.-SAT.-SUN. 20th Century-Fox present GREGORY PECK The BRAVADO'S For what they had done to his woman... he broke the Bravados one by one 7 p.m. 演出者 JOAN COLLINS STEPHEN BOYD PLUS AT 8:45 LEO M'CAREY'S RALLY ROUND THE FLAG, BOYS! STARRING PAUL NEWMAN JOANNE WOODWARD JOAN COLLINS JACK CARSON CINEMASCOPE LEO McGAREY'S RALLY ROUND THE FLAG, BOYS! STARRING PAUL NEWMAN JOANNE WOODWARD JOAN GOLLINS JACK CARSON CINEMASCOOPE 20 Century-Fox CINEMA SCOPE COLOR BY DE LUXE Paul Newman, up and coming STAR nominated for "Best Actor" in "The Hustler" in the current 1961 Academy Awards! SUNSET Playboys ATTENTION! Friday Night Is STAG NIGHT At The All-New ROCK CHALK REVUE 8:00 p.m. Stag or Drag don’t miss this laugh packed evening THE GREATEST SNOW ON EARTH! Good Seats Still Available O --- One da Black Thurs. 930 K BLAC Malott turn. Ring Fine. Young restau after Deliv Phone Troul man stude BEVE ice closed Ice 0350 FIRS p.m. with Thursday, March 1, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 11 CLASSIFIED ADS One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms cash: All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. LOST Black Overcoat. Lost in Boyd's Grill Thurs. night, Feb. 22. Please return to 930 Kentucky or call VI 3-5047. 3-2 FOUND BLACK bucket style leather purse for turn Cail Cheryl Cos. I V-3711 3-5 Ring in Flint Hall. Identify. See Mrs. Fine, 14 Flint. t HELP WANTED Young hostess and boys needed for a type work Phone VI型 after 4 p.m. 3-2 Delivery men with cars, evening hours. Phone VI 3-9640 after 4 p.m. 3-1 TUTORING Trouble with German? Experienced Ger- man student will tutor. Call VI 2-0249. 2-1 MISCELLANEOUS EVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repels closed paper bags. Picnic plates. cold, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 3- 0350. tf FIRST at the Dine-At-Mite, Fri. 9 to 12 p.m. Featuring Grizzlews — the live band with the dead beat. 3-7 BUSINESS SERVICES BABY SITTING wanted in my home days or yours evenings and weekends. Call VI 3-3159. 3-1 INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tt GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are not available online. Price: $1 Call VI 2-3752. free delivery. 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. tt DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 9391 $^{2}$ Mass. 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 Gall Reed, VI 3 7551, or 921 Miss T HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In. Pet Center — most company shop. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. 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. tt TYYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. tr SEE Mrs. Comfort for wedding invitations. Fine quality socially acceptable invitations. Prices start $8.50 per 100. Also have napkins, thank you folders, etc. Call VI 3-4296 for appl. FOR RENT LARGE QUIET room for boy. Private bath & entrance. Very close to campus. Call VI 3-7827 evenings or Sunday. 3-1 LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side. utilities paid. $50. TV Call VI 3-6294. fax COMFORTABLE furnished apartment—in friendly atmosphere near Corbin Hall. All other tenants are grad students, instructors, or married couple and are more single students. Private entrance and bath. Call VI 3-6158 during noon or after 4 p.m. 3-1 ROOM FOR 1 MALE STUDENT in double room. Share with graduate student using computer from Union. Private entrance, quiet. Cali VI 3-4092, see at 1301 Louisiana. tf One of our girls has lost her roommate (how careless) and would like a grad to help with her study, separate study. A complete Kitchen & bath, phone, full laundry privileges and cleaning services, other grades. Linens provided. All this at 1228 Ohio — 1 block from Union, for only $35. You can be true you're looking for a better phone call anyone at VI 2-0195 and ask. 3-2 ONE SIMULGE room and on double room Cail VI 3-5942 or see at 1588 Tech. Have you joined the BOOK NOOK BONUS BOOK PLAN Investigate Now!! 1021 Mass. FOR SALE OR RENT close to University and business area. 5 rms, and bath waementen area & dishwasher. Call VI 3-5145 or VI 3-6691. LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 0731. APARTMENTS FOR RENT MARRIED AND GRADUATE STUDENTS Large kitchen cabinets and closet space. Brick construction, fully insulated. Garbage disposal, carpeted central air-conditioning, and laundry $ \frac{1}{2} $ -block. PARK PLAZA SOUTH APTS. 1912 W. 25th VI 2-3416 3 room furnished apt. Very nice. Private entrance, parking, near $75 a month—water pd. Call T. A. Hemphill VI 3-3902. 3-7 FOR SALE 1954 DODGE 4dr, standard shift, 8 cyl. 1321 Tenn. or call VI 3-1584. 3-6 1960 used Admiral stereo console. Tape 723 Mass. Buy $79. See at Pettengill-Ed. 723 Mass. 3-6 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, service, rentals.ENCE Typewriter, 738 Mass. VI 5s644. PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition: formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call V1 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES, complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference: $2.50, free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553, VI 3-5778. tt 1954 CHEVY -- Belair, 4 dft, Power Glide 10 p.m. in condition. 2 y-2280 at 6 p.m. 3-2 For Gifts for Special People Keeler's Book Store carries these delightful books for your friendship and special occasion gifts 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 - Sonnets from the Portuguese GUNS: Robert Redding Firearms. New and used guns, and ammo. Handguns reblued: Just .22 caliber; new of issue at 1346 Ohio. Intensive .22 revolver. See en-1346 Ohio (Corner 14th & OH) 3-2 - Complete Poems of Robert Frost - Hallmark Poetry for Pleasure - Leaves of Gold - Kahil Gibran . . . All books, including two newest: The Garden of the Prophet Spirits Rebellious - Collected Poems of Edna St. Vincent Millay ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch & Lomb telescope immediately. $200. Call WI 3-8877, come to 307 Ark. for info. Come in and browse over our complete selection of greeting and playing cards, office supplies and stationery. - Many Other Appropriate Selections HI-FI EQUIPMENT; Electro-voice monaural three-way speaker system and Bogen 30 watt amplifier sacrificed to sell at only $250. Call VI 3-4928. 3-5 FURNITURE: sofa bed, basket chairs, coffee table, kitchen cabinet, chest of drawers, bedside camera, Bell & Howell, telphone video, VI 2-0387, 1941 Mass. tt ISETTA 300: Leaving town, must sacrifice. Ideal for transportation on hill: Economical, good rubber, everything works. Call VI 2-3366 after 5 p.m. 3-5 KEELER'S '53 MG (TD) w/'54 Jaguar eng. and trans., new Percival tires, top and Tanneau. $1200.00. Call VI 3-4460 after 7 p.m. 3-1 939 Mass. VI 3-0290 TRANSPORTATION WANTED: Ride, or car pool from 75th & Metalfair area. Overland Park to KU and return. Classes 8 thru 4. Call Gary, NI 2-3925. 3-2 WANTED: Late afternoon ride to Topeka, M. W, F. Call KU, Ext 311. tf CAR POOL Cautious and congenial to RR 1 to 3. Call John at TA 2-1213 5 to 9. Call John at TA 2-1213 TYPING FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reason- able rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3- 0524. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patty. VI 3-8370 typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. response: Will type responses, etc. 1311, 1511 St. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440, fc EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing in my home — call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lou Sehlbach. tf Experienced typist would like typing in her home. Accurate, neat, reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. tf Experienced Typtit: Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. major, sports commissioner; these schools accurately. Sundard rates. Ses. Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. Expert typist will type theses, term papers, etc on electric typewriter symbols for math and Greek letters. Will read rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. Call VI 2-1546. 3-6 FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Secretarial Service $817, MA. Hearing HE 2-7718. Eves or Sat., RA 2-2186. 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, reports, letters. Home computer. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mc-Idowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electrical water, fast accurate services. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th. VI 2-14. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher. VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. Electric typewriter Rasonnable in Maita Graham, 1619 Delaware Call I: 30483 FRIDAY & SATURDAY ONLY March 2,3,1962 ATTENTION Discount Card Holders RECEIVE 331/3% REGULAR DISCOUNT _ 10% BONUS ... 23 1/3 % TOTAL ... 33 1/3 % DISCOUNT ON ALL DRY CLEANING If you didn't receive a Discount Card please fill out the coupon below and mail or better yet bring it in with your cleaning to 1342 Ohio only (next to Jayhawk Cafe) NAME ADDRESS STUDENT FACULTY 1342 Ohio 1 HOUR Fast DRY CLEANING 5 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 1, 1962 Human Relations Group Discusses CRC Action By Bill Sheldon Three members of the All Student Council Human Rights Committee expressed three different opinions last night on how to deal with the Civil Rights Council's (CRC) move to eliminate discriminatory clauses in fraternity constitutions. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe last Friday referred the CRC to the ASC committee, saying that this committee would deal with the matter rather than the administration. THIS COMMITTEE, formed last spring, has been relatively inactive on discriminatory matters and has not yet met to discuss definite action on the matter. Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and acting chairman of the committee, said he and Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior and student body president, are planning to meet with the Chancellor this week to plan a course of action. "The matter will certainly cause an investigation by our committee," Grace said. "Action is necessary and we will be willing to listen to complaints and then take some form of action." Grace explained he would not be certain of what action his committee would take until after the conference with the Chancellor. ROBERTA JOHNSON, Joliet, Ill., senior, and member of the committee, said she feels the committee should ask outside help in finding a solution. "I suggest that our committee take advantage of the professors and people who have studied racial and ethnic problems, people who have really worked with problems like this," she said. Miss Johnson pointed out that the relative inactivity of the committee was due to the lack of something to work on. The only other chance the committee had for action was eliminated before action could be taken. Grace explained that the committee spent two weeks last semester investigating the University policy on discrimination and presented a petition to the ASC requesting that sit-ins and similar activities be curtailed. "WE TRIED TO open barber shops, and we had a plan, but it didn't develop because it wasn't allowed to be brought up before the ASC," Meeks said. "I suppose there was more important business," he continued. The three committee members also discussed the actions taken by the CRC in trying to get the Greek discriminatory clauses removed. "I'm not sure what the CRC's aims are," Grace said. "Apparently they are trying to destroy the clauses, but this won't stop discrimination. It would only be a moral victory. "MAYBE THE GOAL OF the CRC is to obtain a pledge of faith from the fraternities," Grace said. "Apparently the clauses themselves are bad for the Greeks," he continued. "It is the right of the individual houses not to pledge a person because of race or religion. The fraternities are private organizations and I have to agree with them when they say that they are private clubs," Grace said. Grace said he has not personally decided how he stands on the removal of the clauses. Meeks said he feels the aims of the CRC are "good and obvious." "I don't think the CRC's aims are to stir up tension, but to alleviate problems concerning discrimination," he said. REFERRING to an earlier statement about handling the situation quietly. Meeks said: "The dividing line between me and the CRC is in the methods. We (the committee) would try to be somewhat more tactful, seeking a solution more smoothly. I'm not against the basic aims of the CRC, because they are the same as our committee's." "But it is better for the CRC to do it openly because it can and is getting the job done," he said. "We don't have our ideas worked out yet. Sit-ins and freedom rides are good until a better method is discovered." Meeks also voiced his personal opinion about Greek clauses. "I DON'T BELIEVE clauses should be present," he said. "They violate basic principles of the American people and the ideas of brotherhood." Grace added that minority groups attending KU also have rights and that these rights are being stepped upon to some extent. "The administration cannot force Greeks to pledge anybody they don't want." Grace said. Meeks answered: "TRUE, NO ONE from a minority group will pledge a white frat, nor a white a Negro frat. Still the clauses shouldn't be there. They look bad. "Whatever the purposes of the clauses are, i. (discrimination) would happen anyway," he continued. "Anybody can still discriminate in his own mind, whether the clauses are there or not. "Attitudes have to be changed more than the clauses removed. But the removal of the clauses would be a start toward changing attitudes." CRC Says Wescoe Violated Rights- (Continued from page 1) the position the administration has taken." BRIAN GRACE. Lawrence sophmore and chairman of the All Student Council Human Relations Committee (through which the Chancellor suggested the CRC channel its actions) was present at the meeting. Grace, after saying he was not representing the Human Rights Council, said the Human Rights Council has not met since the latter half of last semester because, in his opinion, there was no reason for such a meeting until now. "However, there will definitely be a meeting next week some time," he said. Grace said the Human Rights Committee had not talked at all about discriminatory clauses in Greek constitutions. He said again he was not speaking for the Human Rights Council but that he thinks the Council will take definite action soon. DON WARNER, Topeka junior, asked Grace if he thought the Human Rights Council would take any proposals to the Chancellor which the Council itself might oppose. sales - service - rentals "Yes, definitely." Grace said. "Anything the CRC decides will be listened to with interest. Typewriters Olympia - Olivetti Smith-Corona - Royal CHARLES MENGHINI, Pittsburg senior and co-chairman of the CRC, said that the only time the Human Rights Council functioned was in the past off-campus housing incident. "Many people think that because we have a Human Rights Council on the campus there is no need for the CRC," Menghini said. "This is totally wrong. If a committee doesn't do anything or even meet, what good is it?" Lawrence Typewriter "Our job is to hear as many sides to the question as is possible," he said. "What the Chancellor wishes to do and what we will do may be two different things, meaning we are not under his thumb." 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 Free Pick-up & Delivery Jeff Bohr, Great Bend junior, said to Grace, "The Human Rights Council is established to inquire into the area of discrimination, right? Then you will have to see the Chancellor and check into his stand." Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES Having a Party? LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Kansan Classified Ads Get Results Dean Woodruff also expressed the hope that Coan would finish the work to complete his degree. (Continued from page 1) Faculty Rules一 Football coach Jack Mitchell was enroute from Chicago and could not be reached for comment. Don Fambrough, assistant coach, was surprised by the decision. "THERE IS NOTHING that I can say," Fambridge said. "This is the first that I have heard about it. Coach Mitchell is out of town and any comment from the coaching staff would have to come from him." James F. Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, amplified the University's statement concerning the ineligibility of Coan. Gunn stated that he was not authorized as a spokesman for the Senate Committee, and that his statement was merely a personal interpretation. Mr. Gunn said that to his knowledge the Senate's ineligibility ruling hinged upon an agreement between Coan and the San Diego Chargers concerning travel expenses. Auto Wrecking & Junk Mr. Gunn said that apparently Coan went to San Diego with the New & Used Parts and Tires Official Bulletin Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 a.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford road East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) and 11:45 to 12 noon. Saturdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Teacher Interviews: March 2 — G. C. Humphrey, Mesa Public Schools, Mesa, Ariz. March 2 — Ronald Stafford, High School Public Schools, Mess. Apr. High School, High School Principal, I, & Sec., Hugston, Kansas. Principal (El. & Sec.), Hugoton, Kansas. Peace Corps: The next Peace Corps expedition 1962, at 8:30 a.m. Interested students should now submit questionnaires to and particularly for the projected KU-Costa Rican Training Project. For additional information and questionnaires see the Dean of Students, 228 Strong Hall. Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 1. Maerz, um vier Uhr im Vorlesungssaal des Kunstmuseums. Herr Bernstein, Kurator des Museums, wint über den Expressionismus in auch Kunstdienst und auf Diapositive dauerne zeigen. TODAY Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 p.m. Southern Baptist Activities Building, 1221 Oread. Bible study and devotional. TOMORROW Angel Flight Meeting & Song Practice: 6-8 p.m. .330 Murphy. Election of officers. Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. Epicopalco Holy Communion & Breakfast; 7 a.m., Canterbury House. Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m. Baptist Act, Building, 1221 Owl. Speaker, Rev McBain, pastor of 1st Southern Kansas City, on "Reality of Prayer." International Club: 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union, Dean Marvin of "Booat on the Loose" to speak on How Homey It Looks 7,000 Miles from Home. Coffee and dance follow. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. CHICKEN DINNER Slaw, French Fries, Roll, Gravy & Pickles $1.25 BIG BUY understanding that the Chargers would pay the expenses. After he did not sign a professional contract, he discovered that the payment of the expenses was in violation of NCAA regulations and therefore paid for the trip himself. MR. GUNN SAID that in his understanding the committee ruled Coan ineligible because the "spirit of the agreement" removed Coan's amateur status. 59th Coan has been a center of controversy since transferring to KU from Texas Christian University in the spring of 1959. Due to a variety of injuries and suspensions, the Pasadena, Tex., halfback has only played in eight college games. The Big Eight faculty committee ruled on Dec. 8, 1960, that he was ineligible due to a ruling by the NCAA that he had been illegally recruited by Houston oilman Bud Adams. The Big Eight ruling resulted in Kansas' having to forfeit their last three 1960 conference football games and cost the Jayhawks the league championship and a trip to the Orange Bowl. COAN MADE HEADLINES last spring when he suffered a broken leg in spring practice. The Big Eight ruling had made Coan ineligible for the first four games of the 1962 season. The injury kept him out for the entire season. Coan said that he planned to sign a professional football contract now that his college playing days are finished. He has been drafted by the Washington franchise in the National Football League and by the San Diego franchise in the American Football League. 312 Foreign Students Enrolled at KU KU has a foreign student enrollment of 312 this semester. The majority of the students this semester are from Asia. There are, in addition, 140 from the Far East and 31 from the Near East. largest single group from one country is from Formosa. Weather Fair to partly cloudy today through tomorrow. Rising temperatures. Highs today 25 to 30. Lows tonight 5 to 15 above. Highs tomorrow 30s. Leonard's Standard Service 8th and Indiqna 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. KEEP ALERT! SAFE NoDoz TABLETS 19 TABLETS SAFE AS COFFEE THE SAFE WAY to stay alert without harmful stimulants Never take chances with dangerous "pep pills." Instead, take proven safe NoDoz®. Keeps you mentally alert with the same safe refresher found in coffee. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutely not habit-forming. Next time monotony makes you feel drowsy while driving, working or studying. do as millions do . . . perk up with safe, effective NoDoz. Another fine product of Grove Laboratories. Daily hansan Friday, March 2, 1962 LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No. 94 ALFONSO MAYORAL WHAT'SA MATTER—Pedro Pan (right) played by Don Perry, Witchita junior, and sidekick Tinkerbell played by Fred Jones, Merriam senior, are shown here in a scene from Rock Chalk Revue to be presented tonight and tomorrow at 8:00 in Hoch Auditorium. - * * - * * - * * Administration, Students Satirized in Revue Skits KU students will poke fun at the administration and themselves tonight in the opening performance of the 1962 Rock Chalk Reve "Classics Awry" in Hoch Auditorium at 8 p.m. The Reve end with the Saturday night performance. Speaking about Rock Chalk, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said, "We gather together in one of these most human activities, to laugh at ourselves, in the hope that it will be cleansing laughter, healing laughter—never the malicious laughter that cuts and scars. "The University though it may rock tonight, will remain standing tomorrow." FOUR SKITS will comprise the student production. The skits will be presented by Beta Theta Pi and Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Sigma and Delta Delta Delta, Alpha Tau Omega and Kappa Kappa Gamma, Phi Delta Theta and Gamma Phi Beta. The Beta Theta Pi and Kappa Alpha Theta skit is entitled "Scotts on the Rocks." It supposedly was premiered on the Elizabethan stage, colossalized as a motion picture. enjoyed on television, featured in English 1 and 2, and now brought to the Rock Chalk Stage. The plot centers around a Scottish university, McKay U., on the shores of Loch Potter. A very popular Chancellor Duncan has gone to Costa Rica, leaving the Dean of the Alchemy School, Banquo, as chancellor. MacBeth, second ranking man in the Alchemy School, meets some witches in the woods. Using chicanery, MacBeth comes to the realization he has a "chance to be Chance." Bryant Hayes, Alexandria, Va. sophomore, plays MacBeth; Kay Eilen Consoler, Wichita sophomore, Lady Gladys MacBeth; Bob Adams, Wichita junior, Duncan; Mike Patterson, Larned freshman, Banquo. Directors of the skit are John Letton, Pittsburg junior; Bob Thomas, Marysville senior; and Barbara Brooks. Hays junior. Kappa Sigma and Delta Delta Delta will present "Medea," a story of an innocent young girl who falls prey to an amorous-looking young man who is searching for some golden fleece. Medea loves Jason so much that she betrays her father, kills her brother and murders a perfectly Lenita Childers, Kansas City senior, is cast in the leading role of Medea. Michelle Steele. Wichita sophomore, plays the nurse; Ken Mendenhall, Kansas City, Mo., senior, Kreon; Sharon Black, Wichita sophomore, fair godmother. Model UN Group Finds Concealed Microphone "South of the Border" is the presentation of Alpha Tau Omega and Kappa Kappa Gamma. It portrays KU in a deplorable situation wherein the Dean of Women Wemily and the Martyr Board are crusading about students drinking, swinging and carousing. total stranger, but Jason dumps her over in favor of the king's daughter. A hidden microphone was found last night by members of the Model United Nations Steering Committee during their meeting in the Kansas Union. The skulduggery of international politics has hit KU! House directors are Diane Thompson, Hutchinson senior, and Keith Jochim, Birmingham, Mich., junior. The students in turn harass Wemily and her Board about closing hours, chaperones and classes. The situation is remedied by the appearance of Pedro Pan and his trusty sidekick, Tinkerbell. Maurice Smith, Mission senior and president of this year's Assembly, said the microphone had been planted by members of the Russian delegation to the Model UN in an attempt to get "a little added information on the third and fourth resolutions before they are released to the rest of the delegations." By Mike Miller THESE RESOLUTIONS for the Model UN discussion will not be released for another few weeks, He said that the Russian delegations efforts were useless, because Steering Committee members, discovered the microphone before they started discussion. Smith said that the third resolution will be released about three weeks before the Model UN meeting, which will be April 13-14, and the fourth less than a week before the meeting. Smith explained. For that reason any prior knowledge of the content of the resolutions would give a delegation a great advantage over the others. In the end, "All ess well that feneshes well." The Soviet delegation later returned to claim the microphone. No action against the Soviet delegation has been taken yet. Phi Delta Theta and Gamma Phi Beta presents "The Sound and the Scurry," a simple, unadulterated and unabridged story of a bunchnik of no-good Rednips who decide to overthrow. Nothingham University of Damselry and Knighthood because students think for themselves. House directors are Anne and Sarah Graber, Hutchinson juniors and Perry. Don Perry, Wichita junior, plays Pedro; Fred Jones, Merriam senior, Tinkerbell; and LeAnne Burnett, Prairie Village sophomore, Wemily. The University is rescued from this attack by Ivanhoe, B.K.O.C. (Big Knight on Campus) and Little Richard Wescott, B. C. (Boy Chancellor.) Tom Miller, Fort Scott junior, plays Wescott; Ron Kessler, Hutchinson junior, Ivanham; Betty Jackson, Lakewood, Colo., junior, Rowing. House directors are Dorothy Hartbauer, Overland, Mo., senior, and John Maxwell. Columbus junior. Hoite Caston, Independence junior is master of ceremonies for the production. Charles Snodgrass, Lawrence junior, directs the 1962 Rock Chalk Revue orchestra. Jim Scholten. Salina senior, is producer and Sharon Dobbins. Lawrence junior, is assistant producer. Phi Psi Joins Vox; Party Names Acts By Mike Miller Phi Kappa Psi was unanimously accepted into the general assembly of Vox Populi last night. The fraternity was an original member of the opposition University Party, but dropped out at the start of this year because of house apathy toward campus politics. Greg Turner, Seattle, Wash., sophomore and member of Phi Kappa Psi, said, "When we dropped UP, we had no intention of Kennedy to Say Nuclear Tests To Be Resumed WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Barring a diplomatic miracle, President Kennedy will inform the world tonight that the United States must resume atmospheric nuclear tests. U. S. officials also expected the President to offer certain alternatives to atmospheric testing, in an effort to assure the world of this country's continuing desire for an ironclad test ban agreement with the Soviet Union. The President ordered a careful scientific evaluation of the Soviet tests. U.S. surveys were checked with British studies and from these scientific appraisals came Kennedy's decision to order atmospheric test resumption. The last U.S. atmospheric test was conducted in Nevada on Oct. 30, 1958. Russia broke a 34-month moratorium last Sept. 1 and went on to fire test weapons that ranged above 50 megatons in nuclear explosive power. The White House announced late yesterday that the President would speak tonight over all major radio and television networks and world-wide radio facilities of the Voice of America. The miracle would have to be a reversal of basic Soviet foreign policy. Otherwise, when the President goes on nationwide radio and television from his White House office at 6 p.m., he will announce that the United States must resume testing because of the Russian test series last fall and the absence of an effective test ban. British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and French President Charles de Gaulle were believed to be aware of the general nature of the Chief Executive's announcement. Official sources also said Kennedy was sending a special message to Japanese Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda because of Japan's particular sensitivity on the subject of nuclear explosions, tests or otherwise. Despite Kennedy's explanation, Japan is expected to protest. Russia is expected to send up a new shower of invective and accusation. U. S. officials said Kennedy was prepared to announce a go-ahead on test resumption without specifying a date or deadline, and still offer the Soviet Union another chance to join in a test ban with effective inspection controls. He wants his atmospheric test announcement out of the way well before the March 14 convening of the 18-nation Disarmament Conference in Geneva. Essentially Kennedy's alternatives to testing add up to the U.S. case in the forum of world opinion. There seemed to be no realistic expectation that Russia would reverse basic policy and agree to what the West regards as foolproof inspection. The President, however, will try to keep the door open to negotiation while attempting to convince the world that this country cannot allow Soviet scientists to test at will and gain a jump on the West in weapons development. Weather Generally fair and warmer this afternoon, tonight and Saturday. Much warmer with southerly winds 20 to 30 miles per hour this afternoon. Low tonight in the 20s. High Saturday 45 to 50 northeast to near 60 southwest. *joining Vox; we just lost interest in politics.* he said. Ted Childers, Wamego senior and president of Vox, said, "The Phi Psi's will be an asset to the party. We are very pleased to have them in. "We've had two unsuccessful attempts with UP to put candidates into office," he continued. "We feel that we have a better chance to get a candidate elected with Vox. We feel that after working in the party for a while, we can win with Vox," he said. "The action by Phi Psi is a recognition of the accomplishments of Vox in relation to the party doing things on the All Student Council." Childers continued. "For instance, when we put a plank into our platform, we put work in on it. We have an excellent record of accomplishment. We work on a plank until it is accepted as a resolution or until we run into a brick wall." IN FURTHER action, Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and independent vice president of Vox, reported that seven of the nine planks in last fall's Vox platform have been directly acted upon by the ASC, and the other two have been worked on by the party's members in ASC. The seven planks which have received action are; - Investigation of pre-enrollment procedures at other universities in hopes of improving the procedure at KU. - Improvement of study facilities on the Hill. - Night bus service to the women's living districts. - Support of the Human Rights Committee of the ASC. - An increase in the appropriations for the People-to-People program. - An investigation of the student seating plan. Jim Martin, Arkansas City sophomore, said the pre-ASC meeting caucus is "working out like we planned it." He said that ASC members are well-informed, but stressed that "there is no Party influence on their voting." Burma Army Overthrows U Nu Regime RANGOON, Burma —(UPI) —Burmese Army Commander Gen. Ne Win seized power in Burma today in a pre-dawn coup. At least one person was killed in fighting that broke out when troops arrested political leaders. Premier U Nu and his cabinet were imprisoned by the army. It was the second time in 13 months that British-educated Ne Win, a staunch anti-Communist, has taken control of the government. GEN, NE WIN said the army had been forced to act because of a steadily deteriorating economic and political situation in Burma. He said matters had been going from bad to worse. He called on the people to support the coup. troops fought a gunbattle with supporters of former President Sao Shwe Thaike, killing his oldest son, Sao Mimi. The battle broke out at 2 a.m. when troops surrounded the homes of U Nu and other politicians to arrest them. They were greeted by small arms and machinegun fire from the former president's home. THEY RETURNED the fire and stormed the house, arresting 22 persons. President U Win Maung's wife said her husband was called out by the army for secret talks. She refused to say whether he had been arrested. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 2.1962 A Nebulous Committee The controversy that has arisen in the last few days over the role of the Civil Rights Council (CRC), the Human Rights Committee (HRC) of the All Student Council and their relationship to each other has been and still is the subject of much heated discussion. The whole controversy was ignited by Chancellor Wescoe's statement last week referring the CRC to the Human Rights Committee, which he said would handle problems connected with discrimination. The CRC's reaction was quick and angry. They drafted a resolution saying that the Chancellor had violated their rights as students and questioning the University stand on discrimination. THE CHANCELLOR'S stated reasons for referring the CRC to the HRC is that the HRC is the official student body for dealing with matters of discrimination and that all such matters should be taken to it. This position adheres to correct procedure. But it should not be forgotten that the CRC has done much in the anti-discrimination fight. It is an active group that is attempting to do something about discrimination. Considering this, the CRC made one point that is entirely valid and relevant concerning the HRC. It said the HRC has not been meeting its responsibilities or functioning as it should. This is entirely correct. The HRC was formed last spring. Its lack of activity since that time is notable. The chairman of the committee, Brian Grace, said that the committee presented a petition to the All Student Council last semester calling for the curtailment of sit-ins and similar activity. He also noted that the problem being dealt with by the CRC at the time-discrimination by Lawrence barbers--was solved before the committee was able to act. YET IF THE committee wants sit-ins and similar activities ended, it should take definite and positive action of its own. Several members of the committee have said that the inactivity of the committee has been due to a lack of anything to work on. This argument is not even worth considering. There are problems that need to be dealt with, but they are not going to be considered if the committee does not meet its obligation of investigating them and gathering relevant information on them. No one is likely to hand the committee all the facts and opinions on an issue wrapped up in a neat little bundle. Grace has indicated that the committee will meet next week. It is hoped it will also begin functioning. Several committee members have made general statements regarding the course of action that should be taken. It will be interesting to see if they follow up on those statement and begin acting on problems of discrimination. -William H. Mullins letters to the editor Comment on an ROTC Display Editor: Anyone who has used the Military Science Building for a between class warming station the nast few days has probably noticed the Army ROTC display case at the west end of the main hall. This case contains four photographs of soldiers in combat and a sign which reads: "After all the missiles and bombs have been used, the final decision will be made by the ultimate weapon, the soldier with his rifle." I think this display should be somewhat disturbing to anyone who sees it. THE STATEMENT quoted above is made with some rather questionable assumptions. Most atomic physicists would seriously question whether there will even be any soldiers around "after all the missiles and bombs have been used" or if some do survive the blasts. whether they'll need anything except a shovel. It seems foolish to be making post-war preparations as if a nuclear war were coming. We must concentrate 100 per cent on avoiding such a war! If anyone remained after a nuclear war, they alone could figure out what to do next. If Man decides to unleash his missiles and bombs, this will be in a tragically real sense his final decision. Don Warner Topeka junior ** Criticism for the Vacation Schedule Editor: While recently scanning my calendar in search of a much needed break I made a startling discovery. I found that the members of the calendar committee have an unusual sense of humor. Expecting to find a spring vacation around Easter time, I found instead that the spring vacation has been scheduled to cover April Fools Day. Surely when the students return to classes on April 6th they will be greeted with a lusty, "April Fool!", you just missed a week of classes." I FIND IT hard to believe that the Easter holiday, with all its deeply significant religious associations, can be completely ignored by those who make calendar decisions. Easter Sunday is a day when families should be together to strengthen the family bond through combined worship and observance of the meaning of Easter. Also, other members of the family are free from responsibilities during this religious weekend and rightfully expect their families to be united for whatever activities they may wish to undertake. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler YOU WANNA BE A DOCTOR? MY ADVICE: TEACH LEARN TO SOLVE YOUR CIVIL PROBLEMS YOU'VE IN SCHOOL NOW. YOU THINK YOU've GOT PROBLEMS ARE STUDENT THAT YOU DANGERED. GET MEET TO YOURSELF GRATEFUL! Never before have I known this all important weekend, including Good Friday and Easter Sunday, to be completely overlooked and ignored. This must be an April Fools prank by the normally conservative calendar committee. I hope and pray that Easter still means something and hasn't fallen to the level of Washington's birthday or some other non-descript observance. "FRANKLY ID RATHER ADVISE FRESHMEN- THEY'RE NOT SO SET IN THEIR WAYS." Don W. Clifford Wichita senior University of Kansas student newspaper Founded in 1895, dahlman Jan. 16, 1912. *The Journal* Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 276, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East Sloan Street, New York, United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except holidays, holiday and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher Managing Editor Kelly Smith, Coach Clayton, Clayton, Scott Payne, Assistant Managing Editors; Jerry Musil, City Editor; Steve Clark, Sports Editor; Martha Mocer, Society Editor. NEWS DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT PRINT EDITOR Alan Keev, Assistant Editorial Editor. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Manager Charlotte Harlem Advertising Manager, Dick Klune. Classified Advertising Manager; Susanne Ellermeier, Charlotte, National Advertising Manager; Harley Carpenter; Promotion Manager. Comment & Criticism Pringsheim's U-2 Talk Early in May, two years ago, the leaders of the United States, the U.S.S.R., Great Britain and France met together in the Elysee Palace in France for a "summit conference," as it had been scheduled. At that time Mr. Khrushchev stood up and declared, "As God is my witness, my hands are clean and my soul is pure." The "U-2 incident" had reached its climax. Khrushchev persistently demanded that President Eisenhower make a public apology for the reconnaissance flight of Francis Gary Powers into the Soviet territory on the first day of May. President Eisenhower accepted his "personal responsibility," as the Chief Executive of the United States, for the flight, and did not apologize. UPON THE INAUGURATION of President Kennedy, the Soviet Union made its typical gesture of officially announcing that they would forget all about the unpleasant incident of the U-2 in the hope of improving the American-Soviet relationship. Yet the question of the wisdom of the role that President Eisenhower played at the Elysee Palace is still a matter of speculation. And Mr. Pringsheim, instructor in political science, has given a stimulating discussion on this subject at a recent Current Events Forum. The question which interests me most, however, is not one of whether or not espionage is a well-known fact in history; it is rather a most simple and pragmatic one, namely: How would a "traditional denial." such as Mr. Pringsheim suggests, have affected the national interest of the United States and the peace of the world, had the President adopted such an approach? We can answer this question properly only in the light of the actual circumstance under which President Eisenhower made the alleged mistake. I think any realistic student of world politics would join me in agreeing with Mr. Pringsheim that "espionage is an international fact of life." In fact the story of espionage is as old as the Old Testament. Thus we are told that Moses sent Joshua, among other men, to spy out the land of Canaan (Numbers, 13, 16-17). It is also recorded that Joshua himself, when he was in command, sent two spies into the town of Jericho (Joshua, 2, 1; 6, 20). ON MAY 5TH, 1960. Premier Khrushchev told the Soviet Supreme Council that a U.S. aircraft had been shot down in Russian territory. Almost simultaneously, the National Aeronautical and Space Administration in Washington reported the missing of a U-2 in the region of Lake Van, stating that it might have "strayed over the Soviet border while the pilot was unconscious because of lack of oxygen." On the 7th of May Premier Khrushchev announced that the incident had taken place in the neighborhood of Sverdlovsk, which is located in the heart of Russia, that the pilot had been captured alive and that the pilot had admitted his reconnaissance duty. The Premier made a public display of the scene and published photographs of the wrecked plane and the pilot. It was in the face of these strong material evidences with which the world's public opinion was thus confronted that President Eisenhower acknowledged the fact and accepted his "personal responsibility." In Wednesday's Daily Kansan Mr. Pringsheim reiterated his basic view that Mr. Eisenhower's "decision to break long-standing precedent in acknowledging Presidential responsibility for an act of espionage was extremely ill-advised." D C He did have two other alternatives. He could have either denied the whole story as another "Communist lie," or acknowledged the flight as a fact and refused to assume his responsibility on the ground that the flight had not been ordered by the United States government. In either event, I believe the consequence would have been considerably worse than it was, for the obvious reason that the world would not have believed what Mr. Eisenhower said. Such an act of conspicuous public lying by the American President would have severely damaged not only the prestige of Mr. Eisenhower himself but that of the United States. Furthermore, such a "traditional denial" would have only antagonized the Russian people; and this was quite unnecessary in view of how little we might have gained by making such a denial. MR. PRINGSHEIM compares the U-2 with Rudolf Abel and suggests that we should, like the Soviets with their spy, have followed the "correct traditional approach" in denying the U-2 flight. I do not think, however, that his comparison is a very good one, for the simple reason that while the Soviet denial was effective our denial of the U-2 would have been quite ineffective, and even disastrous. The most serious problem that we face today, as I see it, is the increasing danger of an accidental war. And reconnaissance flights could only add to the danger of sparking an inadvertent war, since radar technicians on the ground do not have adequate means of distinguishing an airplane carrying a powerful camera from an airplane carrying a powerful H-bomb. If President Eisenhower's public acknowledgment of the U-2 incident did in any way contribute to terminating the unrestrained mutual aerial reconnaissance activities of the two nations and to preventing unnecessary hostility on the part of the world's public toward the United States, I am inclined to believe that Mr. Eisenhower did the best he possibly could under the most humiliating circumstances. Sugwon Kang graduate student of political science from Korea Dean Taylor Serves Out Term in Corbin Page 3 Emily Taylor, dean of women, said Wednesday, "I'm going over to Corbin tonight to pay my debt to society." united the states have that Such could tran people; have Corbin's freshman counselors won the services of Dean Taylor for one evening. The award was given to the group who raised the most money for the KU Women's Memorial Scholarship Fund (SMOP). l and e fol- flight. I one, e our even Dean Taylor began her tour of duty that night in Corbin with a Hall Council Meeting. During the meeting the council members presented Dean Taylor with a set of Mickey Mouse ears, which she wore all evening. The Council and Dean Taylor also decided on some new freshman women dormitory rules. They included: - A course entitled Primary Hawks Nest will be a prequisite for all freshman women. is the lightts since ans of air-pub- attribute once acustility I am ossibly - All freshman women must wear tennis shoes and chew bubble gum at all times. (Dean Taylor was chewing three pieces of bubble gum during dinner.) - NO CLASSES on Monday. Wednesday and Friday. Only 1 p.m. classes will be held on Tuesday and Thursday. - Freshman women will be issued freshman keys after senior keys and senior privileges have been removed. - Jeans must be worn to all meals. - There will be no room check. - There will be no rooft check. - Corbin women will hold a slumber party with the men of Templin and Joseph R. Pearson Halls. AT 10:15 p.m. the freshman women grown tired of waiting for Dean Taylor's closing party. They wandered about the Corbin living room with signs pinned to their backs protesting Corbin policies. Some of the signs read: "Food! "Down with Grubby Grubb! "Free Male Delivery to All Rooms," and "Free Taxi Service to and from the Hill." The party finally began as the freshman dormitory resident directors did a chorus number entitled "Anything to Get Away From Corbin." The party ended at 12 a.m. with the serving of sandwiches and cocoa in the dining room. Dean Taylor spent the night on 3rd floor South Corbin with George Anne Porter, Kansas City junior and chairman of the Corbin Council SMOP Committee, and Mary Ellen Brooks, Hinesdale, Ill., freshman and president of Corbin Hall last semester. Miss Porter said, "The only trick we played on Dean Taylor was to short-sheet her bed." The Corbin Counselor SMOP Committee collected a total of $63.81, which amounted to $4.56 for each of the 14 committee members. Shiek Speaks KIEL, Germany — (UPI) — An Arabian sheik who divorced his German bride by saying three times "I reject you." will have to pay her an estimated $200,000 for a legal divorce. Prince Abdulla Al Jaber and 19-year-old Heidi Dichther of Kiel were married last spring. Three weeks later the prince dissolved the marriage according to the Moslem law of the Koran. Gorillas to Fight But the girl's attorney has fought ever since for a German divorce. The lawyer said it has been obtained and the settlement was for $200,000. ence LONDON — (UPI) — When it was learned that two British publishing houses plan to bring out different books both titled "The Monkeys," a London columnist commented, "stand by for gorilla warfare." Applications for the four officer positions on the SUA Board for 1962- 1963 are now available in the Union Directors Office. These applications must be turned back into the office by March 13. University Daily Kansan genete shin The money raised from the drive, which included special house projects and will include this Saturday's Late Night, will go toward scholarships for KU women. The scholarships honor women who died while enrolled at the university. Edgar Snow Nuggets of golden goodness BUTTER PECAN COFFEE SHOP Try this golden treasure for a real taste treat... delicious Dairy Queen topped with crunchy butter pecan! Served fresh from the freezer, Dairy Queen is better tasting, better for you. Less fattening, too! DAIRY QUEEN sundae Come in for a treat TODAY! Harnar Auto Supply 1835 MASSACHUSETTS 836 Mass. St. Complete Locksmith Service Day or Night Day Phone VI 3-2362 Night Phone VI 3-7576 Friday, March 2, 1962 Edgar Snow, foreign correspondent who chronicled the Chinese Communist movement almost a quarter of a century ago in "Red Star over China," will present a University lecture at 8 p.m. Wednesday, March 7. Snow Will Discuss Communist China The talk, 'Red China Inside Out, will be in Fraser Theater. It is sponsored by the Committee on East Asian Studies and the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. porter to interview Mao Tse-tung since 1947. Snow will discuss such matters as Chinese attitudes toward the United States, the crash program of industrialization, the extent of social development, the stability of the Communist regime, the relationship with the Soviet Union, and the aims of Chinese leaders. "Red China Inside Out" will deal with the question of contemporary China as analyzed by the only re- In 1960, Snow returned to China for five months and traveled from Peking to Siberia, from Dairen and East China to Inner Mongolia, visiting areas barred to most visitors from non-Communist countries. Snow is the author of 10 books. Final Clean Up Terrific Savings Friday and Saturday Only (Only 16 Left) Men's Suits 34.95 Value $1900 Men's Dress Slacks Values to 10.95 $500 $1900 Men's Parka Coats Values to 18.95 $900 One Group Men's Western Boots Values to 16.95 $1000 Army Style Khaki Shirts Reg. 3.98 $200 Men's Flannel Shirts Reg.1.98 Western Shirts Values to 8.95 $300 97c Men's Sport Shirts 2.98 to 3.98 Values $200 Men's Sweaters Values to 9.95 $400 One Group Men's Oxfords Values to 9.95 $500 $ 400 One Group Men's Belts 50c White Dress Shirts $200 Blazer Sport Coat . . . . . $14.00 (Only 9 Left) — Reg. 25.00 Surplus Store 820 MASS. DUMB - ALL SALES FINAL - NO EXCHANGES OR LAYAWAYS - Last year, Whitey Ford won 25 games for the Yankees. Yet he still insists it doesn't take brains to be a winning pitcher. In this week's Post, Whitey tells why one Dodger pitcher with plenty of brains never made the grade. Tells how he handles Al Kaline, Rocky Colavati, Jim Gentile and other top sluggers. And says why the beanball isn't as dangerous as it's cracked up to be. GUYS CAN BE GOOD PITCHERS —SAYS WHITEY FORD The Saturday Evening LOST MARCH 3, 1982 ISSUE ON SALE Don't Miss It! ROCK CHALK REVUE Good Friday Night Tickets Will Go On Sale At 7:00 p.m.At the Hoch Auditorium Box Office THIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCE SATURDAY NIGHT IS SOLD OUT! Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 2, 1962 KU Jayhawkers Defend Conference Track Title Kansas heads into the Big Eight track meet as favorites to retain their conference crown. The preliminaries and semi-finals, plus the finals in the broad jump are scheduled for Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium tonight. Finals are scheduled for tomorrow night. THE JAYHAWKERS' hopes are riding on miler Bill Dotson, middle-distance men Bill Thornton and Kirk Hagan, high jumper Ron Swanson, spinner Larry McCue and two-miler Charlie Hayward. First places by these men, however, would not win for the Jayhawkers, therefore Coach Bill Eason is relying on overall team balance to capture seconds, thirds and fourths for the winning margin. In this category are quarter-miler Bill Stoddart, hurdler Charlie Smith and Rich Anderson, pole vaulter Jack Stevens and shot putter Yule Yost. DOTSON APPEARS to be a sure winner in the mile and could possibly double in the half-mile. The senior captain's best mile effort is 4:08.5, way in front of Paul Ebert who has recorded the league's next best time of 4:14.4. Dotson does not appear as solid in the half-mile. Oklahoma's Neff and Nebraska's Ray Stevens stand ahead of him in pre-meet times. Neff has run 1:53.2 while Stevens owns a 1:54.7 mark. Dotson's season best is 1:55.2. Bill Thornton's 600-yard dash time is second best in conference listings. His 1:11.8 established a new Allen Field House record two weeks ago. Thornton has been battling a cold the past week-and-a-half and may not be at full-strength. THE OWNER of the top time in the 600 also is ailing, but more seriously than Thornton. Colorado's Jim Heath ran a 1:11.1, but the Buffalo speedster may not run at the meet because of a sprained ankle. Kirk Hagan appears solid in the 1000-yard run. Hagan who has only been defeated once in the event and that by Dotson two weeks ago owns the fastest time of 2:14.1 in the event. Oklahoma's Buddy Stewart and KU's Ted Riesinger are not far behind with 2:13.9 and 2:14.2 times respectively. High-jumper Ron Swanson, a Moline junior college transfer this semester, will be thoroughly tested. Swanson's 6-7/4 is the league's second top effort. Oklahoma's Mark Brady, whom Swanson tied with at an earlier meet this year, owns a 6-8 jump. SPRINTER LARRY McCue will meet a field of 10 participants under 06.4. Among these are Kansas State's Dale Alexander who defeated McCue last week, and Ted Woods, Colorado's Olympic sprinter. Charlie Hayward has defeated three of his four top competitors. Hayward defeated Pat McNeal of Kansas State and Oklahoma State's Danny Metcalf last week, and Oklahoma's Lee Smith two weeks ago. The other competitor he has not faced is Colorado's Griffith. Vital points have to be won by Kansas in the 440-yard dash, 60- yard low and high hurdles, the pole vault and the shot put if the Jayhawkers are to win the conference title. KU'S STODDART faces two of the conference's toughest runners in Jim Baker of Missouri and Charlie Strong of Oklahoma State. Baker's best time is 48.8 compared to Strong's 49.5 and Stoddart's 50.5. Smith is but one-tenth of a second off the league's best hurdle times. Nebraska's Moore holds the league's best time, 07.4 in the highs while OU's Mark Sullivan and Nebraska's Wilke share 06.8 in the lows. The Cornhuskers are strong as a team in the hurdle events. They have three men in the top listings in the high hurdles and two in the lows. JACK STEVEN'S who is a second choice to Colorado's Don Meyer in the pole vault may have his chance to be bride instead of bridesmaid. Favorite Don Meyer who has vaulted 15-0 this year may have to bypass this meet because of a sore hamstring muscle. Stevens' best effort is 14-7. Yul Yost will have tough competition in breaking into the scoring positions. His 53- $ 8 \frac{1}{2} $ ties him with Kansas State's Stout for fifth on the league charts. Missouri's Dan Smith remains a solid favorite in the shot put with a 59-3 effort. The conference's second-best is Oklahoma's Inman's $54.9\%$. Kansas Freshmen End Season With 80-57 Loss to Tigers The Kansas Freshmen last night dropped their second straight game 80-57 to the Missouri Freshmen at Columbia. The loss dropped the Freshmen's record to 2-2. THE JAYHAWKERS led once during the game, 11-9, with five minutes elapsed in the first half. The Frosh tied MU six times before their second half letdown. Dennis Browne led the Tiger Frosh by scoring 22 points. The Tigers started slowly but led 37-32 at halftime. MU outscored the Jay-hawkers 43-25 in the final half to account for its 23-point game-winning margin and biggest lead of the night. MU's Browne, who scored all but two of his points on field goals, not only bothered the KU defense with his drives down the free throw lane and under the basket, but played defensively sound too. Browne blocked several shots and stole several passes. "Browne was up for this game because we talked to him so much about this Unseld (George of KU) boy," said Missouri Coach Paul Geyman after the game. BUT LAST NIGHT it was Browne, not Unseld, whom everyone was talking about. Although he finished the game with 13 points, Unseld played less than half of the game. With 7:35 still left in the first half, Unseld had already committed four fouls. The 6-7 Frosch center was replaced at that point in the game and didn't return until 13:45 was left in the last half. Unseld committed his fifth foul with 9:19 left in the game. THE TIGERS, who boast previous wins over the Iowa State Freshmen and Moberly (Mo). Junior College, now have a 3-0 record. Two wins over Kansas State, a loss to Coffeville Junior College, and last night's loss comprise the Jayhawker season mark. The leading KU scorer last night was David Schichtle who scored 15 points. Schichtle, 6-2 guard from Coffeyville, hit five of eight shots from the field and connected on five of five free throw chances. MISSOURI'S GARY Garner and Ron Mooney each scored 10 points. KU was out-rebounded 46-37. The leading KU and game rebounder was Mike Shinn who pulled down nine rebounds. Unseld, the leading Hawker seasonal rebounder, grabbed only two rebounds. Charles Sudholt, 6-6½ Tiger center, came off the bench in the last five minutes to score four quick field goals which increased the Tiger final lead. KU reserve forward Pete Townsend, 6-5, gathered in seven rebounds and scored five points. The Tigers hit 47.7 per cent of their field goal efforts and had a 58-1 per cent record for free throws. The KU Frosh scored 35.3 per cent from the field and had a 62.5 per cent mark for free throws. Baltimore Officials Say Yanks Will Have Shortstop Problem United Press International General Manager Lee McPhaill of the Baltimore Orioles viewed the American League situation today and came up with a surprising conclusion: The Yankees don't look so tough, after all. McPhail based his analysis on the fact that the Yankees must find an adequate replacement for shortstop Tony Kubek, who was called into military service during the winter. The Orioles have lost shortstop Ron Hansen for the same reason but McPhail said they will have less trouble replacing him than the Yankees will replacing Kubek. "The Yankees are going to have to use one of their two rookie short-stops" said McPhail. "But we've got Jerry Adair, who has already gotten through that tough first Major League season. Adair will be moving from second base but he was a shortstop by trade and was good enough to be voted the best short-stop in the minors two years ago." The Yankees two main shortstop candidates are rookies Tom Tresh and Phil Linz. BIG BUY FORT WAYNE, Ind. — (UPI) — The Cincinnati Royals can clinch a tie for second place in the Western Division of the National Basketball Association tonight when they meet the Detroit Pistons here. Offers One FREE Quart of Lemonade or Orangeade with every Barrel of Chicken A victory would give the Royals a 41-35 record with four games left to play and mean that the Pistons could have no better than a 41-29 final-season mark if they won all their remaining eight games. 25 Pieces, 10 Hot Rolls $5.00 Sports in Brief 23rd & Iowa * * Coach Charley Wolf, looking forward to tonight's game, used his starters sparingly Thursday in a 137-108 loss to the Syracuse Nationals at Syracuse, N.Y. Wolf elected to rest his first unit after the Royals fell behind, 65-59, at halftime and the Nationals scored the first seven points of the second half. CINCINNATI, Ohio — (UPI) — Cincinnati, already assured of at least a tie for the Missouri Valley Conference basketball championship, nearly took things too easy last night in a non-conference affair with Xavier. The Bearcats were coasting along on a 12-point lead when Xavier began its final push. The 'Cats wound up winning 61-58. In the only other Missouri Valley Conference action, Wichita set a school scoring record in blasting North Texas State, 110-69, with four players in double figures. It was Wichita's 18th win against seven defeats. The loss was the 12th in a row in conference play for North Texas State. * * CHICAGO - (UPI) - Wisconsin, fighting to held second place, meets Big Ten champion Ohio State in one of five games on tomorrow's basketball conference card. The underdog Badgers once shared an unbeaten record with Ohio State and as recently as three weeks ago the match between the two leaders had the potential of a genuine showdown. But the Badgers have fallen to a 9-3 league record and are in danger of being overtaken by Purdue in the scramble to finish behind the Buckeyes. The Boilermakers, who have moved up steadily to an 8-4 mark, meet Indiana on the Hoosier court tomorrow night. A victory over Indiana would move Purdue into a tie for second unless Wisconsin can pull off what would rank as the season's biggest basketball upset. SPAGHETTI DINNER PARTY Get Tickets From Any ARNOLD AIR SOCIETY or ANGEL FLIGHT MEMBER (or at the door) $ 7 5^{\mathrm{c}} $ ALL YOU CAN EAT SUN., MARCH 4 5:00-7:00 P.M. ALLEN FIELD HOUSE SUA Jazz Blow Featuring The Best Campus Musicians Sunday, March 11 7:00 p.m. Big 8 Room in the Kansas Student Union COFFEE WILL BE SERVED Friday, March 2, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5 ... Here's the Perfect Start of a Date to Rock Chalk Revue Before you attend the 1962 Rock Chalk Revue this Friday or Saturday night, treat yourself and your date to a superb meal in the Prairie Room at the Kansas Student Union. Enjoy your favorite choice of charcoal broiled steak or tasty sea food served with baked potato, tossed green salad,bread and butter. The Prairie Room is open from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. For Reservations Call KU-540 Union Food Service Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 2. 1962 250 Take English Pro Exam; Now the Long Wait Begins By Steve Clark While not a propagandist's scare phrase, "English Proficiency Exam" excites fears and dread among many KU students. Last night, students took the examination. For the next few weeks, they will wait impatiently until the grading committee finishes scoring the papers. Students who have completed four semesters of English are eligible to take the examination. Students enrolled in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the Schools of Business, Education, Fine Arts, and Journalism, and the departments of nursing, architecture and architectural engineering must pass the examination before they can graduate. THE EXAM is merely a two hour test that requires no immediate preparation and consists of two or three short pieces of simple exposition. Students' big fear is coping with the proper formal-styled English language instead of the common, colloquial Americanese spoken in the United States. Students' fears are justifiable. Approximately one-third of those who take the examination fail. A failure, however, does not mean the end. A student retakes the examination until he is able to pass it. The examination was devised in 1938, and members of the class of 1940 were the first required to take the examination to graduate. THE COMPOSITION originally was suggested for graduate students, as it was felt that some graduate students were incapable of composing a well-organized, intelligent piece of writing. It was hoped that the examination would be an incentive to students to continue writing after they had passed their freshman rhetoric courses. The grading committee judged the papers on clarity of expression and effectiveness of organization, and correctness in diction and in construction and punctuation. An end to the English Proficiency examination was rumored during the spring semester of 1958. However, the rumors turned out to be just that—rumors. THE ENGLISH PROFICIENCY examination always has interesting side effects. In spring of 1960 the Kansas Union Book Store reported a brisk leap in book sales. The primary sales commodity was dust-laden, retired Perrin-Smith English handbooks. Fortunately, however, the examination has brought no kamikazi dives off the campanile, no loss of sleep, and most important no studying. Students enter the examination not with hopes of relying on their vast storehouse of knowledge but on "pot luck." The examination grades are announced in the Daily Kansan several weeks after the test is taken. A not uncommon sight about Flint Hall is a confused, lost architectural engineer who gropes about the halls looking for the Kansan newsroom. Although time passes slowly to the student waiting for his examination grade, he experiences one of life's most joyous and ecstatic moments when he looks at the passing list and sees his name. But the unfortunate ones must wait at least another semester to experience the relief of having English Proficiency behind them. Flags Flying from Fraser Hall Stay in Memories of Alumni By Dennis Farney Ask any alumni member to name some KU landmarks and chances are he'll remember the two flags which fly from the twin towers of Fraser Hall. Ask him to estimate the cost of maintaining this minor landmark and he'll probably underestimate the actual figure — $600 a year. The flags deteriorate rapidly because of the unique combination of violent gales, bright sunlight and torrential rains that makes up Kansas weather. Both Old Glory and the KU flag must be replaced at least three times a year, according to Harry M. Buchholz, superintendent of buildings and grounds. Each new flag costs about $100. Although the flags are never flown during rainy weather, a sudden spring shower may drench them before they can be taken down. The flags fade when exposed to the bright Kansas sunlight. And the strong winds which cause the flags to snap and pop can reduce them to shreds in a matter of days. Although Fraser Hall itself is 89 years old, the practice of flying the Chairman Wanted for Dance Interviews for chairman of the KU Relays Dance will be held next week. Any student who is interested should contact Bill Schaefer at VI 3-4711 before Wednesday noon. The Relays Dance will be held April 21. The chairman will be in charge of organizing the dance. Page-Creighton FINA SERVICE Motor Tune-ups Lubrication $1.00 All Major Brands of Oil 1819 W. 23rd VI 3-7694 two flags used today dates back only to 1932. That year, the design of the first official University flag was submitted by the president of KuKu. KU men's pep club. The first KU flag featured a belligerent-looking Jayhawk perched atop a pile of limestone rocks — a true "Rock Chalk Jayhawk." The flag was used until 1939, when a contest was held to find a new design. Over 250 entries were submitted, with the present design — a blue field trimmed in red, with KU in large red letters placed in the center — winning out. Kansas Conference of AAUP The first annual meeting of the Kansas Conference of the American Association of University Professors will be held Saturday in the Kansas Union. Donald Cowgill, chairman of the department of sociology at the University of Wichita will discuss the problem of academic freedom at Wichita at 1:15 in the Kansas Room. Following this there will be two group discussions. One is on retirement led by Harold Krogh, professor of business administration. The other is on teaching loads in Kansas colleges led by Ellis G. Shields, professor of English at Pittsburg State Teachers College. Reservations for the lunch (12:15, Kansas Room) should be made with Howard Stettler, professor of business administration. CHEMISTRY, METALLURGY, CHEMICAL & MECHANICAL ENGINEERING GRADUATES As you approach the "Career Decision" level make certain that you invest your knowledge in a company that offers opportunities for growth & responsibility. We Invite You To Consider Exciting & rewarding openings available in R & D, Engineering Production & Polymer Development. Small group, diversified assignments makes the ideal stimulus for personal achievement. U.S.I. Chemicals Co. Division NATIONAL DISTILLERS & CHEMICAL CORP. Our Representative will interview on campus at Hoch Auditorium March 8 March 8 U. S.I. Chemicals Co. Division NATIONAL DISTILLERS & CHEMICAL CORP. 99 Park Ave., New York Official Bulletin Foreign Students: The Cosmopolitan Club of the University of Kansas City has invited the KU foreign students to its International Night, Saturday, September 18th at the University Center. Interested students should RSVP by Monday to the Cosmopolitan Club. Teacher Interviews; March 6 — Gilbert Robinson, Pers. Dir. (Elem. & Sec.), Oklahoma City, Okla. March 5 - Richard Ryan. (See only.) Master's preferred. Anaheim, Calif. TODAY Hilill Services: 7:30 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m. Baptist Student Act, Building. 1212 Oread. Rev McBain, pastor of 1st Southern Bapint City, will speak on "Reality of Prayer." International Club: 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union, Dean Marvin of How Journalism Looks 7,000 Miles from Home." Coffee and dancing follow. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union. Bible study. Picture for the Jayhawker will be taken. 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 noon, Centerbury House. Russkii肌 vb sopira臬a 5-vo marta, 7:30 chasov, v "Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union on arm backs budet govirt' bakek on arm backs budet uchizhvie russkii yazkv jpriqlashutusa. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. K.C.Star Pleads to Keep Fraser Name An editorial in the Kansas City Star recently urged the Board of Regents to retain the name of Fraser for the 90-year-old building's replacement. The editorial said: "The regents could recognize tradition, we believe, if the successor to Fraser were to bear the name of the university's early-day chancellor, John Fraser." The editorial began, "Generations of former students of the University of Kansas must have had nostalgic memories, tinged with regret when they learned that Old Fraser Hall will be razed to make way for modern classrooms." STARTS SATURDAY! Cont. Sun.From 2 p.m. Distinguished Adult Entertainment DISPLAY F. SCOTT FIZZGERALD'S CELEBRATED LOVE STORY! 20. Century-Frog JENNIFER JONES JASON ROBARDS, JR. JOAN FONTAINE TOM EWELL MF 8C01F.17 SEFRDUS Tender is the Night CINEMAS LOCAL AT 229 WESTLake CESARE DANOVA - JILL ST. JOINT - PAUL LUKAS HENRY T. WEINSTEIN HENRY KING IVAN MOFFAT Ends Tonight "One, Two, Three" Granada THEATRE...Telephone V13-5784 Student Union Body Approves New Budget One The Student Union Executive Activity Board has approved the 1962-63 budget forecast which includes more than $90,000 in student benefits. The money will be put into programs or areas involving student benefits either directly or indirectly. Such items as cash rebates, vending machines, SUA programs, and athletic concession payments come under the benefits. Members of the board are Emily Taylor, dean of women; Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students; Keith L. Nitcher, University comprtroller; Jim Devall, Overland Park junior and SUA president, and Frank Burge, Union Director. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Rin Fin LAST 6 DAYS To See THE GREATEST HUMAN DRAMA THAT THE WORLD HAS EVER KNOWN! Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents Samuel Bronston's Production King of Kings 70MM SUPER TECHNIRAMA • TECHNICOLOR® Sat. & Sun. Cont. 1:30 - 4:35 - 8:00 Evenings 7:45 Adults $1.25 Children 50c Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Open 6:45 — Show 7:00 FRI.-SAT.-SUN. 20 CINEMAS OF NEW YORK Gregory PECK THE BRAVADOS CINEMA SOPRE COLOR DE LUXE PLUS AT 8:45 LEO McCAREY'S RALLY ROUND THE FLAG, BOYS! PAUL JOANNE NEWMAN - WOODWARD JOAN TACK COLLINS - CARSON CINEMASCOPE COLOR BY DE LUXE SAT. TWO BONUS FEATURES— "Count Five And Die" And "Halls of Montezuma" Sunset Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway Friday, March 2. 1962 University Daily Kansam CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP YOUR Page 7 One day, 5oc; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms cash: All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 2$e for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. LOST Black Overcoat. Lost in Bodd's Grill Thurs. night, Feb. 22. Please return to 930 Kentucky or call VI 3-5047. 3-2 FOUND BLACK bucket style leather purse at turn Cauley Cox. Cox I 3-7111 3-5 Ring in Flint Hall. Identify. See Mrs. Fine, 14 Flint. t HELP WANTED Young hostess and boys needed for restaurant type work. Phone VI 3-9640 after 4 p.m. 3-2 FOR RENT LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. VOI VI 3-6294. tff ROOM FOR 1 MALE STUDENT in double room. Share with graduate student. Availability. Call Assistant. Private entrance, quiet. Calf VI 3-4092. see at 1301 Louisiana. tt One of our girls has lost her roommate (how careless) and would like a graduate student to share her large room and separate study. A complete kitchen & bath, phone, full laundry room, understands that she is shared with 3 students. Limbs provided. All this at 1229 Ohio — 1 block from Union, for only $27.50. Sound too good to be true? If you're looking for a better place, call anyone at VI 2-0195 and ask. 3-2 APARTMENTS FOR RENT MARRIED AND GRADUATE STUDENTS Large kitchen cabinets and closet space. Brick construction, fully insulated. Garbage disposal, carpeted central air-conditioning, and laundry 1/2-block. PARK PLAZA SOUTH APTS. 1912 W. 25th VI 2-3416 ONE SINGLE room and one double room for boys. Call VI 5-5942 or see at 1528 Tenn. 3-5 LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- th 3. room furnished ast. Very nice. Private entrance, parking, near $75 a month —water pd. Call T. A. Hemphill, VI 3-3902. TRANSPORTATION WANTED; Ride, or car pool from 75th & & Metcalf area. Overland Park to KU and return. Classes 8 thru 4. Call Gary, NI 2-3925. 3-2 CAR POOL - Cautious and congenial group. Drive one daw. Fairway to KU. 9 to 3. Call John at TA 2-1213. 3-5 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice coel. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Flame retardant supply. 6th & Vermont. Phone 519-30350. FIRST at the Dine-At-Mite, Fri., 9 to 12 p.m. Featuring Grizzleys — the live band with the dead beat. 3-7 BUSINESS SERVICES INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. (t) DENEHLER PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available on the website. Price: $4 Call VI 2-3752. Free delivery. t DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. $939\%$ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tt 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. tt RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267, u ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3- 1751, or 921 Miss. tf GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Com. Personal service — sectionalized one stop — save time & money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, etc., plus complete lines of pet supplies. HAFPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In. Pet Center — most company shop. Call (866) 521-7800. V 3-850 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI A- 3644. SEE Mrs. Comfort for wedding invitations. Fine quality, socially acceptable men's attire. Prices start $8.50 per 100. Also have napkins, thank you folders, etc. Call VI 3-4260 for appl. TYPING FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. tt Typing; Will type reports, thesis, etc., on electric typewriter. Mrs. Ams Russell, 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. tf Experienced typist would like typing in her home. Accurate, neat, reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. tf Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Cell Mrs. Charles Pattie, VI 3-8797 HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former King James of England reports accurately. Reports & reports accurately. Standard rates See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. tt Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc., on electric typewriter. Send resume to Greg Greek. Standard rate, Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. Call VI 2-1546. 3-6 TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger. VI 3-4409. TYPING; Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers reports, and McCourt books. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8588. t EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing in my home — call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lou Gehlbach. tf 908 Mass. BIRD TV - RADIO FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Secretarial Service 697 F St. HE, HE, HE 2-7718. Eve or, sat, TF 2-2186. VI 3-8855 Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Remsof Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 108. VI 2-168. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 108. VI 2-168. - Guaranteed Hi-Fi Quality Parts [Dancing figure] At Sandy's you know you get the very best, in service and in quality. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type thesis, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt Expert Service SANDY'S THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. Electric typewriter. Reasonable rate. Marian typeham, 1619 Delaware. Cf. machine. 1490 15c Hamburgers Across from Hillcrest Shopping Center FOR SALE HI-FI EQUIPMENT; Electro-voice monaural three-way speaker system and Bogen 30 watt amplifier sacrificed to sell at only $250. CVI II 3-4928. 3-5 FURNITURE: sofa bed, basket chairs, soffee table, kitchen cabinet, also- mium frame; also 8mm-vision camera. Bell & Howell, telephoto vi. VI 2-0387, 1941 Mass. tf ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Baccalaureate degree immunology书 8200. Cgil M-3-8471 come to 907 Ark. for more information. tr WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised. 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. CAVI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. 1954 DODGE 4dr, standard shift, 8 cv. 1960 HOMO 3rd, standard shift, 7 cv. 1970 Tenn. or cann VI 3-1954. 3-6 GUNS: Robert Redding Firearms. New and used guns, and amino. Handguns are blue; rifles and shotguns are insexpensive. 22 revolvers. See at 1346 Ohio. (Corner 14th & Ohio) 3-2 1960 used Admiral stereo console. Tap or FM input, $79. See at Pettengill-Davis 723 Mass. 3- OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. prince Typewriter, 725 Mass. VI 3644 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 GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. complete all diagrams, comprehensive texts, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $3.50. free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553. VI 3-5778. tf 1954 CHEVY - Belair, 4 dr., Power Glide, radio & heater. Excellent condition. Call VI 2-3280 after 6 p.m. 3-2 | SEETTA 300: Leaving town, must sacrilege. Ideal for transportation on hill. Economical, good rubber, everything works. Call VI 2-3366 after 5 p.m. 3-5 JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT VIII NEED A RIDE? NEED RIDERS? Find that group under "Transportation" in your Riding in a Group Saves Money DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS VI 3-2700 - Ext. 376 SPACE, MISSILE & JET PROJECTS have created outstanding career opportunities for AT DOUGLAS SCIENTISTS and ENGINEERS B. S. degrees or better Assignments include the following areas: Servo-Mechanisms relating to all types of control problems Electronic Systems -relating to all types of guidance, detection control and communications Propulsion - relating to fluid mechanics, thermodynamics dynamics, internal aerodynamics Environmental - relating to air conditioning, pressurization and oxygen systems Human Factors analysis of environment affecting pilot and space crews, design of cockpit consoles, instrument panels and pilot equipment Heat Transfer—relating to missile and space vehicle structures Structures - relating to cyclic loads; temperature effects, and the investigation of new materials methods, products, etc. Aerodynamics relating to wind tunnel, research, stability and control Solid State Physics—relating to metal surfaces and fatigue Space vehicle and weapon system studies-of all types involving a vast range of scientific and engineering skills Get full information at INDIVIDUAL ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS with a Douglas representative Friday, March 16 We urge you to make an appointment through Mr. D. E. Metzler, Placement Director, School of Engineering. If you cannot, please write to S. A. Amestoy, Staff Assistant to VP Engineering DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT COMPANY, INC. 3000 Ocean Park Blvd., Santa Monica, California An equal opportunity employer Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 2.196 Crisis Day Group Backs ASC Bill By Bob Hoyt The Current Events committee bill, introduced at the All Student Council (ASC) meeting Tuesday night, is receiving strong support from students who were instrumental in bringing "World Crisis Day" and "Operation Correction" to the KU campus. Brian O'Heron, Lawrence senior, said he thinks the ASC would be "foolish" not to pass the bill. O'Heron thinks the bill is a "terrific idea, as long as it doesn't get amended." ❑ HE SAID IN A TELEPHONE INTERVIEW, he has heard no talk against the bill, but that he has heard some mention of a possible amendment to it, to bring it under the control of the University administration. HE FEELS THE National Student Association (NSA) was a failure at KU because it became bogged down in committees and bureaucracy. "But, we can't wait for NSA to come back. And even if it does come back, there is no assurance that it will do any more than it did before." O'Heron said the success of such a committee would depend on the people appointed to it. "They will have to be people who do a lot of reading and keep up on what is going on, so they can judge what is important and what is not, and what actually constitutes a current event." "That would be a mistake." O'Heron said, "because as it stands now, the committee would have a relatively free hand in bringing people to the campus. If the bill is amended to give the administration power over the decisions of the committee, it would bog down in bureaucracy." O'Heron said he believes students need a free hand in selecting speakers and programs to be brought here because "faculty members sometimes may be subjected to pressure from alumni and other powers in the state. We need to know what is important to everyone, not just to the people in Kansas." The crux of the whole problem, as O'Heron sees it, is money. "You have to have money no matter how interested the students may be. And interest will lag when the students discover they will have to pay $200 or so from their own pockets to bring a controversial speaker to the campus. We have several programs now in mind, but we have no money to bring people to the campus. "You really don't need a committee, all you need is the money to pay a speaker's expense. If we can get that, we'll find a way to arrange to get the people here." O'Heron helped arrange World Crisis Day. He said that he and several other interested students are working together to find a way to get controversial speakers here, but as yet his group has no formal title. "I'm not against using people in the local area," O'Heron said. "There are many fine people available in this area, and we should hear from them, but we need people from all over the country, people who will give us different viewpoints. Many of them are on the East Coast, and it takes money to bring them here." KENNETH N. CIBOSKI, Lawrence graduate student, said he thinks "it is important to have a committee outside the Minority Opinion Forum and the Current Events Forum, but the committee should not arbitrarily decide on programs and speakers. The committee should work with various individuals who are interested in bringing particular speakers to the campus. The decision on who will be brought here should be made by the committee in co-operation with individuals." Ciboski does not feel the committee would take over many functions of the NSA. He said, "The University will benefit much more from such a committee than it did from the NSA. Too many students didn't know what NSA was doing. To many of them, the NSA program seemed muddled. It could have been because the NSA's activities weren't too well publicized." Larry L. Laudan, Lawrence graduate student and chairman of the Minorities Opinion Forum, said, "What the committee will try to do is commendable. It will attempt to bring people of varying opinions to the campus to give students a chance to decide controversial issues for themselves." Laudan said that he heard a suggestion at the ASC meeting two weeks ago that the University administration might not got along with a Current Events Committee, but he sees no opposition from the administration. He based this opinion on a University report made by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe on June 6, 1961, in which the Chancellor or said: 'The Consul' to Open Monday For Three-Performance Run "It is the basic conviction of the University that there should be no restrictions on the opportunity of our students to voice their opinions freely and hear the opinions of those with whom they or others may disagree." "The Consul," a music drama by Gian Carlo Menotti, will open a three-performance run at 8 p.m. Monday in the University Theatre as the fourth event in the Major Theater Series. In the principal roles are: SHARON TEBBENKAMP, Salisbury, Mo., senior, as Magda Sorel; David Holloway, Gas City sophomore, as John Sorel, and Ann Kretzmeier, Liberal junior, as Magda's mother. Dorothy Kay Hammers, Aberdeen, S. D., sophomore, as Vera Boronel; Sharon Scoville, Kansas City junior, as the secretary; Phil Harris, Law- rence senior, as Assan. Janet Woody, Springfield, Mo, senior, as the foreign woman; Ed Sooter, Wichita graduate student, as Nika Magadoff, the magician; Marva Lou Powell, Topeka graduate student, as Anna Gomez; Charles Rogers, Lawrence senior, as Mr. Kofner. In supporting roles are: Daryl Patten, Lawrence graduate student, as the secret police agent; Don Grant, Kansas City sophomore, as the 1st plainclothesman, and Anthony Bengel, Independence sophomore, 2nd plainclothesman. Besides "The Consul" (1950), composer Gian Carlo Menotti has written: "The Medium" (1946), "The Telephone" (1947), "Amahl and the Night Visitors," (1951), "The Saint of Bleeker Street," "Maria Golovin", "The Old Maid and the Thief", "Amelia Goes to the Ball," and "The Unicorn, the Gorgon, and the Manticore." THE LITTLE SYMPHONY will be directed by Robert Bausian, associate professor of orchestra. F. Cowles Strickland, visiting professor of speech and drama, is director of the production. Performance nights are March 5. 7, and 9. Tickets are available at the University Theatre box office in Murphy Hall, at the Kansas Union, and at Bell's Music Co. downtown. THE UNIVERSITY Theatre and the School of Fine Arts presented "The Saint of Bleeker Street" with guest star Virginia Copland in Spring 1958, Murphy Hall's first season. Talk Today on Soviet Tours, Language Mrs. Jonnet Holloday, a representative of the University of Michigan and the University of Indiana, will explain the Summer Russian Language Programs, including tours to the Soviet Union and methods of financing them at 4 p.m. today in room 306 of the Kansas Union. The University Theatre box office is open from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 12 noon Saturday, and from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on performance nights. A U.S. spokesman said the Communist move was meaningless because the U.S. commandant, Maj. Gen. Albert Watson II, had no intention of trying to enter East Berlin until the East Germans lift restrictions on his civilian political aides. BERLIN — (UPI) — The East German Communists today barred the U.S. commandant in Berlin from entering East Berlin in retaliation for American restrictions on the Soviet Commandant. Vopos Stop U.S. Military Leader According to the U.S. spokesman, the liaison officer said Soviet Commandant Col. A. V. Solovyev asked the East Germans to bar Watson because of an American ban on Solovyev from the U.S. sector of West Berlin. THE AMERICANS barred Solovyev in December because the Communist Police prevented Watson's civilian advisers from entering East Berlin without an identity check. The Americans contend that such checks by the East Germans violate the Western Allied rights of freedom of movement in Berlin. The East Germans barred Watson on orders from the Russians. The ban was announced by the official East German news agency and a Soviet liaison officer notified U.S. headquarters by telephone. "General Watson has no intention to enter the Soviet sector of Berlin unless his accompanying civilian advisers are free from identification procedures," he said. The U.S. spokesman said today's Communist action represents no change in the situation which has existed since Watson and his aides were stopped at the East Berlin border on Dec. 23. "The problem with regard to the movement of the two commandants to each other's sector continues to be a matter for resolution between the two commandants." AT THE FRIEDRICHSTRASSE crossing point today. Communist police temporarily held up one of the U.S. military cars which regularly cross the border into East Berlin as an expression of the right of free movement. The car was stopped only briefly, and U.S. officials attached no importance to the incident. While today's developments were played down by the Americans, they underscored the East-West tensions which persist in Berlin. Crash Investigation May Take a Year NEW YORK - (UPI) Only two minutes elapsed from takeoff to tragedy for 95 persons. But it may take as long as a year to find out what happened in those two minutes yesterday when American Airlines Jetliner Flight 1 bound non-stop for Los Angeles, plunged into the murky, shallow waters of Jamaica Bay, killing all on board. - Engine failure; No evidence of power plant difficulty, although this can not be determined definitely until all four engines have been recovered and examined. - Fire: No indication whatsoever, and this would have been one mishap which the crew would have had time to report. As it was, there was no word of any difficulty or - Weather: Apparently no factor ..visibility and ceiling were unlimited, "cavu" as the pilots say, with a 20 to 30 knot (23-34 miles an hour) wind occasionally rising to slightly higher gusts. - From the first evidence on hand, the Civil Aeronautics Board expected to eliminate these possible causes: - Structural failure; not a single eyewitness, and the CAB noted with interest that many witnesses had aviation training and background, saw any parts of the 707 falling from the plane before crash. Nor were any key components found some distance from the wreckage. impending emergency, on the tape which recorded the pilot's contact with Idilwild's flight central tower from clearance for takeoff. - Sabotage: There was an explosion, but all eyewitness accounts agreed that the fire which enveloped the silver and orange carcas of the giant jet developed after impact with the water. - Crew incapacitation; The CAB's "human factors" team will conduct autopsies on whatever pilot bodies are recovered, as well as looking into medical histories. But even in the unlikely event that one pilot may have suffered a heart attack, the other should have been able to take over. Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, conducted in cooperation with professors from Stanford University, University of California, and Guadalajara, will offer July 2 to August 10, art, folklore, geography, history, language and literature courses. Tuition, board and room is $245. Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.O. Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. WHO SAYS ADVERTISING IS FOR MEN? B. B. G. SUE ELLERMEIER is the top retail ad salesman this week. Miss Ellermeier doubles as the circulation manager this semester. MR. MERCHANT, would you like Miss Ellermeier to plan a profitable campaign for you? If so call KU 706. i say, reggie-looks like something of a blast, eh? shall we get dates? NO... let's go stag! FRIDAY march 9. FLOOR SHOW! they're here again! JACK and the MISSILES! at the BiG BARN march the ninth!! the students favorite refresh- ments available! 1.75 per couple per stag 1.50 Powers Called for Public Questioning WASHINGTON—(UPI)A senate committee today called Francis Gary Powers for public questioning tomorrow after the Central Intelligence Agency told congressmen the U2 pilot did all he could to protect U.S. interests in his ill-fated flight across Russia. The Senate Armed Services Committee said Powers will appear at a public hearing at 2 p.m. It will be the flier's first public appearance 'Medea' Wins First in Revue Jason went looking for golden fleece in Hoch Auditorium Saturday night and found a golden trophy. Jason, played by Keith Jochim, Birmingham, Mich., junior, was one of the leading characters in the winning Rock Chalk Revue skirt entitled "Medea," presented by Kappa Sigma and Delta Delta. Alpha Tau Omega and Kappa Kappa Gamma received honorable mention for "South of the Border." Phi Delta Theta and Gamma Phi Beta also received honorable mention for "The Sound and Scurry." Beta Theta Pi and Kappa Alpha Theta took second place with a skit entitled "Scots on the Rocks." The four sorority-fraternity skirts were performed before a full house of 6,000 students. faculty, parents and alumni both Friday and Saturday nights, in Hoch Auditorium. The musical score was written by Gary Foster, class of '60, especially for the theme, "Classics Awy." The band was directed by Charles Snodgrass, Lawrence junior. When Franklin尼利克, associate professor of English and one of the judges, announced that "Medea" won, a Kappa Sigma member standing in the audience grabbed his date by the waist and swung her around several times. Another member of Kappa Sigma wiped a tear from his eye and said: "I didn't think we would ever do it." Diane Thompson, Hutchinson senior and co-director of "Medea," said that students told her last week after seeing the skit that her group would not take place. In a backstage interview a few minutes after the winner was announced Miss Thompson said; "People said we wouldn't win because we didn't have a traditional Rock Chalk skit. Frankly, I'm a little surprised that we did win." Miss Thompson, hugging the large victory trophy, then dashed out the side door of the stage saying that she was going to an open victory party at a downtown hotel. *ance since he was released from a Soviet prison last month. THE COMMITTEE'S decision was announced after CIA director John A. McCone told lawmakers he was satisfied with Powers' conduct both before and after he was downed inside the Soviet Union in May, 1960. McCone appeared at closed-door hearings of the House and Senate Armed Services subcommittees. He gave a digest of what CIA officials had learned from Powers in two weeks of questioning at an undisclosed location. First indications were that congressmen were satisfied with the explanation. IT WAS EXPECTED that something on McCone's findings on the Power's case would be made public within 48 hours. Government officials said that Powers, now described as a "free agent," will make his own decision on whether or not to hold a news conference after he appears before congress. McCONE, ACCORDING to a reliable congressional source, said Powers, high-flying reconnaissance plane was thrown out of control by an explosion he still does not understand. The tail of the plane was said to have been wrecked in the blast. Powers was hurled violently about the cockpit with the result that he was not able to reach a "destruct" button with which it had been contemplated he would destroy his U-2 plane rather than allow it to be captured. Powers had extreme difficulty getting out of the falling plane, the source quoted McCone as saying, but he finally extricated himself and parachuted to earth. McCONE TOLD the lawmakers that the U2 pilot's conduct in prison and during his show trial in Moscow was beyond reproach. Powers' whereabouts was not immediately disclosed. As for Powers' future plans, McCone was reported to have told the lawmakers that the pilot, borrowed from the Air Force for his CIA missions, may now return to Air Force duty. Daily hansan 59th Year, No. 95 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday, March 5, 1962 Wichita Group Begins Move for State School A new move for the inclusion of Wichita University in the state educational system was made yesterday by a group of private citizens in Wichita. The group's immediate purpose is to "interpret the advantages and necessity of having a state university in Wichita, the state's largest city." Lynn W. Whiteside, management development director at the Boeing Airplane Co., was named chairman of the group. In a telephone interview with the Daily Kansan this morning, Mr. Whiteside said: "THE COMMITTEE is working with Wichita University, but the committee is a citizen's group. Its funds come from voluntary contributions." There have been movements before to create a state university at Wichita. In 1961, the legislature allocated funds for Wichita and Washburn University at Topeka, but did Airlines Crash Kills 111 Sets Air Disaster Record DOUALA, Cameroon Republic—(UPI)—A chartered American-built DC7C airliner crashed and burned in a West African jungle swamp last night, killing all 111 persons aboard in commercial aviation's worst single plane disaster. Student Injured in $1,000 Accident A Rockport, Mo., freshman was treated for injuries at Lawrence Memorial Hospital following a 1-car accident at 23rd and Alabama Streets Saturday afternoon. Donald E. Myer suffered a laceration of the lip. Four stitches were taken and he was dismissed. Lawrence police reported that damage to Myer's car was $1,000. Damage totaled $375 in a 2-car accident early Saturday morning at 16th and Tennessee Streets. Lawrence police reported that cars driven by Fred J. Moreau, professor of law, and C. J. Bhuta, Bombay India, graduate student, were involved. MYER SAID HE applied the brakes to avoid hitting a car. He said his car then went out of control and struck a utility pole. Damage to the Moreau car was estimated to be $175. Damage to the Bhuta car estimated to be $200. Control tower officials at Douala airport said there were "absolutely no survivors" when rescue crews reached the scene of the crash about a mile and a half off the end of the main runway. The plane was en route from Lourenco Marques, Mozambique, to Luxembourg by way of Lisbon when it went down in a storm two minutes after takeoff. The 101 passengers and 10 crewmen were mostly South Africans and Rhodesians. (An airline spokesman in London said: "French military planes flying over say there are no survivors. The debris from the plane is spread over two square kilometers (1.25 miles), and there is a half-burned-out portion in a swamp which is only accessible by boat.) The crash brought to 206 the number of persons killed in major plane crashes within three days. At New York Idelwild airport a Boeing 707 jet crashed with a loss of 55 lives last Thursday. It crashed about a mile and a half from the end of the runway in a treacherous jungle swamp. not take action toward making them state schools. When contacted this morning, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University said: "KANSAS UNIVERSITY has no comment on the proposal to make Wichita University a state university. Any change or expansion of the state's educational facilities is a matter for the Board of Regents and the State Legislature." Nichols made the statement in the absence of Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, who is in Washington, D.C. Members of the steering committee appointed yesterday in Wichita are: Dwayne Wallace, President of Cessna Aircraft, Gordon Evans, president of Kansas Gas and Electric Co., and Arthur Kincade, of the Fourth National Bank and Trust Co., all of Wichita. In a telephone conversation this morning, Mr. Kincaid said: "NO DEFINITE STEPS have been taken yet. I know very little about it. I went to a meeting several months ago to advise them, but I cannot take the time which will be necessary to devote to the investigation of all of the facets of the program. I'm in favor of a state university at Wichita. Glen Gardner, director of Wichita University development. said; "To my knowledge, there have been no definite steps taken toward a program. The main problem now is to get people acquainted with the circumstances surrounding the facts. Most of our students are drawn from the southern part of the state and we feel that there is need for a state university to serve this area." Weather Sunny skies prevailed over Kansas today, but temperatures were unseasonably cold and forecasters said the chilling weather would continue. Northerly winds kept the mercury in the 20s today, and weathermen said the pattern would continue tonight, tomorrow and probably Wednesday. Lows tonight were forecast to be from 5 to 10, with highs tomorrow near 20. KU Prepares for Enrollment Jump By Ron Wilcox The big question facing J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories, and other KU housing officials, is Can the University provide proper and adequate housing for the estimated 21,000 students who will be at KU in 1975? The expanding enrollment at KU has caused KU housing officials to come up with some startling figures on the future status of KU dormitories. MR. WILSON, in a recent interview, said that by 1970 housing officials hope to have enough housing so that about 33 per cent of the students will be able to live in University housing, which is approximately the percentage now living in dormitories. The other two-thirds, he said, are divided between Greek organizations and "out-in-town" rooms and apartments. Mr. Wilson divided divided the future dormitory growth into four divisions: - Need. - Development and finance. - Operation and control. - Operation and control - Student responsibilities "Need," he said, "is a thing that is obvious these days. This is a hard thing to judge. Projected figures show 21,000 students by 1975 and this is just an appraised figure we have to work by." Mr. Wilson referred to the "master plan" Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe recently announced. This plan is directed to the renovation and the building of new classrooms. These new dorms will make five dormitories in that section, he said, which will mean that approximately 3.500 students will be living in the area. Presently, Templin, Lewis and Hashinger are the only dormitories in that particular area. Hashinger is expected to open next fall. These three dormitories are seven stories high and house 432 students each. "The present plan," the dormitory director said, "it to build three more dormitories in the Daisy Field tract south of Templin and Lewis." IN WHICH direction will KU housing expand? The new dormitories will house 650 students each and will stand 10 stories. Mr. Wilson said this is not the only direction that the housing may go. There are sites on 19th Street, he said, but little attention has been given to them so far. THE NEW dormitories will be built generally the same as Temp- lin, Lewis and Hashinger, he said. Mr. Wilson said that the housing committee is planning space for 400 additional students each year until 1975. The new dormitories cost around $4,000 per occupant to build. Rates for board and room this semester are $630. Next semester the price will go up to $675. Mr. Wilson predicted that in a few years the rates could be around $800. Mr. Wilson compared these rates with other Big Eight schools. He said Colorado charged $710; Missouri, $670; Iowa State, $660; Kansas State, $660; Oklahoma, $584; Nebraska, $600, and Oklahoma State, $560. THE UNIVERSITY of California was the highest among the 75 schools mentioned, charging anywhere from $740 to $1,030. He said KU ranks sixth among Big Eight schools in residence hall capacity. Other Big Eight schools are also increasing their board and room rates. Mr. Wilson said Figures from Mr. Wilson's office indicate that Colorado will raise their rates $40; Missouri, $30; Nebraska, $100 and Oklahoma, $10 to $20. THE PROBLEM of finding ample housing space is not a new one. Mr. Wilson said. Housing officials have (Continued on page 8) HASHINGER HALL-KU's newest dormitory, is nearing completion. In the near future housing officials hope to build three more dormitories similar to Hashinger, the only exception-the new dorms will be 10 stories high. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 5, 1962 For a Useful Committee A proposal to establish a committee to bring speakers and films to KU is currently up before the All Student Council. The proposed committee would also have the power to form a speakers' bureau of faculty members and students to aid living groups in obtaining speakers. The bill to set up the Current Events Committee was introduced at last week's ASC meeting. The committee is certainly desirable providing a few qualifications can be fulfilled. IN FAVOR OF the committee is that its members would be appointed by the ASC. Therefore, the committee would represent (indirectly at least) all KU students, since ASC membership is an elective office. By their voting power, the student body as a whole would have a voice in who is brought to the campus. This is preferable to having groups such as the Civil Rights Council or others invite speakers to KU, since these groups are usually formed around a similarity of interests. The ASC is a divergent group representing all living districts and schools of the University. An argument advanced against the proposed Current Events Committee is that it is an effort to supplant the now defunct National Student Association's KU organization. NSA backers are afraid that the new committee would hurt chances for an NSA revival at KU. BUT THE NSA is not organized at KU now, and there is a need for a committee such as the one proposed by the ASC. The Current Events Committee's chances should not be hindered by hopeful ideas of NSA backers about the vague future. The committee, since it is a part of the ASC, would receive its funds from the students of KU through student fees. Since this money goes through the University, the funds would in actuality be allotted by the University. There are two ways to look at the significance of this. One is that it is a function of the University to present the various sides of important issues, and it would be only fitting that the University would provide funds for speakers and films about these issues. However, University funds in this case would perhaps equate with University control. This is the second aspect. TO MAKE THIS Current Events committee worthwhile, the University administration would need to be resistant to pressure from various groups who would seek to keep controversial speakers from appearing on the KU campus. Given pressure resistant backing by the University, the committee would be well on its way to success, providing the committee members act rationally and intelligently in inviting speakers to KU. The attitude of "let's get controversial guys to talk to us" pertains to the above. In the past, the controversy quotient of an individual has sometimes appeared to be the predominant factor in bringing a speaker to KU. The proposed Current Events committee should adopt an attitude of getting someone who "has something to say" if it is to be successful. SINCE THIS COMMITTEE would represent the whole student body, its responsibility for an intelligent attitude would be greater than that of groups of the past. Two factors are the keys to this proposed committee fulfilling its purpose: Responsible members within the committee and a pressure resistant administration to back it up. Given these, the committee could perform a needed service to KU. We recommend the passage of the Currents Events committee bill by the ASC. —Karl Koch letters to the editor I do not usually enter into controversies with members of the "Silent Generation" who write letters to the editor and then refuse to scribble their John Hancock on the dotted line, but I feel that "Name Withheld" should become familiar with a few of the facts concerning the program that was held here (Wednesday, February 21, 1982) entitled "Operation Correction." On Operation Correction Editor: Mr. Love stated that he had contacted many individuals in Wichita and no one was able to come but Mr. Myers, and that Mr. Myers was fully capable of "handling" any questions that might come up during the course of the evening (which, incidentally, he was not). Several "leading" citizens of the local community were contacted and they also refused to take part (one staunch citizen stated that he was "getting too old to get involved with those 'bastards' on the hill"), but they recommended Mr. C. W. Tankersley. SEVERAL MEMBERS of the John Birch Society in Wichita were invited to appear on the panel and promptly refused, some for understandable reasons, and some for reasons perhaps not so understandable. I personally contacted Mr. Fred Koch, Mr. Robert Love and Mr. Leonard Banowetz, and they all informed me that they were unable to attend. AS FOR THE University, several professors were contacted, but no one could be located who was willing to defend the film "Operation Abolition" in an open debate. In short, "Name Withheld," Mr. Myers and Mr. Tankersley were the only individuals that we could obtain and they came highly re- In the first place I would like to point out that the committee in charge of the program made every effort to secure the best participants possible, and we feel that we did, considering the limited time and treasury that we had to work with. ommended by various sponsors of the film "Operation Abduction." Secondly, our presentation of "Operation Correction" was meant to be purely objective. The sponsors of this program were merely trying to give the student body the opportunity to view both sides of the controversy which has centered around the production "Operation Abolition." The question at hand was not whether or not HUAC should be abolished, but whether or not the film "Operation Abolition" contained gross distortions and exaggerations. THIRDLY, "Name Withheld" states in the third paragraph of his letter "Either HUAC investigates because its members (who are much closer to the facts than many of us) feel the situation is serious enough that investigation is needed, or it investigates because its members like nice headlines." I feel that "Name Withheld" misunderstands the problem, and I am quite sure that if he has done any serious reading in regard to the issue, or at least had paid attention at the program last Wednesday (providing he attended), he would be aware that the question at hand is not why the committee is investigating, but how the committee is investigating. Fourthly, "Name Withheld" states in his last sentence "The less publicity the committee gets for the better are its chances for survival." This sentence seems to be contradictory to the tradition of HUAC. I must remind "Name Withheld" that it was HUAC that produced "Operation Abolition" and had it distributed and encouraged its showing throughout the country. This would tend to indicate that HUAC does want publicity. Therefore there are some people that want to make sure that the publicity is as unbiased and as accurate as possible. You must remember that when a film such as "Operation Abolition" is produced the reputations of many individuals are at stake. Anyone who thinks that any committee is infallible because "they are closer to the facts then any of us" is truly fallible himself. I would like to remind "Name Withheld" that one of the reasons why our generation is called the "Silent Generation" is the existence of investigating committees that employ questionable methods of procedure. This is also one reason why people, such as you, are afraid to express their opinions without withholding their names. IT SEEMS that those who constantly criticize the programs conducted by the students at KU are always worrying about our students being "duped." My relations with the students of this institution during the last four years have led me to believe that they are just as capable, if not more capable, of weighing evidence as their critics are. Please, "Name Withheld," do not think that Mr. Myrs' statements "carried no weight" because the students and faculty members felt "hostile" towards him, without considering the possibility that the students and faculty members may have felt "hostile" towards him because his statements "carried no weight," but his accusations did. Torrington, Conn., senior Brian O'Heron University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became bweekly 1904, trweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Dailu Hansan LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler 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, Inc., New York, NY. 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 Saturday examinations and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Muttins Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martiancio .. Business Manager Q.17 2 I FIND IT EASIER TO GET DATES NOW THAT I HAVE A CAR. " Sound and Fury Last of an Argument While Faithful Reader's devotion to what he calls "the resolution of our differences" is admirable, I would prefer not to grace the columns of the UDK with such material in future and invite "Faithful Reader" to come to see me in 16 Strong Annex B in the future, where we can indulge in our petty arguments to our heart's content while vacating space in the UDK for more interesting problems. IN REFERENCE to Faithful Reader's latest blast. I wish only to make a few basic comments clarifying my position. I did not say or mean to imply that YAF members made irresponsible statements to liven up the Kansan. My comment was directed rather to Faithful Reader, who complained it would be a dull world if people acted responsibly. As to the motives of members of the YAF, I would not permit myself a judgment, since I do not know any of these persons even casually. Yet, I do have my theories as to what their motives may be, and I entirely agree with Faithful Reader that entertainment is not one of those motives. I rather suspect that when YAF provides us with entertainment it does so unintentionally—for these young men apparently take themselves quite seriously. THE REST OF Faithful Reader's latest statement attempts to cite the Chancellor's protest to the Kansas City Star and Prof. Landesman's letter to the Lawrence Journal-World as examples that proof is indeed an elusive quality. While it is not really my business to speak either for Prof. Landesman or for the Chancellor about their differences of opinion with the Star and the Journal-World, I feel strongly that Faithful Reader's attempt to use these cases as "proof" that no "proof" exists is in the nature of a spurious argument. Yes, I was at the "Operation Correction" film and the discussion which followed it. I happen to agree with the Chancellor that no loud booing or hissing was heard, and I was not sitting on the stage, but in the very center of the auditorium. There was some laughter and some show of disrespect for K. Myers' opinions, but to my ears, nary a boo. As for Prof. Landesman, I am more willing to accept his version of what he said than what a reporter may think he heard him say. In regard to the matter of proof as related to responsible news presentation, I am well aware that "absolute proof" cannot necessarily be found for any contention. Proof thus becomes a relative matter, involving the editor's confidence in the veracity of his reporters, the evaluation of sources, the calculation of probabilities, and the use of verification, research, consultation, tact, and editorial discretion. I nowhere suggested that the motives of people making statements should be investigated before their statements are published. However proof, credibility and responsibility remain valid criteria for publication in my book. Faithful Reader will probably never understand this until he is repeatedly publicly misquoted or maligned and it begins to hurt his reputation or his livelihood. He may then have a belated awakening to the responsibilities of a free press. I hereby consider the public section of this polemic closed. instructor of political science Klaus H. Pringsheim Worth Repeating It is not as if the system required one to be a great scholar, or a good scholar, or even a scholar at all; it only requires that one "produce research," which...means publish papers. Their contents should be in a certain form and they should be documented and if possible accurate—that is all. . . . Jacques Barzun Monday, March 5. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 $9 Million Allotted To Building Projects By Jim Alsbrook The KU campus is the scene of about $9 million worth of building projects in various stages of development. The engineering building on the Bushong tract across from Lindley Hall is scheduled for completion by September, 1963. Construction has been delayed by bad weather, but footings are being poured. This $1.9 million building will house departments teaching mechanical engineering, aeronautical and space classes, electrical engineering and civil engineering. Its 93,000 square feet will include laboratories, classrooms, offices and special facilities such as wind tunnels. the present building programs underlie the 13 year master plan recently announced by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe to cope with an expected enrollment of 21,000 by 1975. The Nuclear Reactor Building has been completed but about 10 per cent of its interior equipment is yet to be installed. The building cost $420,000. ABOUT EIGHT PROJECTS are now underway. They range in stages of completion from letting of bids to putting on the finishing touches. The classroom and research addition to the Museum of Natural History (Dyche Hall) is scheduled for completion in the spring of 1963. Construction began a few weeks ago. The $712,500 wing will be six stories high and contain 35-000 square feet. Biological science will be taught there. THE DEMOLITION of the old journalism school building will be completed by April 15, if the weather is good. Expansion of Watson Library will require its present site. Two things will be added to Watson Library, both scheduled for completion by January, 1964. Final plans for them are being reviewed in the office of the state architect and construction bids will be sought in about 30 days. Construction will begin this spring. The first wing, to be added to the east side of the existing library structure will have three stories, a basement and a sub-basement. The second wing, to be attached to the southwest corner of Watson Library, will be four stories high and contain eight stack levels. This project will cost $1.8 million. PRELIMINARY PLANS are being made for a new Blake Hall. Located on Lilac Lane between Watkins Hospital and the Chancellor's residence, the existing Blake Hall will be torn down and another one costing $750,000 built in its place. It will contain classrooms and offices for faculty members. Hashinger Hall, a student dormitory, is about two-thirds complete and will be ready this fall. The $1.5 million building will house 440 students and will resemble the Lewis and Templin dormitories. CHANGES IN THE power plant are on schedule. Two new heating units have been installed, and work is being done on piping and controls. The 60-unit addition to the Stouffer Place apartments will be ready this fall. Five two-story buildings with one and two-bedroom apartments comprise this project. Bids are being asked for the job of increasing the electrical capacity of the power plant. Within a few months further bids will be asked on a second phase of the power plant expansion. Total improvements for the plant will cost $600,-000. The chairman of the Russian delegation to the Model United Nations has denied that his delegation hid a microphone in a Steering Committee meeting last week. Bids will be accepted March 15 for a 650-student residence south of Hassinger Hall. Contractors have the specifications now. Whether this new dormitory will be for men or women has not been decided. Microphone Probe Stirs Soviet Bloc Pat Piggott, Kansas City, Mo. senior and chairman of the Soviet bloc which contains 11 delegations, said that the Russian delegation did not plant the microphone, but added he would investigate other members of the Soviet bloc. Slams 'Toxion Foolishness' JACKSON, MISS. —(UPI)—The Mississippi House received a resolution yesterday calling for an end to the federal income tax. "I just hope I live long enough to see this taxation foolishness stopped," said State Rep. Tony Gibson, the measure's 81-year-old sponsor. "We are just as curious to find out who did it as anyone else," Piggott said. "We'll investigate the group to find out for sure." Thirst For Knowledge FRESNO, Calif. — (UPI) — Fresno State College reported yesterday that 360 to 350 books were stolen from its library during 1961 — and the hardest hit among the books was the collection on criminology. CHEMISTRY, METALLURGY, CHEMICAL & MECHANICAL ENGINEERING GRADUATES As you approach the "Career Decision" level make certain that you invest your knowledge in a company that offers opportunities for growth & responsibility. We Invite You To Consider U. S.I. Chemicals Co. Division NATIONAL DISTILLERS & CHEMICAL CORP. Exetting & rewarding openings available in R & D, Engineering Production & Polymer Development. Small group, diversified assignments makes the ideal stimulus for personal achievement. Our Representative will interview on campus at Hoch Auditorium March 8 U. S.I. Chemicals Co. Division NATIONAL DISTILLERS & CHEMICAL CORP. 99 Park Ave., New York WIN IN THE COLLEGE BRAND ROUND-UP Get on the BRANDWAGON ...it's lots of fun! PRIZES: $125 — First Place $75 — Second Place $30 — Third Place RULES: Package building contest using all Philip Morris products. 1.000 packages as a minimum to compete. Contest closes May 7th. COFFEE & BARBIES Marlboro WHO WINS: Houses selected by judges on the basis of originality and size of the design. Parliament Alpine BOLINI COOPERSTUFF FOR INFORMATION CALL BOB FITZSIMMONS, VI 3-4050 Philip Morris NEW YORK CITY COUNTY CLUB ∞ 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 high-speed 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 DELL SYSTEM BELLOWS Principal manufacturing locations at Chicago, I.; Kearny, N. J.; Baltimore, Md., Indianapolis, Ind.; Allentown and Laurelde, Pa.; Winston-Salem, N. C.; Buffalo, N. Y.; North Andover, Mass.; Omaha, Neb.; Kansas City, M. Columbrus, Ohio; Oklahoma City, OK. Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J. Teilety Corporation, Skokie, IL., and Little Rock, Ark. Also Western Electric distribution centers in 33 cities and installation headquarters in 16 cities. General headquarters: 195 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 5, 1962 Kansas Wins Big Eight Meet Stevens' Vault Puts KU Ahead for First Time The defending champion Kansas trailed Nebraska at the Big Eight indoor track meet Saturday night by six and one-fourth points with one event not decided. The pole vault bar stood at 14 feet, 10 inches. Vaulting for Kansas was Jack Stevens, Ames, Iowa, senior. His vaulting mate Roger Schmanke had placed third with 14-2. SOME 6,000 fans had waited 20 minutes to see the results of the pole vault. The fans knew that if Kansas was to successfully defend its conference championship Stevens would have to make the vault. His teammate also knew it. So did he. Stevens missed his first two vaults. A hush came over Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium. Stevens started down the runway. He placed his pole in the vaulting box, and vaulted himself over the bar and Kansas to an 11/12 of a point victory over Nebraska. The Kansas Jayhawkers' second consecutive Big Eight indoor title was an uphill struggle the entire way. The Jayhawkers never led during the meet and trailed once by 33 points. The final scoring was Kansas 5314 points, Nebraska $52\frac{1}{2}$ Oklahoma State $27\frac{1}{2}$ Missouri $27\frac{1}{2}$ Oklahoma, $22\frac{1}{2}$ Colorado $10\frac{1}{2}$ Kansas State 10 and Iowa State seven. NEBRASKA qualified the most men for the finals and dominated the first three events of the evening to build up its lead. KU's Bill Dotson and Oklahoma State's Charlie Strong were double winners. Dotson coasted to a mile victory, running his slowest time in several years 4:20.9. He saved strength for the half-mile which he won in 1:56.9. Strong defeated Olympian Anthony Watson of Oklahoma in the broad jump. He returned and fought off Colorado's Ted Woods and Missouri's Jim Baker to tie Kansas State's Thane Baker's record of :48.6 set in 1953. BILL THORNTON contributed greatly to the Jayhawks' win. Thornton, despite a 10 day bout with the flu, finished second to Dotson in the half-mile, and second to Missouri's Greg Pelster, who set a new record in the 600-vard dash. KU's other first place came in the 1000-yard run. Kirk Hagan staved off a late bid by Nebraska's John Porteet to win. Much to red-faced Big Eight officials' dismay, there was no official time recorded. Five runners ran the race under the world's record with Hagan eight seconds under- Meet officials determined the course was too short. KANSAS AND Nebraska tied for the most first places, each with four. The 60-yard dash ended in a photo finish. Nebraska's Degnan and Knaud and KU's Larry McCue were so close the decision was upheld until the photograph could be developed. After studying the photograph Degnan was awarded first place and McCue, the defending 60-yard champion. second. Charlie Hayward was upset in the two-mile run. Hayward set an early pace and at one point in the race led by 15 yards. Nebraska's Fleming and Oklahoma State's Danny Metcalf slowly narrowed the margin and Fleming outsprinted Hayward in the final lap. SUMMARIES 60-yd. High Hurdles—1, Ron Moore. Nebraska. 2, Fred Wilke. Nebraska. 3, Jerry Berger, Kansas State. 4, Bill Fasson. State. 5, Ron Toppenberg, Iowa State. 70-4. Broad Jump (Finals Friday)—1, Charles bong, Oklahoma. 14, Dennis Sinclair. bong, Oklahoma. 14, Nathan Washon. Oklahoma. 24-0. 3. Victor Brooks. Nebraska. 23-63a. 24-0. 3. Victor Brooks. Nebraska. 23-61a. 5. Tom Raleigh. Oklahoma. 22-104a. 60-yd. Dash-1, Donald Degnan, Nebraska. 2. Larry McCue, Kansas. 3. Ray Knaub, Nebraska. 4. Richard Beldner Missouri. 5. Ted Woods, Colorado. @06.2. 60-yd. Low Hurdles—1, Fred Wilke, Nebraska. 2, Ron Moore, Nebraska. 3, Charles Smith, Kansas. 4, Bill Fasano, Nebraska. 5, James Streeby, Missouri. 06:9. Shot Put—1. Donald Smith, Missouri, Kansas City, 54-6; 2. Ron Stout,man- klahoma, 54-6; 3. Ron Stout, Kansas State, 53-81; 4. Tom Galbes, Colorado, 5. Bob Crumpeter, Colorado, 52-193. Mile Run—1. Bill Dotson, Kansas. 2. Ray Stevens, Nebraska. 3. Ted Riesinger, Kansas. 4. Jerry Mathis, Missouri. 5. Jerry Mfcadden, Missouri. 4:20.9. 600-yd. Dash-1, Gregory Pelster, Mission Stone, Oklahoma State. 4, Robert Wilcox, Okahoma. 5, Tonie Cone, Kansas. 5, Remy Rene, Record 1:12.1, Jim Heath, Colorado. 1961). 440-vd. Dash-1, Charles Strong, Oklahoma. James Baker, Missouri. 4; Dale Alexander, Kansas State. 5, Standish Barnes, Iowa by Thane Barrens, Kansas State. 1553) Two-Mile Run—1, Mike Fleming. Nebraska. 2, Charles Hayward. Kansas. 3, Oklahoma State. 4, Pat McNeal. Kansas State. 5, Dan Ralston. Kansas. 9:17.6. 1000-yd. Run-1, Kirk Hagan, Kansas. 2. John Porte, Nebraska. 3. Timothy Jeonard, Oklahoma. 4. Marvin Stewart, Oklahoa. 5. Ted Risinger, Kansas. (No time). High Jump—1. Larry Ellert, Iowa State. Homa State—2. Ron Swanson, Kansas. 6-4, 4-5. (Tie). Bill Metzger, Colorado. Oklahoma. Mark Brady, Oklahoma. 6-2, 4-8. 880-vd. Run—1, Bill Dotson, Kansas. 2, Bill Thornton, Kansas. 3, Ray Stevens, Nebraska. 4, Walter Mizell, Oklahoma. 5, Chuck Buchoit, Colorado. 1:56.9. Mile Relay-1. Oklahoma State (Gary Krause, Jack Miller, Bill Stone, Charles Strong). 2. Missouri. 3. Nebraska. 4. Kansas. 5. Oklahoma. 3.18.0. (New Record). Record. 3.18.7. Kansas (Charles Tidwell, Bone Covey, Cliff Cushman, Bob Lida). Pole Vault—1, Stevens, KU. 14-10. 2. Mule, MU. 14-6. 3 (Tie). Schkane, KU. Holstinger, OS. 14-2. 5. Tie among Boark, CU. Wiley, MU. Jessifers, KU. 13-10. At GEORGE'S PIPE SHOP It's Clay Pipe Time Again For St. Patrick's Day, George has a dozen different kinds of clay pipes including the Dooroker mystery pipe, church wardens, and fancy clays. All Priced from 25c to $5.00 These are offered for a limited time only. So HURRY down and see George KU's performance came as a surprise to many people, but not to Coach Jav Marklev. The 119-110 score is as close as any team has come to Oklahoma in many years. Last year OU took first place by 70 points. "It was an outstanding team effort," the KU mentor said. "We outswat them, but just didn't have enough swimmers." Although winning first place in eight of 14 events, the Kansas swimming team finished second to perennial champion Oklahoma in the Big Eight championships Friday and Saturday at Ames. Lack of Depth Responsible For Swimming Team's Loss VI 3-7164 By Mike Miller All America Eldon Ward swam anchor on the team in 48.9, which Coach Markley said was the fastest 100-yard time in Big Eight competition this year. HE EXPLAINED that KU has only eight swimmers on the team as compared with Oklahoma's 18 and Iowa State's 17. The Cyclones took third place in the meet. Since each swimmer can enter only three events, the KU squad simply did not have the depth that Oklahoma and Iowa State did. Coach Markley said, "Eight men went up there to do a job and they did it. It was a great endeavor. We couldn't ask for any more. I can not overemphasize how much eight fellows can do." The team of Bill Mills, George Winter, Bill Murdock, and John Kemp swam the distance in 3:49.5 in the preliminaries, and 3:50 in the finals. THE 400-YARD medley relay team also set a new Big Eight record, breaking their own record set two weeks ago. Eldon Ward successfully defended his conference 50-yard freestyle title, however, he did not break the Big Eight record which he set at the conference meet last year. 727 Mass. The fact that Nebraska and Colorado could score only a combined total of 82 points also hurt KU's chances. Markley explained that if either of the other two could have taken a few places from OU, the Jayhawkers would have had a better chance of winning. THE RELAY team composed of two distance men, Ludy Harman and Stewart Anderson, and two sprinters, Bill Mills and Capt. Eldon Ward, had originally been expected to take third. The team set the record of 3:27.6 the first time that they had swum together as a team. Coach Markley explained that these four men were the only four who had not swum in their maximum three events. He had the alternative of swimming them as a team or putting them in one additional individual race. He chose to enter them in the freestyle relay and was rewarded with a first place and a new Big Eight record. "The outstanding event in the meet for us was the 400-yard freestyle relay." Markley said. He was referring to the relay team that set a new Big Eight conference record for the event. KU was weak in diving. Oklahoma took 24 points in the diving events as compared to only one for KU. Bill Murdock just missed the conference record as he won the 200-yard breaststroke. "Bill did an outstanding job on both his individual events and the relay," Coach Markley said. "He has the potential to qualify for the nationals." ASIDE FROM the lack of depth Sophomore John Kemp won the 200-yard butterfly in what Coach Markley described as "nearly a perfect job of swimming." Markley explained that Kemp started so fast that as he tired near the end of the race, he was far enough ahead of his competition that they didn't have a chance of catching him." --- pro ARROW University Fashion In Batiste Oxford This authentic Arrow button-down, has a special appeal for you. Here's why . . . Arrow craftsmanship and care for detail insures you of a properly fitting roll collar. The shirt is Mitoga cut to fit the lines of your body with no unsightly bunching around the waist. In stripes and solid colors of your choice. Sanforized labeled. ARROW From the $5.00 "Cum Laude Collection" --- S Styling YI ...in the Classic tradition From the Arrow Cum Laude Collection comes the perfect example of authentic traditional styling. This luxury oxford is offered in subtle British stripings tailored with button-down collar and box pleat. Whites and plain colors, too. CARL'S $5.00 --- Wildcats, Buffaloes In First Place Tie Page 5 By Ron Wilcox The Kansas State Wildcats moved into a first place tie for the Big Eight conference race Saturday night with a 60-48 victory over the Colorado Buffaloes before 12,500 fans. The 'Cats win snapped an 11-game Colorado winning streak. It also was the 11th straight win for the Wildcats. Both teams stand 11-1 in conference play. MIKE WROBLEWSKI, who finished with 20 points for the game's scoring honors, scored the 'Cats first two points. From then on K-State was never behind. The game was tied at 2-2 and 4-4 in the early minutes of play. K-State's biggest lead was 14 points with 11:20 left in the second half. Colorado was able to cut the lead down to four points, 50-46, with 3:06 left, but couldn't find the spark to keep their rally going. Chamberlain Sets Scoring Record HERSHEY, Pa. — (UPI) — Wilt (The Stilt) Chamberlain is slipping, but there's no need for concern — the 7-1 scoring machine has three more league games and at least two playoff games in which to top the century mark again. Chamberlain, who scored 100 points in an amazing performance Friday night at Hershey, Pa., "only" tossed in 58 Sunday at the Philadelphia Warriors edged the New York Knickerbockers. 129-128. What will Wilt do for an encore? All Chamberlain will say is "I don't think I'll reach 120 points." Paul Arizin's jump shot with 29 seconds provided the margin of victory for the Warriors. The Knicks were leading 128-126 when Chamberlain tossed in one of two free throws and Arizin hit the jumper. Willie Naulis scored 39 points and Richie Guerin 31 for New York. In other National Basketball Association games Sunday, the Boston Celtics moved closer to clinching the best percentage prize ($2,000) by beating the St. Louis Hawks, 123-120; the Detroit Pistons snapped a six-game losing streak by downing the Chicago Packers, 133-116, and the Los Angeles Lakers tripped the Syracuse Nationals, 124-115. Both teams shot poorly from the free throw line. The Buffs sank only six out of 16 for 37 per cent. The 'Cats dropped in 14 of 25 for 56 per cent. Colorado had a better shooting percentage from the field, sinking 21 of 54 for 39 per cent, while the 'Cats hit 23 of 70 for 33 per cent. Colorado was unable to work the ball into its big center, Ken Charlton. Wilky Gilmore, whom the Bucks rely heavily on for scoring punch, was held to only eight points by a pressing K-State defense. COLORADO was hampered by the strong rebounding power K-State showed. Unendlessly the Buffs were able to take only one shot at the basket before the 'Cats grabbed the ball. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Colorado meets Missouri tonight at Columbia and entertains KU at Boulder Saturday. Oklahoma State plays host to K-State tonight, and the Wildcats travel to Nebraska Wednesday. A GIFT FROM the past for the present at the BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Portraits of Distinction Photography HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 SUA Jazz Blow Featuring The Best Campus Musicians Sunday, March 11 7:00 p.m. Big 8 Room in the Kansas Student Union COFFEE WILL BE SERVED Jayhawkers Meet Cyclones Tonight The Kansas Jayhawkers in the midst of a two-game losing streak meet the third place Iowa State Cyclones at Ames, Iowa, tonight. The KU Sports Network will broadcast the game. Area stations carrying the contest are KJAY, Topeka, 1440, and KANU-FM, Lawrence, 915. Game time is 7:30. University Daily Kansan Monday, March 5, 1962 The Cyclones stand 8-5 in conference play and are 13-11 overall. The Jayhawkers' record is 2-10 in the conference and 6-17 for the season. Last week the Cyclones broke even defeating Missouri, 66-62. Wednesday night after losing to Kansas State Monday night, 69-54. The Jayhawkers' only action last week was a 63-62 loss to the Oklahoma Sooners. Top Ranked Ohio State Loses First Game一to Wisconsin MADISON, Wis. —(UPI)— Ohio State has lost its chance for a perfect season, but it may be in a better position than ever today to prove itself the nation's best college basketball team. The Buckeyes, who traditionally throw a crumb to the hungry mob, picked an appropriate spot for its first poor game of the season when it lost at Wisconsin, 86-67, Saturday. Ohio State lost only once last season, but that was to Cincinnati in the finals of the NCAA tournament. With only one more game to go before the start of the national championships, Ohio State has eased its presshre and it could be full steam ahead for the Buckeyes when they go after the elusive NCAA title. Several other NCAA berths were filled Saturday while in the top individual effort Billy (The Hill) McGill closed his collegiate career at Utah with a 50-point performance that gave him a season total of 1,009 points, third highest in the history of college basketball. The tournament developments were: —Wake Forest defeated upstart Clemson, 77-66, to win the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament at Raleigh. N.C. —West Virginia took the Southern Conference title at Richmond, Va., by whipping Virginia Tech, 88-72. —Bradley upended St. Louis, 58-47, to force a playoff with Cincinnati in the Missouri Valley Conference. Look More Handsome The Sanitone Way!! Smart appearing college men always expect their clothing to complement their natural good looks. That's why we know you'll be pleased when your clothing is cleaned and pressed by the nationally advertised Sanitone process, exclusive at Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners. Stop in soon!! R "Quality Guaranteed" LAWRENCE 10th & N.H. VI 3-3711 launderers and dry cleaners "Specialists in Fabric Care" Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 5, 1962 47 in Business On Honor Roll Forty-seven students are on the fall semester honor roll of the School of Business. The list, recently released by James II. Surface, dean of the School of Business, includes 25 seniors and 22 juniors. Seniors are required to make a 2.3 grade point average and juniors must attain a 2.2 average to achieve honor roll standing. Students making all A's are: George W. Coe Jr, Kansas City, Kan. labor; Ann Merie Wees, Prairie Village seni- lar; Warren R. Keller, Prairie Village junior; Gary Nudeman, Prairie Village junior. Phillip E. Kneidl, Coffeville; Benjamin C. Langel, Salina; Ronald L. Leslie, Goodland; William E. Logan, Hollday; James G. Measel, Lawrence. SEAMONDS on the honor roll are: Eugene H. Caylor, Osawatomi; Karin V. Chess, Evansville, Ind.; Robert L. Chil- dale, Geneva; Geneau A. Cobb, Kansas City, Kan James E. Crocker, Joplin, Mo.; Max E. Eberhart, Great Bend; Peter G. Falkner, Lawrence; Alan G. Handly, Overland Park; Ward Hanks, Bonner Springs. Cleve Douglas Miller, Salina; David F. Davidpek; Arie B. Siebert Jr.; Wichita; Michael M. Thomas, Kirkwood; Mo.; Rob Lawrence; White, Topena; Frank A. Wiebe Lawrence Larry J. Heeb, Lawrence; Jon Lee Howell, Kansas City, Mo; Gerald G. Stephan, Mo; Stephen R. McAllister, Mon., Mo.; Worth D. Murphy, Kansas City, Mo. ruard W. Bryant, Mission; Sarn A. Coileman, Holton; Gene F. Gaines, Joplin, Mo.; Kirk R. Hagan, Oklahoma City, Okla.; John A. Head, Needsah. JUNIORS on the honor roll are; Carl A. Nelson, Overland Park; Robert W. Orr, Topeka; Thomas J. Pitser, Glacier; Stephen G. Powell, Joplin, Mo.; Edward A. Roberts, Bonner Springs. Michael M. Roberts, Shawnee Mission; Brett Schroeder, Kansas City, Mo.; Nich- hua Stucky, Buhler; Carolyn A. Toews; Inman; John Louis Walker, Meyetta. 26 Schools Enter KU Art Competition Approximately 23 schools over the nation have submitted entries for the fifth KU Student Art Competition to be held during April. The exhibition, which will be displayed in Murphy Hall, consists of metal sculpture. Two sculpture pieces selected by the respective faculties will be submitted from each school. Prizes totaling $500 will be awarded. Mr. Semour Lipton, an internationally recognized sculptor from New York, will judge the competition and speak at the bronze casting conference to be held with the exhibition. Mr. Lipton is famous for his work in bronze casting and metal work. Around the Campus Ski Club to Meet Ski Club will meet tomorrow night at 7:30 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. A movie will be shown. Japanese Film to Be Shown "Portraits of Shame," a Japaneselanguage film with English subtitles,will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Fraser Auditorium, rather than in 303 Eailey as originally planned. The change was made to accommodate more viewers. When the first film in the East Asian studies committee series was shown in Bailey, more than 100 students and faculty had to be turned away. 'The Consul' Opens Tonight "The Consul," by Gian Carlo Menotti, will open at 8 tonight in the University Theatre. Performances will also be given Wednesday and Friday. "The Consul" is set during a time of political struggle in an unnamed country. The principal characters are watched by the secret police and their activities are centered in the office of a consulate. Limeliters Sing Here Mar. 17 The Limeliters, a folk-singing trio, will appear at the annual SUA Spring Concert, March 17, at Hech Auditorium. Tickets will go on sale next Monday at the Information Booth. Prices range from $1 to $1.50. Spaghetti Dinner Attracts Students Approximately 500 persons attended a spaghetti dinner sponsored by Angel Flight and Arnold Air Society last night in Allen Field House. An estimated $100 was raised. The dinner was part of a campaign to earn money for a trip to Los Angeles, Calif., April 11-14, to attend the national convention of the two groups. Jeanne L. Howell, Tulsa, Okla. senior and information officer for Angel Flight, said estimated expenditures for the trip were $3,000. The organizations need to raise another $1,500. Angel Flight members are waiting tables at fraternity houses to raise funds. The group will serve at Alpha Tau Omega tonight and at Phi Gamma Delta Wednesday evening. Food and Drug Administration Employment Interviews Wed. A representative of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration will be on campus Wednesday to discuss employment opportunities with science students. Students interested in being interviewed may make an appointment by calling KU Extension 207. Harnar Auto Supply 836 Mass. St. Complete Locksmith Service Day or Night Day Phone VI 3-2362 Night Phone VI 3-7576 Applications are now being accepted for up to five internships which will allow graduate students in political science, law and journalism, a chance for experience in the legislative process. The $4,000 internships will be awarded under an appropriation by the state legislature and a supporting grant from the Ford Foundation. The 1962-63 academic year will mark the first year that such internships are available. 5 Internships Are Available This is the first time in two months Khrushchev has had a chance for a major policy statement. He returned only recently from a vacation on the Black Sea. Russians Meet For Test Reply MOSCOW — (UPI) — Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev met with the Soviet Communist Party's Central Committee today in a secret session that may bring forth a formal reply to President Kennedy's nuclear testing decision. LAST 3 DAYS To See THE GREATEST HUMAN DRAMA THAT THE WORLD HAS EVER KNOWN! Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents Samuel Bronston's Production King of Kings TOMM SUPER TECHNIRAMA • TECHNICOLOR® Sat. & Sun. Cont. 1:30 - 4:45 - 8:00 Evenings 7:45 Adults $12.50 Children 50c Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 They normally will be expected to have completed at least one year of graduate study beyond the A.B. degree. Appointments will be based on academic records and ability to fit into legislative situations. Applicants must be nominated by the head of the appropriate department or school. Interns will work on assignments with members, committees, or staffs of the state legislature and will pursue a program of advanced study in legislative process. Applications should be submitted to the department of political science. SOMEDAY, SOMEBODY'S GOING TO TELL HIM HE'S A DOG. Snoopy IT'S A DOG'S LIFE CHARLIE BROWN by Charles M. Schulz by Charles M. 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ROC ble Ava from VI : Distinguished Adult Entertainment SCOTT FITZGERALD'S Tender is the Night CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUKE THOSE "PILLOW TALK" PLAYMATES ARE AT IT AGAIN! ROCK HUDSON DORIS DAY TONY RANDALL "LOVER COME BACK" in Eastern COLOR re starring EDIE ADAMS JACK OAKIE JACK KRUSCHEN A Universal International Release AN ADULT SOPHISTICATED COMEDY! co storica EDIE A' CHEN Starts Thursday Granada TNEATR...Telephone VI 3-5784 Monday. March 5. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS LOST FOUND BLACK bucket style leather purse at turn. Call Cheryl Cox, V 3-7711, 5-5 FOR RENT Ring in Flint Hall. Identify. See Mrs. Fine, 114 Flint. tf LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. CVI 13-6294. tfa ONE SINGLE room and one double room room. Call VI SI-5942 or see at Tenn. 3-5 ROOM FOR 1 MALE STUDENT in double room. Share with graduate student. Send to: School of Education, from Union. Private entrance, quiet. Call VI 3-4092, see at 1301 Louisiana. tt LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-073 t 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 3 room furnished apt. Very nice. Private entrance, parking, near new, $75 a month —water pd. Call T. A. Hemphill VI 3-3902. 3-7 Rooms for male students. 1 double, 1 double, VI 3-7642 or VI 3-9698. 3-98 HOUSE FOR RENT-1810 Alabama $90 at 2 p.m. for appointment. 3-9 145 at 3 p.m. for appointment. TYPING FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-8524. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Truck 1511, W 21 St; Call VI 3-6440. Truck 1511, W 21 St; Call VI 3-6440. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI T-2-3651 any time. Experienced Typii; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. english teacher at NYU and reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt, apt. 3. tf Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with English math and Greek. Good standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Cailin VI 2-1546. 3-6 EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name -- call VI 3-9126 Mr. Loehbisch TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tt TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers reports, Election typewriter, Reasonable Electric typewriter, Mrs. McEldowney, Ph. VI 3-8568. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing Special rates to students. Execution of the Service 691 Williamson, Mission, HE 2-7718 Eyes or Sat. R-2-2186 ff Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 19th. VI 2-17. THESES. reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter Reasonable rate Marlin Graham, 1619 Delaware. cat I 3-0483. EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mr. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. **tt** Bicycle for beginners. Clean and in good mechanical condition. Call KU ext. 377, WANTED TRANSPORTATION CAR POOL Cautious and congenial on the one on the other 8 to 3. John Call at TA 2-1213. 3-5 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plicie, party supplies. plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI. 0350. FIRST at the Dine-Alt-Mite. Fri. 9 to 12 at the Dine-Alt-Mite — the live with the dead beat. 3-7 FOR SALE 1054 DODGE ddr, standard shift, 8 cyl. 1321 Tenn. or call VI 3-1584. 3-6 1960 used Admiral stereo console. Tape 725 Mass. See at Petetengli-Di- 735 Mass. 5-6 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. Enance Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-8644. 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 GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES, complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $2.50, free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553, VI 3-5778. tf WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised. 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. ff ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch. Medical scope immediately. Call Vl. 2-8877 come to 607 ARL. for more information. HI-FI EQUIPMENT; Electro-voice monaural three-way speaker system and Bogen 30 watt amplifier sacrificed to sell at only $250. Call VI 3-4928. 3-5 We Are Ready To Serve You With All Drug & Sundry Items Round Corner Drug FURNITURE: sofa bed, basket chairs, coffee table, kitchen cabinet, chest of drawers. Also: 5mm- movie camera, Bell & Howell, telef- phone. VI 2-0387, 1941 Mass. 801 Mass. Fast Delivery Service VI 3-0200 Drug ISETTA 300: Leaving town, must sacrifice. Ideal for transportation on hill. Economical, good rubber, everything works. Call VI 2-3366 after 5 p.m. 3-5 What's Wrong With COMMUNISM STANDARD and find out AVAILABLE TUESDAY at Information Booth WHITE BOND typing paper—$1.25 per room, correspondence Outlook, 1005 MMS number. 29 x8' mobil home. 1958 Great Lakes. Excellent condition. One bedroom, colored fixtures. Call collect, Muncie, Kan., AT 9-6278. Mrs. Nipper. BUSINESS SERVICES INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available at www.psychology.edu. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752 Free delivery. DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 339 $' Mass. 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, tt ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3- 7531, or 921 Miss. tt 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. tt HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most comp parties in town! 1-822-555-5500 1-822-555-5500 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. tf 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. tt TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 6444. Give your pre-schools best of care and nursery school training at Gingerbread House. All day or part time. Call VI 2-3315 or VI 2-0503. 3-9 SEE Mrs. Comfort for wedding invitations. Fine quality socially catered invitations. Prices start $8.50 per 100. Also have napkins, thank you folders, etc. Call VI 3-2064 for appl SALE ENDS --i say, reggie-looks like something of a blast, eh? shah we get dates? CLIP THIS COUPON TROUSERS - SLACKS • 5 TIP - SPORT SHIRTS - SWEATERS - BLOUSES - SKIRTS (plain) - SLACKS - 5 TIES MAR. 10TH 39℃ ea. SHIRTS NOW ONLY Deluxe Cleaned. Beautifully Pressed Note: No Limit. But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Order 25e SHIRTS Laundered to perfection! Starched as you like! 20℃ Dress Shirts DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND GRY 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 To acquaint you with our JUBILEE HOT CHOCOLATE Buy yours and get your date's FREE Mon.-Tues.-Wed.-Thur. Home of delicious food and courteous service Drive-In Restaurant DIXON'S NO... let's go stag! FRIDAY march 9. FLOOR SHOW! they're here again! JACK and the MISSILES! at the BIG BARN march the ninth!! the students favorite refresh- ments available! 1.75 per couple per stag 1.50 they're here again! JACK and the MISSILES! at the BiG BARN University Daily Kansan Monday, March 5, 1963 KU Prepares— (Continued from page 1) been confronted with the situation for many years but to a much less degree than today. Few realize it, but eight years ago KU had but one dormitory, Corbin. Corbin was built in 1923 when the enrollment of KU was 3,492. Before 1955, Corbin housed 130 women. The University-owned dormitory facilities for single students were about nil, Mr. Wilson said. The big boom in housing came after World War II when the University was flooded with war veterans. War surplus dormitories were found as far away as Texas and brought to the campus. Oread Hall, housing 160 men, was assembled in 1946. At one time the east section of Memorial Stadium was converted into McCook Hall for 48 men. 1955 was the big year for KU housing. That year Carr-Orthle- Hall was occupied for the first time housing 100 men its first year. The same year Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall opened with 450 residents. Mr. Wilson said four of KU's residence halls have been made possible by benefactions from Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Pearson, who have given KU more than $500,000. IN THE PAST, dormitory construction at KU depended on a 100 per cent appropriation by the Legislature, or 100 per cent through gifts, a procedure that did not produce the needed student housing, Mr. Wilson said. The example of the Pearsons donating a large sum of money influenced the legislation which created the statewide dormitory fund levy to make available "down payments" to all state schools, he said. Mr. Wilson explained that the --make IncomeTax work easier ThriftiChecks® TAX OFFICE Have a happier outcome to income tax computations with ThriftiChecks! Pay all important bills with a ThriftiCheck personal checking account. Let cancelled ThriftiChecks recall all deductible expenses, provide exact figures, prove deductions when the day of tax reckoning comes. ThriftyChecks cost but a few pennies each, can help you save many dollars on Income Tax Day—and every day of the year when paying personal and household bills. Lawrence's Most Modern Bank University's only way to gain additional money for dormitory needs is through gifts or more state funds. "With the University able to rely on a combination of gifts, tax funds, and borrowing power to finance dormitory construction, the system can be enlarged in a planned manner, although not as rapidly as many would like," Mr. Wilson recently said in the KU Alumni Magazine. DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK Mr. Wilson said the city of Lawrence has a great deal to do with the future expansion of KU. "We think and have tried to say that Lawrence has a great opportunity and responsibility for developing housing for enrollment in the future," he said. Official Bulletin "The Bank of Friendly Service" Member F.D.I.C. 9th & Ky Psychology graduate students will meet Thursday, March 8, 1962, at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room, Kansas Union Topic; Organization of the Graduate Council. Applications for Counselors for Men's Basketball. Office of the Dean of Men, 228 Strong Hall. Applications must be returned by mail to the Office of Counseling, contact the Office of Dean of Men. Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd March 6 — Gilbert Robinson, Pers. Dir. (Elem. & Sec.), Oklahoma City, Okla Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) and 11:45 to 12 noon. Saturdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Russkii Klub obsiraetaa 5-vo marta, 73千asonv. v "Cottomwood Room, Kan- bo" sovskym prave. Vse izuchayushchive russkii yazyk glipashyutov. Government Controls News In Iran, Dean Marvin Says "Two years ago, I would have been less hesitant to tell you how journalism looks in Iran . . . If I had spent only three weeks there, I might have considered myself an expert, but I was there nine months." Burton W. Marvin, dean of the school of journalism and Fulbright lecturer in Iran last year, was speaking to the International Club Friday on "How Journalism Looks 7,000 miles from home." IN IRAN, he explained, we had to wait until the government was ready to release the news before we had any idea of the dimension or real importance of rumors we heard. "As Americans in Iran, we felt that we were in something of a vacuum." "People have a way of getting excited, no matter who they are, and when the news is controlled by the state, rumors often grow which are all out of proportion to the facts." In enlarging on the freedom and the responsibility of the press in general, Dean Marvin stated, "The individual in this world is sacred as an individual. If we accept this—if each individual feels he is sacred, and if he is a responsible individual — he must feel that way about others. "In an ideal society, the individual has a right to express himself, but must be held responsible for the way he expresses himself. In order to be responsible, the individual must have facts. And in order for the individual to have facts, someone must communicate the information." DEAN MARVIN pointed out that the whole responsibility does not lie on the press, however. "The reader is fooling himself if he thinks a single newspaper should inform him about the whole world. The individual must take some initiative in informing himself — he must develop a habit of reading a variety of publications." He said that the coverage of foreign news is often inadequate in American papers, but pointed out that there is not enough space for each paper to print every important thing which is happening in every part of the world. "SOMETIMES papers are guilty Bowl Applications Due Tomorrow Undergraduate students planning to enter the College Bowl contest March 18, must submit applications to the College Office, 206 Strong, by 5 p.m. tomorrow. Each living group is limited to one team which shall consist of four stated contestants and two stated alternates. of interpreting all foreign news according to our feelings of the moment — they often tend to show foreign events in a good light only if they conform to current foreign policy. "None of us are unbiased, but we must try to be fair. It's a difficult ideal to achieve, and we need dedicated reporters who will report fact rather than opinion." CATERING SERVICE Kentucky Fried CHICKEN 20 WHOLE CHICKENS 20% Off 20 CHICKEN DINNERS 15% Off Delivered ready to eat BIG BUY 23rd & Iowa, VI 3-8225 Menthol Fresh Salem FIETER CIGARETTES Salem refreshes your taste -"air-softens""every puff Take a puff...it's Springtime! A refreshing discovery is yours every time you smoke a Salem cigarette...for Salem refreshes your taste just as Springtime refreshes you. Most refreshing, most flavorful, too...that's Salem! - menthol fresh • rich tobacco taste • modern filter, too Created by R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No. 96 Tuesday, March 6, 1962 Writer Edgar Snow Will Give Speech Foreign correspondent Edgar Snow, the only Western writer to interview Chinese Communist leader Mao Tse-tung since 1947, will speak at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Fraser Theater. Snow has been given perhaps the most liberal and extensive courtesies granted to any visitor to Communist China because he is considered by the Chinese Reds as "a writer, not a correspondent." "Red Star over China," the most famous of Snow's 10 books, contains a full life story of Mao Tse-tung as told to him by the Chinese Red leader. THE BOOK IS DESCRIBED AS "the first authentic account" of a revolutionary movement destined to conquer China and change the face of Asia. Prior to writing the book, Snow spent seven years in China, studied Chinese and taught at a Chinese university. He also has traveled extensively in the other areas of the Far East. He has contributed articles on the Far East to various national magazines. He has worked for the Chicago Tribune, the New York Sun, Chicago Daily News, London Daily Herald and the New York Herald-Tribune. Snow, known by some as "The Marco Polo of Red China," has reviewed his 26 years as a foreign correspondent in his autobiography, "Journey to the Beginning." He was a war correspondent during World War II, and in a war time interview with President Franklin D. Roosevelt, he wrote one of the Prize Winning Skit Challenged A special meeting of the KU-Y cabinet (the members are ex officio members of the Rock Chalk committee) was held last night to discuss the Revue. The Rock Chalk committee of the KU-Y is investigating the possibility that the winning Kappa Sigma-Delta Delta Delta skit in last weekend's Rock Chalk Revue was taken from an original play, "Medium Rare." THOMAS MOORE, executive secretary of the KU-Y, said the cabinet did not want to talk about the situation yet or disclose what happened at the meeting. Bill McCollum, Leavenworth senior and co-chairman of KU-Y, said following the meeting that the cabinet was "unsure of the issue" and would therefore rather not make a statement. The investigation was begun on the basis of information received late yesterday from students and faculty members. This information asserted, among other things, that the skit was plerigered from "Medium Rare" almost exactly. Normally, Rock Chalk skits lampooning college life include original dialogue and lyrics set to established music. Moore said that no action has been taken by the committee and that it will look into the matter more thoroughly in the next few days. Directors of the skit from the two houses involved indicated last night that they preferred to withhold comment at this time. Weather Generally fair this afternoon and tonight becoming partly cloudy tomorrow. Warmer with winds becoming southerly and increasing to 25 to 30 miles per hour by tomorrow. Low tonight in the 20s. High tomorrow 20s east to the 50s west. few accounts of the President's thinking about Chinese and East Asian questions. Snow, will speak under the auspices of the Committee on Asian Studies and the School of Journalism, will be interviewed in a press conference by journalism students at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 205 Flint. Rights Group Fails to Convene For First Meeting The KU Human Rights Committee failed to convene last night for its first scheduled meeting since early last fall. Because only two of the committee's members were present, Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and chairman of the ASC committee, postponed the meeting until 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. ONE COMMITTEE MEMBER who was absent from the meeting said later, "Brian called me but somehow we got our signals mixed up. I thought he was supposed to call me back if the meeting was going to be tonight." Although the meeting never opened, Grace and Roberta Johnson Joliet, Ill., senior, discussed "organizational" matters for more than an hour. Grace placed all matters discussed at the gathering "off the record" and said, "These meetings will run a lot smoother and we can get a lot more done at this meeting if reporters are not here. Of course, if reporters demand to attend I cannot and will not do anything about it. But I just think we could get a lot more done at this meeting because it is going to be just organizational." GRACE SAID THE COMMITTEE will meet tomorrow "to discuss what to do in relation to the CRC and the problems they will bring to us. I think everyone who is really interested in civil rights issues should come to the meeting. It will be open and they can discuss their feelings on the subject." The HRC meeting was the first called since Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe told the Civil Rights Council two weeks ago to take any proposals they have concerning the University to the Human Rights Council. Grace said last week that in his opinion there has been no reason for a meeting of the HRC until now. PARIS — (UPI) — French police raided the homes of a dozen known extremists in the Paris area today and announced they had seized an arsenal of terrorist weapons in one apartment sufficient to "blow up a whole neighborhood." Police Raid Arms Cache The strikes against the Secret Army Organization (OAS) appeared aimed at assuring Algerian rebels that France will battle rightwing terrorists as relentlessly as it has the rebels over the past seven years. Peace talks are to resume tomorrow. About 400 pounds of explosives and large quantities of arms—including a bazooka, sub machine guns and pistols—were found in a Paris suburban apartment occupied by two youths. The apartment was searched after a truck in which the youths were transporting more explosives blew up last night. The youths escaped Nikita Says U.S. Program Entails Atomic Blackmail MOSCOW — (UPI) — Premier Nikita Khrushvice today called the United States plan to stage nuclear tests in the atmosphere "atomic blackmail" and threatened new Soviet testing. In a letter to President Kennedy made public today by the Tass, official Soviet news agency, Khrushchev accepted the Anglo-American proposal for opening the 18nation Geneva disarmament talks next week at the foreign ministers' level. PRESIDENT KENNEDY said last Friday night that the United States would resume nuclear testing in the atmosphere unless an agreement could be reached by late April for a test ban with adequate controls. But he indicated that the U.S. test proposal put forward by the President would virtually wreck that conference before it started. The President said he would go to Geneva and sign such an agreement if one were reached before American testing arrangements at Christmas Island in the Pacific are completed. The President said his decision to resume nuclear testing in the atmosphere was made to keep the Western world from falling behind Soviet nuclear weapons developments. His decision was made after careful analysis of the Soviet nuclear tests series conducted in the atmosphere last fall. The Soviets had prepared for these tests in secrecy while talks on a test ban were going on at Geneva, and carried them out without notification of the West. The Russians at that time tested weapons with a high yield of power equivalent to more than 50 million tons of TNT. KHRUSHCHEY MADE no mention of these facts in his latest note. In a separate letter to British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, Khrushchey accepted the foreign ministers' level meeting "with regret," but made no mention of the "atomic blackmail" line nor of the Soviet threat to resume nuclear testing in the atmosphere. "ONE WHO HAS not set out to delude world opinion would realize that if the U.S. and its allies add another series of tests ... the Soviet Union will be faced with the need to hold such tests of new types of its nuclear weapons as might be required ... to strengthen its security "You," Khrushchev wrote to Kennedy, "are opening another round in the contest in creating the most death-bringing types of nuclear weapons and are starting . . . a chain reaction which will become ever more tempestuous. - Attacked again Western insistence on international inspections to protect the test ban treaty against cheating. "You and your allies in aggressive blocs justify your decision to start - Reiterated his belief that disarmament issues should be handled at the summit level. Big 3 Ministers Plan Geneva Parlay Soon - Denounced Kennedy's decision to resume atmospheric tests in the latter part of April unless Russia signs an effective test ban treaty by then—ignoring the fact that Russia last September broke a three-year-old testing moratorium. WASHINGTON—(UPI)—U.S. and British officials were gratified today at Soviet agreement to a Big Three foreign ministers conference in Geneva next week but they saw no sign of Russian readiness for a nuclear test ban agreement. President Kennedy was expected to dispatch a quick reply to Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev welcoming his decision to send Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko to Geneva as Kennedy and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan had proposed. Though they said nothing publically, officials here expressed considerable disappointment over France's decision not to participate in the March 14 disarmament conference, originally scheduled to include 18 nations. But officials here described the tone of Khrushchev's letter consenting to the meeting as "grudging" and saw in it little indication that Russia was ready to break the deadlock over a nuclear test ban. As analyzed by U.S. Officials, Khrushchey's letter: THE SOVIET LEADER AGREED to have Gromyko attend the East-West disarmament conference beginning in Geneva March 14 and also said Gromyko would be there a day or two early for the Big Three foreign ministers talks. THE FRENCH DECISION WAS not unexpected, however. President Charles de Gaulle, while staying out of nuclear test ban talks so far, has said he would join a final agreement if one were reached. De Gaulle was said to feet that the disarmament forum is too big to produce any substantive progress and will degenerate into a propaganda exercise. He also is known to be reluctant to negotiate with the Russians when he feels his "hand is being forced." Macmillan, supporting the idea of a U.S.-British-Soviet foreign ministers meeting before the disarmament conference, told the House of Commons yesterday the West was forced to resume nuclear tests to avoid being outstripped in weapons development by the Soviet Union. Secretary of State Dean Rusk tentatively planned to leave for Geneva March 10. He probably will confer there with British Foreign Secretary Lord Home on March 11, and possibly with Gromyko and Home the following day. KENNEDY AND MACMILLAN proposed on Feb. 7 that U.S.A., British, and Soviet Foreign Ministers meet just prior to the March 14 conference to make a major effort to settle nuclear test ban issues. Kennedy, in his Friday announcement on future U.S. atmospheric tests, stressed that a treaty would have to include adequate inspection against cheating. The United States and Britain presented Russia with a complete draft test ban treaty last April, which the Soviets rejected. Officials indicated they were now thinking of changing the inspection provisions of the April treaty along two lines; - Adding inspections against secret preparations for tests. - Finding possible ways to refine inspection machinery, in the light of new scientific knowledge, so that it would provide the same protection but involve fewer inspections on Russian territory, to which the Soviets object. new nuclear tests by saying that such tests have been held by the Soviet Union. But this argument does not hold water. "I hope this is not expected of us, as it would look too much like atomic blackmail." "THE FIRST TO make the atom bomb was the United States. The first tests of nuclear weapons were also held by it. The U.S. exploded atomic bombs above...Nagasaki and Hiroshima It was the U.S. and nobody else that forced the Soviet Union to start the development and stockpiling of nuclear weapons in order to insure its security." KHRUSHCHIEV'S AGREEMENT to open the Geneva conference at the foreign ministers level was seen by Western diplomats here as an initial victory for the West. - * * Kennedy Happy With Soviet OK WASHINGTON — (UPI) – President Kennedy told Premier Nikita Khrushchev today he was pleased by the Soviet leader's willingness to drop demands for an immediate summit conference and instead open the Geneva disarmament talks at the foreign ministers level. The President said he was "particularly glad" krushhev had agreed to let Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko meet with Secretary of State Dean Rusk and British Foreign Secretary Lord Home prior to the formal conference opening on March 14. AT THE SAME TIME the President said he did not now wish to answer Khrushchev's latest charges against the United States, including the complaint that Kennedy was indulging in "atomic blackmail" by his latest test ban offer. He ignored Khrushchev's threat that Russia would resume nuclear testing if the United States goes through with its plans to hold atmospheric tests in late April. Kennedy instead called on Khrushchev to drop "sterile exchanges of propaganda" and join him in "close personal support" of efforts to achieve disarmament. TODAY'S BRIEF presidential note set the stage for the opening of the 18-nation disarmament conference March 14 and a preliminary meeting of Rusk, Gromyko and Home two days earlier. Kennedy's message, dated yesterday and delivered in Moscow this morning, ran only about 140 words. He did not repeat his previous offer to hold a summit meeting in April or May if progress at the Geneva conference warrants. Nor did the President reply to various charges of bad faith made against the United States in Khrushchev's Sunday message in which he grudgingly agreed to open at the foreign ministers level, instead of at the summit. KENNEDY SAID he wanted progress—not propaganda—and "in that spirit. I shall not undertake at this time to comment on the many sentiments in your letter with which, as I am sure you know, the United States government cannot agree." The President called on Khrushchev to join him in "giving our close personal support and direction to the work of our representatives" and "join in working for their success." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. March 6, 1962 The President's Decision The announcement by President Kennedy last Friday that the United States would resume nuclear testing by late April unless a test ban with "detection and verification" controls was achieved by that time is not really surprising. A number of factors pointed to such a decision long before the Presidential announcement came. The breaking of the test referendum by the Kremlin was, of course, the decisive factor. The President has explained that while the Soviet tests did not result in any technical breakthrough that would imperil the free world, significant progress was probably made. Additional tests could result in a breakthrough that would give the Kremlin a nuclear weapons superiority extremely dangerous to continued world peace. U. S. OFFICIALS stated last fall that if testing was resumed, tests of anti-missile devices, improved nuclear warheads and the much discussed neutron bomb would probably be conducted. A plausible argument might be advanced against simply testing improved nuclear warheads, but the anti-missile devices and the neutron bomb fall into different categories. The antimissile devices in particular are something that have long been needed. As yet no effective antimissile device has been developed, but it is certainly a desirable weapon to have in the U.S. arsenal. In case of a nuclear conflict its importance would be enormous. Many groups and individuals have expressed opposition to the resumption of nuclear testing, either on moral grounds or due to the possible effects of nuclear fallout from tests on the world's population. IT SHOULD BE clearly understood that whether or not nuclear tests are resumed is not a question of morality. It is a question of necessity. The United States cannot afford not to resume nuclear testing. The possible effects of such tests on the world's population is entirely subordinate to that necessity. The possession of a decisive nuclear superiority by the Kremlin would be far more dangerous to the world's population than any fallout resulting from U.S. testing. The decision to resume nuclear testing should be accepted for what it is: a necessary and unavoidable action. That decision, as President Kennedy has stated, can be reversed only by the signing of an effective test ban treaty providing for adequate inspection and controls. Considering the behavior of the Kremlin in the past, such a treaty is not likely. —William H. Mullins letters to the editor A YAF Member Replies To The Communists Editor: Some things never cease to amaze me, most recently the peculiar Looking twists that the Communists give to our American liberties to use them against us. "YOU SHOULD HAVE SEEN HER DEMONSTRATION LAST YEAR." Some important things are often forgotten about the Communists, among them that they ARE Communists and will behave as such. One of the essential doctrines of Communism is the overthrow, or takeover, of any government that gets in its way. This does not necessarily mean a shoot-em-up war where they come out showing true colors. How much easier and less costly to subtly influence thinking, so that all of a sudden one day their doctrines don't really look as bad "come to think of it" as they did last year, or maybe five years before. SINCE THEY intend to "bury us" (I don't believe the far right made up that term, who do you suppose could have said that?), is it possible that they would go so far as to LIE to us? Or pretty up their ideas by using our favorite words about the ideas that our way of life is based on. They might at that. The thing that must not be clouded over is the fact that they LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler DO intend our destruction, by one means or another, no matter how civic-minded they appear to be on occasion. The disguise of a little old lady isn't an old one for no reason. Communists are not Americans, they are members of their party. They are not entitled to American rights. If we choose to extend them, it's a loan, not an automatic right. Those rights are something that are earned. ONE MORE PUNCH in this comedy of using words that our fathers and sons and brothers died to give us the right to use—since when are the Communists qualified to speak on "the policies of the Right" (even the American Left doesn't appear to know; they're noisy, but issues they seem to feel, can be dispensed with), "the vital issues of peace, democracy, freedom of speech..." Is anybody besides me laughing at their script man? Suzy Robbins Americans might feel that they can tolerate Communism far across the waters, but the Communists cannot tolerate us. I would hate to wake up some day to find the tidy line between us had been moved under our feet while we slept. San Pedro, Calif., junior and YAF member DEMONSTRATION TODAY: CREPE SUZETTES R. GLEER 9-25 At the Movies "Tender Is the Night": produced by Henry T. Weinstein. At the Granada. Ey Murrel Bland "Tender Is the Night" is an unusual Hollywood production. Based on the novel of the same name by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the movie is unique because it has the same realistic ending that is in the book. Many recent Hollywood writers have changed the endings so they are idealistic. THE MOVIE CONCERNS a psychiatrist, played by Jason Robards, and his patient, played by Jennifer Jones. Dr. Richard Diver is an American psychiatrist practicing in an institution in Zurich, Switzerland. Nicole Warren is the daughter of an American packing company owner and is the patient. "Baby" Warren, Nicole's older sister, feels that Dr. Diver should marry Nicole to insure proper treatment. "Baby," played by Joan Fontaine, believes that money DR. DIVER leaves the institution in Zurich and goes to a plush beachside home on the French Riviera where he concentrates on one patient, Nicole. After Nicole is cured, Dr. Diver becomes frustrated because he is not busy in his practice. Later, the couple decide it would be better if they separate. The travelogue in the movie is excellent. Many scenes were shot on location in Paris, Zurich and the Riviera. The good color photography captures the beauty of these places. solves all problems. (She has been left in charge of her father's business.) After Dr. Diver and Nicole are married, "Baby" makes sure the couple is well provided for. The actors do a reasonably good job of acting. They make it clear that a conflict can arise when a husband and wife have contrasting goals in life. If you want to see a relatively well acted movie that has an ex- ectional travelogue, then see "Tender Is the Night." A Reply To A Communist Offer Editor: A letter from the Communist Party appeared in a recent issue of the Kansan imploring the fact that people are getting a one-sided impression of Communism and complaining that the Communists have been given no chance to speak in their own defense. Indeed, one might wonder why no Communists have spoken on this campus in reply to the numerous conservative anti-Communists who have appeared here. The letter from the Communist Party implies that it is because of the narrow-mindedness of the students here that no Communist has been invited to speak at KU. I SHOULD LIKE to point out that the reason for the absence of Communist speakers on this campus has not been because the students did not want to hear both sides of the question. Quite to the contrary, the Communist party itself is to blame. As chairman of the Minority Opinion Forum, I have been trying to contact someone associated with the Communist Party in hopes of having them speak here. No less than three letters have been sent to various officials of the CP inviting them to speak at the Minority Opinion Forum. Only one of these three letters got a reply. That reply came from Mr. Gus Hall, who is the national secretary of the Party. It was delivered over two months after I first wrote to him. The letter informed me that I would be contacted as soon as they were able to find a speaker. It has now been over two months since I heard anything from them. Thus, they seem anything but eager to see that their side gets a fair hearing. I AM WRITING this letter because I want to make clear that the blame for the failure of a Communist to appear on campus has not been our prejudices against communism; instead, it is the apparent indifference and negligence of the Party itself. The Minority Opinion Forum would be quite happy to give the CP a chance to speak here; all they have to do is answer our letters. Short Ones Larry Laudan, chairman Minority Opinion Forum Optimism, said Candide, is a mania for maintaining that all is well when things are going badly. — Voltaire. Sound and Fury The Traffic Control Plan The administration is continuing work on the proposed traffic control plan to keep cars and trucks off the campus at certain times. This is an admirable idea, yet the plans for the control seem a bit ludicrous, for several reasons: 1. Thousands of dollars are going to be spent on the installation of five control stations to be located at the periphery of the campus. It will take funds later for maintenance of these shelters. 2. Additional policemen are going to be hired to man these shelters. These men must be paid—more funds. 3. THESE CONTROL stations, no matter how they are built, probably will wind up looking like old-fashioned out-houses. What a lovely addition to the Chancellor's plan to beautify the campus! 4. Streets must be torn up, repaved, widened and rebuilt. In the instance of the station at Memorial Drive, the small, beautiful rock garden, (built at a considerable expense to the University) will be torn apart. 5. And last, why spend this money to keep students and faculty cars out, but let visitors in? There should be a way to do it that wouldn't entail such expense and wouldn't injure the psyche of college student. Therefore, I submit this plan. Therefore I stubout this plan. Instead of stations, turn-around areas, traffic lights and extra policemen, why not use portable barriers between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.? A SIMPLE SIGN, mounted on a well-designed, moveable, portable barrier could be placed at points beyond which traffic would not be permitted. It should be so placed that emergency vehicles could pass. This plan could be enforced by fines for student or faculty cars not having parking permits inside the campus area. I propose that: 1. Traffic be allowed from the corner of 14th and Jayhawk north to the Kansas Union. This will allow visitors to both museums to use the parking lots by the art museum and will also allow visitors going to the Union for conferences to use the available street parking. If there is any plan to keep vehicles off the campus streets, it should prohibit All vehicles. Students will cross the streets at various places and become less aware of approaching cars. A few vehicles allowed on Jayhawk Blvd. could be more dangerous than the many we face now. And the funds proposed for the control project could be put to use to construct parking lots near the campus, perhaps the site of old Sunnyside. -A Critic Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Faxing 725, business office Extension 111, 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. Tuesday. March 6,1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Weeklies to Grow In Suburbia-Abels The former editor of the Lawrence Outlook said last night that the field of weekly newspapers has a great potential in the suburban areas of big cities. Ed Abels, who last week celebrated his 35th year with the local weekly, told members of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity for men, that these suburban papers would replace the small town weekly because of the population growth of urban areas. HE STRESSED the need of the editor to take a stand on controversial issues saving, "You've got to stir up people and make them think." He said this should be one of the main objectives of journalism because the average reader is too lazy to get worked up on an issue without stimulation. Debate Meet Set Tomorrow Debate squads representing 24 universities and colleges from coast to coast will be KU guests from tomorrow until Saturday during the Heart of America Debate Tournament. Harvard, Dartmouth, Notre Dame, Southern California and Northwestern U., last year's winner, are among the participants. Events will begin with an English-style debate between KU and the U.S. Air Force Academy at 8 p.m. tomorrow, and all sessions will be held in the Kansas Union. Thirty-two two-man squads will participate. THE TEAMS WILL debate the Intercollegiate Debate Topic, "Resolved: That labor organizations should be placed under anti-trust legislation." John Ise, KU professor emeritus of economics, and Leonard Woodcock, vice president of the United Auto Workers of America, will be technical advisers. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER He emphasized that the news-paperman does not lose anything by taking a stand on a controversial issue even if people do not agree with the paper's stand. Mr. Abels said they want to know what the paper's opinions are on the subject. He said that job opportunities in journalism have decreased greatly in the last three decades. THE MODERN NEWSPAPERman must know his job, do this job, and take the responsibilities associated with this job. Mr. Abels said. He said that modern editors "are crying for this type of reporter." The young person going into the newspaper field must really enjoy doing this kind of work, Mr. Abels said. He said that bringing Arthur Schlesinger was also a mistake. "I find newspaper work to be the most interesting field in the world," he said, "If I had an opportunity to change my work. I would never do it any differently." DISCUSSING World Crisis Day held at KU last December, Mr. Abels said, "I don't feel that Fomin (Alexander Fomin, counselor to the Soviet embassy) had any place up here." He endorsed the objectives of the John Birch Society and said that the American public "shouldn't sell the minuteman movement short." CAROL BURNETT FROM HAT-CHECK GIRL TO TV STAR A few years ago, Carol Burnett was checking hats for $30 a week. Today she's TV's hottest new comedienne. Says Carol: "I've been successful far beyond anything I've deserved." In this week's Post, she tells how a "mystery man" financed her career. How she gets along with Garry Moore. And why success jinxed her marriage. The Saturday Evening POST MARCH 10 ISSUE NOW ON BAIL. The Plaza Theatre PROUDLY ANNOUNCES IT HAS BEEN SELECTED TO SHOW ONE OF THE GREATEST ENTERTAINMENTS IN THE HISTORY OF MOTION PICTURES Mid-America Premiere; WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21st "WEST SIDE STORY" ROBERT WISE PRODUCTION NATALIE WOOD RICHARD BEYMER RUSS TAMBLYN RITA MORENO GEORGE CHAKIRIS Plaza -on the Country Club PlazaVA 1-2626 KANSAS CITY, MO. WEST SIDE STORY THE PLAZA THEATRE - on the Country (Club Picasso VA1-2626 ALL SEATS RESERVED • MAIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY Price scale: EVENINGS (Sunday thru Thursday) . . . . . EVENINGS AT 8:15 P.M. MATINEES AT 2:15 P.M. ALL PRICES TAX INCLUDED. NO. OF SEATS AT $ Orchestra □ Balcony □ MAT. □ EVE. □ LIST THREE NEXT FIVE ADDRESS. DATE REQUESTED. MAIL SELF ADDRESSED. STAMPED ENVELOPE WITH CHECK OR MONEY ORDER TO THE PLAZA THEATRE 4701 WYANDOTTE, KANSAS CITY, MO. SPECIAL CONSIDERATION ACCORED GROUP THEATRE PARTIES, PHONE VA.1-2626 ACME LAUNDRY Freshest ever! We wish we could say more about it. Try our laundry service just once.See if you can't describe it better. Acme LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Downtown VI 3-5155 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0995 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. March 6. 1962 Sport Briefs NEW YORK—(UPI)—The United Press International college basketball ratings (with first-place votes and won-lost records through March 3 in parentheses): Team Team Points 1. Ohio State (32) (22-1) 345 2. Cincinnati (3) (24-2) 311 3. Kansas State (21-2) 244 4. Kentucky (20-2) 224 5. Mississippi State (24-1) 194 6. Bradley (21-4) 157 7. Utah (23-3) 62 8. Wake Forest (18-8) 55 9. Loyola (Illinois) (21-2) 47 10. Bowling Green (21-3) 45 Second 10 group—11, Duke; 41; 12, UCLA; 31; 13, Oregon State; 28; 14, West Virginia; 25; 15, St. Johns; 21; Wisconsin; 20; 17, Arizona State 16; 18, Villanova; 12; 19, Colorado; 8; 20, New York University; 7. * * DENVER—(UPI)—Billy (The hill) McGill, senior center for Utah, practically rewrite the Skyline Conference basketball record book during its final season, statistics revealed today. McGill scored 566 points in 14 league games for an average of 40.4 points per game and a record. He also attempted the most field goals in Skyline history (393), the most field goals made (224) and the best field goal percentage (.570). In addition, McGill led the league in free throw percentage (.756) and in rebounds (14.1) per game, but these marke were not league records Paul W. Brechler, commissioner of the Skyline Conference, said McGill undoubtedly will rank as one of the outstanding players in the history of the Skyline when the conference's career statistics are compiled. * * BALTIMORE — (UPI)—The American Football League's $10 million anti-trust suit against the National Football League will move into its sixth day today in federal court following testimony that television rights to AFL games were worth $3 million. The estimate was made in testimony yesterday by Jav Michaels, a television agent. He said he made the estimate in 1960, as an agent of the AFL, but that sale of the rights ran into difficulty and he had to settle for about $1,795,000. Among its charges, the AFL claims the NFL tried to prevent it from arranging television programming. Its principal charge is that the NFL engaged in monopolistic practices aimed at preventing formation of the now two-year-old AFL. Michaels testified further that the American Broadcasting System and the National Broadcasting Company indicated a desire to televise the AFL games. He said that in the midst of his negotiations with the two he learned that NBC had obtained rights to televise games of the Pittsburgh Steers and the Baltimore Colts. Both teams, Michaels said, usually were handled by the Columbia Broadcasting System. The move made him feel that his customers to televise AFL games had been reduced to one, he concluded. Joe Foss, commissioner of the AFL, also testified at yesterday's hearing. He said he wrote letters to NFL officials in 1960 urging them to expand to cities where the AFL did not already have teams and not follow a "scorched earth" policy "designed to destroy our league." The AFL contends the NFL tried to monopolize professional football and to squeeze out the new league by expanding into cities where the AFL was trying to get started. Tuesday Special Tuesday Special Kentucky Fried Giblet Special 95c At the New CRESTAURANT Located in the NW Corner of Hillcrest Bowl Kansas Upsets Cyclones; Gardner Hits 1000 Mark Jerry Gardner scored the 1,000th point of his college basketball career last night as the KU Jayhawkers upset Iowa State, 76-71, at Ames. Gardner reached the coveted 1,000-point level when he hit a field goal with 4:25 left in the game. THE HAWKERS, who never trailed by more than six points, once led by a 12-point advantage, their biggest lead. The 6-2 Wichita guard led the Jayhawk scoring attack with 31 points to capture game scoring honors. KU led the Cyclones, 68-56, with 5:45 left. I-State narrowed this margin to 71-68 with 2:20 left. THE CYCLONES' Vinnie Brewer added the game's final points. Brewer hit three consecutive free throws in the last minute of play. Harry Gibson scored a pair of free throws, Gardner added career points 1,001, 1,002 and 1,003 from the free throw line, and Jim Dumas hit a free throw to clinch the Hawk victory. Nolen Ellison, the second member of KU's guard duo, contributed 20 points and Harry Gibson scored 10 points. BREWSTER AND Gary Wheeler paced I-State's scoring. Brewer connected for 17 points and Wheeler added 15. The Hawks scored 50 per cent of their field goal efforts. Iowa State ended the season last night with a 13-12 overall record and an 8-6 Big Eight mark. The Cyclones captured third place in the league standings. Kansas, which ends the season Saturday against Colorado, now owns a 7-17 overall record and a 3-10 mark for conference play. GARDNER HAS now scored 674 more points than any other KU guard in history. Maurice King, the previous top scoring Hawk guard, scored 329 career points. Gardner collected his 500th point a year ago at Ames. (Bell Bridges, former KU forward, also scored his 1,000th point at Iowa State.) Last night's game marks the first win for KU since the Jayhawkers defeated Nebraska, 73-70, February 21 at Lincoln. KU TIED the Cyclones 2-2, 26-26, 35-35 and 37-37 before they took a 38-37 half-time advantage on a free throw Gibson scored after the buzzer. O-State Beats Cats; Buffs Lead Big 8 IT WAS a night of upsets all the way around, with Colorado the only favored team coming through. Kansas whipped Iowa State 76-71 for its third win in 13 conference games, and Nebraska downed Oklahoma at Norman, Okla., 71-69 in overtime. By United Press International Colorado's Buffs have clinched at least a tie for the Big Eight conference basketball championship and need only a victory over Kansas Saturday at Boulder, Colo., to win the title outright. The Buffs defeated Missouri 73-64 last night, while Oklahoma State stunned Kansas State 78-68 to knock the Wildcats, the nation's no. 3 team in the latest United Press International poll, out of a first-place tie. Colorado nearly fell in the upset wave, as it trailed Missouri 37-34 at haltime and was outscored from the field 55-44. But the Buffs were deadly at the free throw line, sinking 29 charity tosses in 36 attempts. Ken Charlton, whose 35 points were a career high, led the Colorado attack and cashed in on 19 of 22 from the free throw line. Center Jim Davis had 17 points for Colorado, while Walt Grebring scored 15 and Ken Doughty 13 for Missouri. OKLAHOMA STATE built up a 14-point lead in the second half and never was threatened as it hit a masterful 71.9 per cent from the field. It was the New Cowboy victory over Kansas State in 18 games. Eddie Bunch, Gary Hassmann and Cecil Epperley led the Oklahoma State charge with 18, 17 and 15 points, respectively. But Kansas State's Mike Wroblewski led all scorers with 31. You Open The Door to the finest banking service that human ingenuity can devise when you pay us a call. Right now, treat yourself to banking at its best. Stop in and get acquainted. Dumas returned to the KU lineup for the first time since the Oklahoma State game when he sprained his ankle. Dumas scored five points and contributed greatly to the Kansas 39-31 rebound edge. FIRST NATIONAL BANK Lawrence 746 Mass. The Cyclones established a 43-42 lead before Gardner hit one of his 13 field goals with 16 minutes left and put the Hawks ahead, 44-43. The Hawks led from then on. John Matt relieved ailing Lee Flachsbarth and scored eight points. Flachsbarth, the Hawk starting center, saw limited action because of flu. Big Daily Double NEW YORK — (UPI)—The biggest daily double payoff in New York was $4,313.90, returned by Buddy Bones and Junction City at Belmont park on Aug. 27, 1945. Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. If you want the swingin'est sounds in town. Rebel Rousers famous recording artists Contact Bill Ott Rm. 421 VI 2-1200 Templin WHY DO SO MANY SMALL BUSINESSES FAIL Last year, 16,000 U.S firms went out of business. But, says Commerce Secretary Luther Hodges, many could have pulled through if their owners had known the ABC's of economics, In "Speaking Out" in this week's Post, he gives the two main reasons for business failure. Says most Americans are "economic boobs." And outlines a 3-part plan for coping with economic problems. The Saturday Evening MARCH 10 ISUSE NOW ON SALE NEW NEW Malt and Shake Flavors RASPBERRY - BANANA NEW at the BIG BUY Home of Kentucky Fried Chicken SUA Jazz Blow Featuring The Best Campus Musicians B Sunday, March 11 7:00 p.m. Big 8 Room in the I B5 th or ter Ar Kansas Student Union COFFEE WILL BE SERVED Bomber Breaks 3 Speed Records LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — A B58 Hustler jet bomber shattered three transcontinental speed records and numerous windows yesterday on a round trip between Los Angeles and New York. The delta-winged B58, powered by four jets, hit a top speed of 1.450 miles an hour on the round-trip between Los Angeles and New York in 4 hours, 43 minutes and 51 seconds. The time for the 4,900-mile flight chopped almost two hours off the previous record of 6 hours, 46 minutes set in 1957. The needle-nosed Hustler also set records of 2 hours, 1 minute and 39 seconds for the West-East leg of the flight, and 2 hours, 15 minutes and 12 seconds for the east-west leg. THE AIR FORCE said all times were unofficial pending a recheck of instruments which clocked the plane. The round-trip time included about half an hour for refueling in flight over the Atlantic Ocean. The B58 — rated at a top speed of mach 2 or twice the speed of sound — set up a continuous sonic boom. Shock waves emanated from the plane as it pierced the sound barrier in much the manner of an explosive blast. Recurrent sonic booms were felt on the ground as the bomber pierced the sound barrier. Numerous reports were received of broken windows and cracked plaster walls in homes along the route. Gen. Thomas S. Power, head of the Strategic Air Command (SAC), was on hand at International Airport at the end of the flight and pinned Distinguished Flying Crosses on the blouses of the three man crew. The second section of the Jayhawker is being printed and will be released March 19, Blaine L. King, Emporia junior and Jayhawker director, said today. Release Set For Yearbook Page 5 King set April 27 and May 19 as the final release dates for the third and fourth sections. JOHN M. HENDERSON, Stanberry, Mo., senior and editor of the Jayhawk, said the yearbook has been delayed because the staff is trying to achieve an All America rating for this year from the National Collegiate Press. The Jayhawker, although attaining a first class rating many times, has never made All America, he said. "Many of the extra man-hours needed to attain All America have gone into this yearbook," said Harry D. Booker, Lawrence senior and photography editor. Booker mentioned the pictures on pages 34 and 35 in the first edition. He said two different photos taken on two different occasions were carefully matched for lighting and similarity and then combined to appear as one. CAREFUL ATTENTION to selection and quality of photographs, layout and margins were reasons cited by King and Henderson for the delay. "Things like this take many manhours and make All America yearbooks," he said. Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Psychology graduate students will meet Thursday, March 8, 1962, at 8 p.m., in the Forum Room, Kansas Union. Topic: Psychology Graduate Council. Tourier interviews: Official Bulletin March 8 — Robert Ward, Dir. of Pers Kansas, City, Mo. Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) and 11:45 to 12 noon. Saturdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Applications for Counselors for Men's Office of the Dean of Men, 228 Strong Hall. Applications must be returned by information contact the Office of Dean of Men. Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Kansas City, Mo. March 8, 1011 - Maynard Bowen, Dir of the Kansas City Royals, N. Moy March 8 & 10 — Maynard Bowen, Dn of Pers., Albuquerque, N. Mex. TODAY Archaeological Institute of America: 7:30 p.m., Lecture Hall, Museum of Art. Program of color films from the University of Istanbul. SUA Will Sponsor KC Art Gallery Tour The SUA art forum will sponsor a bus trip to the Syracuse International Ceramic's Show at the Nelson Art Gallery on Thursday, March 15. Tickets will go on sale today at the Kansas Union. The price is $1. The bus will leave the Union at 1 p.m. and will leave the museum at 4 p.m. 34 seats are available. Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 TOMORROW Analytical-Inorganic-Physical Chemistry Colloquium: 4 p.m., 122 Malott. Dr. Melanid uwdwig, Univ. of Bonn, "ESR and Electron Spin Distribution in pi-Electron Radicals." El Atenco se reune il mielérodes dia 7 de marzo a la 4 de la tarde en 11 Fraser. Se reúne el Sr. Emseraldino (Aldo) Oliveira, estudiante graduado de Recife, quiens hablara en portuguese sobre el tema, que serviran refrescos. Todos invitados. CQ CQ CQ CDE WOAHW BT Meeting 080130 ZULU (This is Wednesday, March 7, at lunch or non-hams.) in 2011 E. Lee. Bill Can will speak on SBO operation BCNU SK. Episcopal Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. GARRY MOORE IS AN ANGEL — SAYS CAROL BURNETT Garry Moore and Carol Burnett have a mutual admiration society. Says Carol: "He's the kindest man I've ever met." Says Garry; "She could be a great serious actress." In this week's Post, Carol tells why Garry "rations" her TV spots. How she and Durward Kirby laugh it up offstage. And why success put a jinx on her marriage. The Saturday Evening POST MARCH 10 ISSUE NOW ON SALE Have You Had Your Formal-Wear Dry Cleaned? TUXEDO MAN Make sure your tuxedos or cocktail dresses are dry cleaned before the spring party season. Tuesday, March 6, 1962 University Daily Kansan REPAIRS - ALTERATIONS - REWEAVING VI 3-0501 NewYork Cleaners 926 Mass. Merchants of Good Appearance Delivery NewYork Cleaners VI 3-0501 Puzzle of Big Sign Solved SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — (UPI) — The mystery of the giant "Visit and Enjoy Illinois" sign on U. S. 1 near North Bergen, N. J., has been solved. It was erected without cost by neon sign executive John C. Sabatini, who, incidentally, is a friend of Illinois Gov. Otto Kerner. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT T On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) THE GRASS IS ALWAYS GOLDER The academic world, as we all know, is loaded with dignity and ethics, with lofty means and exalted ends, with truth and beauty. In such a world a heinous thing like faculty raiding—colleges enticing teachers away from other colleges—is not even thinkable. However, if the dean of one college happens—purely by chance, mind you—to run into a professor from another college, and the professor happens to remark—just in passing, mind you—that he is discontented with his present position, why, what's wrong with the dean making the professor an offer? Like the other afternoon, for instance, Dean Sigafoos of Gransmire Polytech, finding himself in need of a refreshing cup of oolong, dropped in quite by chance at the Discontented Professors Exchange where he discovered Professor Stuneros from the English Department of Kroveny A and M sitting over a pot of lapsang soochong and shriking "I Hate Kroveny A and M!" Surely there was nothing improper in the dean saying to the professor, "Leander, perhaps you'd like to come over to us. I think you'll find our shop A-OK." (It should be noted here that all English professors are named Leander, just as all psychics professors are named Fred. All sociology professors are, of course, named Myron, all veterinary medicine professors are named Rover, and all German professors are named Hansel and Gretel. All deans, are, of course, named Attila.) “Well, it's not too bad,” says Leander. “We have 28 volumes in all, including a mint copy of *Nancy Drew*, Girl Detective.” But I digress. Leander, the professor, has just been offered a job by Attila, the dean, and he replies, "Thank you, but I don't think so." "And I don't blame you," says Attila, stoutly. "I understand Kroveny has a fine little library." "Very impressive," says Attila. "Us now, we have 36 million volumes, including all of Shakespeare's first folios and the Dead Sea Scrolls." "Golly whiskers," says Leander. "But of course," says Attila, "you don't want to leave Kroveny here, I am told, working conditions are tickety-boo." "Oh, they're not too bad," says Leander. "I teach 18 hours of English, 11 hours of optometry, 6 hours of forestry, coach the fencing team, and walk Prexy's cat twice a day." "A full, rich life," says Attila. "At our school you'd be somewhat less active. You'd teach one class a week, limited to four A students. As to salary, you'd start at $50,000 a year, with retirement at full pay upon reaching age 29." "I walk Prexx's cat twice a day." "Sir," says Leander, "your offer is most fair but you must understand that I owe a certain loyalty to Kroveny." "I not only understand, I applaud," says Attila. "But before you make a final decision, let me tell you one thing more. We supply Marlboro cigarettes to our faculty—all you want at all times." "Gloryosky!" cries Leander, bounding to his feet. "You mean Marlboro, the filter cigarette with the unfiltered taste—Marlboro, the cigarette with better makin's—Marlboro that comes to you in pack or box—Marlboro that gives you such a lot to like?" "Yep," says Attila, "that's the Marlboro I mean." "I am yours," cries Leander, wringing the Dean's hand. "Where do I sign?" "At the quarry," replies Attila. "Frankly, we don't trust paper contracts any more. We chisel them in marble." \* \* \* $ \textcircled{c} $ 1962 Max Shulman Stonecutters cut it in stone, woodcutters cut it in wood, seamstresses embroider it in voilies: you get a lot to like in a Marlboro—filter, flavor, pack or box. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 6, 1962 Moslem Students Begin Feast By Safynaz Kazem Ramadan, the Moslem holy month ends today. Tomorrow, 50 Moslem students will begin celebration of the "Eid," the three-day Moslem feast which follows Ramadan. Early in the morning they will gather at the School of Religion to face east and pray the "Eid Prayer." After the prayer they will have their first "morning" breakfast in 28 days. For four weeks the Moslem students have had breakfast at sunset. RAMADAN IS THE FASTING month of Islam, in the Hejra lunar calendar. For almost thirty days, from the moment they sighted the new moon in the sky or heard confirmation of its appearance from the radio, devout Moslems have abstained from food, drink and other physical pleasures from dawn to sunset. The fast is one of the five obligations of Islam. The other obligations are: saying, "there is no God but God, and Mohammed is 'Its prophet,' praying five times a day, paying alms, and making one pilgrimage to the Holy City of Mecca. RAMADAN HAS DEVELOPED its own social traditions. In Cairo, Egypt, at the Fishawy Cafe at Al- Starts Thursday JIMINY CRICKET ---what a show! WALT DISNEYS ALL-CARTOON FEATURE Pinocchio TECHNICOLOR® 7 SONG HITS! © Walt Disney Productions Be released by GUINA VESTA Distribution Co. Inc. PLUS Walt Disney's Short "MYSTERIES OF THE DEEP" ENDS TOMORROW THE GREATEST HUMAN DRAMA THAT THE WORLD HAS EVER KNOWN! Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents Samuel Bronston's Production King of Kings King of Kings SUPER TECHNIRAMA • TECHNICOLOR® Hussein, one of the most popular haunts during Ramadan, there is invariably a group of writers and artists chatting over cups of the cafe's celebrated green tea. At dusk, the mosques are illuminated. The streets become crowded Visits, feasts and entertainment as well as prayer continue through the night. During Ramadan, the movies have special late performances. "Htfar," the evening breakfast, and "Sehur," the meal taken just before dawn, become a regular part of each day's activities. 7:45 ONLY ADULTS $1.25 CHILDREN 50c EVEN THE CHILDREN take part in the celebration of the fast. They can be seen with their parents, much later than usual. In many of the outlying districts they make contributions to the evening activities by carrying gay colored lanterns while singing the traditional Ramadan song, "Wahaee ya Wahaee." Varsity THEATRE --- Telephone V1.3-1065 The festivities which follow the fasting are not the most important aspect of Ramadan. The idea of the fasting is not to give a sharper appetite for the evening meal, but rather to give the participants an idea of the sufferings of the poor, and to stimulate self-control. FASTING DOES NOT mean merely abstaining from food. It means avoiding anything which might harm others. A sense of equality is also seen, when the rich and the poor, the high and the low, all share the same experiences. The Koran, the Moslem Holy Book, was revealed to the prophet Mohammed during the month of Ramadan. It stipulated that all Moslems should fast a month. However, anyone who was ill or on a journey could fast a similar number of days at a later date. Those who could not fast at all were directed to feed a poor man, if they could afford it. Romulos to Talk On World 'Crises' One of the Far East's acknowledged spokesmen for the democratic idea, General Carlos Romulos, will lecture on "The Crisis the Free World Faces." Tuesday, March 13, at 4 p.m., in Swarthout Recital Hall. STARTS THURSDAY General Romulos is the former Philippine ambassador to the United States and the United Nations. ❤ THOSE "PILLOW TALK" PLAYMATES ARE AT IT AGAIN! ❤ Kansan Classified Ads Get Results THOSE "PILLOW TALK" PLAYMATES ARE AT IT AGAIN! ROCK HUDSON DORIS DAY TONY RANDALL "LOVER COME BACK" in Eastman COLOR co starring EDIE ADAMS JACK OAKIE JACK KRUSCHEN A Universal International Release AN ADULT ROPHITICATED COMEDY! CHEN Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5783 ENDS WED.! Jennifer Jones and Jason Robards Jr, in "TENDER IS THE NIGHT" Granada TREATRE...Telephone VI 3-5783 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers many a young blade lost his mettle A good sword nowadays is hard to find—and in olden times, too. Many a feudal lord saw it pointless to joust with a faulty halberd, and for worthy steel alone the Visigoths sacked Rome. Today, centuries later, the search for stronger steels goes on. And among those making most dramatic strides in advancing the state of the metallurgical art are the research teams at Ford's Scientific Laboratory in Dearborn, Michigan. In exploring the "world of microstructure," these scientists, using methods of extreme sophistication, have been able to look at iron and steel on a near atomic scale. They have discovered secrets of nature leading to new processing techniques which yield steels of ultra-high strength unknown a decade ago. The promise of such techniques seems limitless. As man develops the needs and means to travel more swiftly on earth and over interplanetary reaches wherever economy of weight and space is required—strength of physical materials will become paramount. This is another example of how Ford is gaining leadership through scientific research and engineering. Ford Ford MOTOR COMPANY The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan PRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD • THE FARM • INDUSTRY • AND THE AGE OF SPACE One day GREEN Kappa class. C Jr. coll of Feb. WHITE Thurs. Mayor FORMI typewr able ra 0524. EXPE tiontion etc. Nrates. HAVE punctu major & rep Mrs. Experi papers symbo Standi VI 2-1 FROM typin tive son, RA 2 TYPIN secret. report rates. Eldow Exper thesis write rates. 1648. Tuesday, March 6, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms cash; All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in advance on the day before publication is desired. LOST GREEN Crocheted hat lost around Sigma Kappa house. Needed for minor crafts class. Call Pat Warren, 521 Lewis Hall. 3-6 FOUND WHITE raincoat at Student Union last April. Please call Please call Mayer at VI 2-3529 3-8 Jr. college ring in Flint Hall the middle of Feb. Identify. See Mrs. Fine. 14 Flint. TYPING FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. Typing - Will type reports, thesis, etc. Wilson, Robert. *Tips for Writing*. New York: Seal, 1511 W 21 St. CALL VI 3-6440. fc10 Williams, John E. *Thesis Report Guide*. Wait, the prompt says "Maintain the original document structure". I will just list the information in order to be sure it's all there. Typing - Will type reports, thesis, etc. Wilson, Robert. *Tips for Writing* New York: Seal, 1511 W 21 St. CALL VI 3-6440. fc10 Williams, John E. *Thesis Report Guide*. Experienced typist would like typing in session of 3-2651 any time. Call VI 3-2651 any time. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call. VI 3-2001. t EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses. neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattii, V 3-8379 HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher, N.Y.C., reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Crompton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with a mechanical math or Greek keyboard. Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. Call VI 2-1546. C-6 TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers reports. Electric typewriter. Responsible Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive andarial Services 59138. Executive Mission, HE 2-7715. Eyes or Sat. 2-2186. experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Barlow, Barlow. 408 W. 103h. VI $1648. Mair. TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tt EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name - call VI 3-9136. Ms. Lloyd Gebhlach. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter Reasonable rate Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. Ct i 3-0483. FOR RENT LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. ROOM FOR 1 MALE STUDENT in double room. Share with graduate student. Meet at Union. From Union. Private entrance, quiet. Call VI 3-4092, at 1301 Louisiana. tf LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 1 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 o 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2 9731 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 3 room furnished apt. Very nice. Private entrance, parking, near new. $57 a month—water pd. Call T. A. Hemphill. VI 3-3902. 3-7 Rooms for male students 1 double, 1 b room, 1 union bldg. 3-9642 or 3-9698. 3-96 TRANSPORTATION OUSE FOR RENT - 1810 Alabama $30 415 after 3 p.m. for appointment. 3-9 Want ride from Lawrence to downtown KC., M. 8-5 week days. Will share expenses. Call VI 3-9819 between 7:30 and 9 p.m. 3-12 BUSINESS SERVICES INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re- woven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags replied. Call VI 2-2533. tf GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Notes are revised and comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752. Free delivery. DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 3919¹ Mass. Call 3-5263. tf 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. tt RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. t 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. tt TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. SEE Mrs. Comfort for wedding invitations. Fine quality, socially correct invitation. Price $8.50 per 100. Also have napkins, thank you folders, etc. Call VI 34-2064 for apps. IMPROVE YOUR AVERAGE this semester (.5pt.) with Hypnosis. This experienced operator will, without embarrassment, increase your grasp of communication appointments evenings! Evening's Fee — $5. Call Bill at VI 2-0524 after 5 p.m. 3-8 Give your pre-schools best of care and nursery school training at Gingerbread House. All day or part time. Call VI 2-3315 or VI 2-0503. 3-9 Bicycle for beginners. Clean and in good mechanical condition. Call KU ext. 327. WANTED MISCELLANEOUS BEVERACES — All kinds of six-paks, ice coid. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Ice plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 0350. FIRST at the Dine-A-Mite, Fr; 9 to 12 the lively theatre with the dead beat. 3-7 FOR SALE 1854 DODGE 4dr, standard shift, 8 cyl, 1200 Tenn. or call VI 3-1854. 3-6 1660 used Admiral stereo console. Tape 723 Mass. $79. See at Pettitengton. 723 Mass. 3-6 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, service, rentals. Ence Typewriter, 733 Mass. VI 3-1844. 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 GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $2.50, free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553. VI 3-5778. tf HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete location! 2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. 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. ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch medical scope immediately. $200. CALL V-3 88176 come to 907 Acct. for more information. **ft** FURNITURE: sofa bed, basket chairs, coffee table, kitchen cabinet, chest of drawers table, kitchen cabinet. Also: 80mm camera, Bell & Howell, telefew. VI 2-0387, 1941 Mass. 29'x8" mobil hope. 1958 Great Lakes. Excellent condition. One bedroom, colored fixtures. Call collect, Muncie, Kan., AT 9-6287. Mrs. Nipper. 3-9 WHITE BOND typing paper - $1.25 per work envelope Outlook - $10.00 M-3-3660 5-7 1980 Austin Healey Sprite. Excellent cont- tainer of a single 250mm wide side curtains. Vi C1 52-36. 3-12 To acquaint you with our Jubilee Hot Chocolate We are serving Free hot chocolate with each food order Dixon's Drive-Im Birds on a branch BIRD TV - RADIO V1 3-8855 908 Mass. HI-FI STEREO - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service D Another CAVERNS Exclusive: N FREE Pizza Delivery Anyplace in Lawrence Phone VI 3-9640 CLIP THIS MENU & SAVE! CAVERNS N Reg. 10" Lrg. 14" Mozzarella Cheese .85 1.40 Green Pepper ---- 1.15 1.65 Mushroom ---- 1.25 1.90 Hamburger ---- 1.25 1.90 Anchovy ---- 1.25 1.90 Pizza Supreme ---- 1.40 2.40 For Fast, Free Delivery Reg. 10" Lrg. 14" Olive 1.15 1.65 Onion 1.15 1.65 Sausage 1.25 1.90 Pepperoni 1.25 1.90 ½ Cheese — ½ Sausage 1.25 1.90 Added Ingredients ----- 10c ca. 20c ca. and minutes later your pizza will be rushed hot to your door - WITH NO CHARGE FOR DELIVERY - no matter where you live - on or off campus! Phone VI 3-9640 RON D CAVERNS TOM VI 3-9640 N N 644 Mass. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 6, 1963 Around the Campus Young Rep to Hold First Poll Tonight The Student Opinion Poll Group sponsored by the Young Republicans will conduct its first poll tonight. The general topic will be admission standards and academic requirements at KU. The questions to be asked were checked for objectivity by Ray P. Cuzzort, associate professor of sociology and anthropology. A sample of 200 students selected at random by the IBM machines will be polled by telephone. A Froshawk telephone committee will make the telephone calls from 6:30 to 8:30 to night, tomorrow and Thursday. The names of the students polled will not be made public. The specific questions asked and the answers received will be made public as soon as the group completes the poll and tabulates the results. Professor Johnson Gives Recital Tonight Roy Hamlin Johnson, associate professor of piano, will present a recital tonight at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall on the Faculty Recital Series. Prof. Johnson, a member of the KU piano faculty since 1955, is a doctor of music from the Eastman School of Music. He studied with French pianist Yves Nat in France in 1952-53 under a Fulbright grant. His program will be the English Suite No. 2 in A Minor by Bach, a Poem, Op. 32, No. 1, two etudes, Op. 42, No. 5 and 6, and the Sonata No. 5, Op. 53 by Scriabin, and the Sonata Op. 5 by Brahms. There is no admission charge. Col. Fraser's Diary Published as Book Publication of "A Petition" a book taken from the notes of Col. John Fraser, second chancellor of KU, has been announced by James Helyar, editor of the KU Library series. Col. Fraser, who was confined in a Southern prison camp during the Civil War kept a diary of notes in a small leather-covered notebook. In his "Petition" he addressed the Confederate Authorities regarding the conditions in the C.S.M. Prison at Columbia, S. C. Juco Officials To Be Here Friday Nineteen Kansas junior colleges and their representatives will be on the KU campus Friday to discuss curriculum content and higher education with KU officials. The junior college administrators will have a conference Friday afternoon with their former students now at KU. The deans from the various junior colleges indicate they are concerned most about content of basic junior college courses — mathematics and chemistry in general. Voice Professor Has Noon Songfest Miriam Stewart Hamilton, assistant professor of voice, has recently begun a song repertory session which she will hold each Wednesday at noon in the chorus room, Murphy Hall. "There is a great body of contemporary music people should know more about." Last week she sang and talked about songs by Hugo Wolf and Arnold Bax. Tau Sigma Program To Be Presented Tau Sigma, dance fraternity, will present "Hero Journey," a dance drama, on March 12th. 14th, 18th, 18th and 20th at 8 p.m., in the University Experimental Theatre. Tickets for the drama are on sale at the University Theatre Box Office. The box office is open from 1-5 p.m., Monday-Friday. Tickets are $1 or 50 cents with a student identification card. Ski Club to Meet Ski Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. A movie will be shown. B-School to Hold Its Core Program The School of Business will conduct its annual junior-senior orientation program at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Dean James R. Surface of the School of Business, H. K. L'Eucuyer, associate professor of business administration, and a faculty panel of five will present the aims and objectives of the School of Business. Students in the junior and senior core groups in the business school will be present at the orientation to answer individual questions concerning the curriculum and requirements of the business school program. "How a Business School Education Can Prepare You for a Career in Business" will be the main topic discussed at the meeting. Indian Collection Presented to KU The department of anthropology has received an historical Indian collection composed of rawhide costumes, beaded moccasins, handmade blankets, and various other relics. The collection was originally made by a Lawrence couple, Mr. and Mrs. John Kilworth, who traveled among the Southwest, Plains, and Northwest coast Indians. A small wood and rawhide drum included in the collection is thought to originate from the Northwest coast, British Columbia or Alaska. Another item from this area is a miniature totem pole resembling those used by tribal Indians. Navaho rugs and blankets make up a very valuable part of the collection. The ancient pieces were woven on looms by the Indians. Kansas Archbishop Dedicates Chapel A bow with arrows, a woven basket, a feather head-dress, and a necklace made of animal teeth and beads complete the assortment. The Most Rev. Edward J. Hunkler, archbishop of Kansas City in Kansas, dedicated KU's first Catholic student chapel Saturday. The new center is located at 1910 Stratford Road. The center's center hall has a capacity for 125 persons. Daily Mass is read at 7 a.m. and 12:50 p.m. The new center is another step in the series of events which is to eventually lead to a permanent Catholic student center. Archbishop Hunkler emphasized Saturday that the long range goal of the Catholic students was the construction of a permanent student center with adequate space for the entire student body. The dedication of the chapel last Saturday marked the opening of the Kansas Regional Convention of the National Newman Club Federation. The convention lasted through Sunday. ONE MILLION JOBLESS TEEN-AGERS: OUR NATIONAL DIS-GRACE This year, more than one million teen-agers will have nothing to do. They're not ambitious enough to stay in school. And not skilled enough to hold down jobs. In this week's Post, you'll learn why many employers won't take a chance on a teen-ager. And what we can do to put these boys to work. The Saturday Evening LOST MARCH 10 ISSUE NOW ON SALE Save Time and Money by Dry Cleaning the Coin Operated Way 8 lbs. for $2.00 (HERE ARE 3 TYPICAL LOADS) - 2 Men's Suits or 1 Man's Suit and 3 Pairs of Slacks - 2 Ladies' Dresses,3 Sweaters, 3 Pairs of Slacks,1 Car Coat - 10 Sweaters or 5 Sweaters and 2 Pairs of Slacks Try it soon youll be pleased INDEPENDENT ALL SERVICE CENTER Corner of 9th & Miss. VI 3-5304 Daily Hansan Wednesday, March 7, 1962 LAWRENCE. KANSAS 59th Year, No. 97 Fund Drive Hits ASC Rule Snag By Bill Sheldon A resolution presented at the last All Student Council meeting to start a special fund raising drive has brought up the problem of the ASC's regulations concerning such drives. Jo Snyder, Bethesda, Md., junior, presented the resolution to start a fund raising campaign for the Student Non-Violent Coordination Committee (SNVCC). SNVCC is a group which works in the South to get eligible voters registered and aid in the coordination of integration activities such as sit-ins. The problem is that the ASC constitution states that Compu Committee Asks For Script of 'Medium Rare' The Rock Chalk committee of KU-Y has sent a letter to the holders of the original script of "Medium Rare," the play from which one of the Rock Chalk skits is alleged to have been taken. Jim Scholten, Salina senior and Rock Chalk Revue producer, said the committee has written the Happy Medium Cabaret in Chicago requesting a copy of the original script. The committee will make a comparison with the Kappa Sigma - Delta Delta Delta skit "Medea" in last weekend's Rock Chalk Revue, he said. The committee will meet tonight to further its investigation into the alleged possibility that this winning skit was excerpted from "Medium Rare." Committee members will meet with people who have said they saw the original production in Chicago and have made the allegations. Keith Jochim, Birmingham. Mich. junior, representing the two houses involved, gave the following statement to the Daily Kansan last night: "No one in either the Kappa Sigma or the Delta Delta Delta house had any knowledge of a professional performance of the story of 'Medea' with a Disney interpretation before Monday, March 5, 1962." The Disney interpretation spoken of in the above statement is that which is used as a part of the production "Medium Rare." "We want to get to the truth." Jochim said. "We want to get the matter cleared up as soon as possible and will be willing to cooperate as much as possible in doing so." Chest is the only agency which can be recognized for soliciting funds. Therefore, unless the constitution is amended, the ASC cannot sanction the proposed special drive. If an amendment cannot be passed, the ASC would have to pass by a 2'3 vote a motion to allocate money from the Campus Chest Emergency Fund for such a special project. The only other alternative is that the campaign be carried on independently of the ASC on a voluntary basis. MAX EBERHART. Great Bend senior and student body president, said last night the only way to have the ASC sanction the proposed drive is to have the constitutional bill amended. He explained that the ASC is presently legally prohibited to pass the resolution. "The history of soliciting funds is consolidated into the present bill." Eberhart said. "The idea is that the students should be asked to contribute to only one drive rather than a great many. That's the purpose of the Campus Chest." Eberhart then explained the ASC position on the matter. "We have to take the long range point of view and protect what we have now." he said. "If we don't, we will probably return to what we had before the Campus Chest — a lot of small drives." Eberhart said he could not predict the vote on the issue but that he had found several ASC members to be thinking along his lines. "TM WORRIED about the precedent that would be set if we were to allow this resolution," he stated. "If we let this pass, every organization wishing to solicit funds would come to us to ask for sanction. "A vote against the resolution would not be against the project (SNVCC) but in favor of the principle of the Campus Chest," Eberhart added. Eberhart mentioned that the Emergency Fund is "slim" and that he did not think it would be wise to allocate money from it. (Continued on page 8) A. William Ferguson Social Progress Lag Seen by Ferguson Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior and one of the organizers — along with Arthur Miller, Pittsburg junior; Brian O'Heron, Tarrington, Conn., senior, and Bruce Bee, Mission senior — said that a meeting will be held tomorrow night in which the organizers hope to complete their constitution and elect temporary officers. William Ferguson, Kansas attorney general, said yesterday that it is unfortunate that American social and political improvements are not keeping pace with technological advances. If they do finish their constitution. A third political party - to be called ACTION—which will be part of a national confederation of campus political parties, is coming out of its embryonic stage after many months of organization. "THE RECENT SPACE flight of Astronaut John Glenn proves that we are rapidly advancing in the field of technology," he said. "However, the juvenile delinquent problem shows that we haven't made similar social advances." Mr. Ferguson spoke at the Faculty Forum yesterday in the Kansas Union. Mr. Ferguson said that he has appointed a committee of five juvenile judges to cope with this problem. He said Kansas recently set up a diagnostic center to determine whether or not convicted criminals can be rehabilitated. Mr. Ferguson also commented on Kansas laws affecting the seizure of obscene literature and on Sunday closing. ACTION Breaks Political Surface "The Kansas legislature put the language of a U.S. Supreme Court decision into a new section of a law that makes it possible to seize and destroy obscene literature," he said. By Mike Miller "The case concerns alleged obscene books that were confiscated in a raid on a Junction City newsstand last summer." HE SAID there is now a test case in the Kansas Supreme Court that concerns this section of the law. The section of the law gives power to any judge to decide whether the books are obscene. HRC and CRC Set Meetings Mr. Ferguson said he was not too disappointed because he lost the case The Human Rights Committee of the All Student Council will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union to discuss what attitude they will take toward the Civil Rights Council. Two campus organizations concerned with civil rights will hold separate meetings tonight. GRACE SAID the function of the HRC is to investigate and make recommendations to the ASC but that nothing needing the attention of the committee had arisen to warrant a meeting. Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and chairman of the HRC. called a committee meeting for the first time since early fall for Monday night. that the Human Rights Committee was the proper committee to take care of human rights problems. CRC MEMBERS will meet at 8 p.m. not more than 50 feet away in Parlor C to discuss the statement by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe noting that CRC actions concerning discrimination be referred to the HRC. Two weeks ago, CRC co-chairman Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, was told by the Chancellor Only Grace and one other member of the HRC showed up for the The responsibility the Chancellor gave the HRC, namely of handling the actions proposed by the CRC, changed the HRC docket. Monday meeting. It was postponed until tonight. Thus, according to Menghini, the Civil Rights Council will try to "draw up a formal stand for the CRC which we will present to the Human Rights Council for action and consideration." THE HUMAN RIGHTS COMMITTEE, meanwhile, will be discussing what to do with any proposals the CRC might introduce. Both meetings are open to the public. in the Kansas Supreme Court involving the Sunday closing law. (The court Saturday ruled that the law was wague and unconstitutional.) "MOST LAWYERS DON'T TALK much about cases they lose," Mr. Ferguson said. "However, in this case, I don't mind to comment because the law was obviously vague." MR. FERGUSON, who graduated from KU in 1938, told of a state Legislature investigation of alleged communist activities while he was in school. Menghini said last night he and the other co-chairman of the CRC —George Buford, Kansas City junior—would attend the first 30 minutes of the HRC meeting. Grace said no member of the HRC would attend the CRC meeting. "Several students decided to convince the investigating legislators that there was communist activity here on campus," Mr. Ferguson said. "They made several Russian banners and flags and planned to display them when the members came over." Mr. Ferguson said that the flags and banners were not displayed because of a downtown incident the night before the legislators came over. "Unfortunately, the Lawrence police caught a student who was displaying a Russian flag on his car." Mr. Ferguson said. "The students then decided not to do anything the next day." U.S. Launches New Research Satellite CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) — The United States today launched the first of a new series of satellites to find a way to forecast radiation "storms" that threaten man's flight through space. A GLEAMING WHITE Thor-Delta rocket thundered from its launching pad with the 458-pound moonlet tucked in its nose. The satellite, called an "orbiting solar observatory (OSO)," was aimed toward a nearly circular orbit more than 350 miles above earth. Scientists hoped OSO-1, which cost more than $5 million to launch, would remain "alive" for at least six months. OSO-1, carrying a series of 13 experiments, was designed to take the first direct, undistorted look at the sun. THE SUN IS THE source of high-intensity radiation that whips through space threatening manned-flight to the moon and planets. The satellite today was the first of a group the Federal Space Agency plans to launch during the next 11 years—a period covering one full "sun spot" cycle. Menghini said, they will start holding public meetings and become a working political party. The organizers have announced three issues which they plan to include in their platform and which they feel the student government should give its immediate attention to. They are: - "We endorse the People-to-People program and the proposed Current Events Committee. However, we consider them inadequate substitutes to affiliation with the national and international student community which can only be accomplished through affiliation with the National Student Association (NSA). We consider withdrawal from this organization an irresponsible and provincial act on the part of the ASC. - We censure the Human Rights Committee for its stagnation. Furthermore, we suspect that the HRC is another example of the ASC' creation of committees which never meet and are not intended to function, although we assume that the blame for the committee's inactivity attaches to its chairman. - "We call for the referendum on the football seating plan which was unconstitutionally denied the student body. We feel that the rejection of this referendum, demanded by the signatures of 2,500 students, highlights the ineffectiveness and weakness of the ASC." MENGHNI SAID last night that the national confederation will act as a coordinating body for the information submitted from the different campuses and will distribute these ideas to the other members. He added that this idea of an organized national political party confederation would probably take another two or three years to go from its present formative state into a functional reality. Bee said that membership in the party will be through "individual choice." Because of this individual membership, he said, the dues will probably be higher than those of the two existing campus political parties, Vox Populi and the University Party. This individual membership will be in opposition to the block membership used by the other two parties. Bee said this approach is "more democratic." ASKED WHETIER the party would run candidates in this spring's All Student Council elections, Menghini said: "It depends on how much work we can get done before election time. I would imagine there will be candidates running who agree with our political views, but I doubt if ACTION will formally back them." However, O'Heron indicated ACTION may enter candidates in a future election. He said he was not sure how many the party would run this spring but that members hope to run a full slate in the future. Menghini said he believes the party could get the signatures of 10 per cent of the student body, which is necessary according to the ASC constitution for a group to become a recognized campus political party. THE PURPOSE OF ACTION, according to the organizers, is "to promote the active interest and participation of students in student government and in University affairs by presenting a liberal position on both a campus and a national basis." Weather Fair and warmer today. Increasing cloudiness and not so cold tonight. Rain late tonight and tomorrow. Rain possibly mixed with snow along the northern border tomorrow. Highs today and tomorrow 40s. Low tonight 30s. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 7, 1962 Back to Neutral Corners J. Edgar Hoover has written a piece that ought to turn off the gas under the furiously boiling pot that represents the squabble over how to combat communism. It is high time. The extreme right-wingers are getting so reckless that they threaten to create a widespread fear that the country is being deliberately betrayed by trusted leaders. At the same time the attack on the "radical right" is getting so shrill that any conservative runs some risk of being suspected of a fascist plot. The effect of it all has been divisive, even when it has stopped short of mistaken apprehension or hysteria. The stage was set for this hubbub last year when the country experienced some sharp setbacks in the Cold War. The Berlin wall and the failure of the Cuban invasion brought a sense of frustration that made some ready to believe we weren't trying. There was, at the same time, a calculated politeness toward the Russians—now evident in the story of the censored speeches—that seemed to lend credence to suspicions that appeasement was the new policy. conservatism with the screwball fringe. SO A LOT of self-created experts on communism leaped upon the platform shouting that the Reds were at the gates and we'd better shoot now and ask questions later. The number, the importance and the strength of the following of these alarmists was exaggerated by those who found it tactically advantageous to identify all Hoover, whose long experience as head of the FBI ought to qualify him as a trustworthy authority on the Communist menace, writes in the American Bar Assn. Journal: "We need enlightenment about communism, but this information must be factual, accurate, and not tailored to echo personal idiosyncrasies. . . Our fight must be a sane, rational understanding of the facts. Emotional outbursts, extravagant name-calling, gross exaggerations hinder our effort." BY THIS TIME, even the Welches and the Walkers must observe that wild and undocumented charges of Communist sympathies alienate the people they are trying to persuade. Similarly, their counterparts on the left must suspect that they have been suckered into fronting for the Reds. Hoover doesn't believe there are very many serving Communist ends, and we doubt if he thinks a fascist coup is imminent. We ardently hope, therefore, that he makes converts with his plea for a moratorium on emotional outbursts, extravagant name-calling and shouts for the vigilantes. It won't be easy to convince the raucous super-patriots that they can serve their cause better by restraint. But if their audiences dwindle the shouting should diminish, permitting the voice of reason to prevail. (From the Feb. 19 Chicago Daily News) The End of Fraser Hall There has been considerable comment about the plan to raze Fraser as part of the University's plan to renovate and expand University facilities. Some alumni have expressed a desire to see the building preserved. A resolution was introduced in the All Student Council "encouraging these officials to retain part of the design of the old Fraser in the new building so that the spirit of this relic of the founding of the University will not be lost." THIS SENTIMENT is admirable and certainly there is no reason why some of the "spirit" of Fraser could not be preserved in the new building if it does not interfere with the efficiency of the new building or add to its cost. But Fraser, like many other old buildings and relics, must yield to the needs of society. It has already deteriorated to the point where it is dangerous to its occupants. In addition, the amount of room available for new buildings at the center of the campus is obviously limited. In deciding to raze Fraser, the administration was taking the only realistic and reasonable course of action. —William H. Mullins letters to the editor Comments on the ROTC Editor: I agree with Don Warner that we should concentrate on avoiding war instead of making plans for what to do after it starts. But 100 per cent concentration goes too far. Who would begrudge say five per cent for other purposes? I think the more important issue concerns the existence of ROTC itself. It may shock most of us, but some people who are not Communists (Bertrand Russell, for example) have accused us of being unduly militaristic. I agree. THE MILITARY is necessary, but when it reaches its hand into civil institutions I think it needs to be denied its object. The fact is that a great many schools have ROTC programs, there are also military high schools, and if I'm not mistaken military training even goes below that level (I'm not thinking about the Boy Scouts). What this does, which I think is harmful, is to create (in however much a way) a militaristic atmosphere. Say all you want about how those trained in military techniques are thoroughly schooled in democratic tradition, they nevertheless learn about warfare, march around with uniforms, even saluting one another in some cases, and insofar as this happens, society gets that much more oriented toward, unfortunately, things military. SOME WILL ARGUE that the existence of ROTC programs are in the national interest, since the military needs astute officers and such programs provide them. No doubt these programs are a source of military personnel, but the question is at what price? I would be happier if colleges and universities got out of the military business, leaving that to the military. That might increase the burden of the military somewhat, but it is not a problem with which it could not cope. On the other hand, permeating society with things military is the wrong way to go about trying to create an atmosphere conducive to thinking peace. As a rule I think that the pugnacity of a nation varies in some kind of direct proportion to the number of polished metal buttons worn by the non-military public. I am not advocating doing away with the military, what I am advocating is its confinement. And that involves the restricting of the instruction of military techniques to military bases. Edward Lopatin New York, N.Y. graduate student * * * The trouble is that ROTC has become sort of a national institution. A fine attribute for a nation that is supposed to be among the most peace loving. The Civil Rights Issue Editor: The members of the All Student Council Human Rights Committee who were interviewed by the paper must be commended for their honest approach to the problems of their relation to the Civil Rights Council. Apparently the Committee regrets its inactivity. Its problems lie in the response of the ASC, which seems to discourage all civil rights activities. In the attitude of Chancellor Wescoe, who appears to believe that the less done in this field the better, and in the Human Rights Committee's own lack of initiative. The Committee has continually given the CRC the lead in civil rights: "It is better for the CRC to do it openly because it can and is getting the job done" (Mr. Meeks, Thursday's UDK). THE CHANCELLOR seems to believe that, by denying any direct contact with the CRC, he can avoid the whole civil rights problem. The people on the Human Rights Committee are responsible students, and it is hoped that they will use their new prominence to become an active organization and to present strong and responsible recommendations to the ASC and to the Chancellor. But the CRC is a far more vital and active organization and Chancellor Wescoe cannot fulfill his duty to the students in this area unless he listens to the CRC and responds openly to its suggestions. Charles Nicol Blue Springs, Mo. graduate student University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. University of Kansas Dailuhansan Telephone Viking a-2700 Extension 111, news room LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East Sloan Newark, NJ 07502. Mail subscription rates: $2 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the week except evenings and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. FOOTBALL PLAYER'S BULLETIN BOARD JOBS FOR FIGHTING BERS CLOCK WINDER $225.00 FURNACE WATCHER 210.00 STAPLER WANTED 300.00 TOWEL CHECKER 200.00 (WEEK ONLY) BOYDER 0-16 HEY COACH, WHAT'S THIS I HEAR ABOUT A 'WINNING PROSPECT' YOU FOUND FOR US THIS SEASON? Sound and Fury A Traffic Incident Perhaps I have been laboring under a false illusion, but I have long considered it the job of a traffic policeman to improve the flow of traffic rather than hinder it. However, there seems to be at least one member of the campus police force who thinks otherwise. THIS GUARDIAN OF student security stood stubbornly in the middle of the intersection of Jayhawk Blvd. and Sunflower Road at 2 p.m. last Friday and refused to allow traffic to move across the intersection because a student pedestrian or motorist had raised his irie. One student, who witnessed the spectacle, said the gentleman in blue became excessively irritated when some inconsiderate student pulled into the intersection against his command. The infraction was compounded when a young lady, in a rather small car, attempted to thread her way through the mess. Our vigilant traffic director apprehended her immediately. Other motorists protested the ensuing traffic tie-up by hefty blasts of their horns. THIS WAS MORE than any self-respecting public servant could take and our defender promptly halted traffic. For three minutes he stood with him arms crossed, while students continued to assail him by appropriate manipulations of the horn. Finally he consented to allow a few cars to pass through his sanctuary and ultimately full flow was restored. After the traffic jam was dispelled, the policeman, who refused to identify himself, told a Kansan reporter: "Those kids thought they were going to outdo me, but I outdone them." He warned, "next time I'll take the whole mess of them down and citation them. I can do it." When he noticed that the reporter was taking notes he said, "you better not write a story or the chief will be down there eating you out." HE CONFIDED." I think those kids framed me. I think a bunch of them got together and framed me." He then requested the reporter's name, classification and student number. He warned that a story on the matter would, "just make it harder on the force." — R. G. Sound and Fury On Communist Speakers Since the University of Kansas recognizes no equal in the land among institutions of higher learning, I feel it my duty to note that the University of Oregon is now one up on dear old KU: Oregon recently allowed Gus Hall, the former general secretary of the Communist Party in the United States, to speak on its campus. I THINK our far-sighted administration here should extend Mr. Hall an invitation to speak on our campus, particularly since KU has gained a reputation for presenting all viewpoints. We've had a Bircher (Love), a Castroite (Shaw), a newspaperman (Kilgore), a Comsymp (Schlesinger) and a Soviet official (Fomin). Now it's time we had a good old red-blooded American Commie. Bacchus Wednesday, March 7. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Editorial Page Material Pringsheim's Reply to Bainum Editor: Mr. Mike Bainum in a recent letter to the Kansan was so incensed by the Daily Kansan's version of my remarks at the Current Events Forum of February 23, that he felt called upon to compare me to "a rude sixth grader" and accuse me of bad taste and juvenile name-calling. One can not really blame Mr. Bainum for his outburst for the Daily Kansan's report on my talk clearly seemed to indicate that I had spoken rashly and irresponsibly. Especially in quoting an off-the-cuff remark I made after the conclusion of my talk, and quoting it out of context, the Kansan story created an impression which was wolly at variance with both the content and the implications of my remarks. I think the Kansan's story was in extremely bad taste and was an example of the kind of irresponsible reporting against which I have spoken out repeatedly. NEVERTHELESS I will not deny that I used the word "stupid" which according to the American College Dictionary means "lacking in keenness of mind." Would it make Mr. Bainum any happier if I had said: Mr. Eisenhower's decision to take responsibility for the U-2 flight was in my opinion lacking in keenness of mind? If so, I shall be glad to retract the ugly word, and substitute the euphemism. The fact of the matter is that in the informal atmosphere of the question period I did not really expect that my remark would be preserved for posterity and used a word I would not normally resort to in a formal presentation. I must add, that in questioning the wisdom of a particular decision by our former President, I was not attacking his character but merely indicating that I questioned his judgment. Strangely enough I used the word in a sentence in which I defended President Eisenhower from the charge made by a questioner in the audience that he had acted on the basis of partisan political motives. MY POINT WAS that he had not acted wickedly or schemingly, but had simply used bad judgment. I was asked for my opinion on this matter and I honestly answered according to my own convictions. I realize that many will disagree with my contentions and that is their good right. But my opinion is not based on a snap judgment or political or personal prejudice. I have studied the case quite thoroughly and my conclusion is that Eisenhower acted unwisely. ... Letters I am sorry if this offends some people who hold our former President in high esteem. I too think very highly of him, but I don't believe that he acted wisely in this case. If this be slander, you may make the most of it, but I hardly think the label applies. Let me also add that it is not my flair for publicity which is involved in this case but the uncanny ability of the Daily Kansan's Reporter to quote out of context in such a way that fairly conventional statements sound lurid and sensational. In conclusion, I wish to state that I have no desire to discuss this matter any longer in the columns of the Kansan but will be glad to talk to individual complainants during my office hours. Klaus H. Pringsheim instructor of political science * * A Reply To Payton And now I would like to continue Mr. Payton's and my disagreement; realizing that as the "Faithful Reader" in the Sound and Fury column has said, "disagreements between newspapers generally make crummy reading." However, I cannot let Mr. Payton's remarks go by unchallenged. It appears to me as though you are the one, Mr. Payton, who is adverse to dealing with facts, for in the February 8th issue of the UDK you stated, "There is no really vocal conservative in the economics and political science departments." And also, in the February 7th issue, you stated, "I suspect that there are no conservatives (in the departments)." MOVING ON, I must say that I HAVE read much of the propaganda put out by your organization and by the John Birch Society. I found of particular interest the plans to impeach Chief Justice Earl Warren and to repeal the federal income tax. I have in my own library The Blue Book and the pamphlet, The American Right Wing, both of which I am sure you have gleefully read. In summary here, I have found this literature reeks of ambiguities and generalizations attempting to tie its cause to religion and "Americanism." This reading almost reminds one of the fascist writings of the old German-American Bund of the late 30s and early 40s. I most certainly was not "enlightened by these activities but was more on the borderline of being nauseated. I feel that my praise of your organization's selection of Portugal was somewhat misinterpreted. I mean't it to mean that I felt it was most fitting that you should choose the most ruthless dictatorship and right-wing ruled nation in the world. Portugal's captive citizens live in conditions which are comparable to those in the Congo. I ALSO HATE to belabor you with facts, Mr. P., but it would appear as though the fact is that your reply to the assertions I have previously made was rather incompetent in its fulfillment of the questions asserted. You go on to state that you have been on public record only once in a statement mentioning Communism. Well, come now, I think this indicates that you have been rather lagged in performing one of the objectives of a leader of your organization, to unveil subversive activities in this country, label them as Communism, and warn us all of the horrible danger from within facing the nation. (This I am quoting from a Birch pamphlet.) I attended your organization's meeting the night of Feb. 8, and became so "awed" by the group's naive approach to its problems that I was compelled by conscience to leave. In closing, I must say that I was very gratified to see your statement, "Though one may spend one's life shooting myths, it is not a very profitable (a good American word) occupation, and I will do it no more." I was also glad to see that you do not believe me a Communist, but was rather disturbed that you used such an incompetent, vicious slanderer such as Whittaker Chambers (you misspelled his name) as a basis for an assertion that perhaps I was blind. Believe you me, I would rather be physically blind than blind as you are. Mr. Payton, to the facts of the world. Alec Hamilton P. S. The name given me at birth was Alec Maynard Hamilton, in case you're interested. A Note to the YAF Chapter at KU Last week Navy Judge Advocate General, Rear Admiral Mott, told the Senate dryly that "we have no need for space age witchhunters; amateur anti-Communists are as useful as amateur brain surgeons." Another official wrote, "Today far too many self-styled 'experts' on Communism are plying the highways giving erroneous and distorted information. This causes hysteria, false alarms and misplaced apprehension among our citizens." His name? J. Edgar Hoover, of all people. (From the Feb. 26 issue of the New Republic) See How Good Hot Chocolate Can Taste Free with each food order DIXON'S Drive-In i say, reggie-looks like something of a blast, eh? shall we get dates? NO---- let's go stag! FRIDAY march .9. FLOOR SHOW! they're here again! JACK and the MISSILES! at the BiG BARN they're here again! JACK and the MISSILES! at the BIG BARN march the ninth!! 8^20-12^30 the students' favorite refresh- ments available! $ $ $ 1.75 per couple per stag 1.50 Worth Repeating But aren't patience and forbearance in the face of student error and abuse essential qualities of educators? Surely they are if the teacher or administrator accepts as one of the basic tenets of a liberal education that the developing mind must be encouraged to test and stretch itself, to put its convictions and its critical judgments into words—even when they may be wrong.—John M. Harrison 10th Anniversary Sale The Jay SHOPPB 835 Mass. In observance of the 10th Anniversary of our formal opening we offer this choice group of $10 Specials — Jane Compton Two-piece coordinate shirtwaist-sheath $10 Reversible Utility Coats . . . water repellent. Sizes 8-18 SUPER PLAIN COTTON DRESS WITH BUTTONED BACK AND CROSS LINKS. MADE FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON. SIZE 8. $10 Cotton Suit Fabulous Cardigan Collar, tarpoon cotton plaid. Sizes 8-18 $10 A $10 Gift Certificate For the daily winner Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. Come In! Register! Bobbie Brooks Carefree "Katya" cotton . . . that delightful, easy-care fabric in spring's most fetching step-in shirtdress. Your favorite colors in sizes 5-15. These "SPECIALS" also available at the Campus Jay Shoppe 12th & Oread V13-9544 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 7, 1962 --- Jack Stevens Surpasses Goal In Leading KU to Indoor Title By Steve Clark When Jack Stevens left his home state of Iowa to enter the University of Kansas he never thought that someday he would pole vault over 14-feet. Saturday night in the Big Eight indoor meet at Kansas City, he broke his own school record, vaulting 14-10 for first place. "Every jump over 14-feet is a surprise for me," the Ames, Iowa, senior said. "When I graduated from high school, Hal Mollissen was pole vaulting for Iowa State and his best was 14-feet. Mollissen was one of the best vaulters in the conference and I could never envision myself doing better than him." Easton sat back in his chair, crossed his legs and replied with a grin. "I know he can do it." STEVEN'S VAULT occurred at a most opportune time. The mile relay, which normally closes a track meet, had been completed and Kanas trailed Nebraska by six-and-one-fourth points. The pole vault had not been completed and whether Kansas was to repeat as Big Eight indoor champion rested on Stevens' shoulders. His vaulting mate Roger Schmanke had placed third and Stevens needed a first for KU to win. Some 8,600 persons waited an extra 20 minutes to see the completion of the pole vault. They knew if Stevens won, Kansas won, and if Stevens lost, Kansas lost. The Jayhawkers' track team, assembled on one side of the auditorium, also knew it. So did Stevens. KU'S KIRK HAGAN, who earlier in the evening won the 1000-yard run, turned to Coach Bill Easton and said, "Do you think he can do it, Coach?" Stevens started down the runway About 15 feet from the pit Schmanke, standing next to the runway, said "OK Jack, throw your pole now." Stevens placed his pole in the vaulting box, and vaulted himself over the bar and his team to an 11/12 of a point margin for its second consecutive conference indoor title. "I DIDN'T realize I had made it until I reached the pit," Stevens said. "When I was going over the bar, everything went black." His teammates charged across the auditorium after the vault and mobbed him with pats on the back and words of congratulations. "I kept telling those guys it wasn't over yet," said Stevens. "The Missouri guy had one more vault. "I thought I would have to vault another time. I thought I would have to go 15-feet to win, and I was relieved when Missouri's vaulter missed on his third try." STEVENS was determined before his final vault not to let the pressure bother him. "I knew the meet counted on my vault," he said. "The coach didn't think I knew, but I heard the public address announcement. "My first thought was to relax. This has bothered me all year. I knew I couldn't press myself, so I just thought about getting a smooth run down the runway. "I got my smooth run and planted my pole. Once you get into the air you don't worry, you just lay back and work. As soon as I got on my back I started to pull." STEVENS credits Schmanke and his coaches Easton and Bob Lawson with a big role in his successful vault. "Roger and I work together," Stevens said. "He helps me, and I help him. There is one thing you can't tell yourself and that's what you are doing wrong. This is where Roger helps me." Stevens almost did not make the 14-foot level. He missed twice at 13-6 and 13-10. "My timing was off all evening," he said. "Schmanke noticed that the pole vault standards were too far away, so before the winning vault we moved them two inches forward. "EVERYTHING went perfectly," Stevens said. "It took me seven vaults to get my timing, but I finally got it when I needed it most. "Much credit must go to my coaches," he said. "They have spent many hours working with me, especially with my pole plant." Stevens tried 15-feet twice after his meet-winning vault, but missed at both attempts. "It was an anticlimax for me," Stevens said. "I was very happy with my 14-10 vault." DURING THE second jump, Stevens dislocated his shoulder which is liable to put him out of action for several weeks. "My first jump wasn't a good one, yet it wasn't a bad one. On the second jump I was over, but I didn't have the standards placed right, and my hand hit the bar. While I was coming down I dropped my arm to catch myself, and I landed on my elbow, shoving my shoulder out of place." Stevens said he had been preparing himself to withstand pressure for several weeks. "In the earlier meets this year I would press myself so I could get used to pressure. I never expected pressure to such a degree however. "THIS TO ME is the first time I've felt I've given something to KU as far as my ability is concerned," Stevens said. "I told the coach this after the meet. CHA "The Kansas atmosphere is tremendous," Stevens said. "They don't accept anything half-way here. The only thing that will stop you is your own ambition. STAR VAULTER-Jack Stevens, Ames, Iowa, senior, came through for KU under pressure and vaulted 14 feet 10 inches at the Big Eight Indoor meet to win the event and give the Jayhawkers an 11/12 margin of victory. Although Stevens has yet to clear 15-feet, he has set 15-4 as his goal. "As far as I'm concerned and as far as the coaches are concerned I have reached 15-feet. I was over at the Big Eight meet, but I nicked the bar coming down." Southern Methodist and Texas Tech finished in a tie for first place in the Southwest Conference last night and will meet at Fort Worth Friday night for one of the four remaining berths in the NCAA championship. Other schools competing in the tourney were Arkansas, Wichita, and Oklahoma State's "B" team. The playoffs before the playoffs are making things interesting for those teams seeking the last tickets to the NCAA basketball tournament. Another berth will go either to St. Joseph's or Temple, which clash in a Middle Atlantic Conference playoff at Philadelphia Friday night. The loser of this game won't wind up in the cold, for officials of the National Invitation Tournament are saving a bid to their show for the conference runner-up. "Coach Easton teaches you hard work and discipline and that's what you need to win." NORTHERN BAY HOTEL EXPERT AUTO REPAIR Mignot & Sawyer Garage 620 Mass. STEWARDESS INTERVIEWS In men's bowling action, Bill Miller, Prairie Village freshman, led the KU squat at an Oklahoma State meet with a 184-162-164 — 510 score. The Jayhawk squad placed second in the six-tteam meet behind the University of Oklahoma Betty Jo Hember Qualifies For Bowling Tournament SMU, Texas Tech Tied in Southwest Fearing, bowling coach, learned yesterday. Miss Mullinix totaled 1445 points in the qualifying meet with a 160 average and series totals of 443, 540 and 462. UNITED AIR LINES Betty Jo Hember, Shawnee Mission freshman, will participate in the women's national intercollegiate bowling tournament April 28, 29 and 30 at Phoenix, Ariz. March 20 You may qualify if you . . . . . MISS HEMBER qualified as the top woman bowler in team, doubles and singles events in competition Feb. 17 at the University of Nebraska and Feb. 19 here at the Jav Bowl. ★ are 5' 2" to 5' 8" ★ are 20 - 26 ★ single Miss Member, a member of KU's varsity women's bowling team, is one of two bowlers from the National Student Union Association's Region Eight. Contact Placements Office for March 20 interviews ★ weight proportioned to height Miss Member had series totals in the qualifying events of 491, doubles; 5508, singles; and 532 in team play for a 170 average. UNITED Nancy Mullinix, Kansas City freshman, will be a Region Eight alternate at the meet, Bacom Old Spice ORIGINAL LOTION Old Spice BITER SPRAY LOTION men recommend it to other men Cool, clean Old Spice After Shave Lotion always gets you off to a fast, smooth start. Feels just as good between shaves as it does after shaving Rates A-OK with dates. 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IN THE CARRIAGE KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 7, 1962 International Skulduggery Soviet Delegation Head Labels Microphone Charge a 'Lie' the chairman of the Russian delegation in the Model United Nations charged last night that Steering Committee accusations that his delegation planted a microphone in one of the meetings was a "boldface lie." Pat Figgot, Kansas City, Mo., senior, said his bloc was conducting itself in "good faith" and that the accusation was made because they were the Russian delegation and supposed to be "bad guys." HE ACCUSED THE United Kingdom delegation of spying on the Steering Committee's meeting and the Latin American delegation of padding its bloc with a country that doesn't exist. Piggot also accused the UK delegation of spying on one of his delegation's bloc meetings. He said a girl who arrived late for the meeting noticed a man outside the door taking notes. "We later found out he was connected with the Great Britain delegation," Piggot said. HE SAID THE LATIN American bloc included a Tongolese Republic which doesn't exist. Four girls organized the country, he said, but all correspondence is sent to one of the leaders of the Latin America bloc. Maurice Smith, secretary general, accused the Russians of planting a microphone in the Pan American Room where the Steering Committee held a meeting last Wednesday night. Piggot explained his actions and whereabouts that evening. He said there was a Russian bloc meeting at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Pan American Room. The meeting adjourned about 7 and he went home, Piggot added. He said he returned about 7:30 for a SUA Board of Directors meeting. When the meeting broke up about 8 he went to the corridors outside the Pan American Room to wait for George Bennet, student adviser for the Russian delegation, he said. He said he was not listening to the proceedings. About 8:15 Steve Long, Mission sophomore, arrived at the meeting and saw him standing in the hallway. Long informed the meeting that "Piggot is spying on us." PIGGOT SAID HE anticipated trouble so he left immediately to avoid any controversy. Nest where he met Jacob Dyck, Topeka senior, and Dyck's date. They talked for awhile and when Smith appeared at the Hawk's Nest, Dyck went upstairs. Dyck had tape-recorded a Russian class in the Forum Room earlier. He said he had taped a Russian class with Ken Collins, Shawnee Mission graduate student, from 2 until 4 that afternoon. Dyck said he went to class at 4 o'clock, leaving the tape recorder behind. He went downstairs to the Hawk's WHEN HE RETURNED to the Pan American Room later in the evening he discovered there was a meeting in progress, but did not know it was a Russian bloc meeting, he said. He went downstairs to the Hawk's Nest and returned to the Pan American Room about 8:30 to pick up his tape recorder, meeting several members of the steering committee, Dyck said. British Set for Summit Before 18-Nation Talks LONDON—(UPI)—Prime Minister Harold Macmillan has told Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev that the British are ready for a summit conference at Geneva if anything can be gained. The message was contained in a brief note handed to the Kremlin last night by the British Embassy. Macmillan told Khrushchev he would go to Geneva during the Piggot said he went upstairs to help Dyck and he saw the discussion. Piggot said he overheard a steering committee member congratulate Dyck on planting the microphone. Billings Operates Large Business A small office in room 222, Strong Hall, is the center of a brisk business topping many Kansas industries in size of money transactions. Here, Robert Billings, director of aids and awards, manages a $1.25 million-a-year business. Each year, the Aids and Awards office distributes about $.5 million for scholarships and about $720,000 in loans to KU students. The office's yearly scholarship business includes about $300,000 in academic scholarships and about $200,000 in athletic scholarships. The staff is now processing 2,200 new scholarship applications for next year in addition to scholarships now in effect and up for renewal. Scholarship applications will be studied to evaluate the financial need of each applicant. Award decisions will be made by May 1. During the past year the office has made 3,100 student loans for a total of $420,000. Another 500 loans totaling $300,000 were made under the provisions of the National Defense Education Act (NDEA). Students can borrow as much as $500 a semester in the NDEA program. Interest of 3 per cent begins one year after graduation and the graduate repays 10 per cent of the principal each year for ten years. The federal government supplies eight-ninths of the money for NDEA loans and the University furnishes the rest. KU gets about $250,000 a year in federal funds and adds about $28,000 for its share in the program. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT forthcoming 18-nation disarmament talks "at any stage when it appears that such action can be of positive value." Macmillan's message was in reply to Khrushchev's letter of March 3, in which the Soviet leader reluctantly agreed to the Anglo-American proposal that the big-three foreign ministers meet in Geneva before the 18-nation disarmament conference. Macmillan said: "I am very glad to learn that although you do not entirely share my view, you have agreed to the proposal put forward by President Kennedy and myself for a meeting of our three foreign ministers two days in advance of the 18-power conference on disarmament. "I have accordingly asked British Foreign Secretary Lord Home to be ready to meet Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and U.S. Secretary Dean Rusk in Geneva on March 12." While Kennedy's letter made no specific reference to a summit conference, Macmillan once again expressed readiness in principle to go to Geneva if and when the presence of heads of governments is warranted. Macmillan's message followed a letter from Kennedy to Khrushchev yesterday. Advisers Are Needed at KU Applications are open for student counseling positions in men's residence halls for the Fall semester. The positions involve working in a residence hall as an adviser to individual students and student groups. The general duties of a counselor include general counseling with residence hall residents, advising hall student government and activities, encouraging positive student citizenship, and reporting maintenance needs. A counselor must be a graduate student, senior or junior, must have an interest in working with other students, must be academically and emotionally mature, and must have a class schedule so as to have certain free hours for staff meetings and duties usually held at night. The deadline for applications is March 30. Application blanks may be obtained from the office of the dean of students, 288 Strong Hall. Student counselors receive a monthly salary of $45. The counselors pay their own room, board and tuition fees. Barrel of Chicken 25 pieces,10 hot rolls $5.00 BIG BUY TOMORROW FOR THE WHOLE WORLD TO ENJOY! WALT DISNEYS ALL-CARTOON FEATURE Pinocchio TECHNICOLOR 7 & 9 p.m. THE GREATEST HUMAN DRAMA THAT THE WORLD HAS EVER KNOWN! Plus Walt Disney's "MYSTERIES OF THE DEEP" TECHNICOLOR www.technicolor.com Revised by BUILD.MM in Coquitlam, Canada ENDS TONIGHT Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents Samuel Bronston's Production King of Kings Adults 85c Kids 35c Austin M. Lashbrook, assistant professor of classics and classical archeology, has revealed new methods of teaching Latin that have resulted in an improvement in language comprehension. 7:45 ONLY ADULTS $1.25 CHILDREN 50e Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 The new method is called the "descriptive linguistic approach." New Method Is Revealed Coming "Two Women" A special textbook is used, which is prepared through the studies of Dr. Waldo E. Sweet of the University of Michigan. The study is supplemented by the use of recorded tapes, films, maps and records which are used as practical laboratory work in the study. Prof. Lashbrook said the new method is not necessarily easier to learn than the traditional methods, but is more of a challenge. THE NEW METHOD WAS first carried out by two Lawrence West junior high school teachers, Mrs. Alma McLaughlin and Mrs. Robert Green. The new method was compiled by a group of Latin teachers who met in summer study to work out plans for a more comprehensive approach to the language. The project was carried out under a Carnegie Corporation grant of $25,000. In reading skills, under the traditional method, 12 per cent of the students ranked in the 75-100 percentile, whereas 24 per cent of the World Prayer Day Service Planned A World Day of Prayer service for KU students will be held at 7 p.m. Friday in Danforth Chapel. The event is sponsored by the Lawrence United Church Women. Students from University church groups have planned and will give the program. The event is an international, inter-denominational and inter-racial observance. Christians in more than 150 areas of six continents will take part in the observance. students studying the new method ranked in the same percentile group. In grammar proficiency, $5\frac{1}{2}$ per cent of the students in the traditional method ranked in the 75-100 percentile, while 14.4 per cent under the new method scored in the same percentile. On total scores, only 7.7 per cent of the traditional study group attained the 80-100 percentile, but 20 per cent of the students under the new method scored in the same range — a 12.3 per cent improvement. KU Professor to Head Puerto Rican Project A KU professor of geology has been named chief investigator of a two-year project involving a study of Western Puerto Rico. Frank C. Foley, state geologist and director of the State Geological Survey, will participate in the study under a $28,000 grant from the Office of Naval Research. He and Mortimer D. Turner, Lawrence graduate student, will conduct a study to determine how the geologic area ties in with the geology of other islands in the Caribbean Sea. The information will be used to help interpret some of the earth movements which have taken place there. Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Artist One Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 The Picture with ViP... TOMORROW - 7&9 pm WHI Thu May Jr. of F A. C. Rock Hudson Doris Day Tony Randall Those "Pillow Talk" Playmates are at it again! "LOVER COME BACK" IT'S ALL ABOUT THE UPS AND DOWNS OF THE LOVE GAME! IN EASTMAN COLOR ENDS TONIGHT Jennifer Jones and Jason Robards Jr. in "TENDER IS THE NIGHT" AN ADULT SOPHISTICATED COMEDY! Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Wednesday, March 7, 1962 University Daily Kansan SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Page 7 One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms cash: All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office, in Flint Hall, by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. LOST FOUND WHITE raincoat at Student Union last month. Please call Meghan Mayor at V1 2-3829. 3-8 WANTED Jr. college ring in Flint Hall the middle of Feb. Identify. See Mr. Fine, 141 Flint. Bicycle for beginners. Clean and in good mechanical condition. Call KU ext. 873. MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supply plant, 4th & Vermont. Phone VI 0350. FIRST at the Dine-At-Mite, Fri., 9 to 12 p.m. Featuring Grizzleys — the live band with the dead beat. 3-7 FOR SALE OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright typewriter sales, service, enforcement Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-8644. 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. GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES, compose with diagrams, comprehensive conditions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference: $3.50. free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553. VI 3-7578. tf HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grants' Drive-In Pet Center - more than 40 pet sites. - Pet phone VI 3- 2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. 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 ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bakar Gold. Call 3-8777 or come to 907 Ark. for more information. SPORTS CARS 1961 MGA 1600 Sports Roadster Blue 1960 MG Magnette 4-dr. compact Black 1959 MGA 1500 Sports Roadster White BRITISH MOTORS 704 Vt. Phone: 704 VI. VI 3-8367 FURNITURE: sofa bed, basket chairs, coffee table, kitchen cabinet, chest of drawers — reasonable. Also $mm. 100s. VI - 2-0387, Bell & Howell, telephones . . . 91 WHITE BOND typing paper - $1.25 per paper, Lawrence Outlook - 10% off 3-2:066 3-7 29'x8' mobil home. 1958 Great Lakes. Excellent condition. One bedroom, colored fixtures. Call collect, Muncie, Kan., AT 9-6278. Mrs. Nipper. 3-9 1980 Austin Healy Sprite. Excellent con- trols. Solid side curtains. ViCT 12-1062 3 1823 GUNS: Lawrence Firearms Co. New & uses guns, ammo. Handguns reblued. rifles reduced to .44 magnum. bouncers 44 magnum. Order now. 1346. Ohio corner of 14th & Ohio. 13-13 PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Tub of Chicken 15 pieces, 5 hot rolls $3.50 BIG BUY FOR RENT ROOM FOR 1 MALE STUDENT in double room. Share with graduate student, attend class or visit from Union. Private entrance, quiet. Call VI 3-4092, see at 130 Louisiana. tt Central Air Conditioning Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking Park Plaza South Apartments VI2-3416 or VI2-8253 We will pay local moving expenses Office -- 1912 W. 25th. LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 0731. 3 room furnished apt. Very nice. Private entrance, parking, near new. $75 a month —water pd. Cali T. A. Hemphill, VI 3-3902. 3-7 LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. VI Call 3-6294. Rooms for male students. 1 double, 1 double, VI 3-7642 or Union bldg. 3-9689. VI 3-7642 or VI 3-9689. HOUSE FOR RENT-1810 Alabama $20 1415 after 3 p.m. for appointment. 3-9 TRANSPORTATION Want ride from Lawrence to downtown K.C., M. 8-5 week days. Will share expenses. Call VI 3-9819 between 7:30 and 9 p.m. 3-12 TYPING FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Tell us the name of the book you sell. 1511 W 21 St. CAI V1 3-6440. tkell 1511 W 21 St. CAI V1 3-6440. tkell Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. 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. tt HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng shees, theses & reports accurately. Standard rates. So Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt, apt. 3. Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with text for math and Greek using Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gulane. Call VI 2-1546. 3-30 TYPING; Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers reports, manuscripts. Reasonable. Electric typewriter. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Office Service, 6917.oso services Mission, HE 2-7718. Eves or Sat. 2-2186. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Resumes rates. Barlow, Barlow. 408 W.183, VI 2-1648. Mair. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8757 EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name call VI 3-9136. Wmrs. Lo Gibbach. EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mr. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. ff THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter Reasonable rate. Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. C.I. 3-0483. BUSINESS SERVICES INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re- inveni so damage cannot be seen. Cig- arette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tt GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752. Free delivery. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- 1989; 931>. Mass. Call V 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 fc 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. tt ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. 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 TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. SEE Mrs. Comfort for wedding invitations. Fine quality, socially correct and admirable. $8.50 per 100. Also have napkins, thank you folders, etc. Call VI 34-2406 for appl. Give your pre-schools best of care and nursery school training at Gingerbread House. All day or part time. Call VI 2-3315 or VI 2-0506. 3-9 IMPROVE YOUR AVERAGE this semester (5 p.m.) with Hypnosis. This experienced operator will, without embarrassment, increase your grasp of concepts and skills now! Evening's Fee = $5. Bill at Call i V-02-5 1 25pm after 5 p. 3-8 Tareyton delivers the flavor... DVAL FILTER DOES IT! "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 Tareyton Product of The Nurseman Tobacco Company - Tobacco is our middle name © 4.7.17 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 7. 1962 Page 8 CIA Hopes Flier Is Cleared WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Central Intelligence Agency Director John A. McCone today said he hoped the testimony of Francis Gary Powers "will clear up any cloud" over the U2 pilot. As to the future, McCone told newsmen, Powers will work for CIA for "an indeterminate period." Although Powers wants to begin flying again, McCone said no formal decision had been reached on whether he will rejoin the Air Force. The CIA director gave Congressional committees report yesterday stating that Powers carried out the terms of his contract, his CIA instructions and his "obligations as an American" during and after his ill-fated flight on May 1, 1960. POWERS TOLD his own story to the Senate Armed Services Committee, and, while some lawmakers remained less than enthusiastic, it appeared certain that the U2 pilot has been cleared on any breach of faith or contract. It appeared that the Congressional review of Powers' conduct and the U2 incident has also renewed an old Congressional controversy over the question of Congressional scrutiny of CIA operations. After Powers' testimony, Chairman John C. Stennis, D-Miss., of the Preparedness subcommittee said he was satisfied with the testimony of Powers and McCone. He said he was particularly impressed by the finding of the CIA report that Powers' testimony on technical aspects of his flight and the downing of his plane agreed with the views of technical experts in the CIA interrogation. HOWEVER, REP. Frank J. Becker, R-N.Y., a member of the House Armed Service Committee, called the CIA's report, "nothing but a whitewash." He said Powers broke his contract when he failed to destroy his plane. "A lot of Powers' statements sound fantastic to me. There appears to be a lot of cover-up going on." But Rep. Cornelius O. Gallagher, D-N.J., a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said it appeared that Powers is "absolutely in the clear." The "great loss" in the case, he said, was the advanced photographic equipment aboard the U2, which he said the Russians recovered intact. CHAIRMAN CARL Vinson, D-Ga., of the House Armed Services Committee said he agreed that Powers had lived up to his contract. Fund Drive Hits Snag (Continued from page 1) He continued: "The best bet would be the 'mail your contributions to me' type of thing," he said. "Jo (Snyder) could make a plea and make the campaign on her own. Voluntary donation wouldn't be a conflict with the ASC." DEAN SALTER, Garden City junior and chairman of the ASC Committee on Committees and Legislation, called the possibility of an amendment to the ASC constitution "remote." He agreed that the most likely means for conducting a campaign would be outside the Campus Chest since the resolution "will probably be held in violation of the bill." "I don't know what will happen in the ASC meeting," Miss Snyder said. "A %3 vote is hard to get on anything. I can't see any objection to the idea on basic principles," she added. "The only objection that will come is that this problem doesn't concern KU or that the Emergency Fund shouldn't be used. "This student group (SNVCC) is part of an organization which is trying to do something worthwhile. I believe in what they are trying to do and feel there is enough interest on campus to get a drive started," she said. She added that she hoped that $1000, or about 10 cents per student, could be raised. Mel Saferstein, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student, who moved the resolution be tabled at the last ASC meeting, said last night he does not think the ASC is the proper group through which to conduct fund raising drives. Library Council Has First Meeting The Council's aim is to strive for closer cooperation between the state university libraries. Tentative suggestions are: The Library Council composed of representatives from five Kansas state colleges and universities held its first meeting yesterday on the KU campus. Those attending were Dr. Joe W. Kraus, Manhattan; Paul Friesner, Hays; Benjamin Richards, Emporia, and Floyd Meyer, Pittsburg. They met with Thomas Buckman, director of libraries at KU. 1. A station wagon service between schools for the transportation of borrowed books. 2. Development of a union list of periodical holdings kept by the five libraries for faculty use. 3. Closer ties with Linda Library, a large Kansas City science library. 4. Better connections with the Truman and Eisenhower historical libraries. "IF WE (THE ASC) were to consider all of the very worthwhile organizations which could ask for funds, we would be spending all our time with the drives. "This might be a good idea but what about the others, like the Heart Fund, KU-Y, and Red Cross? Regardless of what the cause is, it's not the ASC's right to back these drives," he said. SNVCC began functioning unofficially in late 1960 when it tried to coordinate the sit-ins in the South. The committee was formally organized last year and has continued to carry out the same type of work. Sen. Harry F. Byrd, D-Va. said he was also pleased with Powers' testimony and said he believed McCone's statement went even further toward vindicating the U2 pilot than the CIA director did in his appearance Monday before a special Senate CIA watchdog committee. Affiliation with the National Student Association (NSA) was considered for SNVCC last summer at NSA's national meeting. However, NSA felt that SNVCC's connection with a national or Northern organization might interfere with its work because of criticism that "outside" pressures were being applied to solve the segregation problem in the South. SNVCC IS AFFILIATED with several national organizations, including the Young Democrats, Students for Democratic Society, Young Men's Christian Association, World University Service, and NSA indirectly. Funds for SNVCC have been raised through contributions on college campuses. The initial operating costs were covered by contributions from a half dozen eastern colleges. The money which has been collected is used primarily to pay for travel costs. The members of the committee travel to contact prospective voters throughout the South and help coordinate the sit-in movements. Sen. Francis Case, R-S.D., said no one can take issue with the CIA finding that Powers carried out his contract. Case said, however, that he wishes Powers had not said at his trial that he was sorry he had flown over Russia. The only other source which has donated money to SNVCC has been the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) which has provided money to cover expenses for lawyer's fees. The money also goes to help in the education of people so they may pass tests required for registration in many counties. Money also is needed to pay bail when members of the committee or persons in whom they are interested are jailed because of the nature of the work. CASE SAID he understands that Powers made that statement on the advice of his defense attorney to improve his own legal situation. He commented, however, that "some of us did not commend him nor did we condemn him." If you want the swingin'est sounds in town. Powers said in his testimony yesterday that he tried to destroy the plane. He said he had planned to get ready to crawl out and then throw the destruct switches, which had a 70-second delay. Rebel Rousers But he said that when he opened the canopy and removed his seat belt, he was blown out onto the front of the plane, hanging by his oxygen hose, and could not get back inside the cockpit to throw the switches. Contact famous recording artists Bill Ott VI 2-1200 WHILE FLYING over Russia, he said, he felt an explosion which seemed to be outside the plane, and "everywhere I looked it was orange." But he couldn't tell what had brought his U2 down. When he reached the ground with his parachute, he told of seeing another parachute in the air. He said it could not have come from his U2, and we could not see what was at the end of it. Rm. 421 Templin YAF Backs Events Bill He said he decided to follow his instructions to "adopt a cooperative attitude" toward the Russians if captured because they knew from the maps, Russian rubles and other things he was carrying what he had been doing. The Young Americans for Freedom, at a brief meeting last night, resolved to support a bill proposing a KU Current Events Committee that is currently before the All Student Council. A copy of the bill, which was introduced at the Feb. 27 ASC meeting was read at the meeting. The bill calls for the establishment of a committee which would bring speakers and films to KU. The committee also would have the power to form a speaker's bureau to aid living groups in obtaining speakers. P-T-P Sets K.C. Trip For Foreign Students The People-to-People committee will sponsor a bus trip to Kansas City for foreign students Friday. The trip will begin at 1 p.m. in front of the Kansas Union and will include a tour of a vending machine manufacturing company. Interested students are asked to sign up at the office of the foreign students adviser or the P-T-P office. CATERING SERVICE Kentucky Fried CHICKEN C Foreign Students: planning to take either the Fredonia or Osakalaoma camp and then return the reserve forms to 228 Strong Hall by noon on Saturday, March 10. 20 WHOLE CHICKENS 20% Off Psychology graduate students will mee- Thursday, March 8, 1962, at 8 p.m., in Kansas Union Topic: Organization of the Graduate Council. Teacher Interviews: 20 CHICKEN DINNERS 15% Off March 8 — Robert Ward, Dir. of Pers. Kansas City, Mo. March 8 & 10 — Maynard Bowen, Dir. of Pers. Albuquerque, N. Mex. Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) and 11:45 to 12 noon. Saturdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. Official Bulletin Delivered ready to eat TODAY BIG BUY El Atenco se reune el microméteria día 7 de marzo a las 4 de la tarde en 11 Fraser. Panel Discussion Set for Tomorrow 23rd & Iowa, VI 3-8225 The panel discussion of the aims and objectives of the School of Business which will be held Thursday is for freshman and sophomore students. Bob Fitzsimmons, St. Joseph, Mo., senior and chairman of the Business School Council, said today. Students in other divisions of the University who are interested in taking business courses are invited. The discussion, which will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union, will center around the topic, "How a Business School Education Can Prepare You for a Career in Business." Charles Gudger, manager of manufacturing engineering at the Ford Motor Co. in Kansas City, Mo., will be present at the discussion, in addition to Dean James R. Surface of the School of Business and six other business faculty members. KU Chemists Get $60,000 in Grants The KU chemistry department has received two grants totaling more than $60,000 for chemical research on free radical reactions. Free radical reactions are chemical species that have one or more unpaired electrons. EARL S. HUYSER, assistant professor of chemistry, received a grant of $32,483 for a three-year study of the mechanisms of free radical reactions. The grant was made by the United States Public Health Service. Two chemistry graduate students, Douglas C. Neckers, Clymer, N. Y., and John Jeffrey, Bartlesville, Okla., will work as project assistants. The organic and inorganic disciplines of the chemistry department received an additional grant from the National Science Foundation of $28,900 for a three-year exploratory study of free radicals. Programa brasileño. El conferenciante sera el Sr. Esmeraldino (Aldo) Oliveira, estudiante graduado de Recife, quien nos hablará en portugueses sobre el tema, "Educacao no Brasil." Se servirán refrescados. Todos invitados. SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m. 306 Kansas Union. Instructor, Larry Bodie. CQ CQ CQ DEWOAH BT Meeting 080130 ZULU (This is Wednesday, March 9 non-hams.) Ec Lab. Bill McCaan will speak on SSB operation BCNU SK. THURSDAY Episcopal Holy Communion & Lunch: 12 noon, Canterbury House. Organic Chemistry Colloquium: 4 p.m. 233 Malott. Charles Barknecht. "Interpretation on Spin-Spin Splitting in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance." Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 p.m., Southern Baptist Activities Building, 1221 Oread. Bible study and devotional. Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. FRIDAY Der Deutschte Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 8. Maerz, um fuern Uhr Dennerstag, den 8. Maerz, um fuern Uhr Knetsch, von Wuerzburg, wird uebert Universitatet Wuerzburg sprechen. Am 16. Maerz haben wir unseres Faschingsfest von 8 bis 12 Uhr im englishen Zimmer Entwürskarten in 306 Fraser zu verkaufen. Entrittspreis 256. International Club: Following film in Hoch, Jawkah Room. Kansas Union. Dance competition followed by refreshments and dancing. 52" 52" wide Burlap $ ^{*} $ *12 colors $ 8 8_{Yard}^{c} $ Vogue Simplicity-McCalls patterns terriill'S LAWRENCE, KANSAS Douglas County State Bank Congratulates the Winners of ROCK CHALK, 1962 Tri-Delts and Kappa Sigs Winning service is yours at Douglas County State Bank whether you want a savings or "Thrifticheck" account. The Bank of Friendly Service Douglas County State Bank Member F.D.I.C. 9th & Ky. Daily hansan LAWRENCE. KANSAS 59th Year. No. 98 Thursday, March 8. 1962 CRC Planning to Pressure Wescoe on Discrimination By Bob Hoyt The Civil Rights Council moved last night to attempt to put pressure on Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe to meet with the CRC on issues involving discrimination. "ID BE WILLING to sit-in by his door until the Chancellor listens to us." At the CRC meeting, Ivory Nelson, Lawrence graduate student said: Nelson suggested a sit-in, reminiscent of the recent sit-ins at the University of Chigo, in an effort to get a hearing from Chancellor Wescoe. Efforts of CRC personnel to meet directly with the Chancellor on discrimination issues have been discouraged. TWO WEEKS AGO, CRC co- chairman Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, was told by Chancellor Wescoe that the Human Rights Committee was the proper committee to take care of human rights problems and that all such problems should be taken to it. The HRC is a committee of the All Student Council, and is set up specifically to deal with human relations problems on the campus. THE SIT-IN IDEA met with opposition. The opposition was based on a feeling that such an action is not yet justified, and that student support should be assured before any such action is taken. After some discussion, a petition protesting the Chancellor's refusal to meet with CRC was drawn up. It is being circulated in an effort to get student support for CRC. The Chancellor Against Clauses, HRC Says The Human Rights Committee of the ASC said last night that Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will oppose discriminatory clauses in Greek national constitutions and wants the local chapters to get rid of them as soon as possible. Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and chairman of the committee, said, however, that the Chancellor's stand does not include any plan for action to be taken by the University against fraternities with such clauses. "THE ONLY POSITIVE action the Chancellor will take towards getting rid of discriminatory clauses in fraternity constitutions is what I guess you would call suasion," Grace added. "He will urge and that is all." Grace outlined four actions which the HRC will take presently concerning the discrimination problem. They were: - The HRC will send out a questionnaire to all Greek houses asking their opinion of the presence of the clauses, whether they were good or bad and whether they can be taken from the constitutions of the chapters. - A GENERAL INVESTIGATION will be made concerning what the clauses really sav and what they mean. - The HRC will hold open hearings at all regularly-scheduled meetings so as to hear any comments from students and faculty members who want to express their opinions. - A final summarization will be presented to the ASC along with a committee recommendation for action. He continued, "Any group or individual should come to the committee meetings and air their views and their criticisms. If they do not, they are not too interested in the question. Rest assured that representatives of the Greek houses had better come forth to present their views or the HRC will take a dim view of just how much they want the clauses left alone." (Continued on page 8) WE. THE UNDERSIGNED members of the University of Kansas community, oppose discriminatory clauses as morally wrong and urge the Chancellor to make himself available to the Civil Rights Council—a recognized student organization—for discussion of discrimination at KU." CRC clashed in principle last night with HRC on how to best approach the problem of discriminatory clauses. After hearing the method by which the problem would be approached by HRC, Charles Menghini, CRC co-chairman, reiterated a statement he made earlier to the HRC. "WHAT THEY (HRC) seem to forget is that this problem concerns every student at the University, not just the members of the Greek houses." In outlining action to be taken to do away with the discriminatory clauses, the HRC proposed that a questionnaire be sent to all Greek houses to determine how they feel about the problem and how it should be handled. AT THE CRC MEETING, which overlapped and followed the HRC meeting, it was suggested that the sampling of student opinion should not be confined to Greek houses. Denis Kennedy, Dun Laighaire, Ireland graduate student said: "The poll should be conducted in such a fashion as to get a University-wide opinion—otherwise it is useless." THE CRC PUT ITS opinion in the form of a resolution which will be presented to HRC. The resolution as it was drafted reads as follows. "Realizing that the student opinion of the entire campus is vitally concerned with the issue of human rights and that the restrictions of the poll taking to any section of the student group by such an information gathering and policy forming committee as the Human Rights Committee, would be prejudicial to the rights and privileges of the great majority, we move therefore that all the organized houses, and also a representative sample of unorganized students be polled, as scientifically as possible, via the questionnaire of the Human Rights Committee, and not simply the fraternities and sororites." Mostly cloudy and colder this afternoon. Party cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Colder south tonight. Warmer tomorrow. Low tonight in the 20s. High Friday in the 30s. Weather ROBERT BLAIR AND MICHAEL LUNNER "CONSUL"—Someone has broken the window, a signal from the underground. Magda Sorel (Sharon Tebbenkamp, Salisbury, Mo., senior) calls Assan, the glass cutter (Phil Harris, Lawrence senior), to replace the glass and bring her news from her husband. China Labeled Massive Power An authority on Red China said last night that the country is a progressive, growing power and to ignore this fact is to turn away from reality. Edgar Snow, the only American correspondent with State Department sanction to travel in Red China, told a Fraser Theater audience that the leaders of Red China will not resort to force to assert their position. SNOW PREDICTED THAT RED CHINA WOULD be admitted to the United Nations in the next two years. Because of the U.S.'s hostile attitude toward Red China's entry, its admittance will not ease the tension between the two countries. Snow said that despite a shortage of food and capital, Red China will develop nuclear weapons by 1963 or 1964. He said they already have the ability to deliver such a weapon anywhere in the world. Snow said this rise to prominence would make Red China a major presidential campaign issue in 1964. The author of ten books on China said Red China is in a transition period and showing signs of great progress. Snow pointed to the major gains the country has made in ten years and predicted this progress would continue and carry it to prominence as a world power. DESPITE OBVIOUS WEAKNESSES SUCH AS RED China's inability to produce adequate food for its 700-million population, Snow said that by 1970 Red China will be the third ranking industrial power in the world. Snow qualified that statement by saying that it would depend on the Red Chinese' ability to maintain the industrial progress that has been achieved during the ten years starting in 1950. Snow said that while the Chinese standard of living is low by U.S. standards, it is such that the majority of the people seem happy and are receiving education and technical training. The grey-haired expert of 25 years' observation showed color (Continued on page 8) Action Called 'No Threat'by Vox, UP By Mike Miller Eight campus political leaders have expressed doubts that the proposed third political party, Action, will become an influential political party at KU. Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and independent vice president of Vox Populi, said "The group is not a threat as a third political party. It operates primarily as a pressure group to promote liberal ideas." JERRY PALMER, EL DORADO senior and chairman of the All Student Council, said, "I don't think it could cause a real threat to the existing parties (Vox Populi and the University Party) because they haven't made much progress in the months they have been working. "Although they are very idealistic," Palmer continued, "They will never have the voting membership of Vex or UP." He described the group as something like a YAF of the left and a reincarnation of the Civil Rights Council. He said that it does not seem like a student political group, but rather a pressure group. In reference to the group's running candidates in this Spring's ASC elections, Ted Childers, Wamego senior and president of Vox, said, "I have my doubts if they will be a threat in this spring's election because they lack organization." HE ADDED THAT how well they do this spring will determine if they will continue on campus. Palmer said that under ASC rules, a group which wants recognition as a political party must submit a petition of their intentions signed by at least 10 per cent of the student body. "It is my opinion that they cannot get this 10 per cent." Palmer said. "Only when I see these signatures will I consider them a political party." James Anderson, Lawrence senior and Greek co-chairman of the University Party, disagreed with this saying "I think there is a good possibility of the group picking up 1.000 signatures, but I don't consider it a threat to the existing parties because it is not well organized." CHILDERS SAID THAT THE group is a pressure group which has simply combined a lot of old ideas in a new way and formed their group. Thomas Hardy, Hoisington junior and independent co-chairman of UP, said the group "certainly has no chance to take any seats from the larger schools in the spring election; but they might pick up a small school on the individual candidate's personal popularity. "Really, victory seems quite unlikely," he continued, "and it seems even more unlikely next fall because so many of the organizers (three of the four main ones) will graduate this spring." Mike Harris, Shawnee Mission junior and executive vice president of Vox, said, "We are always glad to see people interested in politics, but it is regrettable that they cannot work through the existing agencies, rather than calling for these changes which would actually retard progress." He explained that the Council has a set procedure in the Constitution governing a referendum vote. Since HE EXPLAINED THAT the time involved in forming and organizing this group would slow down the work of student government. Max Eberhart. Grent Eend senio, and president of the student body, said that Action's third proposed plank (pertaining to the unconstitutionality of the referendum which was denied the students on the football seating plan) is not right. the bill was brought up as a resolution by the Athletic Seating Committee, there was no legal procedure to get a referendum, he said. "If opposition to the seating plan had followed the proper procedure and would have had the time last spring, they would have possibly been able to have a referendum," Eberhart said. SPEAKING ABOUT ACTION'S desired entry into a national confederation of campus political parties. Eberhart said that he does not think it is a good idea "Every campus has its own desires, wants and problems and what is good for KU might not necessarily be good for different schools," he explained. "There is the possibility of a neglect of campus situations." PALMER DESCRIBED THE planned confederation as "a very bad (Continued on page 8) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 8, 1962 Model U.N. Dissension The trite, but publicity-prone game of spy counter-spy is rapidly reaching prominence at KU through the pubescent efforts of a few members of the Model U.N. It got started a week ago with the Model U.N. Steering Committee charging that a hidden microphone had been planted at its meeting. THE PRESIDENT of the committee said the microphone had been planted by the members of the Russian delegation to get "a little added information on the third and fourth resolutions before they are released to the rest of the delegations." He said these resolutions would not be released for another few weeks, and prior knowledge of their content would give a delegation a great advantage over the others. The highly significant game went on with a stout denial issued by the president of the Soviet bloc to the effect that the Russian delegation did not plant the microphone, but that he would investigate other members of the Soviet bloc to see if they had done it. "We ARE JUST as anxious to find out who did it as anyone else. We'll investigate the group to find out for sure," he said. Yesterday, having evidently made his "investigations," he said the Steering committee's accusation was a "boldface lie." The Steering committee made the charges, he said, because his delegation was the Russian delegation and supposed to be "bad guys." Apparently smarting from the accusations against his group, he then proceeded to accuse the United Kingdom delegation of spying on the Steering committee's meeting and the Latin American delegation of padding its bloc with a country that doesn't exist. THESE CHARGES will probably bring raucous refutations from the groups accused, then more refutations about the refutations, ad infinitum. It is this editor's understanding that the philosophy behind the Model U.N. is to give its participants a better awareness and understanding of world government. It's doubtful these adolescent espionage activities go very far in promoting this awareness. Why not spend a little more time on discussing issues and problems of these countries represented, rather than hurling "Spy! Spy!" charges at each other? The theoretical significance of the Model U.N. deserves a more serious approach. —Karl Koch letters to the editor Praise For CRC Editor: Congratulations to the Civil Rights Council for exposing the problem of fraternity-sorority racial and religious discrimination on the KU campus! It is certainly heartening to know that there are a few with the strength of their convictions who are willing to "stand up and be counted" on this controversial issue. What better place than at the university — among a group of other students — for a person to participate in living with others of THE FRATERNITY-SORORITY system could well profit from the "New Frontier" which such an intermixture of races would create. In this day of world tensions, it is becoming evident to any thinking person that world problems will be (and are being) solved by a knowledge of other races and cultures which helps to break down mere "appearance barriers." It is a well-known fact that the more one gets to really know another person and the reasons for his actions, the less one is likely to be critical of the particular person. a different race or religion! This is the time when lifetime values and attitudes are formed and a time when the student ought to look at issues objectively, seeking the truth in the issue. The truth is that the minority groups of the world are, in the 20th century, seeking to better their standard of living and way of life. They are succeeding, and are contributing much to man's knowledge. WHY MUST THE Greek organizations at KU hold back while the "rest of the world goes by." leaving them behind? It is my opinion that if the fraternities and sororites refuse to integrate within the next few years, they will be taking a fatal step backward, a step that may well prove to be their extinction as a campus living group. James Rhodes Lawrence graduate student * * * Criticism For Mullins Editor: "The President's Decision" to resume atmospheric testing has been praised by Mr. Mullins' editorial of March 6. Mr. Mullins does not realize that this "necessary" and "freedom-protecting" decision will only increase the Arms-Insanity which is racing us toward annihilation. And, once again tightens the grip that military and war economy profiteers have over our society. HOWEVER, these facts do not seem to worry Mr. Mullins. He claims the need for atmospheric testing is based on the necessity to develop anti-missile-missiles and experiment with the neutron bomb. Little does he know! For the problems of developing an effective anti-missile-missile are not connected with nuclear tests, but revolve around complex electronic difficulties. Moreover, the neutron bomb is one of the most hideous of all forms of impersonal slaughter. Its purpose is not to destroy a country's industrial capacity; but, rather, to kill people without damaging their material possessions. Therefore, the two reasons presented can in no way justify the resumption of tests for the purpose of deterrence. The first is being done successfully without a pollution of the atmosphere and the second seems to increase the possibility of mass suicide. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler MUSIC APPRECIATION ASSIGNMENT 3 1951 - 120 - 10am. 1952 - 30am. NOW-I HOPE THAT WILL BE THE LOST WE HEAR ABOUT MR. LAWERENCE WELK AND MR. GUY LOMBARDO." WE CANNOT understand Mr. Mullins' ethical system or lack of one—when he assumes that the resumption of nuclear tests "is not a question of morality" and that the possible effects of such tests on the world's population is entirely subordinate to "necessity." Does he value human life so cheaply as to dismiss it for a "necessity" which is not only unjustified but immoral? Or does Mr. Mullins mean to revitalize the old proverb that "the end justifies the means"? Robert Bosseau Robert Bosseau Pittsburg junior Jeff Bor Newport, R. I., sophomore Chuck Menghini Pittsburg senior Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper trineweekly 1983, daily Jan. 16, 1012. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711. news room Extension 711 news room Extension 320 Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East St. 51. New York 22, N.Y. Mail subscription rates: national. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday afternoons and examination periods. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. class NEWS DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT, BILL MILLER EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT. Bill Mullins Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinche .. Business Manager Sound and Fury Mr. Sugwon Kang's comment on and criticism of my U-2 talk is on a higher and more mature level than other previous comments and addresses itself to the substantive questions raised and positions taken by me. As such it is deserving of comment and criticism in its own right which I hereby offer. While Mr. Kang unfortunately did not attend the Current Events Forum meeting in question, and thus had to base his comments entirely on what he read in the Kansan, I feel that his comments do not in any way vitally distort what I had said. Nevertheless I do not agree with Mr. Kang's major contentions and feel that he has not offered any arguments which detract from the basis for my position. A Reply to Kang MR. KANG'S capsule account of the events between May 5th and May 7th is basically correct and corresponds to the description I gave in my talk. Mr. Kang takes the view that Khrushchev's disclosures forced the President to acknowledge the facts and take personal responsibility. I disagree strongly. By May 7th (prior to the President's assumption of personal responsibility) the U.S. government had already acknowledged the following facts: That a U-2 aircraft, studying weather conditions in the upper atmosphere in the vicinity of the Turkish Soviet border strayed from its course due to oxygen trouble, that the pilot lost consciousness, and that steered by its automatic pilot the plane flew into Soviet airspace. This fabrication acknowledged the existence of the plane, explained the flight and left the U.S. Government and the President free from any personal blame for the incident. Mr. Kang maintains that apart from the "confession of culpability," which the President eventually undertook, he had only two other alternatives; to deny the whole thing, or to deny his personal responsibility while acknowledging the flight. This is an absurd contention. The president had dozens of other choices, the most important of which was simply to remain silent by saying, as many a president has wisely said: "No Comment." The State Department release quoted above was all the information the U.S. Government needed to disclose. There was no necessity to be stamped into further disclosures by Khrushchev's cajoling. Khrushchev had said in his May 7th 1960 statement that "I am prepared to grant that the President had no knowledge of a plane being dispatched to the Soviet Union and failing to return." It is hard to understand why Eisenhower chose to take the blame, when Khrushchev clearly showed that while he would milk the incident for all the propaganda value he could get out of it, he was quite willing to leave Eisenhower and the U.S. Presidency out of it. IN MOST SITUATIONS, honesty is the best policy. In espionage, honesty is the worst possible policy, exposing the guilty party to shame and humiliation. There was no necessity nor any positive propaganda reason to make this disclosure. Mr. Kang says we would have gained little by a denial, and antagonized the Russian people in the bargain. Let me remind Mr. Kang that on May 7th prior to the Eisenhower announcement the Russians were already as antagonized as they were ever likely to be, for Khrushchev had painted the incident in lurid tones in his statements. What, may I ask, did we gain from Eisenhower's confession. The love and respect of the Russian people? Nonsense! We got derision, humiliation, scorn, fresh abuse, and the collapse of the summit. Clearly the best policy would have been to stick with our original disclaim of any intention to violate Soviet air space. I don't know what makes Mr. Kang think that the Soviet denial of Abel's espionage was "effective." No one in my circle of acquaintance believed that denial. I didn't. Did Mr. Kang? I doubt it. What was so effective about the denial then? It does not follow that our denial would have been more ineffective or "disastrous." What disaster would have befallen us? What could the Soviets have done that was more "disastrous" than the world-wide publicity fiasco which followed Eisenhower's confession? This confession is what set the President up for the humiliation which he suffered at Khrushchev's hands in Paris. What a trap to fall into! To be put in a position where Khrushchev could actually demand an apology from the American President. Of course Eisenhower could not be expected to apologize. One might have hoped however that he could have handled this incident in such a way that Khrushchev would never be put in a position where he could ask for an apology. This he could have done if he had merely remained silent, referring all protests to the original position of the U.S. government cited above. THE EVIDENCE points to the fact that Mr. Eisenhower did the worst possible thing, and by his actions brought about the very humiliating circumstances to which this nation was subjected as a result of his confession. International politics and international espionage are not polite parlor-games involving the preservation of friendly father images. Nice guys don't win in this particular league. Eisenhower is everybody's nice guy. I think he is a nice guy too honest and sincere and lovable. But as far as handling international espionage incidents is concerned like could learn a lot from the tricky British (see their handling of the Commander Crabbe spy case) and the wicked Soviets (see their handling of the Abel case). That is where I stand on this matter and I hereby rest my case. If anybody else wants to argue the case, please come to my office in Room 16, Strong Annex B, and I'll be glad to oblige, but let's give the Kansan a rest from Mr. Pringsheim's disputes with his public. $T $T $T $T Klaus H. Pringsheim instructor of political science --- Page 3 Orientation Slated For Local Pageant The Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce will sponsor an orientation tea at 10 a.m., March 17 in the Kansas Union, in preparation for the Miss Lawrence contest April 20. Carolyn Jane Parkinson, Scott City junior and Miss Kansas of 1962, and Mrs. Vie Harrod, the official Miss Lawrence chaperon, will officiate at the tea. They will answer questions for women interested in entering the Miss Lawrence contest. Application blanks will be available at the tea. April 12 in Central Junior High School auditorium. During the preliminary contest the participating women will present a short act. This contest will narrow the group to the finalists. The preliminary Miss Lawrence contest will be held at 8 p.m. THE MISS LAWRENCE finals will be at 8 p.m. April 20 in the Lawrence High School auditorium. The contestants again will present a short act, and will model a long evening gown and a one-piece swim suit. The winner will receive a $100 scholarship from the Pepsi-Cola Co. The two runners-up will receive $50 scholarships from the same company. Miss Lawrence will go to Pratt June 7,8,and 9 to compete in the 1963 Miss Kansas Pageant, an official preliminary of the Miss America Pageant. Entrants in the Miss Lawrence contest must have been a resident of the community for the past six months. This rule is only waived for contestants whose residence is out of the city or state but who are in school in the city where the contest is held. ENTRANTS MUST BE single and never have been married, divorced, or had a marriage annulled. Entrants must be a high school graduate by September, 1962, and must be between 18 and 28 on Sept. 1, 1963. All entrants will display talent in a three minute routine. This talent may be singing, dancing, playing a musical instrument, dramatic reading, art display, dress designing, or giving a three minute talk on the career the entrant wishes to pursue. Entrants may be either amateur or professional. "CONTESTANTS WILL be judged on personality, talent, beauty, and poise." Hal Archer, member of the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce, said. "Personality and poise are the most important." The Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce has sponsored the Miss Lawrence Pageant since 1957. Two Miss Lawrence women have held the title of Miss Kansas. Mary Ann McGrew was Miss Kansas in 1957 and Carolyn Jane Parkinson was Miss Kansas in 1962. International Club Dancers Compete The International Club will hold a dance competition Friday evening in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The dance will start after the film. "Treasure of the Sierra Madre," to be shown in Hoch Auditorium. Couples may choose any one dance for their entry. They should register at the International Club office in the Union or with Patsy Price, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore. Partners who are International Club members are eligible to compete for the first prize of tickets to the International Banquet held later in the year. Refreshments and dancing will follow the contest. If you want the swingin'est sounds in town. Rebel Rousers Air Force, KU Hold Debate famous recording artists Debate teams representing the Air Force Academy and KU demonstrated the English Style of debate last night at the Kansas Union. They discussed whether "Congressional powers of investigation should be substantially restricted." Contact Bill Ott VI 2-1200 The English Style of debate is different from other inter-collegiate debates in that the audiences decides the winner and emphasis is placed on presentation of philosophies without either detailed investigation or the producing of specific evidence to support views. The KU team, the eventual loser, took the affirmative. Members of the team are John Stuckey, Pittsburg sophomore, and Dean Salter, Garden City junior. Members of the Air Force team are John Bushnell, Muskogee, Okla., sophomore, and William O'Rourke, New Orleans, La., senior. After both teams' final summations, an audience vote was taken and the Air Force team won 25 to 18. Rm. 421 Templin The members of the Air Force team have debated three times together and took second place in their own tournament at Colorado Springs. O'Rourke came to KU from the Mardi Gras invitational tournament at Tulane University. Bushnell had just returned from competition at Bowling Green, Ky. Thursday, March 8. 1962 University Daily Kansan Whether the United States should or should not assume an active role in liberating satellite nations will be discussed at the Presidential Forum at 7:30 tonight in Bailey Hall, room 303. Presidential Forum To Hold Discussion A film, depicting the Hungarian uprising of 1956 will be shown first. Ellsworth Medical Bill Up for Hearing WASHINGTON — (UPI) — A bill introduced by Rep. Robert F. Ellsworth, R-Kan., attacks the problem of medical care to the aged by giving tax exempt status to pension plans which include provisions for the health and medical care needs of their beneficiaries. Ellsworth's request for a hearing on his bill yesterday went to Chairman Wilbur Mills, D-Aрк., of the House Ways and Means Committee. Under present law, if a health care plan is added to a tax exempt pension, the entire plan is deprived of tax free status. DAYTON, Ohio — (UPI)— It was only a few hours apart in St. Elizabeth Hospital when a daughter was born to Mrs. Colin Dill and a son to Mrs. Albert Pickle. The two mothers were cool as cucumbers when they posed for a photographer with their babies. Dill. Pickle Come Together Memory is the diary that we all carry about with us. — Oscar Wilde Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 the slightly fabulous limeliters — hoch auditorium, march 17, 8:30 tickets $1.25 G $1.50 now on sale in men's living groups. campus sales start march 13th in information booth and at union. An American film, "The Treasure of Sierra Madre," starring Humphrey Bogart and Walter Huston, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium. The film is a part of the KU film series. Film in Hoch Friday Movie to Be Shown The human relations department is sponsoring several showings of the movie "Twelve Angry Men." Two of these showings will be open to the public at 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. March 13 in Bailey auditorium. NEW NEW Malt and Shake Flavors RASPBERRY - BANANA at the Home of Kentucky Fried Chicken BIG BUY Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION DATE BOWLING WITH A SPECIAL DISCOUNT Again this Friday night a 25% DISCOUNT will be given on all bowling and billiards when dates play together. Come in Friday night — have fun, and take advantage of the date discount. Bowling Designed With the University in Mind WHAT GOOD'S A WINDSHIELD IF YOU CAN'T SEE THROUGH IT? It's our job to clean your windshield when you buy Gas here . . . You'll like our "car-side" manners! CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE △ --- Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 8,1962 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Steve Clark One of the many All America basketball teams has been selected and it is not surprising that there was at least one gross error. The Associated Press announced its 1962 All America squad which was selected by a compiled vote of AP sportswriters. ONE OMISSION hit us hard on the home front. Jerry Gardner, KU's senior guard, did not even receive honorable mention. There were no Big Eight players on the first three teams, but Kansas State's Mike Wroblewski and Colorado's Ken Charlton made the honorable mention list. It is obvious why Wroblewski and Charlton were mentioned, while Gardner's name was omitted. Kansas State and Colorado have outstanding teams while Kansas is an also-ran this year. This situation exists too many times. Basketball players are judged on their teams' records instead of their individual prowess. THE CONTRASTING argument is that if a player is All America caliber he should lead his team to a winning season regardless of who the other four players are. GARDNER is perhaps the nation's top guard. Nevertheless this would not qualify him for All America because players are not chosen by position on the team. Very likely five centers could compose a first team All America. The key to basketball today is depth. The day of an individual carrying a ball club is gone. Gardner does everything well. He is a shooter, a ball-handler, a rebounder and e team leader. If he has a weakness it would have to be in the defensive department. Gardner could make any starting five in the country. Here in the Midwest, it has been said if either Kansas State or Colorado had Gardner they would be undefeated. GARDNER IS respected in the East. St. Johns' coach Joe Lapchick said after his Redmen defeated KU here in December that Gardner was one of the finest guards in the country. Arkansas' coach Glen Rose had unlimited praise for Gardner after his team played here, admitting that the Southwest conference did not have an equal match for Gardner. Publicity plays a big role in an athlete making All America. Very few sports writers and coaches who select the teams have opportunity to see all of the top 25-30 candidates play. Usually a voter has just seen one play, or sometimes none. PUBLICITY handouts play a major role in a voter's decision. He goes by what others tell him and by statistics. Well, Gardner has the statistics. He leads the conference in scoring both league and overall. He is the only Kansas guard to ever score over 1,000 career points. Touche. Physical Therapy Used on Athletes Bv Murrell Bland An athlete walked on crutches out of the physical therapy department in Watkins Memorial Hospital. "How's the knee today, Chuck?" a staff physical therapist asked. "IT'S BETTER. I was able to bend my leg a little more." Chuck said. "That's fine," the therapist said "Keep up the good work and you'll be off the crutches real soon." BETTY J. SANDERS, assistant professor of physical therapy, said in a recent interview that about 30 people are treated in the department every day. "We give first preference to students," Prof. Sanders said. "However, we also treat staff members and Lawrence residents." Prof. Sanders said that all the patients in this department are sent to them by a doctor. "MANY OF OUR patients have been in serious accidents." Prof. Sanders said. "We have several devices to help them get back to normal. "We have complete facilities for treating a patient to make him self-sufficient," she said. "We are fully equipped to treat a severe polio case. "WE HAVE two electric devices that applies deep heat to aching muscles," she said. "We also have two whirlpool tanks to treat injured legs and arms." Sometimes it is necessary for us to use a step-by-step process to help injured patients walk again," she said. "First, we have them walk with the aid of parallel bars. We then have them use crutches. Then we have them use one crutch and then a cane until they can walk naturally." She said the department uses ultra-viiolet lights in treatments. Prof. Sanders said the department has taken several patients that could not walk when they were admitted. Stan (The Man) Musial to Play His Last Season ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — (UPI) — This is it for Stan (The Man) Musial and he has made up his mind to go out in style. The St. Louis Cardinals are reluctant to concede that Musial, who is going on 42, will hang up his spikes after the current season. Musial, however, leaves virtually no doubt about his intention. "HE WONT quit if he has a good year," says Manager Johnny Keane hopefully. "He loves it too much." "This is my last year," he said puffing placidly on the stub of a cigar in the clubhouse. "I'll be 42 after the season is over, I've played over 20 years and I don't want to become the oldest man in the majors." THE CARDINAL STAR, who has gone to puffiness a bit around the face and hips during the past few years, glanced around the dressing room and talked about the day he'll take off his uniform for the last time. "THE BIGGEST kick for me personally would be to wind up with a pennant winner. I don't expect to set any worlds on fire myself although I'm determined to have a good year. More than anything else I'd like to have a productive year, something like the one I had last season." Since breaking in with the Cardinals late in 1941, Stan has broken or tied 35 different baseball records. He has a shot at seven more this season held by such greats as Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, Honus Wagner and Mel Ott. Playing in 123 games last season Musial drove in 70 runs and hit 15 homers. His .288 batting average was way off his lifetime mark of .333 although he still was regarded as one of the National League's most dangerous hitters in the clutch. "Most of the kids make a big mistake shooting for the fences all the time," he said. "You can't tell 'em that, though. The first six or seven years I was up here I went to left field a lot and concentrated on just meeting the ball. I wasn't interested in home runs too much and I guess you can tell by looking at my record. LIKE STILL another great hitter, Joe DiMaggio, Musial believes the chief trouble with young ball players today is their preoccupation with home runs. Few major leaguers have it and even fewer to the degree that Musial did. He did so well in baseball that it helped him become an "outside" success in the banking business, and later in restaurant and bowling ventures. "IWOULDN't say I was an overpowering hitter but my power was good enough. I'd generally be good for around 25 to 30 homers a year. I was rather fortunate being able to hit for average and for power. That isn't a bad combination." "Later on, though, when I felt I had enough experience and enough ability I'd take a shot at the long ball occasionally. I guess I didn't do too badly," he smiled. MUSIAL, A MAN who has won seven batting titles, three most valuable player awards and taken part in 21 all-star games, can't miss winding up in baseball's Hall of Fame. "Nothing compares to this, though," he said. "I think I'll be around in some capacity when I can't play any more." & VI 3-8855 908 Mass. BIRD TV - RADIO Tape Recorders - Quality Parts SOME VETERAN pitchers require a little extra time to "get ready" but not Spahn, whose remarkable arm has enabled him to win 309 games in the Major Leagues. - Guaranteed The Spring exhibition season starts this weekend and guess who'll be one of the first on the firing line for the Milwaukee Braves? "He's truly an amazing athlete," said Tebbettes. "He was throwing hard the first day in camp last Thursday." By Fred Down United Press International Exhibition Baseball To Start Saturday That's right, none other than 40-year-old Warren Spahn, who has rounded into pitching form as fast as any eager young rookie on the "citrus" or "cactus" circuit. The Braves believe in nothing but the best for their Bradenton, Fla. fans, so manager Birdie Tebbetts has named Spahn to start Saturday's game against the Detroit Tigers. - Expert Service Spahn, who achieved his 12th 20-victory season with a 21-13 record in 1961, is scheduled to go three innings and will be followed by Tony Cloninger and Bob Shaw. Carl Willey, Ron Piche and rookie Dennis Ribant will pitch for the Braves on Sunday when they play the Tigers at Lakeland, Fla. THE BRAVES got some other good news when relief ace Don McMahon agreed to terms. The 210-pound right-hander had rejected the Braves' terms three times and is believed to have signed for a token raise. picked by Manager Bill Rigney to start their exhibition opener Saturday against the Houston Colts. Rookie Al Neiger and Johnny James (0-2) also were named to pitch for the Angels. Eli Grba, who pitched the Los Angeles Angels' 1961 opener, was AT ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., World Series hero Elio Chacon checked in and signed with the New York Mets, Chacon, who scored the key run of the Cincinnati Reds' only series victory over the New York Yankees last October, had been delayed in Venezuela because of illness in his family. His signing completed the Mets' roster. High winds and temperatures that dipped into the 40s suspended or curtailed activity throughout Florida Tuesday so there was only a sprinkling of news from the camps. Other camp news: St. Louis Cardinal pitching coach Howie Pollet tabbed Ray Washburn, right-hander up from Charleston of the International League, as the outstanding new pitcher in camp. . . Detroit Tigers' injured include Charley Maxwell, 15 pounds underweight after a bout with the flu, and Al Kaline, nursing a sore left shoulder. Relief pitcher Turk Lown, who was the only Chicago White Sox holdout, reported at Sarasota, Fla., and said he is ready to work three innings... the Philadelphia Phillies were encouraged when they learned regular shortstop Ruben Amaro had received a 60-day extended leave from the Army and will report at Clearwater, Fla., today... right-hander Jack Sandon worked out with the San Francisco Giants for the first time and weighed in at 194 pounds. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers LIMELITER R M RECORDS YOU'LL WANT TO HAVE E S "TONIGHT: IN PERSON" On RCA Victor "THE SLIGHTLY FABULOUS LIMELITERS" LIMELITERS WILL APPEAR ON CAMPUS MARCH 17TH "SING OUT!" On ELECTRA Records "THE LIMELITERS" RS 925 Mass. VI 2-2644 BELL'S 1025 Thursday, March 8, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 8 Rock Chalk Skit Still Under Review The Rock Chalk committee of the KU-Y has yet to establish anything definite concerning the possible lifting of a Rock Chalk Revue skit from an original production, but did confirm one of the many rumors about the situation last night. tee met with two people who said they have seen the The committee met with two original production, "Medium Rare," from which it has been alleged that Kappa Sigma and Delta Delta Delta took their recent Rock Chalk skit. Scholten said the two performances of "Medea" are not "identical" because the presentation here was 15 minutes in length while that currently running at the Happy Medium Cabaret in Chicago is eight minutes long. THE TWO, who asked that their names be withheld, told the committee that they had seen "Medium Rare" and that the similarity between one part of it and "Medea" which was presented here was close. Jim Scholten, Salina senior and Revue producer, said there had not been enough evidence presented to warrant the passing of a judgment on the case yet. "WE HAVE ESTABLISHED nothing definite. The situation is still little more than hearsay," Scholten said. The committee is still trying to obtain a script of the original production and has begun to work on a new possibility. Scholten said there may be a record of "Medium Rare" and that the committee is making an effort to obtain it. He said this is probably the best chance the committee has of getting anything like the original script. The committee yesterday wrote to the Chicago theater for a script but there is doubt whether the holders of the script can send it here. The original script may be unobtainable since people in Chicago hold it under royalties and cannot let it be released. ONE OF THE PERSONS who met Hunsinger Motor Co. German Cars BMW - NSU VIVA "So clever of me to switch to..." Eaton's Eaton's OPEN STOCK LETTER PAPER "I never run out of paper or envelopes because my Eaton writing paper is always available. I buy matching paper or envelopes when I need them . . . they're separately packaged. No embarrassing mis-matched letters for me!" You'll be glad you switched, too, when you choose your personality-perfect paper from our varied Eaton's Open Stock collection. with the committee last night stated the basis of comparison was in seeing Rock Chalk here and "Medium Rare" in Chicago in the last week of August, 1961. The person preferred not to make any comment about the finality of a comparison. The other individual who met with the committee was not available for comment. CARTER'S STATIONERY The KU-Y committee plans to meet again within the next couple of days. 1025 Mass. VI 3-6133 Official Bulletin March 8 & 10 — Maynard Bowen, Dir of Pers. Psychology graduate students will meet Thursday, March 8, 1962, at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room, Kansas Union Topic; on Friday, March 9, 1962, at the Graduate Council. Teacher Interviews: March 8 — Robert Ward, Dir. of Pers Kansas City, Mo. Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) and 11:45 to 12 noon. Saturdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford rd. International Students: Those students were international Night at the University of Kansas City, Missouri, on Saturday night should be at Ternation Hall, University Center, by 9 p.m. Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 p.m., Southern Baptist Activities Building, 1221 Oread. Bible study and devotional. TODAY Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Dem Verständnis der Informatik in 502 Fraser. Herr Professor Georg Knetsch, von Wuerzburg, wieder die Wasser- und Gasverbindungen. Maerz, haben wir unseres Faschingsfest von 8 bis 12 Uhr im englischen Zimmer des Studentenhauses. Es gibt Eintrittskarten in 306 Fraser zu verkaufen. Eintrittspreis 25c. Christian Science Organization: 7:30 om. Danforthe Chapel. Episcopal Holy Communion & Breakfast; 7 a.m., Cantonley House. TOMORROW Lecture: 4 p.m. 238 Mallot. Dr. John Biel, Assoc Director of Research at the Chemical laboratories Chemical and Physiological diseases to the Treatment of Mental Diseases." International Club: Following film in Hoch. Jayhawk Room. Kansas Union. Dance competition followed by refreshments and dancing. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT PLANT A GARDEN! Laugh at HIGH FOOD COSTS! No matter how small your plot...plan now to have a GARDEN! Have fun! Let nature furnish your food...and save! Barteldes SEEDS SOLD BY Barteldes SEEDS SOLD BY Barteldes Seed Co. 804 Mass. ● VI 3-0791 Kansan Classified Ads Get Results Girl Watcher's Guide Presented by Pall Mall Famous Cigarettes Girl watching is not strenuous LESSON 9- Advantages over bird watching The bird watcher usually has to hike out into the woods where there is often a great deal of climbing over rocks and fallen trees and, occasionally, some swimming Although girl watching will inevitably be compared with bird watching, it enjoys many obvious advantages. For one thing, it is less strenuous. across rushing streams. Girl watching sites, however, are generally accessible to the watcher's home, school or place of business and can usually be reached without great effort. Perhaps no other hobby is so easy to enjoy. (Pall Mall is easy to enjoy, too. That's because Pall Mall's natural mildness is so good to your taste!) Regular Filter-Tip PALL MALL Compare all three! 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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 8, 1962 Defense Department Reveals Troop Indoctrination Program WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Defense Department told Congress today it is about to launch an unprecedented program designed to educate servicemen "in the area of democracy versus communism." Carlisle P. Runge, assistant secretary for manpower, outlined the program for the Senate Armed Services Subcommittee studying alleged "muzzling" of military officers. He said the effort will launch a new long-range troop information program. It will start next month. RUNGE TESTIFIED after chairman John C. Stennis opened the new phase of the subcommittee's study with a statement stressing that troop indoctrination should stress the advantages of a democratic way of life. Stennis said he was convinced that "we must give our military people something to fight for and not merely something to fight against." Runge said the history of communism will get major emphasis in the new program. He said a 50-minute film "The Road to the Wall" is being produced to highlight "the diabolical rise of communist totalitarianism from Marx to the wall that encircles communism wherever it mav exist." Runge said the 205 radio stations and 34 television stations of the Armed Services Network will carry programs hitting the same theme. Troop newspapers will get a clipsheet on the subject and commanders will be given material on it in a regular newsletter. Deputy Assistant Secretary Edward L Katzenbach stressed that the Defense Department's Directorate for Armed Forces Information and Education had been given responsibility for certain phases of troop indoctrination. In the past it functioned merely as a service agency for the services. IN ADDITION, he said, the separate services will coordinate their efforts with the Defense Department drive. outspoken advocate of extensive troop education, that the eight-hour period will not constitute the entire education program, however. Katzenbach said the new indo- diction program means that at least two hours each quarter—eight hours a year—will be devoted solely to the struggle of democracy against communism. He told Stennis, an Katzenbach said there was a major need to study the effectiveness of troop education and information materials. No extensive work has been done recently to determine what materials and techniques are really effective in the field, he said. QUESTIONED BY Sen. Leverett Saltonstall, R-Mass., Runge declined to say what he would recommend be done about continued circulation of the "Overseas Weekly," a newspaper in Germany whose attacks on retired Gen. Edwin C. Walker led to the General's removal from his European troop command and the current inquiry. He said an Army report on the paper would go to Gen. Lauris Norstad, European commander, and then to Washington. Saltonstall told Runge he couldn't understand why so much time should be taken to decide whether a publication in controversy should be sold through Army-controlled post offices. Tickets will be available Monday for the Limelighters Concert, to be sponsored by Student Union Activities, March 17 at Hoch Auditorium. Prices are $1 and $1.50. TICKETS WILL be sold according to living groups. Each sorority, fraternity and scholarship hall will have a representative to sell tickets, and the house selling the largest percentage of tickets will receive the best seats. Blocks of reserved seats also will be sold in the dormitories. Some general admission and reserved seat tickets will go on sale Tuesday at the Information Booth and in the Kansas Union. Happy Hour Set For Tomorrow The Limelighters trio has been together for two years and has appeared on the Ed Sullivan show and the Dinah Shore show. The trio has given concerts with Chris Conner, George Shearing, Eartha Kitt and Johnny Mathis. Lovell (Tu) Jarvis, Winfield junior, who assumed chairmanship of the KU P-T-P during the mid-semester break, said the Happy Hour will be designed especially to promote the Brother-Sister aspect of the program. The second Happy Hour of the spring semester, sponsored by People-to-People at KU, will be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow at the Gamma Phi Beta house. This semester, he added, P-T-P is concentrating its efforts toward the improvement of local activities. A NATIONAL headquarters for P-T-P has been established at Kansas City, headed by Rafer Johnson, Olympic decathlon champion. Concert Tickets On Sale Monday During Greek Week, March 19 to 23, P-T-P, working with the Interfraternity Pledge Council (IFPC), will begin a lending library program for foreign students. According to Jarvis, the KU chapter of P-T-P will center its efforts on local problems which had to be neglected before because the KU chapter was acting as a national clearing house for the P-T-P program. The IFPC will furnish the manpower to collect the books, then P-T-P will take over and catalog the books and place them in a library for foreign students. The library will lend books to foreign students who are on a limited budget, thus relieving them of the financial burden of buying books at the beginning of each semester. Since September, the Alumni Association has mailed 29,023 letters to prospective new members. The following shows a breakdown of the results of the letters in gaining members: KU Alumni Association membership is expected to pass the 16,000 mark by June 1, Fred Ellsworth, executive secretary of the Association said recently. Alum Membership Expected to Rise On June 1, 1961, there were 14. 718 members, but 1.867 of these dropped out during the year making the total 12.851. A recent count showed a gain of 1,322 new members making 14,173 current members. Letters and sample alumni magazines to faculty: 270 letters, gain: eight new members. Non-active alumni outside the state: 20,000 letters, gain: 397 new members Class of 1927 special campaign: 487 letters, gain: 69 new members. Letters to parents: 6,119 letters, gain: 121 new members. THE GROUP also has toured with Mort Sahl and has performed in night clubs across the country. Heart of America Debate Competition Today at Union The group is well known for its modern folk songs. Some of the more recent numbers include "Charlie the Midnight Marauder," "Acres of Clams," and "Have Some Madeira, M'Deaar." The Heart of America Debate Conference started at 9 a.m. today with registration in the Kansas Union for 32 teams from all over the country. At 9:30, in the Forum Room, there was a general assembly of all coaches and contestants. Actual debating began at 10. Tonight at 6:30 all participants and coaches will attend a banquet in the Kansas Room. Speakers will be John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, and Lenard Woodcock vice president of the United Auto Workers of America. Four more rounds of debating will begin at 9 a.m. tomorrow. Announcement of results of preliminary rounds and drawing for opponents in the octofinals will be held in the Forum Room at 7 p.m. Octofinals will begin at 9 a.m. Saturday. Finals, followed by presentation of awards, will begin at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room. This Weekend in the CAVE Friday – TORNADOES ... 8-12 Saturday – HI LINERS ... 8-12 For fast, free pizza delivery any place in Lawrence phone VI 3-9640 CAVERNS VI 3-9640 644 Mass. D N THOSE "PILLOW TALK" PLAYMATES ARE AT IT AGAIN! ROCK HUDSON DORIS DAY TONY RANDALL "LOVER COME BACK" in Eastman COLOR on starring EDIE ADAMS JACK OAKIE JACK KRUSCHEN A Universal International Release AN ADULT EMPHATICATED COMEDY! Barrel of Chicken 25 pieces,10 hot rolls $5.00 BIG BUY France Imports Horses The Foreign Agricultural Service said French horse slaughter plants have been unable to fill their requirements from European horses and are interested in importing horses for slaughter. Want to get rid of ol' Dobbin? Send her to France. Granada THEATRE...Telephone W1 3-5264 Woolite cotton yarn 100% WeaverS 1 lb. powder 16 oz. liquid $1.50 LASTIC-LIFE 8 oz. $1.50 NOW! STUMPED? A Gift Bond from the BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Solves that different problem Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana NOW! SHOWS AT 7 AND 9 Granada INLAKE--Telephone VI 3-5701 Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. IT'S JOY... IT'S MAGIC... IT'S PURE Enchantment! WALT, DISNEYS ALL-CARTOON FEATURE Pinocchio TECHNICOLOR® © Walt Disney Productions • Re released by BUENA VISTA Distribution Co., Inc. 7 WONDERFUL SONG HITS Plus-“Mysteries of The Deep” NOW! At 7:00 & 9:00 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VT 3-1065 FRI-SAT-SUN OPEN 6:45 SHOW 7 P.M. 20th Century Fox presents BETTY SHEREE BOB GRABLE • NORTH • CUMMINGS HOW TO BE VERY, VERY POPULAR CINEMASCOPE Sunset MOVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 IT'S JOY... IT'S MAGIC... IT'S PURE Enchantment! WALT, DISNEYS ALL- CARTOON FEATURE Pinocchio TECHNICOLOR® 7 WONDERFUL SONG HITS © Walt Disney Productions • Re-released by BUENA VISTA Distribution Co., Inc. NOW! Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VT 3-1065 OPEN 6:45 SHOW 7 P.M. SAL CREATIVE BANKS HUMANA CLAY MIMEO-CARERE-COE-EDEN-CROSSBY THIST J.14 VINES PRINTER MOORE-BACKUS-LANDUS a Private Rain COLOR BY DE LUCE CINEMASCOPE 20th Century Fox presents BETTY SHEREE BOB GRABLE • NORTH • CUMMINGS HOW TO BE VERY, VERY POPULAR CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUCE Sunset BEAM IN THE ATEE • West on Midwinter Ads SAL CINEMATRE BADM BOUNZA CASTER MINED-CARRIE COF-EDEN-CROSSBY TUFF MOORE-BAKUS LANDIS a Private Affair COLOR BY DE LURE CINEMASCORE 20th Century Fox presents BETTY SHEREE BOB GRABLE • NORTH • CUMMINGS HOW TO BE VERY, VERY POPULAR CINEMA SCOPE Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 One d WHIT Thurs. Mavoi LOST breast wing 7600. Jr. co of Fel ROOM ble re Avail from VI 3- LARC rooms: 3 stue 0731. S orses bin? Thursday, March 8, 1962 University Daily Kansan Service plants their re- horses importing S $1.50 $1.50 e OK bblem Page 7 ard vice o. m. SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS . way 46 One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms cash: All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. LOST FOUND WHITE raincoat at Student Union last day. Please call Drug- ment Manager at V1 2-3329. LOST at Tee Pee Satin. nite: Black double-breasted coat with a mink collar and batwing sleeves. Call Kris Guldner, VI 3-17600. 3-12 WANTED Jr. college ring in Flint Hall the middle of Feb. Identify. See Mrs. Fine, 141 Flint Bicycle for beginners. Clean and in good mechanical condition. Call KU ext. 377, ROOM FOR 1 MALE STUDENT in double room. Share with graduate student in the same room. Transfer from Union. Private entrance, quiet. Call VI 3-4092; see at 1301 Louisiana. FOR RENT LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 0731. Park Plaza South Apartments Central Air Conditioning Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking We will pay local moving expenses Office -- 1912 W. 25th. VI2-3416 or VI2-8253 LARGE FURNISHED apartmen east side, utilities paid. $50. CV VI 3-9244. Rooms for male students 1 double, 1 Room for female students Union bldg. 3-5 S-17-642 or S-19-3688. FOR SALE OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright, typewriter sales, service, rentals. Liberence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 38-5644. SPORTS CARS 1961 MGA 1600 Sports Roadster Blue 1959 MGA 1500 Sports Roadster White 1960 MG Magnette 4-dr. compact Black BRITISH MOTORS GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $3.50. free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553. VI 3-7578. tf Phone: VI 3-8367 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 704 Vt. HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete dog bed. Pet phone 216-504-3825, Modern self-service. Open $ to 6:30 p.m. week days. tl WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised. 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4300 p.m. for free delivery. tt ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Thirteen year medical student must sell his Bauch SCSI medical device immediately. Call Vi 3-8777 or come to 407 Ark. for more information. FURNITURE: sofa bed, basket chairs, coffee table, kitchen cabinet, chest of drawers, large flat-screen movie camera, Bell & Howell, telphoto vi. VI 2-0387, 1941 Mass. 29'x8' mobil home. 1558 Great Lakes. Excellent condition. One bedroom, colored fixtures: Call collect, Muncie, Kan., AT 9-6278. Mcri. Nipper. 3-9 1960 Austin Healy Sprite. Excellent con- trol of the system, especially for side cur- lders. Call VI 2008-1-32. GUNS: Lawrence Firearms Co. New & used guns, ammo. Handguns rebuled. rifles, shotgun. Fuselage. 357 — 44 magnum. Order now. 13h0, Ohio, corner of 14th and 18th. 3-13 BUSINESS SERVICES INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re- woven so damage cannot be seen. Cig- arette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752. Free delivery. DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 939 $^{1}$ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tf 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 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. tt 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. tt TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. tf Give your pre-schools best of care and nursery school training at Gingerbread House. All day or part time. Call VI 2-3315 or VI 2-0503. 3-9 IMPROVE YOUR AVERAGE this semester (5 p.m.) with Hypnosis. This experienced operator will, without embarrassment increase your grasp of More appointments now! Evening's fee — $5. Call Bill at VI 2-0524 after 5 p.m. 3-8 The New Want ride from Lawrence to downtown K.C., Mo. 8-5 week days. Will share expenses. Call VI 3-9819 between 7:30 and 9 p.m. 3-17 Located in the NW Corner of Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa CRESTAURANT Featuring the Complete Self Service TRANSPORTATION SALAD BAR Fraternity Jewelry MISCELLANEOUS Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bag bags. Picnic, party supplies. ice paper, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI. 0350. TYPING FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter writes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers and reports. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-5868. Having a Party? HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher of speech and language & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Ms. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. tt Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with mull and Greek text in math and Greek Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Greek Call VI 2-1546. 3-30 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher. VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Paper number: 1511 W. 21 St. Ctl VI 3-6440. tpw sell, 1511 W. 21 St. Ctl VI 3-6440. tpw TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tt FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution of a test, supervision, SPF, WAIS, Mission, HE 2-7718. Eves or Sat., RA 2-2186. tf THESEES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. pewwriter Reasonable to Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. Call III 0-3483. GUY'S GUY'S POTATO CHIPS GUY'S POTATO CHIPS Be Wise — Buy Guy's BOWLING is FUN! 9th & Iowa Hillcrest Bowl Try It This Weekend at 32 AUTOMATIC LANES 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. Reasonablenames. Barlow, Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI-21648. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2681 any time. Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do by typing home — call VI 3-1916. Mrs. Lol Gehlbach. Meaningful Gifts for Special People KEELER'S BOOK STORE carries these delightful books for your friendship and special occasion gifts LITTLE BOOKS BY JOAN WALSH ANGLUND — Love is A Special Way of Feeling A Friend is Someone Who Likes You Look Out the Window The Prophet Sand and Foam The Garden of the Prophet Spirits Rebellious INSPIRATIONAL BOOKS BY KAHIL GIBRAN — Come in and take time to look over our fine book and greeting card selections. KEELER'S 939 Mass. VI 3-0290 SIC FLICS SIX FLUES "I say, is there a tobacco field somewhere near here?" 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD - THEY SATISFY CIGARETTES Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 8. 1962 Snow: China Press Not American Type Edgar Snow, foreign correspondent and writer on Communist China, said in a press conference with journalism students and faculty members yesterday afternoon that there is freedom of the press in Communist China but not the type that is recognized in America. "It is different in theory," he said in referring to freedom of the press. He said the China press is completely controlled by the Communists and that all content in the papers is thoroughly checked before publication. "By the Communists way of thinking there is freedom of the press. In 1957 there was an experiment known as the 'Hundred Flower.' This experiment encouraged people to write letters and essays to the press and to confess what they had on their minds." Mr. Snow said the press received many critical remarks and the experiment was dropped. Mr. Snow said that illiteracy has always been a crucial problem in China. In past years it has been worse than it is today. There are approximately 700 million people living in China today. Of this there are 250 million or approximately 35 per cent of the people who are literate. ASKED IF THERE is any likelihood of exchange of correspondents between the United States and China, Mr. Snow said: "No, the Chinese are not in favor of this unless the United States settles the basic issues." Mr. Snow explained that he was admitted to China not as a correspondent, but as a writer. Mr. Snow said that he went to China under approval of the State Department. "Nobody can go to China without approval from the State Department," he explained. THE COMMUNIST China expert said that it is time for the American Press to wake up and print a few contradictory facts about the Cold War and the China embargo laws. "For example," Mr. Snow said, "China is about to get membership in the United Nations and the American Press is going to oppose this up until the time it gets in." Mr. Snow said that some of the Chinese publications are the main source of information used by Americans to find out about the Chinese. He said there are 100 men in China whose job is to translate these publications. Asked how much penetration radio broadcasts have in Communist China and Russia, he said; JOHN ROBERTS "I SAW MANY short-wave radios in hotels throughout China, but many of the broadcasts are in Chinese." Edgar Snow Massive Power— (Continued from page 1) slides of modern steel mills, factories, bridges, dams, and living complexes taken during his four-month tour in 1960. IN REPLY TO AN AUDIENCE QUESTION AS TO whether or not he had seen only what the Communists had wanted him to see, he replied: "No. Certainly I didn't. I visited communes in areas which I was familiar with and interviewed persons of my own choices. Almost without exception my itinerary was approved as I submitted it." He contrasted present-day China with the China he was familiar with during his residence there in the 1930s. Snow said that during his 1960 tour he covered 10,000 miles in nine of the 14 provinces and saw no one starving. In the '30s he said it was common to see persons dying or already dead in the streets. SNOW LISTED THE MAJOR ACHIEVEMENTS that have been accomplished since the Communists took power in 1949. - They have cleaned up the country and the people, preventing epidemics. - Compulsory education has raised the level of literacy to 35 per cent of the population vs. 10 per cent in the past. - A good foundation for basic industry has been laid. In 1960 Red China produced more machine tools than Great Britain. - Vast electrical power plants have been built. - The amount of land under irrigation has been doubled. SNOW DISMISSED AS INACCURATE accounts that natural disasters have created starvation conditions. Hardships have resulted from flood and drought, he said, but not starvation. Snow said the Communists have molded a unified and effective political unit in Red China. He said that there are 17 million members in the Communist Party and 25 million youth party members over the age of 12. A still greater number under the age of 12 belong to other party organizations. During the course of his two-hour talk, the former Kansas Citian said that Red China's youth were particularly happy. He said the title of the favorite song literally translates "Socialism is Good." He said that by 1990, Red China would have a population of one billion. While they will continue to have great difficulty in feeding their population, the country will rise as a major power once again, he said. Action 'No Threat' (Continued from page 1) radically affect the present situation." Childers said. Roger Wilson, Wichita junior and Greek vice president of Vox, said "Getting people to sign their names to a petition is one thing, but getting them to take an active part is another." thing if it gets off the ground. It will be sort of a national NSA party." "I have serious doubts that it will Speaking on the "individual choice" which the group will use for membership rather than the block voting system now being used by the existing political parties, Grace said that it will be the thing which will kill the party. He described it as impractical. SUA Jazz Session Set CHILDERS said that individual membership is not exclusive to the proposed party because the block system is used only for scholarship halls, fraternities, and sororites with the members of large dormitories and unorganized students having individual choice in their affiliation. Harris said "I imagine that it will have little if any effect on the present block system. There are not enough students interested in campus politics to get enough membership." SUA will sponsor a jazz session March 11 at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. The session will feature jazz musicians from the campus. Hardy said, "I don't think it is practical, but ideally much can be said about it. It won't work, however. It might have a chance if there were only one block voting political party on campus, but it will certainly not work with two active parties." Typewriters Tub of Chicken 15 pieces,5 hot rolls $3.50 BIG BUY Olympia - Olivetti Smith-Corona - Royal sales - service - rentals Chancellor Against Brian O'Heron, Lawrence senior, said, "Why not let the Greeks do this too? Why does there have to be separate questionnaires to the Greeks? If they are that interested they can come and give their grips. I don't think action based on these questionnaires will be worth anything. You already know what the result is going to be." Meeks continued, "It will be easier to persuade the Chancellor to take a stand if we can prove by these questionnaires that the fraternities are really discriminating." Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 Free Pick-up & Delivery Grace nodded in agreement. CORDELL MEEKS, Kansas City sophomore and the only Negro member of the HRC, said. "You think it's wrong and I think it's wrong and the rest of us in this room probably think it's wrong. But if we went on one opinion we wouldn't be democratic." GRACE SAID, "This is true. But anyone outside the Greek houses will be heard. They can appear and bring their comments to the meetings. If they are interested enough in the problem, really interested, they will come and say so." (Continued from page 1) An unidentified Negro said, "You are talking around the real situation. You are trying to decide if this thing, discrimination, is wrong by asking the Greek houses what they think about it. This has already been decided. We don't even have to talk about it; discrimination is morally wrong. We know it's wrong." 'OHERON SAID, "Suppose the Greeks do not want the discriminatory clauses bothered, as will more likely than not happen? Then what?" Grace answered, "We are only an investigative body. If a large group of Greeks are diametrically opposed to changing the discrimination clauses and on a trickle show any interest on the questionnaires of changing them, then this will be a factor in deciding what to do." Charles Menghini, Pittsburgh senior and co-chairman of the Civil Rights Council was present for the first half of the meeting. He said more than one segment of the student population should be polled. "These are issues," he said, "that concern all students and all the students should be allowed to give their opinions on the subject, not just the Greeks." THE QUESTIONNAIRE WILL ask the members of the houses about race and religious feelings and these questionnaires will be a factor in what action the HRC decides to propose, Grace said. Campus Musicians From this point in the early minutes of the meeting, 14 persons attending the meeting debated various aspects of the questionnaire, charging that it may constitute a way in which the HRC could mix the problem up in procedure and "lose it." Sunday, March 11 7:00 p.m. Featuring The Best SUA Jazz Blow Big 8 Room in the Kansas Student Union COFFEE WILL BE SERVED HILLCREST - MALLS SPECIAL!! Reg. $15 SLEEPING BEAUTY PERMANENT Complete with: • HAIRCUT • SHAMPOO • PERM • SET REGULAR $15.00 Ronnie's FASHION BEAUTY SALONS 'Midwest's Top Hair Stylists' - SET TWO FINE SALONS IN LAWRENCE $795 Complete You'll love the New RONNIE'S Golden Mist HAIR SPRAY Reg. $2.50 $1.49 Plus Giant Size Tax Drop In! Pumila lein strom - Appointment not usually needed - Open late week nites! HILLCREST VI 2-1978 — MALLS VI 2-1144 Daily Hansan LAWRENCE. KANSAS 59th Year, No. 99 Friday, March 9, 1962 ALEXANDRIA KALAMOY OFFICERS EXAMINE CONSTITUTION—Brian O'Heron, Torrington, Conn., senior and temporary president of Action, explains part of the party's constitution to Harold Johnson, Leavenworth senior and temporary vice president of the party. New Party Elects Temporary Staff Action. KU's proposed third political party, elected temporary officers and drafted a tentative constitution last night. The temporary officers are president, Brian O'Heron, Lawrence senior; vice president, Harold Johnson, Ft. Leavenworth senior; treasurer, Robert Bosseau, Pittsburg junior; press secretary, Arthur Miller, Pittsburg junior. About 15 students attended the closed meeting. This is said to be the last closed meeting. Miller explained that these officers are subject to approval by the party's general assembly when it is organized. Miller said: Miller explained that the general assembly "can be called to elect "This party has been formed because present channels of student action are impassable. The present parties have lost contact with the sentiments of the University population. "Controversial issues should be voiced within the All Student Council—regardless of pressure from the administration, living groups, political parties, or other organizations." The general assembly will be organized when the group becomes an official political party. In order to do this, they must submit a petition to the All Student Council signed by 10 per cent of the student body (1,000 students). Miller said the constitution will also be subject to ratification and amendment by the general assembly. "This is only the base of our constitution," Miller said. He explained that representation in the parliament is from every voting district, rather than just the living districts. The temporary constitution calls for a general assembly to be made up of all members of the party: a parliament made up of one member each from the various ASC voting districts, 10 members elected at large by the general assembly, and the officers of the party, and a cabinet made up of the officers. The general assembly is to be called twice a year, once in September and once in February, and at other times when the parliament judges a meeting necessary. "If the general assembly members feel that they are not getting the representation which they deserve from a parliament member, they may recall him by a 30 per cent vote." officers and vote on certain other consequential issues. In discussing the individual membership idea as opposed to the block system now being used by Vox Populi and the University Party, Miller said that the party would have the individual membership, subject to change by the general assembly. Indications were for some snow in the Northwest and rain over the eastern half of Kansas tomorrow. Cloudy skies were expected to prevail for the next two days. TOPEKA — (UPI) — An Arctic front bearing down across Montana this morning promised to bring a return of winter to Kansas. Arctic Front Expected Here Model United Nations Blocs Hold Elections Highs today were expected to range from 40s East to 50s West. Lows tonight generally in the lower 30s. The bloc delegations of the Model United Nations met last night in the Kansas Union to elect delegation officers. The Steering Committee also met and announced that it has invited the Pakistani ambassador to the UN, Sir Mohammed Zaferulla Khan, as the guest speaker for the opening session. The UN ambassador is a former justice of the International Court at The Hague, a former justice of the Pakistani Supreme Court and is a former foreign minister of Pakistan. THE STEERING Committee held bloc reports and then discussed proposals for a third resolution. The Soviet, African, Arab and five members of the Latin American bloc signed a petition asking the University Daily Kansan for better press coverage. The Latin American and the Western blocs closed their meetings to the press last night. The petition stated that the Kansan is giving the Model UN a "poor image" by reporting espionage activities instead of the many hours of physical and mental work that are involved. THE PETITION ASKED for better coverage from the Kansan so that Dorms to Provide Three-Man Rooms Three KU men's residence halls will provide a total of 150 rooms for triple occupancy next semester, Donald K. Alderson, dead of men, said yesterday. The three halls—Templin, J. R. Pearson and Carnrith-O'Leary—presently provide rooms only for double occupancy. In a brief survey this morning of students living in dormitories, seven out of seven men interviewed did not think the new system would be satisfactory. DEAN ALDERSON SAID that Templin and J. R. Pearson will have 60 rooms equipped for three men next semester. Carruth-O'Leary will have 30 rooms available for triple occupancy. The three-man rooms will be scattered through the Halls, he said. There will be five new residents to each wing of each dormitory. "If the administration makes certain modifications it will be all right. If three fellows that are Bill Jennings, Memphis, Tenn. senior, said, "I can see they need the room, but I think the administration should charge less for those living in the triple rooms." Bob Perkins, Joplin, Mo., senior said: Jim Jupe, Phillipsburg graduate student, said, "I'm not too concerned, but I think it is rather unfair. But then, it is probably necessary." "I do not think it will hurt studying, but I am against three men living in a room." Irving Karten, Forest Hills, N.Y graduate student added: friends live in a room it will be all right, but if they are not it might present a problem." Jerry Ray Clawson, Linneus, Mo. junior, said, "It's hard enough to study with two in a room, let alone three." Austin Wallack, Larned freshman: "The rooms are not big enough for three people. It would make study conditions worse." Bill Rosenkranz, Washington sophomore, said, "People have enough trouble studying with two in a room, let alone three. I'm moving out, anyway." Dean Alderson said the decision to provide the three-man rooms was not an "overnight decision" by KU housing officials. "It is inevitable that our resi der halls house more men," he said. Residence halls are just like classrooms or the library; there are simply too many students for the amount of space." Dean Alderson said that in the early 1940's. University housing projects at times were housing 20 or 30 more men than they normally had room for. "This presented crowded situations, but the men always seemed to get along," he said. HE SAID THAT Hashinger Hall, KU's newest dormitory, will house women next fall. The next dormitory—for which bids will be taken Mar. 15—will house men, he said, but that dormitory may not be completed until 1963 or 1964. Dean Alderson said the same price for room and board will be charged men in rooms of triple occupancy as will be charged those (Continued on page 8) KU students will be better informed and better able to participate in the project. Cuba Follows Soviets In Party Organization Roy D. Laird, assistant professor of political science, spoke to the Soviet delegation on its responsibilities in the Model UN to play the role of Russians effectively. HAVANA — (UPI)—Cuba moved toward Soviet-style one-party rule today with the establishment of a 25-man directorate for the so-called Integrated Revolutionary Organizations. The IRO eventually will become the United Party of the Cuban Socialist Revolution. As with Russia's Communist Party, membership will be limited to "the best Cuban men and women." The Soviet delegation discussed charges of espionage that had previously been hurled at them. The delegation censured the Daily Kansasan for disregarding the academic intentions of the Model UN in its coverage and sensationalizing upon the acts of espionage. five survivors of Castro's original 82-man invasion of Cuba from Mexico in 1956. Other old guard Reds in the party leadership included Severo Aguirre, Flavio Bravo and Joaquin Ordoqui. The young blood in the Cuban Communist world was represented by Ernesto (Che) Guevara, Maj. Raul Captro, Maj. Juan Almeida and others. It included the Cuban Communist Party's "Big Five," Blas Roca, Carlos Rafael Rodriguez, Anibal Escalante, Lazaro Pena and Juan Marinello. All of them have been Communist Party members for 30 years or more. Premier Fidel Castro was named as titular head of the IRO but 10 of its 25 members were Cuban Communist Party veterans. The Directorate included one woman and DELEGATION CHAIRMAN Pat Piggot, Kansas City, Mo., senior, assured members of his bloc that the Russian delegation had acted and will continue to act in "good faith." Felix Moos, instructor in anthropology, addressed members of the Asian delegation on the rise of Asian countries in world prominence. He told bloc members that Asia today is ruled by young soldiers whom he described as a "forward looking group." The bloc chose Richard Harper, Prairie Village senior, as chairman. Gregory Swartz, Overland Park freshman and Walter Chappell, Wichita junior, were selected as co-secretaries. THE BLOC VOTED against establishing a spy system in order to maintain. eir status as primarily friendly, neutral countries. The Arab bloc decided to close their meetings to all but the press and steering committee members. Members of the Western bloc elected Greg Turner, Seattle, Wash., sonhomore. as chairman. The Arab bloc voted to send a letter to the steering committee protesting the omission of Syria's name from the roster. The letter written by Jeffrey Ward, Prairie Village sophomore and chairman of the Syrian delegation, intimated that a possible cause for omission was the "colonialist action of certain steering committee members." Stan Walton, Kansas City junior and chairman of the Lybian delegation, was elected chairman of the Arab bloc. Other officers include: Ian Cumming, Syracuse, N.Y., sub-chairman; Charles Cruthird, Caldwell sophomore, sub-chairman; and Karen Jo Emel, Colby sophomore, secretary. THE BLOC DECIDED to bar all non-members including the Kansan from attending its meetings. Mike Thomas, Kansas City senior, was elected chairman of a five member non-aligned European bloc of nations. Other officers chosen were Charles Schooler, Leawood freshman, cochairman, and Mary Curtis, Leoti freshman, secretary. The delegations discussed methods of studying the voting history of their respective nations on United Nations' issues and resolutions. Alan Reed, Steering Committee chairman, conducted a brief question-answer session at the Latin American bloc meeting. Jose de las Fuentes, Laredo, Tex. senior, was elected chairman. Cochairmans are Sarah Walker, Symrna Beach, Fla., senior, and John Ryland, Caldwell senior. TPE AFRICAN BLOC elected three co-chairmen and discussed stands that the bloc would take on various issues. The co-chairman are Dave Kirkman, Tulsa, Okla., junior, Paul Shumard, Dodge City sonhomore, and Mike McDowell, Ellinwood freshman. The bloc signed a petition asking for better Kansan coverage. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 9. 1962 The HRC Controversy LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler A controversy has developed between the Human Rights Committee (HRC) of the All Student Council and members of the Civil Rights Council (CRC) over how an investigation of discriminatory Greek clauses can best be conducted. The HRC intends to send questionnaires to all Greek houses and to hold open meetings where students and faculty members can express their opinions on the subject. It has also mentioned a general investigation to learn what the clauses really say and what they mean. THE CRC DREW up a resolution to present to the HRC saying that a general poll of student opinion should be taken, not just a poll of the Greek houses. There were also complaints raised at the HRC meeting by people attending that the poll was just a move to lose the discrimination issue in the mire of procedure. All these charges and counter-charges tend to confuse the situation. Much of it is simply speculation about what can be or should be done. Now it is possible that the HRC will not take any positive action or recommend any constructive program to the ASC. But this is a judgment that will have to wait until they have had a chance to take action. At present they have not had enough time to carry out any program. IT IS NECESSARY to remember that the discrimination problem is an extremely difficult one, however, and a simple answer to it does not exist. But many people have given it serious thought and the HRC will undoubtedly be able to profit from their observations. This would include various members of the CRC. The point that needs emphasis at present is that the HRC is beginning to grope toward a solution to the problem of discriminatory clauses in the constitutions of Greek houses. Their efforts may result in positive action or the whole thing may turn into a farce. This is something the next month or two will clarify. —William H. Mullins letters to the editor ED. Comments on Discrimination Editor: It is difficult to determine whether a few of the letters to the Kansas and a few of the comments reported on the subject of segregation and discrimination reflect a measure of intellectual dishonesty, confusion, or simply a rather narrow concept of what democracy really means. Our history records that some Americans have interpreted democracy to mean the freedom to "do one's neighbor in" or to imply a favored position for some. And there are men on the national scene who reap headlines as protectors of Americanism, who complain loudly about restrictions of freedom of speech, etc., but who interpret democracy also to mean segregation and discrimination, under the guise of "states rights." THOSE WHO sense the true meaning of the words: freedom, liberty, and justice know that freedom is not advanced by afront to human dignity and that justice and discrimination are incompatible. And so they know that it is a fact of these times that he who espouses the cause of segregation or discrimination rides a dead horse. Unfortunately there are those who find it necessary in discussing these matters to inject references to coercion in personal or even intimate relationships. Now, really! Who ever heard of compulsory companionship? I BELIEVE that many persons in this University, if not the great majority, have a clear and accurate view of the primary issue involved. It is two-fold and it bears restatement: Robert N. Harvey (1) Is segregation (or discrimination) morally wrong? (2) Is a policy or practice of discrimination prejudicial to the ideals of a democracy and a university? Lawrence graduate student * * As a past participant and an interested observer in the model United Nations, I would like to comment on the recent attempt of the Soviet delegation to gain information on the third and fourth resolutions to be debated this year. The Model UN Maneuvers Editor: I think the attempt showed that the Soviet blooc is a well organized group and that they are attempting to put real spirit into the "international" happenings. Needless to say, the Russians have succeeded in the past where others have failed in regard to excitement and planning, and it appears that they will be victorious again this year. THE UNITED STATES bloc should try to overcome their apparent disorganization and give a half-hearted attempt to stay abreast of the Soviet bloc. Unfortunately, it looks like the West has a lot of running to do just to reach the point where the Soviets started. Western delegations arise. You have nothing to lose but your apathy, complacency, laziness, and lack of original thought. Gene Dittenber Lawrence senior * * * A Note on Pringsheim Editor: One of my favorite antidotes to boredom these days is reading the letters to the Daily Kansan. Give me a few more exchanges in the debate on the U-2 affair, which was comic enough all by itself, and I will have mirth enough to cure me forever. I'm still not certain which aspect of the debate pleased me most; whether it was the sight of all those little hairs, split by a scapel of pretentiousness, wafting through the intellectual twilight, or the celebration, in a litany of academic objectivity marvelous to behold, of the anthumanistic dogma that in the public ignorance lies the public strength, or the enormously humorous notion that an individual moral judgment of a collectivized political act now has any meaning at all. I am saddened by the passing of the debate, but at the same time I am strangely and suddenly exhilarated. Clifford S. Griffin assistant professor of history Fraser Hall Considered Editor; FRASER REPRESENTS an attitude of that time, not building for their particular period but building for two or more generations ahead, in a state that was expanding at a higher rate than today. When Fraser Hall was built it was estimated that it would provide for the needs of the University for fifty years. It didn't quite make that estimate, but it did satisfy the University need for thirty years. I am afraid that Kansans have lost some of their bold confidence and vision. I think we should keep Fraser Hall as a reminder that what once had At the last ASC meeting the topic was raised that the spirit of Fraser Hall be retained. I feel that Fraser Hall represents the spirit of Kansas and the University. For a number of years it was "The University." It is a building boldly conceived and an outstanding example of early Kansas architecture. At the time Fraser Hall was built it was the largest college building in the United States. Much of the bold, confident, vision of the Kansans, who built Fraser hall in a partly settled state, is reflected in the architecture of Fraser. It is questionable if either the character and dignity or the architectural feeling of Fraser Hall has been equally reflected by any of the other buildings on the campus. Unless the present trend of KU architecture is radically changed the New Fraser will be a rather anemic mutation of the Old Fraser. In the past ten years over twenty-five per cent of all historical buildings and outstanding examples of American architecture have been destroyed. Is there no place in the United States and Kansas for the architectural history and University tradition? It would seem that a college campus would be an excellent place to preserve examples in the history of architecture. been considered by many Easterners to be a fools dream was solid planning that has been surpassed many fold. IN THE ASC meeting last Tuesday the council was asked to send a petition to the officials asking to have some of the spirit of Fraser Hall retained in the proposed new structure and to have the new building named Fraser Hall. The statement was made, "If the students are interested in retaining the present design they can influence the design in this manner. I would like to see some resemblance to the present building in the new Fraser." I can see three ways to maintain the tradition of Fraser Hall. (1) Keep the building fundamentally as it now stands. (2) Renovate the building by rebuilding the interior and maintaining the exterior with the final results somewhere between a fairly close reproduction of the interior such as was done with the White House and a completely replanned interior such as was done with Bailey Hall. (3) In the tradition that Fraser was built, construct a building of new design, using the latest in materials and technology and the best in architectural design. (Maybe an alumnus would like to donate the cost of the services of an internationally known architect.) If Fraser must die, let her die as a dignified example of early Kansas architecture and not as a pathetic example of a 1965 building half copied from early Kansas architecture. P. S. Fraser doesn't have the most common type of foundation but it does have a foundation. It sets on a nine foot thick natural stone shelf. Sincerely, Ethan E. Pursell Paola junior UNIVERSITY Dailu Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded in 1869, became biweekly 1304, monthly 1260. _Telephone_VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Extension 376, business office Association Associated College Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East St. St. New York 22, N.Y. National Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence. Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays for examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. SNIFF PO SMART SMART BBLER R-11 PO BOX 4 ELMARIE KIRYA "FETCH ANOTHER GUINEA PIG AGATHA—YOUR FATHER JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER 'ANONYMOUS' CHRISTMAS CAKE." Letters to the Editor An Unusual Defense Editor Never did I think I would publicly defend the YAF, an organization with which I find myself in continual disagreement. Nevertheless, I believe in giving the Devil his due (so to speak), and it is this belief in fair play that makes me take exception to the remarks of Mr. Alec Maynard Hamilton (whose name, he tells us, was given him at birth). MR. HAMILTON, when we criticize someone or some organization, it is always well to have some ideas of what we are talking about, and to limit ourselves to the facts. In your two letters to the Kansan, both of which were largely personal attacks on Mr. Marick Payton, you have clearly shown all that you are unfamiliar with these two quite basic principles. You have allowed yourself to wander freely in the realm of unsubstantiated conjecture (did you really think that Mr. Payton thought you are a Communist?), and you have been guilty of a glaring lack of information (briefly, there is no formal connection between Robert Welch of the John Birch Society and the YAF). As a liberal, I oppose many of the ideas of the YAF, and I shall continue to do so. But you, Mr. Hamilton, are not helping the cause of liberalism, if anything you are damaging it by your activities, and I for one would like to see you stop. FRANKLY. Mr. Hamilton, there is much about the YAF that I believe deserves criticism, but blind, empty headed name calling is not really worthwhile criticism, it is just blind, empty headed name calling, and serves no worthwhile purpose. Michael W. Dunlop St. Louis, Mo., senior *** Comments on Discrimination Editor: I would like to call this to the attention of Mr. Denis Kennedy and cohorts. Please excuse the melodrama of this paragraph, which I have included only to keep the right-wingers from trying to recruit me. Many KU students agree with CRC that minority group discrimination is wrong. I have inspected my own attitudes and changed ones which are discriminatory in some very real ways. I shall not here you with the blowing of my horn. THE PURPOSE OF this writing is to point out that, in my opinion, Mr. Kennedy and friends are meddling with and trying to abolish one of the privileges which seems to be guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution, and seems to be basic to the very definition of the noun "organization." I am confident that the privilege to which Mr. Kennedy and friends seem to object so violently is fundamental to the enjoyment of living in the United States (I am patriotic, but not at all in the sense of the American Legion). As I see it, Mr. Kennedy and friends are attempting to eliminate the right of an organization to specify precisely what persons may be members. It is well-known that one important step in the evolution of civilization was the development of the concept of written laws. If I remember correctly, the English have the exceptional unwritten constitution which works. However (someone correct me here if necessary) the Irish have a written constitution which came about for several reasons—one of which was the objection to the arbitrariness of rule under the English "constitution." Apparently, the Irish have something to say for written regulations. But I digress. I claim, for better or worse, that it is still the right of an organization to specify its membership on paper. I do not understand Mr. Kennedy's reasoning against the morality of this practice. Many people would like to have him explain his logic. WITHOUT specifications on membership, organizations can become no more than petty cliques. I must confess here that there are people in many organizations who make their organizations appear like petty cliques under all circumstances. Such developments occur all too often in the "Greek" system. It also seems, at times, that CRC means "Club for Rebellious Children." PERHAPS while Mr. Kennedy is explaining, he can justify the discrimination that the AWS shows against me by refusing membership to me. For me to become a member of AWS would violate the discriminatory clauses in its constitution. Many men on this campus have found that the AWS makes regulations and therefore occasionally causes inconveniences and embarrassments of a much more important and general nature than social fraternity discrimination has ever caused. Yet the men at Kansas have not one vote on this expensive, powerful and highly discriminatory organization. PLEASE NOTICE the following: Both in Mr. Kennedy's violent attacks on the "Greek" system and in my (I hope humorous) attack on the AWS there are precisely two elements to consider which lead to the discrimination. First, there is the weight of tradition, and second, there are slight differences in anatomy. Ed Spencer Lawrence graduate student, Greek alum, and violent middle-of-the-roader --- o n e a t n a d y i i t o a y n o f o f I s h e n w i f e n o r as f u v e u . Friday, March 9. 1962 University Daily Kanson Page UP Makes Plans As Elections Near Three University Party members announced their candidacy for top student body offices and plans were discussed for the upcoming primary elections at the UP meeting last night. Gerald G. Kepner, Wichita junior, has petitioned to run for student body president. Tom Hardy, Hoisington junior, and Patricia Wilson, Kansas City junior, will run in the primaries on the UP ticket for vice president of the student body. Jim Anderson, Lawrence senior and University Party co-chairman, said that each of the candidates is well qualified, and added that "This shows we're going to have good candidates all the way down the ticket." "Pat (Wilson) has led us through several good campaigns as our representative from the large women's dorms, and Tom (Hardy) has been on most of the committees on the Hill," he said. Anderson also announced the appointments of committee chairmen for the primary and general elections to be held April 17-18 and April 24-25, respectively. They were: Kepner, he explained, is a member of Owl Society, a cheerleader and a participant in many Hill activities. Bob Cathey, Shawnee Mission sophomore, campaign manager; Constance Hunter, Hutchinson junior, poster chairman; Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission sophomore, publications chairman; and Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla. freshman, transportation chairman. Peter J. Caws, chairman of the department of philosophy, is resigning at the end of this semester to accept an appointment with the Carnegie Corporation of New York. Caws to Accept Carnegie Position Prof. Caws, a native of England, came to KU in 1957. He succeeded Prof. Clifford P. Osborne as head of the department this year. Prof. Caws' work as an Executive Associate of the foundation will be with its program for higher education in the United States, especially in the humanities. Lords Sleep and Drink LONDON — (UPI) — Peer of the Realm Lord Stoneham lamented today that whenever he gets up to speak in the House of Lords "Most of my fellow noblemen are either asleep, or if wakening, decide it is time to go for a cup of tea." The KU chapter of People-to-People is initiating an orientation program for American students who will travel abroad next summer. WeaverS One meeting covering a specific area of foreign travel will be held each Wednesday until May 2. LIQUID Woolite COLD WATER WASH THE FIRST ONE, covering the British Isles, will be at 4 p.m. March 14 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. --- Protects the color and fit of all fine fabrics Foreign Travel Conferences Scheduled by P-T-P Group 16 oz. $1.50 1 lb. powder $1.50 Leftover Woolits cash value Allan W. Wicker, Independence junior, and a member of the P-T-P foreign students abroad committee, savs: "The program is mainly for those students who will be traveling abroad under the P-t-P program, but we want to stress that we welcome anyone who is considering foreign travel—they don't necessarily have to be connected with the P-t-P tour." WOOLITE TRAVEL PAKS 20 individual paks $1 LASTIC-LIFE Protects bras, girdles, hosiery, etc. Retains the fit . . . Gives extra wear 8 oz. $1.50 Notions - Second Floor The meetings will be designed to aid students in gaining a background in foreign countries and customs so they will be better prepared to make the best use of their foreign travel. A FILM WILL BE SHOWN at the beginning of each meeting, presenting a broad picture of the country under discussion. A foreign student from that area will conduct each of the meetings, and will be aided by a panel consisting of two or three foreign students from that area and one American student. The panel will present information about the country, its people and customs. After the panel discussion, there will be an open question and answer session to cover specific points brought up by the audience. All of the meetings will be at 4 p.m. in the Forum Room, except the last one, at 7:30 p.m. THE COUNTRIES TO be covered, the foreign students in charge, and the dates of the meetings are as follows: The British Isles: Brian E. Cleave, March 14. Germany, Austria, Switzerland: BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Horst Haselmann. March 21. 912 Mass. - VI 3-0151 912 Mass.- VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up SALES - SERVICE - RENTALS Employment Data Sheets Reproduced Printing, Mimegraphing and Duplicating Pick up - Delivery Horst Haselmann, March 21. Netherlands, Belgium: Van Eck Ritsema, March 28. Spain: Pedro Bonet, April 11. japan Pedro bishop, April 11. Scolmavia: Jannik Lindbaek, April 18. France: Genevieve Delaisi, April 25. Italy: Itala Vivan, May 2. Minnesota Professor To Speak on Japan Prof. Martin Bronfen-Brenner of the University of Minnesota, will speak on "Japan's 'Doubling of National Income Plan'" Monday, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 306 of the Kansas Union. The meeting will be sponsored by the department of economics and the committee on East Asian Area Studies. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers BIG BUY Offers One FREE Quart of Lemonade or Orangeade with every Barrel of Chicken 25 Pieces, 10 Hot Rolls $5.00 23rd & Iowa A Favorite Much-Read Page Am I I Rent,I Find I Sell,I Buy Whenever you want to rent, find, sell or buy merchandise or services, on or off campus, you will be rewarded by consulting me. My services are low cost too-Can I find something, sell something, maybe, for you? ROOM for 2 or 8 boys, extra late clean, quiet. Libraries furnished. Crew to KU. Phone VI 3-201 or see 1935 home. BE INDEPENDENT. Live sales to men, campan. Room and board $4.00 per month. Board $6.00 per month. Boch date. Dowon 5371, Tennessee. PB VI 3-105. Ask for Tom Arlan, or Jack. 2-7 ROOMS for boys. Thred of walking up. Haye two rooms half block from entrance. Immediate possession. WE CLEAN ROOM for 1 or 2 Indiana. Phone VI 3-4188. BUSINESS SERVICES YPIST. experienced in the three-leaf project. Less and larger student tape. Meek Botty Vegeta. Potter Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. YPIST. Experienced in throwsite imperial report. Immediate alloy fast service. Meek Botty Vegeta. Potter Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. THE RICC. DRESS MAKEUP times on room. Also drapes and ship crew. 2-604. 1-506. EXPERIENCED TURNER. Former repair will type new term papers and tissues. Fax: 3-8588. Services or rent for mail. 3-8588. TORRING IN ENGLISH. Review sequence structure, outing graphics and theme structures. VI 3-240. FOR SALE LIVE GIFTS. Nightingale Co. era. Permanent all colors, one-compact stock of house tools and for doors. University Daily Kansan Want Ads Kansan Business Office,111 Flint or Call KU 376 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Jayhawks May Help K-State The Kansas Jayhawkers will have their last chance to help Kansas State's struggling Wildcats gain a share of the Big Eight basketball crown Saturday night against Colorado at Boulder. Tipoff for the season's finale will be at 9:05 p.m. Lawrence time. If Kansas could beat the Buffaloes, who are already assured of a title tie, CU and the Wildcats would be deadlocked atop the Big Eight with identical 12-2 records. Kansas State polished off Nebraska at Lincoln Wednesday night, 84-60, and now must sit back and wait. IN ADDITION, a KU victory against the Buffs would vault Dick Harp's crew out of the conference cellar. The Hawks and Missouri are currently tied for last place with 3-10 records. In earlier competition this season, Kansas and Colorado have split a pair of games. The Jayhawks pounded CU, 75-66, in the first round of Big Eight tournament consolation play in December. And Kansas pushed Colorado all the way before bowing to Sox Walseth's league leaders in Lawrence, 65-61, Feb. 17. League-leading scorer Jerry Gardner will wear the Crimson and Blue for the last time in the Colorado game. The Hawker guard, who has teamed with Nolen Ellison for one of the finest guard combinations in the country, is currently averaging 19.9 points a game after his 31-point career-high performance in KU's 76-71 surprise win at Iowa State Monday. ELLISON, a junior, currently shares the No. 3 spot in conference scoring with Nebraska's Tom Russell; both are hitting at an 18.4 clip. Despite the backcourt firepower, however, Colorado boasts a front line of Ken Charlton (6-6), Wilky Gilmore (6-5) and Jim Davis (6-8) that completely monopolized the backboards during the second half of the game in Lawrence nearly a month ago. The Buffalo boardmen average three inches per man taller than the Jayhawkers Harry Gibson (6-3), Jim Dumas (6-1), and Lee Flachsbarth (6-5). Colorado's front-line shooting is also ominous. Charlton is currently shooting for a 17.7 average in conference games, while Gilmore is hitting 15 and Davis 11.2 points per game. In addition, Colorado has an excellent front-line reserve in 6-6 Milt Mueller, who is currently averaging 8.8 points per game. Mueller added 12 points to the CU cause in the Feb. 17 game while substituting for the injured Charlton. reshman Chosen to Serve On Kansas Relays Committee The KU Relays Committee selected eight new freshman members from a field of 46 applicants yesterday. They were: Bob Shenk, Lawrence; George Benson, El Dorado; Gary Gradinger, Prairie Village; Jeff Baxter, Raytown, Mo.; Barry Becker, Overland Park; John Pat Atkinson, Topeka; Scott Linscott, Topeka, and Bill Flannagan, Scott City. The applicants were judged on the basis of past responsibilities of leadership, scholarship, and desire and interest that was shown during Relays Committee interviews. Appointments announced by the Committee included Lauren Ward, Ottawa junior, parades chairman; Rich Keeler, Bartlesville, Oka., junior, queens chairman, and Gene Gaines, Joplin, Mo., junior, and Frank Thompson, Iola sophomore, office managers. Preparations for the KU Relays which will be held April 20-21, will begin next week. The committee will have the additional duty this year of managing the Big Eight Conference track meet which will be held in Lawrence May 18-19. Chicago Relays To Host Stars Of Track, Field CHICAGO, Ill.—(UPI)—Two teenage terriers, Tom O'Hara and Bruce Kidd, might steal the show from world record holders tonight in the 26th Chicago Daily News Relays. Name athletes in the field include Jim Beatty of the Los Angeles Track Club, the only runner ever to better four minutes for the indoor mile, John Uelses, the only 16-foot pole vaulter, Ralph Boston, a 27-foot broad jumper, and hurdler Hayes Jones. ALL HAVE set or equalled world marks and will be trying again tonight to improve on them. But their chances for success are dim and thus O'Hara or Kidd could become the star. Beatty, who has been clocked at 3:58.9, 4:00.9 and 4:00.2 in his last three outings will be the target for O'Hara, and the youngster could succeed. O'Hara, a sophomore at Loyola University, won the K. of C. mile at Cleveland last St. Patrick's Day and last week won the K. of C. mile in New York. In his last meeting with KU Is Entered Kansas track Coach Bill Easton has entered a two-mile relay team in the Chicago Daily News indoor meet tonight. Running for Kansas will be Bill Dotson, Bill Thornton, Kirk Hagan and Tonnie Coane. With the exception of Coane this is the same team that held the nation's fastest two-mile time outdoors for nearly two months. Coane won his berth on the team over Ted Reisinger Wednesday afternoon. The two ran each other and Coane came out on top. Beatty, he was clocked at 4:02.3, the best time ever posted by a 19-year-old for the distance as Beatty won in 4:00.9. THE TWO will be running in the Bankers' mile against Peter Close of the New York A.C., who won the Wanamaker mile this year, and an English star, Brian Turner of Southern Illinois. Kidd, an 18-year-old Toronto runner who likes distances even longer than two miles, will be aiming at Max Truex's meet record of 8:49.1. He will have four competitors, including Laszlo Tabori, the Hungarian star now with the Los Angeles Track Club, Bob Schul, a teammate of Tabori's, Ron Wallingford of the Toronto Olympic Club, and Joe Thomas of Southern Illinois. Uelses, a 24-year-old Marine, cleared 16 feet 3/4 inch with his controversial fiberglass pole earlier this year. He will be competing tonight against the outdoor world record holder, George Davis of Arizona State, whose mark is 15 feet $ 10 \frac{1}{2} $ inches. Others in the vaulting field will be Mel Schwartz of the Marine Corps, Henry Wadsworth of the Army, and Risto Ankio of Finland. FINAL CLOSE OUT 50% OFF on D'Orsay COLOGNE Mist & Stick Hogue, who made the first team last year, too, Walker and Wiley are the only seniors on the all-star team. King is a junior, and Savage a sophomore. Mist Le Dandy — Fantastique Stick Divine — Intoxication Bradley finished the season in a tie with defending NCAA champion Cincinnati. The two teams will meet Monday night in Evansville, Ind., to determine the conference representative to the NCAA regionals, beginning March 16 at Manhattan, Kan. The selection of Walker marked the third time the Bradley forward has been named to the conference's first all-star team. He lost the scoring title for the first time this year, however, trailing King by 10 points. His fellow coaches named Charles (Chuck) Osborn of Bradley as the conference's coach of the year. Others named to the first team were Paul Hogue of Cincinnati, John Savage of North Texas State and Gene Wiley of Wichita. Named to the second team were Harry Foster and Marv Torrence of Drake, Tom Kieffer of St. Louis, and Tom Thacker and Ron Bonham of Cincinnati. *** Wiley, who stands 6-10, is the tallest man on the all-star team, which averages 6-6 in height. ROUND CORNER DRUG KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UPI) —Chet Walker of Bradley and James King of Tulsa, the league's top scorers, were the only unanimous choices for the Missouri Valley Conference all-star basketball team, announced today by the league's coaches. Although it was Missouri's final game of the year, the Tigers can climb into a tie for seventh place if Kansas loses at Colorado Saturday. \* \* \* COLUMBIA,Mo.—(UPI)—Sparky Stalcup has called it quits after 16 years as a basketball coach at Missouri. 801 Mass. Stalcup bowed out as an active coach last night as his Tigers dropped a 63-55 decision to Oklahoma and slumped into the Big Eight conference cellar. Receiving honorable mention were Lavern Tart and Rich Williams of Bradley, Tony Yates of Cincinnati, Billy Hahn of Drake, Oscar Miller of North Texas, Gary Garrison of St. Louis, Gary Hevelone of Tulsa, and Lanny Van Eman, Ernie Moore and Sam Smith of Wichita. Sports in Brief * * NEW YORK—(UPI)—The battle for the Eastern Division championship in the American Basketball League apparently is going right down to the wire—and all four teams in the division are within striking distance. Tub of Chicken 15 pieces, 5 hot rolls $3.50 BIG BUY Cleveland and New York squeezed out narrow victories last night and tightened up the standings to a point where only two and one-half games separates first place Pittsburgh and fourth place New York. Chicago is a half game behind the pace-setting Rens, and Cleveland trails Pittsburgh by two. Last night's victories came at the expense of the Western Division, which is considerably more scattered. Chicago chalked up a 108-107 victory over western leader Kansas City and Cleveland came from behind to edge San Francisco. 100-98. Kansas City enjoys a six and one-half game lead over second place Hawaii in the western standings, while San Francisco has dropped a full game behind the Chiefs. Cleveland outscored San Francisco by nine points in the fourth quarter for its victory. Dick Barnett led the Piper attack with 33 points, while Mike Farmer was top for the Saints with 26. Jack Adams was the big gun for New York last night. He scored 37 points, including the winning basket in the final second of play. However, the rugged contest, marked by 63 fouls, may have been costly for the Tapers. Their leading scorer, Dan Swartz, suffered a possible dislocated finger in the third period. * * BOSTON, Muss. - (UPI) - The Boston Celtics have resumed their drive toward a new National Basketball Association season victory total of 60. Sidetracked by the New York Knickerbockers last Tuesday night, the Celtics resumed their winning ways with a 108-102 triumph over the Chicago Packers Thursday night and now need three wins in their final three games to set the new mark. The Celtics play at Detroit tonight, face the Los Angeles Angels at home Sunday and are hosts to the Syracuse Nationals next Monday Bill Russell scored 27 points and Frank Ramsey had 27 to lead the Celtics Thursday night while Walt Bellamy had 31 for the Packers. PLANT A GARDEN! Laugh at HIGH FOOD COSTS! 雪地滑雪 Mi Lewi in p ber Scab Ge Chevenga Kath and Iola. No matter how small your plot...plan now to have a GARDEN! Have fun! Let nature furnish your food...and save! Barteldes Seed Co. 804 Mass. VI 3-0791 Barteldes SEEDS SOLD BY Harnar Auto Supply 836 Mass. St. Keys Duplicated Mi busii tend listed gram dida M of $ enga to R E. V M Mr Prair gage Penn Mr. Farm Complete Locksmith Service Day or Night Day Phone Night Phone VI 3-2362 VI 3-7576 BIG BOSS # University Daily Kansan Page 8 --- S. DARREN HOLMER Kathy Coutts Penne Payne 1965 Carolyn Throop Four Couples Announce Wedding Plans Coutts-Shaffer Gen, and Mrs. J. W. Coutts of Chevy Chase, Md., announce the engagement of their daughter, Kathy, to Jon Shaffer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Shaffer of Iola. Miss Coutts is a member of Lewis Hall. Shaffer is a senior in political science and a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon and Scabbard and Blade. A January wedding is planned. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Payne of Prairie Village announce the engagement of their daughter, Penne, to Gary L. Weerts, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Weerts of Farmington, Ill. Payne-Weerts Miss Payne is a sophomore in business education. Weerts is attending KU under the Navy Enlisted Scientific Education program. He will go to Officer Candidate School after graduation. Holzhauser-Markley An August wedding is planned. Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Holzhauser of St. Joseph, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Leois to Richard E. Markley, son of Mrs. E. W. Markley of Lincoln. Miss Holzhauser is teaching i Lois Holzhauser Nancy L. St. Joseph, Mo. Markley is a junior in engineering and a member of Kappa Eta Kappa, professional fraternity. Carolyn, to Lt. Clifton E. Cushman, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Cushman of Grand Forks, N.D. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey M. Throop of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Throop is a senior in music education and a member of Mu Phi Epsilon and Pi Lambda Theta. Cushman is presently undergoing pilot training at Craig Air Force Base, Ala. - * * Throop-Cushman Friday, March 9, 1962 Frats Tell Officers Delano, Bell Delta Tau Delta Delta Tau Delta fraternity has elected pledge class officers for the spring semester. The new officers are: president, John Lettmann, St Louis, Mo, sophomore; vice president, John Martens, Colorado Springs, Colo., freshman; secretary, Andrew Grossmann, Kansas City, Mo, freshman; sergeant at arms, Bob Pitner, Glasco freshman; scholarship committee chairman, Louis Ebli, Shawnee Mission freshman; house and grounds committee chairman, Charles Hiller, Humboldt tophome; social committee chairman, Reuben McCornack, Abilene sophome; and rush chairman, John McArtor, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman. Men and women should be given equal opportunities to realize their natural potentialities within the social milieu—Ashley Montagu Delta Chi Delta Chi announces the election of the following chapter officers: president, Larry Borcherding, Kansas City junior; vice president, Jack Duncan, Raytown, Mo., sophomore; treasurer, Tom Rich, Leawood junior; secretary, Doug Walcher, Wichita junior; corresponding secretary, John Anderson, Joplin, Mo., sophomore; alumni newsletter, Bill Woodburn, Pleasanton senior; sergeant at arms, Alan Tonelli, Cicero, Ill., sophomore; house manager, Frank Breen, Cincinnati, Ohio, junior. Early Spring Sees 3 Couples Pinned Pi Kappa Alpha announces the pinning of Herman Mast, Lawrence junior, to Jean Grimshaw, Wilmette, Ill., freshman. *** Sigma Nu announces the pinning of Mike Elwell, Wichita sophomore, to Helen Bingham, a sophomore at Christian College in Columbia, Mo. Acacia fraternity announces the pinning of Lynn Wildermood, Mission senior, to Joan WillManis, Prairie Village junior. German Cars BMW - NSU Hunsinger Motor Co. DANCE SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN Across From Hillcrest HAMBURGERS ... 15c CHEESE BURGERS ... 19c TOASTED CHEESE ... 15c FRENCH FRIES ... 10c MILK SHAKES ... 20c COKE, COFFEE, ORANGE ... 10c MILK, ROOT BEER ... 10c WATCH FOR BIG NEWS OF ST. PATRICK'S DAY SPECIAL CELEBRATION NEED MONEY? Let Kansan Classifieds Work for You Here is your chance to sell some of those unused items around the house and make that needed money too. Clothes, radios, watches, cars-if you have them, Kansan Want Ads will help you sell them. Take advantage of Kansan Want Ads' high readership and low cost. (5 times for $1.25) Let a Kansan Want Ad be your salesman—low rates and quick results. Cash in on the KU Market! Try KANSAN WANT ADS for Quick Results Kansan Business Office—Flint Hall $ $ $ University Daily Kansan Page 6 Friday, March 9, 1962 Vox to Support Move in ASC For Secretary Vox Populi last night voted unanimously to support a move in the All Student Council to hire a part-time executive secretary. Support for the move was requested by Ron Gallagher, Fort Scott senior and ASC representative from the School of Journalism, in a letter to Ted Childers, Vox president. IN THE LETTER Gallagher said he believes the ASC has "definite need" for an executive secretary. After the meeting Childers said Vox is interested in and willing to support the suggestion. "I want to point out that I do not think that the present condition of the ASC office indicates that the secretary or her committee are not doing their jobs," he wrote. "I feel that there are certain deficiencies inherent in the present system and that it would be difficult to correct them even with the most active secretarial staff, operating under the present ASC regulations. "I THINK THAT THE creation of a paid secretarial position will eliminate the deficiencies." "For the ASC to function as it should and as we would like to see it functioning, an executive secretary is definitely needed," he said. "As the ASC expands its operations it is going to need some additional help in the office." "THIS ACTION HAS the potential to put vitality into the ASC," he continued. "The council is getting to the point where it is running into a stone wall from sheer work load." Asked to make a prediction about the coming ASC elections, Roger Wilson, Wichita junior and Greek vice president of Vox, said: "We feel that we have a powerful party and we go on the assumption that if we get out all of our votes we will win all 10 seats" Mike Harris, Shawnee Mission junior and executive vice president of Vox, announced at the meeting that Sunday night had been set as the tentative time for ASC candidate interviews. March 24 was set as the beginning of candidate orientation and April 8 was set as the beginning of the campaign. Father-Son Team To Lecture Here A joint lecture-recital on architecture and music by the father and son team of H. Th. Wijdeveld and Wolfgang Wijdeveld from Amsterdam, Holland, will be held Monday and Tuesday here. Sponsored by the department of architecture and architectural engineering, the lecture-recital will be held at 4 p.m. Monday, in 330 Murphy Hall and at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall. H. Th. Wijdeveld, the father of Wolfgang, is a pioneer in contemporary architecture and art. His art magazine "Wendingen" was one of the first (in 1922) to publish the works of Frank Lloyd Wright. He was the first to publish X-ray photos of shells and other organic forms. Wolfgang Wijdeveld studied piano with William Andriessen and composition with Sem Dresden and William Pijper. He was director of the Municipal Music School at Zwolle from 1936-46, and since that time he has been a professor at the Consevatory of Utrecht. Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The Guadalajara Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, conducted in cooperation with professors from Stanford University, University of California, and Guadalajara, will offer July 2 to August 10, art, folklore, geography, history, language and literature courses. Tuition, board and room is $245. Write Prof. Juan B. Real, P.O. Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. Zolbrod to Discuss Japanese Protests Leon M. Zolbrod, instructor in oriental languages, will discuss "Are Popular Demonstrations in Japan Communist Inspired?" at the Current Events Forum today at 4 p.m. in the Music Room of the Kansas Union. Free coffee will be served. 143 Quered In First Poll The Student Opinion Poll group sponsored by the KU Young Republicans finished its first poll last night. The general topic was academic standards and admission procedures at KU. The exact questions and tabulated results will be released by next Tuesday The number of students polled has been reduced to 143 from the original estimate of 200. The number of students available to make the telephone calls was less than had been expected because of study for mid- semester examinations. Jerry Dickson, president of the KU Young Republicans, and other YR members supplemented the Frosh Hawk telephone committee. The group expects to get a larger sample for the next poll. More members of the telephone committee will be able to make the calls when midsemester examinations are over. Peter Wellington, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, is coordinating the telephone committee with the poll group. Book Includes Gunn's Story An English editor apparently believes that a story by James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, is one of the "best tales of terror." Edmund Crispin has included Mr. Gunn's story, "The Misogynist," in an anthology called "Best Tales of Terror," being published by Faber & Faber. "This is the first time I've been paid for a story in pounds," Mr Gunn said. "The Misogynist" has been published three times before. It first appeared in "Galaxy Science Fiction Magazine" in November 1952. It was included in the Permabook anthology, "Shadow of Tomorrow" (1953), and the "Second Galaxy Reader of Science Fiction" (Crown, 1954). Mr. Gunn has published 48 other stories and four books. A new book, "The Immortals," will appear later this year or early next year. Charles Landesman Jr., assistant professor of philosophy, will speak at 8 p.m. Tuesday, March 13, in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. He will talk on "A Defense of Humanism." Landesman to Speak Tuesday Prof. Lanesman taught at Yale from 1557-1959. He came to KU in 1959. He has published articles on the philosophy of language and on the problems of memory. Chemistry Dept Past Chairman To Be Honored Arthur W. Davidson Recognition Day, in honor of the immediate past chairman of the KU chemistry department will be held next Friday. Prof. Davidson left the chemistry department chairmanship in 1961 upon reaching the mandatory retirement age for administrators. He continues teaching and research, and is chairman of the University Senate Advisory Committee. Six scientists who received Ph.D. degrees under Prof. Davidson's direction will return to the campus for the Recognition Day, to present addresses in Malotl Hall on topics of their choice. Members of the Arthur W. Davidson Syposium are: Dr. Raymond Stoenner (Ph.D.'49), Brookhaven National Laboratory, Long Island, N.Y., who will speak on "Meteorites as Extra Terrestrial Probes" at 9 a.m. Dr. Eugene A. Ramskill (Ph.D. '41). U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C., "Atmosphere Purification and Control in the Nuclear Submarine" at 9:45 a.m. Dr. W. C. Lanning (Ph.D. '38), Phillips Petroleum Co., Bartlesville, Okla., "Reactions of Condensed-Ring Aromatic Hydrocarbons in the Presence of Hydrogen" at 10:30 a.m. Dr. Harriet Geer (Ph.D. '35) Parke, Davis and Co., Detroit, Mich. "Information—A Product of Our Expanding Research" at 1:30 p.m. Dr. O. D. Bonner (Ph.D. '51), University of South Carolina, Columbia, "Osmotic Properties of Solutions of Polyelectrolytes" at 2:15 p.m. Dr. Ernest Griswold (Ph.D. '34), professor of chemistry, the University of Kansas, "Ion-size Parameters in Nonaqueous Solvents" at 3 p.m. Prof. Davidson, who became chemistry department chairman in 1956, joined the KU faculty in 1921. From 1950-56 he was associate dean of the Graduate School. He was a Fulbright lecturer in physical chemistry at the University of Turku, Finland, during 1954-55, and has been associate editor of the Journal of the American Chemical Society. Upon his retirement from the chairmanship last year, the Arthur W. Davidson Award for Academic Excellence in Chemistry was established by Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemistry society. Space Travel's Nothing PORTLAND, Ore. — (UPI) — Jacob Bibler took a critical look at space travel on his 103rd birthday yesterday and decided he didn't "believe the whole deal will amount to much." JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT ❤️ THOSE "PILLOW TALK" PLAYMATES ARE AT IT AGAIN! ❤️ ROCK HUDSON DORIS DAY TONY RANDALL "LOVER COME BACK" In Eastman COLOR co starring EDIE ADAMS JACK OAKIE JACK KRUSCHEN Universal International Release AN ADULT BROMILITATED COMEDY! 40-116 pr. N5 Fri. — 7 & 9 p.m. Sat. Mat. 2 p.m. Sun. Cont. From 2:40 The area had been quiet for months. Delegates of France and the Algerian rebels met for the third successive day at the Hotel Du Pare on the shores of Lake Geneva this morning. illy-fortified eastern frontier with artillery for 48 hours. The Tunisian press agency reported the action was continuing today and that Algerian anti-aircraft guns had shot down "several enemy planes." EVIAN, France — (UPI) — French-Algerian peace talks continued to make good progress here today despite a battle between their armed forces on the Tunisian border. Informed sources said there was a good chance of a cease-fire by March 15. However, they added that the most difficult issues are being left to the end and these could create last-minute hitches. Granada TNEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5783 At the same time, "El Moujahid," official organ of the Algerian rebel army, issued a threat to break off negotiations and continue the war unless France bowed to last-ditch rebel demands. Algerian Peace Talks Continue Despite Battle These consisted of claims for greater powers in the mixed provisional government which will run Algeria for a transition period after a cease-fire and for more manpower for the security force. 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Walt Disney's ALL-CARTOON FEATURE Pinocchio TECHNICOLOR® © Walt Disney Productions • Re-released by BUENA VISTA Distribution Co., Inc. Y! Coming Soon shockingly... THE SCREEN TELLS THE SHARE OF WOMEN RAVAGED BY WAR! JOSEPH E. LEVINE shockingly... THE SCREEN TELLS THE SHAME OF WOMEN RAVAGED BY WAR! JOSEPH B LEVINE presents Sophia Loren "Two" WOMEN winner best actress award Cannes Film Festival 1961 for her performance in Producer Carlo Ponti Directed Vittorio DeSica An Embassy Pictures Release Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1045 Sophia Loren nominated for "Best Actress" en"Two WOMEN Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065 LOST at breasted wing sie 7600. Jr. colle of Feb. 1 M B BEVERA ice cold closed price Plan 350. Bicycle mechar Want r K.C.. M penses. 9 p.m. Girl w Stouffe 3:30 p. FORM typewr able ra 0524. TYPIN secreta reports rates. Eldow EXPEI in my Gehlba Experi papers symbo Standa VI 2-1 EXPEI theses, on ne Fulche Typing on ele sell. 1 TYPIS papers able 1 4409. Friday, March 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 r with "unisian action that Alad shot s." iet for ujahid," in rebel leak off the war st-ditch ms for pro will run od after e man- L" LUXE ppen SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS - N N LOST FOUND OST at Tee Sap Sat. nite: Black double- breasted coat with a mink color and bat- wing sleeves. Call Kris Guldner VI 3-12 7600. Jr. college ring in Flint Hall the middle of Feb. Identify. See Mrs. Fine, 114 Flint, MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, cee cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 3- 19350 Don't Forget JACK and the MISSILES Tonight at the BIG BARN 8:30-12:30 WANTED Bicycle for beginners. Clean and in good mechanical condition. Call KU xt. 377. TRANSPORTATION Want ride from Lawrence to downtown K.C. M., 8-5 week days. Will share expenses. Call VI 3-9819 between 7:30 and 9 p.m. 3-12 Girl wants ride beginning April 1 from 7:30 a.m. Call VI 2-2720 at 6:50, 3-15 3:30 p.m. Call VI 2-2720 at 6:50, 3-15 TYPING FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, memoirs, and articles on rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mc-Edlowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-9136. Ms. Lo Gebhach. Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric computer writer with sympthat math and Greek letters Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert II 5-1246. EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1021 Miss. tt Typeing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Wilson, 1511. W 21 St. CAI V1 3-6440. telf: sell 1511. W 21 St. CAI V1 3-6440. telf: TYPIST. experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execu- sional Internal Service, 691 W. Wenson, Mission HE, 271-83. Eves or Sat. R 2-2186 THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist, writerwriter. Reasonable rate. Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware, CA III-04838 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Near, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Fatti, VI 3-8379. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. 40 W. 18 th. VI, 2t-168. Mrs. Barlow. 40 W. 18 th. VI, 2t-168. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI T-2-6514 any time. Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student dates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001 tf HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. Eng. teacher Ms. Crompton. tests & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt, apt. 3. tl FOR RENT ROOM FOR 1 MALE STUDENT in double room. Share with graduate student. from Union. Private entrance, quiet Call VI 3-4092, at 1301 Louisiana. tf LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 4 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2 1731 Central Air Conditioning Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking Park Plaza South Apartments We will pay local moving expenses GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Price notes are revised and comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 2-7522. Free delivery. VI2-3416 or VI2-8253 Office -- 1912 W. 25th. LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid; $50. Cash V1-3 6294-8 Rooms for male students 1 double, 1 Room for female students in board bldg. 3- VI 7-342 to VI 3-918. 3-918 HOUSE FOR RENT=1810 Alabama $90 BOOKING FORMAL ATTENDANCE FOR 145 after 3 p.m. for appointment. 3-9 TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3-3644. BUSINESS SERVICES INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re- woven so damage cannot be seen. Cig- arette burns, mol holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tt GRANTS' Drive-In pet Center, 1218 Commercial parking area. one stop = save time & money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, etc., plus complete items. pet supplies if 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. Give your pre-schools best of care and nursery school training at Gingerbread House. All day or part time. Call VI 2-3315 or VI 2-0503. 3-9 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. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mats 3-5261, Ola Smith 3-9391, Marys Mass Call VI 3-5263. FOR SALE ALTERATIONS -- Call Gall Reed, VI 3-754, or 921 Miss. tf Guitar instruction — all types. Classical guitar instructions also available now at Richardson's. Fine instrument rental service, too. 3-15 Kirsten's Hillcrest Shopping Center Sportswear ● Majestic ● White Stag ● Helen Harper ● Oper OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriter, precision made to perform like an upright. lawrence typewriter, sales, service, rentals. lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-3644. 29 x'8" mobil home. 1958 Great Lakes. Excellent condition. One bedroom, colorful fixtures. Call collect, Muncie, Kan., AT 9-6278. Mrs. Nipper. 3-9 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 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 ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch camera microscope immediately. $200. Call Vi 3-8875 come to 907 Ark. for more information. FURNITURE: sofa bed, basket chairs, coffee table, kitchen cabinet, chest of drawers, dresser, also: sofa movie camera, Bell & Howell, telef- gen 'vs.' EN 2-0387, 1941 Mass. 1959 MGA 1500 Sports Roadster White HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete service. Call Phoebe on Phone 2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. tt 1961 MGA 1600 Sports Roadster Blue GUNS: Lawrence Firearms Co. New & uses guns, ammo, Handguns rebued. Inventory now. Hydraulic 357 - .44 magnum. Order now. Ohio, corner of 14th & Ohio. 13-13 1960 MG Magnette 4-dr. compact Black 1960 Austin Healey Sprite. Excellent companion for driving side curts. Call VI 523-365-12-5 One beige leather Hide-a-bead couch model with a modern model set $19.00. Call VI 3-6213. 3-15 1957 Olds 88 Holiday 4 hardtop. Call 3-1725 at 6:30 p.m. & Sundays. 3-15 GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. for the delivery. Phone VI 3-755f VI 3-7578 SPORTS CARS BRITISH MOTORS 704 Vt. Phone: VI 3-8367 NOW is your opportunity to buy a fabulous 50% discount on furniture. Will give 1 year warranty for parts and labor. Several extras. Call VI 3-867 or VI 3-7275 after 6:30 p.m. and Sundays. M Hollow Stemmed Champagne Glasses Peggy's - on the Malls Only $1.00 Peggy's SPACE, MISSILE & JET PROJECTS AT DOUGLAS have created outstanding career opportunities for SCIENTISTS and ENGINEERS B. S. degrees or better Assignments include the following areas: Servo-Mechanisms — relating to all types of control problems Electronic Systems - relating to all types of guidance, detection, control and communications Propulsion - relating to fluid mechanics, thermodynamics, dynamics, internal aerodynamics Human Factors - analysis of environment affecting pilot and space crews, design of cockpit consoles, instrument panels and pilot equipment Heat Transfer—relating to missile and space vehicle structures Environmental - relating to air conditioning, pressurization and oxygen systems Structures-relating to cyclic loads, temperature effects, and the investigation of new materials methods, products, etc. Aerodynamics—relating to wind tunnel, research, stability and control Solid State Physics - relating to metal surfaces and fatigue Space vehicle and weapon system studies-of all types involving a vast range of scientific and engineering skills Get full information at INDIVIDUAL ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS with a Douglas representative Friday, March 16 We urge you to make an appointment through Mr. D. E. Metzler, Placement Director, School of Engineering. If you cannot, please write to Staff Assistant to VP Engineering 5. A. Amestoy, Staff Assistant to VP Engineering DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT COMPANY, INC. 3000 Ocean Park Blvd., Santa Monica, California An equal opportunity employer Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 9, 1962 Demonstrators Run Wild in Protest SANTO DOMINGO — (UPI)—The government clamped a 10-hour nightly curfew on this strife-torn city last night to curb the anti-American mobs which smashed, looted and burned their way through the streets yesterday. Santo Domingo was tensely calm under the guns of troops and police enforcing the 7 p.m.-to-5 a.m. curfew. OPPOSITION POLITICIANS were trying to organize a general strike against the junta government, recalling the violence-backed walkout in December which brought the junta to power. The ostensible motive for the new violence was anger at the government for allowing ex-President Joaquín Balaguer and ex-Gen. Pedro Rodriguez Echavarria to leave the country. The mobs focused their furry on the United States because Balaguer and Rodriguez flew from here to Puerto Rico. Screaming rioters shot and wounded three policemen, burned U.S. Ambassador John Bartlow Martin's limousine and two other official American cars and looted the offices of Pan American World Airways. EMBASSY GUARDS blocked an attempted mob attack on the U.S. visa office, traditional target of anti-American agitators in this tropical capital. Balaguer and four companions—a brother-in-law, two sisters and a maid—were traveling on 60-day U.S. tourist visas. They are expected eventually to go to Spain. Rodriguez carried no travel authorization. He was admitted to Puerto Rico on parole pending investigation of his case. There was no indication that the government would seek to extradite either of the refugees, although Rodriguez had been a military prisoner awaiting trial on charges including murder. No charges were pending against Balaguer. Police Chief Rafael De Castro was fired yesterday for unspecified reasons and replaced by Belisario Peguero, who had been deputy chief. Rifles were issued to police battling the mobs yesterday, but so far as was known no rioters were shot. Police depended largely on tear gas Students Confess Lawrence Burglary Two KU sophomores signed a statement yesterday confessing to the burglary of a downtown drug store early yesterday morning. They are Gary Engel and Harold M. Williams, both of Bismarck, N.D. Robert Ebey of Colorado Springs, Colo., a KU student last semester, also signed the statement. A preliminary hearing in Douglas County Court is set for March 19. They were arrested shortly after the alleged burglary by Lawrence and KU police and charged with burglary and grand larceny. Lawrence police said about 1,000 "semt-narcotic" pills were taken. Police also said several cartons of cigarettes, a box of cigars, several lighters and several wrist watches were taken. and noise bombs to deal with the outbreak. RIOTERS ARMED WITH pistols, iron clubs and stones smashed shop windows and looted political offices in downtown Santo Domingo. Some rioters massed outside the Dominican "White House" to shout anti-government slogans, while others staged noisy disorders outside the justice Ministry, blocking a hearing in the case of Rafael Bueno, an 18-year-old "professional agitator" held on criminal charges. In addition to Martin's limousine, which was parked near the visa office, the cars wrecked and burned by the mobs were those of Passport Chief Matt Ortwein and an embassy station wagon. Gas Explosion Kills 30 Germans HEESSEN, Germany—(UPI) —A methane gas explosion set off by dynamite blasts ripped through the Sachsen coal pit today, killing 30 miners and injuring eight in West Germany's second mine disaster in five weeks. The blast came only 25 minutes before the 756 men on the night shift were due to come off the job Of those killed, 29 died instantly in the explosion. Another was critically injured and died in a hospital. Two of the eight injured were in serious condition. It took rescue workers less than two hours to bring all the injured and most of the dead to the surface. Some bodies were left underground pending completion of a preliminary investigation. Dark clouds hung over the pit and there was a steady drizzle during the morning and friends and families of the miners watched the rescue work in this Ruhr Valley town just outside the city of Hamm. Official Bulletin Foreign Students: Foreign students planning to take the Freedonia or Oskamie to return the reservation forms to 228 Strong Hall by noon Saturday, March 10. March 12 — Ben Ahlschwede, Public Schools, Battle Creek, Mich. March 13 — Donald Shieldon, Assoc Supt. (Elem. & Tech), Stockton, Calif. TODAY Lecture: 4 p.m., 238 Malott. Dr. John Biel. Assoc. Director of Research at Akkesko laboratories in Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences to the Treatment of Mental Diseases." International Club: Following film in Hoch, Jayhawk Room. Kansas Union. Dance competition followed by refreshments and dancing. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship; Inter-Union Union, Film, "Red River of Life." Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m., 1221 Oread. Rev. Tom Muskrat, Baptist Student Union. Haskell, will speak on "A Case for Missions, in today's World." Hillel Services: 7:30 p.m. Jewish Community Center, 317 Highland Drive. Lutheran Services; 8:30 & 11 a.m., Immanuel Lutheran Church, 17th & Vermont, 5 p.m., Wednesdays, Danforth Chanel. Catholic Mass: 9 & 11 a.m., Fraser Hall (Newman Club). Oread Friends Worship Meeting: 10:30 a.m. Danforth Chapel. Bhai Brith Purim Party and Cost Support Community Center, 917 High Drive Newman Club Meeting: 7 p.m., Kansas Union. Room to be posted. ★FLOATS ★SODAS ★FREEZES She has been associated with the actors and playwrights of the Irish theater renaissance. Among them are Barry Fitzgerald, Padraic Colum, Denis Johnson, Lennox Robinson, Sean O'Casey, William Butler Yeats, Lady Gregory, St John Ervine and John Syngge. Ria Mooney, an actress and director at Dublin's famous Abbey Theatre, will talk about the Abbey and her work there at 3 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall. Miss Mooney worked at the Abbey during the 1940s. She was assigned to experimental work in encouraging new playwrights. It was her job to take the Abbey out of the artistic slump it had fallen into in the 1930s and early 1940s. In 1926 Miss Mooney created the role of Rosie Redmond in O'Casey's "The Plough and the Stars." Miss Mooney is currently directing Syngne's "Deidre of the Sorrows" at Kansas City University. Her production of "Deidre" is considered to be the authentic one by theater intelligentsia. It is based on notes by William Butler Yeats. Dorms- He also said it is impossible to divide the price because it will present a diversity in feeling among the students. "I want the residents of the three-man rooms to feel they are regular residents of the Hall. Two rates would divide the students into two classes," he said. Men presently living in residence halls who turn in their contracts for next semester will not be assigned to the triple occupancy rooms next semester unless they request it, Dean Alderson said. (Continued from page 1) living in double rooms. He said this is necessary because of the new furniture the University will have to buy to equip the triple occupancy rooms. ODAS DRINK QUEEM DRINK QUEEM DRINK QUEEM r co. N It's a happy choice no matter which of these Dairy Queen favorites you choose. Your flavor . . . and smooth, freshly-frozen Dairy Queen! Professor Arnold To Give Law Talks A nationally known attorney, jurist, and author will deliver the Judge Nelson Timothy Stephens Lectures in the Law School March 23-24. Thurman W. Arnold, a former professor in the Yale Law School, will give two public lectures on "Economic Folklore of 1962" in Fraser Theater at 3:30 p.m. each day. He also will participate in the Law Day activities March 24. © 1956, NATIONAL DAIRY QUEEN DEVELOPMENT CO. Actress to Speak On Abbey Work The Judge N. T. Stephens lectures are presented by the Law School twice every seven years. QUEEN 1835 Massachusetts Q DAIRY QUEEN Holloway's light baritone was sometimes overpowered by the orchestra, but he became increasingly stronger as the show went on. He songs beautifully in the haunting trio. "Now, I lips, say good-bye," with Magda and his mother. IN SCENES where she is more dependent on the sung or spoken word, however, she is convincing. She can bring tears with lines like, "Shall I call the carpenter and the priest? Shall I go to market to buy white roses?" when she learns her baby is dead. And she truly sounds and looks terrified in the weird final scene. Among the men, David Holloway, Gas City sophomore, convincingly acts John Sorel, Magda's husband and hero of the underground. Ann Kretzmier, Liberal junior, who plays Magda's mother-in-law, is the most consistently believable and pleasing performer. SHE IS an indignant old lady when the secret police agents barge in upon her and Magda to question and intimidate them, a loving grandmother when she sings tenderly to Magda's baby in the "Lullaby," and a grief-stricken old woman when she finds the baby dead. Miss Tebbenkamp's acting is not so fortunate. Frequently, as in her big aria, "To This We've Come," her body movements look careful and planned, her gestures studied and sometimes weak, and she indulges in some meaningless pointing. "The Consul," Gian Carlo Menotti's music drama, will end its three-performance run tonight at the University Theatre. Curtain time is 8 p.m. Earlier performances were Monday and Wednesday. Menotti's 'The Consul" Closes Run Tonight By Tom Winston The drama is effective, but confusing in places. Individual performances range from magnificent to mediocre. Sharon Tebbenkamp, Salisbury, Mo., senior, plays Magda Sorel, the drama's most demanding role. Her singing rings and thrills in a magnificent mezzo-soprano. Applications for the four officer positions on the SUA Board for 1962- 1963 are now available in the Union Directors office. These applications must be turned back into the office by March 13. AUTHOR JOHN WARD is the tap retail ad salesman this week For Advertising Assistance, Call KU-376 Ed Sooter, Wichita graduate student, plays magician Nika Magadoff, the only comic relief in an otherwise depressing and despairful story. Sooter, whose tenor is the strongest of the show's male voices, was taught some slight-of-hand for the show. He won spontaneous applause with some very amusing hocus-pocus. Sharon Scoville, Kansas City junior, sings the secretary. Her acting is competent and interesting. IN THE REMAINING roles the acting is consistently good, but the voices vary from sure to unreliable. Robert Chambers' lighting and Carolyn Kriesel's costumes are especially effective in the dream sequences. Elsewhere the costumes seem much alike, and even too plush for such poor people. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Miss Woody is delightful as the foreign woman, particularly in the scene with Mr. Kofner in the consul's office where he translates for her. Charles Rogers, Lawrence senior, plays Mr. Kofner. Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank 591 Mass. VI 3-0330 A The New Spring Look MRS. JOHNSON MARY JANE TRUITT Delta Delta Delta Accent on Ruffles . . can make you the center of attraction in this easy-care frock of dacron and cotton by Alfred Werber. Black only. Sizes 7-15. $22.95 Jay SHOPPB 12th & Oread 835 Mass. Daily Hansan - stu- adoff, orwise story. longest aught show. with us. jun- ning is s the but the durable. s the in the con- ses for the sen- and re es- m se- tumes plush LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday, March 12, 1962 8. water of frock Alfred ; 7-15. 59th Year, No. 100 Survey Reveals Lack of Interest In Events Group A series of telephone interviews by the Daily Kansan over the weekend has revealed a lack of interest in the All Student Council bill to create a current events committee. Most persons in the 10 fraternities and 12 sororites contacted said they have little information about the proposed committee, which, if established, would bring speakers and films to the campus to encourage discussion on vital issues of the day. The committee would also form a speakers bureau composed of faculty members and students. The only person contacted who said she was informed on the proposed committee was Linda Stark, Salina junior and president of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Ask if she felt the committee would be worthwhile, she said: "I do. However, there has been an emphasis on current events lately and I don't feel this program would add a great deal to the programs already existing. If it did, it would be worthwhile." Nearly all the persons interviewed expressed the opinion that present organizations such as the Current Events Forum and the various house organizations are doing an adequate job of filling any need in the field of current events. All but one of the fraternities covered in the survey bring speakers into their houses and all the sororities checked have a similar program. Most persons interviewed professed little knowledge of the current events bill. Robert Walter, Hutchinson senior and vice president of Phi Kappa Psi questioned the need for the committee. When asked if they would make use of the speakers bureau to provide speakers for their organizations if the bureau should be formed, representatives of all house and dorms thought they would. "A continuation of the Current Events Forum will satisfactorily meet the needs. As for supplying speakers for the house, I think those who are interested will attend campus meetings. This is my personal opinion and I cannot talk for the house." Don Eversmeyer, Wright City, Mo. sophomore and president of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, felt the committee could perform a worthwhile service, but expressed concern over the expense. "Yes, I think it is a good idea. But if the expense is too great, I am against it. Under the present setup, we have faculty members speaking at no expense." Jim Standefer, Lenorah, Tex., senior and president of Templin Hall, was in favor of both speakers bureau and the off-campus speaker functions of the proposed committee. "It would be a good idea—if the program was carried out. It would give independent organizations an opportunity to hear qualified speakers that they don't have now." "GSP has a program for having speakers talk every Sunday on subjects in their areas. I feel these speakers are a cultural benefit to students." Mary Frances Watson, assistant to the residence director at Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall, said she would favor the committee. Judith Martin, Winfield junior and president of Lewis Hall, said that Lewis has a similar program. A lack of knowledge on the proposal prevented most of those interviewed from expressing too strong an opinion for or against it. When given a sketch of the committee's proposed function, all those interviewed felt that excellent speakers would be required to make the committee worthwhile. MATRIX CAMPUS WOODROW WILSON FELLOWSHIP WINNERS—Seated left to right are: Frances M. Schloz, Kansas City, Mo.; Karen M. Jennison, Healy; Mary S. Killgore, Parkville, Mo.; Charles E. McLure Jr., Van Horn, Tex.; Carol S. McMillen, Coldwater; Patricia Ann Monseth, Kirkwood, Mo.; Nancy H. Marsh, Dieue-sur-Meuse, France, (formerly, Leavenworth). Standing: Robert K. Remple, Weather Lawrence; Alan D. Latta, Wichita; Constant J. Poirier Jr., Topeka; Jon T. Anderson, WaKeney; Charles W. Hargrove, Lawrence; Harold W. Fearing, Lawrence; John R. Swanson, Baldwin; Larry L. Laudan, Lawrence; Craig E. Nelson, Mankato; Russell D. Klomp, Detroit, Mich., all seniors. Seven other KU seniors won honorable mention. Kansas has more tornadoes than any other place on earth Fred C. Bates, associate professor of aeronautical engineering, said yesterday. Partly cloudy and windy this afternoon with a few snow flurries northeast and extreme north central portion. Colder East. Clearing and colder tonight. Tuesday generally fair. Low tonight 10 to 15 northwest to the 20s southeast. High Tuesday 35 to 40. He was speaking to the Faculty Club on "Tornado Tracking." Kansas Top Storm State, Bates Says Tornadoes do occur in South Africa and Australia, he said, but they occur mostly in the Great Plains area of the United States. Kansas is in the center of the area. Prof. Bates said Great Plains thunderstorm activity is the most violent on earth. "It makes Florida and Ohio storms look gentle as kittens by comparison. (Continued on page 8) "If a thunderstorm passes directly over you or goes south, there is only a slight possibility you will be hit by a tornado," Prof. Bates said. Research indicates tornadoes usually occur south of the principal thunderstorm. Prof. Bates said tornadoes are often spotted by radar. Thunderstorms appear as a gray blotch on a radar screen. If a hook-like appendage shows up, the storm is likely to contain a tornado, he said. "In the East, however, Kansas has a reputation it doesn't deserve. People think we are like gophers in holes, running for the storm cellar about once a week to escape tornadoes. More than 255 storms occurred between 1916 and 1955," he said. "That's an average of five storms per year in a 14,000 square mile area." But there is less than one chance in 300 for a town to be affected by a tornado in such a large area, he noted. "But if a severe thunderstorm goes just north of you, the chance of being hit by a tornado is greater." A vector angle can be drawn from 17 Win Wilson Awards As KU Places in Top Ten Seventeen KU seniors have won Woodrow Wilson Fellowships to put the University among the top ten colleges and universities in competition for the coveted awards. Seven other KU seniors won honorable mention. Michigan (20). Columbia and Swarthmore tied for tenth with 16 each. The 17 awards put KU in ninth place. All the other institutions in the top ten have highly selective admissions examination policies. THE WOODROW WILSON National Fellowship Foundation makes the awards to encourage students in the arts and sciences to prepare for careers in college teaching. TOPPING KU in number of awards were Harvard (31); Yale (26); Oberlin, Princeton and Toronto (21); and Chicago, Cornell and Each Wilson fellow will receive a full year's tuition and fees at a graduate school of his choice and a living allowance of $1,500. IN THE NATIONAL competition, 965 colleges nominated 9,975 candi- Chancellor Advocates Individual Action In a statement issued this weekend, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoc said he is opposed to discrimination in fraternities and sororites but that he feels they should be allowed to deal with the situation themselves. During a Daily Kansan interview Saturday, he said: "I AM AGAINST SECREGATION. I am opposed to it, and also opposed to discrimination used in that sense," Chancellor Wescoe said. "I do not believe fraternities should have discriminatory clauses," he said. - "I THINK AT THE University of Kansas we probably have the campus with the least discrimination I have seen, and I have seen a good many of them. One of the great things about the University is that the living groups have gotten along very well together. Chancellor Wescos set forth his policy in five points: "There have been in the past excellent relationships between those who were members of fraternities and sororites and those who were not. I suspect that if there is any real hallmark of our student body at the present and in the past, it is the excellence of these relations. - **"AS I UNDERSTAND the situation relative to the chapters on this campus, each one at the present time really has the option within its organization of accepting whomever it wishes to accept.** The mechanics of acceptance differ but the mechanisms are available. (If a national organization has a Chancellor to Discuss Racial Discrimination Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will participate in an open hearing on the subject of racial discrimination at KU next Sunday night, Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and chairman of the Human Rights Committee, said last night. The meeting will be held in the Kansas Union, Grace said. - "THE FRATERNTIES in the recent past (by which I would mean particularly the postwar years) have (Continued on page 8) discriminatory clause, the local chapter can apply for a waiver of the clause, Chancellor Wescoe added.) dates. The foundation named 1.058 winners. The 17 awards to KU students were among 21 awarded at Kansas schools. They accounted for about 40 per cent of the awards at Big Eight schools. KU students have won far more than the University's share of the awards since a Ford Foundation grant made the Wilson Fellowship program a national program. Since 1945, KU students have won 78 of the fellowships. Jon T. Anderson, WaKeeney, Asian studies, Harvard; Harold W. Fearing, Lawrence, physics, Stanford; Charles W. Hargrove, Lawrence, French, Stanford; Karen M. Jennison, Healy, sociology, Washington: THE KU FELLOWSHIP winners, with field of study and first choice of graduate schools are: NANCY H. MARSH, Dieue-sur-Meuse, France, art history, Michigan; Charles E. McLure Jr., Van Horn, Tex., economics, Michigan; Carol SueMcMillen, Coldwater, English, Wisconsin; Patricia Ann Monseth, Kirkwood, Mo., anthropology, Columbia or Minnesota; Mary S. Killgore, Parkville, Mo., geography, Wisconsin; Russell D. Klomp, Detroit, Mich., classics, University of Washington; Alan D. Latta, Wichita, German, California; Larry L. Laudan, Kansas City, Kan., philosophy, Princeton Craig E. Nelson, Mankato, zoology, Texas; Constant J. Poier Jr., Topeka, international relations, California; Robert K. Remple, Lawrence, mathematics, Stanford; Frances M. Scholz, Kansas City, Mo., German, Stanford; and John R. Swanson, Baldwin, international relations, Indiana or Wisconsin. THE SEVEN KU students who won honorable mention are: Judith E. Baker, Salina, English; Garv E. Dilley, Emporia, Asian studies; Dell R. Odell, Shawnee Mission, French; Jon R. Rutherford, Garden City, French; Clyde O. Thogmartin Jr., Emporia, French; David C. Trowbridge, Prairie Village, history; and Janet Wright, Prairie Village, history. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday. March 12, 1962 Nikita's Farm Problem Premier Khrushchev has decided to continue channeling funds into the Kremlin's military program rather than diverting substantial funds into the Soviet Union's inefficient agricultural system. He recently chastised the officials who run the Soviet agriculture program for the inefficiency and low production of the collectivized farms. THIS INEFFICIENCY becomes obvious if you know that over 40 per cent of the Soviet work force is engaged in agricultural work, as compared to less than 10 per cent of the American work force. The fact that even this large percentage of the Soviet work force is not producing enough to do more than meet the needs of the Soviet Union is even more telling. Khrushchev has said that attempts will be made to increase the output of agricultural products by more efficient use of machinery and improved organization. However, numerous attempts of this sort have been made in the past, and have failed to solve the problem. THE DECISION is an unfortunate reflection of the cold war and arms race. This is shown by Khruchchev's statement that the Soviet Union's military strength is its most important objective. Thus what the Kremlin is attempting to do is increase agricultural production by efforts to increase the efficiency of the collectivized farms. At the same time he intends to continue with plans for military projects. The military plans will probably be successful, considering their priority and the absolute power the Kremlin can use to insure them. But the agricultural situation seems destined to continue in its present condition —William H. Mullins letters to the editor On the Rights of Communists Editor: This is in reply to Miss Robbins' ideas about the rights of communists in this country. She categorically asserts that, "Communists are not Americans, they are members of their party. They are not entitled to American rights. If we choose to extend them, it is a loan, not an automatic right. Those rights are something that are earned." THERE ARE three varieties of Communists in this country: 1) American citizens (who are obviously Americans), 2) diplomatic staff members from communist countries, and 3) a very small number of temporary visitors who are communists. Those in 1) have American rights by definition. Those in 2) have diplomatic immunity and at worst can be declared persona non grata. The rights of the few in 3) can be abridged, but only to a certain degree. Thus, if the attorney general spotted a person of this type causing general mischief, he would probably have the man deported rather than, for instance, throwing him in jail without a trial. FOR THE MOST part, contrary to Miss Robbins' statement, communists do have rights. Moreover, we can make no changes in the law regarding the status of those in category 2), and we dare not make any law abridging the rights of American citizens who are communists or are suspected of being communists. To do so would be to lay the foundations for a police state in this country. Make no mistake, Miss Robbins! I am opposed to communism, and we must fight the movement as strongly as possible, but we must use legal weapons only. To do otherwise would be to imitate the communists. Alan D. Latta Wichita senior Finally, Miss Robbins, you asked what right do the communists have to speak about the "American Right?" The answer: just as much right as the "American Right" has to speak about the Communists — limited only by libel and slander laws. * * Message to the Kansan Editor: Be it hereby resolved that the undersigned representative nations abhor the necessity of espionage activities and as such the poor image it is giving to the KU Model United Nations and that henceforth it is hoped the University Daily Kansan will be able to report the many hours of physical and mental work that are being involved to make this UN a success. Being aware of its tremendous value to the campus in creating an international conscience for the campus. This is an activity of intense interest that we hope the students will be better informed of and better able to participate in due to the coverage of this work the University Daily Kansan has now so earnestly expressed an interest to make available. There is much good material the UDK can find at its disposal. We are an all University assemblage and as such shall conduct ourselves with sincerity and as much authenticity as possible. —the Soviet bloc —the African bloc —the Arab bloc five members of the Latin American bloc * * In Defense of ROTC Editor: Being a professional naval officer and, at the same time, both an instructor in the NROTC Program and a graduate student on the Hill, I feel bound to comment on my fellow graduate student's (Mr. Lopatin's) letter. We certainly should concentrate on avoiding war, and if it is my firm belief that this is, has been, and always will be our prime objective. History shows us that war has never been avoided by being the weaker of two possible opponents; we are dealing with men and not with saints. Because our country sees fit to remain militarily strong does not, per se, make us "militaristic" as Mr. Bertrand Russell and Mr. Lopatin infer. To begin with, there is no rightful place in a democracy such as ours for pure militarism. Fortunately, we possess checks and counter-balances in the structure of our National Government which function to preclude the establishment of militarism in our society. This insures that our military will always serve as an instrument of the people and not vice-versa. This is as it should be. Have the ROTC Programs fostered a militaristic atmosphere on the Campus? Look around you. Perhaps you can confirm my observation that the ROTC Cadets and Midshipmen are among the quieter, well-behaved students on the Campus — not storm-trooping militarists. I BELIEVE that the over-all design and execution of the ROTC Programs are in consonance with our democratic objectives along this line, rather than acting as a threat to these objectives. The enrollment in the various ROTC Programs at most universities is limited so that the total number of students enrolled in ROTC shall always be a minority, rather than a majority, representation of the Student Body. Does this smack of militarism? Can the ROTC's create a militaristic atmosphere on the Campus? Not when one considers the fact that fully 89 per cent, or more of the courses undertaken by ROTC personnel are taught, not by military personnel, but by the university professors who. I can assure you, make no such distinction among their students. We are all civilians to them, and we are taught as civilians in a civilian, not militaristic, atmosphere. NOW. SINCE "we shall know a tree by its fruit," what about the finished product of the ROTC Programs? Has he been transformed into a snarling "militarist?" Hardly. In fact, a large majority of the ROTC graduates voluntarily elect to return to civilian life upon completion of their obligated active duty. The point being made is that they are primarily civilians at heart, not only while in the ROTC Programs, but while on active duty also. Again, does this smack of militarism? Would it not seem plausible that the presence on active duty of such young men with ingrained civilian attitudes and desires might thus exert some tempering effect on our military establishment? The answer is that they do. Mr. Lopatin, if you are worried about what I think you are, then you should be a strong supporter of the ROTC Programs and not an opponent, because the ROTC Programs simply are not established or geared to produce a militarist. Lewis L. Dobbs LCDR, USN graduate student * * On "Poor" UDK Reporting Editor: Lately the Daily Kansan and one of its reporters were blamed by an instructor of the political science department for irresponsible reporting of the now famous "U-2 CURRENT EVENTS FORUM." While we are happy that the above mentioned instructor softened some of his harsh statements given on that occasion, we are sorry to see the Daily Kansan reporters attacked unjustly. We suggest, therefore, that from now on the above mentioned instructor will read his speeches from a prepared typed text, a copy of which will be given to the "irresponsible" reporters of the UDK. This will avoid in the future any "extreme bad taste" stories, "uncanny" reporting, "out of context" quotations, "lurid and sensational" reporting of "fairly conventional statements," contradicting "versions" and so many letters to the editor (including this one). Name Withheld Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1850, became biweekly 1904, published quarterly 1920. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 896, business office Extension 376, business office Association of Associated College Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East St. 50. St. New York 22. N.Y. Press. Represents the Press International Mail subscriptions semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and weekends and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Mullins Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinez .. Business Manager LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler LOUISÉ — THIS IS YOUR DATE WORTHAL TH' TALL DARK HANDSOME DEBONAIRE DEVIL I'VE BEEN TELLING YOU ABOUT. SHE'S SENSITIVE ABOUT HAVING TO WEAR GLASSES-SHE'S BLIND AS A BAT WITHOUT 'EM. BBER R-27 CLARK ART CANADA On Other Campuses HOBOKEN, N. J.—A $31,000 grant to initiate the study and design of a new type of unspecialized undergraduate engineering program that emphasizes the unity of all branches of science and technology has been awarded to Stevens Institute of Technology by the Victoria Foundation, Morristown, N. J. The program will cut across traditional fields of engineering and science to regroup their basic principles into "general concept" areas. For example, it is expected that certain areas of Chemical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Physics and Metallurgy might be brought together in a single course which would emphasize their basic common mathematical relationships. $$ * * * $$ NORTHAMPTON, Mass.—Papers, examinations, and nearly all classes were suspended at Smith College for a three week period, January 8-28, according to a report released here, for an experiment in education designated the "interim session." The new program replaces a reading and examination period which formerly followed the Christmas holidays. This year midyear examinations were held immediately before the holidays began. The new program was designed to afford all students an opportunity for independent study and discussion, to permit juniors and seniors to investigate special topics in the field of the major, and to assist freshmen and sophomores in determining the field of their major interest. $$ $$ IOWA CITY, Ia.—College life has little influence in changing a student's values, Professor Leonard D. Goodstein, director of The State University of Iowa Counseling Services, said here recently. He said that research indicates that if a college has any effect on student values, it makes students more content with the world as it is, more satisfied with the values they already have, more conformist and more materialistic. "In other words," Professor Goodstein said, "a graduate's values are pretty much like when he came to college, only more so." One of the main reasons for this is that a student is influenced more by the constant contact with his student friends—his dormitory roommate, for example—than by his professors who are primarily concerned with presenting to him their subject-matter specialty. And, a student tends to select as his friends, and especially as his roommates, fellow students who have interests and values similar to his own. $$ $$ TROY, N. Y.-The filing system for hour quizzes and final examinations, initiated with the January 1962 final examinations at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, received its initial impetus on the basis of a joint Student Council-Honor Board resolution. Reasons listed included: such a program would provide an additional method of preparing for hour quizzes and final exams, as well as reducing the pre-test psychological pressure of anxiety of students; in filing quizzes and examinations, the system gives the faculty an incentive for producing original test material; such a program would reduce the definite inequality that the fraternity filing system causes between fraternity men and independents insofar as preparation for testing is concerned. Worth Repeating Drink is worse than war, for drink is continuous, war but periodic—Graccio Houlder - * * All that is necessary for the forces of evil to win in the world is for good men to do nothing.—Edmund Burke Page 3 P-T-P to Collect Books For KU Lending Library A goal of 5,000 volumes has been set for the People-to-People lending library for KU's foreign students. The library, still in its planning stages, has the approval of Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and Clark Coan. foreign student adviser. Books will be collected during Greek Week, March 19 to 23. It will be a university-wide program and will provide every KU student with an opportunity to take an active part in the KU P-T-P program. During the first two days of Greek Week, March 19 and 20, members of the Interfraternity Pledge Council will visit all the organized living groups on the campus. They will present skits during the dinner hours, and make arrangements with members of the living groups to pick up books at a specified time during the three middle days of Greek Week, March 20-21-22. As yet, no permanent location for the library has been established, but by next fall the library should be in some permanent location on campus. Until then the books will be stored at some as yet undetermined location off campus. Students who live outside the organized living groups may bring the books they wish to donate to the campus collection center which will be located at the information booth on Jawhawk Blvd. All kinds of books will be collected, but those needed most are the ones still used in classroom instruction. Books which are no longer used at KU will be sent overseas through the KU-Y overseas books program. After the books are collected, the KU chapter of P-T-P will catalog Monday, March 12. 1962 University Daily Kansan the books. James H. Stoner, manager of the Student Union bookstore has agreed to help P-T-P with the cataloging job. In addition to the cataloging help, the book store will also exchange books which may be in surplus in one field for books in short supply on the P-T-P library shelves. The trip is sponsored by the geology department, R. H. Benson, assistant professor of geology and W.K. Pooser, technical assistant of geology will accompany a maximum of 30 students. Travel will be by bus. Grand Canyon Trip Has Room for 5 Room is still available for five more students to go on an eight-day Spring vacation sight-seeing trip to the Grand Canyon, Pike's Peak, four National Parks and other vacation spots in the Colorado-Utah-Arizona region. Any student in good health is welcome to go. The cost will be about $80. The group will sleep outdoors several nights in sleeping bags provided by the department, and a cook-out is planned. Rocks, petrified trees, fossils and other geological matter will be observed. The bus will leave Lawrence at 7 p.m. March 31, and return on April 7. Further details can be obtained from Prof. Benson, 303-N Lindley Hall. The closing date is March 19. MOTOR TUNE-UP HALT ENGINE WEAR Get the best tune-ups in town electronically by Dynavision ALSO Lubrication Oil Changes Brakes Mufflers Tail Pipes Generators BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE 601 Mass. Art Nease, Mgr. 7 a.m.- 10 p.m. VI 3-9849 Catholic Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11:45-12 noon; Saturdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road America's Most Exciting Folk Trio the Limeliters HOGH march 17 8:30 Official Bulletin Applications for Men's Residence Hall Class of 2014. 288 Strong Hall. Applications must be returned by March 30. Application contact the office of Dean of Men. There will be no Modern Book Forum on Tuesday. March 14 — James Flake, Parkville Public Schools (El. & Sec.), Parkville, Mo. March 13 — Donald Sheldon, Assoc. Supt. (Elem & Sec.), Stockton, Calif. March 14 — C. X. Dowler, Pers. Dir., Columbia. Foreign Students: Your attention is called to page 8 of the March issue of *The College Journal*, for invitations for home hospitality. If you would desire to take advantage of either one of these journals, please return the reservation coupon from page 8 to the office of the Dean of Students, 228 Strong Hall. The deadline date extended to 5 p.m., Tuesday, March 13. Teacher Interviews: TODAY Lecture: 4 p.m., 322 Malott, Mr. Robert Allen Wiley, Ph.D. candidate from the University of California, "Thyroxine Analogues." Mathematics Colloquium: 5:10 p.m., 103 Strong Hall, Dr. Fred S. Van Vleck from the University of Michigan Systems of Ordinary Differential Equations." Coffee: 4:50 p.m., 119强 Hall. Quill Club: 8 p.m., room to be assigned on board in Kansas Union. Bring menus/recipes. TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion & Breakfast: 7 a.m., Canterbury House. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Wanna' Buy a Dog? Talented Students Perform Tonight CHICAGO — (UPI) — Dennis Vinnaneh placed the following ad in his insurance company's house organ: "Will pay $2 to anyone who wants dog which has been bitten by child three times." Seven outstanding performers from student recitals this year will present an honor recital at 8 p.m. tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. The seven were chosen by the faculty of the School of Fine Arts. Solists will be John Taddiken, Independence sophomore, violist; Donna Moore, Independence, Mo., cellist; Martha Shirley, Mankato sophomore, soprano; and Errol Haun. Larned sophomore, pianist. Student accompanists will be Carol Swift, Fort Smith, Ark., sophomore, Leann Hillmer, Hutchinson junior and Miss Mishell. A trio consisting of Beatrice Kay Gordon, Wichita junior, violinist; Ben Clinesmith, Fort Scott sophomore, cellist; Lee Mishell, Beverly Hills, Calif., senior, pianist, will also be on the program. Check your opinions against LM's Campus Opinion Poll 18 $\textcircled{1}$ Would you volunteer to man the first space station if odds on survival were 50-50? Yes No 2 How many children would you like to have when you're married? TALK TO OVER THE TIME □ Yes □ No □ None □ One □ Two □ Three □ Four or more Do men expect their dates to furnish their own cigarettes? Yes No □ None □ One □ Two □ Three □ Four or more Get lots more from L&M L & M gives you MORE BODY in the blend, MORE FLAVOR in the smoke, MORE TASTE through the filter. It's the rich-flavor leaf that does it! L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO HERE'S HOW 1029 STUDENTS AT 100 COLLEGES VOTED! Yes ... 36% No ... 64% None ... 3% One ... 9% Two ... 31% Three ... 31% Four or more... 26% Yes ... 73% No ... 27% L $ ^{\mathrm{4}} $ M's the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 12. 1962 Wescoe Takes Some Stands, Gives Some Answers Chancellor Urges Juco Cooperation By Walt Blackledge Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has urged junior college leaders to work for statewide coordination of the junior college program. In an address to the Junior College Conference Friday, the Chancellor stressed that if junior college education is to be considered higher education and not an extension of high school, it should be coordinated with the total college and university program throughout the state. "We believe that the junior colleges should view themselves as colleges, with statewide implications, rather than as extensions of the high schools on the local level," he said. Wescoe quoted from the report of the Comprehensive Educational Survey, which recommended "that the State Board of Regents be recognized as the agency which carries statewide responsibility for all higher education and for determining the role which a state system of higher education should supply in providing leadership and planning to meet the needs of the years ahead." - Local communities are short of funds and find it difficult even to support elementary and secondary education. - HE SAID THAT thinking of junior colleges only as local institutions and extensions of high schools is inadequate for the following reasons: - State aid in nickels and dimes without control, supervision and accounting for funds simply drains money from local elementary and secondary schools and from the five state institutions of higher learning. - Technical-vocational education will not flourish under local support and thinking. It must be coordinated. 105 - The recommendation of the Comprehensive Educational Survey that the Board of Regents carry statewide responsibility for higher education in Kansas cannot be implemented under the present system. Chancellor Wescoe - There is, under the present system, no statewide planning for the establishment of junior colleges where they are needed or for the discontinuance of junior colleges where they are not needed. "JUNIOR COLLEGES should expect . . . financial support (rather aid) from the State . . . supplemented by adequate and reasonable fees paid by the students in attendance," he said. The Chancellor said that estimates indicate that enrollment will nearly double by 1970 in Kansas public institutions of higher learning. (These include the five state schools, Wichita, Washburn and 14 junior colleges.) If this is done, he added, the Board of Regents could begin to exercise its responsibility for public higher education in Kansas. He said the question is raised whether the present campuses can accommodate this number of students under the present financial structure. IT MAY BE NECESSARY to control the number of students enrolled on some of the campuses, he said, but if this is done, alternate locations must be available to students who cannot be taken care of at these schools. "If alternate campuses are provided throughout the State, the size of existing campuses can be controlled. But, wherever the student attends, he should be guaranteed an educational experience of high quality . . . suitable to his needs and abilities." he said. Senor Patrolman Is Beesy WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — (UPI) A passerby kept Highway Patrolman Stan F. McCreadie Jr. from being stuck without transportation recently when a swarm of bees clustered on his motorcycle. A statewide program for higher education would be expensive, but it is needed to provide a quality The man, who happened to be a beekeeper, purchased some honey in a nearby store, lured the bees into a cardboard box and walked off with them. The Chancellor urged the junior college leaders to take the initiative in working for this kind of program. system of higher education for the youth of Kansas, he added. Mexican Diplomat To Speak Tomorrow Professor Herberto Sein, Mexican educator and diplomat, will speak on "Half a Hemisphere in Revolution" at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The University lecture is sponsored by the department of Romance languages and the Latin American Area Committee. The lecture will be in English. A KU instructor said Friday afternoon at the Current Events Forum that the Communists did not inspire the Japanese demonstrations during the summer of 1960. Zolbrod Says Japanese Riots Linked to History, Tradition Leon Zolbrod, instructor of oriental language, was the featured speaker for the subject "Were the Japanese Demonstrations Communist Inspired?" Zolbrod, who is on leave from Tokyo University, thinks that Japanese riots are a tradition in Japan which dates back to the establishment of population centers around Japanese urban communities. SEEKING TO SUPPORT his theory of tradition-inspired riots, Zolbrod said: "During the 1780s a series of natural disasters, fires, earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, rocked Japan. The Japanese people blamed the disasters on the government." CITY OF WASHINGTON The trouble ended in 1787 with a mass demonstration calling for the downfall of the government. The reigning government was replaced and a period of reform was ushered in with the new government, he said. HE ADMITTED THAT during the riots of 1960 there was some Communist support, but he said he did not believe it was of much importance. He primarily blamed the Japanese tradition of resistance for the demonstrations. He said that the riots of 1960 are pertinent today in 1962 because "they are a landmark in the liberal democratic development of post-war Japan. STEWARDESS INTERVIEWS UNITED AIR LINES March 20 You may qualify if you . . . ★ are 5' 2" to 5' 8" ★ are 20 - 26 ★ single ★ weight proportioned to height Contact Placements Office for March 20 interviews UNITED By Walt Blackledge Chancellor Speaks OnTelevisionShow Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe appeared on television in Kansas City, Mo., Sunday afternoon to answer questions about federal scholarship aid, making Wichita University part of the state system, drop-outs at the University and student marriages. The chancellor answered the questions on "Yours for the Asking," a KMBC program moderated by Claude Dorsey. The questions were telephoned to the television station before and during the broadcast. ONE VIEWER ASKED Chancellor Wescoe his opinion on federal scholarship aid "on a pay-back basis." The chancellor answered: Asked if he favored Wichita University becoming part of the state system, the Chancellor said: "The associations of universities to which the University of Kansas belongs . . . are on record with the American Council on Education . . . as being opposed at the present time to federal scholarships in support of higher education. "We believe at the present time that the greatest need in higher education is the provision for physical facilities adequate to handle the students who presently are enrolled and who will be coming to us in the next few years, and we really put, under those circumstances, the matter of federal aid by way of scholarships at a lower priority level." "IT WILL BE INCUMBENT on the legislature of Kansas and the Board of Regents of the State of Kansas to decide at the last analysis whether Wichita University will become part of the state system or not . . . "It is quite apparent to me, and I think to most everyone, that a state the size of Kansas with the income that Kansas now has from tax sources is probably in no position to support three institutions of higher learning with highly developed graduate programs." have another would be exceedingly costly, "and in my estimation, the state cannot afford that." Another viewer asked Chancellor Wescoe how many students who entered the University found they could not stand the pace. He answered that of the 2119 students entering the University for the first time this fall, less than five per cent found it necessary to leave for scholastic reasons. The state now has two such schools at KU and Kansas State University, the chancellor said. He said that to HE ADDED THAT many of those who left could have been readmitted on probation if they had applied for readmittance. Another questioner asked if the chancellor approved of early marriages among University students. He said there seemed to be "a good deal of it going on" and that the marriages seemed to be fairly successful. Married students did not appear to have a greater amount of difficulty in school, he said. Chancellor Wescoe also answered one question about charges that certain faculty members or departments are favoring socialistic ideas. "I do not consider that the faculty of the University in any way . . . can be described as being left wing in its leanings," he said. Elder Gunter, president of the International City Managers Association (ICMA) and city manager of Des Moines, Iowa, will speak on "Ethics and Future of City Managership." Orin F. Nolting, Chicago, director of ICMA, will also address the group. Seventy city administrators from a 10-state area are expected to attend the school. Two Experts to Talk At Managers' Meet John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, will give the closing address of the session. He will talk on "Why Do You Want Your Cities to Grow?" Two city administration leaders will speak at the 15th annual City Managers School at KU April 24-26. 1010 university sport coat — the season's smartest fashion to wear with your favorite slacks, traditionally styled, 3 button front, natural shoulder, center vent, in the newest fashion, right colors. from $22.95 diebolt's 843 Mass. Page 5 WELCOME TO THE NEW YORK MUSEUM OF ART. Judy Young (center), Kansas City, Mo., junior, representing Alpha Delta Pi was chosen Greek Week Queen by a panel of judges yesterday. Her attendants are Ann Leffler (left), Pittsburg sophomore, Pi Beta Phi and Susan Olson, (right), Topeka junior, Alpha Chi Omega. The three, chosen from a field of 13 candidates will reign over the chariot relays, the Greek Week Sing and the scholarship Banquet. Greek Week Royalty Chosen— Rusk, Gromyko Hold 3-Hour Talk GENEVA — (UPI) — Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko today held a wide-ranging three-hour talk which apparently failed to crack the East-West deadlock on critical cold war issues. The other queen candidates were: Dana Sullivan, Alpha Omicron Pi; Connie Hays, Alpha Phi; Sharon Buckner, Alpha Kappa Alpha; Martha Parmley, Kappa Alpha Theta; Lois Ann Ragsdale, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Betty Dwyer, Delta Delta Delta; Kitty Wood, Sigma Kappa; Melanie Chandler, Chi Omega; Carol Cline, Delta Gamma, and Jan Wise, Gamma Phi Beta. RUSK, WITH A few of his top advisers, was the lunch guest of Gromyko at the Soviet Villa Rose near the Palais Des Nations where the U.N.-sponsored 17-nation general disarmament conference is scheduled to open Wednesday. Gromyko told newsmen afterwards that he found no reason for optimism after discussing a broad list of matters of "mutual interest" with Busk. Even while the lunch was in progress, the official Soviet news agency released the text of a letter to U.N. Secretary General Thant in which the Soviet Union proposed that the nuclear powers agree not to turn over nuclear weapons or any information on their production to other countries. THE LETTER WAS signed by Gromyko and said the "Soviet Union considers that there is no reason for putting off such an agreement." It also reiterated Kremlin support for the creation of nuclear-free zones in various areas of the world. Also high on the agenda of the Big Three foreign ministers' conversations was the problem of Berlin. Monday, March 12. 1962 University Daily Kansan BAR B Q CHICKEN SANDWICH 30c BIG BUY Applications for the nine SUA Board Chairmen are available in the Union. The applications must be returned by March 30. Two freshmen from South Missouri State College took first place in the Heart of America debate tournament here Saturday. Missouri School Wins Debates Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia. Charles Collins, of Monette, Mo., and Larry Chastain, of Sedalia,Mo., both political science majors,won by a 3 to 2 vote over debaters from The finals were the result of two and one-half days of debating "Resolved; That Labor Organizations Should Be Placed Under Anti-trust Legislation" by debaters from 32 schools all over the country. SALE ENDS CLIP THIS COUPON MAR. 17TH ANY CLOTH Men's-s-Child's-Ladies' COAT 59¢ CAR COATS FUR TRIMMED ZIP-IN LININGS OVERCOATS RAINCOATS ANY COAT! SALE ENDS CLIP THIS COUPON MAR. 17TH ANY CLOTH Men's-Child's-Ladies' COAT 59¢ ea. CAR COATS FUR TRIMMED ZIP-IN LININGS OVERCOATS RAINCOATS ANY COAT! NOTE: No Limit — but you must bring coupon in WITH your order. TROUSERS ● SLACKS ● 5 TIES ● SPORT SHIRTS ● SWEATERS ● BLOUSES ● SKIRTS (plain) 39¢ ea. Deluxe Cleaned, Beautifully Pressed Note: No Limit. But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Order $5c SHIRTS NOW ONLY 20¢ 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 SHIRTS SHIRTS NOW ONLY 20¢ Laundered to perfection! Starched as you like! 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 DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FINEST By Susan Flood It was advertised as informal—it was announced as informal—and it was. The SUA Jazz Forum last night seemed to thrive on informality. The musicians had never played together before, and they didn't last night. At least not in physical proximity. Musicians wandered in and out of the Big Eight Room of the Union, and on and off the stage at will. T-Shirts, Guitars and Smoke Seen at SUA Jazz Forum Although the clapping was sporadic, the playing was not. The musicians tuned up, came in and faded out without any interruption in the pulsating jazz. THE AUDIENCE DID THE same, but the crowd grew instead of dwindling. Dress of both the audience and musicians varied from suits to T-shirts. The beat of the music set the scene. Blue overhead lights and cigarette smoke blended into the hazy state of mind. Reactions varied. A small child enacted her version of the twist—in perfect time. One boy in the audience wandered over to converse with the guitar player, who immediately stopped playing to talk. A SAXOPHONE PLAYER submitted his horn to a newcomer and joined the audience. Another little boy without an instrument unconsciously fingered the notes in front of him. KUOK announcers made casual comments over the air and to anyone nearby. An occasional familiar strain blended into the haze. A wide range of notes and moods passed between musicians and audience. The only signs among the musicians were a nod of the head, meaning, "you take it." More often it was merely spontaneous. At the end of the "program," a member of the audience asked a musician near her, "What do you call what you're playing?" "Jazz," he replied casually. "Progressive jam-session type." Kansas high school students will display original works of art March 13 to 19 in Strong Hall in connection with the 19th annual High School Art Conference. High School Students To Display Art Work The conference is expected to draw approximately 1000 junior and senior high school students to the campus March 16. Critics will evaluate the work submitted by the students. The critics and KU faculty members will counsel with the students about their work, about education and careers in art and about the Midwestern Art Camp held at KU in the summer. MEN! In plastic! Old Spice DEODORANT 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 Monday, March 12. 1963 KU Foursome Sets Record A Kansas two mile relay team of Kirk Hagan, Tonnie Coane, Bill Thornton and Bill Dotson established a new American record of 7:30.8 at the Chicago Daily News indoor meet Friday night. The Jayhawker unit chopped two seconds off the old record held by Manhattan college. HAGAN STARTED the race for the Jayhawkers. For the first four laps he was nip-and-tuck with runners from Nebraska and Drake. He then pulled away from the pack and built up a 30-yard lead for the second runner, Coane. Conne and Thornton added to the already substantial margin and on the final leg of the relay Dotson lapped the Drake runner. Dotson ran KU's fastest time with a 1:51.1. Hagan ran a 1:52.2. Thornton, 1:52.8 and Coane 1:54.8. Last Place Hawks Fall to Colorado Kansas basketball coach Dick Harp has maintained all year long that his squad's major problem was "maintaining a consistent effort." He buttressed his arguments by pointing to eight games in which his Jayhawkers either led at halftime or with several minutes remaining in the game, before coming out on the losing end. The margins ranged from one point in overtime play to five points. SATURDAY NIGHT the cellar-bound Jayhawkers met front-running Colorado at Boulder. The game meant little for Kansas, but Colorado had everything to lose and nothing to gain. Riding atop the Big Eight CU could only lose its undisputed claim to the conference championship and a trip to NCAA Regional tournament at Manhattan Friday. The Kansas State Wildcats completed their season Wednesday and could only cross fingers in hopes that its rival Jayhawkers could do what some termed "impossible." It looked as if an impossibility was to be reality with five minutes remaining at Boulder. The Jayhawkers, playing as if they were conference champions held a commanding 10-point lead over the Buffaloes. IT WAS no surprise that their old nemesis "maintaining a consistent effort" should strike. In a period of one minute and 58 seconds the Buffaloes outscored KU 11-0 and gained a one-point advantage. Cincinnati Meets Bradley Tonight CINCINNATI, Ohio—(UPI)—The second-ranked Cincinnati Bearcats meet Bradley tonight in a Missouri Valley Conference playoff to determine the District 5 representative to the NCAA games. The loser will undoubtedly round out the National Invitation tournament roster for its Thursday opener. Cincinnati won the 1961 NCAA title by beating Ohio State in overtime. It has won the MVC crown four straight years and on the basis of past performance could make it five in a row—provided it gets by Bradlev. Three of the four NCAA regional preliminaries start tonight, with an Eastern sectional tripleheader at Philadelphia. Have You Visited the "COBWEB" at the BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass This is all it took to put the wraps on one of the Javahawks' worst seasons in history. The Hawks, having lost their momentum, could settle for no more than last place. It was some consolation that they weren't alone. Hunsinger Motor Co. German Cars BMW - NSU The final score was Colorado, 63, Kansas 59. During the football season Kansas and Missouri fought it out for the top rungs on the Big Eight ladder. In basketball the two rivals share last place, both with 3-11 records. JERRY GARDNER finished his college career with a 25-point performance and a sure conference individual scoring title. Official figures will be released later this week. The scrappy guard scored 1,029 points during his three-year career and finished as the highest scoring guard in Javhawk annals. Nolen Ellison, his running mate, continued his late season slump scoring 14 points, four below his average. Harry Gibson, sophomore forward who has been hampered by a bad knee the entire year, scored 10 points. KEN CHARLTON who engaged in a season-long scoring duel with Gardner, was the Buffalooes' big show. Charlton scored 24 points for the game's second high individual total. He had but one companion in double figures, Lonnie Melton who scored 12 points. The league title for Colorado ended a seven year respite for the Buffalooes. Colorado's only previous titles came in 1954 when it tied Kansas and 1955 when it won undisputed. BOSTON, Mass.—(UPI)—Boston equalled the NBA record for most victories in a season by making Los Angeles its 59th victim with a 119-105 triumph over the Lakers yesterday. The Celtics can set a new mark by beating Syracuse tomorrow. 1c SALE For every 10 cent drink you buy, the BIG BUY offers you another for 1c. Sport Briefs Wilt Chamberlain came within three points of 4,000 for the season when he tallied 44 in Philadelphia's 148-130 loss to Syracuse. Pro basketball's greatest scoring champion can reach the charmed plateau in his final game of the regular season against Chicago Wednesday night. In the only other game played yesterday, Bob Pettit kept his unbeaten record as a player-coach intact when the St. Louis Hawks edged the Detroit Pistons, 126-123. Tuesday thru Friday FROM Yesterday's exhibition baseball results: * * 23rd & Iowa 11 a. m. to 5 p.m. Chicago (A) 10, Cincinnati (N) 3 Kansas City (A) 7, Los Angeles (N) 5 BIG BUY HOME OF KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN Milwaukee (N) 10, Detroit (A) 6 New York (N) 4, St. Louis (N) Philadelphia (N) 3, Minnesota (A) Washington (A) 7, Pittsburgh (N) New York (A) 5, Baltimore (A) 4 Boston (A) 6, Chicago (N) 5 San Francisco (N) 9, Cleveland (A) 9 (10 innings) Los Angeles (A) 8. Houston (N) 7 * * CHICAGO, Ill.—(UPI)—The Chicago Majors have regained first place in the Eastern Division and are determined to remain on top for the second half American Basketball League playoffs with the Kansas City Steers. Tony Jackson, former St. John's star, scored 22 points for Chicago Sunday as the Windy City squad downed Hawaii, 111-95. Pittsburgh dropped out of the Eastern lead when Kansas City ripped the Rens, 100-91, in the only other league action. KU Track Team Handles Warrensbura With Ease In coordination with the varsity meet, the freshmen competed against themselves. Herald Hadley, Shallow Water, established a new freshman two-mile run record of 9:17.8, over seven seconds better than Billy Mills' 9:25 set in 1957. The Kansas Jayhawker track team defeated Warrensburg 88-32 in a practice meet here Saturday afternoon. MIKE FULGHUM and Larry Cordell were double-winners for the Jayhawkers. Felghum won the 1000- yard and mile run, and Cordell the high jump and broad jump. Kansas won all events with the exception of the 60-yard dash and the low hurdles. Winners for KU included; Charlie Smith, high hurdles; Bill Stoddart, 600-yard run; Larry McCue, 440-yard dash; Charlie Hayward, two-mile run; Yul Yost, shot put; Roger Schmanke, pole vault; Ted Riesinger, 880-yard run. NOW!! 7 & 9 p.m. Fun is Back . . . Laughter is Back . . . Those Pillow Talk Playmates Are Back ... ROCK HUDSON DORIS DAY TONY RANDALL TONER COME BACK EDIE ADAMS • JACK OAKIE JACK KRUSCHEN TOVER COME BACK Granada TREATRE...Telephone VI 3-573 Another pleasant surprise for the freshmen was Richard Cordell, brother to the varsity's Cordell. The younger Cordell jumped 6-3½ in the high jump, three inches better than he had ever jumped. Longhorns Defeat Sooners Austin, Tex. — (UPI) . The University of Texas scored 14 runs in the seventh inning Saturday to drub Oklahoma, 19-7, in a non-conference baseball game. The Longhorns got four homers in the seventh-inning melee, including a three-run blast by second baseman Pat Rigby and a grand-slammer by first baseman Buddy New. HELD OVER! 7 & 9 p.m. FOR THE WHOLE WORLD TO ENJOY! WALT DISNEYS ALL-CARTOON FEATURE Pinocchio TECHNICOLOR PLUS Walt Disney's "MYSTERIES OF THE DEEP" Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 "YOUR AFTER-SHAVE LOTION, SIR" "Jason, you doilt! You know I use only Mennen Skin Bracer after shave lotion." "Of course, sir. And this..." 3 "Indeed so, sir. And..." "Tonight I need Skin Bracer. I'm going to the Prom. So take that stuff away and get me some Skin Bracer!" "I've told you that Skin Bracer cools rather than burns. Because it's made with Menthol ice." "Quite, sir. And this..." "Besides, that crisp, long-lasting Bracer aroma has a fantastic effect on girls." "But sir, this is Skin Bracer. They've just changed the bottle. Shall I open it now, sir?" [Image of a young man with dark hair, wearing a light-colored shirt and holding his arms outstretched.] [Image of a young man with dark hair, wearing a light-colored shirt and holding his arms outstretched.] MENNEN skin bracer AFTER CARE MENNEN M TRADE MARK LOS breat wing 7600. Jr. of F BEV ice close Ice 0350. M CREATIVE COMPUTER - ACTUALLY, YOU DON'T NEED A VALET TO APPRECIATE MENNEN SKIN BRACER. ALL YOU NEED IS A FACE! Monday, March 12. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS LOST FOUND LOST at Tee Pee Sat nite; Black double-breasted coat with a mink collar and batwing sleeves. Call Kris Guldner, VI 3-7600. 3-12 Jr. college jump in Flint Hall the middle of Feb. Identify. See Mrs. Fine, 141 Flint. MISCELLANEOUS TRANSPORTATION BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. 6350. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 6350. Want ride from Lawrence to downtown K.C., Mo. 8-5 week days. Will share expenses. Call VI 3-9819 between 7:30 and 9 p.m. 3-12 Girl wants ride beginning April 1 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Call VI 2-2720 after 6:30, 1-35 8:30 p.m. TYPING FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-6524. Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with paper mast and Greek text Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. vii VI 2-1546. TYPING; Experiented typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports. Extra Accurate Writer. Responsible extra. Etc. Contact Mrs. Mrs. McEldowney, Ph. VI 3-8568. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-9136.Mrs. Lo- gehib. EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mr. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. **tt** TYPIST. experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Cases: 1511 W. 21 St. CVI 3-6440 t. Sell 1511 W. 21 St. CVI 3-6440 t. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Service. Medical Service. Eyes or Sat. Mission. HE 2-7718, EV7 or Sat. R 2-2168. tf THESES, reports, term papers typeset neatly, accurately by experienced typist, typewriter. Reasonable price for Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. Colu I 3-04835. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate desk-resistant rates. Mt. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 21-1648. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses. neat. accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattii, VI 3-8379. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2551 any time. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001 t HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. major, late professor of English & sports accurately. Standard apts. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. tf BUSINESS SERVICES INVISIBLE REEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf 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. ff DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- lighting. 9391. Mass, Cahl VI 2-5260. 9391. Mass, Cahl VI 2-5260. 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 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. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. tf ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-155, or 921 Miss. tf GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Study notes are revised comprehensive. Price: $4. Call Vi 2-7572 Free delivery. Guitar instruction — all types. Classical guitar instructions also available now at Richardson's. Fine instrument rental service, too. 3-15 FOR RENT ROOM FOR 1 MALE STUDENT in double room. Share with graduate student. Call the office from Union. Private entrance, quiet. Call VI 3-492, see at 1301 Louisiana. tf LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 9731. tf APARTMENTS FOR RENT MARRIED AND GRADUATE STUDENTS Large kitchen cabinets and closet space. Brick construction, fully insulated. Garbage disposal, carpeted central air-conditioning, and laundry $ \frac{1}{2} $ -block. PARK PLAZA SOUTH APTS. 1912 W. 25th VI 2-3416 LARGE FURNISHED apartment east side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. LARGE nicely furnished 2 bedroom apt. King suite, kitchen & garage. First floor, 2½ blocks from campus. Extra nite. Rents for $15 per month, paid. Available Apt. I. Call VI 3-7836. 3-16 Harnar Auto Supply 836 Mass. St. Keys Duplicated FOR SALE Night Phone VI 3-7576 Complete Locksmith Service Day or Night Day Phone V1 3-2352 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. lawrence typewriter sales, service, rentals. lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 38-5844. ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch Call VI 3-8877 or come to 907 Ark. for more information. 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 1960 Austin Healy Sprite Excellent consi- tling side curtains. Call VI 5-102-83 - 3-12 for details. HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet service. Phone 516-724-3921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. **tf** GUNS: Lawrence Firearms Co. New & used guns, ammo. Handguns rebelled. Hydrahunter made Hyhuder .357 rifle. 44 magnum Owner Now Ohio, corner of 14th & Ohio. 3-13 One beige leather Hide-a-bed couch model with a built-in model set $10.99. Call VI 3-6213. 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 1957 Olds 83 Holiday 4 dr hardtop Call I 3-1727 after 6:30 p.m. & Sundays. 3-1727 GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES, complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $3.50, free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553. VI 3-5778. tt NOW is your opportunity to buy a fabulous 1906 MG-Midget at a substantial price for parts and labor. Several extras. Call VI 3-8367 or VI 3-7275 after 6:30 p.m. and Sundays. Let Us Help You Look Well Groomed Smart looking college men expect their shirts to be expertly laundered and pressed That's why so many send their clothing regularly to Lawrence Laundry. You'll appreciate the friendly, personal service we offer. We'll treat you like a person; not a number. And... we will make minor repairs at no extra charge. Stop in soon!! JOHN WILLIAMS "Quality Guaranteed" LAWRENCE 10th G N.H. VI 3-3711 launderers and dry cleaners "Specialists in Fabric Care" Page 8 University Daily Kansan Kansas Leading Tornado State the radar screen pattern to determine the area the storm will probably travel over, he said. (Continued from page 1) "The velocity of a tornado funnel is very great," Prof. Bates said. "Estimates range from an official maximum of 300 miles per hour to an unofficial 500 m.p.h. Typically, the storm itself will travel at better than 45 m.p.h. "We do not know exactly what causes a tornado but there are about 14 current theories. By continued research tornado experts will eliminate them until they arrive at a satisfactory answer." "The funnel's rotation is predominantly cyclonic; that is counter clockwise. That is why a tornado is sometimes called a cyclone. Some of the theories have been that the storms originate from atmospheric electricity, or that they occur at the center of a cloud with very low atmospheric pressure. The former theory has recently been renewed. Prof. Bates said. Another theory suggests the storm is caused by a roll cloud, which turns over and comes to the surface. A recent theory offers that it is caused by a column of air produced by a hail column down the cloud's middle. Prof. Bates subscribes to the theory that tornadoes are caused by the action of the substance of a very wet cloud layer. A tornado can have more than one funnel. "We think the funnel is an appendage of a parent structure," he said. "A tornado about five years ago in Scottsbluff, Neb., had 12 funnels. The May 1957 Dallas tornado had two that touched down to the ground." "Where tornadoes touch down, damage is almost total," he noted, adding that damage is often equivalent to the amount of time the funnel touches down, but that there is destruction on the ground even if the funnel does not touch down. Prof. Bates showed slides of tornadoes last year in Russell and Otis, Kan, which he and his associates tracked in an airplane. He also showed a 15-minute film of the Dallas tornado in action. The Dallas tornado lasted about 25 minutes, and that is considered long, he said. "Thank God they're small storms," he said. "If they were 50 miles wide there wouldn't be anyone living in this area." Fraser Green Room Stirs Up Memories Theatrical performers who played in Fraser Theater before Murphy Hall was built remember the Green Room as they fondly remember the "good old days." In the tradition of the theatrical world that every productive theater should have a Green Room, a queer little alcove in the attic of Fraser Hall was converted into such a room for the KU drama participants. THE ALCOVE, which was appropriately painted green, served as a general lounging room for actors where they could relax and learn their lines. Theater curios such as pictures, swords, shields and scenic odds and ends created a unique museum. The collection of scenery, costumes, and props were the remains of scores of plays given in Fraser Theater. AROUND 1950, the German department moved in to share the Green Room. While costumes still hung in one corner, sound booths were erected for the German classes. Some of the original stage equipment was transferred to Green Hall which was the first home of the experimental theater. For a time, Fraser and Green Halls shared the KU theatrical world. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Chancellor- (Continued from page 1) made tremendous strides in this area. "If there had not been such strides and if there had not been such activity, I think this University and others would have cause for alarm and reason for action. "The trend is apparent, and it has been a progressive one. For this the groups should be complimented. "This University would hope to assist in the acceleration of this trend, not alone by counseling with the members of chapters on the campus, but by counseling with the national offices of the organizations as well. "Too often, I think, when people talk about fraternities, they have in mind what went on 20,30,40 years ago. It has been quite popular to deride the fraternal system. "What people choose to forget is that fraternal organizations, like most other activities, are constantly changing. In my opinion, they have changed for the better. - "I BELIEVE IN the necessity on a university campus of there being a mature student government. - "I choose to deal with the All Student Council's committee on these matters because I think the duly constituted authority of the student body should be recognized. - "I BELIEVE THAT the greatest teaching is accomplished by precept and the greatest advances made in the same way. "At the Brotherhood Banquet in Lawrence this year a statement was made by the speaker, quoting another: 'One example is worth a thousand statements.' "There is an important corollary to the Golden Rule which in my words would be this: 'Do thou as you would have others do.'" "As has been stated in a Daily Kansas editorial, the matter of discrimination is a social problem. "This problem can be solved by students who are willing to set examples for others, and the answer to this social problem will be reached more effectively and more permanently by students individually and collectively setting the precepts in their daily lives by their example. "No University dictum and no administration fiat can possibly accomplish what the students themselves can do if sincerely they mean to do it." Traffic Officers Reduce CHICAGO — (UPI) — In an effort to help reduce the "size" of the police force the weights of 200 traffic officers will be posted in their squad room. Health Club Refused License BOSTON — (UPI) — The Massachusetts State Senate yesterday killed a House-passed bill to grant a liquor license to a health club. Western Aircraft Harassed In East German Air Lanes BERLIN — (UPI) — Western officials today reported new Soviet harassment of Western aircraft in the air lanes over East Germany to West Berlin. The officials gave no details of the harassment because of a news blackout ordered on the Soviet tactics, but the Russians were believed to be scheduling flights in the corridors at the times and altitudes Allied planes were scheduled to fly. Western officials expressed fear the new Soviet harassment tactics could lead to incidents in the three 20-mile-wide air corridors which link West Berlin, located 110 miles inside Communist territory, with the West. They said the Russians kept their tactics within legal limits by announcing their flight plans at the air safety center as they are supposed to. But the Soviets were said to be coinciding their flight plans deliberately with those of Western aircraft. Informed sources said also that West Berlin's Tempelhof Airfield has had sporadic trouble reaching aircraft in the air corridors on some frequencies of ground-to-air communications. Whether this was due to Soviet jamming was not immediately known. The Russians on Saturday tried to jam the Western radar which guides aircraft into West Berlin through the corridors. SNEA To Meet Wednesday The KU Student National Education Association will meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday in 303 Bailey Hall. 鸟 BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service KING SIZE It's what's up front that counts FILTER-BLEND is yours in Winston and only Winston. Up front you get rich golden tobaccos specially selected and specially processed for filter smoking. Smoke Winston. Winston FILTER·CIGARETTES FINER FILTER FOR FINER FLAVOR B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N. C. WINSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should! BENNIE GREVIN KU POLLSTERS—KU Young Republicans sample student opinion. John A. Grothusen, Ellsworth sophomore, ask the questions over the telephone as Jerry W. Dickson, Newton junior and president of YR, records the answers. More than half the students answering the Young Republican student opinion poll taken last week believe KU has courses designed to "wash out" freshmen and sophomores. First YR Poll Answers Given The question revealing this opinion was, "Do you believe that the University already has courses designed primarily as freshman-sophomore flunk-out courses? If so, name some." Seventy-four students answered "yes," 47 "no" and 16 gave no opinion. The 74 named the following as "flunk-out" courses: ENGLISH, 42; physics, 13; mathematics, 12; biology, 10; chemistry, 9; psychology and history (United States and Modern European), 5 each; and sociology, logic, economics and foreign language. 1 each. Asked to comment on the large number of students who called English a "flunk-out" course, W. P. Albrecht, professor of English and chairman of the English department, said: "We certainly do not design any course for that purpose. Since so many take it, the gross number (of students failing) is somewhat higher than in other courses. But I don't think that the percentage is particularly high." Prof. Albrecht said the percentage of students who fail English is greatly exaggerated and is not out of proportion to other courses. ANOTHER QUESTION was, "Do you believe that such courses are fair in that they eliminate primarily those students who really are not mentally or emotionally prepared to do college work?" Sixty-five answered yes, 53 no and 17 gave no opinion. The students answered; yes, 24; no, 106; no opinion, 2 Respondents apparently felt KU courses are tough enough now. One question asked, "Do you believe that University courses should be made tougher in order to weed out inferior students?" The poll also asked, "Should this University adopt a policy of selective admissions?" Fifty answered yes. 83 no and 2 had no opinion. THE 50 WO ANSWERED "yes" were also asked, "On what basis should admission be granted?" Ten had no opinion, but the others suggested these bases for selection: Some type of entrance examination. 24; high school standing, 9; College Board Examinations, 6; higher out-of-state requirements, 1. The final question of the poll was, "Should the probation requirements for freshmen and sophomores be raised from 0.8 to 1.0 as they are for juniors and seniors?" The answers were: yes, 28; no, 85; no opinion, 22. The poll sample was selected by University IBM machines using a random number table, Jerry Dickson. Newton junior and president of the KU Young Republicans said this selection method is designed to give a scientifically accurate random cross section of the KU student population. THE POLL WAS TAKEN by telephone by members of a Frosh Hawk committee and by members of the poll group. The callers contacted 140 students. The questions were phrased by the poll group and checked for objectivity by Ray P. Cuzzort, associate professor of sociology and anthropology. Dickson said the Young Republican group was "encouraged by the success of the poll. It is as scientifically accurate as any poll conducted to determine opinion can be." Private Support For KU Increases By Walt Blackledge Some seeds have a way of drifting far from "home" and starting new growth in new fields. Lawrence residents may have tossed such seeds in the air when they started the HELP-KU fund a year ago. "Nothing succeeds like success, and the fact the Lawrence residents responded through the HELP fund so enthusiastically . . . planted a lot of seeds," says Maurice Barker, executive secretary of the Greater University Fund (GUF). Lawrence HELP (Higher Education Loan Program) unites residents of the city and surrounding countryside in a campaign for private support for KU. The success of the local program boosts interest in private support of higher education elsewhere. "Private support of the University of Kansas—a state university—is of tremendous significance because of the number of things it enables the University to do that it could not do otherwise," Mr. Barker says. He explains that private support provides some of the basic ingredients of higher education, such as scholarships, student loans, research grants and facilities, and student housing. "The only way this can be done is to establish among the alumni that they have a stake in this," he says. Much has been done for the University, he says, by interested alumni who not only help with their support, but also encourage others to help. Lawrence HELP-KU was established to encourage contributions to a fund for loans to students attending KU. A similar program is getting under way in Kansas City with the establishment of the Greater Kansas City Friends of KU. This organization will collect money to loan to KU students from the metropolitan Kansas City area. The same pattern is repeated throughout Kansas, and even beyond the state. There are 125 workers in Wichita, 30 in Salina, 15 in Junction City, and more than 50 in Bartlesville, Okla. About 20 per cent of KU students come from the metropolitan Kansas City area, Mr. Barker says. He estimates the University will loan these students approximately $150,-000 each year. The Topeka group emphasizes contributions without restriction on their use, but donors may designate their gifts for special purposes. Although the Greater Kansas City group will emphasize student loans, donors may earmark their gifts for other purposes. Mr. Barker says. Topeka is another place the Lawrence HELP example is bearing fruit. A committee of 150 persons is working to collect funds for GUF from the capital city. \* \* \* HELP Kicks Off Campaign The Lawrence HELP-KU committee will kick off this year's campaign with a banquet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom Henry Bubb, president of Capitol Federal Savings & Loan Association in Topeka and member of the Board of Regents, will speak. CAMPAIGN WORKERS attending the banquet include deans, administrative officers, faculty members, members of the board of governors, team captains and committee members of HELP. Dolph C. Simons Jr. is general chairman of the HELP committee. Simons is also chairman of campaign will be carried by divisions, working in specific areas. Professional—Dr. Monti L. Belot Jr. (medical), Dr. Paul H. Getto (dental) and Richard A. Barber (atorney); Residential—Ben Barteldes and Paul L. Smart; Business—Bill Bodin, Riley Burcham, Clifton C. Calvin, Chester C. Jones and Warren Rhodes; County—Arthur A. Heck and John Vogel. R. Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry, Cora M. Downs, professor of bacteriology, and Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology, are co-chairmen of the campus division. The advance gifts division has nearly finished its work. It is composed of J. L. Constant, Justin Hill, Olin K. Petefish, A. D. Weaver, Skipier Williams and M. S. Winter. Other divisions and their co-chairmen are: Blustery winds and unseasonably cool temperatures marked Kansas weather again today. Weather Forecasters promised fair skies and cooler conditions detected little change in temperatures. Considerable cloudiness, a few snow flurries, windy and cold today. Partly cloudy and cold tonight. Highs today upper 30s. Lows tonight lower 20s. Highs Wednesday lower 40s. Daily hansan 59th Year,No.101 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Tuesday, March 13, 1962 JFK Seeks Aid Funds; Cuts by Congress Seen WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Kennedy asked Congress today for nearly $4.9 billion in foreign aid and said any less might lead to trouble that all the "armies and atoms" of the United States could not put down. The President requested $1.5 billion for military assistance and $3.4 billion for economic aid in fiscal 1963, starting July 1. The total request came to $4,878,-500,000, nearly $1 billion more than he got last year, when Congress voted $1.6 billion in military aid and $2.3 in economic assistance. CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS forecast generally favorable action on the President's requests, but some reductions were expected. Rep. Otto E. Passman, D-La., chairman of the Foreign Aid Appropriations Committee and a sharp critic of the program in the past, called the President's recommendations "preposterous." "The programs are essential in our national interest, and I am confident the Congress will give very favorable consideration to the request." But House Democratic Leader Carl Albert said: Speaker John W. McCormack said the need for U.S. aid has not lessened since its inception after World War II when, he said, Europe and the greater part of the world would have fallen to Communism without U.S. help. Kennedy requested only one major aid innovation in his 1,500-word message to the House and Senate. That was authority to set up a separate, $3 billion, four-year fund for the alliance for progress development in Latin America. Included in the economic aid request was $1.25 billion for development loans, $335 million for development grants, $400 million for a contingency fund and $481.5 million for supporting assistance, which allows nations to put more of their own money into military outlays. OF THE $3 BILLION, about $600 million would be used in fiscal 1963 for the alliance for progress, which was started a year ago today. The President, noting that Congress gave him long-term financing authority and approved combining all aid agencies into one last year, said he desired no other major changes in the foreign aid machinery now. Kennedy made a particular plea for the contingency fund, which he could use in emergencies. Contingency fund money, officials said, provided cash for increased aid to South Viet Nam in its struggle with Communist Guerrillas. THE REST OF the request would go to international organizations and programs, investment surveys, guarantees of private U.S. investments abroad and administrative expenses. The request did not cover the peace corps, the food for peace program, the export-import bank and some other activities. The administration said only $3.6 billion of the $4.9 billion request would be spent in the coming fiscal year. The money request Kennedy made was slightly lower than the spending authorization he asked because there is some money left from previous appropriations. Administration officials declined to predict how the program will fare in congress, but pointed out that congress cut nearly $1.5 billion from the President's final request last year There was no breakdown of aid spending by countries. Kennedy made no mention of aid to Communist Yugoslavia and Poland, which has been sharply criticized. (Continued on page 8) Wesley Group Argues With Wescoe The letter is signed by Don Warner, Topeka junior and president of the Foundation; Virginia Griswold, Lawrence senior; Marsha Dutton, Colby sophomore, and Fred Tiffany, Lyndon junior. The Executive Council of Wesley Foundation has sent a letter to Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe saying the administration has an "imperative" responsibility to assist in the abolishment of Greek discriminatory clauses. A fifth member of the Council, Ronald Halbgewachs, Glen Elder junior, did not sign the letter. Wesley Foundation was founded on the KU campus in 1924 and serves 1800 Methodist preference students. The Rev. Donovan Hull, director of the foundation, said there is an active group in the foundation of about 200 students. The foundation is supported by the Methodist Church in Kansas. The foundation elects the Executive Council of the foundation. The letter was sent in reply to a letter from the Chancellor, in which he suggested that the members of the Wesley Foundation who had written him originally, should set an example by choosing Negroes as roommates. THE COUNCIL'S REPLY says, in part: "We agree that much must be done toward integration by individuals on a personal level. "None of us have red-headed roommates either, but this does not imply we would be unwilling to live "However, the fact that there are two of us who could have Negro roommates, but do not have Negro roommates, in no way indicates we are not working on an individual level. with a red-headed person. Those of us who could have had a Negro roommate this year did not know a Negro in our dorms with whom we wanted to live—just as we didn't know a red-headed person in our dorms with whom we wanted to live. "HOWEVER, WE HAVE MET Negroes this year we would like very much for our roommates and we hope it will be possible for at least one of us to have a Negro roommate next year. "Similarly, one of us has done much work toward integration from within a Greek organization; but we still believe the administration has a responsibility to help. "We believe discriminatory clauses in Greek constitution must be stricken now for reasons mentioned in the preceding paragraph and in (Continued on page 8) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday.March 13,1962 The Current Events Bill The bill presently before the All Student Council (ASC) to create a Current Events Committee will be voted on tonight. It provides for a committee that would bring speakers and films on "vital issues of the day" to the campus in an effort to "encourage discussion of and formation of opinions" on such issues. There is also a provision for a Speakers Bureau of faculty members and students to provide speakers for campus living groups. The committee would work with other groups already having current events committees. THE COMMITTEE would offer one service that no other organization is providing on a regular basis. This is the Speakers Bureau, which is unique in that it would send speakers to the individual campus living groups, thereby eliminating any difficulties students might encounter in going to some building on campus. The speaker could come at a time when most of the living group's members were present, such as the dinner hour. Another advantage that the committee offers is that by working with the other groups on campus having current events committees, they would be able to tell the other groups when they were duplicating each other's efforts. Possibly the greatest advantage of the committee is that it would be an official student organization with an annual budget. It would thus be able to finance films and speakers that other groups might have difficulty in obtaining for their current events programs. IT SHOULD be noted that the bill is not a proposal to eliminate the current events programs of other groups or to bring them under the control of the ASC current events committee. It is really a supplementary service designed to meet needs and carry out projects that other groups either cannot or have not provided. There is certainly no doubt that such a committee is needed. A poll of fraternity and sorority officers Sunday indicated that most of them were not familiar with the current events committee proposal presently before the ASC. This in itself is an indication of the need for an organization to provide the type of program the committee would develop. Provided it functions as an active and informed body, the proposed ASC Current Events Committee would be a valuable addition to the campus. —William H. Mullins The Indian Elections By Baldev Mitter New Delhi India graduate student The election fever in India has abated. The Congress Party of Mr. Nehru has gained an absolute majority in the Lok Sabha (House of the People) and also in most of the Vidhan Sabhas (state assemblies), Rajasthan and Madhay Pradesh being the exceptions. The opposition has done little better than the last two elections, grabbing a few more seats here and there; but the leaders who in reality formed the core of the opposition (however thin it was) have lest to the Congress Party. The opposition benches will be deprived of Prof. J. B. Kirplani, close associate of Ghandi and a veteran parliamentarian; Prof. N. G. Ranga, chairman of the Independent Party; Mr. Ashok Mehta, India's expert on agrarian economics, whose constructive criticism has won him even Mr. Nehru's approbation. Dr. Lohia, chairman of the Socialist Party, has already lost because of his unwise decision to fight against Mr. Nehru and the fate of Prof. Minoo Masani of the Independent Party is also not expected to meet auspicious stars. ALTHOUGH Mr. Nehru's popularity is not at all an eye-sore to any Indian, the future of India's democracy poses a grave problem which is of immediate concern. Again, though the fact that the Congress Party continues in power through three successive terms is a phenomenon not unique to Indian democracy but is also known to Britain and the United States, the shrewdness, maturity and innate soundness of judgment of 70 percent of the illiterate suffrage is accepted with unease and good skepticism. The clean victory of the Congress Party lies in its leadership and in the fact that the party has deeper and more historical roots. Further, it carries the strong stamp of Ghandi, who of course wanted it to be disbanded just after Independence. GROWTH OF other political parties in India has been somewhat erratic and it has even tended to conform to a set pattern. But lately other political parties have come into existence. In the last two elections, the people who occupied the opposition field were largely the splinters of the Congress Party who have previously been voicing out their brand of "Indian non-violent socialism" (in Sanskrit, Savodraya) under the vast umbrella of Congress itself till they were forced by the strong right wing to leave the Congress in 1948—a year after independence. This led to the formation of the People's Socialist Party under the leadership of Prof. J. B. Kriplani, who has lost his seat to Mr. V. K. Krishna Menon in this election. Although ideological differences are claimed, the People's Socialist Party (PSP) is in many ways hardly distinct from the Congress Party and it is often a matter of debate if it is more socialist than the socialist wing within the Congress Party itself. The Sawantara Party (Independent Party), which is new, is frankly speaking a party of conservatives and dissidents from the Congress Party and hence carries little flavour of a distinct political party. TWO PROMINENT parties which are in base and character distinct from the Congress Party and whose membership is not derived from the flotsam and jetsam of the Congress Party are the Communist Party and the Jan Sangh (People's Party). Both of these belong to two extremes but have one thing in common. Both by their mode of action and political thinking are in spirit anti-democratic. While the Communist Party goes for its mental food to Marxist dialecticism, the Jan Sangh uses communalism (Hindu's fanaticism) as its prop and is backward looking — it cries more of "culture than of "economics." THUS IT would seem that the challenge to the Congress Party comes from the extreme left and the extreme right. Hence it is only Policy Statement PSP that can provide a healthy democratic opposition, its intellectuals being the followers of Ghandi. But the misfortune of PSP is that its backbone, Dr. J. P. Narayan, has abjured politics and has become a roving monk collecting land for the landless through love and persuasion. This graduate of Madison, Wisconsin, was called by Ghandi the younger brother of Mr. Nehru and father of "Indian non-violent socialism and basic democracy." In the absence of this distinct personality in PSP, it has no longer a rallying center for the forces of socialism. Maybe while licking its wounds after the election, the PSP might put its house in better order or may even try to reclaim its lost soul—Dr. Narayan. It is helpful to readers to occasionally state Kansan policy on articles and letters to the editor. The general policy is that all letters are printed as long as they are not libelous or in bad taste. The writer should attempt to hold his letter to 300 words or less, since there will be a delay of four or five days before it is printed if it is longer. Letters that are 300 words or less are usually printed within two days after they are received. With a weak PSP, the situation might well occur when the country as such may have to choose between the Congress Party and the Communists or Jan Sangh or between democracy and totalitarianism. THE TIME for such a choice, however, is not now. The seizing of power by the military chiefs is not now new to Asia, Pakistan and Burma are standing examples. Though the same may not happen in India now, it may happen after Mr. Nehru. A strong opposition can arrest this tendency forever, and again, I strongly maintain, that democracy without strong opposition is a "democratic dictatorship." At this time, when the opposition needs to introspect and retrospect, Mr. Nebru, "prince of Indian hearts," should encourage the sapling of democracy to grow and flower in his own life-time, for he is one of those great men who sowed its seeds. And nothing should sadden a gardener more than seeing his sapling drying and withering away before his own eyes. Let "Mother India" be dedicated to democratic ideals forever. If a writer wishes to submit an article in excess of 500 words, he will have to discuss it with a member of the editorial staff. All letters must include the writer's name, classification and address. A writer's name will be withheld only if he gives sufficient reason to a member of the editorial staff. Dailu Hansan UNIVERSITY University of Kansas student newspaper University of Kansas student newspaper unweekly 108, daily Jan. 16, 1912. University of Kansas student newspaper 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. Newspaper service: News service; United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Postage examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Mullins ... Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache .. Business Manager LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler TEST X C. WILKIN R-49 "—NN' WHY NOT A BIG HEAD? I CRAMMED ALL NITE FOR THIS TEST!" Memories of Bataan (Editor's note: The following article is on General Carlos Romulo, former Philippine ambassador to the United States and the United Nations. General Romulo will speak in Swarthout Recital Hall at 4 this afternoon on "The Crisis the Free World Faces.") Twenty years ago, almost to the day, four battered motor torpedo boats roared away from a beach on Bataan. Left behind on Corregidor was Major Carlos Romulo, public relations officer for the United States Army Forces in the Far East. Corregidor has become a memory. The bitterness of defeat has been washed away in the victory which followed. The black silence of Malinta Tunnel no longer echoes to the crunch of bombs bursting overhead but there are those who remember the voices of friends whose faces have faded in the distance. A NATION WAS born in that defeat. In the darkness of despair, hundreds of thousands of Filipinos, fighting in a cause in which they could win no victory, shoulder to shoulder with tens of thousands of Americans, held back the Japanese armies until hunger and fatigue had taken their final toll. One voice carried the message of determination and courage to the Filipino soldiers and civilians. From the crowded dusty headquarters lateral of Malinta Tunnel resounded Romulo's message of courage and determination. And they fought to the last—Filipinos and Americans—taking a toll of the enemy which caused him to recoil in angry surprise. THE FRIEND of his countrymen, the friend of America, and the friend of humanity—Carlos Romulo has carried his message of freedom and determination from the last, sorry airstrip on Bataan, to the beaches of victory on Leyte, to the General Assembly of the United Nations. His deep, warm, enduring humanity has bridged a generation when old enemies have become new friends. We remember his bitter tears the night Corregidor surrendered. We remember his eagerness as the great invasion fleet neared the beaches of Leyte. We remember his sorrow as he watched American guns blast away the beautiful cathedrals of Intramuros and the white walls of the University of the Philippines. We remember his thoughtfulness to the family of an insignificant American soldier. Romulo has said that he walked with heros. There are heros who can be proud that they walked with this man. —One of the "Bataan Boys" letters to the editor Criticism for the Kansan Editor:... It seems somehow significant that the only effort expended by the UDK in publicizing the Model U.N. so far has been aimed in exactly the wrong direction. Editor Koch in his March 8 editorial has done nothing more than point an accusing finger at his own publication for seeking the petty sensation rather than the general benefit associated with this, and probably other, student activities. IT IS UNDOUBTEDLY true that the accusations and refutations in question in the article make juicier reading, but this hardly seems adequate justification for making some of the more obvious detractors from the Model U.N. program appear to be representative of the program as a whole. It has come to my attention that the Steering Committee of the Model U.N. has had some difficulty securing space in the UDK for their press releases, even though it is clear that the more the students of the University know about the more responsible and educational aspects of the program, the more successful and meaningful the Model U.N. will become for the campus as a whole. To paraphrase Mr. Koch, the significance of the Model U.N. as a constructive student activity deserves a more clear-sighted editorial approach. Mike Thomas Ft. Riley junior Tuesday, March 13. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 New Student Loans Available College students needing money to complete their college education can be aided by a new student loan program designed by the Kansas Bankers Association. Irvin E. Youngberg, executive secretary of the Endowment Association, said KU will not participate in the program until next fall. "THE REASON KU IS considering the program is that our student loans are in full use right now and looking ahead to next fall, they are not going to be adequate. We have more borrowers than money," he said. The specifies have yet to be worked out and students should not apply for loans yet, he added. The loans will be handled through Aids and Awards. To become eligible, the student must be certified by his college as having completed satisfactorily the first year of study, and must show need for financial assistance in order to complete his college work. The banks of Kansas are cooperating with the colleges and universities in the state in providing the low-cost, long-term loans to eligible college students after completion of their freshman year. The loans are available at the rate of $1,000 a year for three years, or a total of $3,000 maximum. Loans are repaid during an extended period upon completion of the fourth year. Burton L. Lohmuller of Centralia, president of the Kansas Bankers Association, said "banks of Kansas are proud to have a part in this plan for assisting more students to obtain a higher education. We like to think that some of our young Kansans will be staying in college because of this loan program who otherwise might have to drop out in financial embarrassment. STUDENTS INTERESTED should apply first to their home-town banker. The banker contacts the college of choice for certification of the student. Participating Kansas colleges will be favored first, Mr. Lohmuller explained, until the other states have joined the program and it becomes truly nationwide. Eventually all colleges in the country are expected to participate so the local student might get loan aid for attending college anywhere. John E. King, president of Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia, said "it is very encouraging to know that the Kansas Bankers Association has entered into a program which will make it possible for more young people to gain a college education. We are also pleased that the banking profession through this plan, has officially endorsed educational loans as a sound financial investment." Old Friend Met in Cafe LONDON — (UPI) — Anthony Asquith was absent-mindedly reading at a restaurant table when he jumped up to shake hands with a man he remembered meeting before. It was the waiter. Double Edge Razor Blades Finest Surgical Steel, honed in oil. Full money back guarantee. 20 $9.00 100 - $5c 200 - $1.50 500 - $4.80 1000 - $5.75 Postpaid. Packed five blades to package, 20 packages to carton. C.O.D. orders accept packaging brings general merchandise catalog. EMERSON COMPANY 406 South Second Alhambra, California Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Also, two of the recitalists and four other student musicians were presented awards for significant achievement in scholarship and music. The seven music students chosen for outstanding performances by the School of Fine Arts faculty presented an outstanding honor recital last night in Swarthout Recital Hall. Martha Shirley, Mankato junior, received two awards. Irene Peabody, associate professor of voice, presented her a $50 award from Mu Phi Epsilon, professional music sorority, as the most outstanding junior. Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups Miss Shirley was also named the outstanding junior class musician by Marcus Hahn, associate professor of music education, in behalf of Pi Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Honor Recital Given by 7 Music Students Kappa Lambda, honorary music organization. Others receiving Pi Kappa Lambda certificates of merit were Daniel Watters, Salina freshman, cellist, outstanding freshman; Marine Hall, Clay Center sophomore, violinist, outstanding sophomore, and Fred Wiemer, Drumwright, Okla., pianist, outstanding senior. Donna Moore, Independence, Mo, sophomore, cellist, who was one of the recitalists, receiver the $50 award from the Lawrence Patroness Group for outstanding scholarship and musicianship. Elin K. Jorgensen, professor of music education, made the presentation. Judith Whaley, Lawrence senior, received a certificate from Sigma Alpha Iota, professional music sorority, for the senior member with highest scholarship. On the recital portion of the program, John Taddiken, Independence sophomore, played a sonata for viola by Pietro Locatelli. His tone is lyric and smooth, and he played with precise intonation. Miss Moore played the final two movements of "Concerto in C Minor" for cello by Johann Christian Bach, the youngest son of the great J. S. Bach. Miss Moore plays like a virtuoso. Miss Shirley, who has been ill with laryngitis for the past week, seemed little the worse last night. She sang an aria by J. S. Bach, two songs by Hugo Wolf and "Un Bel di Vedremo" from "Madame Butterfly" by Puccini. The Hugo Wolf songs showed a lovely pianissimo and the Butterfly aria was exhilarating. played the E Flat Minor Polonaise and the Etude Op. 25, No. 12 ("Waves") by Chopin. The polonaise was beautiful and passionate, but the playing of the etude was rather muddy, like the nickname suggests. President of Rice to Speak Monday The trio which closed the recital was made up of Ben Clinesmith, Ft. Scott sophomore, cellist; Beatrice Gordon, Wichita junior, violinist; and Kathryn Mishell, Beverly Hills, Calif., senior, pianist. The chairman of the general advisory committee of the Atomic Energy Commission and President of Rice University, Kenneth S. Pittzer, will deliver the 14th annual E C. Franklin Memorial lecture March 19. has also acted as associate editor and consulting editor for chemistry journals. He received the American Chemical Society award in pure chemistry in 1943 and a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1951. The work was the finale of "Trio in C Minor" by Mendelssohn. The ensemble between Miss Gordon and Clinesmith was perfect, and Miss Mishell played brilliantly. The playing was exquisite in the humn-like middle section, and fiery at the close. His lecture "Marginally Metallic Systems," will be at 8 p.m. Monday in Bailey Auditorium. The program is open to the public. Pitzer is the author of three books and has contributed articles to scientific journals and reviews. He Errol Haun, Larned sophomore, The Franklin Memorial Lecture Series was established in 1949 as a tribute to E. C. Franklin, former KU faculty member whose research and teaching established a tradition for inorganic chemistry. Among his scientific contributions was the development of liquid ammonia and the nitrogen system of compounds. 1c SALE Tues. thru Fri., 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. For every 10c drink purchased, the Big Buy offers any other drink for one penny. BIG BUY Tareyton delivers the flavor... DVAL FILTER DOES IT! "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 DUAL FILTER Tareyton Product of The American Tobacco Company-"Tobacco is our middle name" Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. March 13, 1962 Jerry Lucas Leads UPI's All America NEW YORK—(UPI) Jerry Lucas of Ohio State, college basketball's "Mr. Wonderful," today was elected to the 1962 United Press International All America team by a unanimous vote—the first player ever so honored. This was the third straight year that the talented 6-foot-8 Buckeye center was voted All America. Lucas thus matched the feats of LaSalle's Tom Gola (1953-54-55) and Oscar Robertson of Cincinnati (1958-59-60). Every one of the 202 basketball writers and radio-TV broadcasters who participated in this year's nationwide UPI poll made Lucas a first team selection. The four other players selecte were Terry Dischinger of Purdue; Billy (The Hill) McGill of Utah; Lucas' Ohio State team mate, John Havlicek, and Chet Walker of Bradley. Dischinger and Walker, like Lucas, were repeaters from last year's UPI All America. McGill and Havlicek moved up from the 1961 second team. All five players are seniors. This is an unusual honor squad, averaging 6-foot-7 per man and possessing a scoring average of more than 27 points per-man per-game. McGill, Utah's 6-foot-9 beanpole, led the nation in scoring with a 38.8-point average that was the second highest ever recorded by a major college player. The 6-foot-7 Dischinger averaged 30.2 points and led the Big Ten Conference in scoring for an unprecedented third straight season. Walker's average was 26.4, Lucas' 22.3 and Havlicek's 17.0. Although Lucas was outscored by three members of the All America team, he was by far the most valuable player in the group. He had the best major college field goal shooting percentage (65 per cent) and ranked third nationally in rebounding by grabbing more than 21 per cent of all the shots made in the 24 games he played. Not only that, but Lucas is a superb team player. He is a natural leader on the court, has an ideal athletic temperament and has proved a truly unselfish star. His comparatively "low" scoring average is due largely to the number of times he preferred to pass to teammates for field goals. The 21-year-old Lucas now can climax perhaps the greatest career in American collegiate history by leading Ohio State to the NCAA championship, a feat that eluded the Buckeyes last season. Lucas was a member of the victorious U.S. Olympic team in 1960. All five All Americas ranked among the nation's top 20 in field goal shooting accuracy. McGill, Havlicek and Walker hit on slightly better than 55 per cent of their shots and Dischinger on 54 per cent. Havlicek was undoubtedly the standout defensive player in the group. This "Bulldog" invariably was assigned to guard the opposing team's high scoreer. These opponents included Dischinger, who scored only 9 points against Ohio State. This season's honor five were overwhelmingly popular choices in the nationwide voting. Dischinger was a first or second team selection of 90.9 per cent of the voters, McGill's name appeared on 82.3 per cent of the ballots, Havlicek's on 76.9 per cent and Walker's on 70.4 per cent. Four of the five players chosen on the UPI second team were from the South. Cotton Nash of Kentucky and Rod Thorn of West Virginia were the highest vote-getters in this group. Next came Len Chappell of Wake Forest, Art Heyman of Duke and John (The Shot) Foley of Holy Cross. A third team was comprised of: Jim Rayl of Indiana, Dave Debuschere of Detroit, Paul Hogue of Cincinnati, John Rudometkin of Southern California and Don Nelson of Iowa. This was the first year that two players from the same school were chosen to the UPI All America first team since Dick Ricketts and Si Green of Duquesne were honored in 1955. *** NEW YORK—(UPI)—The 1962 United Press International Al America basketball team: | Player & School | Ht. | Age | Class | Hometown | Avg. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Jerry Lucas, Ohio State | 6-8 | 21 | Sr. | Middletown, O. | 22.3 | | Terry Dischinger, Purdue | 6-7 | 21 | Sr. | Terre Haute, Ind. | 30.2 | | Billy McGill, Utah | 6-9 | 21 | Sr. | Los Angeles | 38.8 | | John Havlicek, Ohio State | 6-5 | 21 | Sr. | Lansing, O. | 17.0 | | Chet Walker, Bradley | 6-6 | 21 | Sr. | Benton Harbor, Mich. | 26.4 | Second Team Cotton Nash, Kentucky Rod Thorn, West Virginia Len Chappell, Wake Forest Art Heyman, Duke John Foley, Holy Cross Jim Rayl, Indiana Dave Debusschere, Detroit Paul Hogue, Cincinnati John Rudometkin, Southern Cal Don Nelson, Iowa Third Team Honorable Mention (2 or more votes) OHIO STATE 11 Aiken, St. Bonaventure; Appel, Southern California; Armstrong, Arizona State U.; Beckman, Memphis State; Benson, Miami (Ohio); Bento, Loyola (Calif.); Bolyard, Indiana; Bonham, Cincinnati; Brewer, Iowa State; Broussard, Texas A&M; Campbell, Princeton; Carty, Oregon State; Charlton, Colorado; Christie, Wake Forest; Counts, Oregon State; Downey, Illinois; Drysdale, Temple; Duffy, Colgate; Ellis, St. John's; Ernst, Providence; Fedor, Florida State; Feldman, George Washington; Galbreath, Westminister (Pa.). Gardner, Kansas; Glenn, Niagara; Green, Colorado State 7.; Green, UCLA; Green, Utah State; Hadnot, Providence; Hanson, Washington; Harger, Houston; Harkness, Loyola (Ill.). Hooley, Boston College; Hudgens, Texas Tech. Johns, Auburn; Jones, Toledo; Keller, Virginia Tech; Kerwin, Tulane; Kessinger, Mississippi; King, Tula; Komives, Bowling Green; Kramer, NYU; Luyk, Florida; Madden, Yale; Magdanz, Minnesota; McAteer, LaSalle; McDonald, Ohio State; McKenzie, Kansas State; Merriwether, Tennessee A&I; Miles, Seattle; Mitchell, Mississippi State; Mounts, Texas Tech; Mullins, Duke; Nowell, Ohio State; Pardue, Virginia Tech; Pursifal, Kentucky; Rascoe, Western Kentucky; Roggenburk, Dayton; Russell, Vanderbilt; Savage, North Texas; Sherrard, Army; Siebel, Wisconsin; Silas, Creighton; Smith, Furman, Somerset, Duquesne; Strickland, Jacksonville U.; Stroud, Mississippi State; Thacker, Cincinnati; Thurmond, Bowling Green; Van Eman, Wichita; Warner, Gettyburg; Warren, Oregon; Werkman, Seton Hall; White, Villanova; Wiley, Wichita; Williams, Morehead State; Wroblewski, Kansas State; Yates, Cincinnati. ALL AMERICA—Jerry Lucas of Ohio State was chosen to the UPI All America first team for the second straight year. Young Brave Shines at Bat BRADENTON. Fla. — (UPI) — Mack (The Knife) Jones is cutting himself in for that vacant left field spot with the Milwaukee Braves. The 23-year-old speedster from Atlanta hit his fourth home run in three exhibition games as the Braves handed the Cincinnati Reds their third straight defeat, 5-1, here yesterday. Jones now has collected six hits in 11 at-bats and has driven in eight runs in his bid to succeed Frank Thomas, now with the New York Mets, as the Braves' regular left fielder. Elston Howard, who doesn't have to worry about his job with the New York Yankees, also has gotten off to a fast start in the exhibition grind. The sturdy catcher, who beat the Baltimore Orioles with a three-run homer Sunday, hit two more as the Yankees downed the Washington Senators, 7-3, at Pompano Beach, Fla. In a brief trial with Milwaukee last season, Jones batted only .231 in 28 games but rated another look after clubbing .326 and knocking in 61 runs with Louisville of the American Association. Milwaukee (N) 5, Cincinnati (N) 1; Kansas City (A) 4, Baltimore (A) 1; New York (A) 7, Washington (A) 3; Pittsburgh (N) 6, Philadelphia (N) 4; New York (N) 8, Chicago (A) 4; Los Angeles (N) 5, St. Louis (N) 4; Detroit (A) 9; Minnesota (A) 7; San Francisco (N) 6, Houston (N) 1; Cleveland (A) 5, Chicago (A) 4 (12 innings); Los Angeles (A) 7, Boston (A) 3. Buckeyes Again Reign as Kings In UPI Voting Monday's exhibition baseball results: NEW YORK—(UPI)Ohio State's magnificent Buckeyes, beaten only twice during the past two seasons, today were unanimously acclaimed by the United Press International board of coaches as the 1961-62 major college basketball champions. The Buckeyes were the first team in history to receive the first-place vote of every one of the 35 coaches who make up the UPI rating board a year ago, and the same coaches accorded them the honor an unprecedented second time. Picked to win the national championship in the pre-season balloting by the coaches-five each from the nation's seven geographical sections —Ohio State was no. 1 every week of the 1961-62 season. In the 1960-61 season the Buckeyes also were picked no. 1 every single week, thus giving them a string of two straight seasons in which they were named tops in the land. Following the conclusion of the regular season a year ago, the Buck-eyes were upset by Cincinnati in the NCAA championship final. That was their only loss until Wisconsin turned the trick with a surprise 86-67 decision on March 3. Led by All America Jerry Lucas, who averaged 22.3 points per-game in addition to ranking third in the nation in rebounds, and defensive star John Havlicek, the Buckeyes were unanimous picks for the no. 1 spot in five of the 15 weeks in which ratings were released. In seven other weeks they missed gathering all 350 points by just a single point, and never drew less than 341 points in the other weeks. Points are awarded on a basis of 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 for votes from the first to 10th. Team Points 1. Ohio State (35) (23-1) 350 2. Cincinnati (24-2) 310 3. Kentucky (22-2) 250 4. Mississippi State (24-1) 206 5. Kansas State (22-3) 144 6. Bradley (21-5) 122 7. Wake Forest (18-8) 84 8. Colorado (18-6) 65 9. Bowling Green (21-3) 64 10. Utah (23-3) 61 Second 10—11, Oregon State 52; 12, St. John's 45; 13 (tie), Duke and Loyola (Ill.) 30 each; 15, Arizona State 24; 16, West Virginia 23; 17, UCLA 20; 18, Duquesne 12; 19, Utah State 9; 20, Villanova 8. Others—Texas Tech 6; Dayton and Stanford 3 each; New York U. 2; Houston, Pepperdine and St. Joseph's (Pa.) 1 each. Lakers Set Mark In Beating Knicks By United Press International NEW YORK—(UPI)—The Los Angeles Lakers—taking fullest advantage of the jet age—grabbed their National Basketball Association record last night, and this evening the Boston Celtics attempt to get a mark of their own. Holding the game in Seattle, Wash.—coincidentally PFC Elgin Baylor's army station—the Lakers got a 37-point performance from Baylor and defeated New York, 119-106, to set a NBA Western Division mark of 52 wins in a season. In the only other NBA action last night, Detroit staged a final-quarter scoring binge to rally and defeat the Chicago Packers. 121-116. Laker coach Fred Schaus figured the speed of jet travel would make it simple to zip the entire team out to Seattle for the game and then to Los Angeles for a game tonight against Cincinnati. He was right. Boston, which tied its own NBA victory record of 59 Sunday night against the Lakers, takes on Syracuse tonight and aims for a new standard of 60. WeaverS 1 lb. powder $1.50 16 oz. liquid Woolite مصدر شركة woolite LASTIC-LIFE 8 oz. $1.50 FREE PIZZA DELIVERY ANY PLACE In LAWRENCE D CAVERNS N VI 3-9640 Added Reg. 10" Lrg. 14" Mozz. Cheese _ .85 1.40 Olive ___ 1.15 1.65 Green Pepper _ 1.15 1.65 Onion ___ 1.15 1.65 Mushroom ___ 1.25 1.90 Sausage ___ 1.25 1.90 Hamburger ___ 1.25 1.90 Pepperoni ___ 1.25 1.90 Anchovy ___ 1.25 1.90 Pizza Supreme 1.40 2.40 ½ Cheese — ½ Sausage ___ 1.15 1.65 * Ingredients 10c ea. 20c ea. VI 3-9640 Ron D Tom CAVERNS VI 3-9640 644 Mass. Kansan Classifieds Get Results ODE BANJOS Gold Direct From Factory To Consumer from $79 The ODE Company 5433 N. Broadway Boulder, Colorado Write For Illustrated Catalogue LET'S DO AWAY WITH LEGAL TAX DODGES Unscrupulous people get all the tax breaks, says a noted economist. In this week's Post, he blasts our "unfair" tax laws. Says the low rate on capital gains is just a tax dodge. And tells why he thinks we should stop tax relief to the elderly — and even to the blind. Also: Special 12-page guide 'How to make the most of your money.' The Saturday Evening POST MARCH 17 ISSUE NOW ON BALE Page 5 CIA Jobs Are Tough to Get; Background, Ability Count By Bob Hoyt No official information about the activities or the operation of the Central Intelligence Agency is available to the public. However, according to an article in the "Cleveland Plain Dealer," March 1, 1959, by Alvin Silverman, "Recruitters (for the CIA) work through college placement officers and talk only to potential candidates individually, never in groups. The students they are specially looking for are outstanding in foreign languages, or the sciences, have shown some interest in foreign affairs and, while not necessarily the top campus leaders, have demonstrated some capacity to assume responsibility. They need not be intellectuals but they must have stood high in their class." THE FUNCTION OF THE CIA is summed up in a terse and rather vague statement, written by the CIA itself. "The Central Intelligence Agency is that executive agency responsible for the co-ordination of the foreign intelligence activities of the United States government." As for the duties of its personnel, "All positions offer an opportunity to make a contribution to the international position of the United States." The CIA is interested in seniors and graduate students, male or female, preferably those in the top quarter of their class. Candidates must be U.S. citizens, and must be able to pass a thorough medical examination. All applicants are given background examinations. ACCORDING TO AN ARTICLE by John C. Schmidt, which appeared in "The Baltimore Sun," June 12, 1960. "The checking usually takes about six weeks for a young man or woman just out of college . . . CIA uses a polygraph, or lie detector, in checking out its job applicants. No one is required to take the test, but nearly everyone does. Continuing security checks are run on Howard Walker Returns From Chicago Meeting Howard Walker, University Extension director, has returned from meetings in Chicago sponsored by the Center for the Study of Liberal Education for Adults. Walker participated in committee meetings of the National University Extension Association; State University Association Council of Deans and Directors of University Extension; and the Land-Grant division of General Extension. TV Sets Stolen from Motels MOUNT VERNON, Ill. — (UPI)— Someone has been taking too literally the "free television" signs on motels in this area. Police reported that two motels here and one in nearby Effingham have had TV sets stolen from guest rooms. CIA personnel without their knowledge." John Scali, in an article in the "Washington Post and Times Herald." June 29, 1958, says. "The toughest employment hurdles in the government are those set up before applicants for jobs with CIA. Only about 1 in 15 makes the grade." The final article in a CIA series written by Don Whitehead for the "New York Herald Tribune," gives a clue to what a candidate might expect in CIA employment. "The CIA is exempted by law from the civil service requirements imposed on most government agencies, and thus the agency has a free hand in establishing employee policies to meet its own peculiar needs for secrecy. "CIA PERSONNEL are carefully chosen and well trained. Some are sent to universities for post-graduate study in economics, law science and other fields. Many study languages, off and on the job. "Only a relatively small group go into the 'cloak and dagger' branch and they must have special qualities required for losing themselves and their identity in strange lands—and taking the tremendous risks which a secret agent must take . . . " A CIA representative will interview students on the KU campus March 19-23. For appointments, non-engineering students should see Mrs. Ann Davis, Room 206, Strong Hall. Engineering students should see the secretary in the Engineering Placement Office in Hoch Auditorium. Goff to Austrian Theater Next Year Lewin Goff, professor of speech and drama and director of University Theatre, has accepted two roles in the study of theater in Europe for next year, including a Fulbright research grant to Austria during the 1962-63 academic year and a position as secretary of the International Theater Institute's permanent committee on training for the professional stage. In his Fulbright studies, Prof. Goff will be investigating the European curricula and training methods for theater during his affiliation with the University of Vienna. He is the first theater director to have such a grant to study in Austria. He will also be talking to teachers and students of theater and possibly directing a play with them on the theater methods and techniques. The work for ITI will involve traveling in Europe to investigate theater training methods. He will report on his studies at the 10th ITI international congress biennial meeting, held in 1963 in Warsaw, Poland. He and his family will leave for Vienna in late August or early September. Catholic Mass. 7 a.m. & 12.05 p.m. La- wrence Chapel, 1910, Stratford Road. Official Bulletin Confessions; Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11 45-12 noon; Saturday, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. There will be no Modern Book Forum on Tuesday. March 14 — James Fike. Parkville Public Schools, (Elem. & Sec.). Parkville Mo. TOMORROW People-to-People Forum: 4 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. Orientation and planning to visit the British Isles. All students welcome. Brian Clevie in charge. Student National Education Association: 'Summer Opportunities for Teachers.' March 14 — C. X. Dowler, Pers. Dir. Tulsa, Okla. University Daily Kansan People-to-People Forum: 7:30 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union, Panel of foreign students will discuss "The American College. Student—First Impressions." Episcopal Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Landesman To Give Humanities Lecture Charles Landesman, assistant professor of philosophy, will speak on the "Defense of Humanism," at the Humanities Forum at 8 tonight in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. Tax Paid with Yuans The taxpayer explained in a note, "I can't cheat because I work for the government, and because I'm way around the world I can send only yuans." CHICAGO — (UPI) — A U.S. Air Force civilian employee in Formosa has paid the 20 cents due on his 1961 Federal income tax with eight Chinese yuans, each worth about $2_{1/2}$ cents. Internal revenue collector Harold Hall said yesterday he needn't have bothered since amounts under $1 are forgiven automatically. RED BOSS "You have poured dung over me, Comrade Hoxha. One day you will have to wash it off yourself." That's what Krhuschev screamed, they say, at the Red boss of Albania. in this week's Post, you'll read why the smallest satellite dares to defy the Kremlin. And how Stalin's ghost still rules this land. Also: Special 12-page guide "How to make the most of your money." DEFIES KHRUSHCHEV! The Saturday Evening POST Tuesday, March 13, 1962 MARCH 17 ISSUE NOW ON SALE Need a Break From Mid-Term Study? Come to the Dick Bibler's 'Worthal' Freshman for 16 Years 9 till 10 TRAIL ROOM DANCE Wednesday, March 14 The familiar "Little Man on Campus" has been poking fun at the students and faculty at the University and clowning at higher education for 16 years. By Janice Pauls Dick Bibler, the little man's daddy, was chosen as staff cartoonist for the University Daily Kansan as a result of a contest held in 1946. His work was unanimously selected by the judges as the best of more than 40 entries. Shortly after the cartoons first appeared in the Kansan, souvenir booklets and Christmas drawings also appeared—all featuring the "Little Man." The fun-loving caricature had become so famous that the souvenir supply was exhausted within hours. The film "Twelve Angry Men" will be shown at 6 and 8 p.m. today in 303 Bailey Hall. "Twelve Angry Men" In 1947, original cartoons by the "Little Man's" creator were made available for sale to students, organized houses, faculty, and staff members. The drawings, 11 by 14 inches, were done black on white and were suitable for framing and decorating recreation or game rooms. Bibler, a fine arts major and former Yank cartoonist, is considered one of the best college cartoonists in the country. Thus, he continues year after year to bring his prodigy to the campus much to the delight and enjoyment of the KU community. PIZZA BURGER 45c BIG BUY This Week's Special March 13-20 89c T-Bone Steak Dinner 8 Oz. T-Bone, French Fries, Salad and Coffee All for 89c RANCHO-MOTEL & COFFEE SHOP 1 $ _{1/2} $ Miles North of Lawrence on Highway 24 Lanz 1962 College Coed Fashion Contest Prizes include a round trip flight to Europe for a Summer Session at a school of your choice and a complete Lanz wardrobe. Obtain contest details at Campus West 1424 Crescent Road Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 13, 1962 Featherbedding Decision May Face Kennedy By Lyle C. Wilson WASHINGTON —(UPI) —The report of the Eisenhower Railroad Commission to President Kennedy spotlights the 1947 effort made by Congress to deal with featherbedding labor contracts. The effort was made during the 80th Congress during development of what became the Taft-Hartley Labor Relations Act. The House adopted a strong prohibition against featherbedding. The Senate forced the House to back down on that and substituted some less inclusive language. THIS SENATE SUBSTITUTE was a pretty good example of double talk, maybe triple talk. It was loose and invited loose interpretation by the courts. It forebade labor contracts that required an employer to pay for work not performed or not to be performed, and the employment of persons in excess of reasonable requirements. This provision has been accepted by some persons as a solid prohibition of featherbedding. For example: Lawrence Fertig, a columnist-economist-industrialist wrote in his recent book, "Prosperity Through Freedom," that "the Congress of the United States has expressed itself in no uncertain terms about feather-bedding . . . that no employer should be forced to employ or agree to employ any person or persons in excess of the number required to perform actual services." Fertig concedes, however, that this language is washed out by agreements forced by big unions supported by friendly judges who construe the phrase "reasonably required" in a way favorable to featherbedding. Full crew laws affecting the railroads also support featherbedding in many states. The featherbedding practice, however, extends to most of the large industries, notable steel, transportation, publishing and entertainment. FRED A. HARTLEY JR. wrote a book, "Our New Labor Policy" after enactment of the Taft-Hartley Act of which he was co-author. He wrote of his regret that the strong House provision against featherbedding was scuttled. Of the Senate substitute, Hartley expressed doubt as to how it would work in practice. The late Sen. Robert A. Taft wrote a foreword to Hartley's book. Taft explained why the Senate balked at the strong House prohibition of featherbedding. "The attempt to prohibit feather-bedding," Taft wrote, "requires an elaborate Federal investigation of conditions in each industry and the exercise by the government of an expert opinion of the number of men required to do each job. The extreme case of paying men for doing nothing, made an unfair labor practice by the new (Taft-Hartley) law, can be more easily dealt with, but there are literally thousands of borderline cases different in every industry which would require a vast extension of government regulation of labor and industry." Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower established the Railroad Commission in November 1960, leaving it like a time-bomb on President Kennedy's doorstep. It should be noted that the commission has met one of Taft's stipulations with respect to the prohibition of featherbedding. The commission just completed an elaborate investigation of conditions in one industry. railroads. Taft also stipulated the exercise of expert opinion by the government. A decision whether featherbedding actually exists in a given industry may confront the Kennedy administration. It could be easier to avoid it than to make it. Students Travel Via Bathtub LONDON — (UPI) — Four British university students last night reached London after sailing down the Thames in a bathtub from Abingdon, 80 miles away. Spring Must Be Near MOUNT VERNON, Ill. — (UPI) — There was snow in the air here yesterday but Mr. Elnora Wilbanks reported a harbinger of Spring—someone stole her lawn mower. Eldon FROM WASHINGTON TO COSTA RICA—Six KU students are among students who will spend their junior year at the University of Costa Rica. They left KU Feb. 18, spent four days in orientation training in Washington, D.C., and arrived in Costa Rica Feb. 23. They will stay there until the end of the academic year in November. They are pictured with five Kansas congressmen. The group includes: Front row, left to right: Eileen Maddocks, Lawrence; Charlene Edmondson, Lawrence; Liss Chauvin, Univ. of Calif. at Santa Barbara; Beatrice Thompson, Univ. of Calif. at Santa Barbara; Elizabeth Elmblade, Univ. of Wyoming; Marilyn Caskey, Independence, Mo.; Loretta Jewett, Colorado Springs, Colo.; Christine Schell, Des Moines, Iowa; Katherine Gardener, Univ. of Calif. at Santa Barbara; Rebecca King, Emporia. Back row, left to right: Congressman Robert Ellsworth; Robert D. Tomasek, assistant professor of political science, traveling with them; Barry Isaac, Mankato; Congressman Floyd Breeding; Donald Wilson, Larned; Congressman Garner Shriver; Gary Gossen, Wichita; Congressman Robert Dole, and Congressman Walter McVey. Coed Solves Problems With Scooter One KU woman solved her problem of cutting eight o'clock classes last fall. She bought a motor scooter. Jill Kennett, Poplar Bluff, Mo., sophomore, finds the scooter more practical than a car because it maneuvers easily. And when she arrives at class, she can park it in the bicycle racks. Miss Kennett has put 800 miles on her scooter since last fall. A trip to Lone Star Lake was the longest jaunt. SHE SAYS SCOOTERS are easy to learn to drive and that her worst problem is keeping it from dying while driving up hills. On hills, she explains, it is necessary to keep the scooter in low gear and then "when you get about halfway up the hill you feel as if you're going over backwards." Miss Kennett remembers the first time she got on the scooter. She 32 College Bowl Teams Selected Thirty-two teams have been drawn from a hat and matched for the first round of the College Bowl contest. Alpha KappaLambda vs. Alpha Phi Alpha; Acacia vs. Delta Tau Delta; Pearson vs. Alpha Phi; Alpha Tau Omega vs. Grace Pearson; Gertrude Sellards Pearson vs. Douthart; Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Delta Upsilon; Chi Omega vs. Stephenson; Templein vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Jolliffe vs. Sigma Nu; Gamma Pi Beta vs. Corbion; Kappa Alpha Theta vs. Corbin counselors; Lewis vs. Foster; Phi Delta Theta vs. Alpha Chi Omega; Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Joseph R. Pearson; Beta Theta Pi vs. Miller, and Pi Beta Phi vs. Alpha Omicron Pi. Results of the first-round drawings were: Seven members of the faculty will assist the Intermediary Board in the bowl project. Calvin VanderWerf, professor of chemistry, Marilyn Stokstad, associate professor of art, and James Seaver, professor of history are preparing the questions. FIRST ROUND competition will be held in the Kansas Union, March 18, from 2:30 to 5 p.m. Rooms and time schedules for each team will be announced at a later date. used the hand brake instead of the foot brake and was dumped off in the middle of an intersection. A few minor cuts and bruises were the result. During the recent heavy snow-storms, she said, the scooter's usefulness vanished. It remained in the yard in front of Miss Kennett's rooming house until the snow thawed. Miss Kennett hears many comments about her scooter because she is the only girl on the campus who drives one to class. "MEN'S COMMENTS," she says, "range all the way from surprise to disgust." One male student questioned her at length about the cost of a scooter, its upkeep and advantages and disadvantages because he was interested in buying one. Another time a man who met her walking asked incredulously, "Aren't you the girl that rides the motor scooter?" Miss Kennett thinks her funniest experience on the scooter occurred when she took her roommate to the grocery store. "My roommate was perched precariously behind me holding two sacks of groceries," she says. "When we were almost home, one of the sacks split. Milk and bean soup were running all over the street in front of the apartment." Father-Son Team Featured In 'Architecture and Music' A father-son duo from Amsterdam, Netherlands, will present the second of two scheduled joint lecture-recitals at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. H. Th. Wijdeveld and his son Wolfgang will present the theme "Architecture and Music." They are sponsored by the department of architecture and architectural engineering. The father is a pioneer in contemporary architecture and art. His Wolfgang, his son, studied piano with William Andriessen and composition with Sem Dresden and William Piper. He was director of the Municipal Music School of Zwolle from 1936-46, and since then has been a professor at the Conservatory of Utrecht. art magazine "Wendingen" was one of the first to publish Frank Lloyd Wright's works in 1922. HRC to Hear Greeks Tonight A fraternity president will appear before the Human Rights Committee at 7:30 tonight to uphold his fraternity's right to have a discriminatory clause in its national constitution. Stephen Brawner, Merriam senior and Commander of the Sigma Nu fraternity house, will be the first to uphold the positive stand for the clauses to HRC, Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and chairman of the HRC said last night. A Monday afternoon performance was attended by a capacity audience in Room 303, Murphy Hall. Grace said that Brawner would present his views, then discussion would be open to those attending the meeting, to be held in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Grace said that the HRC will decide what to include in the questionnaire to be sent to all Greek houses concerning question of the discriminatory clauses. NOW!! 7 & 9 p.m. Fun is Back . . . Laughter is Back . . . Those Pillow Talk Playmates Are Back ROCK HUDSON DORIS DAY TONY RANDALL TOVER COME BACK EDIE AOAMS·JACK OAKIE JACK KRUSCHEN LOVER COME BACK Granada THEATRE...Telephone WI 3-5201 Stevenson Lashes Extreme Rightists WASHINGTON—(UPI) - Adai L. Stevenson today criticized "extreme rightists" for over-selling communism and under-selling America. Jr. co of Fe Stevenson, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, denounced criticism of government policy in a speech to the 12th annual conference of national organizations sponsored by the American Association for the United Nations. "The critics do not spell out what they want, and so we do not know whether they accept the basic facts of our age—that in a nuclear war, there would be not only, no win, but no winners," he said. Stevenson hailed Lt. Col. John H. Glenn's space flight as having "joited us into a new awareness of confidence and hope." "SOME OF US," he said, "have talked as if mankind were at the mercy of the drift of history, powerless to influence his fate, moving like a sleep-walker to some apocalyptic atomic doom—a mood as far removed from the earlier youth and optimism of our republic as is St. Paul from Jeremiah. "I suggest that, in lashing out at a vast, overwhelming, irresistible communist take over, the rightists are not only over-selling communism. worse, they are under-selling America—and under-selling as well the stubborn will to be free which is communism's worst obstacle in every continent." Stevenson pointed out that the U.N. outer space committee will start work next Monday with Russia ending a two-year boycott. "Before we succumb to pessimism about the chances of any agreement on these measures, let us remember that, two years ago, a year of scientific cooperation on geophysical problems between all the nations of the world led to a treaty of neutralization and national self restraint in Antarctica," he said. "This treaty was a substantial effort to bring all the nations into war-reducing activities. Now it provides a model for the broader attempt to free outer space from the burdens and horrors of the arms race." CHICAGO — (UPI) — Twenty-two Concordia college students jammed themselves into the bucket of a construction crane recently and then claimed the world's record for the feat. Booths To Buckets STARTS WED.! — PLUS AT 8:45 — "The Right Approach" — Starring — Franklin Vaughn Juliet Prowse Martha Wyer Gary Crosby 7:00 And 10 p.m. "Madison Avenue" — With Dana Andrews Eleanor Parker Jeanne Crain - Eddie Albert HELD OVER! Tonight At 7 & 9 p.m. Walt Disney's ALL-CARTOON FEATURE Pinocchio TECHNICOLOR* © Walt Disney Productions — PLUS — Walt Disney's "Mysteries of The Deep" Varsity TNEATRE · Telephone VI 3-1065 Tuesday, March 13. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS the eism h to na- thed the lited olted confi- ave the ver- like vptic oved nism from at a ommare isism. heri the h is very the start end- nisman member bien- siacial arali- it in was the tities. the theap the enty-ndents bucketently rec- FOUND Jr. college ring in Flint Hall the middle of Br. Identify. See Mrs. Fine, 141 Flint. MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS SERVICES BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supple- tion, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 86- 6350. INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tt GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Store, private store, save time and money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, etc., plus complete lists of pet supplies. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentations by Ola Smith. *9359; Mass. Cal. VI S-3283. 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 RENT a new electric portable sewing machine. $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. Wear Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tf ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-7531, or 921 Miss. tf GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. these notes are revised and updated. Price: $4. Call VI 2-7852 free delivery. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright typewriter sales, service, rentals, stance Typewriter, 733 Mass. VI 8844 FOR SALE Guitar instruction — all types. Classical guitar instructions also available now at Richardson's. Fine instrument rental service, too. 3-15 ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch Cali V 3-8977 or come to 007 Ark. for more information. HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet phone. Pet phone 2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. weekdays. tt SIMCAX: 1953 super deluxe. Munt, sell imil- ture, bail. Cail V 3-3520 after 5 p.m. 2-19 GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, coprograms, examples of how to use charts Handy cross index for quick reference to the delivery. Phone VI 3-7558 V1. 3-7587 1957 Olds 88 Holiday 4 dr. hardtop. Call 3-725 laterz at 6:30 p.m. & Sundays. 3-15 WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised. 100 pages, mineographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. 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. if Kansan Classified Ads Get Results INSIDERS MEET THE WIVES OF THE WHITE HOUSE INSIDERS Hunsinger Motor Co. German Cars BMW - NSU What's it like when Kennedy picks your husband for a key Washington job? In this week's Post, you'll meet the glamorous wives of the New Frontier. You'll learn how they entertain endlessly on a strict budget. How one outspoken lady caused her husband weeks of embarrassment. And why the Washington whirl isn't always a picnic. Also: Special 12-page guide "How to make the most of your money." The Saturday Evening POST One beige leather Hide-a-bed couch models the available model set $1.00. Cai VI 3-6213. 3-15 Kansan Classified Ads Get Results NOW is your opportunity to buy a fabulous 1969 MG-Midget at a substantial discount and labor. Several extras. Call VI 3-8367 or VI 3-7275 after 6:30 p.m. and Sundays. GUNS: Lawrence Firearms Co. New & used guns, ammo Handguns rebelled. Hydrant Ohio. Hyundai 357 - 44 magnum. Order now. 1246 Ohio. corner of 14th & Ohio. 12-13 1983 2-dr. Blue Ford, I'm a dreambount 2016 between 5-7 for or less. Call 1-59- 2016 between 5-7 for or less. Call 1-59- FOR RENT ROOM FOR 1 MALE STUDENT in double room. Share with graduate student. Mail from Union. Private entrance, hall. Coll T 3-4092, see at 1301 Louisiana. TF LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 1 rooms, kitchens, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. $520 La. VI 2-0731. t LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. APARTMENTS FOR RENT MARRIED AND GRADUATE STUDENTS Large kitchen cabinets and closet space. Brick construction, fully insulated. Garbage disposal, carpeted central air-conditioning, and laundry $ _{1/2} $ -block. PARK PLAZA SOUTH APTS. 1912 W. 25th VI 2-3416 TRANSPORTATION LARGE nicely furnished 2 bedroom apt. trance, bath, phone, & garage. First floor- blocks from campus. Extra nice available April 1. Call VI-37830. 3-1 Girl wants rides beginning April 1 from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Call VI 2-2720 at 6:30 - 15 3:30 p.m. Call VI 2-2720 at 6:30 - 15 PATRONIZE YOUR • ADVERTISERS • TYPING WANTED: Tie to New York over Spring Call: Robert Herschberg at VI 2-2471. 3-150 FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. tr TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will apply these, term papers, and reports. Responsible rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8686. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing — call VI 3-9138. Ms. Lloyd Geibeltch. Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with symbol for math and Greek letters. For example, Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546. 3-30 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Inquiry: 1511 W. 21 St. Ct. VI 3-6440. tsf 1511 W. 21 St. Ct. VI 3-6440. tsf TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger. VI 3-4409. tt FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Service Service, 5917 B Executive Mission, HE 2-7718 Eves or Sat. R-2-2186 THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter Reasonable to Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. Call 3-0483. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. Experienced typist 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 19th, V1 21-1648. Experienced typist would like typing in rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. It Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher, Ms. Burris. Reports accurately. Standard rates. Suits Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 5. Be a TWA HOSTESS Kansan Classified Ads Get Results TWA Apply Now for Spring and Summer Classes Visit world-famous cities . . meet interesting people, prominent personalities. . enjoy a career that couples the wonderful world of flying with a unique opportunity to complete your education with travel! If you can qualify — You may enter classes this spring or summer, train at company expense with pay, at TWA Headquarters in Kansas City. Upon graduation, you'll fly U. S. routes; later, with a minimum language qualification, you'll be eligible to fly internationally—for TWA flights cover 50,000 miles and four continents. Free TWA passes and reduced fares will be yours for additional travel fun. QUALIFICATIONS: Minimum age 20; Height—5'2" to 5'9"; Weight—100/138 lbs.; Vision—20/100 or better, corrected to 20/20; Attractive; Natural-color hair; Clear complexion; Unmarried; 2 years college or equivalent in business experience. TWA Building, Municipal Airport 10 Richards Road, Kansas City, Mo. Every Monday, 8 A.M. Contact this TWA Representative for an interview . . . No Phone Calls, Please An equal opportunity employer Mr. C. E. McBride. Jr. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers. EXPERIENCED typewriter: application letters. Electric (typewriter). Special symbols & slams. Prompt service. Robert Cooke博士. Rhode Island, VI 5-7485. 5-19 TOMMY On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "Rally Round The Flag, Boys","The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) SHAKESPEARE DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANY MORE And we all know how familiar that is—I mean Marlboro cigarettes. And why should it not be familiar? Why, where learning is king, where taste is sovereign, where brain power rules supreme, should not Marlboro be everyone's favorite? The same good sense that gets you through an exam in Restoration Poetry or solid-state physics certainly does not desert you when you come to pick a cigarette. You look for a flavor that is flavorful, a filter pure and white, a choice of pack or box, a lot to like. You look, in short, for Marlboro—and happily you don't have to look far. Marlboro is available at your friendly tobaccoist's or vending machine, wherever cigarettes are sold in all fifty states and Las Vegas. A recent and most heartening development in American college life has been the emergence of the artist-in-residence. In fact, the artist-in-residence has become as familiar a sight on campus as Latin ponies, leather elbow patches, Rorschach tests, hula hoops, and Marlboro cigarettes. Take, for example, William Cullen Signafoos, artist-in-residence at the Toledo College of Belles Lettres and Fingerprint Identification. But I digress. We were speaking of the new campus phenomenon—the artist-in-residence—a man or woman who writes, paints, or composes right on your very own campus and who is also available for occasional consultations with superior students. As we all know, Mr. Sigafosas has been working for many years on an epic poem in rhymed couplets about the opening of the Youngstown-Akron highway. Until, however, he went into residence at the Toledo College of Belles Lettres and Fingerprint Identification, his progress was not what you would call rapid. He started well enough with the immortal couplet we all know: They speed along on wheels of rubber, rushing home in time for subur . . . Then Mr. Signafos got stuck. It is not that his muse deserted him; it that he became involved in a series of time-consuming episodes—a prefrontal lobotomy for Irwin, his faithful sled dog; fourteen consecutive months of jury duty on a very complicated ease of overtime parking; getting his coattail caught in the door of a jet bound for Brisbane, Australia; stuff like that. He was engaged in a very arduous job in Sandusky—posing for a sculptor of hydrants—when an offer came from the Toledo College of Belles Lettres and Fingerprint Identification to take up residence there, finish his magnum opus and, from time to time, see a few gifted students. Mr. Sigafos accepted with pleasure and in three short years completed the second couplet of his Youngstown-Akron Turnpike epic: The highway is made of solid concrete and at the toll station you get a receipt. "What is truth?" said one. Then a few gifted students came to visit him. They were a prepossessing lot—the boys with corduroy jackets and long, shaggy beards; the girls also with corduroy jackets but with beards neatly braided. "What is truth?" said one. "What is beauty?" said another. "Should a writer live first and write later or should he write and do a little living in his spare time?" said another. "How do you find happiness—and having found it, how do you get rid of it?" said another. "Whither are we drifting?" said another. "I don't know whither you are drifting," said Mr. Sigafoos, "but as for me, I am drifting back to Sandusky to pose for the hydrant seater." And back he went, alas, leaving only a fragment of his Youngstown-Akron Turnpike epic to rank with other such uncompleted masterpieces as Schubert's Unfinished Symphony, the Venus de Milo, and Singer's Midgets. © 1902 Max Shulman Take cheer, good friends, from one masterpiece that is complete. We, refer, of course, to Marlboro cigarettes. Filter end and tobacco end are both as good as tobacco artistry and science can make them. University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 13, 1962 Wesley Group- (Continued from page 1) our earlier letter. The support of the administration is almost imperative for this. A few individuals, or even one entire chapter, desiring to strike such clauses would have little effect on the national convention of a fraternity or sorority. "... in answer to our belief that the administration should not consider race when pairing roommates for women's dorms, you stated.' . . the University of Kansas will never demand that someone live with another person with whom he is incompatible.' You also implied that our suggestion would force 'impossible personal relationships.' "WE DO NOT BELIEVE two persons are incompatible merely because they are of different races—even if the races are white and Negro. We would question the 'impossibility' of the personal relationships to which you referred. "Besides, some of us feel the administration has given us 'incompatible' roommates before, even though they were of our own race. We do not deny that the University grants each dorm student the privilege of changing roommates if he can't live happily with his present one; and thus the University does not demand that any two persons live together. If a white girl and a Negro girl were placed together, they would have the same opportunity to change rooms as anyone else. "Our suggestion necessitates no change in this university policy. It does involve eliminating race as a determining factor in deciding roommates. IN AN INTERVIEW today, Warner said: "We write this letter with the fervent hope that the time will soon arrive when no Negro student at Kansas University feels he is a 'second-class citizen." "It is my belief that the chapters with the discriminatory clauses will not respond at all in the way the Chancellor hopes. The Greeks have not responded so far either for or against the clauses or the University's policy toward them, and I do not see any indication of a trend to do so. The Chancellor has not answered the Council's latest letter. "As far as the administration no wanting to regulate the fraternities, that is funny. A number of regulations are already placed on fraternities by the University and I do not think that this one would be out of line with the others." Foreign Aid Bill— (Continued from page 1) KENNEDY SAID HE realized that some Americans were getting tired of foreign aid. But he said his request could not be cut without endangering this country's attempt to create well-being and political liberty through such aid. "All our armies and atoms combined will be of little avail if these nations fail, unable to meet the needs of their own people and unable to stave off within their borders the rise of forces that threaten our security." Kennedy said. Foreign aid administrator Fowle Hamilton will open the administration fight for the funds Wednesday before the house foreign affairs committee. Officials said they were attempting to purchase more aid materials in the United States to ease the outflow of dollars and gold. They SMOP Drive Gets $2,008 These ingredients spelled success for KU Women's Memorial Scholarship Fund (SMOP), sponsored by the Associated Women Students, as returns from the drive increased this year by $708. The Pi Beta Phi's sold tickets to a fire drill, the Corbin counselors sold confections, and KU boy friends bought "Late Night" tickets. KU WOMEN RAISED $2,008 for SMOP this year. Last year they raised $1,300. Members of the SMOP Committee attributed the increase to the competition between houses during the individual house projects. The KU Women's Memorial Scholarship Fund was established in 1948 in commemoration of KU women students who died while attending the university. SMOP scholarship applications are available in the Dean of Women's office, 220 Strong. The applications must be returned to the Dean's office by Saturday, April 14. The scholarships will be awarded on All Women's Day, April 30. P-T-P Forum Meets Tomorrow Night Five foreign students will discuss their American counterparts at the People-to-People forum, 7:30 Wed., in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The title of the discussion is "The American College Student—First Impression." The panelists are: Vincentyak B. Kothari, Bombay, India junior; Luis E. Mayer, Placentas, Cuba junior; Brian E. Cleave, Sussex, England graduate student; Inga M. Safholm, Drottningholm, Sweden special student, and Walter S. Bgoya, Tanganyika, Africa freshman. hope to reach 80 per cent procurement in the United States. OFFICIALS SAID THAT only in the development fund does an appreciable amount of money remain from last year's appropriation. One official said this was because the United States was weighing applications for aid carefully to make sure the applicants were really working toward self-help. "We have no trouble getting rid of the money," he said. "There are plenty of applicants." Wilson Writes Police Manual "Basic Rules of Arrest, Search and Seizure," a manual for Kansas peace officers, has been written by Paul E. Wilson, associate professor of law at the University of Kansas. The report, published by the KU Governmental Research Center, explains important rules and answers questions of interpretation of law which apply to the daily duties of the peace officer. The study offers a step by step explanation of the proper procedures for arrest with and without a warrant. It discusses the use of force under varying circumstances, and explains the rights of the citizen to resist unlawful arrest and unlawful methods of restraint. Important topics in the report are procedures for obtaining search warrants, limitations on the area of the search, search of the person and the subject's home or place of business, search of vehicles, search when consent has been obtained, and consequences of unlawful searches. J. M. Jewett, associate professor of geology and senior geologist of the state geological survey at KU, has been appointed to a commission which works to further conservation of oil and natural gas. Geologist Named To Research Group Prof. Jewett has been appointed a member of the Research Committee of the Interstate Oil Company Commission. His appointment was announced by J. H. Edmondson, governor of Oklahoma and chairman of the IOCC. Prof. Jewett served as chairman of the IOCC Research Committee in 1960, and directed a nation-wide report on underground storage of natural gas. The committee's present project is a study of oil-field brines. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results Around the Campus Prints, Woodcuts In Murphy Display An exhibit in the display gallery of Murphy Hall from now until April 6 features a selection of 29 recent prints and woodcuts by graduate and undergraduate students. Included in the show are woodcuts, color relief prints and intaglio prints, all made by students of John Talleur, assistant professor of drawing and painting. University Theatre To Begin KC Work The University Theatre will take the first step in establishing a continuing program of theatre productions in Kansas City March 30 when it presents "The Boy Friend" in Battenfeld Auditorium at the University of Kansas Medical Center. The Theatre will present five productions in the KU Medical Center auditorium during the 1962-63 season they will be announced next week. University Theatre officials said their ultimate goal is to establish a permanent professional theatre company in Kansas City. "The Boy Friend" will also play in Junction City on March 31 and Salina June 15-16. Aging Conference Here April 16-17 The 12th annual Kansas Conference on Aging will be held here April 16-17. One of the principal speakers will be Marie C. McGuire, from the Public Housing Administration office, in Washington, D.C. The Kansas Citizens Council on Aging is sponsoring the conference. Donald W. Cowgill of Wichita University is chairman of the council The conference theme will be "The Role of Education for the Aged and Aging." Mexican Educator To Lecture Today Hebero Sein, Mexican educator, diplomat and interpreter, will give a University lecture on "Half a Hemisphere in Revolution" at 4 p.m. today in the English Room of the Kansas Union. Sein, now an official interpreter in the United Nations, has held diplomatic positions in the UN and in other posts. He was official interpreter for Nehru during the Indian prime minister's visit to this hemisphere in 1961. His lecture is sponsored by the department of Romance languages and the Latin America Area Committee. A third report in a study of municipal finance of nine Kansas cities has been published by the Governmental Research Center at the University of Kansas. KU Agency Publishes City Finance Analysis The report analyzes the topics of revenues, expenditures, bond indebtedness, and capital outlay from 1948 to 1959 in nine cities: Atchison, Coffeyville, Fort Scott, Hutchinson, Lawrence, Parsons, Pittsburg and Salina. James T. McDonald, senior analyst in the center, is author of the study. NEW YORK — (UPI)—Driving at night? Know that it takes about 30 times as much illumination to make objects visible when you are facing bright lights as when you are not. Other reports in the series were issued in 1953 and 1957. Studies show that an average driver going 50 miles an hour and passing a pair of glaring headlights travels the next 73 feet totally "blind" researchers at the Murine Co. report. Night Driving JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Administrators Say Fund Dance 'Illegal' A controversy has arisen over the legality of a proposed fund raising dance scheduled to be held Friday night in Templin Hall. James G. Middleton, assistant to the dean of students and program director of dormitory supervision met last night with men's dormitory residents and said that the administration opposed the holding of fund raising dances in the residence halls. FOLLOWING THE meeting with Mr. Middleton, the Templein Hall Senate voted 22-2 to go ahead with the dance with the understanding that it would be moved to the Kansas Union Ballroom if a state law prohibits holding it in the dormitory. IAWS to Hold Convention Here There will be no classes during spring vacation, but nevertheless the campus will still buzz with activity. Watkins Memorial Hospital will be open, Lewis Hall will be open, meals will be served at Templin Hall and there will even be mail delivery and telephone service in Lewis Hall. The activity will center around the regional Intercollegiate Women Students (IAWS) convention which KU's Associated Women Students (AWS) will host April 1-4. REGIONAL IAWS conventions are held every two years. This year the convention for the southern region comprising 15 states and 40 member schools is being held at KU. Two hundred women are expected to attend the spring convention. The major part of the convention is to be held in Lewis Hall. Approximately 200 Lewis women have agreed to turn their rooms over to the delegates for the duration of the convention. A convention hall, complete with a table and placard for each member school will be set up in the Lewis dining room. All convention meals will be served in Templin Hall. KU IAWS delegates will serve the meals, man the switchboards and take care of mail delivery. The central theme of the IAWS Convention is "concern for the individual in modern society." Convention members will discuss contemporary communications, art, philosophy and education. The KU women attending the convention will include the members of the present AWS Senate and House, and Cwen members, the sophomore women's honorary organization, who have worked on convention committees. Committee chairmen include Susan Callender, Bonner Springs junior; George Ann Porter, Kansas City junior; Susan Flood, Hayes sophomore; Karen Jordan, Great Bend junior; Jeanne Maxwell, Lawrence senior. Priscilla Camp, Lawrence junior; Carolyn Houser, Howard junior; Patricia Kendall, Holton sophomore; Mary Nan Scammon, Tarkio, Mo., junior and Ann Leffler, Pittsburg sophomore. Emily Taylor, dean of women, is the regional IAWS director. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Jack Zinn, Mission freshman and a staff member of Templin Hall's news letter, "The Observer," said that Mr. Middleton presented three choices to the residence halls: - Hold the dance at the Kansas Union, paying a fee of $35 and charge admission. - Cancel the dance altogether. - Hold the dance at Templin Hall and charge no admission. Zinn said if the dance is held in Templin Hall, the group could be placed on social probation. The New DURING THE MEETING, Mr. Middleton cited a 1947 statute forbidding fund raising activities on state property. Students attending the meeting expressed doubt about the statute and said the proposed dance would be no different from such activities as the Angel Flight spaghetti diner, Rock Chalk Revue and the coming appearance of the singing group. "The Limelimeters." CRESTAURANT Located in the NW Corner of Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa Featuring the Complete Self Service SALAD BAR THE DECLINE AND FALL OF SUGAR RAY! At 41, Sugar Ray Robinson seems to be in hock up to his ears. And the ring is the only place he can earn big money. But how long can he take the beating? In this week's Post, you'll read how he made and lost $4 million. Why it costs him $100,000 a year to live. And why he's never liked fighting. Also: Special 12-page guide "How to make the most of your money." The Saturday Evening TOST MARCH 17 ISSUE NOW ON SALE Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No. 102 Wednesday, March 14, 1962 Events Group Approved; Cuban Debate Arranged By Bill Sheldon The All Student Council last night unanimously approved the establishment of a Current Events Committee and appropriated funds to bring a member of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee (FPCC) to KU for a debate on the Cuban situation. Following the meeting, Ron Gallagher, Fort Scott senior who introduced both resolutions, identified the representative as Edward Shaw. MR. SHAW'S APPEARANCE here last May received severe criticism and was declared "unofficial" by the administration. Gallagher's resolution asked that $101.95 be provided to bring a member of the FPCC to debate with a member of the Truth About Cuba Committee (TACC). The Minority Opinion Forum has already contacted representatives of both groups. Larry Laudan, Lawrence senior and chairman of the Forum, said his group was without funds and could not get money from the Student Union Activities which governs it. LAUDAN EXPLAINED THAT the representative of the TACC could pay his own way to KU since his appearance would be part of a national tour by that group. He said the debate will take place about April 25, when the Truth About Cuba Committee would be in the area. The Current Events bill provides for "a permanent committee . . . to bring to the campus speakers and films that will encourage discussion and formulation of opinions on the vital issues of the day." The bill also creates a speakers bureau to aid living groups in obtaining speakers. "There is a vacuum in this area now. There is no group which has the funds to bring speakers to the campus," Gallagher said. Geneva Has Gloomy Air GENEVA — (UPI) The 17nation General Disarmament Conference opened today under a cloud of pessimism. The bleak outlook stemmed from failure of the Big Three foreign ministers to make the slightest progress in breaking the East-West deadlock on critical issues, including the American and Russian threats to resume nuclear testing in the atmosphere, during preliminary meetings that have preceded the conference here. THE CONFERENCE began late this afternoon at the Palace of Nations with a brief public ceremony. The first full-scale business session will take place tomorrow morning. The conference was called by the United Nations for another attempt at halting the global nuclear arms race by an agreement on a "complete and general disarmament" including a big power nuclear test ban. THE BIG THREE foreign ministers made a final but futtle preconference effort this morning to dent the deadlock over inspection and controls to guarantee a test ban and other arms control measures. Delegates from four NATO, five Communist and eight neutral nations are attending the conference. A fifth NATO country, France, refused to attend because President Charles de Gaulle felt any talks under present conditions would be futile. Secretary of State Dean Rusk was reported by American sources to be neither pessimistic nor optimistic about the outcome of the talks. "This was illustrated by the group which had to ask for contributions to bring 'Operation Correction' here recently." GALLAGHER SAID he felt it would be good if the committee could bring speakers who would represent extreme viewpoints. He added, however, that he hoped there would be a balance of conservative and liberal viewpoints over the long run. A resolution made at the last meeting by Jo Snyder, Bethesda, Md., junior, to establish a committee to start a fund raising drive for the Student Non-Violent Cooperation Committee (SNVCC) was withdrawn by Miss Snyder. She said she felt it best to withdraw her resolution since it would be too difficult to amend the ASC bill governing the solicitation of funds. - Referred to a committee a resolution for a constitutional amendment which would require the ASC chairman to be an elected ASC member. The ASC also: - Heard a motion for the establishment of an ASC secretarial staff - Set a limit of $50 on expenditures for persons running for class officers (there had been no previous regulation). - Received a suggestion that a stop day be set for May 24. - Formed a committee to investigate the possibility of night bus service for women's residence areas. - Authorized the traffic and safety committee to investigate the need for stop signs at the corner of Eleventh and Louisiana Streets. - Recommended that $100 be appropriated to the Peace Corps Committee for its operations. (This was automatically referred to the finance committee.) CHARLES WHITMAN. Shawnee Mission sophomore, moved to amend article six, section three of the ASC Constitution, which deals with the chairmanship of the council. Presently, as in the case of the current chairman (Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior), it is not necessary for the chairman to be an elected member of the council. Whitman's motion stated that the chairman should be an elected member of the ASC throughout his tenure as chairman (from spring election to spring election) and that the vice-chairman, secretary and treasurer should be governed by the same rules. Whitman's motion was automatically referred to the committee on committees and legislation. GALLAGHER THEN PROPOSED an amendment to the ASC bill to establish a secretarial staff. He asked that a 6-member committee be formed which will "endeavor to employ . . . an executive secretary who will be able to remain in the employ of the ASC for a considerable time" and who "shall not be empowered to make policy decisions or speak for the ASC." This action will be voted upon at the next meeting. - * * Shaw Causes Controversy On Last Visit Edward Shaw, whose appearance at KU was voted last night by the All Student Council, was the focus of a controversy when he spoke at KU last spring. Last spring Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said that Shaw was not an official guest of the University and his appearance was not in any official capacity. "HE (MR, SHAW) does not appear on this campus in any official capacity, and he is not an official guest of the University of Kansas. "The University officially, and I personally, disclaim his viewpoint on the Cuban situation." The Lawrence Daily Journal World, in an editorial, said it was "lame-brained foolishness" for schools to welcome "with open arms" individuals who "obviously and openly espouse anti-United States causes." The appearance of Mr. Shaw was one of the causes of the January statement by State Senator Ford Harbaugh (R-Wellington) of socialism at KU. When asked about the Chancellor's statement, at the time of his visit last year, Mr. Shaw said, "I think he (the Chancellor) is ill-informed." SEN. HARBAUGH REPRIMANDED the University for authorizing the use of University premises for a meeting for friends of Fidel Castro and his Cuba (Mr. Shaw). During his May visit, Mr. Shaw said his committee did not necessarily support Castro but functioned "to correct the atrocities and false reports of the distorted American press." President Defends Fraternity Rights By Dennis Bowers The Commander of Sigma Nu fraternity went before the Human Rights Committee of the All Student Council last night and defended his fraternity's right to retain a discriminatory clause in its national constitution. He appeared before 30 persons in the second in a series of open hearings on which the HRC will base recommendations for action against discriminatory clauses of fraternities and sororites. STEPHEN BRAWNER, Merriam senior, said that "Sigma Nu is not an anarchy of any sort. Anything we have in our laws, including the discriminatory clause, we feel we have a perfect right to have and any infringement of this right would be an infringement on our freedom." Brawner said he appeared before the HRC because he "thought it would benefit everyone to know what the Sigma Nu position is—especially after all the controversy going around." Brawnay said, "Sigma Nu is based on the same principle as a family circle. A family is historically this way. Brawner said the only way the discriminatory clause can be stricken is at the national convention which will meet this year. "AS WE ARE A member chapter of the national fraternity," Brawner said, "we must go along with their laws and their constitution. If we did not, we wouldn't be Sigma Nu's." "But," he said, "we think we have the right to choose with whom we choose to associate. And we don't recognize any other authority except our fraternity on these rights." CORDELL MEEKS, Kansas City sophomore and HRC member, said "You have stated the national organization's opinion on discriminatory clauses. Do you know the local view on the clause, whether the local Sigma Nu members oppose them or not?" "It must be obvious that since we have not disaffiliated from the national chapter and become local, the majority of men in our house are in favor of the discriminatory clause." Brawner replied. "Our local chapter has agreed to go along with what the other chapters have decided. Majority rules." Roberta Johnson, Juliet, ill., senior, asked Brawner if his chapter would vote to remove the clause if the matter came up for a vote. "I couldn't say whether we would or not." Brawner replied. "I don't know each person's individual opinion on the matter. But the matter was not even brought up at the last national convention." HE WAS ASKED WHAT the Sigma Nu chapter would do if the administration decided to rule against recognizing chapters which retained discriminatory clauses. "The University doesn't have any right to say if our chapter is approved or not," he replied. "It can't say if we are a healthy chapter or if we are a good place to live. It can't regulate us. Art Miller, Pittsburg junior, said that the Supreme Court ruled in a New York University case that a university has the right to regulate fraternities. "The Supreme Court ruled that since they (fraternities) are an integral part of the university, the university has the right to dictate to the fraternities on their right to discriminate because of race," Miller said. FREDERICK G. BUSHMAN Steve Brawner BRAWNER REFEATED his statement that the local chapter believes "Sigma Nu has the right to determine our own members. "We are looking for a test case right now in which we can test this right," he said. "In the future this might be different, but this is the way it is now. I think you'll find our chapter open-minded in this issue." He continued, "If our stand is wrong, we expect to die a natural death." Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior and co-chairman of the Civil Rights Council, asked Brawner the number of Sigma Nu chapters which have gone local because of the discriminatory clauses. "LET'S JUST SAY that it is more than one." Brawner said. It was announced that the HRC would send letters to the national offices of Sigma Nu, Lambda Chi Alpha, and Alpha Tau Omega fraternities explaining the interest in their respective discriminatory clauses. Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and HRC chairman, said (Continued on page 8) Weather Generally fair this afternoon and tonight. Thursday far north, increasing cloudiness south. A little warmer northwest and north central portion Thursday. Low tonight 5 to 10 northwest to 15 to 20 southeast. High Thursday 40s northwest to near 40 southeast. Romulo Says Friendship Is Weapon JOHN C. WESTMAN Gen. Carlos Romulo Gen. Carlos P. Romulo, former president of the United Nations General Assembly and former U.S. ambassador from the Philippines, said yesterday that America's most potent weapon can be its friendship with the peoples of Asia, Africa and Central America. "Today you are engaged in a life and death struggle against communism for the minds, hearts and souls of men," he said. "You need have no fear if you convince the world that you really believe your own Declaration of Independence which states that 'All men are created equal.'" THE PULITZER Prize-winning journalist and ex-aide to Gen. Douglas MacArthur spoke at a University Lecture on "The Crisis the Free World Faces." Gen. Romulo said the winning of foreign friends is a part of America's struggle against communism. The struggle must go on, he said. because the basic objective of Soviet planning is world conquest. "In two world wars America did not annex one square inch of territory but was the most generous conquerer in all history," he said. On the other hand, he said, Russia did not demobilize after World War II and "millions of once-free men were created into robots of the Kremml." "WE ARE IN THIS bitter struggle and must resist for our own survival," the speaker added. Gen. Romulo also said: - The United States should not have invited Khrushchev here in 1960 because the trip gave Khrushchev and Russia status and acceptance in the eyes of Asians, Africans and Central Americans. Despite the advances of Russia and Red China, Americans need not fear if they convince the world they "really believe every man has a spark of the divine in him and that all men are brothers under the canopy of heaven and the fatherhood of God," he said. - The initial victories of Japan in World War II destroyed the notion that the western nations are always invincible in war. - "In the days of our grandchildren Russia will rue the day she created this monster, Red China." - Red China should not be admitted to the United Nations because it is "in flagrant violation of the U.N. charter. Red China must not be allowed to shoot her way in. - "Soviet Russia fought the Korean War to the last Chinese soldier." - Communism was contained in Europe only when the Marshall Plan became effective. - The present Russo-Chinese disagreement is not deep enough to change the basic relationship between the United States and Russia. "Whenever freedom is in peril." Gen. Romulo said, "it is in peril everywhere and America can no longer be an island unto itself." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. March 14, 1962 An Elusive Agreement It begins to appear certain that the Soviets plan to wreck another nuclear disarmament conference. They made a surprise proposal for uncontrolled nuclear disarmament Monday at the 17-nation conference in Geneva. Russian sources said the proposal would probably be presented to the conference today. The fact that the Soviets have chosen to ignore the question of adequate controls (some arrangement for inspection teams and observation posts), which they know the Western powers consider vital, is the key factor in their proposal. They knew before the proposal was made public that it is unacceptable to the Western powers. IT IS WORTH noting that the Kremlin has also adopted an aggressive attitude on several problems it is dealing with at present. One of these is the decision by Khrushchev to go ahead with Soviet armament plans at the expense of needed improvements in the Soviet Union's agricultural program. Another is the harassment of Allied planes and ground forces in Berlin. Perhaps the most significant factor is the recent massive series of nuclear tests by the Soviet Union, which does not indicate that a nuclear disarmament agreement is being considered as a possibility for the near future. Such a series requires lengthy preparation and consideration of all related factors. It is doubtful the Kremlin would have decided to go ahead with those nuclear tests if it was seriously considering nuclear disarmament. All these actions suggest that the Kremlin's plans do not call for any compromise with the West on current problems. Naturally the West will continue to seek a nuclear disarmament agreement, but the possibility of one coming from the current Geneva conference is almost non-existent. —William H. Mullins letters to the editor Reaction to JFK's Speech Editor; Good old consistent Jack Kennedy, always cheerlein' folks up when the awful curse of the Devil seems most near. Why, accordin' to his Saturday night speech — a natural encore to his TV talk a while back about settin' off some more of our real clean nuclear bombs — "humanity" can look right forward to "an age in which many of the predictions of imaginative fiction will be coming true." Yes sir. Now that's what I call a genuine Revelation. Only thing is that this member of humanity, havin' read some "imaginative fiction" himself, can't decide which fiction book we're racin' to prove: "Nineteen Eighty-four" or "On the Beach?" Note on "A Traffic Incident" Editor: Thank you for your article entitled "A Traffic Incident." I fully agree with your opening statement. I am the "Young lady in a rather small car" that upset our fair patrolman. Robert Bosseau Pittsburg junior * * * It seems important that I vindicate my position. As I approached the intersection of Javihawk Blvd. and Sunflower Road, the patrolman was attempting to halt another young lady, a pedestrian, who had also irritated him. Meanwhile traffic waited. THE OFFICER'S chase was unsuccessful, so he began walking back toward the intersection. Needless to say, by this time horns were blaring away. The policeman lifted his right arm high in the air in what several pedestrians and I thought I was not intentionally breaking any of his orders as he accused me of doing. My car was halted in the center of the intersection for several moments while he told me that he would stop traffic indefinitely if I wanted him to do so. In my most polite voice I said "No, sir." He then very rudely asked if we "all" wanted to go before the judge — again "No, sir." He seemed quite disappointed that I didn't argue with him and so let me move on and resume the traffic flow. was a signal to proceed. Obviously, this was not the meaning of the motion as far as he was concerned. TO ME, HE did not carry out his duties as a public servant. If I broke a law and endangered other lives I believe I should have received a ticket and due punishment. This was not the case. I followed what I trusted to be a clear direction and was rudely insulted by said party. Kansas University would profit by improving the quality of its public servants. Marsha Morgan Boulder, Colo., junior * * * Action Commended Editor: Until last Thursday, when the platform of ACTION was announced, the campus gave no impression but that of being politically dead. Both existing parties ran for the last elections on platforms which carefully avoided every important issue of conflict. This seems to change with the foundation of the new party. The fact that a stand is being taken on questions such as the NSA-affiliation, the CRC (which movies "Lover Come Back": produced by Martin Melcher and Stanley Shapiro. At the Granada. HOT RODS "Lover Come Back" is a movie about an oversexed account executive from a Madison Avenue advertising agency who successfully advertises a product that does not exist. The executive, Jerry Webster (played by Rock Hudson) falls in love with undersexed Carol Templeton (played by Doris Day). So, even if ACTION should not succeed in winning seats on the ASC, it contributes considerably to the political scene by bringing some movement into the benumbed atmosphere of student government. MISS TEMPELTON is from a rival agency and is consistently outdone by Webster. He impresses the prospective client by showing him a good time in New York night spots. Then, after the client is drunk, he has him sign with his agency. Miss Templeton refuses to use these tactics and loses all of her prospects to Webster. By Murrel Bland WEBSTER AND Miss Templeton meet for the first time in the eccentric chemist's laboratory. Miss Templeton has come to persuade the chemist to give her and not Webster the formula for VIP. She comes into the laboratory when the chemist is out of the room. Webster is able to convince her that he is the chemist. She unknowingly plays up to Webster to get the formula and, in the process, falls in love with him. John Turner The product Webster advertises that really does not exist is VIP. The VIP advertising campaign started as the result of a mistake and Webster must now find a product to fit the advertising. He persuades an eccentric chemist in Greenwich Village to make something that can be used as VIP. The chemist develops a special cooky that dissolves into pure alcohol after it is eaten. This means the average person can now have a cheap drunk for just 10 cents. BY THE MERE fact that these controversies are made issues in future elections on this campus, students are forced to make a personal decision. The voting is thus no longer merely a popularity contest but a true election of the representative who stands for the ideas of the majority. It seems to us that even UP and VOX should be grateful for this achievement. The story line in the movie is not probable. However, the movie does accomplish its main purpose—to make people laugh. means on the discrimination issues) and the stadium seating plan can only be welcomed, since it raises these questions to the level where they belong and creates the necessity for decisions and actions by the ASC, the students' representatives. John Turner Topeka junior Wolfgang Keim Hamburg, Germany graduate student Brian E. Cleave Sussex, England graduate student Policy Statement (Editor's note: The general policy on letters to the editor is that all letters are printed as long as they are not libelous or in bad taste. All letters must include the writer's name and classi- cation. The writer's name will be withheld only if it gives a good reason for such action to a member of the editorial staff. (Because of the amount of space available to print letters, some limitation on length is necessary. Letters should be no longer than the length if possible and will usually be printed within two days after they are received. Letters which are longer than this may not be printed until four or five days before publication. If a writer wishes to write a letter longer than 500 words, he must talk to a member of the editorial staff about it.) University of Kansas student newspaper Founder; first weekbile 1904, weekbile 1908, weekbile 1908. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711 news room Daily Hansan home Viking 3-26 extension 711, news room Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22 N.Y. n.n.a. national. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during University year except Saturday and Sunday examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher Managing Editor Kelly Salmon, Carrie Jerryfield, Clayton Keller, Scott Perry, Managing Editors; Jerry Musl, City Editor; Steve Clark, Sports Editor; Martha Moser, Society Editor. NEWS DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Mackenzie, Assistant Editor Karl Koeth, Assistant Editorial Editor. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinchek .. Business Manager Hal Sailor .. Operations Manager Kline, Classified Advertising Manager; Susanne Ellermeier, Circulation Man- gler; Elysabeth Wright, National Advertising Manager; Harley Carpenter, Promotion Manager. R-19 P.O. BOX 3 ELKHART, VIRGINIA "OH MY —IM IN FOR IT AGAIN TONITE —IT LOOKS LIKE HE'S HAD ANOTHER BAD DAY AT SCHOOL!" the look world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism SCOTT FITZGERALD, by Andrew Turnbull. Scribner's. $5.95. F. Scott Fitzgerald now has passed the point of frenzied revivalism that marked those late-forties appraisals of his writings. We now can look at Fitzgerald a bit more objectively, and perhaps his books and short stories will come to have more meaning than they had in an era when Americans were trying to go back to the gaudy 1920s. On the dust jacket is the face of an incredibly handsome man, looking to be in his mid- or late-thirties. If one cares to, he can try to read into this face the excitement—and the torment—of the life this man was living in the twenties and thirties. ANDREW TURNBULL, WHO BENEFITED from a friendship with Fitzgerald when the author lived in a house belonging to the Turnbulls in the Maryland countryside, has written an excellent biography of the celebrated novelist. If it is not as introspective as Mizener's "The Far Side of Paradise," it is more readable; and it resembles Elizabeth Nowell's recent biography of Thomas Wolfe in its attempts to use excerpts from the author's work to tell the story. There is much in the Fitzgerald novels and short stories that is autobiographical. The heroine of "The Ice Palace" could be Zelda, and Fitzgerald could be either "The Rich Boy" or "The Freshest Boy." The tormented lives of Dick Diver and Nicole in "Tender Is the Night" could be Scott and Zelda trying to burn themselves out in Paris and on the Riviera. "The Last Tycoon" gives us Thalberg of MGM and the miserable days the already wasted Fitzgerald thrald as a Hollywood writer. "Babylon Revisited" is the thoughtful Fitzgerald returning to the scenes of his triumphs and miseries. This is a sad tale as well as a fascinating one. Trying to live life to the fullest, Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald began to drink their way into oblivion, and for Zelda, her mind already touched by the seeds of madness, this was an unfortunate way to live. Fitzgerald was a fine writer, not a great one, though there is greatness in "The Great Gatsby" and much of his other work. He was a perceptive one, and a generous one. It must have been both trying and inspiring to be Maxwell Perkins of Scribner's and have Fitzgerald, Hemingway and Wolfe all writing at the same time. This time of genius and adventure in American letters has been captured well by Andrew Turnbull. Sound and Fury Many faculty members here seem to be highly skilled at criticizing students for laziness, slovenly thinking, bad grammar, poor posture, etc. But it is unfortunate that these instructors can't sit in on a few bull sessions to learn what students think of their courses. THE FACULTY might be shocked to hear that a major gripe of students is that courses are not sufficiently challenging. And the professors most students like—and work for—are not the ones who tell corny jokes, but the ones who stimulate thinking. Unimaginative teaching appears to be the norm at this university. And if the students are stupid and lazy, our esteemed faculty must share some of the blame. —Bacchus Page 3 Experimental Theatre Program Includes Plays, Dance Drama The KU Experimental Theatre is trying a new twist in drama this week and next with Theatre International, three foreign one-act plays presented in their native languages. Theatre International will alternate performances with the Tau Sigma dance dramas through March 21. Tau Sigma, dance fraternity-sorority, will present "Twas Never Thus" and "Hero Journey" March 14 16, 18, and 20 in the Experimental Theatre. "TWAS NEVER THUS" is a tongue-in-cheek version of history. It will look at Helen of Troy, Antony and Cleopatra, Henry VIII, Pocahontas and John Smith, Perry Mason, and beatniks. "Hero Journey" follows the lines of the standard hero of literature. He does noble deeds in exchange for boons from supernatural powers. Members of Tau Sigma dance fraternity participating in the program are Mary Jean Cowell, St. Louis junior; Susan Curry, Topeka sophomore; Kathy Hibbard, Ann Arbor Mich., freshman; Kay Lanners, St Aviator Requests Censor Reasons WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss., has said a much-decorated World War II naval aviator was right on target in suggesting ways to avoid inconsis- tencies in military speech censorship. The former aviator, Cmdr. Sidney R. Overall Jr., now a Pentagon speech-writer, told a Senate subcommittee recently that censorship of the 75 speeches he wrote for Adm. Arleigh A. Burke, former chief of naval operations, followed no set pattern. Testifying at the inquiry into alleged military "muzzling." Overall said Pentagon and state department censors should be required to give specific reasons for any blue-pencil ing. Louis, Mo., sophomore; Sarah Jane Lutton, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; Carol Phillipi, Salina junior; Sandra Shrout, Leawood junior; Kitty Wood, Winnetka, Ill., sophomore; Deanna Woolrfidge, Des Moines, Iowa, junior. Tom Heitz, Kansas City senior; Dan Fisk, Salina freshman; Jay Crotchett, Louisburg senior; Wallace Nicholson, Olathe freshman; Ronald Seney, Kansas City freshman; Douglas Deachiro, Westmoreland senior; and Alex Brown, Lawrence junior high student. The students did approximately half of the choreography for the program. The other half was done by Elizabeth Sherbon, instructor of dance, who also wrote the script. Theatre International will present Miguel de Cervantes' "The Magic Theatre," Tankred Dorst's "The Wall," and Jean Anouilh's "Humulus the Mute" on March 15, 17, 19, and 21 in the Experimental Theatre. Tomorrow and March 21 all three plays will be presented in their native languages, "The Magic Theatre" in Spanish, "The Wall" in German, and "Humulus the Mute" in French. Wednesday, March 14, 1962 University Daily Kansan ON MARCH 15 "The Magic Theatre" will be performed in Spanish and the other two in English. "The Wall" will be presented in German March 17 and the others in English. On March 19 "Humulus the Mute" will be given in French and the others in English. "The Magic Theatre" is directed by Virgil Godfrey, assistant professor of speech and drama. Prof. Godfrey described the play as the perpetration of a hoax in which only certain people can see the performance. Its theme is similar to Hans Christian Andersen's "The Emperor's New Clothes," he said. "The Wall" is directed by Horst Muller, Tirschenseuth, Germany, graduate student. The play is about two months old and has never before been performed in the United States. Celia Candlin, London, England, junior made the English translation. BAR B Q CHICKEN SANDWICH 30c BIG BUY "The Wall" is about a woman whose husband is behind a big wall. She wants her husband back but she is ready to take any man to get a husband. "HUMULUS THE MUTE" is directed by Diana Abruzzino, Huntington, W. Va., graduate student. Miss Abruzzino describes the play as an extended gag. It is set in early 19th century France and is about the formidable Duchess of Brignoc and her mute grandson. Tickets for the dance dramas and the language plays cost $1, or 50 cents and ID cards. Committee Makes First Plans For Kansas Relays Parade The Kansas Relays Committee has made initial plans for the 1962 Kansas Relays parade to be held April 21 at 10 a.m. Bruce Hall, Coffeyville sophomore and assistant parades chairman, said letters are being mailed to all organized houses explaining procedure for entering floats in the parade. MEN'S AND WOMEN'S houses will be united in fairs this year, Hall said. The houses will be paired by the committee according to first choices by the organized groups. The committee is arranging sponsors for the floats. A sponsor will provide a place to build the float and will provide transportation for the float. Deadline for applications to enter a float is March 24. After the applications are in, the committee will meet with the entered houses and discuss regulations and make selections. THE THEME FOR the floats will be announced later, Hall said. Any questions concerning entering floats may be directed to Lauren Ward at the track office, Allen Field House. Interviews for publicity, ticket and decorations chairmen for the KU Relays dance will be held at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. Anyone interested in any of the three positions is asked to contact Gary Buller, VI 3-2655. Americans Were Friendlier in '61 NEW YORK — (UPI) — People in the United States were friendlier than ever in 1961. They sent a record 6 billion greeting cards during the year—about half of them for Christmas. This does not include the tremendous number of various other types of personalized greetings, including such things as home-made cards, floral wreaths, "living letters." An estimated 3 million of the "living letters," tape-recorded greetings, were exchanged during the year. Most of these went out at Christmas, Valentine's Day and Mother's Day. IRELAND SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN Across From Hillcrest Sandy's is doing it again. We are going to change the name of Sandy's to O'Sandy's for this special occasion. There will be prizes and surprises. Tune to KLWN for further information. THE LUCK OF THE IRISH TO YOU STATIONERY at the BOOK STORE E-mail Eatons Crystal Sheer $1.25 Blue - White - Green - Yellow - Pink Random Weave $1.59 White - Blue - Green Eldridge Perfection Notes ---- $1.00 Gold Sachet $1.50 Blue - Pink - White - Ivory Sachet Notes $1.00 Blue - Pink - White - Ivory Gentlemen's $1.25 Sportsman ... $1.00 Windfall $1.00 Eldridge Perfection Note $1.00 Panelled Informals $.89 With Jayhawk In Gold Continental $1.50 Pink - Blue - White Thank You Notes $ . 75 Gold or Silver Engraved Montag 25 $1.00 KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 14, 1962 Diplomat Says U.S. Must Alter Outlook A 64-year-old Latin American diplomat, interpreter, and educator said yesterday that Americans must start looking at Latin American problems through the eyes of Latin Americans. Prof. Herberto Sein, a native of Mexico, spoke on "Half a Hemisphere in Revolution." He has been an interpreter for 25 years, primarily for the United Nations and its agencies, and has represented Latin America as a diplomat. AMERICA, SEIN SAID, "pushed Cuba into the arms of the Russians" and missed a historic opportunity by a "negative and unconstructive attitude." He said he feels America lost a healthy influence in Latin America because of this attitude. Latin Americans now have a "conflict of images," he said. It appears to them that the U.S. is incapable of understanding Latin American revolutions and that Russia does understand and gives the kind of constructive aid needed, he said. Sein said the exclusion of Cuba from the Alliance for Progress program is unwise. He pointed out that String Quartet to Play Tonight The University String Quartet will hold a chamber music recital at 8 o'clock tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall on the Faculty Recital Series. The Quartet will be joined by Roy Hamlin Johnson, associate professor of piano, in one of the numbers. This will be Prof. Johnson's second recital appearance here in eight days. The group is composed of Raymond Cerf, professor of string in- sturuments, 1st violin; Theodore Johnson, assistant professor of organ and theory, 2nd violin; Karel Blaas, associate professor of string instruments, viola, and Raymond Stuhl, associate professor of string instruments, cello. The program will be the Quartet in A Minor, Op. 132 by Beethoven and the Quintet Op. 57 for Piano and String Quartet by Dimitri Shostakovitch. Prof. Johnson will join the Quartet on the latter number. only six nations voted against this decision, but that these six countries represent 70 per cent of the Latin American population. WHILE EACH LATIN AMERICAN nation has its own special problems, Sein said, there are certain common denominators for all the countries. Feudalism is one common denominator, he said, pointing out that three-fourths of the arable land in Latin America is owned by two per cent of the population. Sein blamed many Latin American ills on a "triple alliance" made up of the military, which holds back any progressive government reform; the landed gentry with their "feudalistic mentality and suicidal attitude"; and the foreign interests which control Latin American resources and find it expedient to side with the rest of the alliance members. He said the Roman Catholic Church in Latin America does not favor reform or progressive government and is in close association with the "triple alliance." form through land redistribution, a graduated income tax, and legislation to provide equality of opportunity and equality before the law. THREE GREAT REFORMS ARE necessary in Latin America, Sein said. These reforms are agrarian re- Sein said terms of trade between Latin American nations and the United States are making American laborers richer and Latin American laborers poorer. Latin Americans, he said, do not determine trade prices and are "capitive economies." This "great economic imbalance" must be corrected, he said, before Latin America can progress at any noticeable rate. Sein said he is disturbed by the attitude of Latin Americans that the United States is to blame for all their troubles. He said that too many Latin Americans are not insisting on their rights and are not doing anything to help themselves. PROGRESS TOWARD democracy in Latin America will be difficult, Sein said. It will not be like the progress of nations of Anglo-Saxon origin, he said, because Latin America started out differently. "No one seeks to be a carbon copy of the United States," he said, "but democracy is possible where people are." 800 Tickets Remain For Limeliters Show Over 800 tickets are still available for the Limeliters concert Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. All tickets are $1. 250 reserved seat tickets for the first balcony and 560 general admission tickets for the second balcony are on sale at the Information Booth on Jayhawk Boulevard and in the Kansas Union. 2700 tickets have been sold so far, most of them in dormitories and other organized living groups. SUA Offers Tour Of Nelson Gallery The SUA Art Forum will sponsor a bus trip tomorrow to the Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City. The bus will leave from the Kansas Union at 1 p.m. and return at approximately 5 p.m. While in Kansas City, students will be able to see the "Syracuse International Semantics Show." Tickets are on sale in the Kansas Union for $1. Easy-care Arnel® and cotton tailored blouses! 1 66 Roll Sleeves Sleeveless Machine washable blend of Arnel® triacetate and cotton in white and colors to team with your Dan River pants. Sizes 32 to 40. count on Penney’s to bring you this fabulous collection of DAN RIVER, LITTLE - OR - NO - IRON cotton pants at Anniversary Prices! 2 66 slacks 1 66 Jamaicas Knee Knockers We picked the fabric... Dan River’s Dansheen and Dansport... famous for machine washing, little or no ironing. Then, we had a top manufacturer make these to our exacting specifications with set-on waistbands, side zippers, self belts or elasticized waists (higher price features). Now, yours in solids, stripes, tapestry designs, plaids. Sizes 10 to 18. 102 X X X X X A Fu The be he as a the d minis In dents R. H O'Lee and the I rectoclude in the chars EX to coo by tl who tions luncl La Temp istrat activ sociations allow does resid lowe ing UniC Page 5 Agreement Solves Dorm Fund Dance Question The inter-residence hall dance will be held Friday night in Templin Hall as a result of a compromise between the dormitory presidents and the administration. In a meeting yesterday, the presidents and social chairmen of Joseph R. Pearson, Templin, CarruthO'Leary and Grace Pearson Halls, and James G. Middleton, assistant to the Dean of Men and program director of dormitory supervision, concluded that the dance could be held in the dormitory if no admission was charged. EXPENSES FOR THE dance are to come from voluntary contributions by the residents of the dormitories who plan to attend. The contributions are to be in boxes in the lunch lines in the respective halls. Last Monday night in a meeting at Templin, Middleton said the administration opposed the dance because: - The halls have a $3.50 per man social fund to finance social functions and the administration will not allow a function in a dorm which does not come from this fund. - The administration says any resident of Templin should be allowed to use the lounge without having to pay. - A state law forbids fund raising activities on state property. - Hold the dance in the Kansas Union and pay the rental. - the hall has a contract with Jack and the Missiles to play Friday night. The administration offered three choices to the dormitories: - Hold the dance in Templin and charge no admission. - Cancel the dance altogether. In a meeting last night of the JRP EXPERT AUTO REPAIR Mignot & Sawyer Garage 620 Mass. dormitory council, a motion passed unanimously to support the dance by placing the contribution boxes in the lunch lines and by agreeing to pay any deficit in the band's charge from the social fund. The hall also protested the administration's action in setting double standards for soliciting in the dormitories. They feel that if the KU Women's Memorial Scholarship Fund (SMOP), Rock Chalk tickets, laundry agents and sororites selling popcorn in the lounges to raise money for their respective organizations are allowed, the halls should be allowed to hold a dance. The council also protested the recent announcement of several threen rooms in the dormitories without adequate explanation. CHARCOBURGER 50c BIG BUY BOLSTER Overloaded With Unwantables? Visual Aids Bureau To Show 2 Films Try Kansan Want Ads Get Results Two films, "Fiddle-De-Dec" and "Nanook of the North" will be shown at 4 p.m. this afternoon in Room 3, Bailey Hall. The first film will be presented in color. The films are sponsored by the Bureau of Visual Aids for Faculty and Students. Wednesday. March 14, 1962 University Daily Kansan SUA Dance Tonight Set In Trail Room Student Union Activities will sponsor a dance tonight from 9 to 10 in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union. A Lawrence band will provide the music. There is no admission charge. Council Plans to Entertain Pledges The executive Council of Junior Panhellenic will entertain the newly elected spring pledge class presidents at 8 p.m. today in the Dean of Women's office. The pledge class presidents include Jean DeGrand, St. Louis, Mo., freshman, Alpha Chi Omega; Jill Wells, Holton freshman, Alpha Delta Pi; Sharon Ray, Fort Lewis, Wash., sophomore, Alpha Kappa Alpha; Kay Weber, Wichita freshman, Alpha Omicron Pi; Betty Schultz, O'Neill, Nebr., junior, Alpha Phi; Lois Miller, Alma freshman, Chi Omega; Pamela Stone, Wichita freshman, Delta Delta Delta. Kay Estes, Lubbock, Tex., freshman, Delta Gamma; Judy Peterson, Cedar Falls, Iowa, freshman, Gamma Phi Beta; Sherry Whitcher, Prairie Village freshman, Kappa Alpha Theta; Joan Felt, Prairie Village freshman, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Mary Weston, Overland Park freshman, Pi Beta Phi, and Susan Maurer, Overland Park freshman, Sigma Kappa. Kansan Classified Ads Get Result Jack AND THE Missiles Presented by MEN'S RESIDENCE HALLS Friday March 16 8-12 p.m. Templin Hall $1.00 per couple Dress: Casual You Name It! Acme has the equipment to do your fine cleaning right. Check your closet now.Is everything in shape for the weekend? Let Acme Quality Cleaning prepare you for your best! 101 ||| ||| I Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Downtown VI 3-5155 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 Acme K LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 14. 1962 Attorney General Kennedy Terms P-T-P Idea 'Terrific' The People-to-People summer student exchange program received a warm reception in Washington. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy termed the idea "terrific" in a meeting with three members of the national P-t-P organization yesterday. Kennedy met with Rafer Johnson, former Olympic track star and national co-ordinator of the P-t-P program, and with two former KU students, Rick Barnes and Bill Dawson, who have dropped out of school to devote full time to the P-t-P program. BUT KENNEDY ALSO had a word of caution. Speaking about the students representing the U.S. abroad, he said: "They ought to know the answers on unemployment, the race question, the American policy, so they don't go over knowing nothing about what the United States position is." IN THE WASHINGTON meeting, Kennedy told the P-t-P representatives he would help cut some of the red tape they have encountered in making arrangements for the student exchange program. About 1,000 young men and women from Big Eight schools will go to Europe this summer to meet their student counterparts under tours arranged by P-t-P. During the summer they will attend seminars and live in private homes in foreign countries. About 50 West German students have signed up to visit America as part of the exchange in international understanding. All the exchange students will be members of People-to-People chapters throughout the world, and they will pay their own travel expenses. KU P-t-P has started two different programs to help students familiarize themselves with the places they will visit and the problems they may encounter while there. P-T-P WILL SOON begin a series of informal discussion groups called "America From the Outside." In these discussion groups, American students will meet with foreign students to discuss current issues from the various countries' points of views. Recommended readings will be given to students preparing for foreign tours. Through these conversation groups the foreign students will discuss the stands taken by their governments on domestic and world issues. The other program will be a series of foreign travel orientation conferences. The first one will be at 4 pm, today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. It will be directed by Brian E. Cleave, Sussex, England graduate student, and will cover the British Isles. Allan W. Wicker, Independence junior and a member of the P-t-P foreign students abroad committee, said: "THIS PROGRAM IS mainly for students traveling abroad under the P-t-P program, but we want to stress that anyone who is considering foreign travel is welcome—the don't necessarily have to be connected with the P-t-P tour." A film will be shown at the beginning of each meeting, presenting a broad picture of the country under discussion. A foreign student from that area will preside and will be aided by a panel consisting of two or three foreign students and one American student. The other conferences scheduled are: Germany, Austria, Switzerland Horst Taselmann, March 21. Official Bulletin Catholic Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m. L. Lawrence Chapel, 1910. Stratford Road. Confessions: Weekdays. 7 a.m. (durin, Mass) & 11:45-12 noon: Saturdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. The Office of the Dean of Students, 228 Strong Hall, has a booklet available for students in the U.S.'s "Invest Your Summer" A Catalog of Service Opportunities, 1962." The booklet includes information concerning communal camps, institutional service, working seminars, vans, study seminars, and individual service, both in the U.S. and abroad. TODAY March 15 - R. E. Shepherd, Supt. Kingman, Kansas March 16 16 - Max G. McAuley, Prin wife of Commu. Schools, Omaha, Nebraska People-to-People Forum: 4 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. Orientation meeting for students planning to visit the British Isles. All students welcome. Brian Cleave in charge. SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m. 206 Kansas Union, Instructor. Larry Bodge, Body Solution; 7 p.m. 206 Kansas Union, Body Solution; 303 Bailey. Speaker, Mr. Regier, "Summer Opportunities for Teachers." people-to-People Forum: 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Panel of foreign students will discuss "The American College Student—First Impressions." TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion & Lunch: 2 Noon, Canterbury House. Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 pages 1212 Oread. Bible study and devotion. Christian Science Organization: 7:30 pm. Danforth Chapel Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Netherlands, Belgium: Van Eck Ritsame, March 28. Spain: Pedro Bonet, April 11. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Scandinavia; Jannik Lindbaek, April 18. HOT DOG 25c BIG BUY France: Genevieve Delaisi, April 25. The Look o' the Irish MARY MISCHLER Kappa Alpha Theta Featuring the peasant sleeve blouse rimmed in lace $4.98 Italy: Itala Vivan, May 2. Mary In Honor of St. Patrick Coordinated skirt with matching lace border $9.98 Another Bobbie Brooks Favorite White with blue or yellow. Sizes 5-15. Jay SHOPPE 835 Mass. 12th & Oread HILLCREST - MALLS 100 'Midwest's Top Hair Stylists' Complete with: REGULAR $15.00 - HAIRCUT $795 Complete TWO FINE SALONS IN LAWRENCE SPECIAL!! Reg. $15 SLEEPING BEAUTY PERMANENT - SHAMPOO - SET - PERM Ronnie's FASHION BEAUTY SALONS You'll love the New You'll love the New RONNIE's Golden Mist HAIR SPRAY Reg. $2.50 $1.49 Giant Size hair cream Drop In! - Appointment not usually needed - Open late week nites! HILLCREST VI 2-1978 — MALLS VI 2-1144 Dogs' Howling Explained NEWARK, Eng. — (UPI)—Someone finally discovered why dogs howled when they approached a certain lamppost — it had a short circuit. JACKSON, Miss. — (UPI) Police yesterday rather sheepishly reported the theft of a patrol car parked in front of police headquarters. C'mon Fellows! THE IVY LEAGUE JUNGLE 7:00 & 10 P.M. NOW! MADISON AVENUE staring DANA ELEANOR ANDREWS·PARKER JEAGNE ENDIE CRAIN·ALBERT CINEMA SCOPE 20 century five previews 8:45 ONLY - The RIGHT Approach 20 Century Fox presents The RIGHT Approach JULIET FRANKIE PROWSE VAUGHAN MARTHA GARY DAVID HYER CROSBY M'LEAN CINEMAS INKIE SHAN DAVID 'M·LEAN Adults 85c VARSITY TREATHE...Telephone VISIONS 3-1065 Coming "Two Women" NOW! At 7:00 & 9:00 Adults 85c GRANADA TINEATRE . . . . . . . Telezione VIKING 3-5783 FOR STUNNING US WITH CROWDS! THANK YOU, LAWRENCE! It's A Scream And We Hope You Get Your Share of Laughs Before It Leaves Town! ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ THOSE "PILLOW TALK" PLAYMATES ARE AT IT AGAIN! ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ ROCK HUDSON · DORIS DAY · TONY RANDALL "LOVER COME BACK" in Eastman COLOR EDIE ADAMS • JACK OAKIE • JACK KRUSCHEN COMING SATURDAY! from Ibañez' immortal classic Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents a towering motion picture. A JULIAN BLAUSTEIN PRODUCTION THE 4 HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE GLENN FORD·INGRID THULIN·CHARLES BOYER·LEE J. COBB PAUL HENREID CINEMASCOPE, METROCOLOR Jr. col of Feb BEVE ice co closed Ice Pl 0350. Girl v Stouff 3:30 p WAN' vacati Call H LARG side. LARG rooms: 3 stu 0731. GR/ Con LAF Boy tran $ 2 \frac{1}{2} $ Ren Ava c bird guil pet EXI chil hom ple 2 an rater only VI 3 Wednesday. March 14, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOUND Jr. college ring in Flint Hall the middle of Br. Identify. See Mr. Fine, 141 Flint. MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Fliptic. paper supply Ice Plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone 31- 0350. TRANSPORTATION WANTED: Ride to New York over Spring Call Robert Herschberg at 9-2-3471-2471 Girl wants ride beginning April 1 from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Call VI 2-2720 after 6:30, 3-15 FOR RENT LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-0731 LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilizes paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. tff APARTMENTS FOR RENT MARRIED AND GRADUATE STUDENTS Large kitchen cabinets and closet space. Brick construction, fully insulated. Garbage disposal, carpeted central air-conditioning, and laundry $ \frac{1}{2} $ -block. PARK PLAZA SOUTH APTS. 1912 W. 25th VI 2-3416 LARGE nicely furnished 2 bedroom apt Boys preferred. Fireplace, private entrance, bath, phone, & garage. First floor $2_3 blocks from campus. Extra nice Rents for $115 per month. All bills paid Available April 1. Call VI 3-7830. 1-800-496-2040 2 and 3 room apt. for rent. Newly decorated, close to town and campus. Adults only. Call B. E. Jacques, 2101 Learnard. VI 3-9995. 3-20 APT, for 2 or 3 boys. Utilities pid. 1 block sooner. 1142 Indiana. 3-50 BUSINESS SERVICES 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. tt 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. tt RENT a new electric portable sewing machine. $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Double Edge Razor Blades Double Edge Razor Blades Finest Surgical Steel, honed in oil. Full money back guarantee. 250 $30c 160 $85c 200 $1.50 500 $3.50 1000 $5.75 Postpaid. Packed five blades to package, 20 packages to carton. C.O.D. orders accepted. Postcard brings general merchandise. EMERSON COMPANY 406 South Second Alhambra, California INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- more, call Ola Smith 32619941 Mass., Cal. VI 3-5263. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. t GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Note prices are revised and new notes. Price: $4. Call M1 V-2752. Free delivery. tf TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. Guitar instruction — all types. Classical guitar instructions also available now at Richardson's. Fine instrument rental service, too. 3-15 FOR SALE OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriter, precision made to perform like an upright, typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lance Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-164. ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch Cali V 3-8777 come to 907 Acr. for more information. HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In. Pet Center — most complete place. Pet Phone. Pet Photo. 2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. tf SIMCA: 1959 super deluxe. Must sell implemen- dation. Bail, C1 3-5250 after 5 p.m. 5-19 GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $3.50, free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553, VI 3-5778. tf WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised. 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. 1957 Olds 88 Holiday 4 dr. hardtop. Call I 3-7275 after 6:30 p.m. & Sundays. 3-15 PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, compile by Katherine Dahlman and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta library. I 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. NOW is your opportunity to buy a fabulous unit. Will give you 1 year warranty for parts and labor. Several extras. Call VI 3-866 or VI 3-7275 after 6:30 p.m. and Sundays. 1953 2-dr. Blue Ford. I'm a dreambott 61-80 between 5-7 or less. Call V-19 16:25 between 5-7. A STUDENT who needs tutoring in Spanish or Math 2 (or equivalent, especially 2c). Carolyn Hunnickt, 1703 Indiana, or call VI 3-4180. 3-20 HIXON STUDIO WANTED Portraits of Distinction 建筑工人 HELP WANTED TYPING MALE HELP. From 11 a.m. till 5 p.m. or at night. Hourly wages $1 and up. Apply or call Bob Fondren at Giff's Burger Bar, 1618 West 23rd. VI 3-9347 721 Mass. Bob Blank VI 3-0330 Bob Blank BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING Birds on a tree WHEEL ALIGNMENT FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP 3-20 First street north of the river 229 Elm VI 3-2250 TYFING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers and books. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term paners, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001 BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. CAR RADIOS Guaranteed - Quality Parts - Expert Service FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. tt Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI T-32651 any time. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter. Fast accurate service. Ressoumie on Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th. VI if- 21648. Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with paper for math and Greek letters. Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546. 5-30 EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lo- Gebihbach. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattie. VI 3-8737 TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. ff HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. major, or Masters? You should have scored accurately. Standard rates. See Ms. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type heses, term papers, and themes, neatly in new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Broadcast: Will send thesis to 1311 W. 21 St. CALL VI 3-6440. *if* not available. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution son, Mission, HE 2-7718. Eves or Sat. RA 2-2186. THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. Electric typewriter Reasonable rate. Civil Graham, 1619 Delaware. Car VI-3; 04883. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, thesis, letter writing. Electric typewriter — Special symbols & signs. Prompt service. Robert Cook (Robert Cook) Rhode Island, VI 5-7485. 3-19 WORLD'S FIRST VACUUM CUP BY VACRON keeps drinks PIPING HOT much longer! VACUUM INSULATED - like a vacuum bottle - but UNBREAKABLE Combination Offer! $1.25 VACRON Vacuum Cup filled with delicious NORDICA COTTAGE CHEESE all for 69c VACRON Exclusive! Insulated not just with AIR but with a REAL vacuum between the walls. 8. FASHION FIRST COLORS . . . Pink, gray, coral, aqua, orchid, yellow, blue, green C - So NEW you won't find them in any store - Chip-Proof Drinking Lip - Guaranteed UNBREAKABLE - Safe in All Dishwashers - Completely New Styling Concept - Won't Sweat . . . No Coasters Needed Ever - Made of Miracle Plastic, Polypropylene — Stays Bright and New Indefinitely At Your Favorite Food Store Now! Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co. ALL STAR DAIRY Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. March 14, 1962 President- (Continued from page 1) the letters are being only to inform the national chapters. A questionnaire is under consideration which will query 5000 KU students on their feelings on discriminatory practices at KU, especially the discriminatory clauses of KU Greek houses. THE PLAN TO SEND out the questionnaires was postponed until the possibility of polling the students by phone was investigated. Grace said 2400 questionnaires will be distributed among Greek organization members and an equal number will be distributed to independent students. The questionnaire, as it was drawn up, asks the student if he is aware of the existence of discriminatory clauses. It asks if the person objects to a racial and a religious discrimination clause and if the person thinks the University should take the initiative in ridding KU of chapters with such clauses in their constitutions. The questionnaire also had one section specifically for members of Greek houses. Questions in this section ask if the student would accept a racial and a religious minority group member. A thirty-minute discussion on the merits of the questionnaire preceeded the decision to postpone the issuance of it. Don Warner, Topeka junior and member of the CRC, objected to the wording of the question which asked students if they thought the question of discriminatory clauses should be left to the Greek houses themselves. Warner said that the students will be tempted to agree with the question because they would think that the Greek house members are "trying to burn off the responsibility on the administration." Around the Campus Seaver To Read At Poetry Hour James E. Seaver, professor of history and director of the Western Civilization program, will read Medieval Poetry at the Poetry Hour tomorrow at 4 p.m. in the Music Room of the Kansas Union. P-T-P Forum To Meet In Jayhawk Room The P-t-P forum at 7:30 tonight will meet in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union, instead of the Forum Room as was announced yesterday in the UDK and the Daily Bulletin. Augelli To Discuss KU Peace Corps John P. Augelli, professor of geography and chairman of the Latin American Area Studies committee, will speak at the Current Events Forum at 4 p.m. Friday in the Music Room of the Kansas Union. He will discuss "KU's Peace Corps." Art Museum To Show 3 Films March 22 Three short color films will be shown at 7:30 and 9 p.m., March 22 in the lecture hall of the Museum of Art. The showing will include "Images Medievales." 19 minutes; "The Geesebook," 14 minutes; and "The Golden Age of Flemish Painting." 22 minutes. The film, "Hunchback of Notre Dame," which was scheduled to be shown tonight at 7:30 has been canceled because of non-delivery. SUA officials said the film will be shown at a later date. Film Is Canceled Foot-Long Hot Dog 40c BIG BUY Hunsinger Motor Co. German Cars BMW - NSU It's Potter's 66 Service For Your Car's Spring Tune-Up Free Pick Up & Delivery Call VI 3-9891 6th & Mich. MEET the Limeliters AT THE BIG BARN AFTER THE CONCERT HOCH-MARCH 17- COURTESY OF Kief's RECORD + hiFi MALLS SHOPPING CENTER VIX-1544 SPECIAL FROM KIEF'S RECORDS RCA Victor's 3 Great Limeliters' LP's SPECIAL PRICE hifi - $2.95 sTereo - $3.95 CRC Acclaims Wescoe Action By Terry Murphy The Civil Rights Council last night passed a resolution commending Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe for agreeing to participate in an open Human Rights Committee hearing this Sunday. An hour-long discussion preceded the passing of the resolution. SEVERAL CRC MEMBERS OPPOSED THE ORIGINAL draft of the resolution saying it could easily be understood as "poking fun at the Chancellor." Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior and CRC co-chairman, agreed, saying the purpose of the draft was "number one, to commend the Chancellor and, number two, to poke fun at him." Thursday, March 15, 1962 Two amendments to the original resolution were defeated before a newly worded draft was accepted. The accepted resolution reads: CHANCELLOR WESCOE: "The Civil Rights Council wishes to commend you for your recent decision to discuss in an open forum with students and faculty the subject of discriminatory clauses. This forum will be of great benefit to the understanding and avoidance of racial discrimination at KU." CRC co-chairman Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, reported that 500 signatures had been obtained on a petition asking the Chancellor to meet with the CRC to discuss discrimination at KU. Previously the Chancellor had told the CRC that the proper channel for such matters was through the Human Rights Committee, an ASC committee set up to handle such matters. In other action the CRC stated its stand on administration policy concerning discrimination at KU. "In regard to the Chancellor's statement on discriminatory clause we are reminded of a similar statement concerning the issue of offcampus housing. Eventually there was a change in the university' policy. "NOW, IF A HOMEOWNER DISCRIMINATES, he or she shall not have the privilege of registering on the university's housing list. "A consistent policy of any university should be to oppose nationality and racial discrimination wherever it exists. Moreover, it is entirely consistent with the policy of off-campus housing to withdraw the privilege of recognition from any student living group which discriminates on the basis of race, color or national origin. "We feel that a decision in this area should be made jointly by the administration, the faculty, and the All Student Council. "WE ARE ASKING THAT THE LATTER two groups be included in this decision because they have closer contact with the students and usually have a better understanding of the problems which minority groups have to confront. "Therefore, be it resolved that we ask the All Student Council and the Faculty Senate to urge the administration to make an immediate decision to withdraw university recognition from those living groups which have discriminatory clauses (in their constitutions or by-laws) by the fall term of 1965." Spokesmen for Wesley Foundation, the Methodist student organization, said that presently discrimination is practiced in the assignment of roommates in dormitories. In other action, Barbara Rice, Kansas City junior and CRC secretary, reported that Emily Taylor, Dean of Women, has agreed to meet with CRC members next Monday. THE SUBJECT OF THE TALK IS TO be on alleged discrimination by the University in selection of roommates in women's dormitories. The administration said recently it would not assign persons as roommates who would not be "compatible." Brian O'Heron, Lawrence senior, brought up a question as to the procedure for next Sunday's forum. (Continued on page 8) C. P. B. A lack of communication between the administration and students was responsible for the recent controversy over the three-man room systems proposed for J. R. Pearson, Templein, and Carruth-O'Leary Halls. This was the position taken last night by Donald K. Alderman, dean of men, as he spoke to residents of J. R. Pearson Hall. Dean Says Controversy A Mistake DEAN ALDERSON SAID the administration had not considered the new system a "big thing," and had not anticipated controversy over the issue. Daily hansan Dean Donald K. Alderson "From now on," he said, "we will try to improve our communications and we should be able to solve more of our problems with less controversy." Dean Alderson announced last Thursday that the three large men's residence halls will provide 150 rooms for triple occupancy next semester. He said the same price for room and board will be charged men in three-man rooms as would be charged those living in double rooms. LAWRENCE, KANSAS Controversy arose when residents in the three halls received a notice from James G. Middleton, assistant to the dean of students, announcing the triple occupancy rooms and equal room-and-board rates. Students protested at the time because there was no additional word from the administration concerning room-and-board rates, and because the dorm counselors had been told of the new 59th Year, No. 103 KU-Y Skit Decision Due (Continued on page 8) The final decision whether the winning Kappa Sigma-Delta Delta Delta Rock Chak skit was taken from the original production, "Medium Rare," will probably be made tonight. Jim Scholten, Salina senior and director of Rock Chalk, said the decision has been turned back to the KU-Y Cabinet from the Rock Chalk committee for the final word. The question of the possibility of "YES. I THINK a definite decision will be reached," Scholten said. "There is always the possibility of it being turned back to us (the Rock Chalk committee), but I'm hoping this won't happen." THE KU-Y CABINET which will make the decision is the group which sponsors and has complete control over the entire production of Rock Chalk. "I want to get this matter cleared up; I'm planning to have it solved tonight," he continued. the skit, "Medea," being taken from "Medium Rare" was brought up last week after a member of the faculty informed the KU-Y that the skit here was very similar to one being produced at the Happy Medium Cabaret in Chicago. The KU-Y wrote last week to the theater in Chicago requesting a copy of the original script but was unable to obtain one. Scholten said the Chicago people were unable to release the script because of a contract governing the use of the script. BOTH THE FACULTY member and a student have been questioned by the KU-Y and have revealed that the two presentations of the skit are very comparable. The only comment to date from either of the houses involved is that they had not "had any knowledge of a professional performance of the story of 'Medea'" before the skit was given here. SCHOLTEN EXPLAINED that the KU-Y has not sent its copy of the script presented here because it would mean being without it for several days. Scholten explained that the Cabinet will act as an arbitrating jury in the case and will levy punishment, if seen fit. Scholten said the reason for the delay in coming to a decision is because of the conflicting schedules of the Cabinet members. "I personally think a comparison would only confirm what we already know." Scholten said. "Some of the lines have already been confirmed." The reason for the exchange of scripts is to attempt a comparison further than that given by the two who have seen both productions. SCHOLTEN SAID the Rock Chalk committee has compiled the facts and a recommendation for the KUY Cabinet to consider in their decision at the special meeting tonight. Election Squabble At Demo Meeting AYLWARD SAID the membership cards may have been given out to replace 16 Young Democrats whose names had been omitted from the list of eligible voters compiled by the election committee. Factional strife broke out in the Young Democrat's election meeting last night. Also elected on the Bennington slate were John Young. Salina law student, vice president; Gloria Mays, Lyons junior, secretary, Barry Bennington, Cheney junior, was named new president but Peter Aylward, Ellsworth junior and a candidate for the office, said he intended to investigate the possibility that the faction running Bennington had handed out membership cards to his supporters prior to the meeting. and Michael T. Thomas, Ft. Riley junior, collegiate council representative. He said he had affidavits from seven persons not on the elections committee's voting list who are legal members of the Young Democrats. Aylward said freshman Young Democrats living in Corbin Hall were omitted from the list. He said he learned of the omission by sending a girl to each floor meeting to get names of Young Democrats there. "THIS IS CLEARLY a fraudulent election unless these persons are given the right to vote," said Aylward. Cary Conklin, Hutchinson second-year law student and elections committee chairman, said some cards may have been misplaced in factional squabbling last semester. Aylward then asked Jane Bell, Gad Godesburgh, Germany, freshman, if she had bought a membership card during enrollment. She said that she had. Her name was not included in the voting list. CONKLIN INMEDIATELY de- manded that Aylward produce the number of Young Democrats he said were omitted from the list. At this point, Verne Gaubay, Grand Island, Neb, third-year law student and chairman of the meeting, intervened saying, "The chair will acknowledge that an error has been made." HE THEN SAID members omitted from the voting list would be allowed to vote if they were present and could show their membership cards. Gauby then asked Aylward why he had not brought the matter up before the election. He asked if Aylward was trying to embarrass the club's administration. Aylward replied, "This is more than a slight mistake. I'm not trying to embarrass the club but just point out deficiencies in the administration." JIM LAWING. Lawrence graduate student, added, the "supposedly impartial elections committee chairman" delivered the campaign address for the opposing slate of candidates. Lawing said the issue was not brought before the committee because of feeling that it would not be handled fairly. Gauby said, "The only thing we know is that they (the memberships) just got lost." JOHN YOUNG, Salina first-year law student and candidate for vice president on the Bennington slate, replied that the responsibility did not lie entirely with the elections committee. He said that if the members in question were interested in the Young Democrats they would have heard of the meeting by word-of-mouth, as he had, and would have come to the meeting to defend their rights. As the discussion began to cool slightly, Conklin walked into the room with the ballot box under his arm and announced that the Bennington slate had made a clean sweep of the election. OAS Extremists Terrorize Algiers ALGIERS—(UPI)—"Six of you have been condemned to death by the OAS!" This was the voice of terror speaking in Algiers today. The words came from European extremists who invaded a Moslem quarter social center here. They were addressed to the 18 men they found inside, who stood lined up against a wall. Then the Secret Army Organization (OAS) terrorists marched the six—three Europeans and three Algerians—to the yard and lined them up against a wall. A VOLLEY OF shots rang out and the men crumpled as the bullets struck. Miraculously, one man survived the "execution." The brazen OAS attack was only one incident in a series of European extremist actions in Algeria during the day as the OAS spread its terror, angered by the impending cease-fire agreement between France and the Algerian rebels that is destined as a first step in making this territory an independent nation. Yesterday, 21 persons were killed and 31 others injured in violence involving both Europeans and Arabs. THE EXECUTIONS and slayings in the Moslem quarter here and violence in other parts of Algeria brought the casualty toll since Jan. 1 to 1,662 dead and 3,811 wounded. Earlier today OAS commandos pulled up to a bus stop in Algiers. A man jumped from the car and began shooting with a submachine gun, spraying the crowd at belt level from left to right. SCREAMING men and women tried to escape, eye-witnesses said, but the bullets killed 10 and wounded at least six. The gunman then returned to the car and drove slowly away. The gunfire shattering the dawn brought crowds of Moslems into the still semi-dark streets. Veiled women chanted their eerie "yuyu" death wall as they sat on the steps and balconies of their little white houses. French army units sped to the scene. While wailing ambulances arrived to pick up the dead and wounded, the soldiers closed off the Moslem section. When the crowds of surging, angry Moslems threaten en to erupt into violence, soldiers fired shots into the air. Terrorism has become commonplace in Algeria's cities. Yesterday, a crowd of white-collar workers returning to their jobs from lunch paused in the Rue de Gueydon. They looked, most of them indifferently, at a corpse on the curb. The dead man was an Arab. One of the policemen blocking off the street suddenly moved into the crowd and said: "All right, all right, move along, it's all over." Weather Mostly fair this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow. A little warmer tomorrow. Low tonight 15 to 20 West to 20s East. High toorrow upper 40s East to 50s West. . Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 15, 1962 Delaying Justice The legend still persists in substantial areas of the Deep South that the requirements of federal law on segregation may be denied by legal obstruction, by interminable appeals and by erecting some new segregation statute whenever there is a breach in the wall. As the number of desegregated school districts attests, however, there is no more hope for the Massive Resistance idea now than there was when Virginia went baying off after the theory of Interposition. THE TRUTH is that in any area of the segregation controversy, where the legal questions are settled, the patience of the federal courts is not inexhaustible. This is true in any court system, state or federal. After so long, as attorneys well know, the highest tribunal in a system will weary of the endless argument and summarily sweep the impediments aside. So it is now in the United States Supreme Court's sharply definitive decision on segregation in public transportation. In a case arising indirectly from the arrest of Freedom Riders in Mississippi, the court has used language of the kind reserved to meet complete intransigence. The questions in segregated transportation have been settled now for so long that there is really nothing left to debate. Yet the state of Mississippi has continued to follow the line of defiance by arresting Freedom Riders in mass whenever they sought to exercise their rights as defined by the highest court. HENCE THE extraordinary language — "We have settled beyond question that no state may require racial segregation in interstate or intrastate transportation facilities. "The question is no longer open; it is foreclosed as a litigable issue." What's relevant in this matter is not the judgment, nor the tactics, of the Freedom Riders. Their demonstrations have been entirely within the law, so the issue is simply whether anyone may exercise a constitutional right free of police arrest and harassment. The issue of segregated transportation is, indeed, foreclosed in a court decision which in essence upholds the doctrine that justice indefinitely delayed is justice denied. (From the March 1 Little Rock Arkansas Gazette) Mr. Brian O'Heron states that he contacted several people of the John Birch Society in Wichita, asking them to appear on the program of February 21st and these people "promptly refused." This, of course, is the usual error of fact so easily committed when one is trying to present an unbiased program and yet, at the same time, leans so far over the cliff it is impossible to retrieve them. Note From a Bircher Editor: A truly unbiased meeting would have been one in which each film was shown, with a discussion following. Many of us on the conservative side do not try to pass ourselves off as "objective." We believe certain things and we are honest enough to admit it. It would seem Mr. O'Heron would do well to admit he is biased, stand up for his right to be biased, and not try to hide under the cloak of objectivity! MR. O'HERON called me at home one evening, and I assured him I would talk to some people about the matter, as my own schedule was quite full at that time. As anyone who knows me well realizes, I have been very busy on this subject and many others, and I simply have not turned anyone down on an appearance if it were physically possible for me to be there. I had a commitment to be at our factory in Ohio on the same evening this program was presented, and it was hardly possible to be in two places at one time. Mr. Koch was out of Wichita at the date of the meeting, and Mr. Banowetz had another very important program in the city. To say we refused to come is an unfortunate choice of words. To say that we could not physically be there because of other arrangements would be the fair thing to say. THE PEOPLE who are biased in our favor said Mr. Myers did a very fine job of handling all questions. Of course, those who are biased on the other side, in spite of their plea of objectivity, said he was not able to handle the questions. I have known Mr. Myers for some time; I know of his vast experience during the war and with the army of occupation following, and I also know of his fine ability to comprehend. I would say that he would easily match anyone put forth by Mr. O'Heron and his "unbiased" group. Robert D. Love * * * An Alumus on Fraser Editor: Word has finally trickled northward and westward to the State of Washington that one of the University of Kansas' most beloved (by alumni, at any rate) buildings and oldest landmarks is soon to depart the Jayhawk scene. IT HAS NOT been long since I sat in Dr. Sidney Johnson's German classroom in one of Fraser's lefties. ... Letters ... and draftiest corners. The unesiness which I sometimes felt was not entirely caused by anticipation of Dr. Johnson's "Ja, Herr Daeschner? Ganz falsch!" Oftimes the blusty winds of the prairie on a cold wintry afternoon would shriek their way through the Deutschesklausse (and down the corridor toward Dr. Johnson Watts' more care-free students) rattling the shutters and seemingly the walls as they rushed through. Yes, those were the great days of wearing parkas in classrooms—unlike Linus, in those days the parkas supplied us with such a deep sense of inner security that we left our cotton blankets at home and could face even "furriin" language study otherwise unsupported. But enough of such reminiscence. It undoubtedly is time for Fraser Hall to retire and for the various departments housed therein to find more suitable quarters. One question, though, does stay in mind. The new building will undoubtedly be a great improvement in classroom and office efficiency, but what about the other aspect so important to us alumni—the landmark. I well remember the first time that I approached the famed temples of learning housed at Lawrence-on-the-Kaw. What a magnificent vista! And like a proud prince, perched atop Mount Oread — commanding the valley for miles around — with flags proudly flying, stood our beloved Fraser Hall. What, I pray, will be the replacement landmark? Will our beloved campus lose at one fell swoop of the wrecking ball the half of her physical and visual dignity? Will the newer erection be of yet another architectural design? Can even the honorable State Architect propose still another dissimilar structure, even as all new structures on the campus for generations have been unlike any of their predecessors? IT IS a matter of concern to a number of proud KU alumni lost the replacement for Fraser be resemble, perhaps, a bowling ball with the classrooms located in the finger holes, rotating in frequency with our astronauts — or perhaps a shining space-needle structure — or perhaps a building cleverly disguised as a greenhouse — but then, we already have that model. It is my real hope that the replacement building will be blessed with character and dignity befitting the great University of Kansas; further that the campus will have another landmark suitable as a replacement for Fraser. Answer to a Middle-of-the Roader Editor: William E. Daeschner Class of 1961 In answer to attack from violent middle-of-the-roader, and putting aside my shillagh in favor of the calmer voice of reason; but not relinquishing an Irishman's enjoyment of a fight. (This "Kennedy and cohorts makes me feel that I must have acquired control of the L.R.A.) I am also basically a middle-of-the-roader (a Social Democrat), but in order to achieve progress it is necessary to drive on the left. Middle-of-the-roadism pure and simple, is apt to create merely a traffic block to necessary change. MY ACTIVE resentment or segregation practices began shortly after my arrival in Lawrence, when I took a Negro girl to a drug store for a cup of coffee and was refused service. It was an impertion intrusion into my freedom of association. It is no one else's business whom I choose to associate with; certainly not a probably semi-illiterate drugstore manager. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Now it is not true that I am anti-Greek or against freedom of association. On the contrary, I believe in the basic superiority of independent housing to University provided housing, and in untrammeled freedom of association. However, the stand of fraternities which possess discriminatory clauses, or engage in systematized unwritten discrimination against minority groups, is interfering, in fact, with the freedom of association of their own members, particularly as there are a considerable number of Greeks who are indifferent to racial or religious differences. In summary, one cannot take a stand based on the principle of freedom of association, at the same moment that one is breaking it. NOW, ON THE right of an organization to choose its own membership; I completely concur in this right—inherent in all organizations of an "essentially" private character—like clubs, living groups, etc. But besides the legal right, there is also a moral obligation, to exercise it in a responsible spirit. 11 the American way of life( and the Irish way of life) are anything, they are manifestations of the democratic spirit: that is, in my opinion, they are based on the values of liberty, equality and fraternity. The last named seems to be generally overlooked by the political scientists. Nevertheless, what democratic society can coexist with serious ill-will between groups, whether it is the ill-will generated by religious conflict, caste prejudice, race conflict, or the institution of slavery? Finally, with reference to "indignant's" very logical attack on the A.W.S.—made in a humorous vein. I agree with it in a serious vein—and have always considered the women's curfew regulations an affront to personal dignity—and to this much discussed principle of freedom of association! Denis Kennedy Denis Kennedy Dun Laoghaire, Ireland graduate student COFFEE BAR SERVE YOURSELF 10+ DOUGHNUTS BOY PURE FOOD AND HEALTH INSPECTORS KEEP OUT! T.42 " WHAT SAMATTER? YA CUT HIS CLASS AGAIN?" the took world By Doug Farmer Pratt junior ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN, by George and Helen Waite Papashvily, Pocket Books, Inc., 35 cents. Heartwarming, entertaining, delightful and tremendous are the masterful words and lines which are found within this book. The authors present their own charm and wit into a story of their life once here in the United States. George Papashvily is the immigrant who faces the strange and momentarily unexpected life in the new country. His wife Helen, a native of the land, portrays her own views of the new life and does a masterful job of showing the reader her reaction to her immigrant husband. UPON ENTERING the country, George finds he has no money, no job, and more important, no understanding of the people and the country. This fast moving book demonstrates to the native of America the underlying feeling the immigrant must face and gives him an excellent view of how a foreigner looks at our country. The book is written in the broken language of the authors and does much to add to the expressive zestful combination of understanding found throughout the book. The following lines present the typical language used in the book and the lack of understanding George had of America and its customs. So we ate, after came pie, coffee, ice creams. Whistle blew himself again and we started out. At the door I showed money, I pay for my eat. They didn't take. So I put away. Gonna dock from my wages, I thought. Well is worth it. I'll come every day in here. A book for entertainment of the highest level, it will reach the heart of everyone. The authors have written other books such as "Dogs and People," "Thanks to Noah," and "Yes and No Stories: Georgian Folk Tales." Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Viking 3-2700 Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor Kelly Smith, Carrie Merryfield, Clayton Keller, Assistant Managing Editors; Bill Sheldon and Zeke Wigglesworth, Co-Assistant Managing Editors; Jerry Musil, City Editor; Steve Clark, Sports Editor; Martha Moser, Society Editor. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Mullins ... Editorial Editor Karl Kech. Assistant Editorial Editor. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache ... Business Manager Hal Smith, Advertising Manager; Dick Kline, Classified Advertising Manager; Susanne Ellermeler, Circulation Manager; Bonnie McCullough, National Advertising Manager; Harley Carpenter, Promotion Manager. Regent Cites Need, Gain of Education Henry Bubb, Topeka, president of Capitol Federal Savings and member of the Board of Regents, said last night that education is basic to this country's security. Page 3 Speaking at the kick-off banquet for the Lawrence HELP-KU campaign here, Mr. Bubb said: Mr. Bubb emphasized the role of education in helping a country develop high standards of living. He said: "IF WE WANT to lose the cold war, the surest way to do it is to get soft and sell our educational sys tem short." "One of the big reasons for our (America's) success is our emphasis on education. HE CITED MANY examples of countries rich in resources which had not developed high living standards, and related this to a lack of adequate education. He contrasted these countries to others which have developed high standards of living in spite of a lack of rich resources. He said each of these countries have excellent systems of education. MR. BUBB SAID private support is important to KU. The state pays only 53 per cent of the University's budget; the rest must come from tuition and private gifts, he said. Later, Dolph C. Simons, Jr., chairman of the HELP committee, gave evidence that Lawrence residents are not going to sell KU short. He announced that the advance gifts division had received $7,312 in contributions. At the banquet last year, the advance gifts division reported gifts amounting to $4,300. JFK's Mother Makes Progress BOSTON (UPI) — Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy, the President's 71-year-old mother, made further progress today in her recovery from major surgery. Officials at St. Elizabeth's hospital said Mrs. Kennedy remained restricted to a liquid diet but had responded well to post-operative treatment. Mrs. Kennedy underwent surgery Tuesday for a pelvic hernia which has troubled her for some time. Opium Smuggling On the Increase MIAMI —(UPI)— Federal agents today cited the seizure of a half-pound of opium here as the "first definite proof that Red Chinese are using Cuba as a base to launch a traffic in opium." Federal and state narcotics agents yesterday arrested five Cubans and charged them with selling opium and cocaine. Charles Siragusa, assistant to the commissioner of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, said cocaine smuggling had quadrupled since Fidel Castro took over the government of Cuba. Seized with the opium, valued at nearly $1,500 was two ounces of cocaine valued at between $5,000 and $6,000. The arrests came after a six-week investigation by Siragusa and other federal and state agents. Camel Driver Set To See Jackie KARACHI—(UPI)—Camel driver Bashir Ahmad announced his entry into politics yesterday and then left for Lahore and a meeting with Jacqueline Kennedy. Bashir, who visited the United States last year as the guest of Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, made the trip with the compliments of the West Pakistan government. Mrs. Kennedy is scheduled to arrive in Pakistan next week after a tour of India. Bashir, before leaving, said he would be a candidate for election to the West Pakistan provincial assembly. "I am a poor man myself," he said. "But as people want me to contest the elections I will do so." RCL-RULER the faster way to draw lines! GREATEST INVENTION SINCE THE T-SQUARE Calibrated scale makes even spacing of horizontal lines quick and easy. HOW ROL-RULER SPEEDS YOUR WORK ★ ROL-RULER rolls back and forth easily, you never have to lift. ★ One tool does the job of two (triangle and T-square) for horizontal and vertical lines. ★ Eliminates need for special layout table. ORDER NOW only $3.95 Printing --- Typewriters Adders — Supplies Famed Physicist Dies in California 912 Mass. VI 3-0151 Thursday, March 15, 1962 University Daily Kansan BERKELEY, Calif. — (UPI) — Physicist Arthur Holly Compton, Nobel prize winner and pivotal figure in the development of the atomic bomb, died early today at the age of 69. BUSINESS MACHINES CO. His death was caused by a cerebral hemorrhage complicated by pneumonia and came 11 days and 13 hours after he lost consciousness at Alta Bates community hospital. Dr. William G. Donald, Jr., said that "Compton's heart just stopped beating. It was as quiet as that." Auto Wrecking & Junk East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 New & Used Parts and Tires Space Instruments Company Picketed NEW YORK — (UPI) — Picket lines and police greeted day-shift employees when they reported for work today at Sperry Gyroscope Co., but a company spokesman said operations still were in progress at all nine Long Island plants. A strike, called shortly after midnight by 1,500 engineers, threatens to tie up production of millions of dollars worth of intricate space and defense equipment at the Sperry plants. The New CRESTAURANT Located in the NW Corner of Hillcrest Bowl 9th and Iowa Featuring the Complete Self Service SALAD BAR . . . Now you can buy fine, magnificent PERFECT DIAMONDS NO CRACKS! NO FLAWS! 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MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE —Wear and Compare for 30 Days * $250 Both Rings 5 Weekly Victoria Jay WC358 Victoria Jay WC471 *All Center Diamonds Guaranteed Perfee - $375 Both Rings $5.25 Weekly OTHER SETS FROM $100 TO $1,000 Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back Within 30 Days For Any Reason BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mass. VI 3-4366 Grilled Cheese Sandwich 25c BIG BUY Kansam Classifieds Get Results I SELF-SELECTION Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 1302 W. 23rd St. (23rd & Naismith) SAVE on fashion FLATS for Spring 2^87 SPRING . . . Just around the corner! Harvey's Spring flats . . . just waiting to walk out! Sharp styles and colors in your size. OPEN 9 to 9 NOON TO 5 SUNDAY Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 15, 1962 President Seeks Consumer Shields WASHINGTON—(UPI)—President Kennedy today proposed sweeping new federal controls to protect the consumer's health and pocketbook in the purchase of food, drugs, and cosmetics. In a special message to Congress, Kennedy urged passage of bills to provide the government with a tight check on misleading advertising, packaging, sales and other practices aimed at bilking the buyer. The Presidential message is the first of its kind to deal entirely with the interests and needs of the consumer. Kennedy also announced an executive order to give the consumer "whose views are not often heard" $ \textcircled{6} $ in Washington, a voice in government equipped only for VHF signals. FULFILLING A campaign promise, he directed the creation of a consumers' advisory council to keep the council of economic advisers posted on the needs of purchasers of goods and services. He also ordered the head of each applicable federal agency to pick an assistant to keep him advised on consumer interest. The President also directed the Postmaster General to set up a pilot project by displaying in some 100 post offices, samples of publications useful to consumers. "The housewife is called upon to be an amateur electrician, mechanic, chemist, toxicologist, dietitician and mathematician," Kennedy said, "but she is rarely furnished the information she needs to perform these tasks proficiently." KENNEDY SAID THE cost of his consumer proposals would be "modest." Officials estimated the cost would run about $10 million for the added staff and programs. "It is time," Kennedy declared, "to give American men, women and children the same protection we have been giving hogs, sheep and cattle since 1913, under an act forbidding the marketing of worthless serums and other drugs for the treatment of these animals." Turning to food, Kennedy noted that one-fifth of all the meat slaughtered in the United States is not inspected. He urged passage of legislation to broaden the meat inspection act to cover all meat slaughtered in this country. KENNEDY ALSO strongly supported passage of a bill that would require all new television sets to be equipped to receive both very high frequency (VHF) and ultra high frequency (UHF) stations. He said it would broaden the range of television programs now available to the public. Most TV sets now are Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER To keep the public from getting stuck on the so-called "large economy size" and "cents-off" promotional advertising, Kennedy said a government survey would be made of packaging and labeling abuses. Kennedy Not In Ted's Fight WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Kennedy has ruled himself out of his brother's campaign in the Massachusetts Democratic primary but has left unanswered the question of whether he may give pre-primary endorsements in other states. As President Franklin D. Roosevelt learned in his 1938 "purge campaign," White House interference in state party primaries can backfire. The President's youngest brother, Edward, announced at Boston yesterday that he would be a candidate for the Democratic senatorial nomination. Edward McCormack, nephew of Speaker John F. McCormack, had previously announced himself a candidate for the same prize. Asked about his brother's announcement at yesterday's news conference, the President said: The Chief Executive failed to answer questions asking whether he had given his brother any advice or approved the decision. The other Kennedy brother, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, ruled himself out of the Massachusetts campaign entirely on the ground that the Justice Department is "non-political" but did say he thought his brother would win the Senate seat. He also expressed the belief that the President would consider campaigning in Massachusetts after the primary. 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Bru chair comm panel Aslican said, that too hospi with world perses." PA. A. B gradu Bomb Mayo Inga Swed S. Bs 6th & Florida Mi I agi the stres SH soror been thing "I in to fi are said. Be seem "F" AUTOR VI 3-9033 Page 5 American Students Absent At Forum About Themselves Foreign students more or less talked to themselves last night at the People-to-People forum on "The American College Student — First Impression." The majority of students attending the meeting were foreign students. PANEL MEMBERS WERE John A. Bethel, Southampton, England, graduate student; Vinay Kothari Bombay, India, junior; Luis E. Mayor, Placetas, Cuba, junior; Inga M. Safholm, Drottnringholm, Sweden, special student; and Walter S. Bogova, Tanganyika, freshman. Bruce Whisler, Topeka junior and chairman of the P-t-P steering committee, was moderator for the panel. Asked what he thought of American students as a whole, Mayor said, "One of the big problems is that they are somehow insincere—too sweet to be true. American hospitality as a whole can compare with hospitality anywhere in the world, but students lack a depth in personal relationship with outsiders." Miss Safholm said, "As a whole I agree, but that might be due to the fact that American students stress social life." SHE SAID THE WOMEN in the sorority in which she lives have been "wonderful" to her, but that things seem too "planned." "In Sweden we have more time to find out for ourselves—here there are so many organized things," she said. Bethel said interest in politics seems to be slight here. "Few people attend student political meetings and there is little discussion," he said. "In Europe much more interest is shown in politics. American students appear to me to be very conservative." Weaver Woolite with milk wash 1 lb. powder $1.50 16 oz. liquid LASTIC-LIFE 8 oz. $1.50 Best by campus test... FOR STYLE, RUGGED WEAR AND PERFECT FIT pedwin young ideas in shoes Bgoya agreed with this and said he thinks American students are wasting their freedom. "In my country you can get kicked out of school for expressing the wrong political opinions—I've been chased out three times myself," he said. BGOYA COMMENTED on the concept of time. 9.99 to 11.99 McCoy's "At home when one is invited for a meal at noon, it probably means that they will begin cooking at noon," he said. "It nearly shattered my nerves to find that everything begins on time here." Things are less hurried in India also, according to Kothari. "At home we take time to read and to take walks with friends," he said. "Things are also much less formal here. In India we sit and listen when people are talking. Here, if you don't find something interesting, you can get up and leave—you just don't do that at home." McCoy's When the meeting was thrown open to discussion, several foreign students were eager to learn what the American students thought of them. WHISLER SAID THAT since the topic of the discussion was the foreign student impression of American students, and that there were few American students attending, this question should be taken up later. During the open discussion period, Lovell (Tu) Jarvis, head of the KU chapter of P-t-P, said that the coming "America from the Outside" discussion groups will provide a chance for American and foreign students to meet on an informal basis. He was asked to give his personal impression of foreign students. Whisler replied that he could not give one specific impression of foreign students—"I have as many different ideas as there are foreign students on the campus," he said. "During these meetings we can meet face-to-face and thrash out some of our different ideas and approaches to current events and social customs within our different countries," he said. Savage Appetite! PLAINFIELD, Ind. — (UPI) — Two escapees from the kitchen detail at the Indiana Boys School were recaptured a few hours later when they went to a farmhouse in quest of food. MISS LAWRENCE PAGEANT The Lawrence Jaycees cordially invite all single girls between the ages 18 and 28 to attend Thursday, March 15, 1962 University Daily Kansan The Miss Lawrence Orientation Tea Saturday, March 17 at 10 a.m. in the Kansas Union Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION RED,BLUE,GREY WHITE,BLACK Which shall it be? Shiny new bowling ball & bag to match. We have them all. Prompt service with your order. BREAK TIME IS BOWLING TIME Jay Bowl AT THE Daily ___ 8 a.m. - 11:30 p.m. Sun. ___ 1 p.m. - 11:30 p.m. Official Bulletin Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11:45-12 noon; Satdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. March 16 — Max G. McAuley, Prin. Westside Comm. Schools, Omaha. March March 16 — Dr. Leroy Hood. Supt. Garden City Schools, Garden City, Kan- Applications for Men's Residence Hall Course in the Office of the Dean of Men, 228 Strong Hall. Applications must be returned by March for additional information contact Dean of Men. TODAY IXXIX Baptist Student Devotional: 5 p.m. 1221 Oread. Bible study and devotional Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Don- nerstag, den 15. Maerz um fuenf Uhr in 105 Fraser. Gottfried Hogh wird ueber seine Reise nach Griechenland sprechen und sie sich auf der Straße Sie nicht, dass der Verner sein Faschingsfest am Freitag, den 16. Maerz hat, Das Fest wird um neun Uhr nach dem Film in Hoch anfangen. Es gibt Ein- trafritten: 25c Christian Science Organization: 7:30 om, Danforth Chapel. TOMORROW Epicapel Holy Communion & Breakfast: 7 a.m., Canterbury House. Activities Building. 122l Orend, Devotional studies and fellowship. 122l Orend, Bible study. 7:30 p.m. Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union. Mr. Bill Summerville will head a Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. DARREN KENNEDY Joyce Hedrick Alpha Delta Pi Sportswear by Petti Is Here Coordinated Shirts, Pants and Skirts Truck COACH HOUSE 1237 Oread On The Campus John Pozdro's "THIRD SYMPHONY" On LP Records OKLAHOMA CITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Guy Fraser Harrison, Conductor BELL MUSIC COMPANY 925 Mass St. VI 3-2644 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 15, 1962 Soviet Diplomat Popular By United Press International RUSSIA'S NEW MAN in Washington comes highly recommended by Western diplomats who know him well. At 42, Anatoly Fedorovich Dobrynin has gained higher respect from the Western World than few Soviet diplomats could ever claim. His rise in the Russian diplomatic service has been rapid and he has been described as a bright star in the new generation of Soviet officialdom. He is no stranger to American shores. For three years from 1952 to 1955 he was with the Soviet embassy in Washington, first as counsellor then as Counsellor-Minister. He traveled extensively throughout the country, getting to know the American people as few Russians ever have. His English is fluent. IN 1955 HE returned to Moscow to assume the post of counsellor in the Ministry for Foreign Affairs. He held the rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary and attended a number of international conferences. In 1957 he returned to this country as an undersecretary without a department in the United Nations Secretariat. A year later he became under-secretary for the Department of Political and Security Council Affairs. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT He was one of the principal advisers to the late Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold. Dobrynin was known for his frankness when dealing with Hammarskjold. At meetings Dobrynin often would interrupt Hammarskjold and disagree with him. But he also was on good terms with his fellow officials and was popular with his subordinates. When he returned to Moscow, Dobrynin became chief of the American section of the Soviet Foreign Ministry where he specialized in affairs of both North and South America. He held that post until his Washington appointment. Details on his personal life are sketchy, although it is known that he is married, has a daughter and a son and is a member of the Communist party. He is tall and of slight build. He is a good mixer, both at informal and official functions, and has made some close friends among western diplomats—a prime example of the new type of Soviet diplomat. Deferment Test April 17 Applications for the Selective Service College Qualification Test to be given on April 17 are now available to college students at the Registrar's Office. The applications must be postmarked no later than midnight Tuesday, March 27. Scores made on the test will provide local boards with evidence of aptitude for continued undergraduate and graduate study. The scores will not individually determine eligibility for deferment, but will be considered with other information in determining whether or not individual registrants may be deferred for further study. To be eligible to take the test, an Hunsinger Motor Co. 922 Mass. German Cars BMW - NSU University of Kansas Experimental Theatre Presents AN ADVENTURE IN INTERNATIONAL THEATRE March 16, 18, 20 Two Dance Dramas: HERO JOURNEY and 'TWAS NEVER THUS March 15, 17, 19, 21 3 Famous one-act plays by: Cervantes Dorst Anouilh PERFORMANCES BEGIN AT 8:00 P.M. Tickets on sale at University Theatre Box Office $1.00 GENERAL ADMISSION .50 WITH ID Phone Ext. 591 For Reservations applicant must be satisfactorily pursuing a full-time college course, undergraduate or graduate, leading to a degree. "At the present time, Kansas local boards reach men for induction at about age $ 2 1 \frac {1}{2} $," said James K. Hitt, Registrar. "Students generally can be nearly through their undergraduate studies at that age. But those hoping to continue studies in graduate school, for example, will need a deferment to do so. Also heavier draft calls would lower the age at which local boards reach men for induction, and deferments might be necessary to finish undergraduate work." 7:00 & 10 p.m. Ends Friday! MADISON AVENUE WARNING DANA ANDREWS ELEANOR PARKER JEANNE CRAIN EDDIE ALBERT Bruce Humberstone Norman Corwin Read on to learn more. I - 8:45 ONLY - Juliet Prowse - Frankie Vaughan Martha Hyer - Gary Crosby 20 CINEMA DO MONTANA The RIGHT Approach CINEMASCOPE VARSITY 4140 ... Fort Wayne 731-285-8888 ST.PATRICK'S DAY Means Come to KEELER'S Book Store for your St. Pat's Day cards. Special Greeting Cards for your friends who'll be Wearin' the Green this Saturday Come in and browse At Keeler's you'll find the best in greeting cards, stationery, books and office supplies. 939 Mass. KEELER'S BOOK STORE VL 3-0290 VI 3-0290 MOTOR IN Featuring Skelly Products 827 Vermont VI 3-4955 Complete Auto Repair - Brake Service Tune Up - Wheel Balancing - Overhaul Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Hurry - Last Few Days! Shows At 7:00 & 9:00 ... ROCK HUDSON DORIS DAY TONY RANDALL "LOVER COME BACK" EDIE ADAMS JACK OAKIE JACK KRUSCHEN A WOMAN-ADULT INTERACTIVE COMMENT A NORMAL INTERACTIVE COMMENT PETER BOLGA THE 4 HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE Coming Saturday! directed by VINGENTE MINNELLI --- Ibañez' unforgettable story sweeping you from the broad pampas of the Argentine to the boulevards of Paris, telling of Julio, with his fast cars and sleek women, of Marguerite, who tried to divide her love, and of Marcelo, who ran from one war to be caught by another. Telling of Madariaga, who built a Paradise and of Karl, who destroyed it, of Etienne, who knew the depths of man's depravity and Chi-Chi, who believed only in man's good. It tells of Elena, arrogant in her pride and Luisa, humble in her sorrow. It tells of Heinrich, drunk with the power that loosed the Four Horsemen on a helpless world. [Image of a group of individuals] GLENN FORD • INGRID THULIN • CHARLES BOYER LEE J COBB • PAUL HENREID • PAUL LUKAS • YNETTE MIMIEUX KARL BEHMIR • ROBERT ARDREY • JOHN GAY • VICENTE BLASCO IBANEZ CINEMASCOPE • METROCOLOR A LARGE rooms, 3 stude 0731. LARGE side, ut LARGE Boys trance, 2½ bl Rents Availal Sat. Eve. At 6:30 & 9:10 Larg clos stru Gar cer and PAR 191 Met. Sat. 2 p.m. 2:30 - 5:15 And 8:00 Sun. Shows At 2 and rated. only. VI 3-9 GRANADA TREATRE Telescope VK1863-5783 APT. from soone; A STU ish on 2c). C call V Jr. col of Feb Thursday, March 15, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RENT LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 0731. LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. LARGE nicely furnished 2 bedroom apt. on the west side of campus, trance, bath, phone, & garage. First floor. 21s blocks from campus. Extra nice furniture in the basement. Available April 1. Call V1-37803. 3-16 MARRIED AND GRADUATE STUDENTS APARTMENTS FOR RENT Large kitchen cabinets and closet space. Brick construction, fully insulated. Garbage disposal, carpeted central air-conditioning, and laundry $ \frac{1}{2} $ -block. PARK PLAZA SOUTH APTS. 1912 W. 25th VI 2-3416 2 and 3 room apt. for rent. Newly decorated, close to town and campus. Adults only. Call B. E. Jacques, 2101 Learnard. VI 3-9995. 3-20 APT, for 2 or 3 boys. Utilities nd. 1 block sooner. 1142 Indiana. 3-50 FOUND Jr. college ring in Flint Hall the middle of Feb. Identify. See Mrs. Fine, 141fnt WANTED A STUDENT who needs tutoring in Spanish or Math 2 (or equivalent, especially 2). Carolyn Hunnicutt, 1703 Indiana, or call VI 3-4180. 3-20 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. 4th, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 0350 HELP WANTED MALE HELP. From 11 a.m. till 5 p.m. or at night. Hourly wages $1 and up. Apply or call Bob Fondren at Grif's Burger Bar, 1618 West 23rd. VI 3-9347. OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright writer, sales, service, rentals, at Lawrence Typewriter, 733 Mass. VI 8644. FOR SALE SIMCA: 1595 super deluxe. Must sell imple- bid. Cell VI 3-5520 after 5 p.m. 3-19 GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES. Hand cross index for quick reference, definitions, and time saving charts. Hand cross index for quick reference. the delivery. Phone VI 3-7558 VI 3-5778 ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch and Kosmos scoop immediately. Call Vi 3-8977 come to 407 Ark. for more information. 1957 Old 88 Holiday 4 day, dr. hardtall. Call VI 3-7275 at 6:30 p.m. & Sundays. 3-15 WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All calls received graphed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call Call 011 after 4:30 p.m. for free duvetry. HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet phone. Pet phone 2921 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days tf PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 prehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition: formerly known as the Theta I II 2-0742 anytime. Free t delivery, $4.50. 1953 2-dr. Blue Ford. I'm a dreambromt — 1954 2-dr. Blue Ford or less. Call 3-15 2016 between 7-p. 5-m. NOW is your opportunity to buy a fabulous book on payroll. The account. Will give 1 year warranty for parts and labor. Several extras. Cali VI 3-8367 or VI 3-7275 after 6:30 p.m. and Sundays. GRANTS Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Comcast Street in New York, one step = save time & money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, etc., plus complete lists of pet supplies. 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 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. INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re- woven so damage cannot be seen. Cig- arette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tt DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentations. Ola Smith. Laa 939% 939%. Mass. Call S1-5263. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3 7551, or 921 Miss. t Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. - VI 3-0152 GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 2-7572 Free delivery. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. Guitar instruction — all types. Classical guitar instructions also available now at Richardson's. Fine instrument rental service, too. 3-15 "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression on the judges. For excellen- toring at standard rates, call Ms. Louis Pope, VI 3-1097. TYPING SECRETARY WILL DO TYPING in home. Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at VI 2-1749. tf Experienced Typtist: Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-9136. Mt. Lost Gehbach. FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. tf TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers reports. Electric newswriter. Requests Electric newswriter. Mrs. Mc-Edlowney. Ph. VI 3-8588. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Scheduled call: 1511 W. 21 St. Clt VI 3-6440. f schedul FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution of the Service. S19T 17 W. Wilson, Mission, HE 2-7718. Eyes or Sat. R-2 2186. Experienced typist would like typing in her home. Accurate, neat, reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. tf THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter Reasonable rate. Marrian Graham, 1619 Delaware, cal. IV 3-0483. EXPERIENCED TYPEST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Nest, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patii, VI 3-878f Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barry. Barlow. 408 W. 10th. V1-2f. 1648. M娩. 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, etc. on electric typewriter with standard rate, moth and grellent. Standard credit. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. Call VI 2-1546. 3-30 HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING. punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. business manager? Who reports accurately. Standard dates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST : Term papers, publication letters. Electric typewriter — Special symbols & signs. Prompt service. Robert Cook. Rhode Island. VI 3-7485. 3-19 TRANSPORTATION Girl wants ride beginning April 1 from 1-3 pm. Call VI 2-3720 after 6:30, 5-20 3:30 pm. Call VI 2-3720 after 6:30, 5-20 WANTED. Tide to New York over Spring Call. Rick Robert Herschberg at vi 2-2471. 3-19 Kansan Classified Ads Get Results BOWLING is FUN! Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 32 AUTOMATIC LANES ATTENTION! ORGANIZED HOUSES AND DORMITORIES The catering department of the KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE will be glad to serve you in one of its many attractive dining areas.Many have used these facilities for luncheons, dinners, teas, parents' weekends, and other special events. For reservations or information PHONE KU 509 --- Any size group from eight to eight hundred can be accommodated with dinner prices starting at $1.50 If you desire, the department will help you plan your menu. KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 15, 1962 Controversy A Mistake (Continued from page 1) system several days before it was announced to the residents. JERRY MUSIL, KANSAS CITY junior and JRP dorm counsel, said. "My main complaint is that there was no personal word given to us by the administration. They just told us not to tell the guys in our wing. Also, at first there were no reasons given for the dorm rate increase." In conjunction with his appeal for a more personal contact between the administration and members of the men's residence halls, Dean Alderson said: "I hope the Men's Residence Hall Council will become a stronger group, a group that will represent the thinking in all the men's balls." Dean Alderson also explained why and how the program will be carried out. HE SAID THE ADMINISTRATION, in the beginning, was reluctant to make plans for the three-man rooms. It was necessary, however, to provide space in organized housing for new men coming next semester. He added that the program had been tried on other campuses successfully. Dean Alderson commented on the plan to charge all students equally for room and board, regardless of whether they live in a double or triple room. "I do not desire to be a part of a program with first- and second-class rates," he said. "All students should feel equal under the new program,' he added. He also said it will be difficult to make the necessary financial adjustments with unequal rates, because a certain percentage of students probably will move out of the halls between semesters next year. DEAN ALDERSON said the rooms in the three halls will first be filled as two-man rooms. As the new applications arrive, however, another man will be added to each of the designated 150 three-man rooms. He said that the current program is only for 1962-63, and the administration hopes to have a new 600-man dormitory ready for occupancy by the fall of 1963. "Maybe by that time we can go back to the original housing program," Dean Alderson said. "However, I see us going in and out of this program during the next 10 years." Kansan Classified Ads Get Results Double Edge Razor Blades First Street Dental in oil, first money back guarantee. 25 — 30c 100 — 85c 200 — $1.50 500 — $3.30 1000 — $5.75 Postpaid. Packed five blades to package, 20 packages to carton. C.O.D. orders accepted. Postcard brings general merchandise catalog. EMERSON COMPANY 406 South Second Alhambra, California LOOKING FOR A SUMMER JOB? Guys, gals, whether you want money, adventure or fun from your summer work, SUMMER JOBS 1962 will tell you how and where to look. This comprehensive report lists names and addresses of employers who actually seek college students for summer work. Report lists jobs in all parts of the country and includes details on how to apply, how to sell yourself, etc. Saves you weeks of trial-and-error effort. SEND $1 AND COUPON NOW! CAREER ADVISORY SERVICE College Division A-100 Box 1131, Hanover, N.H. Send ... copies at $1 ea. SUMMER JOBS 1962 Name Address State Fall Grades Announced Douthart Hall's 2.05 grade point average for last semester is the highest of the 54 living groups on the hill. Kappa Kappa Gamma, which lead the KU sororities in grades, was next with 1.91. Beta Theta Pi headed the fraternity houses with an average of 1.96. Douthart was closely followed by Watkins which had an average of 1.97. Kappa Alpha Theta was the sorority runner-up with a 1.96 average. The Thetas were closely followed by Pi Beta Phi, Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta, and Gamma Phi Beta. Twelve of KU's 13 sororities were above the all-University average and the all-women's average. City PEARSON HALL lead the men's scholarship halls with an even 2.00 average. The all-University average was 1.35. The all-women's grade point average was 1.52, and the all-men's average was 1.25. HIGHEST AMONG MEN'S residence halls was Templin, with a 1.12 grade point average. A complete listing of all living groups and grade point averages follows: NATIONAL SOCIAL SORORI- TIES: Kappa Kappa Gamma, 2.01; Kappa Alpha Theta, 1.96; Pi Beta Phi, 1.86; Chi Omega, 1.83; Delta Delta Delta, 1.82; All-Sorority, 1.76; Delta Gamma, 1.76; Alpha Chi Omega, 1.66; Alpha Delta Pi, 1.66; Alpha Phi, 1.58; Sigma Kappa, 1.57; Alpha Kappa Alpha, 1.32. WOMEN'S SCHOOL ARSHP HALLS: Douthart, 2.05; Watkins, 1.97; All Women Scholarship Hall, 1.87; Miller, 1.78; Sellards, 1.67. WOMEN'S RESIDENCE HALLS: Lewis, 1.44; All-Women Residence Hall, 1.30; Gertrude Sellards Pear- son, 1.22; Corbin, 1.19. NATIONAL SOCIAL FRATERNITIES: Beta Theta Pi, 1.96; Phi Delta Theta, 1.63; Alpha Tau Omega 1.57; Theta Tau, 1.56; Delta Upsilon, 1.53; Acacia, 1.51; Lambda Chi Alpha, 1.43; Sigma Chi, 1.41; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 1.41; Kappa Sigma, 1.39; Gamma Delta, 1.39; Phi Kappa Psi, 1.35; Phi Kappa Alpha, 1.34; Delta Tau Delta, 1.33; All Fraternity, 1.32; Phi Kappa Tau, 1.24; Sigma Nu, 1.21; Delta Sigma Phi, 1.19; Alpha Phi Alpha, 1.18; Alpha Kappa Lambda, 1.17; Delta Tau,1.09; Theta Cti, 1.03; Tau Kappa Epsilon, 0.98; Sigma Phi Epsilon, .97; Triangle, .95; Kappa Alpha Psi, .92; Phi Kappa Theta, .87; Phi Kappa Sigma, .87. CRC Acclaims Wescoe (Continued from page 1) "Grace (Brian, Lawrence sophomore and chairman of the Human Rights Committee) may not recognize troublemakers. We should get Wescoe to recognize persons from the floor." A QUESTION WAS RAISED AS TO WHAT effect the forum might have on future administrative policy. Menghini doubted that it would result in any change. "The Chancellor's mind is made up." he said. "He won't cha The Chancellor's mind is made up," he said. "He won't change it." Jeff Bor, Lawrence resident, disagreed, saying, "The Chancellor can change his mind. It is a dangerous supposition on your part to think that he won't." D & G Front End Alignment Tune Up General Repair Don Barnett — Glen Freeman 1/2 BLOCK EAST OF HASKELL E. 12th St. VI 2-0753 Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 There Are No "HIGH H There Are No "HIGH HATS" Here! In any amount your account is welcome. ] ST FIRST ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Lawrence 746 Mass. MEN'S SCHOLARSHIP HALLS: Pearson, 2.00; Battenfeld, 1.91; All-Men Scholarship Hall, 1.82; Stephenson, 1.79; Jolliffe, 1.77; Foster, 1.56. MEN'S RESIDENCE HALLS: Templin, 1.12; Carruth-O'Leary, 1.11; J. R. Pearson, 1.08; All-Men Residence Hall, 1.06; Grace Pearson, 1.03; Oread, .73. Mrs. Rockefeller Can Get Divorce RENO, Nev. — (UPI) — Mrs. Nelson Rockefeller becomes a resident of the state of Nevada today, making her eligible for a divorce which would end her 31-year marriage to the governor of New York. The six-weeks residence requirement will be fulfilled after the courts close, but Mrs. Rockefeller could file her complaint and receive a decree tomorrow. The Rockefellers announced last Nov. 17 that a legal separation and property settlement had been agreed upon, hence no contest of the divorce is expected. The reason for ending the marriage has not been announced. Jumbo Fish Sandwich 40c BIG BUY PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS GUY'S GUY'S POTATO CHIPS GUY'S POTATO CHIPS Be Wise — Buy Guy's A STORYTELLING HISTORY PLANT A GARDEN! Laugh at HIGH FOOD COSTS! No matter how small your plot...please now to have a GARDEN! Have fun! Let nature furnish your food...and save! B Barteldes SEEDS SOLD BY Barteldes Seed Co. 804 Mass. • VI 3-0791 terrific! Two tones are smarter than one in this smart casual with the blissful fit and the squared off toe. Wear it with suits, with slacks, or skirts — and look terrific every step the way! JAMAICA SQUARE 9.95 Black/Beige Tan/Beige AAAA to B to 10 NATURALLY... maine trotters ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP IRELAND LANDMARK SHUDDERS IN DEATH—"The Shack" looks desolate as the heavy steel demolition ball crashes into its side during its destruction this morning. "The Shack" used to be the old journalism building and was also used by the anatomy department. The new space will be used for an addition to Watson Library. Astronaut Slayton Grounded Because of Heart Ailment WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Astronaut Donald K. Slayton, scheduled to have been the second American in orbit, has been grounded by an old heart ailment and M. Scott Carpenter has been assigned to take his place. Slayton was to have duplicated John Glenn's three-orbit flight in May or June. But the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) said yesterday that Slayton had an "erratic heart rate" and would not be allowed to attempt the flight. NASA did not say why a heart condition it first noted in November, 1959, seven months after Slayton became one of the seven Mercury astronauts, should now disqualify him. orbital flight) — well, I'm very disappointed to say the least," Slayton said. "To realize that I will not be piloting MA7 (the next scheduled NASA did not comment on reports that Slayton would remain in the Mercury Man-in-Space project as a technical adviser or instructor, or as a future pilot-candidate should his heart condition clear up. Weather Five-day forecast for Kansas, East and Central Nebraska— Temperatures will average 2 to 5 degrees below normal highs of 51 to 58 for Kansas, 46 to 50 for Nebraska. Warmer Saturday, cooler Monday, warmer Wednesday, Precipitation will average light to moderate occurring as rain or snow Sunday night or Monday and again in west portions by Wednesday. Davidson Honored After 40 Years By Dennis Branstiter Arthur W. Davidson, professor of chemistry and former chairmar of the department, is being honored today after 40 years on the KU chemistry department staff. Six scientists who received their Ph.D. degrees under Prof. Davidson's direction are on campus to present addresses during Arthur W. Davidson Recognition Day. The program also will include an informal dinner in the Kansas Union tonight. In a letter telling alumni about the program, C. A. VanderWerf professor of chemistry and chairman of the department, described Prof. Davidson as an inspiring teacher, a creative and productive scholar, a progressive leader among the faculty" at KU. PROF. DAVIDSON DESCRIBED the growth and future of the KU chemistry department in a recent interview. "Expansi size right now is limited by space. We hope to expand not merely to get bigger but to introduce new fields of research." Of the future he said: Prof. Davidson said a major fact in choosing staff members is the ability to initiate new fields of research in the chemistry department. "Quality comes first," he said. "We would rather not take anyone on at all rather than take someone who does not come up to the quality of the young men we have added in the last few years." ASKED WHETHER RESEARCH or teaching ability is more important "Everybody who is added to the department is expected to contribute to both teaching and research. Obviously with the expected increase in students, the teaching load will increase. The number and size of the staff is dictated by the teaching duties that have to be fulfilled." to the value of a new staff member Prof. Davidson said: "Some feel that of the two, research is more important. I don't feel that way. In the interview Prof. Davidson praised the addition of young scientists to the department staff and the department's ability to keep them here. "Every one of the new additions has been someone who is outstanding in some way or another," he said. "In spite of the fact that they had opportunities to go elsewhere at higher salaries they chose to stay here. (Continued on page 8) Daily hansan 59th Year, No. 104 Friday, March 16, 1962 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Regents Table Proposal To Alter J-School Status The Kansas Board of Regents was to act this afternoon on a resolution by Whitley Austin of Salina, which would return the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information to a department in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Bulletin The proposal would also put the Kansas State University journalism department in the English department. CHANCELLOR W. CLARKE Wescoe was appearing before the Regents early this afternoon. TOPEKA—(UPI)—The Kansas Board of Regents today tabled a resolution which would return the University of Kansas School of Journalism to a department and put the Kansas State University journalism department in the English department. He is expected to oppose the move. This morning Dr. James A. McCain, president of Kansas State, appeared before the board to oppose the measure. The resolution would provide for journalism instruction in the English departments of all state schools such After meeting with the Board of Regents this afternoon Chancellor Wesco told the Kansan that he made it clear to the board that he "does not believe that a change from the status of a school of journalism to that of a department of journalism would change the instruction that I believe is already being given from the standpoint of liberal arts." as to provide an understanding of news media "as may be helpful or required for proficiency in other fields of learning except that the University of Kansas professional training in journalism may be given as part of a program leading to the degree of bachelor of arts and graduate professional training in journalism may be given as part of a program leading to the degree of master of arts." The policy would become effective in the 1962-63 school year, but students now enrolled in courses leading to a bachelor of science degree in journalism would be allowed to receive the degrees. BOTH STATE UNIVERSITIES now offer bachelor of science degrees in journalism. KU offers courses in four journalism sequences while K-State specializes in technical journalism. "I am not acquainted with all the factors involved in this proposal, so all I can say at the moment is that we at the William Allen White School of Journalism agree wholeheartedly with the conviction that a liberal education must be at the heart of education for journalism. Mr. Austin is well acquainted with our program, and we understand and appreciate his continued interest in it. Dean Burton W. Marvin of the School of Journalism said: In today's meeting Austin contended that journalism graduates need more training in specific fields and general education in the liberal arts without specialized training in journalism. He said his resolution would carry out the recommendations of the state education survey. He also told McCain, "It might improve your college paper." "We have been working in the tradition of William Allen White, the man for whom our school is named, and we shall continue to do so. We owe this to our students, to our alumni, to the people of Kansas, and to the profession of journalism, in which scores of our graduates have risen to state and national prominence." Wescoe Will Speak Give Answers to HRC Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will speak at the Human Rights Committee of the All Student Council at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union. He will speak on discrimination at KU. Following the Chancellor's talk, he will be questioned by HRC members. The audience will then be allowed to ask questions. Greeks Prepare To Start Week At 11 a.m. tomorrow, Kansas Atty. Gen. William Ferguson will descend the steps of the capitol building in Topeka to light a torch held aloft by a toga-clad figure. The figure will turn and jog off through Toneka toward Lawrence. Charles Hawward, Lenexa sophomore, the Greek torch-bearer, will head for Highway 40 to give the torch to the second member of an eight-man relay squad which will bear the torch down Highway 40 to Lawrence, a distance of 24 miles. THE RUNNERS, all dressed in the Greek togas, will be Robert Covey, Ames, Iowa; senior; Clarence Coane, Long Island, N. Y., sophomore; William Cottle, Needham, Mass., freshman; Robert McNickle, Ashland freshman; William McArthur, Mason City, Iowa, freshman, and Theodore Riesinger, Catoosa, Okla., sophomore. All are members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. William Dotson, Jamestown senior, will anchor the relay squad. He is expected to jog into Lawrence a little before 3 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. He will carry the torch down West Campus Rd, accompanied by a blare of trumpets from the front porch of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. He will light a specially-prepared burner atop the Chi Omega fountain with the torch. GREEK WEEK QUEEN JUDITH Young, Kansas City junior, will then ascend to her throne with her two attendants, Ann Leffler, Pittsburg (Continued on page 8) Russia Charges U.S. Sabotage GENEVA — (UPI) — The Soviet Union charged the United States today with sabotaging the nuclear test ban talks here to clear the way for resumption of American atmospheric blasts in the Pacific next month. Chief Soviet Nuclear Negotiator Semyon Tsarapkin told a news conference that Secretary of State Dean Rusk was not taking a "serious" approach to the problem. He repeated Russia's claim that *** Russia Puts New Satellite in Orbit MOSCOW—(UPI)—Premier Nikita Khrushchev made a surprise announcement today that a new Soviet space craft was in orbit. He did not reveal immediately whether it was manned. In an impromptu statement to a huge election rally in the Kremlin Palace of Congresses, Khrushchev said the launch was made today and the craft was circling the earth. Khrushchev broke the news in an address to 6,000 persons assembled for the rally preceding Sunday's balloting for the USSR Supreme Soviet. One of the speakers preceding Khrushchev, an academician, ex-tolled the premier's efforts in guiding the Soviet Union to various space successes, including the launching of space men. At that point Khrushchev gesturing with a pointing forefinger, broke in and exclaimed: "Yes, another one has been shot up today and has been circling the earth already for three hours." (This was at approximately 9:30 am. CST.) It is the first known Soviet space shot since Major Gherman Titov made 17 orbits of the earth last August 6. Khrushchev did not specify whether there was a man aboard the new Soviet space vehicle nor did he say how big it was. international controls and inspection were completely unnecessary to police a test ban agreement. He added that the British and Americans know this. TSARAPKIN DESCRIBED as "impossible" President Kennedy's proposal that a nuclear test ban treaty contain safeguards against secret preparations for such experiments. In response to a question, he added that he did not think the American suggestion, which Russia rejected yesterday, was "serious." His charge that the American government was trying to torpedo the talks here came early in his news conference held at the Geneva press house. "The Soviet Union's impression," he said, "is that the United States would like to create such a condition which would permit them to go along with their decision to resume nuclear explosions in the atmosphere." Tsarapkin's news conference had a standing room only audience. HE MADE HIS CHARGES after Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev announced in Moscow that another Russian space ship was in orbit. It came, too, just after the United States and Russia moved to work out arrangements for a series of informal secret meetings at which neutral nations can obtain full details of their rival disarmament plans. The Soviet-American action was in response to a demand from the non-aligned delegations to the general disarmament conference, led by Indian Defense Minister V. K. Krishna Menon. THE INDIAN delegation chief broached the proposal yesterday at a rump session of the eight neutral nations and proposed it formally at this morning's conference session. The idea is that the non-aligned delegations want an opportunity to quiz the Americans and Russians in an informal, off-the-record manner on details of their rival disarmament plans. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 16. 1962 For a Free Choice An officer of the Sigma Nu fraternity chapter at KU went before the Human Rights Council of the All Student Council this week and defended the fraternity's right to retain a discriminatory clause in its national constitution. The American university has traditionally been the stronghold of freedom and opportunity, and Greek organizations are an integral part of these universities. It is only right that the university would not tolerate discrimination on the basis of race or religion. A COURT RULING in 1954 ruled that since fraternities are an integral part of the university, the university has the right to dictate to the fraternities on their right to discriminate because of race. His arguments are the stock arguments of defenders of Greek discriminatory clauses. They contain several fallacies. In the first place, defenders of discriminatory clauses often draw an equation between the right to choose with whom they want to associate, and the right to keep the clauses. There is no known instance where a university has ordered a Greek house to accept anyone. There have been instances, and rightly so, of a university ordering a Greek organization to remove its discriminatory clause or withdraw from the national organization. Carrying this a step farther, the university has not only the right, but the duty to see that some sort of effective action, whatever it might NOTHING COULD be more wrong. No one can logically hold that a private group should be told with whom to associate. But there is a growing and quite correct sentiment that a Greek system should not ban en masse every member of a certain racial or religious group. be, is taken against discriminatory clauses in Greek organizations. Another of the Sigma Nu president's arguments was that "it must be obvious since we have not disaffiliated from the national chapter and become local, the majority of men in our house are in favor of the discriminatory clause. Our local chapter has decided to go along with what other chapters have decided. Majority rules." IT IS JUST as "obvious" and logical that a fraternity does not disaffiliate from the national organization or fight its discriminatory clause because no one cares to take the risk in the closely integrated social structure of a fraternal organization. All members of a particular race or religion cannot be labeled as undesirable. Each member has a right to be judged individually and on his own merit. In short, a discriminatory clause in a national Greek constitution is indefensible. It has no moral or logical grounds on which to stand. Removal of discriminatory clauses would in effect be an extension of the local chapter's freedom, not an infringement. These chapters should have the right to pledge whom they want without blanket rules from a national organization. They should have the maturity to see that this is the logical and morally sound approach. IT IS A SAD commentary on some Greek organizations that they deem it logical to have a national constitution labeling all members of a group undesirable. It is an even sadder commentary that members of a local fraternal organization allow themselves to be forbidden to pledge a member of a certain racial or religious group without consideration of the particular individual. —Karl Koch Greek Clauses Criticized Editor: Steve Brawner, Sigma Nu president, has stated, "As we are a member chapter of the national fraternity, we must go along with their laws and their constitution. If we did not, we wouldn't be Sigma Nu's." In other words, to be a Sigma Nu, one must support a clause enforcing bigotry. One sometimes wonders whether many Greeks consider themselves individuals first and Greeks second, or vice versa. The narrow-minded, robot-like Greek attitudes on issues such as this one are a major reason why the overwhelming majority of the KU student body is independent by choice, not chance. Class Gifts and Their Usefulness Editor: Jack Zinn Shawnee Mission freshman *...* It is my opinion that a class gift given as a memorial to future students of the University of Kansas should be so placed or arranged that students can use it to its fullest. I have in mind the Hammond Organ in the Student Union. For four years I have seen student after student told to stop using it. THIS MORNING (Wed.) I inquired about the regulations for its use. The hostess informed me that it was never to be used unless special permission from the director of the union was obtained. She said that the union was used for too many activities and special functions to allow the piano or the organ to be played. I asked her if it were possible to use it at that time (7:45 a.m.) since only she and a janitor were within hearing distance. "SORRY! IT'S A RULE" was her reply. Nearly every room I have visited has allocated one room to house a piano for student use so it wouldn't annoy the television viewers or others. It seems that better planning would allow the students to use these facilities even if it meant that the Ladies Flower Club of West Lawrence couldn't hold their meetings on campus. Since every student gets to pay Union dues I feel that it should be operated for the ...Letters.. student's convenience and comfort. Furthermore, I want no part in purchasing a class gift for the University that will lose all value in a matter of a few years. Perhaps the regulations always stipulated that the piano and organ were never to be used? LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Terry Watkins El Dorado senior * * * For purposes of clarification of the stand that Sigma Nu Fraternity has taken on our rights to determine our own membership requirements, I would like to relate the full content of statements made at the Tuesday meeting of the Human Rights Committee. Brawner Clarifies HRC Remarks Editor: ANYTHING WE have in our laws concerning membership requirements, we feel we have a right to have being a private organization. Any infringement of this right would be an infringement on our freedom of voluntary association in a free country. Churches, lodges, country clubs, and fraternal organizations are entitled to choose their members as they see fit. If liberty perishes on the campus, it will not last long in our country. Responsible college administrators realize that the function of a university is to teach people how to think, not what to think. Sigma Nu is based on the principle of a family circle in that groups which are historically and culturally related have the best chance for a harmonious existence. This belief is shared by many sociologists and clergymen. AS A MEMBER chapter of the national fraternity, we must go along with the national laws and constitution. If we do not, we will not be Sigma Nu's. The local chapter must go along with what all the other chapters decide in convention. Majority rules. If our stand proves to be wrong, then we expect to die a natural death due to our inability to attract members. Steve Brawner Merriam senior Commander, Sigma Nu Coment on Brawner's Statement Editor; No one denies the right of a fraternity to choose its own member. Any organization has no right. The question is not the truth of that right but its abuse. So if Mr. Brawner is trying to justify a clause which discriminates solely on the basis of color or creed; and if he tries to put the blame on the national fraternity, as though the local chapter of Sigma Nu is lacking sufficient intestinal fortitude to disaffiliate itself; or if he refuses to recognize any other authority than his fraternity, disassociating himself from the Christian ideals on which his country was founded; or if he acts like the University will try to reprimand his fraternity as a mother would admonish her wayward child, then he and any others with him have demonstrated their right to be asinine fools. Robert Cummings Leavenworth junior Dailu Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founder, editor bickwee 1904, bickwee 1908;染家 1924 Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East St. S., New York 22, N.Y. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday and Sunday examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Extension 711, news room Enterprise 376, business office NEWS DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher Managing Editor Kelly Smith, Carrie Merryfield, Clayton Keller, Scott Payne, Assistant Managing Editors; Jerry Musil, City Editor; Steve Clark, Sports Editor; Martha Moser, Society Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Mullins ... Editorial Editor Karl Koch, Assistant Editorial Editor. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache Business Manager Rhine Classified Advertising Manager; Susanne Ellerlemer, Circulation Man- eller National Advertising Manager; Harley Carpenter, Promotion Manager. IMPORTANT NAMES DUFFY'S POOL PARK OR BUD'S BILLIARDS JAKE'S PLACE P.U. GIRESU. CLASS SCHEDULE IMPORTANT DATES FISHING SEASON DUCK SEASON DEER SEASON QUAIL SEASON 0-1 BIBLEC "NUTHIN TO DO ON A LOUISY DAY LIKE THIS—WHADDA YA SAY WE GO TO CLASS?" theater theater By Tom Winston The Experimental Theatre opened its newest experiment Tuesday night $\rightarrow$ three foreign-language one-act plays in their native languages. The plays are "The Magic Theater" (in Spanish), by Miguel de Cervantes, "The Wall" (in German), by Tankerd Dorst, and "Humulus the Mute" (in French), by Jean Anouilh. TUESDAY evening's performances ranked in that order of interest, too. But be it known that this writer can understand only German. He like the other 40 persons present, had to depend on the acting and the situation to tell him what was happening, much the same as in an opera. John Magill, Shawnee Mission sophomore, might as well have been Zorro the Quartermaster. All that was missing from his final entrance was a big white horse. He is slender and even handsome, but he did not act convincingly. Saving "The Magic Theatre" from all but complete disinterest were Jose Lacomba, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico, graduate student, and Joan Felt, Prairie Village freshman, whose imaginative, facile and energetic performances add life to some otherwise dull, stodgy and dead acting. IT IS POSSIBLE the play, directed by Virgil Godfrey, assistant professor of speech and drama, will improve in English. Much of the slow pace can be attributed to actors struggling to remember lines and apparently, having remembered them, to pronounce them. The same players act both English and original versions of all three plavs. "The Magic Theatre" is set in XVII century Spain. Its theme is similar to Hans Christian Andersen's "The Emperor's New Clothes". Chirinos and Chanfalla (Miss Felt and Lacomba) set up a magic theater and perform at a wedding celebration. Chanfalla says nobody who is either a bastard or has Jewish blood can see the show. --- Much more fortunate was "The Wall." The play has only four characters: a man, a woman, a fat soldier, and a thin soldier. Celia Candlin, London, England, junior, plays the woman. The woman comes to the wall to ask of her husband. The soldiers ask her questions and make fun of her. The woman wants her own husband back, but she will take any man just to have one. Julia Callahan. Lawrence graduate student, plays the duchess. Humulus' grandmother. Humulus is played by Randy Williams. Each of the cast members are excellent. The play is about 15 minutes long, in three scenes. The plays will run on alternate nights with the Tau Sigma dance drama: Saturday, Monday, and Wednesday. Keith Jochim, Birmingham, Mich., junior, and Phillip Kimball, Derby junior, are both amusing and cruel as the fat and thin soldiers. HUMULUS CAN say only one word per day. His grandmother has him come to her to say his one word each day. One day he refuses, explaining through the governor (Steve Lopata, Clayton, Mo., sophomore) that he is madly in love with a young woman and is saving his words to propose to her. Saturday, "The Wall" will be in German, the others in English; Monday "Humulus" will be in French, the others in English, and Wednesday all will be in their original languages. THE WALL symbolizes some great power. Since the play is new it may symbolize the separation of families in East and West Berlin. But who knows? Miss Candlin made the English translation. The play is directed by Horst Muller, Tirschenseuth, Germany, graduate student. Curtain is at 8 o'clock each performance night. "Humulus the Mute," directed by Diana Abruzzino, Huntington, W. Va., graduate student, has the merest trifle for a plot and is also the most charming of the plays. Worth Repeating It is simply not possible for small oases of prosperity in the world to continue to exist amidst vast deserts of poverty without engendering storms that might engulf those oases.—B. K. Nehru Chamber Series Shines On Shostakovitch Piece Page 3 By Tom Winston The chamber music concert by the University String Quartet Wednesday night was disappointing at the beginning and delightful at the end. About 350 persons heard the Quartet play the Beethoven Quartet in A Minor, Op. 132, and the Shostakovitch Piano Quintet, Op. 57. The Shostakovitch was as delightful as the Beethoven was disappointing. THE QUARTET IS composed of Raymond Cerf, professor of string instruments, first violin; Theodore Johnson, assistant professor of organ and theory, second violin; Karel Blaas, associate professor of string instruments, viola, and Raymond KU's Prof. Berger To Study in Russia Klaus Berger, professor of art history, will study in Russia next semester under the cultural exchange program set up between that country and the U.S. Prof. Berger has recently been named one of 12 professors in the humanities and social science fields to participate in the program, which is sponsored jointly by the American Council of Learned Societies and the Russian Academy of Sciences. As the only are historian in this special group, Prof. Berger's project is to study and evaluate 18th, 19th, and 20th century French paintings in the State Hermitage at Leningrad. Prof. Berger, who was born in West Berlin, Germany, and came to the U.S. in 1941, has been at KU since 1950. He had previously taught at Northwestern University, Evanson, Ill., and the U.S. Army University in Blairitz, France. In addition, he has published three books and some 30 major magazine articles on French art, both here and abroad and his most recent book, "Gericault and His Work." has been published in French, German, and English. FREE PIZZA DELIVERY ANY PLACE In LAWRENCE Reg. 10" Lrg. 14" Mozz. Cheese _ .85 1.40 Olive ___ 1.15 1.65 Green Pepper _ 1.15 1.65 Onion ___ 1.15 1.65 Mushroom ___ 1.25 1.90 Sausage ___ 1.25 1.90 Hamburger ___ 1.25 1.90 Pepperoni ___ 1.25 1.90 Anchovy ___ 1.25 1.90 Pizza Supreme 1.40 2.40 1/2 Cheese — 1/2 Sausage -- 1.05 1.65 Added Ingredients 10c ea. 20c ea. VI 3-9640 Stuhl, associate professor of string instruments, cello. Ron Tom Roy Hamlin Johnson, associate professor of piano, joined the Quartet in the Shostakovitch. CAVERNS VI 3-9640 644 Mass. CAVERNS The Beethoven had some nice spots in it, notably some duetting between Prof. Blaas and Prof. Stuhl in the finale. But the beginning was beset with intenation and ensemble problems. Tonight: Larry Emmet and The Moovin-Groovers Saturday: Hi-Liners THE BEETHOVEN quartet, one of the longest in string quartet literature, ran 50 sometimes excruciating minutes. The Shostakovitch quintet, dating from 1940, sparkles. It has some lovely muted string passages, a scherzo that churns in merrily, and a finale that lilts and stomps. Prof. Roy Hamlin Johnson, the pianist, played like one possessed in the scherzo and finale. He was entirely sympathetic to the wit inherent in the music. His tone is sharp and brittle when he wants it to be, but never distorted. A PIANO IS almost never muted, as a stringed instrument frequently is. That is why it was remarkable that Prof. Johnson actually was able to produce muted sounds at the piano in the muted string passages. The Quartet played like a different ensemble in the Shostakovich quintet. Nearly all the imperfections that marred the Beethoven were gone. Bergman Film Set "Wild Strawberries," a Swedish language film with English subtitles, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today in Hoch Auditorium. The film is directed by Ingmar Bergman, with Bibi Anderson and Victor Sjostrom. Admittance is free. Friday, March 16. 1962 University Daily Kansan Official Bulletin Hillel Services: 7:30 p.m. Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: 7:30 p.m., Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union. Mr. Bill Summerville will head a discussion on Hebrews: 4. International Club: After film in Hoeh and Kalamazoo, Kansas Union Dancing and refreshments. Baptist Student Union : 7:30 p.m. Bap. Mt. Olive, Devotional studies and fellowship, Orest, Devotional studies and fellowship. SUNDAY Mathematics Colloquium: 10 a.m., 103 Strong Hall. Robert A. McLean, Research Scientist, Western Connector Division, "Reliability and the Dilemma that it Presents to Industry." Lutheran Services: 8:30 & 11 a.m., Immanuel Lutheran Church, 17th & Vermont, 5 p.m. Wednesdays, Danforth Chapel. SATURDAY Catholic Mass; 9 & 11 a.m., Fraser Hall (Newman Club). Orcad Friends Worship Meeting: 10:30 a.m. Danforth Chapel Jewish Purim Party: 4-6 p.m. Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. A cost supper, entertainment & refreshments. MONDAY Episcopal Holy Communion & Lunch: 12 noon. Canterbury House. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Harnar Auto Supply 836 Mass. St. Keys Duplicated Complete Locksmith Service Day or Night Day Phone VI 3-2362 Night. Phone VI 3-7576 Ireland Holds Games Ireland had the first organized track and field games. Its Taitlin Games anteceded the ancient Olympic contests by more than 1,000 years. THE FIRST WORLDWIDE VIRTUOSITY SHOW STEWARDESS INTERVIEWS UNITED AIR LINES March 20 You may qualify if you . . . ★ are 5' 2" to 5' 8" ★ are 20 - 26 ★ single ★ weight proportioned to height Contact Placements Office for March 20 interviews UNITED CHEVROLET CARS FOR EVERY FAMILY,EVERY BUDGET,EVERY TASTE Chevrolet Want to pull out all stops—except price? The Jetsmooth Chevrolet serves up spacious, gracious interiors. Body by Fisher craftsmanship, Jet-smooth ride, new V8 vinegar or 6 savings—and more. On the ferry: an Impala Sport Sedan. Chevy II Hungering for a car that's lovely, lively, easy to park and pay for? Chevy II is all that, all right—and also winner of Car Life magazine's award for Engineering Excellence! Parallel to the shore: a Nova 400 4-Door Station Wagon. Corvair If you spark to sporty things this one ought to fire you up but good. With the engine weight astern, the steering's as responsive as a bicycle's and the traction's ferocious. As for the seat -wow! At the ramp: the Monza Club Coupe. JM2056 See the new Chevrolet, new Chevy II and new Corvair at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 16, 1962 Engineering Exposition To Be 'Engineers Today' "Engineers Today" will be the theme of the 42nd Engineering Exposition to be held April 20-21 in Allen Field House. The exposition will be concerned with current events in the engineering profession as compared with past expositions which have emphasized the future. AT LEAST 17 engineering departments and organizations will have exhibits in the exposition. Robert Eaton, Arkansas City junior and Marvin Lindsey, La Cygne senior are co-chairmen for the exposition. Randall Nollette, Monument senior, is finance chairman; James Warner, Wichita junior, is publicity chairman and Elmo G. Lindquist, associate professor of mechanical engineering, is the advisor. First Round Begins For Bowl Sunday Thirty-two teams representing KU organized living groups will compete in the first round of the College Intermediary Board's College Bowl contest from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union. First-round matching of teams and opponents are as follows: Alpha Kappa Lambda vs. Alpha Phi Alpha; Acacia vs. Delta Tau Delta; Pearson vs. Alpha Phi; Alpha Tau Omega vs. Grace Pearson; Gertrude Sellards Pearson vs. Douthart; Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Delta Upsilon; Chi Omega vs. Stephenson; Templin vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Jolliffe vs. Sigma Nu; Corbin counselors vs. Kappa Alpha Theta; Corbin vs. Gamma Phi Beta; Pia Beta Phi vs. Gamma Omicron Pi; Lewis vs. Foster; Phi Delta Theta vs. Alpha Chi Omega; Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Joseph R. Pearson; Beta Theta Pi vs. Miller. Six faculty member have assisted the Intermediary Board in the bowl project. Calvin VanderWerf, professor of chemistry, Marilyn Stokstad, associate professor of art, and James Seaver, professor of history, are preparing the questions. Chairmen of the exhibits are: GERALD BUTTRON, Lancaster senior, architecture and architectural engineering; James W. Straight, Bartlesville, Okla., senior mechanical; Richard Moore, Pleasanton senior, civil; Richard L. Knuckey, Lawrence senior, electrical; E. Kent Hunter, Kansas City, Mo., junior, engineering physics. Dale L. Collinson, Humboldt senior, chemical; Leland Barrington, Partridge senior, mining and metallurgical; Richard L. Peil, Atchison senior, aeronautical; Ronald D. Keith, Beaumont, Tex.; junior, applied mechanics; C. Jerome Waylan, Herington freshman and Colin Case, Colby freshman, engineering drawing. Robert Lindsay, Prairie Village sophomore, engineering manufacturing processes; Richard Norfleet, Coffeyville senior, Society of American Military Engineers; Wayne Pratt, junior, Theta Tau; Lionel Richford, Marienthal senior, Eta Kappa Nu; Ronald Cox, Wichita senior, Tau Beta Pi; John K. Earlywine, Kingman senior, Sigma Tau, and Stanley Thurber, Richland senior, Petroleum. No Decision Reached On Skit; Due Monday The KU-Y Cabinet did not meet last night as previously announced and therefore did not reach a decision concerning the Kappa Sigma Delta Delta Delta Rock Chak skit. The Cabinet to have decided whether the skit presented here was a copy of that being given at a theater in Chicago. The meeting has been set for Monday night at which time the problem will be discussed. Peter Rabbitt III Arrives ST. LOUIS, Mo. — (UPI) — State Rep. Peter Rabbitt recently announced the birth of his fifth son. The baby, 10th child of Mr. and Mrs. Rabbit has been named Peter Rabbit III. Nuggets of golden goodness BUTTER PECAN sundae Try this golden treasure for a real taste treat... delicious Dairy Queen topped with crunchy butter pecan! Served fresh from the freezer, Dairy Queen is better tasting, better for you. Less fattening, too! THE COFFEE MAN CONDENSED AND PASTEURIZED DAIRY QUEEN SAN DIEGO, CA 92405 FOOD COOKING & BAKERY Come in for a treat TODAY! 1835 MASSACHUSETTS MISS LAWRENCE PAGEANT The Lawrence Jaycees cordially invite all single girls between the ages 18 and 28 to attend The Miss Lawrence Orientation Tea Saturday, March 17 at 10 a.m. in the Kansas Union ST. PATRICK'S SPECIAL Roberto's ... NORTH OF UNION GREEN BEVERAGES ZZ Here's to the Memory of The Good Old Saint Whether You're Irish or Whether You Ain't Saint Patrick's Day 1 free beverage—order small pizza 2 free beverages—order large pizza 20% off on green pepper pizzas 20% off on olive pizzas FOR FAST DELIVERY CALL VI 3-1086 --- SPACE, MISSILE & JET PROJECTS AT DOUGLAS have created outstanding career opportunities for SCIENTISTS and ENGINEERS B. S. degrees or better Assignments include the following areas: Servo-Mechanisms — relating to all types of control problems Electronic Systems—relating to all types of guidance, detection control and communications Propulsion - relating to fluid mechanics, thermodynamics dynamics, internal aerodynamics Environmental - relating to air conditioning, pressurization and oxygen systems Human Factors analysis of environment affecting pilot and space crews, design of cockpit consoles, instrument panels and pilot equipment Heat Transfer—relating to missile and space vehicle structures Structures-relating to cyclic loads, temperature effects, and the investigation of new materials methods, products, etc. Aerodynamics -relating to wind tunnel, research, stability and control Solid State Physics -relating to metal surfaces and fatigue Space vehicle and weapon system studies-of all types involving a vast range of scientific and engineering skills Get full information at INDIVIDUAL ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS with a Douglas representative Friday, March 16 We urge you to make an appointment through Mr. D. E. Metzler, Placement Director, School of Engineering. If you cannot, please write to S. A. Amestoy, Staff Assistant to VP Engineering DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT COMPANY, INC. 3000 Ocean Park Blvd., Santa Monica, California An equal opportunity employer Action Half Way To Party Status Page 5 Contrary to the predictions of several campus political leaders, Action is reported to be half way to becoming a recognized campus political party. HAROLD JOHNSON. Ft. Leavenworth junior and vice president of the group, said approximately 500 students have signed the petition the group is circulating. The All Student Council constitution states that a proposed political party obtain the signatures of 10 per cent of the student body in order to be recognized. The group will need slightly over 1,000 signatures to meet the requirement. An article in the March 8 Daily Kansan reported that several KU political leaders had expressed doubt that Action would be able to secure the necessary number of signatures. The petitions have been in circulation for two days. Johnson expressed hope that the signatures will be secured by next week. JOHNSON SAID 70 PETITIONS are being circulated, with space for 20 signatures on each. Flatfooted Cops? CHICAGO — (UPI) — A City Council Subcommittee has adopted a resolution asking the Chicago Civil Service Commission to reconsider its policy of blocking people with flat feet from becoming policemen. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT KU-Y to Sponsor Leadership Program Forty KU students will take part in an all-day leadership training program tomorrow in the Kansas Union. The session, sponsored by the KUY, is designed to instruct KU students in group leadership. It is open to anyone who wishes to attend. Howard Baumgartel, associate professor of human relations, will speak on "Leadership Roles in Groups" at the morning session. The afternoon program will include a panel discussion on the student "Y" program, a role-playing demonstration of a discussion group, and a skit on effective committee meetings. John P. Augelli, chairman of Latin American Studies and professor of geography, will speak about "Catholicism, Protestantism, and Communism in Latin America," at 7 p.m. Sunday, in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. Prof. Augelli's talk is being sponsored by the Newman Club. Augelli is Speaker Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers BUSINESS MACHINES CO. TENNIS University Daily Kansan 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up SALES - SERVICE - RENTALS Employment Data Sheets Reproduced Printing, Mimeographing and Duplicating Pick up — Delivery Saturday, March 17 Twist Contest Featuring JERRY SKINNER and THE THEME BRATS Blue Moon Ballroom GARDEN GROVE, Calif —(UPI) —Boyd Smith, photographer for the Garden Grove News, got trimmed twice yesterday. Smith told police that while he was getting his hair cut someone clipped $1,000 worth of photo equipment from his car. Friday, March 16, 1962 East 15th St. Ottawa Haircut Is Costly Kansan Classified Ads Get Results A Good Deed Every Day A Good Deed Every Day ST. LOUIS, Mo. — (UPI) — Irma Jean Evans, 21, a Waterloo, Ill., secretary told police that when she fell in the snow the other day she was assisted to her feet by a courtly gentleman who robbed her of 80 cents. Hunsinger Motor Co. 922 Mass. German Cars BMW - NSU ALLEN'S NEWS 1115 Mass. Come In and Browse Around Over 2,400 Copies From a Magazine to a Popular Novel the shoe that fits like a sock! a built-in stretch - Leather that stretches - Soft and Flexible - Cushioned Insole - Wedge rubber sole for support - In your favorite colors Sockaroo $10.99 REDMAN'S SHOES ST. PATRICK'S DAY ONLY O'SANDY'S SPECIAL DANCE O' Sandy's will be celebrating St. Patrick's Day Saturday with free gifts and prizes for everyone and Saturday night a grand prize will be given away to cap off this gala affair. FREE PRIZES Just come in and register to be eligible—need not be present to win. Try O'Sandy's special St. Patrick's Day Green River drink GRAND PRIZE ($25 value) NO PURCHASE NECESSARY THE NATIONAL DANCE TEAM FREE PRIZES Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 16, 1962 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Rough Road Ahead For Green Golfers KU golfers will be plagued by a lack of experience and stiff competition this spring, but golf coach Jay Markley is meeting the problem head-on. Markley, who is in his second year as head mentor, explained that not one of the top four players from last year's squad will return. Of the 16 linksmen competing for the top five slots on the team, only one of the Hawker golfers, Dick Haitrink, Salina junior, is a returning letterman. Markley says leading contenders for the remaining top four spots on the team are John Hanna and Paul Carlson, Lawrence sophomores, David Gray, Lawrence senior, and Reid Holbrook, Kansas City sophomore. Markley feels that Oklahoma State and Oklahoma will dominate the Big Eight golf links this spring. "Hanna," Markley said, "shows a lot of ability. He has shot a 68 (four below par) on the Lawrence Country Club course." KU will open the golf season squaring off against these two powerhouses in the Oklahoma Invitational Golf Tournament at Norman, April 6-7. To meet the challenge from the South, Markley is embarking on a new training program. In past years, he explained, the players could train in whatever way they chose; the golfers had no exact schedule to practice. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results BARREL OF CHICKEN 25 pieces,10 hot rolls $5.00 BIG BUY 23rd & Iowa Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO 摄像师 Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 JACKSON PARK SCHOOL PLANT A GARDEN! Laugh at MIGH FOOD COSTS! The KU golf mentor said that the only way a player can build stamina and consistency is to practice regularly each day. No matter how small your plot...pls now to have a GARDEN! Have fun! Let nature furnish your food...and save! B Barteldes SEEDS SOLD BY But Markley said the procedure has changed this year, and the players are now required to practice so many hours a day and to turn in qualifying scores. "I am only interested," he said, "in those boys who show a great deal of desire and really want to take golf seriously." Barteldes Seed Co. 804 Mass. • VI 3-0791 KU Network Director Named 'Sportscaster of the Year' Tom Hedrick, director of the KU Sports Network, was recently named the state's "sportscaster of the year" by Kansas radio and newspaper men for the second consecutive year. Hedrick, believed to be one of the youngest recipients of this award in his field, is in his second year as head of the KU network. Hedrick said he was fortunate to have been selected for the second straight year by his contemporaries for the honor, and added: "In my opinion, an award of this type means more to a person when his associates give him their support. "I also feel," he said, "that this would not have happened had I not been aided by our coaches, had the complete cooperation of the Kansas broadcasters, and followed KU football and basketball all the wav." A timer at a track meet starts his watch when he sees the smoke from the starter's gun. Because of the comparative slowness of sound, the report from the gun does not provide an accurate starting signal. He Watch'em Smoke The award is given annually by the National Association of Sportscasters and Sportswriters of Salisbury, N.C. The winner of the award is determined by the votes of the sportscasters of every radio station in Kansas. Double Edge Razor Blades Finest Surgical Steel, honed in oil. Full money, back guarantee. 25 - $30 100 - $5c 200 - $1.50 500 - $3.30 1000 - $7.75 Postpaid. Packed five blades to package, 20 packages to carton. C.O.D. orders accepted. Postcard brings gen- EMERSON COMPANY 406 South Second Alhambra, California Kansan Classified Ads Get Results Kirsten's Hillcrest Shopping Center Sports Wear ● Majestic ● White Stag ● Helen Harper ● Open evenings LUCKY STRIKE presents: LUCKY PUFFERS "We wanted you to be the first to know, Mother...Mother? Mother?" "PARENTS' WEEKEND" "Mom! Pop! Come on in and meet my roommates." "Now you boys see that my Jimmie gets to bed by 10:30, won't you?" "ARRRGH!" LUCKY STRIKE 175 X 45 X 180 CIGARETTES L.S./M.R.T. "Now you boys see that my Jimmie gets to bed by 10:30, won't you?" "ARRRGH!" LUCKY STRIKE IT'S SCANSTER CIGARETTES BREAKING THE ICE years with questions do they?" "S- great cigar smoke real" CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE 177 2045180 CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. "I'm afraid your father's a little burned up about your grades, dear." BREAKING THE ICE FOR DAD. When Dad comes to visit, help him bridge the years with questions like this: "These old ivy-covered buildings never change, do they?" "Say, aren't those girls the cat's meow?" "Dad, do you remember how great cigarettes used to taste?" Then inform your Dad that college students still smoke more Luckies than any other regular. He will realize that times haven't really changed. He'll be in such good, youthful spirits that he'll buy you a carton. CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change! @ A. T. Co Product of The American Tobacco Company—"Tobacco is our middle name" Friday, March 16. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE OLXMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. writer, sales, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-8644. ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch card to the medical office immediately. Call Vi 3-8877 or come to 807 Ark. for more information. 1959 Renault. 4CV. Good condition. Black, white side wall tires. Will accept any reasonable offer. Call VI 3-6145 or VI 3-5060. GUNS: Lawrence Firearms Co. New & Used guns and ammo. Handguns rebelled. More inexpensive new 22-12 volvers. See at 1346 Ohio (Corner 4, 13-8 & Ohio) CUTE Simiese purered kittens. About 6 weeks old. TU 7-67 434 days after 6 p.m. 5-20 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In. Pet Center — most complete location. Pet phone 2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. tf SIMCA: 1959 super deluxe. Must sell im- bual. Bid. CALL VI 3-5202 after 5 p.m. 3-19 GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $2.50, free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553. VI 3-5778. tf 1957 Olds 88 Hullaina 4 dr. hardtop. Call 3-1727 at 6:30 p.m. & Sundays. 3-1727 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 deff PRINTED BIOSOLOGY 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 1953 2-4. Blue Ford. I'd a dreambunt 2916 between 7-5 p.m. Call V-15 1954 TRANSPORTATION Girl wants rides beginning April 1 from Stouffer Place to K.C., Mo. Works 7 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Call VI 2-3729 at 6:30; 3:50 WANTED: Ride to New York over Spring vacation. Will share driving and expenses. Call Robert Herschberg at VI 2-2471. 3-19 MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Picnic, party supplying plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 3- 3550. FOR RENT Second floor two room apt. Suitable for two men students. Everything furnished. Available now. Call VI 3-5137 after 5 p.m. or weekends. 3-20 LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2, rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 9731. LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. Park Plaza South Apartments Central Air Conditioning Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking We will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 3-8253 Office -- 1912 W. 25th. LARGE nicely furnished 2 bedroom apt. entrance, bathroom, entertainment, bath, phone, & garage. First floor: 213 blocks from campus. Extra nice. Available April 1. Call 514-7380. 3-16 Available April 1. Call 514-7380. 3-16 2 and 3 room apt. for rent. Newly decorated, close to town and campus. Adults only. Call B. E. Jacques, 2101 Learnard. VI 3-9935. 3-20 APT, for 2 or 3 buses, Utilities pd. 1 block after the first stairlift 1st of Apt. sooner, 1142 Indiana. BUSINESS SERVICES 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. tt 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. tt RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. CLI VI 2-2533. tf DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mation details. Ola Smith 930's Mass, Cali. VI 5-2633. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 5-7551, or 921 Miss. tf GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Notes are revised and a comprehensive price. $4: Call Vi 2-7522 Free delivery. tt TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. TYPING "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ment for vectorors. For excellett typing at standard rates, call MISS Louff Pope, VI 3-1097. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates: Betty Vequest, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. t SECRETARY WILL DO TYPING in home. Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at VI 2-1749. tf FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing, Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-852 ff EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher. VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt TYFING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers reports, etc. Accurate work. Reasonable time with Mrs. or Mrs. tf. Edlowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-3136. Ms. Lott Gelbach. Typing; Will type reports, theels, etc. Type: Will type reports, theels, etc. 1311, 511 2. St Ct. VI call 3-6440. ff typing FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execu- sion Service, S917 W. Work- son, Mission, R 2-7718. Evers or Sat. RA 2-2186. THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter Reasonable rate. Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware, Ct I-3 0483-8. Experienced typist would like typing in occasional rates. Call VI S-318 any time. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pavli, VI 3-8379. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow, Barlow. 408 W. 13th, VI 2-1648. 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- glish teacher. Send resume to & reports accurately. Standard rules. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. tf Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with math and Greek letter Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, application letters. Electric typewriter -- Special symbols & signs. Prompt service. Robert Cook. Rhode Island, VI S-7485. 3-19 MALE HELP. From 11 a.m. till 5 p.m. or at night. Hourly wages $1 and up. Apply or call Bob Fondren at Griff's Burger Bar, 1618 West 23rd. VI 3-9347. HELP WANTED PATRONIZE YOUR • ADVERTISERS • FOUND Jr. college study in Flint Hall the middle of Feb. Identify. See Mrs. Fine, 141 Flint,. WANTED A STUDENT who needs tutoring in Spanish or Math 2 (or equivalent, especially 2c). Carolyn Hunnicutt, 1703 Indiana, or call VI 3-4180. 3-20 Jack Fiscus $ ^{*} $ says... Q. Where can a college man get the most for his life insurance dollars? A. From College Life Insurance Company's famous policy, THE BENEFACTORI Q. How come? Call me and I'll give you a fill-In on all nine of The Benefactor's big benefits. No obligation, of course. A. Only college men are insured by College Lfe and college men are preferred risks. *JACK FISCUS P. O. Box 272 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Viking 2-3206 Area Director representing Representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA ...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men HERE'S SOME GOOD ADVICE FOR SATURDAY NIGHT If you are going to attend the Limeliters Concert this Saturday night, why not make it a real "evening to remember!" Just treat yourself and your date to a superb meal in the Prairie Room at The Kansas Union. Enjoy your favorite choice of charcoal broiled steak or tasty sea food served with potato, tossed green salad, hard roll and butter. The Prairie Room is open from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. For Reservations Call KU-540 U UNION N FOOD SERVICE University Daily Kansan Page 8 Friday, March 16, 1962 Greeks Prepare - (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) sophomore, and Susan Olson, Topeka junior. They will be escorted by James Warner, Lawrence junior, and William Anderson, Park Ridge, Ill., sophomore. Warner, who is in charge of the preparations before the races, said that he wasn't sure just what was going to happen since the queen had already been announced. He said that previous plans were to announce the queen at that time but that somehow the announcement was made early. AFTER THE QUEEN ascends her throne in front of Hoch Auditorium with the Chi Omega fountain at the end of Jayhawk Blvd. burning, 20 chariot teams, representing 20 fraternities, will compete in the first event of Greek Week, the Chariot races. The 20 teams will race two at a time, from the starting point in front of Hoch Auditorium down Jayhawk Blvd. around the Chi Omega fountain, and back to the starting point. The winner will be determined by the best time in the race. Civil Engineering Professor Ross E. McKinney, professor of Civil Engineering, will speak to Phi Sigma, honorary biological society. Tuesday at 12:00 noon, Room 247, Snow Hall, on "Some Aspects of Bio-Engineering." Kansan Classified Ads Get Results 1800 Students At High School Festival An estimated 1800 high school and junior high school students flooded the KU campus today to attend an Art Festival in Strong Hall and a Speech and Drama Festival in Murphy Hall. Students from 47 Kansas High Schools displayed various drawings which lined the second and third floor of Strong Hall. KU officials estimated that about 1,000 pieces of art are on display. About 1,500 students were to visit the art display, sponsored by the KU art department. About 300 other students from about 37 high schools in northeast Kansas flocked to the campus to participate in the District Speech and Drama Festival in Murphy Hall. The festival is part of the Kansas High School Activities Association's regular program. Persons and groups who earn a Class I rating are eligible to participate in the state festival later in the spring. Federal Boost Here WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Welfare Department estimated today that Kansas would get an additional federal outlay of $1,591,000 annually and Missouri $6,962,000 extra yearly as a result of the budget-boosting $140 million included in the welfare revision bill which passed the House of Representatives yesterday. Davidson Honored "I ATTRIBUTE A GOOD DEAL of the willingness on the part of the younger men to stay here in spite of attractive offers from elsewhere to the democratic administration of the department." (Continued from page 1) Asked to rank the KU chemistry department relative to others, Prof. Davidson said the KU department "can certainly be ranked among the best 20 in the country. I think that would be conservative." Prof. Davidson noted changes in the University during his 40 years here. "KU WAS REALLY OFF THE beaten path. Visitors from outside the Midwest were relatively rare. We are now much closer to the metropolitan centers in respect to communications." "The community is far less isolated than it used to be," he said, "There were only six miles of pavement between here and Kansas City when I came. Prof. Davidson joined the KU chemistry department staff in 1921 after receiving his Ph.D, from Columbia University, New York City. He was born in New York City and was in the Army Chemical Warfare Service from 1917 to 1919. He was married in 1925 and has two children and eight grandchildren. PROF. DAVIDSON SAID, "After over 40 years in Kansas I have become fairly well acclimated. Out here they say I talk like a New Yorker. When I go back there they say I talk like a Midwestern." Asked if he has noticed any difference between students in New York City and students here, Prof. Davidson said, "There is no appreciable difference between the best students here and the best students there. "The problem of discussion in class, which is practically non-existent at KU, is sometimes a problem there (New York City)." Prof. Davidson said most freshmen here are still somewhat awed by their surroundings, but students in New York City are awed by nothing. IF You can't make it to Kelly's or Cohen's come to O'BOOFIE'S at the JAYHAWK CAFE. Your favorite beverage will be served green all day St. Patrick's Day. JAYHAWK CAFE 1340 OHIO VOLUME DISCOUNT Kentucky Fried Chicken 20 whole chickens 20% OFF 20 chicken dinners 15% OFF Delivered ready to eat BIG BUY VI 3-8225 ENDS TONIGHT "Lover Come Back" STARTS SAT. Glenn Ford and Ingrid Thulin in IBANEZ' IMMORTAL CLASSIC "四 Horsemen of the Apocalypse" SHOWS SAT. AT 2—6:30—9:10 Granada TREATRE...Telephone 913-5005 MOVED OVER SAT. ONLY ROCK HUDSON DORIS DAY TONY RANDALL EDIE ADAMS • JACK OAKIE JACK KRUSCHEN FRIDAY — SATURDAY — SUNDAY "Revolt of Mamie Stover" and "In Love & War Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 60 PLUS TWO BONUS FEATURES SAT. Sophia Loren Nominated for Best Actress in "Two Women" STARTING SUNDAY Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 U.S. ROYAL MASTER The tire that pays for itself LONGER LIFE! Count on as much as 56% longer tire life. Thank POLY-BUTADIENE (the mileage-extender) for increased mileage. (Formerly used in truck tires only.) SAFEST TIRE! 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(Ofter expires in 10 days) BUY 2 TIRES $15 YOU GET OFF SALE PRICE! (Offer expires in 10 days) BUY 4 TIRES $32 YOU GET OFF SALE PRICE! (Offer expires in 10 days) EASYTERMS Lawrence Tire and Oil Co. 1000 MASS. PHONE VI 2-0247 Spring Fashion Edition UNIVERSITY Daily hansan LAWRENCE. KANSAS 59th Year, No. 105 Monday, March 19, 1962 French, Algerian Forces Join to Oppose Rebels By Joseph W. Grigg PARIS—(UPI)—Seven and a half years of war between France and Algerian Nationalists formally ended at noon today. They immediately joined forces to crush opposition by the Secret Army Organization (OAS) which is trying to keep Algeria French. The OAS struck the first blow with a massive general strike that wrapped the major cities of Algeria in tomb-like silence. It was like the calm before the storm. French officials and Algerian nationalists alike foresaw a bloody struggle still ahead before real peace could be achieved in the big north African land. A cease fire was signed yesterday between French officials and Algerian rebels to go into effect at noon today (5 a.m. CST). IT MEANT THE formal end of fighting between the French army and Moslem guerrillas which has bled France of more than $15 billion and cost the lives of 17,250 French soldiers, 141,000 Algerian rebels and 200,000 civilians. It meant that before the year is out Algerians will have a chance to establish an independent nation ruled by Moslems. French newspapers cheered it. French government officials and Algerian rebel leaders expressed satisfaction. But the leadership of the European extremists in Algeria vowed to fight on to destroy the pact and try to keep Algeria French. A real peace for Algeria seemed A real peace for Algeria seemed to be a thing well into the future. THE OUTLAWED European OAS formed a new "resistance council" headed by former Gen. Raoul Salan to continue the fight against the independent, Moslem-ruled Algeria. This established the new battle lines. In effect, the cease-fire proclaima- (Continued on page 8) (Continued on page 8) Weather Spring-like weather returned to Kansas Sunday,following a gradual warmup over the western part of the state the latter part of last week. Balmy weather will continue for the next few days with intermittent showers and thunderstorms prevailing over the southeast and extreme eastern parts of the state. Board of Regents Member Calls J-School a 'Disgrace' A member of the State Board of Regents charged Friday that the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information at the University of Kansas is "a disgrace." Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and KSU President James A. McCain appeared at the meeting to oppose Austin's motion. Whitley Austin, Salina publisher and board member, introduced a resolution at a board meeting which would have reduced the KU school of journalism to a department and placed the Kansas State University department within the English department. The motion was tabled. "WE SHOULD LOOK to your school for leadership but we're not getting it." Austin told the chancellor. "The journalism school is a disgrace. It hurts me to say I have any connection with a journalism school like we run. "Visiting lecturers come to the school once then wash their hands of the thing. We need quality. I've had lots of experience with your graduates," he continued, "and those who graduate in journalism fail in other disciplines. We do not have competent instruction at the school today. Some teachers are good, but there are many who are not." "I would hate to snuff out the career opportunities we've now of- J-School Wins Award The KU School of Journalism was the highest scoring university in the February feature writing competition of the William Randolph Hearst Foundation national contest. Fred Zimmerman, Lawrence junior, placed second in the individual competition based on an interview with a Negro student, Moses Gunn. Arthur C. Miller, Pittsburg junior, placed 16th with an interview with John Ise, professor emeritus. The KU school was named the nation's top journalism school last year by a board of independent judges in the first Hearst Foundation awards competition. be made without consideration by the department and school heads involved and consultation with faculty members. He emphasized that the matter was brought to the board's attention without his recommendation. He discounted Austin's theory that journalism instruction would have been given more prestige by making the school a department. fering in technical journalism," President McCain told the Regents. "Journalism's prestige has been elevated by its being a separate school," Wescoe said. "I'm not convinced your proposal would increase the quality of instruction." CHANCELLOR WESCOE told the board he felt the move should not He indicated that he felt the matter should have been discussed with him before being proposed before the board. He said it struck him, "like a bolt out of the blue." AUSTIN SAID HE was trying to help the school by concentrating journalism professional instruction within the state at the state university. The school was named the outstanding school of journalism last year by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation. The award is one of the most prized recognitions given to (Continued on page 12) HILTON CITY, CO. - The Rev. Eugene O'Connor, the founder of St. John's Catholic Church in Hilton City, said Wednesday that he will be on hand to help students and staff with the challenges of the pandemic. Torch Lighter Opens Greek Week - WILLIAM DOTSON. Jamestown senior and member of the KU track team, lights the torch on top of the Chi Omega fountain after he and seven other track men carried a similar torch in a relay race from Topeka to Lawrence. The event opened Greek Week. Sixteen fraternities participated in chariot races. Phi Kappa Sigma wen the races. Sigma Chi and Tau Kappa Epsilon placed second and third respectively. Greek Week ends Sunday. Wescoe States Views on Bias By Dennis Bowers and Walt Blackledge Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe told more than 350 students and faculty members last night that individual action, not University pressure, constitutes the best way of dealing with discriminatory fraternity clauses at KU. He participated in a two-hour open meeting of the Human Rights Committee. The meeting, held in the Kansas Union, attracted both fraternity members and unaffiliated students, as well as the faculty members. Thirty minutes after the meeting formally ended, at least a dozen small clusters of three or five persons were still squabbling under the pink, blue and white lights of the Big Eight Room. Chancellor Wescoe sparked discussion with opening comments restating his position on discriminatory clauses and what the University will do about them. He said: "I do not believe in restrictive clauses. I believe restrictive clauses should be removed, and as promptly as possible. I don't think any man should be judged primarily on the basis of what his color may be or on the basis of what his religion may be." * * THE CHANCELLOR expressed his feeling that orders and rules issued by the University would not be the best solution to the problem. "Discrimination rests in what a man thinks and what a man feels, and no written word can change it," he said. He said fraternities on the KU campus were not firmly bound by restrictive clauses in national constitutions. He said: "There is, to the best of my knowledge, no chapter on this campus that cannot waive that clause if it desires to do so at the present time, without any further action by the student body, the faculty or the University and its Board of Regents in any way." Chancellor Wescoe again stated his belief that those who oppose discrimination can best fight it by the examples they set for other students. He said: In speaking about the criticism directed toward fraternities which depicts them as "miserable," the chancellor said he believed in the fraternal system. He added: "NO ONE has ever come to me on this campus to speak about this matter or anything closely related to it, with one exception, who has ever lived in a truly interracial situation. I think this is regrettable." "I believe it has made positive contributions, not only to this University but to other universities, not only from the standpoint of student housing, but also of social life and other matters on this campus as well as others across the country." $$ * * * $$ HE SAID critics of fraternities seem to be talking of the organizations as they were in the past. There is a need to recognize what they are today, he said. "Most of them have changed. They really aren't any longer the happy, social clubs that they used to be. Most of them now, fortunately for the academic situation, are dedicated to scholarship," Chancellor Wescoe said. When Chancellor Wescoe had outlined his position, Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and HRC chairman, asked for discussion and questions from students and faculty members present. Don Warner, Topeka junior and president of Wesley Foundation, said to the chancellor, "The universities of Wisconsin and Colorado have brought pressure to bear on Greek organizations to remove their discriminatory clauses. I would like to know how much you think these universities have avoided discrimination more than the University of Kansas." Chancellor Wescoe answered, "I think it fair to say, the reasons that some of these fraternities have changed these clauses and constitutions relate to the actions of the universities. But I think that the very changing of those words, in essence, changed nothing." HE CONTINUED, "I don't think if you go to the University of Wisconsin or the University of Colorado you would see any difference between it and the University of Kansas. I talked to the presidents of both those institutions and I can say that their situation is the same that ours is." Brian O'Heron, Lawrence senior, asked the chancellor if he did not think his decision on refusing to recognize outside housing who discriminate because of race or creed was contrary to his stand on making a similar decision with fraternities who have discriminatory clauses. Chancellor Wescoe said that sororities and fraternities were private organizations and that they do not advertise for members. He said that he does not think his stands are contrary to each other. Harry Shaffer, assistant professor of economics, said, "As I understand what you have said, the University thinks that discrimination in fraternities and sororities is wrong but that you would do nothing about this. Am I to believe that the University also believes that other immoral acts are perfectly all right in fraternities and sororities and that the University would not do anything about other immoral acts?" CHANCELLOR WESCOE answered, "Mr. Shaffer, that's a specious argument. I don't know whether you discriminate or not and I don't think you know whether I do or not either. I don't think you know if these youngsters who are members of fraternities and sororites discriminate either. They have the right in my opinion to select those with whom they wish to live, as you do. (Continued on page 12) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 19. 1962 An Excellent Action Last week the All Student Council approved the establishment of a Current Events Committee and immediately appropriated funds to bring Edward Shaw, a member of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, to KU to debate with a member of the Truth About Cuba Committee. THE FACT THAT the ASC ignored past tirades against bringing controversial speakers to campus should also be noted. The Current Events Committee must not become so fearful of criticism that it brings to campus only those speakers who have pleasant and acceptable opinions. These moves represented quick and effective action on a worthwhile proposal and the ASC deserves the commendation of the entire university community for its actions. If the Current Events Committee follows this fine example, it will be a vital and beneficial group. This does not mean that every speaker who is invited to campus should be a fire-breathing radical. But certainly the university community should be given the opportunity to listen to a substantial number of controversial speakers. especially those whose viewpoints are not given adequate attention in the press. Despite the alarmists' continuing cries against allowing speakers with unpopular views to be heard, the holders of controversial opinions should be allowed to speak and to question current ideas and opinions. This type of activity has a definite place in the educational process. It prevents it from becoming stagnant and it serves to point out the weak points in popularly held opinions. IT IS OBVIOUS that the ASC will probably be criticized for inviting the Cuban speakers. This is to be expected. There are far too many unenlightened groups who believe in freedom of speech only for those who agree with them. The ASC and its Current Events Committee should ignore such ridiculous criticism from the radicals and continue with the excellent work they have begun. -William H. Mullins letters to the editor Kansan Editorial Castigated (Editor's note: Ordinarily no comment is made on letters criticizing the Kansan's editorial policies. However, the violence of this particular attack leads us to point out that the letter is entirely a subjective tirade.) Editor: I cannot help but view with despair some of the extremes to which the Daily Kansan will go to fill a newspaper page. One obvious example is the editorial page (on which this will probably appear, causing other students to complain just as I am). Since the large newspapers across the nation usually have several editorsit is apparently assumed that the UDK must also have a number of editorials so it can be "just like the big guys". Well, this is acceptable and possibly even desirable provided the editorials were of sufficient quality to make worthwhile reading. But unfortunately the majority are not. TAKE FOR example the editorial entitled Model U.N. Dissension, appearing in the Thursday, March 8 UDK. The author was evidently having difficulties finding a subject to discuss which he knew something about and could present an intelligent viewpoint supported by factual material. So he decided upon something, namely the purpose and "philosophy" of the Model U.N., on which he could not satisfy the above qualifications. THE AUTHOR of the article appears to be either unwilling to recognize the international espionage carried on by both the East and the West or is unaware of one of the major objectives of the Model U.N. that being realism. I cannot accept the former as being true so I must assume it is the latter. He stated that "the philosophy behind the Model U.N. is to give its participants a better awareness and understanding of world government." I will agree with this but must dissent when he says "it's doubtful these adolescent espionage activities (He is referring to the alleged spying by the Russian, delegation.) go very far in promoting this awareness." When the Model U.N. was originally organized it was conceived to be almost an exact replica of the real U.N., with the exception of a few essential modifications, such as the organization of the Security Council, debate procedures, etc. It was ideally supposed to consist of the same number of nations as the original. It was stressed to the delegates that they should strive to disregard their American prejudices and make an honest attempt to assume the attitudes and ideals of the governments of their respective countries. In this manner the Model U.N. was imagined to achieve a high degree of similarity to the real U.N. INTERNATIONAL espionage is certainly a fact of life, as evidenced by the recent U.S.-Soviet Union exchange of spies. Therefore in order to achieve realism espionage should exist in the Model U.N. It adds interest and excitement to the tedious research and preparation of speeches prior to the General Assembly meeting. It not only increases the enthusiasm of the delegates but it also arouses interest from the non-participating students. And most importantly, it helps the delegates assume the roles of foreign ambassadors and make the Model U.N. the stimulating and enjoyable experience that it should be. Hence I would like to ask the author of the previously mentioned article to please restrict his tutorials to issues on which he is at least reasonably well-versed and which are open to valid criticisms. For instance, why not write a critique on a more controversial issue such as the All Student Council? Now there is a controversial subject! Gil Hall Gil Hall Bartlesville, Okla. junior U.N. delegation chairman * * Criticism For Wesley Editor: I am writing in regard to the published letter of the Wesley foundation executive council stating that the administration has an "imperative" responsibility to assist in the abolishment of Greek discriminatory clauses. This sort of naive view springs from any of three errors. The first error is the inability to distinguish between fact and opinion. That segregation of races in regard to public facilities is illegal is a fact. That a private organization is wrong in practicing or condoning discrimination on the basis of race or religion is an opinion. The administration has no imperative to enforce the opinions of anyone on fraternities. INDEED, THE history of trying to achieve good conscience by "assisting" in the abolishment of "evils" is not a happy one. The prohibition law ushered in the era of big time gangsterism in this country, and the laws against gambling provide crime with one of its most lucrative industries. Brotherhood cannot be forced upon those who do not think it extends beyond their own self-constructed definition of it. There are always many who are willing to abridge the rights of others on the basis of personal opinion. The second error is a religious one. Those who feel they have the backing of God in their effort to make men obey the golden rule are as out of date as the crusades. Jesus Christ says he stands at the door of a man's heart and knocks; he does not break down the door. Paul says that love is patient and kind and does not insist on its own way. (I assume that the Wesley foundation is acting in love.) So, writing letters and passing resolutions are easy, but as Christians, the Wesley foundation should know that only God can give a man the love to accept another man as a brother. THE THIRD ERROR is laziness. So, the letter of the Wesley foundation represents a retreat from reality. They cannot think that prejudice is such a weak force that it can be effectively dealt with by the administration (which does not exist in a university primarily as a coercive entity). How quickly the writers of the reply to the Chancellor's letter clear themselves of any possible charge of discriminatory attitudes; how quickly they condemn the fraternities' attitudes. It is a good theory to say that mere racial difference is no basis for determining incompatibility between two people, and yet it is a great psychological problem to some people. Doubtless the forcing of fraternities to remove all discriminatory clauses would be a great victory for the reformers, but it would only be a paper victory defeating straw men. If you can't force righteousness, you can force sterile unwilling conformity. A fine way to build the new Jerusalem! I see here no vital encounter between man and man, but only the desire to invoke the big brotherly hand of the administration; no real concern for others, but only self-righteousness, no satisfaction with real personal gains in the area of brotherhood, but only the childish insistence that all visible trace of discrimination be swept away in a twinkling. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Michael L. Clark Deerfield, Ill. graduate student Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded new year became biweekly 1904, 2006. telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office United Dept. of Police, Accts Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service NY, News service; United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the weekdays and Sundays, University holiday and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ___ Managing Editor NEWS DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Mullins — Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache . Business Manager WE PREPARED FOR A TEST! "GRAB A PENCI MISS GRAVES — IVE JUST FOUND AN EXCELLENT ESSAY QUESTION!" Sound and Fury The Cuban Situation Last week Fidel Castro announced to the Cuban nation that it would be necessary to ration food and medical supplies. This marks a tragic moment in the course of events which have brought this country to the brink of economic chaos. Cuba is isolated. Her people are under siege. The Pearl of the Antilles is being ground to dust. What has brought this about? Why, when the rest of the world prospers, must the Cuban eat less tomorrow than he did yesterday? What has he done to deserve this? THE ANSWER is that he has done nothing. The United States is unhappy with his government and is trying to get rid of it. Thus the United States has placed an embargo upon Cuba. All trade has stopped and Cuba is caught in an economic vise. What is to be gained is as yet undetermined. What is being lost, to the Cuban at least, is very real. And so Fidel has announced the need for rationing. Herberto Sein, a Mexican educator who recently visited our campus, has called Cuba a "martyr nation." That her government is popular cannot be doubted: What other type of government would dare place guns and ammunition in the hands of the governed? And indeed, what can our policy of starvation do but unite the whole nation more closely together against a common enemy? What is to be hoped for by our policy? No doubt the same thing the Romans sought when they made martyrs of the Christians. THE UNITED STATES is wrong. We are wrong. We can gain nothing but hatred and fear by this embargo. By strangling Cuba we strangle ourselves. By depriving others of the right of self-government, of self-expression, we renounce that right ourselves. The world will not always agree with us. We must protect that right. We must protect Cuba's right. We must stop the embargo and stop it now! For if Castro is killed or overthrown by this policy the United States will be held a murderer of her own values. -A Troubled Observer George Eliot must have looked around her and decided that life was a grimly deterministic matter. She was writing her novels sometime before Darwinism had become influential, yet "The Mill on the Floss" is as Darwinian as many novels that appeared 50 years later. This is a big book, a long book, a deservedly important book. It was one of the earlier landmarks in realistic fiction, and it paints a picture of English society that was far from the romantic side so many enjoyed reading about. THE MILL ON THE FLOSS, by George Eliot. Doubleday Dolphin, $1.45. Books in Review IT IS A TRAGIC STORY, THAT OF A BROTHER and sister relationship—Tom and Maggie Tulliver and Dorlcote Mill on the river Floss. Maggie is romantic and dreaming, a rebel of sorts; Tom is dull, plodding and uninspired, but arrogant and domineering. When Maggie falls in love with Philip Wakem it is a relationship that Tom cannot sanction. But neither can the rest of society sanction it, and Maggie is socially ostracized. Finally she and her brother meet their deaths in a raging flood on the Floss. Neither Tom nor Maggie was able to adjust to life, and so both perished. This seems to be what George Eliot is saying. The fit survive, and Tom and Maggie are not of the fittest. It is a grim view, and one that had numerous parallels in the literature that followed it 100 years ago.—Calder M. Pickett, Professor of Journalism Monday, March 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan Tape Page 3 KU Peace Corps to Go to Costa Rica By Ron Gallagher Peace Corps volunteers selected for the secondary education project in Costa Rica will be the first Americans ever to be in continuous contact with the people of the area the program will operate in, according to Thomas Gale, assistant professor of history. Prof. Gale recently returned from a two week trip to Costa Rica which took him to 13 of the 15 towns where Peace Corps volunteers will establish programs. He is working with George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and John P. Augelli, professor of geography and chairman of the Latin American area studies, to set up a Peace Corps plan which will be under KU's direction. "Americans don't come to these towns." Prof. Gale said in reference to the communities that the program will be set up in. "These towns would be, without exception, extremely interesting places to live in." HE EXPLAINED that the only Americans that ever appear in these areas are usually businessmen who come in for a day or two then leave after their business has been transacted. Prof. Gale said that the volunteers will live, "modestly but without John Augelli, chairman of the Latin American area studies and professor of geography said at the Current Events Forum Friday that KU is the best equipped university in the U.S. to carry on a Peace Corps program in Costa Rica. Teachers Needed In Costa Rica The forum discussion centered on a short-term Costa Rican program designed to increase the capacities for secondary school teachers, improve the English program, and aid in the improvement of the teaching methods in that area. Thomas Gale, professor of history, will direct the program to begin in October. He and Professor Augelli expressed their interest in obtaining as many KU seniors and alumni as possible to fill the 30 to 35 openings. The newly established program has been developed by KU with the help of the University of Costa Rica and the ministry of education. Professor Gale explained that the dropout rate in the Costa Rican secondary schools is rapidly increasing. The people feel that their high schools are slowly deteriorating. It will be the job of volunteers to help stop this deterioration. Peace Corps volunteers should be prepared to teach English, the basic sciences, or assist in counseling and guidance. All will need to possess a knowledge of the Spanish language. Accepted applicants will serve for two years. At the end of the first term, they will be transferred to another school in the area. Two or three volunteers will be assigned to each of the 15 schools, all relatively isolated from the central capital. Approximately 200 to 600 students attend the individual schools. Pool-Beach Meeting Set for Wichita For the first time in seven years the University of Kansas Pool and Beach conference will not be held on the KU campus. Instead it will be in Wichita March 23-24 at the Central YMCA. The conference is sponsored by the Kansas Swimming Pool Association. The Kansas State Board of Health. The University of Kansas Department of Physical Education and Recreation and the University of Kansas Extension. Topics to be discussed are a practical approach to state regulation, life guard behavior, new chemicals for disinfection, operation and maintenance of mechanical equipment, records and reports, replacement of personnel and safety. dangerous hardships." He mentioned that hot water will probably not be available and that it will be necessary to go without some of the other conveniences found in most American homes. He said that the experience of the KU exchange program with Costa Rica has shown that Americans can easily adapt to the living conditions found there. Prof. Gale said that the Costa Ricans are anxious for the start of the Peace Corps program. He said the success of the KU exchange program in Costa Rica has made the Peace Corps plan easy to sell. PROF. GALE is enthusiastic about the success of the KU exchange program with Costa Rica and is convinced that the Peace Corps can be just as successful. Almost everyone living in the capital city of San Jose and some of the other larger cities of Costa Rica is aware of the KU exchange program, he said. There is not a bus driver who does not know about the program, he said. "In fact, there is one bus driver who never collects fares from KU people." He described the Costa Ricans as friendly people who are eager to meet and talk with Americans. Costa Ricans are impressed and very helpful when an American attempts to communicate with them in their own language, he said. Dean Waggoner made the initial steps toward the establishment of the Peace Corps program which will be directed by KU. When he was in Costa Rica last summer he talked with Costa Rican officials to see if such a plan was wanted and to find out what kind of program would be most useful. THE LAST fall, Prof. Gale did the leg work necessary to find out what type of program the Costa Ricans preferred. Upon his return to the United States he worked with Dean Waggoner and Prof. Augelli to outline the basic program for presentation to the Peace Corps. versity thought up and decided the Costa Ricans should have." Prof. Gale said. It is essentially a plan that the Costa Ricans think is good. "This is not a plan that the Uni- "We think we can run a very successful program because of the excellent language program that we have and the large number of faculty members who are acquainted with Costa Rica. This is the kind of a program that will reach a lot of people," he commented. COACH HOUSE OUR DOOR IS OPEN TO SPRING Inside you'll find Hip Huggers, Skorts, Kilts, and much more in Campus Wear COACH HOUSE Clothes For Town and Country 1237 Oread — On the Campus OLD MISSION INN INN VI 3-9737 for the Best hamburgers in town! 1904 Mass. it's by PURITAN Contested by Good Sheathing CHEMISTRAND NYLON $8.95 Automatic Wash and Wear Fabulous Ban-Lon Full Fashion Brookview Here's the casual shirt that looks like a million and stays that way! . . because Puritan knits it for us from wonderful, absorbent Ban-Lon yarn which will not shrink, sag or fuzz, and washes without blocking. Fully-fashioned, beautifully detailed, handsomely masculine . . right down to the rich, flattering colors. [ ] See the Brookview on Page 29 of the April Issue of PLAYBOY THE Town Shop BOWNTOWN THE University Shop ON THE HILL Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 19, 1962 Limeliters Quiz UDK Reporter By Pam Christiansen "The auditorium hasn't been this crowded since they inaugurated the new Chancellor," a woman said at the Limeliters concert in Hoch Auditorium Saturday night. It was intermission time and the capacity audience was reluctant to take a break. Backstage, however, the Limeliters seemed glad for the chance to relax and eat dinner. Lou Gottlieb, bass man, nodded and turned to the reporter, "Would you like some cole slaw?" "THEY EVEN SOLD out the programs," said Glenn Yarbrough, guitar-playing tenor, as he held a half-eaten hamburger. The reporter shook her head and asked, "Don't you get tired of eating on the run and touring all the time?" Alex Hassilev stopped picking at his banjo and said, "Sure, the only sane reason for going on tour is to make money. Why, are you thinking of going on tour?" AND THAT WAS HOW the interview began. Every time the reporter asked a question, the Limeliters shot back with a question of their own and the reporter began wondering who was interviewing whom. "We were talking to a foreign student the other day," Gottlieb said, "and he said we are very popular in Uruguay." "Why don't you go abroad, then," the reporter asked. "No one has asked us, that's why," Gottlieb quipped. "Tours are very self-defeating." Hassilev said. He added that once a group performs in a city, their chances of going back to that city and getting as good a response are very slim. "DO YOU COLLECT the songs you sing?" the reporter asked Gottlieb. "No, I don't have time for that," he answered. "Like that song about Vicki Duggan, a woman in Berkeley, California wrote the words to that." "I could just see you out in the foot hills with a tape recorder," Yarbrough laughed. "What kind of music do you like?" Hassilev asked the reporter. SLIGHTLY TAKEN ABACK, she answered. "Jazz, mostly." The conversation turned to jazz, then. Gottlieb began mimicking Louie Armstrong, using the latest jazz jargon. "Don't you like jazz?" the reporter asked him. Raising his eyebrows, Gottlieb answered in a faked English accent, "My dear, I have been a jazz fan all my life." "Why did you go into folk singing, then?" she asked. "BECAUSE I'M NOT a very good piano player and because there wasn't any work," he quipped. "I did work in a California ballroom for a while, though," he said. "I got tired of looking at the way people danced there, though," he said as he imitated the dancers. Then the lights in the auditorium blinked and Gottlieb said to his partners, "Well, let's go out there and give them thar people some more of this here fine folk music." Yarbrough and Hassilev laughed, Gottlieb winked at the reporter, and they went back on stage to sing more of their satirical folk songs. Before they could leave the stage again, they were called back for two encores and received a standing ovation. Beef Stew on Thursdays DES MOINES, Iowa — (UPI) — Things are looking up in the culinary department at City Jail. Instead of bean soup seven days a week, prisoners will get beef stew on Thursdays. Double Edge Razor Blades Finest Surgical Steel, honed in oil. Full money back guarantee. 25 — 30 c 100 — 85 c 200 — $1.50 500 — $3.30 1000 — $5.75 Postpald. Packed five blades to package, 20 packages to carton. C.O.D. orders accepted. Postcard brings general merchandise catalog. EMERSON COMPANY 406 South Second Alhambra, California Model UN May Admit Red China Says Piggot The chairman of the Model United Nations Communist Bloc told the Arab bloc yesterday that Red China's admission to the UN is inevitable. The Communist bloc leader, Pat Piggot, Kansas City, Mo., senior, spoke at a scheduled Arab bloc meeting at the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity House. "The power of the UN no longer lies with Communist or Western blocs," he said. "The power is now with the African, Asian and Arab members." PIGGOT SAID if enough of these nations banded together, they could easily put the Red China proposal through. Dan Patz, Mission junior and chairman of the Jordan delegation, asked Piggot if there was a split between the Soviet Union and Red China. Patz said he understood that the Soviet Union was demanding payment from Red China for the Korean War debt. "There is no split," Piggot said. "We are merely putting pressure on Red China to make her pay money that she owes. The same pressure technique has been used by the United States in collecting money from Britain." HARRY BRETSCHIEDER, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore and chair- Hunsinger Motor Co. 922 Mass. German Cars BMW - NSU Applications for the nine SUA Board Chairmen are available in the Union. The applications must be returned by March 30. WX17015- DRAKES From Simple BAKES It's to Decorated CAKES Decorated CAKES Decorated CAKES for BAKES Portraits of Distinction man of the Tunisia delegation, asked Piggot why Tunisia, which is predominantly Islam, should support Red China, a Communist nation that forbids religion. Stop in the next time you're down town and have a snack in our fully equipped coffee shop. There is a difference. 907 Mass. VI 3-0561 "Communism does not deny all religion," Piggot said. "The Communist doctrine does not recognize religion, but it does allow religious organizations to exist." 美术培训 HIXON STUDIO Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Counterfeiters at Large! ut ly ng ed suit. Just about everybody seems to be making a so-called "natural shoulder" suit. But just anybody can't make them right. It needs high-skilled tailoring to bring out the authentic classic...the kind that is part and parcel of our MADISONAIRE by "Varsity-Town". Styled with the unpadded, slightly sloped shoulder...approved straight lines of the shorter jacket...the pleatless, slim trousers. MADISONAIRE "Naturally Yours" by Varsity-Town Clothes Ober's Phone VI 3-1951 841 Mass. Red China Expert Pringsheim Has International Background Page 5 By Jerry Musil German by birth, American by choice and Oriental by education. This is KU's new Communist China expert and instructor in the political science department, Klaus Pringsheim. He is a tall young man with unruly black hair, sparkling green eyes and an easy smile which say, "Let's talk." Born in Berlin, Germany, in 1923, he and his family left there for political reasons when Hitler began his rise to power. After spending six years in England, his family moved to Japan where his father became symphony conductor at the Imperial Academy of Music. They remained in Japan during World War II. His uncle, Thomas Mann, the author, was a leader of an anti-Fascist movement abroad and his family was known to be in sympathy with the movement. The Germans wanted revenge and denounced him as a spy to the Japanese government. BEING A German citizen, he was drafted by the Army of the Third Reich, but refused to return to Germany because of political reasons. The Nazi regime started desertion proceedings against him and sentenced him to death in absentia. Because of his father's position with the Imperial Japanese Government, he was viewed as a political refugee, even though Japan was an ally of Germany. He was arrested in 1944 by the Japanese and imprisoned until after the war. Shortly after his arrest the government began investigating the German charges. "THE ONLY reason I came out alive was my extremely good luck," he said. The spy trial was about to begin when the first prosecutor in the case and all the evidence went up in flames from an American bomb. The second prosecutor was married and had three children. He feared a fate similar to that of the first prosecutor—death. He resigned and took his family to the mountains. The third prosecutor began investigating, but was interrupted by the end of the war. After being released, Mr. Pringsheim worked for Gen. MacArthur as a translator and censor of the Japanese press. (Mr. Pringsheim speaks six languages: Chinese, Russian, French, Japanese, English and German. He speaks the latter three best.) Monday, March 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan HE CAME TO THE United States in 1946 and went to live with his uncle, Thomas Mann, in Southern California. He worked at the University of Southern California translating Chinese and Japanese books, but could not make the grade as a student. He then had a series of false starts—taxi cab driver and salesman, man. In 1948 he joined the Army where he taught Japanese to officers and enlisted men in the language school in Monterey, California, for three years. After another false start as a writer of technical handbooks for the aircraft industry, he enrolled at UCLA at the age of 30. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree in political science in two and one-half years and decided to go to graduate school. When the GI Bill benefits ran out. Mr. Pringsheim's luck came through again. He received a Ford Foundation grant which enabled him to continue his studies. HE RECEIVED five consecutive Ford grants from 1956 to 1961. He has received his Masters of Arts S. H. C. S. degree from Columbia University in New York and has partially completed his dissertation for his doctorate. He credits the Ford help to his concentration on the Chinese Communist area. His dissertation is a study of the Communist Youth League on the China mainland. He arrived at KU after spending two years in Hong Kong where he did most of his research for his dissertation. Klaus Pringsheim Mr. Pringsheim has praised the KU administration for its foresight in developing an East Asian area program. "Those of us here already intend to work very hard to put KU on the map in East Asian studies," he continued. "IF THE POLICY continues, the University of Kansas should soon be one of the few institutions which has a full staff of East Asian specialists," he said. He said he gets all his material from the American Consulate General in Hong Kong. The Consulate translates the most important articles from the Chinese Communist press as a free service for governmental offices and scholars. He said he has collected about $2,000 worth of Communist periodicals dating from the beginning of the regime in 1949. 1c SALE Tues. thru Fri., 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. For every 10c drink purchased, the Big Buy offers any other drink for one penny. 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College Bowl Excites Students Two, four-man teams sat at the front of the room, awaiting the moderator's question. Spectators bit fingernails, twiced in their seats. By Ben Marshall "Name as many authors of the Federalist Papers' as you can." "Left," shouted a member of the team to the moderator's left. "JOHN JAY," said one man. "Alexander Hamilton and James Madison," added one of his teammates. "Go ahead, left." A young woman on the opposing panel tried to light a cigarette. Her hands shook. She succeeded with her second match, inhaling deeply on the Winston. Her team was one of 32 competing in the first round of the College Bowl contest, sponsored by the College Intermediary Board, at the Kansas Union yesterday afternoon. "Some of those questions were impossible," said one woman, after her team had lost a close match. Contestants answered questions on world literature, opera, politics and current events, history, science, and many other topics. More questions were missed than were answered correctly. THE RULES followed the nationally-televised College Bowl program rules. Two teams were given a 10-point tosup question. The team answering that question correctly was given a bonus question worth additional points. If one team missed the tosup question, its opponents had an opportunity to answer. All questions had to be answered within a 10-second time limit. Each match lasted 30 minutes. Results of the first-round competition were: Foster 205, Lewis 85; Templin 235, Kappa Kappa Gamma 125; Pearson 175, Alpha Phi 165; Joseph R. Pearson 385, Sigma Phi Epsilon 70; Alpha Tau Omega 205, Grace Pearson 110; Gertrude Sellards Pearson 220, Douthart 130; Phi Delta Theta 265, Alpha Chi Omega 185; Alpha Kappa Lambda 410, Alpha Phi Alpha 65; Delta Tau Delta 245, Acacia 50; Peta Bhi 225, Alpha Omicron Pi 115; Beta Theta Pi 260, Miller 220; Delta Upsilon 170, Sigma Alpha Epsilon 105; Sigma Nu 305, Jolliffe 50; Stephenson 180, Chi Omega 135; Gamma Phi Beta 285, Corbin 185 and Corbin-GSP Counselors 265, Kappa Alpha Theta 245. Anderson said that questions in the second round of competition on Sunday, April 15, would be balanced more closely between science and the humanities. He added that slide pictures and records will be used if possible. FOLLOWING the first-round action, Charles Anderson, Osage City senior and College Intermediary Board chairman, said, "The Board is very happy with the student and faculty support of this project." Anderson said that a college bowl contest similar to the one currently being held at KU has recently been completed at the University of Missouri. The ultimate goal of the KU Bowl contest is to arrange a contest between the KU and MU champions. Anderson said Missouri has been contacted, but no word from Missouri concerning the possibility of such an arrangement has been received. Sharon Scoville, Kansas City junior; Betty Shultz, O'Neil, Neb, junior; and Bonnie Ward, Topeka, sophomore, Alpha Phi. Jeanne Howell, Tulsa, Okla, senior, Chi Omega; June Owens, Altamont junior, Delta Gamma; Sheril Murrow, Topeka sophomore, and Betty Jackson, Lakewood, Colo, junior, Gamma Phi Beta, and Mary Lynn Cooper, Prairie Village sophomore, Kappa Alpha Theta. Nancy Borel, Falls Church, Va., junior, and Judy Strafer, Shawnee Mission sophomore, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Joan Burger, Prairie Village freshman; Nikki Lewis, Overland Park freshman, and Mary Tramposh, Lenexa freshman, Gertrude Sellards Pearson. The application deadline for the Miss Lawrence Pageant contest entries is Monday, April 9. Joan Berry, Carlisle, Pa., sophomore, and Linda Epps, Tampa, Fla. sophomore, Lewis. Applications for Men's Residence Hall Course of the Dean of Men. 282 Strong Hall. All applications must be returned by March 30. Business information contact the Dean of Men. Official Bulletin The Miss Lawrence finals will be at 8 p.m. April 20 in the Lawrence High School auditorium. **Peace Corps:** Mr. Arthur Massolo of the University of Oklahoma will be available on Wednesday to visit with students interested in the Corps. The lunch will be at 4 p.m., 306 Kansas Union Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11:45-12 noon; Saturdays, 4-5 and 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd March 20 Mrs. Helen S. Andres, hours of hours of grad. work), Cambell, Calif. (Severson) Teacher Interviews: March 20 — Robert Shreve, Supt., Cherry Creek Dist. Englewood, Colorado. cherry Creek Dist. Englewood, Colorado Public Schools, Tucumcil, New Mexico TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion & Breakfast: 7 a.m., Canterbury House. Nursing Club: 7 p.m., Fraser Dining Hall. Public Health Nursing. Russkii Klub sobiraetsa vo vtorlnik, 20-vuk romahsas ahasov, romonwood Ro marmara Kansas Uusan govorit' a predmete; Kommunizim i Rusoise Messanstvo. Ve uzachushychile Rusoise Messanstvo. Ve uzachushychile Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Augelli Says Church Can Fight Communism In Latin America WEDNESDAY People-to-People Forum: 4 p.m. Forum Bibliotheca Medica: 10 a.m. for students for students planning to visit Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. All stu- dents welcome. Horst Haselmann in charge. John P. Augelli, professor of geography and chairman of the Latin-American Area Committee, said last night that a religious revolution in Latin America would help fight Communism. Prof. Augelli was speaking at Newman Club on "Communism, Protestantism and Catholicism in Latin America." "Social, class, and racial friction is present in Latin America and Communism is feeding on that friction. The Church's hold on the people has been weakened," he said. "Communism has become essentially a religion for many Latin Americans. Many of them remain religious and still become Communists." Prof. Augelli pointed out that social reform cannot be bought with money. "It's essentially a problem of blood, sweat and tears." "There is a need for a strong religious revival to fill a vacuum which has existed for a long time in the lower classes in Latin America. "Communism offers the Latin Americans a promise. Whether Communism comes through with its promises or not is immaterial—the emotional pounding has a strong effect," he emphasized. "Social reforms in conjunction with a religious revitalization could help hold back Communism." Gunn to Attend NSF Seminar At Northwestern University James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, will be one of 60 science public information specialists from the midwest attending a seminar in science communications at Northwestern University Wednesday and Thursday. The seminar, which is supported by the National Science Foundation, is designed to aid communications specialists in promoting the understanding of science by the layman. Some of the top scientists who make news will be on the program. Chinese Banned from Buses PRETORIA. South Africa — (UPI)—Chinese are not permitted to use transport services reserved for whites in this segregated South African city. Japanese are permitted to use white transport facilities in Johannesburg, 30 miles from here. THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: DON PICKARD Soon after his return from the Army two years ago, Don Pickard began managing a telephone public office in Chicago. Because of his skill in handling the public relations tasks of this job, Don was transferred to a new job in the Public Relations Department. Here his public office experience comes in very handy as he works with other departments of the company to promote the kind of service that lives up to customer expectations. Don Pickard of the Illinois Bell Telephone Company, and other young men like him in Bell Telephone Companies throughout the country, help bring the finest communications service in the world to a growing America. BELL SYSTEM CONSULTANTS IN MILITARY AND DEPARTMENTAL SERVICES BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES TELEPHONE MAN-OF-THE MONTH Monday, March 19. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Tau Sigma Program to End By Tom Winston The Tau Sigma dance program consisting of "Twas Never Thus" and "Hero Journey," has one thing to recommend it above all else: it runs almost exactly one hour, then stops. Tau Sigma is the dance fraternity sorority on campus, made up of persons interested in the dance. It is sponsored by Elizabeth Sherbon, instructor of physical education. It is disappointing to report that there is very little to rave about in the present program, which will play for the last time at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Experimental Theatre. THE PROGRAM HAS a fairly interesting script but lacks experienced dancers. Since KU has no department of ballet, except during the summer as part of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, the group consists—for the most part—of people merely interested in dance. The inter-residence hall dance held Friday night at Templin Hall was termed a "success" by James Cline, Rockford, Ill., freshman, and social chairman from Templin. However, there are a few bright spots in "Twas Never Thus" and "Hero Journey." The beatnik dance between Sarah Lutton, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, and Douglas Dechaire, Westmoreland senior, is lively and skillfully done. Mary Jean Cowell, St. Louis, Mo., junior, Earlier in the week controversy arose over the dance when the administration questioned plans for charging admission to the dance. The administration opposed the holding of fund raising dances in a residence hall. Templin Dance Called Success James G. Middleton, assistant to the dean of students and program director of dormitory supervision told representatives from Joseph R. Pearson, Templin, Carruth-O'Leary and Grace Pearson Halls that a state law forbids fund raising activities on state property. Mr. Middleton said the dance could be held in Templin if an admission was not charged. He also said the dance could be held in the Kansas Union by paying a rental fee. The Templin dormitory council decided to go ahead and hold the dance at Templin and ask for donations at the door. Residence halls have a $3.50 per man social fund to finance social functions. Cline said they collected $110 in donations. The band was guaranteed $130. Profits from the refreshments were $6. is a lith trickster in "Hero Journey." "We went in the hole $14," Cline stated. Ron Seney, Kansas City freshman, commands the most attention of the evening as the hero in "Hero Journey." He is graceful and agile and his facial expressions add much to a part fragile enough to be ludi- 7 Men Accept Trusteeships Six Kansans and one Texan have accepted William Allen White Foundation Trusteeships. Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information and director of the foundation, announced the new trustees as: Paul Allingham, publisher of the Atchison Globe; Sam R. Bloom, head of the Sam R. Bloom Advertising Agency, Dallas, Texas, and Alfred M. Landon, president of radio stations WREN, Topeka, KSCB, Liberal and KEDD, Dodge City, Landon is a former Kansas governor and 1936 Republican presidential candidate. The other trustees are Peter M. Macdonald, editor and publisher of the Hutchinson News; Larry Miller, general manager of the Kansas Press Association, Topeka; R. E. Robinson Jr., publisher of the St. Mary's Star, and Robert Wellington, editor of the Ottawa Herald. crows if not handled with the most scruppulous care. THE ONE REMAINING bright point is the script for "Twas Never Thus," written by Miss Sherbon and Mary Ann Smith, Merriam junior. It makes use of a speaking chorus that describes the action in verse. There are six scenes: "Helen of Troy," "Antony and Cleopatra," "Henry VIII," "Pocahontas and John Smith," "Carrie Nation." and "Beatniks." The scenes are set to music by Bach, Milhaud, Frescoboldi, Chavez, Prokoifieff and Cooper, respectively. Each of the scenes ends different from the way history tells it, hence, 'twas never thus. Experimental Theatre Presents Foreign Plays The three foreign plays comprising the program for Theatre International will be presented at 8 o'clock tonight and Wednesday night in the Experimental Theatre. The plays are Miguel de Cervantes" "The Magic Theatre," Tankred Dorst's "The Wall" and Jean Anouilh's "Humulus the Mute." The plays are Spanish, German and French, respectively. Tonight, "Humulus" will be presented in French, the other two in English. Wednesday night, all three will be presented in their native languages. ID cards and 50c, or $1 without IDs will admit. --- SALE ENDS CLIP THIS COUPON MAR. 24TH TROUSERS ● SLACKS ● 5 TIES ● SPORT SHIRTS ● SWEATERS ● BLOUSES ● SKIRTS (plain) 39 c ea. Deluxe Cleaned, Beautifully Pressed Note: No Limit. But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Order 25¢ SHIRTS NOW ONLY 20 c ea. Laundered to perfection! Starched as you like! Dress Shirts DeLuxe LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FIRESH 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 LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING AT ITS FINEST --- DO YOU KNOW... ... HOW TO BROWSE? If You Don't Come down today and enroll in our free course, elements of browsing. IF You Do This is the place to keep in practice. We'll be expecting you. BROWSING HOURS 10-5:30 THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Arensbergs ESSENCE OF ELEGANCE: SILK ON PATENT Party-pretty patent paired with peau de soie. Slim. Suave. Feminine glittering for any spring gathering. Gracefully aloft on a willowy two-inch heelet. Soft Supple. Charmingly Joyce. Also in Navy Calf COCKTAIL HOUR 1395 joyce ... a way of life! As seen in Glamour J T COCKTAIL HOUR 1395 joyce ... a way of life! COCKTAIL HOUR 1395 joyce ...a way of life! As seen in Glamour --- Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 19. 1962 Want to play the Guitar? Bass? Drums? NOW'S THE TIME TO LEARN! Take advantage of our Professional Instruction now! Come in . . . make an appointment for lessons any time of the day. Only $1.75 per lesson from any of our three expert instructors. CELLO Learn all the latest techniques and chord positions for standard, classical and steel guitars. Read music quickly and easily too. You'll be more than satisfied with the results! Richardson Music 18 East 9th Just a block off Massachusetts. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Terrill's Swimwear by ★ Cole of California ★ Alix of Miami ★ Roxanne Terrill's FASHIONS of Lawrence 803 Mass. Ga. Spring is around the corner and new fashions are becoming everyday news. Gay colors, fresh prints, and light fabrics are setting the stage. Acme knows how to keep new (and old) fashions looking fresh. We know the way you want them cleaned. young and fresh for today’s living Acme LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS DOWNTOWN, MALLS, HILLCREST I'll just use the crop to fit the image. The woman is wearing a light-colored blouse with a large, decorative floral pattern on the front. The blouse has a ruffled collar and short sleeves. She is standing with her hands on her waist, smiling gently at the camera. There are small flowers around her neck. 100 COR 花香 花香 N B The Saturo UCLA ball C OH number midable powered De with of largest Wake and aln Nsemi-fi bthe sec 79-69 f UCL its Fars ville as State I COL Cincinn an all on a ju to push but mo The George quickly built u the rear Cinem. 29 Hogu with 22 Bonhar Big Eig Wilky with 15 --- NCAA Semi-Final Berths Established The stage is set for a showdown at Louisville, Ky., Friday and Saturday. The cast includes Ohio State, Cincinnati, Wake Forest and UCLA and the drama is entitled "Who Will Reign as NCAA Basketball Champions." Defending champion Cincinnati made it to the four-team affair with ease as it handled Big Eight champion Colorado 73-46, the largest margin of victory in Midwest Regional history. OHIO STATE, which finished its regular season as the nation' OHIO STATE, which finished number one team, met a more for-midable opponent but still overpowered its foe, Kentucky, 74-64. COLORADO led in its game with Cincinnati but once. Ken Charlton, an all-Big Eight selection, connected on a jump shot in the first 23 seconds to push the Buffaloes into an early, but momentary 2-0 lead. 5 Wake Forest blew a 10-point lead and almost blew itself out of a NCAA semi-final berth, but came back in the second half to defeat Villanova. 79-69 for the Eastern Regional title. UCLA had little trouble winning its Far West title and a trip to Louisville as it overpowered the Oregon State Beavers 88-69. The Bearcats led by Paul Hogue, George Wilson and Ronnie Bonham quickly passed the Buffaloes and built up a margin that was beyond the reach of the Big Eight champs. Cincinnati's halftime margin was 41-29. Hogue was the game's high scorer with 22 points. Wilson added 19, and Bonham, 17. The Buffaloes two all-Big Eight selection led their scoring. Wilky Gilmore was high point man with 15; Charlton added 11 points. CREIGHTON captured third place in the Midwest bracket defeating Texas Tech 63-61. However, it took four points in the final 30 seconds before Creighton eked out its triumph. Creighton led most of the way and held a 34-30 halftime margin. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Portraits of Distinction Photographer HIXON STUDIO Page 9 Sport Briefs 721 Mass. Bob Blank Abilene Christian's Oliver Jackson, one of the nation's most successful track coaches, was named referee of the 37th Kansas Relays here April 20-21. VI 3-0330 Jackson has been Wildcat coach since 1948. During that span his runners, either individually or as members of relay teams have established or tied world records on 15 occasions, 15 American records, 11 intercollegiate records, and three national freshman records. * * * Stephenson Scholarship Hall defeated Smith Hall, the Kansas State University scholarship hall league champion and independent runner-up, 43-42 in Robinson Gymnasium yesterday afternoon. You'll Love Your New Spring Hair Style From Driscoll's 100 Soft—natural—beautifully styled just for you! Driscoll Beauty Salon VI 3-4070 908 Mass. Monday, March 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan Two Big Eight Coaches Ousted Two Big Eight coaches lost their jobs this weekend. Oklahoma's basketball coach Doyle Parrack resigned under pressure, and the Colorado Board of Regents terminated Buffalo football coach Sonny Grandelius' contract. Parrack resigned Friday after a siege of speculating reports that his contract would not be renewed. The CU Board of Regents voted 5-1 to terminate the contract of Grandelius, who coached the Buffaloes to a Big Eight championship last fall. The Regents' decision came upon discovery that Grandelius had violated recruiting practices. The decision came in the wake of reports by Grandelius that he would retire from coaching upon the expiration of his contract in 1966. You Are Invited Yes, please accept our invitation to visit us. We feature famous brands such as Longines, Wittnauer, Elgin and Croton watches, Speidel bands, Krementz and Hobe' jewelry. You will enjoy our china room. We also maintain a watch repair department of excellent reputation. Come in today! Gustafson 809 Mass. THE COLLEGE JEWELER VI 3-5432 Weaver Our 105th Year of Service Weavers Our 105th Year of Service step into Spring • new season • new look • new you from Gay Gibson a scene stealer . . . in 2 parts $25 clever braid-trimmed jacket tops sleeveless sheath with contrasting bodice in beautiful Duprini blend. Navy/white, black/beige. 5-15 a ripple of ruffles the very feminine look of fashion this spring embodied in drip-dry dacron and cotton. White $5.98 by Citation $14.95 luxurious gold crushed kid with smart stacked heel in high or Blouse Shop — Second Floor luxurious gold crushed kid with smart stacked heel in high or mid-heel. Shoe Shop - Second Floor --- Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 19. 1962 Wichita East Defeats Wyandotte 46-26 Wichita East High School foiled Wyandotte of Kansas City's bid for a sixth straight Kansas state Class AA basketball championship at Wichita Saturday night. The Blue Aces handed the Bulldogs the worst shellacking in the state tournament's 21-year history, 46-26. The previous record for the widest margin was set in 1951 when Wichita East defeated Newton 62-48 Other Kansas high school winners were: Class A. Immaculata (Leavenworth) 75, St. Mary's (Pittsburg) 62; Class B. Melvern 60, Peabody 53; Class BB. Winona 53, Windhustor 39. Washburn Rural (Topeka) defeated Ward (Kansas City) for third place in the Class AA bracket 52-44. All-stater Ron Paradis scored 25 points for the victors. Wichita East held Wyandotte's set-shot specialist Bill Wendel, pivot man Steve Renko and forward Tom Jones to seven points each. Jamie Thompson led the new state champions with 16 points. Teammates Kelly Pete and Clarence Brown balanced the Blue Aces scoring attack with 10 points each. The first quarter was nip-and-tuck with East holding a narrow 9-7 margin. In the second quarter the Blue Aces burted into the lead which they were not to relinquish for the remainder of the game. Wichita led at halftime 20-13. Wichita East's coach Cy Sickles described his state champions as the greatest team he has ever coached. Pole-vaulter Goes 28-2 A pole vaulter once vaulted 28 feet two inches. Platt Adams, who established the mark at New York City in 1910, went for distance instead of height. Well Groomed Men Take Their Dry Cleaning To Lawrence Laundry Yes, the well groomed men whose dress you admire always have their clothing cleaned and pressed by the nationally advertised Sanitone process exclusive at Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners. Complement your natural good-looks with a Sanitone clean suit!! ose Stop in soon. Or, phone for prompt pickup and delivery. "Quality Guaranteed" LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. VI 3-3711 "Specialists in Fabrtc Care" --- COMPLETE AUTO BODY & FENDER SHOP Expert Body Repair Car damaged? Have all those nicks and dents repaired like new. Whatever your car needs our body and fender experts will restore it to its like-new, factory-smooth finish. For finest body and fender work, it's . . . . AUTO SALES FREE ESTIMATES Dale's Body Shop 704 Vermont VI 3-4732 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers The Fashion for Spring is an ENGLISH LIGHTWEIGHT BIKE I am happy to have been a cyclist. I love cycling and enjoy exploring the outdoors. SUZANNE WRIGHT, Sigma Kappa, admires a new English lightweight bike Each bike comes equipped with: - 3 speed gearshift - Front and rear caliper brakes - Generator light set - Handlebar gearshift lever $38.54 Western Auto also has a full line of bike accessories - Saddleb Lights, Baskets, Tires . . . Reasonable Terms . WESTERN AUTO - DOWNTOWN - N S I The Chi fracing trictive heir oeward frere He te ial" rig stitution Lewis Wash., al lent of city of I regional ernity MR. s no o leave restichet the cons various force the clau y take groups, "At A. U. town, M. presider required their cler complete national sational unity, through unless of the r. the grow He'(He versy worites cult all drew th' the 'The seems the restricti' delete some in opportunity Mr. A. Rodon as he Said rights a things. Mozz Olive Green Onion Mush Sausa Hamb Pepper Anch Pizza ½ Cl ½ S Added Ingred VIII CA VI 3 Monday, March 19. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 11 National Fraternity President Speaks Out on 'Social' Rights By Dennis Branstiter The national president of Delta Chi fraternity said Saturday that forcing fraternities to remove restrictive membership clauses from their constitutions is the first step toward forcing them to take members from minority groups. He termed this a denial of "social" rights guaranteed in the Constitution. Lewis S. Armstrong, Seattle, Wash., attorney and national president of Delta Chi is at the University of Kansas to attend a Delta Chi regional conference to discuss fraternity problems. MR. ARMSTRONG said, "There is no question that persons who have led the program to withdraw restrictive membership clauses from the constitutions of social groups on various campuses are attempting to force the groups who have removed the clauses to prove their intentions by taking members of minority groups. "At Williams College (Williamsown, Mass.) Dr. William Cole (now president of Lake Forest, Ill.) required fraternities not only to have their clauses removed but to have complete local autonomy from their nationals. He then took the additional step known as 'total opportunity', which means if 100 men go through rush, no one can be pledged unless all are pledged," regardless of the racial or religious makeup of the group. "He (Cole) has been in a controversy with the fraternities and sororities at Lake Forest and as a result all the national sororites withdrew their charters (1961). "The pattern that has developed seems to be one of first removing restrictive clauses, requiring complete local autonomy, and then in some instances requiring 'total opportunity.'" Mr. Armstrong described this action as a denial of social rights. He said that civil rights and social rights are two separate and distinct hings. FREE PIZZA DELIVERY ANY PLACE In LAWRENCE Reg. 10" Lrg. 14" Mozz. Cheese .85 1.40 Olive ----- 1.15 1.65 Green Pepper - 1.15 1.65 Onion ----- 1.15 1.65 Mushroom ---- 1.25 1.90 Sausage ---- 1.25 1.90 Hamburger -- 1.25 1.90 Pepperoni --- 1.25 1.90 Anchovy ---- 1.25 1.90 Pizza Supreme 1.40 2.40 ½ Cheese — ½ Sausage --- 1.05 1.65 Added Ingredients 10c ea. 20c ea. VI 3-9640 "I FEEL THESE (social) rights are guaranteed American citizens by the Constitution. "We are a social club. We don't pretend to be anything else. I do Ron D Tom CAVERNS N VI 3-9640 644 Mass. 1930 not think that social groups should have the will of any minority or majority imposed on them. Lewis S. Armstrong Constitution as they accuse the fraternities of being. "The people who are forcing this issue are as guilty of violating the "I think that the thing has swung so far to the left that people are ignoring the rights that are guaranteed by the Constitution." ASKED IF a fraternity is a part of a university and as such should have its social rights defined by the university, Mr. Armstrong replied: "I do not think that they (fraternities) are an integral part of the institution but I feel that they must cooperate because of their very nature. "WE WANT TO cooperate, and have and are cooperating, with college administrations on every phase of college life which is intended to develop better citizens and better students." "They would appear to me to be no more a part of the school than a Masonic order, which certainly has members in college, or the American Legion, the Knights of Columbus or the multitude of other social and fraternal organizations which have membership requirements. "I haven't yet seen a university financing fraternity houses. As a matter of fact we have been assisting in financing educational facilities by providing well-supervised housing. Asked if Delta Chi has any racial or religious membership restrictions, Mr. Armstrong said: "We had a 'white clause' until 1952, when it was removed by the national convention in Biloxi, Miss. We have never had any restriction on religion or creed." "We have no regulations in our constitution or ritual against any person of any race or religion. He said Delta Chi has no "socially acceptable" clause either. (The interpretation of a "socially acceptable clause is up to each fraternity member.) WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Scientists at the University of Iowa College of Medicine recently conducted a series of tests with office and factory workers. They wanted to answer this question: "Is the coffee break an efficient substitute for an adequate breakfast?" Breakfast Beats Coffee Break Citing the study, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said subjects who ate an adequate breakfast were more productive during the late morning hours, were quicker in their reactions and did not tire as easily as those who relied on coffee alone. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Prices are still below the prices in other surrounding towns, but have gone up nearly five cents per gallon from what they were during the greater part of the fall and winter. Gas Prices Are Up Again The "gas war" that has been raging on in Lawrence since July has come to an end-at least temporary. Competition among the Lawrence service stations was the primary cause of the debased prices. Last week the service stations got together and reached an agreement to raise the prices. Prices now range from the 24.9 cents per gallon at cut-rate stations to 25.9 at other stations. "It's hard to say how long it will last," a west side service station attendant said. "Prices might go back down tomorrow." Unusual Gifts Peggy's Gifts and Cards Malls Shopping Center Lawrence, Kansas OUR NEW Spring Shoes step out in the softest leathers and loveliest color OUR NEW Spring Shoes step out in the softest leathers and loveliest color Classic Moccasin Style Slipon Smartly Fashioned Needle-Toe Pump $9.99 Little Girls' Sunday Best only $8.99 New Oxford With Half-Moc Seam REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. Classic Moccasin Style Slipon New Oxford With Half-Moc Seam Little Girls' Sunday Best only $8.99 REDMAN'S SHOES 815 Mass. Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 19. 1962 Wescoe States Views — (Continued from page 1) "I don't think there is an answer to that question relative to morality. I've been laughed at in the past and I've had fun poked at me in the past because I said we should use moral suasion. I think most of us in the room know that in at least one circumstance, moral suasion was very successful in this community and it can be again." (The chancellor was referring to the discrimination in local barber shops in the Lawrence area which was under fire last year.) He continued, "As I said in my interview to the Kansan, if the fraternities weren't making any moves in this direction there would be cause for university alarm and perhaps cause for university decision. But they are moving in this direction and I think we should compliment them for moving in this direction. I think we should help them in moving in this direction. But I think no University dictum or fiat will help them move in that direction." * * ALAN LATTA, Wichita senior and member of Alpha KappaLambda, asked the chancellor what policy he would take if the Kansas Board of Regents decided that the University should not recognize fraternities which had discriminatory clauses in their national constitutions. Chancellor Wescoe answered that the Board of Regents is the governing body of the University and he would follow any decision they would make. Chancellor Wescso said, "I do not think that the University can wash anybody's brain." He said that he had been asked if he has been receiving any pressure from alumni about the discrimination problem. He said, "I have yet to have one alumni speak to me about this question." (Continued from page 1) tion transformed the French Army and Algerian Moslem rebels from enemies to allies and gave them the OAS as the common foe. French, Algerian - President Charles de Gaulle called his cabinet into session this afternoon to give formal approval to the peace settlement and approve a series of decrees to set the machinery of the pact working. An extraordinary session of the National Assembly will be held tomorrow to hear a message from De Gaulle and a statement by the government. The statement will be followed by a debate—but no vote. DE GAULLE MADE it clear in a broadcast to the nation last night that he will seek approval of the pact directly in a nationwide referendum. This is expected to be held April 8 or soon after that. The cease-fire settlement was signed yesterday at Evian, a French resort community on the shores of Lake Geneva, at 7:30 p.m. (12:30 p.m. EST). It capped a final 12 days of negotiations and frequent false alarms that agreement was imminent. De Gaulle spoke to the nation two and a half hours later. He appealed for ratification by the French nation through the forthcoming vote. WITHIN HOURS THE first terms of the cease-fire pact went into effect: Algerian rebel Vice Premier Mohammed Ben Bella and four companions were released from the Chateau of Aunoy near Paris after nearly six years of custody and sent off to Morocco and freedom. All war prisoners—an estimated 17,000 Algerians and about 100 French soldiers—will be released within 20 days. De Gaule now faced the immense task of trying to put across the agreement in Algeria without a new bloodbath. He banked heavily on what he described as the "dynamism of peace" to do so. But he had to deal first with the OAS. Officials in Paris were not seriously concerned that the OAS could do much in France where it has little popular support, although some increase in plastic bombing attacks and possibly attempted assassination of French leaders was expected. BUT IN ALGERIA, the OAS virtually controls some of the big cities in which the European population is concentrated. OAS tactics were expected to be a new terrorist offensive against the Moslems in an attempt to provoke them in mass attacks on Europeans in which the French army would be called in to intervene. J-School - (Continued from page 1) journalism schools in the United States. The William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information is one of the 17 accredited schools of journalism in the United States. Many more universities have departments of journalism. Exactly what changes, if any, would be made in the courses of study that would result from the proposed switch was not known. The present sequence of studies for students majoring in the news-editorial field at KU requires a minimum of 31 hours of journalism courses. The resolution would have placed the KU department within the College of Liberal Arts. Instead of the present Bachelor of Science in Journalism being offered at the two Universities, journalism graduates would have received bachelor of arts degrees. However, students already enrolled in journalism would have been given Bachelor of Science degrees upon graduation. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results PIZZA BURGER 45c BIG BUY PENNEYS Now Laminates come in a roster of fashion fabrics ... wool ribbon weave ... Acrilan® acrylic crepe weave ... rayon and acetate Lamel twill weave ... wool and nylon strawmat weave Full of fabric news ... full of casual chic. These make a point of oversize pockets, plentiful collars, bold buttons, smart seaming. And, each is laminated to polyurethane foam which means their good shape is in to stay. On your agenda in new three-quarter and full lengths in all the shades of '62. Junior misses' sizes. Trench coat Monday, March 19. 1962 University Daily Kansan United Page 13 pool of nationalsools ofStates. depart- Country-Look Takes Its Place in KU Fashion any, es ofs in the n. The r stu- toriali num of collected Coli of the vee in e two educates or of alts alwould ecience results KU women will borrow style from their country cousin when they go shopping for clothes this year. The country-look came to town this spring and took her place in fashion, and her city counterpart has refused to let her go back. The country-look lends spring fashion a rustic charm. As its name implies, this look has taken its features from nature. The green of mossy trees was taken and put into fabrics for dresses and skirts. Greys were made as dark 1956 KNEE-TICKLER—The latest in college fashion proves doubly popular in hopsacking, spring's newest fabric. Kathy Baysinger, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, chooses a blouse by Ship'n Shore and skirt by Bobbie Brooks. F. A. H. R. F. C. S. W. J. E. T HIP-HANGERS — Barbara Cooke, Kansas City freshman, plans to set fashion flames blazing for her camisole topper and hip-hugging Jamaica shorts in cotton knit by Aileen. Bright yellows, oranges and chartreuse were plucked from first blossoms and also put into striking outfits. as slate and brown was made as rich and warm as earth. The biggest steal in fashion came when urbanites took hopsacking or gunnysack right out of the farmer's feed bin to make the city girl's smartest coats and dresses. Also big on the fabric scene are mattress and pillow ticking, duck and sailcloth. Once limited just to sports clothes, these fabrics are proving how Sir Knight FORMAL WEAR 1342 OHIO VI 2-3466 I She'll Look Twice when her campus man wears a tux from Sir Knight. smart they are since they have picked up big-city ways. These fabrics make up some of spring's smartest dresses and suits. Designs in the heavier fabrics are simple. Wooden buttons and belt buckles sometimes trim the coat and dress. Skirts are trimmed with raveled pockets or rows of fringe sewn around the hem. Shirtwaist dresses are simple and often go collarless. The KU woman's newest fashion fad looks all the world like her country cousin's low slung blue jeans. This is the hip-hanger or hip-hugger, which insists on riding on the hipbone rather than fastening at the waist. Hip-hangers can be found in slacks, shorts, skirts and swimming suits. A long sweater or long blouse can be worn with the hip-hanger but in most cases the midriff is bare. Prints are as bold and friendly as the next-door neighbor. And the sweet "Dear Liz" ruffled look continues to be popular. Ruffles and pleats can be found on almost any type of outfit, and with the couture emphasis they are sure to remain on the fashion scene. Lynes Sounds Off on Women The career woman takes it for granted that, when she marries, she is bound to get, almost as though it were a package deal, a husband who is part-time wife.-Russell Lynes It is no secret to women that female vanity is usually a means to an end, but that male vanity is an end in itself.-Russell Lynes Being a lady is a state of grace that women would like to achieve and that men would like to be able to take for granted.—Russell Lynes 1920s A lady is a woman who makes a man behave like a gentleman. RUFFLED LOUNGEWEAR—Fashion says women can wear the oh-so-feminine ruffles from daytime dresses to late evening suits. But Joan Callahan, Lawrence junior, finds she can wear them at night, too, in this cotton duster by Lounge Craft. HOTELS, HOTELS, HOTELS Higley's Elegant New Suits Herald Spring's Coming! Just in time for spring! And remember that our lovely accessories—hats, bags, gloves, jewelry make your spring suit a complete fashion outfit! Hialey's Page 14 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 19. 1962 --- Couture Designers Dictate Women's Clothing Styles As sure as early spring brings flower buds, late winter blossoms with new spring fashions. Showings of couture collections begin in late January and women over the world hold their breath. A radical change from last year's style may mean an entire new wardrobe. The originals from designers would cost the wearer from $400 to $1,200 per costume depending on the style, fabric and decoration. But the silhouette and the details of the new collections are copied and adapted on a large scale and made available to chic women the world over. THERE WAS NO fashion revolution in Paris this spring. Paris couture collections echoed the trends set by American designers. But there is a definite trend to a more closely fitted silhouette and feminine trimmings. Clothes are shaped to the body with waists belted and skirts full. Airy fabrics, ruffles and bows soften evening fashions. Except for Dior, Paris designers featured a slim waist often outlined by a wide, tight belt. BELTS ON THE HIPS, the boxy, square skirts and the camouflaged waist highlight the March Bohan collection, which is his first independent one for the House of Christian Dior. Yves Saint-Laurent, famed for his smashing "trapeze" success, showed his first independent collection since leaving the House of Dior. His silhouette is predominantly soft and fluid. He showed square-shouldered suit jackets that stop at the hipbone. Skirts are short and move freely, with an apron effect in the front. BLOUSES ARE an integral part of his costume. Soft and bias shaped, they fall in a fluid line to the hips or are lightly sashed at the waist. Some showed a few inches below the jacket. Saint-Laurent went all out for the tunic, one of the most predominant themes in his collection. Some are soft and bloued at the waist, others cut along stricter lines. CEIL CHAPMAN in New York emphasized the Egyptian look in her spring collection, "Daughters of the Nile." Her clothes take on a look of ancient fashion when women of Egypt wore robes of transparent linen or nothing at all. Her gowns are strapless, gathered high under the bosom and draped in body-molding line. Sometimes the bare shoulders were sheltered by suede tops, and the daring combination of suede and chiffon won applause. THE SOFT WAVE of fashion that was felt in New York and Paris was the top story in London, too. England and tailoring have always gone hand in hand and this season the couture continued the tradition, but with softer, less classic designs. Clothers fitted closer to the body and there was an abundance of floating chiffons, pretty flower prints, soft crepes and silks, and even a ruffle or two. MICHAEL, one of England's most avant-garde designers, created two new skirts for his spring collection. One has two creased trouser pleats in front and back, similar to a skirt seen at Dior, but flatter and less bulky. The other skirt sits low on the waist, actually resting on the hipbones. It has a narrow fabric or leather string belt and is worn with a tuck-in sweater or blouse and an open, very tailored jacket. JOHN CAVANAGH, another London star, showed a shaped and fitted silhouette, but it was not nailed to the body. His shaping went from the bosom to a natural waist on coats and suit jackets which emphasized the midriff. Skirts flared or had fullness from the waist. Hardy Amies summed up his collection with short skirts and swinging skirts, too. He has shaped jackets and very young, bolero-length ones. Many of his dresses have a bias inset at the waist, giving a pronounced, waisted look but never pinched. RONALD PATERSON'S suits have fluttering skirts—pleated, flared or cut on the bias. Jackets are fitted or shaped gently to the body. A printed silk suit blouse, a constant theme, often has a wide, matching belt. Wide belts also cinch day and evening dresses. In general, not a severe line is to be found in clothes for spring. All are soft and curved to make the most of the female form. BLOOMING LIKE SPRING tulips are fashions that reach their ultimate enchantment in gossamer dresses with ruffles, bows and ribbons of lace. Attention centers on the waist. Whether marked at the natural line or lifted to accent the bosom, it is wrapped, belted or firmly cinched for emphasis. The accented waist looks especially new in suits with abbreviated jackets. SKIRTS ARE ANIMATED. Extreme versions are gathered full or, newer still, gored to near circles. For coats and suits, nubby textures vie with smooth-faced wools. Late-day fabrics especially are frothy, fragile, light as air. Sometimes they are pebbled or puffed. Daytime colors lean to mellow neutrals with a smattering of navy, a flash here and there of brilliant color. For afternoon and after, prints predominate in bold black and white and tones of green from spring grass to dark forest. Fraternities Announce Spring Officers Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon recently elected the following officers for the spring semester: president, Fred Perry, Junction City junior; vice president, Sam Lux, Topeka senior; secretary, Bob Johntz, Wichita junior; treasurer, Tom Bornholt, Topeka sophomore; chronicler, Mike Hites, Prairie Village sophomore; warden, Jeff Heitzeberg, Mission sophomore; correspondent, Dave Stinson, Lawrence sophomore; social chairman, Mike Mason, Omaha, Neb., senior; rush chairman, John Williams, Osage City junior; house manager, Jim Williamson, Hutchinson junior. *** Sigma Gamma Tau Officers for the spring semester of Sigma Gamma Tau, national aeronautical engineering society, are Harold Rogler, Wichita senior, president; Richard Peil, Atkison senior, vice president; Dallas Wicke, Atwood senior, secretary-treasurer; and Frank Breen, Cincinnati, Ohio, junior, pledge trainer. Alpha Kappa Lambda Dick Byler, Wellington freshman, has been elected president of the pledge class of Alpha KappaLambda fraternity for the spring semester. Others officers for the spring semester are vice president and social chairman, Greg Gardner, Wichita freshman; secretary-treasurer, Webb Cummings, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Interfraternity Fledge Council representatives, Dick Trump, Overland Park sophomore, and Bob Crosier, Lawrence freshman; sergeant at arms, John Brown, Western Springs, Ill., freshman. The newly elected officers of Lambda Chi Alpha are: president, Fred Lamar, Alma junior; vice president, Larry Bailey, Atchison junior; secretary, Philip Brooks, Independence, Mo., senior; treasurer, Gayle Anderson, Garnett senior; social chairman, Jay Deane, Kansas City junior; ritualist, Jerry Freund, Dodge City junior; and pledge trainer, Bob Borton, Cleveland, Ohio, sophomore. Lambda Chi Alpha *** The officers of the Lambda Chi pledge class are: president, Bob Walsh, Shawnee Mission sophomore; vice president, Jay Luff, Ottawa freshman; secretary-treasurer, Dave Spaw, Shawnee Mission freshman; rush chairman, John Dooley, Taecoma, Wash., sophomore. Women seldom acknowledge that they have fallen in love until the man has revealed his delusion and so cut off his retreat. Three Sororities Announce New Officers Delta Delta Delta Pamela Stone, Wichita freshman, of the Delta, Delta, delpier cliché. elected pi Delta Delta Delta pledge class. Other officers are Susie Gerlash, Tarkio, Mo., secretary; Marilyn Huff, Wichita, social chairman; Madalyn Van Landingham, Excelsior Springs, Mo., scholarship chairman; Gail Gibson, Herington, song leader; Winnie Frazee, Great Bend, treasurer; and Betsy Eaton, Wichita, chaplin. Rouge, La., freshman, standards chairman; and Carol Childers, Waimo freshman, song leader. Alpha Delta Pi Pledge class officers of Alpha Delta Pi are Kay Weber, Wichita freshman, president; Janet Bowman, Larned freshman, secretary-treasurer; Oralee Broussard, Baton Kappa Kappa Gamma Kappa Kappa Gamma Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the installation, following officers: president, Gretchen Lee, Hays junior; vice president, Linda Stark, Salina junior; house chairman, Joy Sharp, Topeka junior; treasurer, Judy Strafer; Prairie Village sophomore; scholarship chairman, Nancy Borel, Falls Church, Va., junior; corresponding secretary, Nancy Gaines, Joplin, Mo., junior; recording secretary, Barbara Schmidt, Kansas City junior. Tri Delts Announce Two Pinnings Nancy Noyes of Leawood announces her pinning to Dave Butts of Arlington Heights, Ill. Miss Noyes is a junior in art education and a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Butts is a senior in the School of Business and a member of Kappa Sigma. Lynn Haupt of Wichita announces her pinning to Jeff Wall of Kansas State University. Miss Haupt is a senior in elementary education and a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Wall is a senior in the School of Milling at Kansas State and a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Get Into the Swing of Spring Only the sleeves get into the swing in this amazing new sport jacket. Complete freedom of movement is insured by all-way stretch inserts of Helenca nylon under the arms. There is no rigid connection at any point between the sleeves and jacket body. - Tailored in water-repellent cotton poplin - Styled with Alpine shoulder for continental flair - Washable - Available in Blue, Clay, Sand, Light Olive $15^{95}$ Others, from $4.95 full freedom of action Automatic Jacket 4wings GOLDEN AWARD Authentic New Patterns in TRADITIONAL SHIRTS Compare the dashing air . . . the long wear of our 4wings COLLECTION '62 Luxury fabrics, patterns and colors. Collars are authentic button-down or smart spread. Then compare the price — and you'll agree they're beyond compare! $2.95 to $4.95 Investigate our prices on Formal Rentals. Edmiston's ROBERT EDMISTON STORES, INC. 845 Massachusetts VI 3-5533 Teen-Agers Cause More Than Fur Hat Fad; They Put Bonnets on Hatless Women, Too NEW YORK —(UPI)— The Zoo look has proved to be the new look in millinery. Heads that usually are hatless suddenly this winter sprouted head-gear which looked as if it came from a fur farm. The furred look ranges from long-haired synthetics at prices of $3, $4 and $5 per hat to a Somali leopard number at $335. The hatmakers couldn't be happier. They chortie about how a winter hat fad will blossom right into spring, with the usually bareheaded in straws and every other warm weather hat fabric available. "Wonderful! We're getting hats on their heads," said a spokesman for the Millinery Institute of America, a trade organization. "Once hatted . . . always hatted." Who started the fad for the real or fake fur hat which belongs to all age groups? "Teen-agers, the usually hatless," said Daniel Simner. Simner, an executive with Commodore Hats, explained the sweep of the style through the younger set. "You know how they are," he said. "What one teen-ager likes, all teen-agers like. Look at the beanie, the knee socks. The adult female wants her clothes to be individual, but not the teens. The other day a (store) buyer from Providence, R.I., told me that in walking one block she spotted 16 girls each in the same hat style." "The teeners started the fad. It has spread to every age," said Bernard Grossman, secretary of Betmar, hatmakers for more than 25 years. years. Actually, said the Milliner's stitute, fur hats first showed as a style item among the "name" milliners in their 1959-60 collections. The price ranges then, as now, ran from that leopard at $335 to mink at $225 and up and to sable $250 and up, depending on quality and color of the animal skins used. But as the shaggy head spread, and the younger set latched on to it both for looks and warmth, the millinery industry turned to synthetic materials. Sinner and Grossman are executives of two of the dozens of firms "feasting" on the shaggy head look, which in 1961-62 ranks as a major part of a $400 million annual industry. From the standpoint of materials used, there seems no limit. In real fur, milliners said mink is the number one seller, followed by sable, lynx, fox, wolf, raccoon, and opossum. Inakes, the shaggier the fabric the better, with some having piles as deep as one and one-half inches. Shape of the shaggies? Millinera said they started with "wav out" numbers with as much as 30 inches of material trailing the wearer—this in the synthetics, because in fur they would be too expensive. But the best sellers have proved the pixie-shaped caps with crown length six to 10 inches. Mink Ranching Exotic But 'Frustrating' NEW YORK — (UPI) — Mink ranching rates as both the most "exotic and often most frustrating" type of farming. So says a rancher who for 20 years has produced the makings of mink coats and other mink items for women's wardrobes. "Exotic," said Walter Taylor of Somers, Conn., because mink connotes luxury, glamour and status. Often frustrating, he added, for two reasons—fickle feminine taste and the susceptibility of the animal to disease. TAYLOR IS ONE of the thousands of farmers in the United States turning out a record crop of ranch mink. Taylor explained the mink is a style production. One year women may be thinking in terms of one color of mutation, the next year, another. But there is a trend toward use of the lighter shades. UPPERCLASSMAN to become Tastemaker for large-sized college Our man must aspire to class presidencies . . . want to be included in Who's Who In American Colleges. How we help: with the Cricketeer College wardrobe. The knowing plaid sport-coats . . . the suave vested suits . . . the mustard and olive colors. They make you Tastemaker, Best-Dressed Man on the campus. Illustrated here: the very important vest, the very important glen plaid. Trimlines shoulders all your own, narrow trouser Suits, $62.50; Sport Coats, $37.50 Another in our Cricketeer Trimline series directed to The YOUNG MAN WHO WANTS TO MAKE $10,000 A YEAR BEFORE HE'S 30. CARL'S Monday, March 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan For Your For Your Swimsuits And Sportswear It's Kirsten's Hillcrest Shopping Center --- Page 16 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 19. 1962 words and pictures cannot describe our new spring clothing, purchased especially for you, the "style minded" university man- see you men's diebolt's wear 843 Mass. Monday, March 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 17 ALMERITA NEW DORM—The new student residence hall will house 656 students and be 10 stories high. Construction to Begin On 10 Story Dormitory Construction will begin in three weeks on the 10-story 656-man dormitory to be built just south of Hashinger Hall. Occupancy is expected by September, 1963. The general contract for the building has been given at Topeka to the Harmon Construction Co., now working on the six-story addition to Dyche Hall. The Board of Regents, meeting in Topeka Friday, approved the acceptance of the Harman Construction Co. bid. Harmon's low bid was $1,302,987, with 12 other contractors participating. Additional contracts were awarded to the Brune Plumbing & Heating Co. of Lawrence, with $421,330, and the Huxtable Electric Co., also of Lawrence, with $189,189. nanced through public and private funds. The state dormitory mill tax levy will provide one-third of the cost and the remainder will be provided from the sale of revenue bonds. Private investors purchasing the bonds will be repaid from the dormitory's income. Since Hashinger will be completed in time for 1962 fall occupancy, the total number of dormitory rooms for women students will be 1,642, and for men, 1,196. Four hundred more rooms are provided in scholarship halls. The new dormitory will be fi- The administration plans to add 400 new dormitory rooms per year for the next 10 years. Plans for the dormitory were drawn by James C. Canole, state architect, with the association of Dwight Brown. Graduate Awards Announced April 1 A committee headed by J. A. Burzle, professor of German, is selecting graduate students who will receive exchange scholarships. The winners of the awards will be announced April 1. Prof. Burzle said that KU, with 14 graduate exchange students, has one of the largest programs of direct student exchanges. Five German universities are participating in the program, as well as four from England and one each from Switzerland, Scotland, and France. mendations are then forwarded to the foreign universities, who make the final selection. The students are tentatively selected by the Fulbright Scholarship Committee at KU. The names of those selected and their recom- These exchange scholarships are of the same caliber as the Fulbright and Woodrow Wilson awards, said Prof. Burzle. The members of the Fulbright Committee are Prof. Burzle, chairman; Oswald P. Backus, professor of history; Carlyle S. Smith, professor of anthropology; Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice; Reinhard Kuhn, associate professor of Romance languages; James O. Maloney, professor of chemical engineering; Richard Sheridan, associate professor of economics; and A. Byron Leonard, professor of zoology. Michigan Graduates May Be Assessed By Lois McKee United Press International LANSING, Mich.—(UPI)—A proposal that all graduates of Michigan's state-supported colleges and universities be assessed at least $1,200 each for their state-subsidized education has created a legislative stir here. The proposal came from Rep. Lester J. Allen, a republican from the central Michigan community of Ithaca, who said his "compulsory alumni contribution" plan was better than imposing new taxes or raising tuition fees to get funds needed by the colleges for construction purposes. Tuition at the colleges and universities under state control is half or less than half the tuition paid by Michigan residents at private institutions. Needs of the institutions, however, have not been met in recent years because of Michigan's financial problems. The "boom" of post-war babies is expected to further complicate the problem in education. ALLEN HOLDS to the theory that tuition should be kept as low as possible, to afford the opportunity of higher education to the greatest number of people. ALLEN, A SHORT, thin, greyw- haired man who received his degree from the tax-supported Michigan State University, has rarely come Statistics based on projected enrollments indicated Allen's program would raise $45 million a year at the end of 12 years. Graduate Scholarship Selection Is Underway A Graduate Council committee is at work selecting the recipients of graduate scholarships and fellowships. There will be 50 or 60 awards made. The University Scholarships are given to graduates of colleges and universities of recognized standing. They carry a stipend of $600 for the academic year and an additional sum equal to the incidental fee the student must pay. They are awarded in any field in which a graduate program is established. University Fellowships are awarded to students who have completed at least one year of study in a recognized graduate school. They are worth either $800 or $1,000, the former going to those in their second year of graduate study, the latter to those beyond their second year. Portraits Portraits of Distinction from HIXON STUDIO by Bob Blank Phone VI 3-0330 of A MAN PUSHING A BANNER forth with controversial ideas in the past. Legislature also was considering several other proposals to provide funds for higher education construction. "No one has been exceptionally vocal about it, but all of the people I have talked to, educators and students alike, have been favorable to the idea," he said. "No one likes to pay money to anyone if they can avoid it, but I think this is a plan which will grow in acceptance if approved. His proposal is to require graduates to sign a promissory note for $1,200 and $1,500 for doctoral degree recipients. Allen added to the surprise of his proposal by inserting a provision which would wipe out the debt to women graduates who married before the note was paid. The bill allowed payments to be made at the rate of $100 a year or more, starting one year after graduation. SOME legislators suggested Allen wanted to subsidize the marriage of college women or encourage husband-hunting among coeds. He said forgiveness of the debt for women who married was designed to prevent a state-imposed burden on the man who must assume the debts of his wife. Allen said he heard no opposition to his plan, although the Michigan "WE HAVE to relieve the burden of education on the taxpayer. This would provide funds for capital outlay based on the earning power of the college graduates who went through school partially on tax funds." Allen's two daughters and one son also attended Michigan State University in East Lansing, "They are all in favor of the plan." Allen said. darlené be a long-stemmed beauty ...In Water Lily, our sumptuous swimsuit by Darlene. Splashed with lovely hand-screened flowers, it's shaped with seamless curves and unique inner bra, for the smoothest fit you can find! Three-dimensional full fashioning does it, in Darnille—looped nylon and Lycra $ ^{\textcircled{8}}$. Sizes 8 to 14 $24.98 Ober's Jr. Miss Elevator From Men's Store Page 18 University Daily Kansan___ 42 Students Believe English Used as 'Flunk-Out' Course Young Republican Student Opinion Poll results show that 42 students believe English to be a freshman-sophomore "flunk-out" course. Figures from the Registrar's Office indicate that of the 2,119 freshmen who started the fall semester with English courses, 2,093 actually finished with a grade. Apparently the remaining 26 dropped out before the end of the semester. OF THOSE WHO completed their courses, 1,788 received passing grades as compared to 234 who failed. Seventy-one of the students are recorded as having incomplete or missing grades. Physics was named by 13 students as the second "flunk-out" course. University records indicate that only six freshmen were enrolled in physics last semester. Twelve students believed mathematics to be another course designed to weed out inferior students. In this area, 1,180 students were enrolled during the fall semester. Here, 959 students passed and 199 failed. Twenty-two grades are incomplete or missing. ACCORDING TO James K. Hitt, registrar, English has a characteristic which is possessed by no other course—everyone is required to take it. "I don't believe that English or anything else is set up as a "flunk-out" course, but if English is, it isn't doing a very good job of it," Mr. Hitt said. Peace Corps Representative To Visit Campus Tomorrow Arthur Massolo, field representative for the United States Peace Corps in Central America, will be at KU tomorrow and Wednesday to visit with students interested in Corps projects in Central America. He will talk at 4 p.m. Wednesday in room 306, Kansas Union. Mr. Massolo can be contacted through Clark Coan, foreign adviser in the Dean of Student's office. Award SOPHIA LOREN Nominated For "BEST ACTRESS" In "TWO WOMEN" JOSEPH E. LEVINE presents Sophia Loren "Two WOMEN" Produced by Carlo Ponti Directed by Vittorio DeSica An Embassy Pictures Release A RECOMMENDED FILM FOR NATURE AQUITY BEST ACTRESS In "TWO WOMEN" JOSEPH E. LEVINE presents Sophia Loren "Two WOMEN" Produced by Garlo Ponti Directed by Vittorio DeSica An Embassy Pictures Release NOW SHOWING! Open 6:45 Adults 85c Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 7:00 And 9 p.m. NOW SHOWING THEIR LOVE THROBBED... WHILE THE WORLD TREMBLED! A story that sweeps from Argentina to Paris... as the flames of World War II engulf mankind! METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER presents A JULIAN BLAUSTEIN Production directed by VINGENTE MINNELLI THE 4 HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE GLENN FORD • INGRID THULIN • CHARLES BOYER LEE J. COBB • PAUL HENREID • PAUL LUKAS • YVETTE MIMHEUX KARL BOEHM • play by ROBERT ARDREY • JOHN GAY • based on VIGENTE BLASCO IBANEZ in CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR MGM Adults 85c Kiddies 35c Granada TREATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5788 One Show 7:30 Only NOW SHOWING! Open 6:45 7:00 Adults 85c And THEATRE ... Telephone W3-1065 9 p.m. Varsity NOW SHOWING THEIR LOVE THROBBED... WHILE THE WORLD TREMBLED! A story that sweeps from Argentina to Paris... as the flames of World War II engulf mankind! P. B. KENNEDY A JULIAN BLAUSTEIN Production directed by VINGENTE MINNELLI THE HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE GLENN FORD • INGRID THULIN • CHARLES BOYER LEE J. COBB • PAUL HENREID • PAUL LUKAS • YETTE MIMIEUX KARL BOEMH • screenplay by ROBERT ARDREY • JOHN GAY • directed by VINGENTE BLASCO IBANEZ CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR MCM THE HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE Adults 85c Granada One Show Kiddies 35c INEATRE...Telephone 913-5703 7:30 Only SELF-SERVICE Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES H-D SELF-SERVICE arvey's ISCOUNT SHOES 23rd & Naismith 1302 W.23rd 23rd & Naismith SPRING FASHIONS IN THE SOFTEST LEATHERS AND LOVELIEST COLORS Every Pair BUDGET PRICED DRESS Lovely women's dress shoes. patents, colored patents, light color new bone color — and leathers. Po toe, stacked heel. Sizes 4½ to 10. 587 DRESS SHOES Lovely women's dress shoes. Spectator pumps, patents, colored patents, light colors — featuring the new bone color — and leathers. Pointed or new square toe, stacked heel. Sizes 4½ to 10. 5¹⁸7 FLATS Lighthearted, colorful flats to go with every spring outfit. Scores of colors and styles. Sizes 4½ to 10. 2¹⁸7 Square Toe SNEAKERS Six matching colors—nylon canvas, corduroy. Sizes 4½ to 10. 2¹⁸7 FLATS Lighthearted, colorful flats to go with every spring outfit. Scores of colors and styles. Sizes 4½ to 10. 287 Six canv 10. Select your FIRST QUALITY spring shoes at Harvey's There's plenty of FREE PARKING A STish o2c).call OPEN 9 TO 9 DAILY - SUNDAY, NOON TO 5 Monday, March 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Page 19 One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms cash: All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. FOUND Jr. college ring in Flint Hall the middle of Feb. Identify. See Mrs. Fine, 114 Flint. WANTED MALE HELP. From 11 a.m. till 5 p.m. or at night. Hourly wages $1 and up. Apply or call Bob Fondren at Griff's Burger Bar, 1618 West 23rd. VI 3-9447. HELP WANTED A STUDENT who needs tutoring in Spanish or Math 2 (or equivalent, especially 2c). Carolyn Hunticnic, 1703 Indiana, or call VI 3-4180. 3-20 HELP WANTED. Male or female, par- or full time. Opportunity for exceptional winnings. Set your own hours for work. AmBiC0, P.O. Box 8129, K.C. 12- Mo. BUSINESS SERVICES 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. ff 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 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. INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re- woven so damage cannot be seen. Cig- arette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tt DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formal, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 939½ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tf ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. t GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Price are revised for comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752. Free delivery. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies, Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. tf TRANSPORTATION Irma wants班 beginning April 1 from 9:30 am. Call VI 2-3720 after 6:30, 3:20 1:30 pm. Call VI 2-3720 after 6:30, 3:20 1:30 pm. Call VI 2-3720 after 6:30, 3:20 1:30 pm. Call VI 2-3720 after 6:30, 3:20 1:30 pm. Call VI 2-3720 after 6:30, 3:20 Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. — VI 3-0152 WANTED: Tide to New York over Spring Call Robert Herschberg at VI 31-54 3-19 Call Ridder Herschberg at VI 31-54 3-19 Second floor two room apt. Suitable for two men students. Everything furnished. Available now. Call V1 3-5137 after 5 p.m. or weekends. 3-20 FOR RENT Park Plaza South Apartments Central Air Conditioning Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking We will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 3-8253 Office -- 1912 W. 25th. APT. for 2 or 3 boys. Utilities pd. 1 block from campus. Available 1st of April or sooner. 1142 Indiana. 3-20 2 and 3 room apt. for rent. Newly decorated, close to town and campus. Adults only. Call B. E. Jacques, 2101 Learnard, VI 3-9995. 3-20 LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. CLI V 3-6294. LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-973f 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. TYPING "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impres- sion. The standard factors, for excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Toff, POI, VI 3-1087. EXPERIENCED TYPEJT: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001 SECRETARY WILL DO TYPING in home, Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Fanailur with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at 12-1749. tf FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter writes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. tf TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers etc. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric work. Mrs. M. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execu- sions. Service. 6917 B Woolson, Mission. H 2-7718. Evers or Sat, RA 2-2186. THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist, typewriter, Reasonable rate, Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware, C.I. 3-0483. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI T-3-2651 any time. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Palli, VI 3-8379. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing in my home -- call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lou Gehlbach. tt Typing: Will type reports, thesas, etc. Tape: 111 W. 21 St. Cf. VI 3-6440; tapes, 1511 W. 21 St. Cf. VI 3-6440; tapes. Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow, Bartow, 408 W. 15th, V1 2-1648. TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. tt Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with French, Dutch and Greek. Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Baldwin. Call VI 2-1546. 3-30 HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng reports type themes, theses, & reports accurately identified. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. *tf* EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, manuscripts, & application letters. Electric typewriter—Special symbols & signs. Prompt service.Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 Rhode Island, VI 3-7485. 3-19 CUTE Siamese purered kittens. About 16 weeks old. TU 7-5434 evenings after 6 p.m. 3-20 ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch Cali VI 3,897.1 come to 807 Ark. for more information. FOR SALE OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-8644. 1989 Renault, 4CV. Good condition, Black, white side wall tires. Will accept any reasonable offer. Call VI 3-6145 or VI 3- 3060. HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet-friendly Pet phone 3921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. SIMCA: 1959 super deluxe. Must sell immi- nance. Call BV: 3-5520 after 5 p.m. 3-19 call BV: 3-5520 after 5 p.m. GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES, complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $3.50, free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553, VI 3-5778. tf WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised, 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. iff 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 1933 2-dr. Blue Ford, I'm a dreambowl or less. Call V-18- 2916 between 5-7 p.m. HOLTON TRUMPET with case. Good condition. $50. CV II 3-8475 at 7 p.m. Service for German Autos HUNSINGER MOTORS 922 Mass. 1c SALE Tues. thru Fri., 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. For every 10c drink purchased, the Big Buy offers any other drink for one penny. BIG BUY AS See the Latest Styles Just Arrived For Spring Wearing. Priced from $2.75 to $3.50 Spend Your Leisure Time In Casual Fashions From the KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE --- Page 20 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 19. 1962 What's Behind the Cardboard Door, Asks Inquiring Reporter By Bob Hoyt At the top of the 17 flights of stairs, I paused and a gong sounded. Before me, an impressive, inlaid cardboard door opened a crack. An eye blinked at me from the darkness beyond the door. "Well?" a nondescript voice asked "T'M A journalist." "Good for you," the voice said, "Come back next July. I'll put you down for the fourth." "I want a feature," I said, still panting from the exertion of the ascent of stairs, "I'm desperate!" "Professors who ride bicycles up the hill every morning have something to blow about—go talk to one of them." "I HAD A TIP that you know more about the American Indian than anyone else on campus." "The only Indian I know is the one who joined the boat club so his red sons could sail in the yacht set." "Books! How about books? Have you read any good books, lately?" "Webster." "How do you feel about Webster's book?" "He is evidently not a KU man—he thinks ozone is for sterilizing water, purifying air, bleaching, and so forth." "WHAT ARE your opinions on education? Do you favor a broad liberal education or a technical education?" "I think a student who sleeps in petroleum class is in for a crude awakening." With that, the eye disappeared and the cardboard door closed. In my heart I knew the interview was over. At the bottom of the 17 flights of stairs I paused to gather my wits. My head was swimming but I was determined to penetrate that cardboard door. No Nevadan at St. Louis U. ST. LOUISE —(UPI)—Student enrollment at St. Louis University shows 54 nations and 49 states represented. Nevada is the only state without a student here. Lady Manhattan® How to make sure you'll never wither on the vine: wear the Lady Manhattan® coordinated shirt and skirt in an ever-so-pretty "Floral" woven cotton. The casually sophisticated cropped top has cardigan neckline, bell sleeves and matching flare skirt. It's the prettiest way to flower in the springtime, continue blooming throughout the summer. In 100% woven cotton that irons easily ... this enchanting Lady Manhattan go-together is tailored with the fine Lady Manhattan detailing you've come to expect. 19.98 Style G-907 Lady Manhattan Jay SHOPPE 835 Mass. 12th & Oread MEN'S SPRING APPAREL from Gibbs CLOTHING CO. 811 Mass. TAKES ON A LIGHT, BRIGHT LOOK! — NEW LOOK IN MEN'S SUITS New Styles New Shades New Fabrics Glenshire Suits New casual comfort, handsome new patterns, richly blended in the season's new greys, browns, blues and olives. Suits you would expect to pay much more for. $44.50 to $55.00 STYLECRAFT SUITS For Men and Young Men New hard wearing, long lasting fabrics. Come in soon and see the new spring range of styles and patterns. $34.50 to $39.50 DRESS SHIRTS Snap tab, button-down, pin, and regular collars. Wash and wear, broadcloth and Oxford cloth. Long and short sleeves. $2.98 to $5.00 SPRING SLACKS You will enjoy wearing these stay-fresh fabrics around the clock. Many with permanent creases. By Haggan $6.98 to $12.98 TAPERED COTTON SLACKS Solid colors or checks and plaids. Polished cottons or twills. $3.98 to $5.98 Completely New for Spring '62 SPORT COATS Now showing . . . A complete stock of this season's newest colors and finest fabrics. Scores of rich patterns and styles to choose from. $19.95 to $29.50 SPORT SHIRTS Short Sleeve Styles by Van Heusen, Paddle and Saddle, and Kole Sport New spring styles and colors in cut and sewn or knit fabrics. Button-down or regular collars, poncho or button-front styles in solid colors or patterns. $1.98 to $5.00 Daily hansan 59th Year, No. 106 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Tuesday, March 20, 1962 Action Discusses Proposed Platform Discriminatory clauses, the National Student Association (NSA), and a good nickel cup of coffee are three subjects discussed in Action's proposed platform. - Re-affiliation with the National Student Association. - The group, which is now applying to the All Student Council for recognition as a third KU political party, will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union to discuss, revise, and possibly ratify its first platform. The meeting will be! - The introduction of a bill to the All Student Council to take recognition from living groups at KU which have clauses in their constitution which discriminate on the basis of race or religion if these clauses are not removed by September, 1965. Johnson said that the campus needs the combined efforts of many groups in order to take an active position in national affairs. NSA would help greatly in this attempt, he said. its first platform. The meeting will be open to all students interested in becoming a member of Action, said Harold Johnson, Ft. Leavenworth junior and vice president of the group. Johnson said that Action is against forced integration at KU but that it does want to see the discriminatory clauses removed. THE PLANKS in the proposed platform are: He said forced integration would be as inconsistent with the American ideals as the discriminatory clauses are. He added, however, that Action fully supports the People-to-People program and the Current Events Committee. Action wants to look into the possibility of coffee being sold at the Union for 5c. The group also expressed a desire to find out why the Kansas Union cafeteria's prices are higher than those of other restaurants in the area Since the Kansas Union is supposed to be run for the student's benefit, it should offer the student better service through lower prices on meals Johnson said. - Investigation of some of the Kansas Union services. The platform also calls for: a financial statement to be published annually by the Kansas Union. THE PLATFORM ALSO calls f. Johnson said the group is not trying to crusade against the Union but wants to investigate some phases it thinks need possible change. - Support of the ASC Human Rights Committee as long as the HRC continues to investigate racial and religious discrimination at KU. - Explanation by the ASC of the reasons why the referendum on the student seating plan was never brought up. - Investigation into the work of the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). - Financial and Moral Support for the Student Non-Violent Cooperation Committee (SNCC). - The broadening of the ASC's outlook by including national and international problems in their scope of discussion. - A change in the ASC rules governing the ASC representation of cooperative living groups and professional fraternities. IF NO REASON is given by the ASC, the group will propose that action be taken to get the referendum. In regard to the student seating plan Johnson said the ASC constitution provides that if 20 per cent of the students sign a petition for a referendum on a subject, the ASC must set an election date not more than three weeks from the time when the petition is submitted. He said that a petition was signed last spring by 2500 students (more than twice the required number) but the Council failed to present the issue to the student body for a vote. Action proposes a campaign to be conducted in April to raise funds for the Student Non-Violent Cooperation Committee (SNCC), Johnson said. (Continued on page 8) Action Having ASC Trouble Action has come up against a barrier in its quest for the All Student Council's recognition as a campus political party. The validity of the proposed party's petition for ASC recognition has been unofficially questioned because the students who signed the petition are not necessarily potential members of the group. THE ASC CONSTITUTION says that for a group to get official recognition, its "active membership must constitute 10 per cent of the student body." The petition, which Action is circulating reads, "We, the undersigned, do hereby express the desire that Action be officially recognized as a campus political party at the University of Kansas." This petition makes no stipulation that the students who sign the petition are potential "active members" of the group, but rather that they simply desire to see Action become recognized as a campus political party. MEL SAFERSTEIN, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student and chairman of the ASC elections committee, explained that regardless of the interpretation of the phrase, "active membership," the ASC will have to vote to recognize the group. Although Action does not have the 1000 signatures (10 per cent of the student body) at this time, Harold Johnson, Ft. Leavenworth junior and vice-president of the group, said the required number of signatures is expected in the near future. The deadline for filing this petition with the ASC is Wednesday, March 28. Saferstein said that the problem of "active membership" arises from the group's individual membership (Continued on page 8) J-School Faculty Answers Charge Of Editor Austin The faculty of the KU School of Journalism charged that Whitley Austin, a Board of Regents member, was an unfair critic when he called the school a "disgrace." The faculty issued a statement today proposing that a committee of Kansas journalists make a study of the school to reach an "informed evaluation." The statement deplored Mr. Austin's charges as being made without documentation. A copy of the complete statement will be sent to each member of the Board of Regents. The statement reads as follows: At the March 16, 1962, meeting of the Kansas Board of Regents Mr. Whitley Austin, a member of the board, declared that the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information is a "disgrace." Mr. Austin said this in support of his motion to reduce the school to department status in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences THE FACULTY of the School of Journalism deplores and resents the assertion that the school operates ineffectively. The record shows otherwise. Faculty members, students, and alumni have achieved stature and have won honors that clearly reflect the high standing of the school. Facts in support of this statement are available for all to see. For instance, the students last year won first place in the national writing competition sponsored among all accredited schools and departments of journalism by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation. Mr. Austin made his charges against the school and against the faculty without documentation. We welcome any honest and constructive study and criticism by Mr. Austin or any other person or group interested in making an informed evaluation of our program. Three times since 1947—at the prescribed five-year intervals—the William Allen White School has been accredited by the American Council on Education for Journalism, ACEJ consists half of educators SPECIFICALLY, we propose that a committee of Kansas journalists visit the School of Journalism and make such a study. (Continued on page 8) By Bill Sheldon The KU-Y Cabinet voted last night not to penalize the winning skit in the recent Rock Chalk Revue. KU-Y Declares Revue Skit 'OK' The originality of the Kappa Sigma-Delta Delta Delta skit had been questioned by students and faculty members and had been under investigation by the Cabinet. Although the board felt the skit was not entirely original, they decided not to penalize the fraternity and sorority. The Cabinet, the governing body of the production, "decided that the Kappa Sigma-Delta Delta Delta skit should not be disqualified from Rock Chalk and that they should be allowed to keep the trophies." The vote of the Cabinet was 11-4. 兰妮 Childers, Kansas City senior, who played Medea in the Rock Chalk skit explained that she had gotten the idea for the skit from a show at Southern Methodist University. MISS CHILDERS SAID during a hearing before the Cabinet that at SMU only eight minutes were allowed for the skit. Thus the Cabinet explained its decision saying, "The expansion of the show here to 15 minutes would mean that more than half of the material was by Kappa Sigma and Delta Delta. The announcement of the decision came in a two and one-half page statement from the Cabinet which was released following a one and one-half hour meeting in the Kansas Union. The originality of the skit, "Medea," was first challenged by the Rock Chalk committee of the Cabinet at a special meeting March 5. Information leading to the conducting of the investigation came from a statement by a KU faculty member who said she had seen a similar skit in Chicago. THE FACULTY MEMBER, MRS. Nancy Scott, assistant instructor of English, said she saw the complete play, "Medium Rare," of which "Medea" is a part, at the Happy Medium Cabaret in Chicago in August, 1961. The KU-Y statement also said Bill Charles, Oak Park, Ill., graduate student, "claimed that the 'Medea' skil was similar to that presented at the Happy Medium." Miss Childers told the Cabinet the skit at SMU was presented on April 9,1960, almost three months before the opening of the show in Chicago Miss Childers said she was not aware of the origin of the skit until after Rock Chalk. "CONSIDERING THE FACTS, members of the Cabinet pointed out that the 'Medea' skit differed from other and previous skits not so much in kind but in degree," the statement said. Bill McCollum, Leavenwortn senior and co-chairman of KU-Y, said there was no specific proof that the Chicago and KU skits had identical lines. McCollum, who prepared the statement, said the lines being identical was nothing more than "hearsay." "Unfortunately there has been increasingly more unoriginal material used in Rock Chalk in recent years," the statement said, "and while this has been the most flagrant violation brought to the attention of the KU-Y, there seems to be not enough justification to disqualify them (the winners) in view of previous infractions." McCOLLUM EXPLAINED THERE has not been a clarification in the Rock Chalk rules of the originality of the skits. "Because of the misunderstanding in the 'Medea' skit the cabinet recommended that the Rock Chalk Revue staff prepare specific rules describing the nature of next year's Revue for the participating houses," the Cabinet statement said. "We feel the action to be taken because of the preceding statement will clarify the rules and regulations for next year and that this will not happen again," McCollum said. "IT IS OBVIOUS THAT KAPPA Sigma and Delta Delta Delta, not having been in Rock Chalk in recent years, did not understand the show as being principally a KU student work," the statement said. "The Rock Chalk staff assumed that all the participating houses were aware of this tradition and rules concerning originality in the director's guide seemed unnecessary," the statement continued. Keith Jochim, Birmingham, Mich., junior and previous spokesman for the houses involved, said: "I am pleased with the KU-Y decision and, of course, agree with it. I am glad it was finally decided and out of the way because it has been putting a lot of people on the spot for a long time." Jochim added that he felt there was a need for a change in the rules regarding originality. He said more specific rules would be a great help o the houses. Weather Considerable cloudiness today and tonight. Not quite so warm today. Scattered thunderstorms developing this afternoon and evening continuing tonight. Wednesday partly cloudy and cooler. Highs this afternoon middle to lower 60s. Lows tonight upper 40s. Highs Wednesday 50s. Book Drive Going Well The first day of the People-to-People book drive for a foreign student lending library took in between 800 and 900 books. A goal of 5,000 has been set for the drive which will extend through this week. Books from individual students are being collected at the information booth on Jayhawk Blvd. Tonight, members of the Interfriaternity Pledge Council will drive representatives from the sororites and the Panhellenic Council to the various organized houses to pick up books collected by those groups. THE BOOKS are being stored in a temporary headquarters at 776 North 2nd St. They will be catalogued there and then moved into a permanent library in time to be in circulation for the fall semester. The library which will be in operation next fall, will provide boots on a loan basis, for foreign students who are on a limited budget. All kinds of books are being collected, but those most needed are the ones still used in classroom instruction. Books which are no longer used at KU will be sent overseas through the KU-Y overseas books program. PEOPLE TO PEOPLE BOOK DRIVE MARCH 19 to 23 BOOKS ARE FOR PEOPLE—James Alsbrook, Lawrence sophomore, gives books at the campus collection point in the information booth on Jayhawk Blvd. Robert Crosier, Lawrence freshman. representing the Interfraternity Pledge Council, inside the booth, accepts the books for the People-to-People foreign student library. The drive will continue until Thursday. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 20. 1962 The Disease of Liberty LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler President Kennedy shot down a favorite canard of the far right when he told his news conference last week that there will be no winners in a nuclear war. He was responding to a question which noted that the Administration has been accused of following a "no-win" policy in the cold war. This curious illusion that the United States Government does not want to "win the cold war" was applied to the Eisenhower Administration as well as to the present one. President Truman, also, heard himself so accused, by Senator McCarthy among others. Generally what the critics mean is that American foreign policy is not anti-Communist enough, not hostile enough, not aggressive enough, to suit them. They want the "hard-line." They want somebody punched in the snoot. That is their idea of a "vigorous" foreign policy. The "hard line" people, of course, always deny that they actually want a nuclear war. We are quite sure they do not. But advocating policies which would make war inevitable, or even increase the probability of it, is not sharply distinguishable, so far as results go, from consciously advocating war itself. A man who lights a match in a gas-filled room may not be in favor of explosions, but he might as well be. MR. KENNEDY'S effective reply was that every American citizen wants the United States to be secure and in peace; and all "want the cause of freedom around the world to prevail; quite obviously that is our national objective." But he quietly reminded anybody who would engage in nuclear warfare to liberate the world that there will not be any winners in such a war. THOSE WHO regard as weakness any attempt to reach an honorable accommodation of our interests with Soviet and other national interests are victims of a juvenile psychology. Lacking the intellectual or moral stamina to face the enormously complicated and frustrating problems of today's world, they retreat into the childish fantasy of abolishing the problems by "being tough." The adult world is not so simple. The problems exist, and they will not go away. To assume that they can only be solved by our "winning" or "losing" the cold war is to misconstrue the nature of the world struggle. It is not, indeed, a war at all, and we should not become victims of our own metaphors. Nor is it a game, which after four periods will come to an end, with a neat little score to determine who won. Rather it is a conflict between basic philosophies of government, of man, of politics—a contest of social and economic systems—which has been going on in one form or another for centuries, and will continue to go on (if anything does) long after the present antagonists have passed from the scene. IT IS EASY to suppose that in this struggle the world must go all one way or all another, but in fact it never has. The more reliable assumption is that the world, if it survives, will continue to be a place of variety, a pluralistic world, a world of contrast and contest, a world that resists reduction to a single pattern. No element in it, not our own system nor the Communist nor the infinite gradations in between, possesses the monopoly of power necessary to impose its will on the others. And the decisive fact is that any attempt to impose a single way of life would result in mutual annihilation. In this age, Sparta cannot destroy Athens without simultaneously destroying itself. Of course every American wants the area of freedom to expand; and we think it will expand with time. But the basic truth to be faced is that survival demands that competing philosophies and social systems learn to live together in peace. An armed crusade to compel men to be free is self-contradictory. The President, quoting Thomas Jefferson, put the case better when he spoke of enabling the "disease of liberty" to be caught. In the end, mature minds must recognize that we cannot escape living on the same planet with those we do not approve. That is why President Kennedy is wise in saying that our foreign policy must "proceed with responsibility and with care in an age when the human race can obliterate itself." (From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch) letters to the editor They Listen to the Men Editor: This article threw light on the question in my mind as to why the opinions of the men in residence halls were given such respect when the administration announced the plan for triple rooms. The women's dorms have been triped for years, and every year they move in more bunkbeds. Do the girls complain? No, they accept any idea which comes from the Dean of Women's office as gospel, and if there be one who dares to question such truths, she is immediately brainwashed. If brainwashing does not work, she is ignored. I now know why the men on this campus are given more independence than the women. They have earned the right by showing their ability to think. I REFER to the stand taken by Sigma Nu in saying that they have a right to discriminate. I agree. I do not believe it is right, but I do believe they have the right. What I admire in Mr. Brawner is that he admits frankly that fraternities discriminate. Sororites are not quite so realistic. Panhellenic says that sororities are "not discriminatory because the Negro girls have their own sorority" (quoted from an article on rush from UDK last year). The fallacy of such "reasoning" is obvious. THE ADMINISTRATION knows that an ignored rebel cannot gain followers because the others are either too afraid to use this new thing called a brain which they have just discovered, or they are too stupid to know that they have one. (I hope some rabble will be rused by this statement, but probably it will not.) So carry on, Sigma Nu, the opportunity of a college student to think for himself is rare. Dorothy Kelly Mission junior * * * Kansan Editorialist Criticized Editor: Throughout this controversy on Greek restrictive clauses, it has seemed that the most vehement critics have been the most blatantly confused. To compound this, Mr. Karl Koch has added to this misunderstanding a demonstration of what I believe to be erroneous logic. I am referring, of course, to his attack on the explanatory statement made by Mr. Steve Brawner, Commander of Sigma Nu, which was an honest and clear attempt to explain to the critiques that which they seemed to misunderstand and which they continue to misunderstand. Mr. Koch is both sadly misinformed and strongly lacking in understanding of the issues involved. FIRST, MR. KOCH said "There is no known instance where a university has ordered a Greek house to accept anyone." This will be recognized immediately as fallacious by any Greek who has kept abreast of recent occurrences in this area. I can only suggest that Mr. Koch write to Amherst and Williams Colleges and ask them how they manage guarantees of good faith, total opportunity, and forced placement in fraternities of those boys who wanted to pledge but did not receive an invitation during formal rush. Then, I believe Mr. Koch will be forced to admit that his statement was neither logical nor true. Secondly, why all of this preoccupation with the "Big Bad National" idea? Steve Brawner stated it correctly when he said that he wouldn't be a Sigma Nu if he didn't belong to the national organization. Of course, Mr. Koch is incapable of understanding this. He fails to see that National is not an overbearing, bigoted group, but simply a collection of chapters, each of which is a part of National and each of which is instrumental in forming the rules of the fraternity at national conventions. Mr. Koch seems to feel that National is set apart from the local chapter in a dictatorial position so as to be able to obtain its "bigoted" demands. Can't Mr. Koch understand that we are indeed as much members of our national organizations as we are of our local chapters, and that acting as members of this group, we are entitled to be selective just as we are on a local basis. National does not tell us what to do. We have made these rules, and therefore, we are telling National what to do. I CERTAINLY feel that we have a right to set up our national organization the way we want it and to maintain the same membership standards nationwide. If that's the way we want it, why can't we have it that way, without having someone completely ignorant of the situation take potshots at us in the dark. I feel that it is rather senseless to argue with someone who is not in full possession of the facts, but it is also rather difficult to sit idle and watch this display of ignorance be magnified in the face of Mr. Brawner's honest and voluntary explanation. Bill Gissendanner Bill Gissendanner Kirkwood, Mo., senior Past President, Phi Delta Theta BICLER P-2 "NO WONDER ALL TH' GIRLS ARE SO ANXIOUS TO DATE FOREIGN STUDENTS." movies By Bill Charles DE SICA directed Sophia Loren so well that she has won an award at Cannes and is a nominee for an Academy Award. The recognition is proof that she has content as well as form. But the laurels for "Two Women" must go to De Sica. His black-and-white, narrow-screen "Two Women": with Sophia Loren and Jean-Paul Belmando. Directed by Vittorio De Sica. At the Varsity. As certain scenes — notably the rape scene and the hysterical mother who has lost her baby — clearly show, "Two Women" is a brutal and realistic film. But it is not without its sentimental moments. These ingredients are part of the style of Vittorio De Sica. De Sica is one of the older members of Italy's society of intelligent film-makers. His heyday was the post-war flowering of neorealism. Although he is no longer considered among the avant-garde, he cannot be relegated to the status of minor director. De Sica knows how to tell a story with film. Any director with that skill will never be a second-rater. The camera moves; the effect of "Two Women" is visual. In other words, it is an honest-to-God motion picture. After two postponements, Lawrence finally has its chance to see "Two Women." The film should find favor with those who expect more than merely big-screen television from movies. Producer Carlo Ponti and Director Vittorio De Sica did not make this picture to provide people with something to watch while they eat popcorn. "TWO WOMEN" is set in Italy during World War II. It offers a glimpse at the havoe of war as it concerns a mother and her adolescent daughter. But the film is more than a protest against war. The clue to this is the title, which does not really apply until the film's end. The little girl has become a sort of juvenile woman, due not only to her brutal rape but to the peculiar and unfortunate circumstance of war. 恭 production is a very colorful, a very big picture. By Murrel Bland "The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse": produced by Julian Blaustein. At the Granada. War, death, conquest and pestilence—the four evils that appear in a vision as horsemen in the Bible—are used to carry out the main theme in this movie. The story concerns an Argentina ranch baron, played by Lee J. Cobb, who has two daughters. One daughter marries a Frenchman. The other daughter marries a German. They all live in Argentina. A CONFLICT in the family arises just before World War II breaks out. The old man is quite disgusted because his German son-in-law and grandson have joined the Nazis. The French son-in-law and his son Julio, played by Glenn Ford, go to France. Julio later joins a French underground movement. The movie shows how war, conquest, death and pestilence divide a family. The acting in the movie is better than average. However, some characters go to extremes and overact. For example, Lee J. Cobb overplays the part of the fiery old man. In the scenes just before his death, it appears that he is trying too hard to play the part. The audience sees Cobb as an emotional actor and not the fiery old man. THE MOVIE USES some interesting technical methods. Several film clips of the war are seen. Red and blue filters are used so that these film clips, which were originally filmed in black and white, blend in with the natural color of the rest of the movie. The movie is worth seeing. However, do not see the show if you are interested in seeing a religious movie. The title, which is taken from the book of Revelations in the Bible, is quite misleading. Daily Hansan UNIVERSITY University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Viking 3-2700 Telephone VIking 3-2100 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. Tuesday, March 20. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 June Graduate 'Labor Shortage' Noted KU job placement directors have indicated that the number of job openings for graduating seniors is exceeding the number of graduates. Word from the office of Dana Stevens, director of the placement bureau, has disclosed the response from graduating seniors this year is at an all-time high. Mrs. Mary Lou Phillips, placement secretary, said students' interest this year is much greater than last year. She said the average monthly salary for business students with BS or BA degrees is between $400 and $450. This is generally the same as last year, but is an increase of nearly $100 from three to four years ago. DEANS AND PROFESSORS from various schools on the Hill have also revealed that the number of job openings for their graduating students are also exceeding the number of graduates. All of the interviews disclosed one thing, though—more and more of the graduating seniors are going ahead and attending graduate school for masters degrees. "The main reason behind this," says Donald Metzler, associate dean of Engineering and Architecture, "is that companies simply pay more for the student with the MS degree. Employers are encouraging students to go on to graduate school. "The average monthly salary this year for a student with a BS degree in engineering is around $545. This is an increase of $25 over last year," he said. Dean Metzler said that enrollment in the graduate work in the Engineering and Architecture school is up this year as compared to previous years. Dr. J. Allen Reese, dean of the School of Pharmacy, said the situation has not changed much since last year. "MS DEGREES in engineering and architecture have increased 23 per cent in the last four years and BS degrees have increased 33 per cent during the same time," he said. "Salaries are slightly up," he said. "Minimum wages are between $500 and $550 per month. Some go as high as $1,000 per month." The law student will not have any trouble finding a job. In most cases he will have his choice. Dan Hop- Average wage per month for students entering corporations is between $400 and $425. This figure is up $20 over last year. "In senior high schools," Regier said, "the demand is for English, foreign languages, physics and chemistry teachers. Women physical education teachers are also needed." son, assistant dean of the School of Law said, "This year is good to excellent in the amount of job openings, but not as good as last year. HEROLD REGER, director of the Teacher Placement Bureau, said there is a great demand for teachers in the elementary teaching. He said from kindergarten to sixth grade teachers are in extreme demand throughout the country. There also is a shortage of teachers in the social studies and English in the junior high schools, he added. Mathematics and science teachers are also in demand, he said. "LAST YEAR WAS an exception," he said. Students receiving government jobs will earn around $525 per month, he said. Regier said the lack of male graduates is the main reason why there is such a need for elementary teachers. The average monthly salary is generally more in large city schools than in smaller cities, he said. For the beginning teacher in the larger school system, he said the average salary is between $4600 and $4800 yearly. He compared this to between $4200 and $4500 in the smaller school system. Regier added that beginning yearly pay for California teachers is around $5400. "THE AVERAGE FROM KU," he said, "is much less. It is between 50 and 60 per cent here." He remarked that there are more students going on to graduate school than ever before. Arthur Davidson, professor of chemistry, said job placements are running about the same as last year. He noted that the number of chemistry graduates rose to an all time high in 1960 and has declined only slightly since then. EXCLUSIVE: A POST EDITOR PREVIEWS THE CAR OF TOMORROW How would you like a car that can't overheat, never needs oil and runs on cheap diesel fuel? This week, a Post editor reports on his cross-country trip in exactly this kind of car—a new turbine auto. He tells how it compares with ordinary cars. What kind of mishaps he had en route. And what its chances are of getting on the market. The Saturday Evening POST MARCH 1, 2015 ISSUE NO. 895 Kansan Classified Ads Get Results Double Edge Razor Blades Finest Surgical Steel, honed in oil. Full money back guarantee. 30 - $900 100 - $85c 200 - $1.50 500 - $3.30 1000 - $7.75 Postpaid. Packed five blades to package, 20 packages to carton. C.O.D. orders accepted. Postcard brings general merchandise. EMERSON COMPANY 406 South Second Alhambra, California Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER KU-Y, 1962-63 Turn in petitions by 5 p.m., Mon. March 26th. Those interested in being on the Executive Committee should turn in petitions by Monday also. Plan to be interviewed Tuesday evening, March 27th. Have a good idea for a KU-Y program next year? Interested in chairing a continuing group? The New CRESTAURANT Located in the NW Corner of Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa Featuring the Complete Self Service SALAD BAR Free Parking we've been blowing up a storm! * A The reason: to find the shape of the future-future cars, that is. By creating man-made monsoons in laboratory wind tunnels, Ford Motor Company scientists and engineers are able to test the effects of aerodynamic design on the fuel economy passing ability and stability of passenger cars. They use %-scale model cars and blow gales past them up to 267 mph to simulate 100-mph car speeds. In addition to analyzing shapes with an eye to reducing air drag, our scientists and engineers are studying means of improving vehicle control through proper aerodynamic design. Experimental projects like this are helping pave the way for major advances in tomorrow's cars .advances which could bring even better fuel economy,better performance with less engine effort and sater driving at higher cruising speeds. This is just one more example of how Ford is gaining 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 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. March 20.1962 Page 4 Annual Book Contest Opens The annual Taylor book collection contest will be confined to undergraduate students this year. W. Stuart Forth, associate director of libraries, announced recently. He said the contest will be open to all regularly enrolled undergraduates. The books must be owned and collected by the entrants. A minimum of 35 titles may be submitted and not more than 60. The Taylor contest is a contest to determine the best, private, student library. Prizes will be increased this year. The first award winner will receive $100 and second prize will be $50. The submitted collections may be in any field or on any subject. Entries should be accompanied by a 400 word essay discussing the purpose and development of the collection. Information may be obtained from Mr. Forth, 318 Watson. All entries should be submitted by April 18. The contest is sponsored by Mrs. Elizabeth M. Taylor of Kansas City. DAVID SUSSKIND SAYS: 95% OF OUR MOVIES ARE JUNK Why pick on TV? asks David Susskind. The movies are just as lousy. In this week's Saturday Evening Post, the whiz kid of television lashes out at all American culture. He says Hollywood is run by "mental midgets." Popular music is "enough to chill my blood." Best-sellers are "jam-packed with sex." And then he points out the one bright spot in American life. The Saturday Evening IOCST MARBOH 41 ISSUE NOW ON SALE Stands to reason that a life insurance policy designed expressly for college men—and sold only to college men—gives you the most benefits for your money when you consider that college men are preferred insurance risks. Call me and I'll fill you in on THE BENEFACTOR, College Life's famous policy, exclusively for college men. Jack Fiscus $ ^{*} $ says... *JACK FISCUS Area Director P. O. Box 272 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Vlking 2-3206 representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men Official Bulletin Teacher Interviews: March 21 — Robert Shreve, Supt. Cherry Creek, District. Foglewood, Colo. Catholic Lawn Mass; 7 a.m. & 12:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 191 Stratford Road Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11:45-12 noon; Saturday, 4-5 and 7-8 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Strat- Nursing Club: 7 p.m. Fraser Dining Hall, Public Health Nursing. Russkii萍 soblizatrę vto vtorkin. 20-ova marта, 7:30 chasovy. D `Cottonwood van tova` 7:30 chasovy. Dr `Giovorti govorit` na predmete; Kommunizm na predmete; Kommunizvam tova; Amstvo, i zauchiyushchivy, Russkii, Vykrkx **YAF Meeting:** 7:30 p.m., Gread Room, Kickoff Vote. Note on constitutional amendment. TOMORROW KUOK — Wednesday — 3—News and Weather; 3:05–Fort Topy Tunes; 4—Weather; 6:15–Hilltopping; 6—News and Weather; 6:15–Weather; 6:15–Wax Works; 6:25–Spotlight on Science; 6:30-Bonjour Mesdames; 6:45–Public Program; 6:45–Program I; 8–Noon Flight; 9–Night Flight Stage II; 10–Flight Stage III; 10–News and Weather; 10:15–Night Flight Stage II; 12–Portals of Praver. People-to-People Forum: 4 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas University. Orientation meeting for students planning to visit Gerlach Switzerland. Horst Haselmann in charge Le Cerule Francais se réunira mercred le 21 mars à quatre heures dans la salle de Fraser. M. le professeur Klaus Berger le sur "Géricault et la Semaine Sainte" d'Aroigny." Tous ceux qui s'intéressent au français sont invités. Industrial Tour Set For Foreign Students An industrial tour of St. Joseph, Mo., is scheduled for KU foreign students next Friday. Busses will leave the Kansas Union at 7:45 a.m. The tour will involve visits to four factories in the St. Joseph area. Lunch will be provided for the tour members. Foreign students may sign up for the tour at the P-t-P office, room 113 in the Kansas Union. The second in a series of foreign travel conferences, sponsored by People-to-People, will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Foreign Travel Conference To Be Tomorrow Afternoon Tomorrow's conference will be conducted by Horst Haselmann, Vienna, Austria, graduate student. He will discuss Germany, Austria and Switzerland. The conferences are mainly for American students who will be traveling abroad this summer under the P-t-P Foreign Students Abroad program, but any student who is considering foreign travel may attend. The programs are designed to aid American students in gaining a background in foreign countries and customs. A film is shown at the beginning of each conference, presenting a broad picture of the country under discussion. A foreign student from that area conducts the meeting, and with the help of two or three other foreign students and one American student, a panel discussion about the country is given. Class Officers Must Apply By March 28 The deadline for the filing of class officer candidate applications is 5 p.m. Wednesday, March 28. Potential candidates may pick up applications in the Dean of Men's office. A student needs only 50 signatures on a petition to become a candidate. Girl Watcher's Guide Presented by Pall Mall Famous Cigarettes ' Ranchwrecker Blue-Jeaned Ranchwrecker LESSON 10- Girls should be real Bird watching manuals clearly state that this is the study of living birds. It has nothing whatsoever to do with stuffed birds, models of birds or photographs of birds. The girl watching purist observes this same rule. In other words, girl watchers do not consider it a true function of their art to watch girls in movies or magazines. The real, live girl is only and always the object of his quest, the subject of his contemplation. As experienced girl watchers (such as the cowboys above) know, there's no substitute for the real thing. (Pall Mall smokers know it, too. There's no substitute for Pall Mall's natural mildness—it's so good to your taste!) Regular Filter Tip PALL MALL Compare all three! Smoke "travelled" through fine tobacco tastes best. See the difference! With Pall Mall, you get that famous length of the finest tobaccos money can buy. Pall Mall's famous length travels and gentiles the smoke naturally . . . over, around, and through Pall Mall's fine, mellow tobaccos. Makes it mild . . . but does not filter out that satisfying flavor! Pall Mall's natural mildness is so good to your taste! So smooth, so satisfying. so downright smokeable! C.A. I. Co. Product of The American Telephone Company "Telephone." PALL MALL FAMOUS CIGARETTES THE STATE OF NEW YORK WHEREVER PARTICULAR PEOPLE LONGGATE “Blaceo is our middle name” This ad based on the book, "The Girl Watcher's Guide." Text Copyright by Donald J. Sawers. Drawings: Copyright by Elden Doolin. Reprinted by permission of Harper & Brothers. r m d r n t t = Strangers Write Book On Bee Architecture A book by a KU entomologist and a Japanese entomologist who have never seen each other will be published Friday by the University of Kansas Press. THE BEES SEEM to be an ideal subject for examining the relationship of social development and nest architecture, since they exist in a rich assortment of species and can be studied easily by experienced field workers, the book notes. Charles D. Michener, Watkins distinguished professor at KU, and Shoichi F. Sakagami, faculty member at the Zoological Institute of the University of Hokkaido, Japan, are the authors of the work called "The Nest Architecture of the Sweat Bees (Haliictinae): A Comparative Study of Behavior." With an ocean and part of a continent between them the authors have collaborated in making a new classification of nests and in discussing the evolution of nest structures. They have drawn both on published information and on their own observations during several years. Discussion Topic Is Wedding Music Wedding music will be the subject of the song repertory session by Miriam Stewart Hamilton, assistant professor of voice, at noon tomorrow in the choral rehearsal room in Murphy Hall. Prof. Hamilton will have Richard Gayhart, instructor of organ and theory and a Topeka organist and choir master, as her special guest to speak and answer questions about wedding music. Mr. Gayhart will discuss the matter of wedding processions and recessionals. There are several others besides the "Lohengrin" bridal processional and the Mendelsohn "Midsummer Night's Dream" bridal recessional, which are traditionally used. Page 5 The gathering is informal and open to the public. Michener, who has been a member of the KU entomology department since 1948, was chairman from 1949-61. He has studied sweat bees in Mexico, Panama, Brazil, Australia, New Guinea and the Fiji Islands, as well as the United States. Sakagami is an authority on the bees of Southeast Asia and has written books about the bees of Japan. He now is studying bees at the University of Paraná in Brazil. The two entomologists expect to meet at KU in 1963 after Sakagami completes his work in Brazil. Enrollment Up 8.1 Per Cent James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions, reported that there are 748 new students or an increase of 8.1 per cent over the same time last year. The 9,250 students enrolled on the KU campus spend a total of 124,962 hours in class weekly. A breakdown of each class shows 2,196 freshmen; 1,698 sophomores; 1,489 juniors; 1,748 seniors; 12 iff year students; 142 special students; 119 law students; 106 medical students; and 1,740 graduate students Reports indicate there are 720 enrolled at the Medical Center in Kansas City. This is 32 more than last spring. THE NUMBER of women students at KU is continuing to increase each year. Figures show there are 3,175 women students while there are 6,059 men. This is less than a 2-1 ratio. A breakdown of each school and the number of its students is: Graduate, 1,789; College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 4,094; Business, 371; Education, 983; Engineering and Architecture, 1,100; Fine Arts, 593; Journalism, 82; Law, 119; Medicine, 793, and Pharmacy, 85. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results Dean to Talk At Law Day The annual University of Kansas Law Day will be Saturday in Fraser Theater. The event honors law students for their outstanding work. Moot court finals will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday in the courtroom of Green Hall. Competing will be Charles Wetzler, Lawrence sophomore, Kenneth McIntyre, Livonia, Mich., sophomore, Mike Mills, McPherson sophomore, and Robert Meeker, Leavenworth sophomore. The winners, who will receive a prize of law books, will make up the official Moot Court team which will participate in national competition next year. The men will debate an international law case before a hypothetical supreme court comprised of Walter Huxman, judge of the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, Walter Thiele, retired justice of the Kansas Supreme Court, and Joseph Dawes, referee in bankruptcy. All are from Topeka. University Daily Kansan Thurman W. Arnold, former professor of law at Yale University, will deliver the Judge Nelson Timothy Stephens lecture at 3:30 p.m. in Fraser. Arnold has been assistant attorney general in the Department of Justice and associate justice of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. James K. Logan, dean of law at KU, but on leave this year at Harvard, will return Saturday to give his "State of the Law School" address Saturday. Tuesday, March 20, 1962 Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES Having a Party? JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Weaver Woolite cloth water wash 1 lb. powder $1.50 16 oz. liquid LASTIC-LIFE $1.50 8 oz. Tune Up for Spring at Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results For Tonight's Study-Break You Deserve Fresh Baked GOODIES From Submarines, Too Submarines, Too Joe's Bakery 412 W. 6th Drop In Any Hour Day or Night Closed Sat., 6 p.m.; Reopen Sun., 4 p.m. Closed Sat., 6 p.m.; Reopen Sun., 4 p.m. Have a Big Order? Call VI 3-4720 Graphe Sang You'll Be Glad You Did!! Organized Houses, Dorms, Fraternities, Sororities. Here's an opportunity to keep forever cherished songs of your heart. Recorded in high-fidelity at your house or dormitory. Beautiful customized album . . . or your group may design its own . . . to protect your treasured recording. Century alpha detta μι ωηφε Average LP Price—$4.98—45's about $2.00 (Prices dependent upon number of records purchased) CUSTOM RECORDING Audio House SERVICE HIGH FIDELITY Franchised Associate 909 New York VI 3-4916 Sure, we still supply dance and party music to make your house or dorm party the swingin'est on the Hill. Ask members from these houses how they liked their record. Then you'll learn the fun of being a recording singing group. Social Chairmen, call us: VI 3-4916 MARCHING ALONG Songs of Grist Mill Take Advantage of This Customized Recording Service Before You Graduate. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 20. 1962 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Steve Clark There is much speculation along the basketball-coach market as to who will succeed Doyle Parrack as the University of Oklahoma's basketball coach. Parrack resigned under pressure Friday in a move that surprised few, THE CONTINUALLY growing list of possible successors to the post includes KU freshman basketball coach Ted Owens. Owens is an Oklahoma graduate and well-liked by Sooner fans. Owens is remembered in Boomer- Soonerland for his two-handed, deadly accurate set shot. He is the last person to shoot the two-handed set shot in the Big Eight. OWENS WOULD be a wise choice for the Oklahoma post. He is well-versed in basketball theory, an excellent teacher, and a good recruiter. To watch Owens shoot the monstrosity is like watching Grandma Moses. With the advent of the jump shot and the one-handed set, his two-handed shot appears strictly old fashioned. He works exceptionally hard at recruiting. The number of miles that Owens travels in a single season to watch high school players is incredible. Owens seems very happy at KU. His transformation from a Sooner to Jayhawk was a rapid one and now he appears to be an ardent dyed-in-the-wool Jayhawker. The Oklahoma position is a tempting one. There is usually a desire to return to one's alma mater to coach. Also Owens was raised in Oklahoma and his parents and many friends reside there. ANOTHER NAME that has yet to be mentioned, but is sure to be before the speculation is over is Thornton Jenkins, Missouri's assistant coach. Jenkins was disappointed when he did not receive the MU head coaching post, and is intimating that he can be lured away from Tigerland. Jenkins too is a top recruiter and there were some Big Eight followers who thought Jenkins, if head coach, could lure the top Missouri high school products to Columbia. AT PRESENT MU is batting with St. Louis University for the top cage prospects. Since the Billikens put strong emphasis on basketball, many of the better players end up performing for John Bennington. Oklahoma's problem is recruiting Big Eight caliber ball-players, and either Owens or Jenkins could fill this assignment capably. The OU athletic board will probably wait several weeks before making a decision and in the meantime there will be a long seemingly endless line of rumored prospects gracing the sports pages. NOW SHOWING JOSEPH E. LEVINE presents Sophia loren BEST SELLING MUSIC OF THE YEAR "Two WOMEN" Produced by Carlo Ponti directed by Vittorio DeSica At CINEMAS 10500 N.Y.C. Award Sophia Loren Nominated for the 1961 "Best Actress" in "Two Women" 7:00 and 9 p.m. Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V1.3-7065 Adults Only! 85c THE CLOCKS STOOD STILL FOR THEM... WHILE THE WHOLE WORLD CRASHED! An immortal story of love...intrigue... and adventure in World War II! METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER presents A JULIAN BLAUSTEIN Production directed by VINCENTE MINNELLI THE 4 HORSEMEN OF THE LAPOCALYPSE starring GLENN FORD • INGRID THULIN • CHARLES BOYER LEE J. COBB • PAUL HENREID • PAUL LUKAS • VETTE MIMIEUX KARL BOEHM - screen play by ROBERT ARDREY and JOHN GAY - based on the novel BY VICTENTE BLASCO IBANEZ in CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR MGM NOW SHOWING Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5783 7:30 ONLY BARNES AND ELLEN C. MAYER Battenfeld defeated Jolliffe last night in the finals of the Men's Scholarship Halls ping-pong tournament. Battenfeld Wins Ping-Pong Match THE HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE THE HORSEMEN OF THE LAPOCALYPSE GLENN FORD • INGRID THULIN • CHARLES BOYER LEE J COBB • PAUL HENREID • PAUL LUKAS • YETTE MIMIEUX KARL BOEHM • sung by ROBERT ARDREY and JOHN GAY • based on VICENTE BLASCO IBANEZ in CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR MGM NOW SHOWING Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 7:30 ONLY Milt Swafford, Hugeton freshman of Jolliffe, and Chuck Thompson, Halstead freshman of Battenfeld, met in the final. Swafford won, but the victory had no effect on the final team scores and Battenfeld walked away with a traveling trophy. Granada 7:30 THEATRE • Telephone WI 3-5728 ONLY Other members of the winning Battenfeld team are Jim Tilford, Wichita sophomore, and Les Siegrist, Hutchinson freshman. ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — (UPI)— Bobby Nichols shot a near record 64 yesterday and collected $2,800 for his first tournament victory on the PGA tour since turning pro in 1960. Nichols Wins Tournament Sports in Brief Kansas' appearance in the Bluebonnet Bowl football game last December netted the school $82.554.12. April 23, but it is possible we'll finish before that," he added. Bowl officials announced yesterday that Kansas and Rice, the two participants, each drew that amount. The stadium, which seats 70,000, was sold out for the game but only 52,000 attended because of a steady rain. Kansas won, 34-7, for its first bowl victory in history. The 30-year-old Kansas State coach said, "I don't know how much better we will be—how we will compare with the other teams—but I do know that the added competition on all positions will encourage the most rapid improvement of our individuals." MANHATTAN—(UPI) — Seventy-eight candidates reported to head coach Doug Weaver yesterday as Kansas State held its first spring football workout in 70-degree sunshine. Weaver said he plans to get in the allotted 20 spring workouts as quickly as possible. "We will skip Fridays and Sundays, but otherwise we'll work every day the weather allows, barring injury troubles. We tentatively have set our spring intra-squad game for KANSAS CITY. Mo. — (UPI)—A large appreciation night crowd is expected to watch the Kansas City Steers tonight when they take on the New York Tapers in Municipal Auditorium. The Steers open their final home stand of the season after becoming the city's first professional sports champions in 15 years. They won the first-half American Basketball League title and have clinched the second-half Western Division crown Appreciation night is being sponsored by the Jaycees. A THE SOCK THAT STAYS UP AS LATE AS YOU DO ADLER introduces the good-tempered cotton sock. Nothing ever gets it down. With stripes at the top and reinforced with nylon, it's a white sock that sticks to you the way your little brother used to. Pictured, the Alpine with the new Shape-Up leg. $1.00. THE ADLER COMPANY, CINCINNATI 14, OHIO ADLER'S good-tempered Alpine available at The Town Shop, Diebolt's, The University Shop, Royal College Shop Tuesday. March 20, 1962 University Daily Kansan CLASSIFIED ADS Page 7 HELP WANTED MALE HELP. From 11 a.m. till 5 p.m. or at night. Hourly wages $1 and up. Apply or call Bob Fondren at Grit's Burger Bar, 1618 West 23rd. VI 3-0347. 3-20 FOR SALE HELP WANTED. Male or female, part or full time. Opportunity for exceptional earnings. Set your own hours for work. Add AmBio.P.O. Box 8129, K.C. 32-10 Mo. 1956 FLYMOUTH 2. hr, Automatic trans. 1957 FLYMOUTH 4. hr, Automatic trans. 1958 VI. 5-7583 after 5 p.m. 1959 VI. 5-7583 after 5 p.m. G.E. Mark. tape recorder. Never used. Good for taking lecture notes. 7½" x 3" CD-ROM V1-0514. 1 WEDDING dress. Size 9. Call VI 3-9211 after 5 p.m. CUTE Siamese purebred kittens. About 6 weeks old. House-broken. Just dial TU 7-6574 evenings after 6 p.m. 3-20 TATENTION PRE-MED students: Three year medical student must sell his Bausch call line or come immediately. $200. Call VI S-3877 or come to 907 Ark. for more information. OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright typewriter, sales, service, rentals, at Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 8644 1959 Renault. 4CV. Good condition. Black, white side wall tires. Will accept any reasonable offer. Call VI 3-6145 or VI 3-5060. HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet phone. Pet phone 2521. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts Handy cross index for quick reference $3.50, free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553. VI 3-5788. tf WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised. 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. tf PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lectures; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition: formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call Vi 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf HOLTEN TRUMPET with case. Good condition. $50. Call VI 3-8475 at 7 p.m. BUSINESS SERVICES 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. tt RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabrie re- inven so damage cannot be seen. Cig- arette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- ward the box. Oa Situ 3691% 599%. Mass. Cali VI- 3263. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3-7531, or 921 Miss. GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now revised and comprehensive. Price: $4. Call V1 2-3758 Free delivery. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., V1 3- 6844. SECRETARY WILL DO TYPING in home Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at VI 2-1749. "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting factor." For excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1657. TYPING EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt Experienced Typtist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter writes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. tt TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will write these, term papers and books. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8588. TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-4409. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VI T-2654 any time. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution Secretary Services 597 B Woodson, Michigan HE 2-7718. Eves or Suit. R-2 2186. EXPERIENCED TYFIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Rice, 1511 W. 21 St. Ct. VI T3-6440. 肠鸣音, 1511 W. 21 St. Ct. VI T3-6440. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing in my home — call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lou Gehibach. tf Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with Microsoft and Circus. Credit. Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. Call VI 2-1546. 3-30 Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable offer. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 21648. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. Eng. teacher tests users' use & reports accurately. Standard rules. See Ms. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. iff THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter Reasonable rate. Marin Graham, 1619 Delaware. CA I-3 0483-1. BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plicen, party supplies. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 375-9580. MISCELLANEOUS FOR RENT SUNNY, comfortable, furnished ant. 4 rm., including study rm. & bedroom, private bath. private ent. Large closets. storage space. Call VI 3-1863 or VI 3-3356. 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VI 3-9995. 3-20 LARGE NICELY FURNSHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-731f TRANSPORTATION WANTED Girl wants rides beginning 1 April from 1 to 6:30 p.m. Call VI 2-3720 after 6:30, 3-20 3:30 p.m. Call VI 2-3720 after 6:30, 3-20 A STUDENT who needs tutoring in Spanish or Math 2 (or equivalent, especially 2c). Carolyn Hunnicutt, 1703 Indiana, or call VI 3-4180. 3-20 FOUND lr. college identify in Flint Hall the middle of Feb. Identity. See Mrs. Fine, 14 Flint, MYSTERY MAN OF MONACO Amid the fleshpots of the Riviera lives a quiet American. He neither drinks nor gambles. Yet at 34, he heads a munitions empire that blankets the world. In this week's Post, you'll meet the mysterious Mr. Cummings. Learn why he's got a soft spot for two notorious dictators. How he once sold Nazi machine guns back to the Germans. And why he says, "It's not my job to be a moral judge of humanity." the Saturday Evening IOST MARCH 21-NOVEMBER 24 MARCH 24 ISSUE NOW ON SALE. THE JAYHAWKER IS OUT The 2nd Edition of the 1962 Jayhawker will be distributed Wednesday·Thursday·Friday at the Information Booth Booth open 8 till 5 Bring Your Receipt (attached to your ID) and You Can Pick Up Your 1st and 2nd Editions and Your Cover You Can Buy Your Jayhawker Now for Only $6.50 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 20. 1962 Faculty Answer- (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) and half of practicing journalists—Mr. Austin's fellow editors and publishers. The standards by which schools of journalism and their faculties are tested in this accrediting program are exacting and demanding. Each time this school and its faculty have passed the test with high ratings, most recently in 1960. Our unjust critic stated that Kansas journalism graduates do not get a liberal education, but he either knows or ought to know that our majors have always been required to satisfy the requirements for the B.A. degree (although they receive the B.S.). He ought also to know that our school has had an active part in planning and managing both the Western Civilization program and the humanities program from their very beginnings 15 years ago. His criticism that journalism education is too narrow certainly does not apply to the University of Kansas. NOT ONLY DOES the faculty deplore and resent the denunciation of the school and the group slander of the teaching staff, but the faculty strongly opposes the proposal to reduce the school to departmental status. Immediately after Mr. White's death in 1944 the Board of Regents decided that the department of journalism at the University of Kansas should become a school named for Mr. White. The editors and publishers of Kansas and the regents believed that the profession of journalism is one for young men and women with broad educations and with thorough grounding in the history, the ethics, the responsibilities, and the skills of the profession. They believed that journalism, which plays a vital and basic role in our society, is as worthy of professional school training and status as law, medicine, and engineering. THE REGENTS gave journalism at the University of Kansas this status, and to the school have been attracted young people from coast to coast and from many foreign countries. Upon graduation they have been sought and employed by outstanding editors and leaders in all of the communications media. Since 1948 the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information has operated as a separate school at the University of Kansas. Is it reasonable or defensible now to consider toppling it from the level it has reached among its fellow schools throughout the United States? Does Kansas wish to be known as the state in which an editor torpeded the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information on the basis of undocumented charges and in the face of a record that is respected and envied elsewhere? We find it hard to believe that Mr. Austin actually understood how damaging his statements can be, not only to the good reputation of our school but also to the whole University over which he and the other regents have supervision and responsibility. Action - (Continued from page 1) plan. The membership of the two current campus parties, Vox Populi and the University Party, is made up of voting blocks from the organized living groups on the campus and of separate members. UNDER THE BLOCK SYSTEM, the parties secure memberships by getting dues from the living groups which join the party. Because each member of the living group pays a housebill to his living group, he automatically becomes a dues-paying member of the party. Since Action has outlawed block voting in its party, it is difficult to establish that the students who sign its petition, as it is worded, actually plan to become "active members" of the group. YAF will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. Members will discuss and vote on a constitutional amendment which provides for the hiring of an executive secretary. Applications for staff members for the Standard, the YAF newspaper, will be accepted. YAF Meets Tonight Platform - (Continued from page 1) Johnson said the group, which is working in the South to insure voting rights to all citizens, needs KU's "moral and financial support" to eliminate such things as poll taxes, literacy tests, and coercion which prevent certain citizens from exercising their right to vote. Johnson said Action plans to help reform the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) through the ASC's investigation and action. Johnson said the group proposes that a letter be sent to the local Congressman, Senator, and the President of the United States voicing KU's opposition to this committee which Johnson accused of encroaching on the academic freedom of students. The charge arises out of a disorder in San Francisco after hearings of the HUAC on Communism. Johnson charged that the ASC has not made its voice heard on certain national and international problems and that they should correct this situation by sending their views to national organizations. Action would advocate the lowering of the minimum required number of votes from 75, as it now stands, to approximately 50 because it is more difficult for these living groups to get large numbers of their members out to vote. IN DISCUSSING ASC representation, Johnson explained the ASC rules now state that the representation on the Council shall be determined by the number of votes cast from that living district in the last election. Johnson stressed that all of the proposed planks are temporary and would be subject to revision, deletion, or addition by the members at the Thursday night meeting. Arthur Massolo, field representative for the United States Peace Corps in Central America who was scheduled to visit KU today to discuss Corps projects in Central America, will not be able to come. Peace Corps Man Unable to Be Here Thomas Gale, assistant professor of history, said that Mr. Massolo has been called to El Salvador to set up a Peace Corps program in that Central American country. Prof. Gale said that he would be Second Jayhawker To Be Out Tomorrow The second edition of the Jayhawker will be distributed tomorrow from the information booth. Blaine King, Emporia junior and Jayhawker editor announced today. He said he had previously set yesterday for distribution but the information booth was unavailable. THE WHOLE COUNTRY IS BECOMING STAGE- STRUCK From Romeo and Juliet to Guys and Dolls—about 500,000 plays a year are being put on by amateur actors. In this week's Post, you'll learn how housewives and businessmen get brush-beaten by brash young directors. How the acting bug wrecked one girl's engagement. And how top Broadway names are helping out their amateur colleagues. The Saturday Evening The Saturday Evening POST MARCH 24 ISSUE NOW ON SALE. needed in El Salvador to work with the Peace Corps members who will be arriving there. He is expected to leave in the next few days. FREE PIZZA DELIVERY ANY PLACE In LAWRENCE Reg. 10" Lrg. 14" Mozz. Cheese _ .85 1.40 Olive ___ 1.15 1.65 Green Pepper _ 1.15 1.65 Onion ___ 1.15 1.65 Mushroom ___ 1.25 1.90 Sausage ___ 1.25 1.90 Hamburger ___ 1.25 1.90 Peperoni ___ 1.25 1.90 Anchovy ___ 1.25 1.90 Pizza Supreme 1.40 2.40 ½ Cheese — ½ Sausage -- 1.05 1.65 Added Ingredients 10c ea. 20c ea. VI 3-9640 Ron Tom CAVERNS VI 3-9640 644 Mass. KU THURSDAY Spring Special Ku Kentucky Fried Chicken Snack Basket Roll, Honey, Potato Salad & 2 Pieces Chicken Reg.75c, 49c Char Junior Open Until 11:30 p.m. Single Steakburger Cooked Over Charcoal Reg. 30c, 25c Every 50th Car Gets Order FREE!! Free balloons for the kiddies BIG BUY Home of Col. Sander's Recipe for Kentucky Fried Chicken 23rd & Iowa ok Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No.107 Wednesday, March 21, 1962 YAF Supports Wescoe Raps Civil Rights Council The Young Americans for Freedom voted last night to condemn the Civil Rights Council and to support the recent stand of Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, that "moral problems cannot be solved by coercion." The text of the resolution, introduced by Jay Deane, Kansas City, Kan., junior and YAF vice chairman read: "BE IT RESOLVED: That the Young Americans for Freedom urges all organizations to select their members on the basis of personal qualifications. "That the University of Kansas Young Americans for Freedom condemns the Civil Rights Council for its attempts to restrict individuals' rights over themselves and their property and for the consequent insult by it to the dignity of the individuals it seeks to aid. "And that the University of Kansas Young Americans for Freedom supports the stand of the University of Kansas Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, that moral problems cannot be solved by coercion." IN OTHER ACTION last night, the YAF approved a constitutional amendment to establish the position of executive secretary which would be appointed by the officers. Commenting on the resolution. Gendarmes Battle OAS In Oran and Algiers ALGIERS, Algeria — (UPI) — French gendarmes in armored cars fought a running battle through the streets of Oran today with grenade-throwing European extremists. First reports said there were "several casualties" in the clashes in the big West Algerian port city which is a stronghold of the underground Secret Army Organization (OAS). OAS terrorists also were active in Winter Costs Money But Spring Is Here Winter is expensive and exasperating. Harry M. Buchholz, superintendent of buildings and grounds, said today. But today was the first day of spring. The weather was balmy and the forecast was for a bright day with temperatures going to the 50s. No ice or snow—just good weather. "We used 250 tons of sand and one ton of salt this winter," he said. Statistics compiled by his department further revealed the use of 500 pounds of a chemical de-icer and about 3,000 man hours of work. "This winter was one of the worst we've had in my recollection," he said. "We can do without another one like it for a long, long time. "Fifteen pieces of equipment were used to fight the ice and snow, including sand trucks, tractors, road maintainer and a snow plow. Thirty sets of tire chains were worn out. "Maybe next winter won't be quite as bad," he said hopefully. Algiers. One Moslem was killed and five wounded—including four women and a child when a grenade was thrown into a native quarter. There were other bombings and shootings elsewhere. The death toll in the mortarshelling of a Moslem crowd in Aligiers was mounting steadily, making it the most murderous single incident yet attributed to the European extremist organization. Police sources said at least 20 more Moslems had died from wounds suffered when six mortar shells exploded among a group of unsuspecting men, women and children near Algiers' main mosque yesterday. It brought the toll in the shelling to 24 dead and 59 wounded. European farmers in rural areas were stocking up on food and arms in fear of retaliation for OAS attacks on Moslems throughout Algeria. The mounting death toll in Algiers raised the total of casualties in the wave of violence since the cease-fire was declared Sunday between France and the Algerian Nationalists to 128 dead and at least 108 wounded It was the biggest toll for any comparable period since Jan. 1. which will be sent to the CRC, the All Student Council, the Human Relations Committee of the ASC, the chancellor, the Board of Regents, and the University Daily Kansan, Deane said: Weather Generally fair this afternoon and tonight, becoming partly cloudy Thursday with scattered showers and thunderstorms likely east and south-central Kansas by Thursday night. Colder southeast this afternoon. Warmer north-central tonight and over most of Kansas Thursday. Low tonight in the 30s. High Thursday in the 60s. "Any attempt by any groups to control the use of property and the use of lives outside the individual is contrary to the basic individual integrity of any human being." HE ADDED that recent CRC action is "against man's inalienable rights and is against the principles upon which our organization (YAF) is founded." Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior and CRC co-chairman, said in a telephone interview that the clause urging selection of members on the basis of personal qualification "is precisely the goal that the CRC is working for." Don Warner, Topeka junior and CRC member, said; "It is not just the rights of individuals over themselves and their property that is involved; it also involves the rights of those who are being discriminated against because of race." Warner said that the CRC is not restricting the individuals' rights over their property because "this ultimately includes fraternities and sororities which are clearly subject to university regulations." "THE QUESTION," he said, "is not the right to choose with whom one associates, but whether we have the right to make race the basis of this choice." Deane, who introduced the constitutional amendment for an executive secretary at the March 6 meeting, explained that the new office is to meet the need for the performance of administrative details. He said that Marick Payton, Lawrence resident and former YAF chairman, should be "highly considered" for the position. Payton resigned last Thursday so the YAF could become officially recognized by the administration. University regulations state that heads of University organizations must be enrolled at KU before those organizations may be recognized officially. Also at that meeting, Timothy M Woodbury, Kirkwood, Mo. junior, was elected chairman to fill the vacancy created by Payton's resignation. Walter Kollmorgen, professor of geography, has accepted the position of faculty adviser to the YAF. THE RIVERSIDE MUSEUM UNIVERSITY PARTY PLANS CAMPAIGN—Tom Hardy, Hoisington junior, University Party co-chairman and one of the vice presidential candidates (left), discusses the party's platform with Gerald Kepner, Wichita junior and UP candidate for student body president (center), and Jim Anderson, Lawrence senior and party co-chairman. Candidates Chosen By University Party The University Party (UP) last night announced candidates for the coming All Student Council elections, approved a platform, and ridiculed Action's proposed platform. Gerald (Kep) Kepner, Wichita junior, was announced as the party's candidate for student body president. The vice presidential candidates will be Thomas Hardy, Hoisington junior, and Patricia Wilson, Kansas City junior. THE PARTY'S OTHER CANDIDATES ARE: School of JournalismDaniel B. Marshall, Lincoln junior; School of Pharmacy-Marsha Wertzberger, Kansas City, Mo., senior; School of Business-Melvin Bloomfield, Fort Scott junior, and Graduate School-Larry Jones, Larned. College men—Blaine King, Emporia junior, and Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission sophomore; College women—Kay Cash, Fairview Park, Ohio, sophomore, and Sandy Bornholdt, LaCrosse sophomore; School of Education—Constance Fry, Prairie Village junior, and John Jones, Neodesha junior; School of Engineering—Gerald Memming, Merriam junior, James Lewis, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and Michael Swink, Prairie Village junior; THE PLATFORM SUPPORTS the activities of the ASC's Human Rights Committee and advocates "the elimination of prejudices in individual attitudes." (Continued on page 8) P-T-P Ambassadors Tour a Growing Giant By Bob Hoyt The People-to-People student ambassador program is growing into a tangible giant involving students in Big 8 schools, government officials and KU alumni in Europe. It was announced at the P-t-P meeting last night that as much as $100,000 may be handled through the KU P-t-P office in the form of travel payments for the European tour this summer. The office here will act as a clearing house in making flight arrangements for students in all Big 8 schools. LOVELL (TU) JARVIS, Winfield junior and chairman of KU P-t-P, said, "We want to emphasize that this is not just a student flight to Europe. It is now a student ambassador program. Members of KU P-t-P are now in the process of setting up facilities to handle the funds. "The students who will go on the P-t-P tour will have certain people to contact when they arrive in Europe, and they will be expected to know what P-t-P is about, and what it hopes to accomplish." Students on the tour will spend two days in Washington before leaving for Europe. The department will exercise no control over the program, however. DURING THE 2-day Washington stay, state department officials will act in an advisory capacity to help students prepare for questions they may be asked about United States foreign policy and international politics. The objective of the student ambassador program is to further international understanding through student-to-student contact. This is based on a P-t-P philosophy that complications arising between friends can be settled more easily than those between strangers. Seven hundred KU alumni living in foreign countries have been approached by P-t-P. Approximately 300 of them live in Europe. They will meet the arriving student ambassadors and provide transportation and lodging. THE AMERICAN students will spend the first week of a proposed 2-month tour in West Germany as guests of the West Berlin government. They will meet their student counterparts in P-t-P, and will live in these students' homes. "This idea has a two-fold purpose," according to James Murray, Leawood sophomore and chairman of the student ambassador program. "It will add to the moral support of West Berlin students, and let American students have a first-hand view of a nation preserving its freedom." All arrangements will be made beforehand to insure the best use of time spent in Germany. THE ORIGINAL plan for the foreign student ambassador program made provisions for only one plane load of students. Interest has grown until 800 American students are expected to participate this year, and a much larger number next year. Murray said that, "since the flight program has grown to its present capacity of including the Big 8 schools. KU can now reopen its flight list to all those interested." A down payment for the flight may be made any afternoon, Monday through Friday, from 1 to 5, at the P-t-P office, room 113 in the Kansas Union. Maupintour travel agency helped get the student (Continued on page 8) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 21, 1962 The New Party Action, the proposed third campus political party, has issued a tentative platform calling for All Student Council action on numerous controversial issues. What the final draft of the platform will contain is uncertain. This is to be decided at subsequent meetings, the first of which is being held tonight. MANY OF THE proposals deal with major topics, such as an investigation of the House Un-American Activities Committee, support for the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, withdrawal of recognition from living groups at KU which discriminate on the basis of race or religion and re-affiliation with the National Student Association. The new party seems certain of getting the 1,000 signatures required for recognition as a campus political party. It will therefore be a factor in April's elections. Action has not selected candidates for the spring elections yet, but it undoubtedly will when the membership has solidified and decided on the final form of its platform. But it is obvious that it will be able to take effective action on its platform only with the active cooperation of the established campus political groups, since they will be operating without a majority (assuming the party does win some of the offices up for election next month). THE NEW PARTY is interesting in that it represents an attempt to take action on controversial issues through the established political organization. This is something that has not been done as consistently as possible. The existence of pressure groups or independent organizations working with controversial issues should not be considered as necessarily bad, however. They have often performed useful services and will undoubtedly continue to do so. The group that brought "Operation Correction" to KU is a good example of this. Thus far, Action is developing as an energetic new political party. The fact that it appears willing to deal with controversial issues is a good sign. It may serve to vitalize an All Student Council that is too often apathetic. -William H. Mullins Public Health Insurance By Ron Gallagher One of America's most frequently debated domestic problems that of compulsory health insurance-is a problem solved long ago in Norway. Norway has offered a government medical insurance program for over fifty years and recently extended its plan to include the entire population. It is interesting to talk to Norwegians who delight in pointing out that the gloomy coating the American Medical Association (AMA) smears on proposed medical plans in the United States does not characterize the Norwegian program. IN FACT, Jannik Linback, Oslo Norway graduate student, whose mother is a doctor, has said the health plan in his country works so well that even extremely conservative groups have long accepted it. Linback takes issue with statements that the AMA makes equating any type of health plan with socialized medicine. "Its a matter of definition, of course, but I can't hardly see how it (the Norwegian Plan) is socialistic," he said. The doctors are not employed by the state in the Norwegian plan, as they are in any system of socialized medicine. Linback thinks that possibly the AMA has been misrepresenting the facts of compulsory health insurance for selfish reasons. "It is evident that this association is out for monetary profit," he said. "I should think a medical association would be interested in something other than profit. They don't seem to be concerned with the health of the country," he concluded. HE PRESENTS a list of the stands the AMA has taken on issues of public welfare to document his statement. The list appears in the March 1962 issue of the Progressive. It includes opposition to such programs as compulsory smallpox vaccination, public immunization against diphtheria, federal aid to reduce infant and maternal deaths, the Social Security Act, public venereal disease clinics, voluntary health insurance, school health services, Blue Cross, government medical care for dependents of men in the armed forces, workmen's compensation and the Red Cross blood bank. 1947 Linback views medical aid for the aged as the logical starting point in a system of compulsory health insurance. He said, "I can't see how anyone can oppose it from a rational point of view." Jannik Linbaek In tracing history of the Norwegian plan, Linbaek stated that it was initiated in 1909 to cover low income groups that were unable to afford membership in private plans. It became so popular that other groups were added until today even foreign nationals living in Norway are covered. ALTHOUGH THE AMA has often stated that the doctor-patient relationship would be adversely affected if the United States should institute a health plan, Linback says that this has not happened in Norway. "People have a full choice of doctors," he said. "And doctors have an opportunity to establish a successful practice." He said that in Norway the people can get the medical attention that is necessary. "They can go to the best specialist in the country, if they need to." Doctors in Norway have established a set of normal rates for most of the services usually performed by a general practitioner. However, this rate schedule is only a guide, and the doctors are free to charge any rate they wish. "They are bound only by professional ethics," Linbaek explained. He said that the doctors in Norway are in no way restricted. They may practice the type of medicine they want and may practice it wherever they want. Norwegians are never required to go to a certain doctor. He said that the competition between doctors is every bit as keen as it is in the United States. LINBAEK SAID that the Norwegian medical profession has never opposed the health plan. He said it has the complete support of the Norwegian medical associations. He said that most Norwegians consider their health insurance plan as the best possible program and therefore do not favor taking the step to socialized medicine. He said that there would be no logic in taking this step since Norwegians "already receive maximum benefits." the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism THE HARBOR, by Ernest Poole (American Century, Hill and Wang, $1.45). This fine novel falls in between the reform literature of early 20th century and the proletarian literature of the 1930s. Ernest Poole won the first Pulitzer Prize for this book, which, though it is the story of radical unrest on the waterfront, also is an enduring poem to the waterfront where the conflict takes place. The hero is an idealist who tries to resolve the conflict in his mind and heart between the poverty-stricken and the people with whom he had grown up. His conflict makes for a dramatic and vivid story, and one that is a hallmark in the literature of protest. Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founder, became bweekly newspaper, 1004, weekly newspaper, 1009 Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East St. St., New York 22, N.Y. Eight East St. National Press International. Mail subscription for semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711 news room E-mail: extension.711, news room Extension.376, business office Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office NEWS DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Mullins Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinape ... Business Manager letters to the editor The Chosen Ones I am one of the few unorganized (housing bureau terminology) who managed to procure a decent seat at the Limeliters concert. My good fortune of sitting downstairs was due only to conniving tactics and the generosity of one of my former students. The purpose of this message is not to judge the calibre of the performance (since many members of the "cultured and urbane audience" no doubt will) but to protest the inability of many of my friends to do so. That is, why were there 20 empty seats within a coin toss of mine, when tickets were "all sold out." BLOCK SELLING seems a bit unfair to the many who are not members of a block. Especially in this case when the demand was so great, block selling to insure against loss (This is not the reason?) borders on paranoid behavior. Since we other people must suffer this discrimination in distribution, the least the SUA's chosen people could do was give us a chance at seconds. Those of you who didn't use your tickets might at least have the decency to release them for resale, even if only at the door. Could you be so charitable as to give us second choice next time? Ellis Vaden Couch Prairie Village graduate student ROTC Criticized Again Editor: Some days ago I claimed that this country was unduly militaristic. One manifestation of this, I held, was the existence of ROTC programs. For this reason I argued that universities should get out of the military business and leave that to the military, which means restricting military training to military bases. Mr. Dobbies questions my claims, holding that ROTC programs do not indicate undue militarism. I should like to clear up a few things. One definition "Webster's Collegiate Dictionary" gives to the word "militarism" is "the spirit which exalts military virtues and ideals." My claim was that this country was "undly militaristic, which is to say that there is too much exalting of military ideals and virtues, that it exists beyond necessity. How do I know? Well, how does anyone know? One looks, or as Mr. Dobbs puts it, "Ye shall know a tree by its fruits." If I want to see how much exaltation of military virtue and ideals there is, I look at what is going on. When I do this, one of the things I see is ROTC programs. I see people in uniforms learning how to be soldiers. And this takes place outside of military bases. I CANNOT get inside anybody's head. If ROTC programs exist I assume they are for the purpose of promoting the exaltation of military virtues and ideals. This seems to me to be the only meaningful way to speak of such a spirit. A nation is what it does (and so it is with people). "Ye shall know a tree by its fruits." Mr. Dobbs claims that the ROTC cadets are well behaved. This is supposed to be an argument against militarism. Everybody says that. No doubt the Russians think their troops well behaved, and the Nazis and Japanese probably said that of theirs. The fact is that we have people parading around in uniforms who are not even official soldiers, and all this on a university campus. This is the fact a nation looking at us sees. This is the "fruit." I think that a nation is not unduly militaristic when that nation keeps a minimum, consistent with national defense, the spirit which exalts military virtue and ideals. This can be accomplished in two ways: (1) by having as few men as possible in military training, and (2) having military training confined to as few places as possible. My whole argument is that we are violating this second point. IT IS NOT necessary that we have military training (in whatever amount) in universities. It is not necessary, I maintain, because it would be no calamity to national defense were universities restored completely to their nonmilitary functions. The military can cope with the dissolution of ROTC programs. It might require effort, but it is just this kind of effort that is needed if trouble is to be avoided. What we must try to do is minimize this military spirit, and one way this can be done is through its confinement. And this does not mean significantly weakening ourselves militarily. I never equated "military strength" with "undue militarism," as Mr. Dobbs claims I did. Edward Lopatin Bronx, N. Y. graduate student * * * American Friendliness Editor: I have been in this country since September, 1961; I had come once before in the summer of 1950. And I was most surprised when I read in the issue of March 16 of the UDK some of the comments of the foreign students concerning American hospitality. I believe they were most wrong and unfair when they referred to the hospitality in this country as being comparable to hospitality in any other country. MANY THINGS HERE, as in any other part of the world, can be subject to criticism, but no one should be ready to deny that your hospitality is unique. The way I was welcomed, greeted, accepted cannot be compared with any experience I had before in any of the foreign countries I previously visited. To be considered on the spot as an old friend in a home you have never visited before, to be able to feel really at home and happy when away from your own friends and family—this is something for which the Americans have a secret of their own. Anyone who has travelled in Europe will never deny how hard it is to be "admitted" and then "accepted" in a French home. Even though the situation is slowly improving, it is still a "tour de force" for a foreigner to be treated as a real friend within less than two or three years. I KNOW THAT many of the foreign students will reply to this by saying that even if the American hospitality is wonderful, it does not mean anything, because it is superficial, and that everyone is over-nice, sweet and friendly right away. Maybe they should try harder, and then they would find out that there is something besides and beneath this sometimes too spontaneous friendliness. I wish every foreign student on this campus had been fortunate enough to enjoy the experiences I had and am having here. Francoise Moreau Paris, France * * Kansan Accused of Error Editor: I would like to call attention to a rather serious error made by the reporter who covered the last meeting of the Civil Rights Council. I am afraid that I cannot accept credit for the quotation that was attributed to me (UDK, Thursday, March 15, 1962), because I happened to be quoting someone else at the time. I am quite sure that this error was not intentional on the part of the reporter, but had the quotation not been taken out of context, and had the proper punctuation marks been used, this error would not have occurred. Brian O'Heron Torrington, Conn. senior Short Ones It has been the fate of all bold adventurers and reformers to be esteemed insane. — George B. Cheever When a man seeks your advice he generally wants your praise.— Chesterfield The world hates change, yet it is the only thing that has brought progress.-Charles F. Kettering The strongest symptom of wisdom in man is his being sensible of his own follies—Rochefauld Wednesday, March 21, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 AWS HOPEFULS—The three candidates for Associated Women Students (AWS) Senate president are, left to right, Sharon Saylor, Morrill junior, Susan Callender, Bonner Springs junior, and Marilyn Mueller, St. Louis, Mo., junior. The candidates were chosen from approximately 75 women who applied for the offices by test and by petition. AWS Election Board Selects Candidates for 1962 Senate The Associated Women Students (AWS) election board, composed of the senior members of the AWS Senate, has chosen 31 candidates for the 1962 AWS Senate slate. Senate elections will be held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mar. 28. Polling booths will be in Strong Hall, Murphy Hall, Fraser Hall and the Kansas Union. Those running for AWS Senate offices are: President—Susan Callender, Bonner Springs junior; Marilyn Mueller, St. Louis, Mo., junior, and Sharon Saylor, Morrill junior. Vice President—Constance Fry, Prairie Village junior; George Ann Porter, Kansas City junior; Joanne Stover, Colby junior, and Kay Timberlake, Leawood junior. Secretry —Sydnie Bowling, Garden City freshman; Susan Gerlash, Tarkio, Mo., freshman; Mary Hughes, Des Moines, Iowa, freshman; Karen Indall, Ottawa freshman; Sharon Menasco, Wichita freshman. Treasurer—Priscilla Camp, Lawrence junior; Patricia Kendall, Holton sophomore; Jeanne Maxwell, Mission sophomore; Diane Mullane, Oklahoma City, Okla., junior, and Patricia Zogelman, Norwich sophomore. ASC Greek representative—Hilda Gibson, Lawrence sophomore; Leslie Hagood, Prairie Village sophomore; Susan Hardisty, Salina junior; Ann Leflert, Pittsburg sophomore, and Martha Parmley, Wichita sophomore. ASC Independent representative—Kathleen Baysinger, Kansas City sophomore; Jane Breckenridge, Louisburg freshman; Joan Fowler, Shawnee Mission freshman, and Judith Gottberg, Hoisington freshman. CWEN Adviser—Betty Dwyer, Wichita sophomore; Barbara Edwards, Leavenworth sophomore; Donna Gould, Kansas City sophomore; Karen McCarty, Wichita sophomore, and Wendy Wilkerson, Wichita sophomore. Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd Official Bulletin Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11:45-12 noon; Satdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1010 Stratford Rd. Foreign Students: Students interested in taking the trip to St. Joseph this Friday, March 23, should sign up today at the People-to-People office in the Kansas City area and visit four industrial plants in St. Joseph and a free lunch will be provided. **Peace Corps:** The representative from the U.S. Peace Corps who was to be on campus will meet with students has informed the University that he will not be here at this time. Le Cerule Franceis se réunit mercredi le 21 mars à quatre heures dans la salle 11 de Fraser. M. le professeur Klaus Berger fera une causerie sur "Gérétia qui maîna Sainte d'Aragon." Tous ceux qui s'intérêten au français sont invites. People-to-People Forum; 4 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union Orientation meet-ment, planning to visit Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Horst Haselmann in charge. SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m., 206 Kansas Union Instructor, Larry Bodge. TODAY TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Commission & Lunch: 12 moon. Canterbury House. KUOK — Thursday, 3—News and Weather; 3:05—Top Forty Tunes; 4—Sports; 6:20—Whitaker's Wax Works; 6:23—Spotlight on Science; 6:30—Bon-jour Mesdames"; 6:45—Public Service Program; 7—Countdown; 8—Night Flight. 1—10—News and Weather; 10:15—Night Flight. Stage II, 12—Portals of Praise. Organic Chemistry Colloquium: 4 p.m. assay and Jorge de la Mora and Soynthes of New Amino Acids. Der Deutsch Verein trifft sich am Donnersstag, den 22. Marz, um fuem Ulr in der Traser. Hier Professor Caws wird ueber Philosophie der Exlstenz schrechen. Attención miembros de las delegaciones Latinoamericanas en la ONU. Ya que empezamos este aido de trabajos hay que darse cuenta de que todo Latinoamerica esta cambiano y que si no nos quitamos el mismo camino, volverá Wall Street, perderemos nuestra libertad. Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 pam 1221 Oread. Bible study & devotions Radio Production Center: 7:30 p.m. 220 Flint. Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel. Action Meeting Slated for Tonight KU's proposed third political party, Action, will hold its first open meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The tentative platform will be discussed, amended and possibly approved. Harold Johnson, Ft Leavenworth junior and vice president of Action, said the meeting is open to any student interested in the party. WHOLE CHICKEN $2.00 BIG BUY HILLCREST - MALLS SPECIAL!! Reg. $15 SLEEPING BEAUTY PERMANENT 'Midwest's Top Hair Stylists' Complete with: Ronnie's FASHION BEAUTY SALONS Complete with: • HAIRCUT • SHAMPOO • PERM • SET TWO FINE SALONS IN LAWRENCE REGULAR $15.00 $795 Complete You'll love the New RONNIE'S Golden Mist HAIR SPRAY Reg. $2.50 $1.49 Plus Giant Size Tax Rummin Lait grampy Drop In! - Appointment not usually needed - Open late week nites! HILLCREST VI 2-1978 --- MALLS VI 2-1144 THE JAYHAWKER IS OUT The 2nd Edition of the 1962 Jayhawker will be distributed Wednesday·Thursday·Friday at the Information Booth Booth open 8 till 5 Bring Your Receipt (attached to your ID) and You Can Pick Up Your 1st and 2nd Editions and Your Cover You Can Buy Your Jayhawker Now for Only $6.50 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 21. 1962 Peace Union Leader To Speak at Forum A representative of an organization which advocates unilateral action towards disarmament by the United States will speak at the Minority Opinion Forum at 4 p.m. Friday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Peter Allen, national field secretary of the Student Peace Union (SPU), will speak about student demonstrations in Washington, D.C., in mid-February. The SPU was one of the organizations sponsoring the demonstrations. A PAMPHLET PUBLISHED by SPU said the February demonstrations were staged "to protest the cold war policies of both power blocs." Larry Laudan, Lawrence graduate student and SPU member, said a KU chapter of the organization may be formed if enough students show interest at the Friday meeting. He said a few KU students belong to SPU but that the nearest chapter, as far as he knew, is at the University of Colorado. LAUDAN EXPLAINED that SPU does not require its members to believe in any particular method of avoiding war. It encourages study and discussion of the issues and participation in "action" functions such as the Washington demonstration. "All that a student has to believe when he joins the organization is that war is no longer the way that is successful in solving world problems," Laudan said. "Politically, it doesn't align itself with either party or with right- or left-wing organizations," he said. He said SPU does not identify it- self with partisan politics and its membership "cuts across liberal and conservative lines." HE SAID THE NATIONAL organization has urged that the United States take unilateral steps to release cold war tensions and that efforts be made to find a way this country could get along on a peace budget. SPU also has opposed the House Un-American Activities Committee, the resumption of nuclear tests in the atmosphere, and Central Intelligence Agency recruiting on college and university campuses. Each campus chapter is virtually autonomous, however, and is not bound to the policies expressed by the national organization, Laudan said. P-T-P Lending Library Still Growing; Has 1500 Books THE INTERFRATERNITY Pledge Council with the help of sorority and Panhellenic Council members, is collecting the books from organized houses and storing them in a temporary headquarters at 776 North 2nd St. Jerry Harper, Wichita sophomore and chairman of the Interfraternity Pledge Council said, "Fortunately, most of the books we have collected so far have been textbooks." About 1500 books are now in the growing foreign student lending library being established by KU People-to-People. Lovell (Tu) Jarvis, chairman of KU P-t-P, said, "We are glad to have any kind of books, but we would prefer to have hardbacks rather than paperbacks. So far most of the books collected have been hardbound books." BOOKS FROM INDIVIDUAL students are being collected on campus at the information booth on Jayhawk Blvd. The books needed most are the ones still used in classroom instruction, but books no longer used at KU will be sent overseas through the KU-Y overseas book program. L. Don Scheid, assistant professor of wind and percussion, will present a clarinet recital at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall. Accompanying him will be Marian Jersild, associate professor of piano, and Karel Blaas, associate professor of string instruments, violist. Both appeared with Prof. Scheid in his recital program last year. Scheid to Give Clarinet Recital The Brahms work is one of two sonatas which comprise the Opus 120. Prof. Scheid performed the first of them here last year. Prof. Scheid's recital will include the Clarinet Sonata in E Flat Major, Op. 120, No. 2 by Brahms, the clarinet concerto by Manevitch, and the Trio in E Flat Major for Clarinet, Viola, and Piano by Mozart. After the books are cataloged, they will be moved into a permanent library location somewhere on campus in time to be in circulation by the fall semester. There will be no admission charge. The recital will be broadcast by KANU-FM. Orchestra, Band Plan Kansas Tour Angel Flight has recently initiated 17 new members. New officers installed at the same meeting are Miss Toews, commander; Miss Cowell, executive officer; Miss Dick, administrative officer; Miss Cheesbrough, comptroller, Sharon L. Moore, Leavenworth junior, information officer, and Miss Stevens, pledge trainer and rush chairman. Sky Not Crowded As Imagined NEW YORK — (UPI) — While millions of automobiles crowd the country's streets and highways, there are only 40,000 aircraft in our skies on any given day, the magazine Flying estimates. Yet the airplanes around leading airports often become extremely congested. one hundred and seventy KU musicians will perform in nine Kansas communities March 27-30 in joint concerts by the KU symphony orchestra and the KU concert band. 17 New Members Join Angel Flight Soloists appearing with the band will be Kenneth Bloomquist, assistant director of bands and trumpet instructor; Robert J. Isle, trumpet, and William Booth, trombone. Carolyn J. Bliss, St. Paul, Minn, sophomore; Lois Reynolds, Hays junior; Susan Sandberg, Sheppard AFB, Tex., sophomore; Christi Ann Sleeker, Leawood sophomore; Dorothy E. Stevens, Hutchinson junior; Dana K. Sullivan, Ulysses sophomore; Mary Tatum, Osceola, Mo, sophomore; Carolyn A. Toews, Inman junior, and Bonnie Ward, Topeka sophomore. Russell L. Wiley, professor of band, and Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra, will be in charge of the groups. Initiates are Cynthia Cheesbrough Overland Park junior; Karen L. Cowell, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; Virginia L. Dick, Park Ridge, Ill., sophomore; Gayla Hastings, Topeka sophomore; Judith A. Hill, Denver, Colo., freshman; Virginia M. Hill, Lyons junior; Paula Maulsolf. Hosington junior; and Joan McGregor, Leawood sophomore. The concerts will be given at high schools in Oskaloosa, Salina, Ellinwood, Larned, Beloit, Concordia, Clay Center and Topeka. Stammler to Read 'Pufkin' Heinrich Stammler, associate professor of Slavic languages and literature, will read "Pufkin" and other Russian poetry at the Poetry Hour at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Music Room of the Kansas Union. Coffee will be served. BIG BUY SPRING SPECIAL Thursday Only . . . March 22 Kentucky Fried Chicken SNACK BASKET Roll, honey, potato salad & two pieces of chicken Reg. 79c 49c Full sized steakburger sizzled over charcoal CHAR JUNIOR Reg. 30c 25c Every 50th Car Gets Order FREE Open until 11:30 p.m. BIG BUY 23rd & Iowa Thief Puts Teacher On Pancake Menu "If it doesn't turn up soon it looks like pancakes for another two weeks," said Mrs. Muriel Austin, geology teaching assistant said Monday. This was her philosophical view three days after her purse containing $20 in cash and an unendorsed $100 check had been taken from her office in 317 Lindley Hall between 9 and 5 o'clock last Friday. "That $20 was my grocery money for two weeks. If this weren't bad enough, my driver's license and about 15 credit cards were taken also. "My husband may revolt. We had to eat pancakes for two weeks before and I don't know if he can take it again." TROJAN On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) EDUCATIONAL TV: ITS CAUSE AND CURE A great deal of nonsense has been written about educational television. Following is my contribution; So much for the myth that TV gives no prime time to educational programs. Now let us deflate another canard: that TV is not eager to inject intellectual content in all its programs It has been said that television allots no desirable viewing hours to educational and intellectual programs. This is simply not so. For instance, you can see "The Kant and Hegel Hour" every day at 4 a.m. This excellent show is followed at 5 a.m. by "Kierkegaard Can Be Fun." For such lazy scaps as lie abed beyond that hour, there is a splendid program on Sunday mornings at 7:15 called "Birds of Minnesota, Except Duluth." If you have sat, as I have sat, with a television planning board, you would know that the opposite is true. I was privileged recently to witness a meeting of two of TV's topmost program developers—both named Binkie Tattersall. "Binkie," said Binkie to Binkie, "if there is one thing I am bound and determined, it's that we're going to have intellectual content in next season's programs." "Right!" replied Binkie. "So let us put on our thinking caps and go to work." "I forgot my thinking cap in Westport," said Binkie, "but I have a better notion: let us light a Marlboro." "A Marlboro and a match," replied Binkie. "Got one?" "But of course!" cried Binkie. "Because the best way to think is to settle back and get comfortable, and what is the cigarette that lets you settle back and get comfortable?" "I said Mariboro," answered Binkie. "Weren't you listening?" "A full-flavored smoke is Mariboro." declared Binkie. "Rich tobacco, pure white filter, a choice of pack or box. What is better than a Marlboro?" "First of all," said Binkie, "we are going to avoid all the old clichés. We will have no domestic comedies, no westerns, no private eyes, no deep sea divers, no doctors, and no lawyers." "Binkie!" said Binkie, "Something offbeat." Binkie had, and so they lit their good Marlboros and settled back and got comfortable and proceeded to cerebrate. "Right!" said Binkie, "Something offbeat." (The word is incorrect.) They smoked and cerebrated. "That's the word—offbeat," said Binkie. Then cracked an unreadable "You know," said Binkie, "there has never been a series about the Coast and Geodetic Survey." "Or about glass blowers," said Binkie They fell into a long, torpid silence. "You know," said Binkie, "there's really nothing wrong with 1927 a cliché situation—provided, of course, it's offbeat." "Right!" said Binkie. "So let's say we do a series about a guy who's a family man with a whole bunch of lovable kids who play merry pranks on him." "Yeah, and he's also a cowboy," said Binkie. "And a deep sea diver," said Binkie. "With a law degree," said Binkie. "Plus an M.D.," said Binkie. "And he runs a detective agency," said Binkie. "Binkie," said Binkie to Binkie, "we've done it again!" They shook hands silently, not trusting themselves to speak, and lit Marlboros and settled back to relax, for Marlboro is a cigarette not only for cerebration, but for settling back with—in fact, for all occasions and conditions, all times and climes, all seasons and reasons, all men and women. © 1962 Max Shulman * * * This column is sponsored—sometimes nervously—by the makers of Marlboro, who invite you to try their fine filter cigarettes, available in king-size pack or flip-top box at tobacco counters in all 50 states. Page 5 Wednesday, March 21.1962 University Daily Kansan De Gaulle Called 'Monster' By AUFS Representative A representative of the American Universities Field Staff yesterday called French President Charles de Gaulle a "monster" and questioned the longevity and future usefulness of the present French government. "DE GAULLE WAS the man to solve the Algerian problem," he said. "But the sooner De Gaulle leaves after the Algerian problem is over the better, because he is standing in the way of such things as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the United Nations, nuclear testing, and the entire political feeling now in Europe. Charles F. Gallagher, AUFS representative in Northern Africa, discussed the present situation in Algeria at the Faculty Forum. "He (De Gaulle) is a monster," Mr. Gallagher said, "and as far as I'm concerned must go. "There is no future for Europe with a man like De Gaulle around," Mr. Gallagher added. He said he doubted that the present French government, the Fifth Republic, will continue in power. Mr. Gallagher said it was only in power to solve the Alzerian problem. "Once De Gaulle leaves I doubt the present French government institutions would fit any other man," Mr. Gallagher said. HE SAID THERE is a new danger, a new kind of fascism in France. Mr. Gallagher suggested three possible results of the agreement. This might come about, he said, with the possible return of many French now in Algeria as a result of the cease fire last Monday. He said the settlement might be made to stick despite the many problems. He added that there is "about a 25 per cent chance of the establishment of a de facto government in Algeria with the possible withdrawal of the French troops to make the settlement effective. "This would be a harsh, revolutionary secular state which will have drastic economic problems which must be solved quickly," he said. THE THIRD PROBABILITY is that approximately 400,000 Europeans will leave Algeria, But, Mr. Gallagher said, "co-existence would be difficult because of the past bloodshed." The speaker stressed that he is not sure what is going to happen and that it is hard to tell now. Another probability necessitates the postulating of the existence of an Algerian state to operate the country. "There is no reason for Algeria to be friendly with the West and I don't expect it to be," he said. "But Algeria is not overly friendly with the East either. "The only country I've heard them (Algerian leaders) express admiration for is Yuzolsavia," he said. Mr. Gallagher was asked what he thought the United States' position will be. An education official in the U.S. State Department will speak on ideological conflict in the Middle East at 4 p.m. Monday in 205 Flint Hall. "THE U.S. WILL inevitably help Algeria but I don't think it should try to do anything for almost five years, until the problem is further along in its settlement and organization," he said. Mr. Gallagher has been studying Arab society since 1951 and has visited the area for extended stays. He will appear in several classes before leaving next Wednesday. State Dept. Official To Discuss Mid-East The official is Philip W. Ireland, who is the brother of H. A. Ireland, professor of geology at KU. He is chief of a State Department unit which is concerned with Fulbright, Smith-Mundt and other foreign exchange programs. Mr. Ireland's talk is sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information and the political science department. Six Students Enter Ping-Pong Tourney Around the Campus Six KU students will play in the Regional Intercollegiate Ping Pong tournament Saturday at the University of Kansas City. The same sample of 200 students selected at random by the IBM machines for the last poll will be used for this poll. A Fresh Hawk telephone committee is making the telephone calls through Thursday of this week. The results of the poll will be made public by Tuesday. KU has three teams entered. Steve Peters, Merriam sophomore, and Lowell Wood, Wichita sophomore, will play in the men's singles. The Student Oinion Poll group, sponsored by the KU Young Republicans, is now conducting its second poll. The general topic is atomic testing and disarmament. Norma Repuyan, New York City sophomore, and JoAnna Sutton, Kansas City sophomore, will play in the women's singles. Peters and Win Sein, Rangoon, Burma, graduate student, will play in the doubles. KU teams will compete against teams from Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, and Iowa. Student Poll Group Seeks More Opinions KU Extension To Use Pi Beta Phi House University Extension officials are making plans to move several extension bureaus into the Pi Beta Phi house late next fall. The actual date of moving depends on completion of the new Pi Phi house on Fifteenth Street. The Lawrence center for conferences and institutes, now housed in Blake Hall annex, and the bureau of extension classes, correspondence study, extension library and extension administration, now in Fraser Hall, will be housed in the new location. 'Happy Hour' Slated A People-to-People "Happy Hour" will be held at 3 p.m. Friday at the Delta Delta Delta sorority house, 1630 Oxford Road. "Happy Hours" were started this semester to give American students and foreign students opportunity to get acquainted in an informal situation. CHICKEN DINNER Slaw, French Fries, Roll, Gravy & Pickles $1.25 BIG BUY B CHAS. CREED THE AUTHENTIC BLAZER BLAZER HEADQUARTERS THE AUTHENTIC BLAZER The University Shop is If you are a member of: Acacia Alpha Kappa Lambda Alpha Phi Alpha Alpha Tau Omega Beta Theta Pi Delta Chi Delta Sigma Phi Delta Sigma Pi Delta Tau Delta Delta Upsilon Kappa Alpha Psi Kappa Sigma Lambda Chi Alpha Pershing Rifles Phi Delta Theta Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Psi Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Kappa Tau Phi Kappa Theta Pi Kappa Alpha Scabbard & Blade Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Chi Sigma Nu Sigma Phi Epsilon Tau Kappa Epsilon Theta Chi Theta Tau Triangle The U-Shop has your crest. ALL WOOL FLANNELS or ORLON-WOOL HOPSACKS Colors available in Navy, Black, Red, Pewter, & Antique Gold. Priced at: $32.50, $37.50, $39.50 Group discounts available THE University Shop ON THE HILL --- Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 21, 1962 Chemists to Present Technical Papers Members of the KU chemistry department will present seven papers at the national convention of the American Chemical Society, which starts tomorrow in Washington, D.C. CALVIN A. VANDERWERF, professor of chemistry and chairman of the department, will serve as chairman for the symposium on "Spon-sored Research in Fields of Interest to Petroleum." Theatre International will close its five-performance run at 8 p.m. today in the Experimental Theatre by presenting all three foreign-language one-act plays in their native languages. Foreign Language Plays Close Tonight Miguel de Cervantes' "The Magic Theatre" will be performed in Spanish, Tankred Dorst's "The Wall" in German, and Jean Anouilh's "Humulus the Mute" in French, in that order. The plays are over about 9:30 p.m. Other chemistry department members who will present papers at the convention are Paul W. Gilles, professor of chemistry; D. D. Cubicciotti, visiting professor of chemistry; Albert W. Burgstahler, associate professor of chemistry; and Earl S. Huser, Ralph N. Adams and Frank S. Rowland, associate professors of chemistry. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT NEXT ATTRACTION! WILLIAM HOLDEN | CLIFTON WEBB in LEO McCAREY'S SATAN NEVER SLEEPS FRANCE NUYEN LEO McCAREY CLAUDE BINTON LEO McCAREY PEARL'S BUCK CINEMA SCOPE COLOR BY DELUXE WILLIAM HOLDEN C in LEO MCAREY JB Egg Laying Is On Increase M-G-M presents A JULIAN BLAUESTEIN PRODUCTION THE 4 HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE CINEMASCOPE METROCOLOR The American hen is doing a better job than she used to. In 1961, the rate of egg production per hen was 210.5 eggs, compared with 208.7 eggs per hen in 1900. The rate of lay in 1955 was 192 and in 1950 was 174. NOW SHOWING 7:30 Only Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5780 A state representative and professor of economics will speak on "Public Finance in Kansas" at 4 p.m. today in 204 Summerfield. Representative to Talk on Kansas Finance Wayne Angell, state representative from Ottawa and a professor at Ottawa University, will speak to a graduate seminar in economics. The public is invited. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results Cigarettes Taste Different Lately? DON'T BEAME IT FROM THE CIGARETTES! It's Boredom! GET JIR- GET OUT— GET THE JUNI HABIT OF MOVIES UNDER THE STARS! Cigarettes Taste Different Lately? DON'T SLAME FROM THE CIGARETTES! It's Boredom? OF THING— GET OUT— GET THE JUNK HABIT OF MOVIES UNDER THE STARS! FULL TIME FRI. OUR GALA OPENING PROGRAM! "JOURNEY TO THE LOST CITY" — Plus — "THE ANGRY RED PLANET" TREATS FOR THE KIDDIESS! COMPLETE SNACK BAR! It's Family Time at the Movies Again! Sunset Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Alhambra 40 STARTS THURSDAY! "HIGH-FLYING HUMOR!"* "A perfect performer in Kenneth More! The best British procedure of satire!" PETER R. "A farce! The incidents are funny! Kenneth More is the breeziest!" -Times "A comedy that generates laughter! A fun picture!" _News KENNETH MORE British High & Soaf Division / Federation MAN in the MOON SHIRLEY ANNE FIELD · MICHAEL HORDERN A TRANS LUX RELEASE Post PLUS - AT 8:40 ONLY 20 Celebrating a new years "Marines, Let'sGo!" 20 Century Fox Pictures "Marines, Let's Go!" CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUXE ENDS TONIGHT Sophia Loren In "TWO WOMEN" Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1963 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone 32645 Vincent's CURTIS MATHES CM Student-Faculty-Staff SALE! QUALITY YOU CAN SEE - DANISH MODERN STYLE - HAND RUBBED OIL FINISH - SOLID WALNUT CONSTRUCTION - SLIDING DOORS QUALITY YOU CAN HEAR Every speed record may be played. AM-FM Broadcasts are received with highest fidelity. The new multiplex split channel broadcasts are reproduced as stereo with excellent quality and separation. - FULL FIDELITY AM RADIO - HIGH FIDELITY FM RADIO THIS UNIT IS COMPLETE IN EVERY WAY. THERE IS NOTHING ELSE TO BUY. - V-M FOUR SPEED CHANGER - MULTIPLEX RECEIVER - ELECTRONIC TUNING EYE - DIAMOND STYLUS - AUTOMATIC FREQUENCY CONTROL ( Locks in FM stations, eliminates drift) - POWER TRANSFORMER - 40 WATT STEREO AMPLIFIER (locks in FM stations — eliminates drift) - SIX SPEAKER SYSTEM - JACKS FOR TAPE-EXTENSION SPEAKERS Separate volume, function, bass, treble and tuning controls Compare with sets selling for $399.50 NOW For a limited time only — $ 239^{50} $ complete VINCENT'S Back at our old location 724 MASS. bet the was eggs in Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE Gibson guitar — $60 and Ludwig tenor banjo — $30. Both with case. Also 10 watt Hi Fi amplifier and 12-in. HiFi speaker — $35. Call VI 3-1647. 3-27 G.E. Mark. tape recorder. Never used. X384x34 speed. Call VI 3-0181. 3-26 1 WEDDING dress. Size 9, Call VI 3-9211 2 p.m. 3-26 1956 PLYMOUTH. 2 hr. Automatic trans. 1957 PLAINER. 2 hr. L A FANCHER. PILES. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 3-26 ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch Gail V 3-8977 come to 907 Ark. for more information. GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. Handy cross index for quick reference definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference to the delivery. Phone VI 5-7583 VI 3-5778 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In. In Pet Center — most complete pet center. In Pet Store. Pet phone 2923. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. weekdays. **Om** OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 8-84I WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All records see 100 pages. Minimographed are art and bind. Prehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call 1-800-753-6901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. HOLTON TRUMPET with case. Good condition. $50. Call VI 3-8475 after 7 p.m. (8) 822-9160. FOR RENT SUNNY, comfortable, furnished apt. 4 rm, including study rm . & bedroom, private bath, private ent. Large closets. storage space. Call VI 3-5863 or VI 3-3356. 4 ROOM, nicely furnished apt. Large. 2½ blocks from campus. Private entrance, bath, phone, garage. Also full basement. Laundry privileges, newly decorated, reasonably priced. For boys. Call VI 3- 7830. 3-26 Park Plaza South Apartments Central Air Conditioning Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking We will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 3-8253 Office -- 1912 W. 25th. APT. for 2 or 3 boys. Utilities pid. 1 block sooner. 1142 Indiana. 3-50 LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students, Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-071t HELP WANTED HELP WANTED. Male or female, part or full time. Opportunity for exceptional skills. Set your own hours for work. Write AMBic, P.O. Box 8213, K.C. 3-23 Mo. YOUNG MAN wanted part time. 20-25 hrs. per week. Good hourly wage. Call VI 3-7446 for appointment. Dixon's Drive-In. 2500 W. 6th. 3-27 Nice apts. for rent in Redbud Apts, south of Westwood. Choose a clean change kit and yardwork for one nice 2 bedroom apt. with wall-to-wall carpet. Call Contact J. Wood at 1117 Mass. 3-27 WANTED: A male student available daily from 2:30-5:00. See Betty, 111 Flinn Hall. LOST Two girls' dress coats valued at $200. Left on Saturday night. One canel-colored boy coat with Weaver's label. One Van Dyke coat with Reward. Return. Card 3-27 Hamil at VI 3-5770 Aeronautical engineering laboratory report in Kansas Union Reading Room. Friday, March 16. Phone VI 3-9354 for Brian Liebst. Reward!! 3-27 TYPING Kansan Classified Ads Get Results "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- **vices** to the vectorors". For excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louis POPE, VI 3-1097. Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with writing for math and Greek IELT Standard grade. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. Call VI 2-1546. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter interested in theses, term papers, etc Student notes: Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI I 3-2001 t TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, resumes. Research rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mc-Edlowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0824. ff FROM TEHM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Executive Service, $917 B Wesbon, Mission, HE 2-7718. Or sat, EF R-2126. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-BS79. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will be typing name -- call VI 3-9136.Mor. Lost Gibbach Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable time and reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2681 any time. THESES, reports. term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist, writer, typewriter. Reasonable rate Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. cv I-3 0485. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow, 40 W. 138, VI. TI. 1648. Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Model No. 503.167.189. Sell, 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. Tmp. SECRETARY WILL DO TYPING in home. Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at VI 2-1749. 't' TVPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger. VI 3-4409. t HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. Eng. teacher, ELL staff & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mr. Crompton, 1319 Vt. ant. 3. tf PERSON HAVING MRS. AUSTIN'S PURSE: Keep the cash, but please return the money to the bank. Lindley or ext. 275. No questions. Need check and papers desperately. 3-27 Wednesday, March 21, 1962 University Daily Kansan WANTED SEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Ice Plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 3- 0350. MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS SERVICES PROFESSIONAL party planning, for those with impracticable tastes. Parties for any occasion, completely arranged. Our most impressive party, call VI 3-1241. INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric soen damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf 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 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. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mation: 9199 Mass, Calif. VI 3-5263. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reel, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss . tf Barrel of Chicken 25 pieces, 10 hot rolls $5.00 BIG BUY GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture amu Lab Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. These notes are revised and comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 3-27532. Free delivery. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results It's Potter's 66 SERVICE For Your Car's SPRING TUNE-UP Free Pick Up & Delivery Call VI3-9891 6th & Mich. Sign up for Advanced Army ROTC... And right away, youll feel better about your Military Obligation... Because you know, as an officer, your military service will be a stimulating and rewarding experience. You will enjoy the pay, the prestige, the traditional privileges of an officer... your military service can pay off handsomely in later life. For example, ROTC can be tremendously helpful when a man starts his climb up the civilian ladder. Success in the executive areas of business and industry comes earlier and more substantially to the man who can lead.Few are born leaders; but leadership can be learned.And Advanced ROTC Is a great place to learn it... you will be contributing to the limit of your potentialities in one of the biggest jobs we face today. . you can help keep America so strong the war the whole world dreads need never happen. During your 2-year Advanced Army ROTC course, there will be a subsistence allowance of $535. Uniforms and military textbooks are paid for. There is a $117 allowance for your six-week summer camp training, plus travel allowance.And when you're commissioned,a $300 uniform allowance. And then, of course, there is the warm sense of accomplishment you will feel in June 1964 when the gold bars of a Second Lieutenant are pinned on your Army uniform. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 21, 1963 Student Court Hears Traffic Ticket Cases By Dennis Bowers KU students who call campus policemen unfair and mutter to themselves and others when they find a ticket on their windshields can do more than just mutter. "Students who get tickets which they think are unfair or a mistake, or students who had a good reason to be illegally parked on the campus, can appear before us and appeal their case," said Richard Smith, Lawrence law student. When a student receives a ticket he wishes to protest, he should go to the traffic office in Strong Hall and fill out a form which will be given to the Student Court. The Court convenes alternate weeks at 7 p.m. Tuesday. SMITT SAID THE court is set up primarily to handle parking tickets which students believe are unjust. However, the court also handles any case or complaint concerning violation of ASC laws. ALL MEMBERS of the court are students in the School of Law, although this is not an ASC ruling, Smith said. The Chief Justice, Dick Jones of Lawrence is elected by the ASC. Other justices are Richard Smith, Lee Woodard, Anthony Marrow, Hermia Kaplan, Charles Wetzler, and David Mills. Defense attorneys are Robert Luce and Paul Debauge, and prosecuting attorneys are Lynn Anderson, Kenneth McIntyre, and Robert Williams. He was referring to the KU Student Court, established by the All Student Council. The court consists of seven justices, two defense attorneys, and three prosecuting attorneys. P-T-P — (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) ambassador program rolling by giving information, counseling and advice to P-t-P. TO DATE, 140 KU students have signed up for the tour. Some are already taking the series of inoculations necessary to obtain a passport Colorado University has 135 students signed up. Other Big 8 schools have not yet turned in their lists, but are expected to do so in the near future. In preparation for the European tour, KU P-t-P has set up a series of programs to prepare students for their student ambassador responsibilities. THE SECOND in a series of foreign travel orientation programs will be held at 4 o'clock this afternoon in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The program includes a movie and a panel discussion about Germany, Austria and Switzerland. At 2 p.m. Sunday, the first in a series of "America From the Outside" discussion groups will meet in Room 306 of the Kansas Union. This will be a continuation of the orientation programs with smaller groups getting down to specific aspects on cultural, social and political differences American students may encounter during the tour. Horst Haselmann, Vienna, Austria graduate student, with the help of two or three other international students and one American student, will conduct the forum. The students will pay their own travel expenses on the tour. The cost of the flight will be a little over $200. The exact figure will not be known until the number of students involved and the airlines furnishing the planes is known. "It is our hope." Murray said, "that from the brother-to-brother relationship and P-t-P, a nation-to-nation friendship will emerge." Double Edge Razor Blades Finest Surgical Steel, honed in oil. Full money back guarantee. 25 = $10 100 = $5c 200 = $1.50 200 = $3.20 1000 = $7.75 Postpaid. Packed five blades to package, 20 packages to carton. C.O.D. orders accepted. Postcard brings general merchandise catalog. EMERSON COMPANY 406 South Second Alhambra, California "Students are assumed guilty when they appear concerning parking violations," Smith said. "If they can give some reason, some what we call 'equitable reason' why they were illegally parked, then we usually let the ticket go." He said the court is an "equity court," which means that there is no right for trial by jury. SMITH SAID THREE justices sit on each court hearing and act as judge and jury for the hearing. If the student is not satisfied with the decision of the court, he can appeal the decision to a "court en bane" in which all seven judges preside. "We can recommend disciplinary action—but only recommend it," Smith said. "The Chancellor has the final say on that." The court rarely recommends such action, he added. Smith said the KU police give University tickets to all parking violations on the campus except for parking by a yellow curbing. For this violation, the campus policeman issues a ticket from the city of Lawrence. This ticket can not be appealed to the Student Court, Smith said. The next Student Court session will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the courtroom in the basement of Green Hall. - The use of the "direct primary" rather than uncontested primaries as now used by Vox Populi. (Continued from page 1) Other planks concern: Nominees, Platform Announced - - An increase of funds to the four classes of the University in order to promote "class functions and projects." The party advocated that these funds be divided equally among the four classes of the University. "The text of the UP platform will be released later this week," said Jim Anderson, Greek co-chairman of UP. Hardy, independent co-chairman of UP, attacked Action, KU's proposed third political party mentioning alleged fallacies in six of Action's nine potential platform planks. IN THE PRIMARIES, to be held April 17-18. UP will run more than one candidate in 5 of the 12 races. The candidate receiving the most votes in the primary will be the UP candidate in the general election April 24-25. - Changes in the freshman orientation program. These changes would be an orientation lecture by the president of the student body on the structure, operation and powers of the ASC; a pamphlet on the same subject to be distributed to all entering students, and a briefing for entering students by the leaders of the various campus organizations on the opportunities which their groups offer. Hardy said that he did not "think that Action provides the party's prime worry in the coming elections." He said that he found the planks to their platform "very easy to disagree with." HE SAID THAT in regard to the Action platform on lowering the minimum requirements for representation on the ASC of cooperative houses and professional fraternities the originators were mistaken in their information. He said the ASC rule directs that a group must have 75 votes, or one half of their membership, whichever is the fewer, to get a seat on the ASC rather than the 75 which the Action temporary platform states. "IF THE ACTION members would attend some ASC meetings," he said, "they would be aware of these issues." The living district contains only a few more than 100 members. Hardy said, so the number of votes required for representation is about 50, the number to which Action suggests the rule be lowered. Hardy said that the student seating plan, the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee, and inefficiency in the Kansas Union which Action says need immediate ASC attention have already been discussed in great detail by the council. He said that it is not the place of the All Student Council to expand its operations to include national and international issues such as the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). The Action proposed platform called for ASC to widen its scope. Hardy charged that Action is "being run by people who want to make changes, but who, for the most part, do not have the necessary experience in Hill activities." After his nomination, Kepner said that UP has made great strides since its birth in the fall of 1900 which culminated in last fall's election as the party took 10 out of a possible 18 seats. He said that the party should strive to promote more active student participation in All Student Council and Hill activities. Moore to Lecture Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology, will deliver two public lectures tomorrow at Arizona State University, in Tempe, Ariz. His two talks are sponsored by the American Geological Institute under a grant from the National Science Foundation. HALSTEAD, Kan. — (UPI) — A fire roared out of control for more than two hours early today and caused $45,000 damage to two buildings in the Halstead business district. Tub of Chicken 15 pieces, 5 hot rolls $3.50 BIG PHY $45,000 Damage in Fire Career Cues: BIG BUY "An interest in student activities can pay you dividends later on!" Gibson F. Dailey, Asst.to the President George A.Fuller Company "Extracurricular activities never really interested me... architecture and construction always did. It's a paradox, though, because as it turned out student activities gave me a big jump on my career in construction. "Studies educated me. But college activities provided the confidence I needed to approach the business world. Looking back, it was these activities that really gave me my first knowledge of people, administration, leadership. "Working for the college newspaper, fun magazine, and engineering bulletin taught me writing-a gift I use today in the promotion and getting of new business. Student Council brought the chance to work with other men-a daily occurrence now. Penn's theatrical group and engineering shows helped me relax in front of an audience then-and help me find my voice when I'm talking to large groups now. "True, today's heavy college curriculum doesn't allow much time for activities. There wasn't much time for them in my day either. I burned a lot of midnight oil on architectural studies, but difficult as they were I still found time for student activities. —I'm mighty happy that I did." "If you have time during the rest of your years in school to take an interest in activities-do it! It's certain to pay big dividends in an inspiring future in the business of your choice." Gibson Doiley started with the George A. Fuller Company, the largest building construction firm in the country, right after college. Today he is assistant to the president. Gib started smoking Camels while still on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania. He's been a Camel smoker ever since. Smoking more now but enjoying it less?...change to Camel! Have a real cigarette-Camel THE BEST TOBACCO MAKES THE BEST SMOKE CAMEL TURKISH DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Winston-Salem North Carolina Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No. 108 Thursday, March 22, 1962 ChargesMadeAgainstAction By Mike Miller Two of the organizers of Action, KU's proposed third political party, have severed their affiliation with the group and accused it of being "created for the personal advancement of a few people." Charles Patterson, Rockville, Ill., junior, and Bruce Bee, Mission senior, said that the party has deviated from its original purpose, has some incompetent and inexperienced leaders, and has planks to its platform which are "impractical and unrealistic." BEE CHARGED, "After starting out seriously, I now question the structure, goals, and leadership of the party." Patterson said that the platform and some of the points in the constitution were a complete surprise to him in view of Action's original purpose. He charged that Menghini has used the proposed party for advancement of his personal ideas and plans and has used the party's officials as a mouthpiece for these ideas. Speaking of Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior and another of the organizers of the party, Bee said, "the unstated goals of the party have become primarily an extension of Menghini's ego. His lust for power is fantastic." Bee and Patterson agreed that they were "disillusioned by what they considered the original goals of the party. PATTerson SAID, "I am disappointed that Bruce and I were not apprized of the party's progress in view of the initial impetus which we supplied." When asked if Patterson and Bee were intentionally eased out of the party heirarchy, Menghini said, "Chuck and Bruce were not excluded from any meetings but simply did not come to the scheduled ones." Fatterson and Bee charged that the control of the party is in the hands of a few, rather than in the hands of all the members as had originally been proposed. Patterson said that the part of the party's constitution which says that a quorum shall consist of 10 per cent of the membership when the party is not discussing elections means that only one tenth of the party can decide the policies for the whole group. HE NOTED THAT since the group is made up of individual membership, a small quorum is necessary, but such a small quorum puts too much power in the hands of too small a group. He added, "This keeps the power where Menghini wants it." Bee said, "When we initially started talking about the subject of discriminatory clauses in the national constitutions of some of the KU fraternities, Menghini said that the party was to be organized to encompass all students, including the Greeks. "A week ago, I told Chuck (Menghini) that I thought Action's stand on discriminatory clauses (they advocate the withdrawal of University recognition of those living groups who do not remove their discriminatory clauses by September, 1965) was a contradiction of what he had previously said about encompassing the wishes of all the students. "I said that it looked to me like the party was evolving into a fight between Greeks and independents. When the party gets going, it will become a group of independents organized against the Greeks." He added that Menghini shrugged his shoulders and agreed with him. Bee said, "There is no question in my mind that Menghini is anti-Greek, regardless of any statement to the contrary by him." PATTERSON AGREED with Bee, saying, "It is definitely not a plank to attract the Greeks." - * * Brian O'Heron, Torrington, Conn. senior and temporary president of Action, said, "This plank was not meant to 'attract the Greeks,' but to take a stand on an issue that concerns the majority of the students on this campus." In turning his attention to other party leaders, Eee said. "It is interesting to note that Bob Boseseu (Pittsburg junior and temporary treasurer of the group) was elected treasurer even though he had never attended a meeting prior to when he was elected. At least not to any of the meetings which I was invited to attend." When asked his reaction to O'Heron, Patterson said, "O'Heron is unimportant." They did, however, say that Harold Johnson, Ft. Leavenworth senior and temporary vice president of the - * * (Continued on page 12) Action Says Its Planks Were Taken From UP - * * Action last night joined the campus political merry-go-round of charges and counter charges by saying that one of the Action planks with which the University Party found fault was contained in two previous UP platforms. In answer to a charge by Thomas Hardy, Hoisington junior and cochairman of UP, that it is not the place of the ASC to expand its operations to include national and international issues as Action advocates, Brian O'Heron, Lawrence senior and temporary president of Action, quoted the 1961 UP platform: "WE CANNOT ACCEPT the assertion that the student is only an observer of world affairs and must accept the social and political environment imposed upon him. We feel that students, as potential leaders of the future, not only should investigate and discuss the problems which confront our nation but that they are qualified to express opinions on these important issues." O'Heron continued quoting the UP platform for the fall of 1960 which read: "With this platform the University Party seeks to broaden the base of student government, to enlarge its scope of interest and to create and maintain an atmosphere favorable to the free exchange of ideas and opinions." Hardy replied to the statement saying, "A party is to elect the best people and it is not its function to give party lines. The platform reflects the ideas of those running at that time. The people who ran under these platforms are no longer with us." THE ACTION CONSTITUTION was approved by the members of the General Assembly without much discussion. The General Assembly for last night's meeting was made up of all students interested in the party rather than the block type membership of the other two campus political parties. Attendance was approximately 75. Missionary Says Portuguese Torture People in Colonies A Methodist missionary imprisoned by Portuguese for four months charged last night that forced labor, brutality, and slave trade is being practiced by the Fortuguese government in Angola and Mozambique. Brancel and the Rev. Mr. Malcolm McVeigh, also a missionary to Angola, appeared last night and told a startled audience of the tortures forced upon the Angolan people by the Portuguese government. Fred Brancel, deported by Portuguese authorities, said at the Wesley Foundation that the Portuguese government is trying to trick the United States government into supplying foreign aid in order to buy arms with which to suppress the natives of Angola. He said more than 200,000 natives have fled across the border into the Congo to escape the daily torturing and killing by Portuguese soldiers McVEIGH SAID THAT 1500 Europeans and over 30,000 Africans have been killed in the revolts of the African people against "inhuman treatment by the Portuguese mili-tia." and that the United States is afraid to come out against their "NATO partner." McVEIGH DESCRIBED a system of what he called "forced labor" and said that natives were taken from their homes and forced to work for the government. Women and children do most of the work on secondary road construction, he said. "No one would even think about complaining or criticizing the inhuman way they are treated because they would be jailed or killed at once, he said. McVeigh said the government "encourages" the natives to work by threat of torture and he demonstrated with a 13 inch length of hard wood with which he said Portuguese militia beat the natives. He said the stick is struck against the palms of the native's hands 150 times each. The torture called "Palmerio," is rocks and the McVeigh said a group of natives had revolted and quit work in the cotton fields of a valley of Angola in defiance of the Portuguese troops McVEIGH SAID THAT in North Angola the natives also revolted, killing five Europeans but no missionaries. "The Portuguese government then figured that the missionaries were behind the revolt," McVeigh said. "Government militia bombed villages and killed missionaries 250 miles from the revolt. but that not one European was killed. As a result, he said, Portuguese troops bombed many villages with napalm bombs, killing thousands of natives. "The Portuguese are trying to divide the Africans religiously into tribal groups that hate each other," Brancel said. "They try their best to build hatred." BRANCEL SAID THAT he remembered one case where a minister was taken by Portuguese militia in the middle of his sermon and beaten to death. The people in the church at the time were forced to "tear the roof off the church" before they were allowed to leave. The church was "flattened" immediately by the militia. The group also approved the following planks for a platform for the coming Spring ASC elections. - The expansion of ASC interests to take in national and international issues. - An explanation by the ASC of the reasons for "stifling" the petition concerning a referendum on the football seating plan. If this explanation is not received, the group advocates an investigation into the matter. - An investigation of high prices in the Kansas Union Cafeteria and explanation of why the Union does not make annual financial statements easily attainable to the students. - Granting the Faculty Senate power to set University policy in areas of direct student concern. - The revoking by the ASC of recognition of all living groups which do not remove clauses from their This spring's UP platform appears on page four of today's Kansan. constitutions or bylaws which have to do with discrimination on the basis of race, color, national origin, or creed. - A fund raising drive for the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee which is coordinating activities in the South for registration of Negro voters who have been denied voting rights. - SUPPORT OF THE ASC'S HUMAN Rights Committee as long as the committee continues its function of investigating racial and religious discrimination wherever it exists. - Reaffiliation with the National Students Association while at the same time supporting the Current Events Committee and People-to-People. - Changing the ASC constitution to allow all voting districts at least one representative. - A reforming of the House Un-American Activities Committee through the help of the All Student Council. Action advocates that the ASC pass a resolution concerning reforming HUAC and send copies of it to Congress, the HUAC, the At- (Continued on page 12) Weather Partly cloudy this afternoon, tonight and Friday with a few light showers east-central portion this afternoon and scattered thundershowers extreme West Friday afternoon. Cooler West this afternoon. Low tonight in the 30s. High Friday in the 50s. Gerald T. McCormick CHUCK PATTERSON — "party is in hands of a few." FREDERICK FISCHER CHUCK MENGHNI — "did not exclude Bee and Patterson." CORRIS GILLIARD BRIAN O'HERON — "many Action members are also CRC members." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 22. 1962 The Geneva Conference A few weeks before the Geneva conference, President Kennedy stood firm on his desire to not start a summit conference until representatives of the 18 governments had smoothed out the path for the government heads. The conference got off to an immediate bad start by France's refusal to attend. It already appeared that rough sailing lay ahead. Developments at the conference Tuesday put Kennedy in a much tighter position than even he probably expected. The British foreign secretary, Lord Home, told Russia that Britain is willing to cut enforcement machinery to the "absolute minimum" in order to get a test ban agreement. HOME INTRODUCED the idea of a "sampling technique of inspection." Under this system, inspectors would visit at random some geographical areas of a nuclear power, but would not check the whole country. The British solution to the inspection problem creates a new area of crisis for President Kennedy. The United States has long insisted on open international inspection of a country's whole area. The British statement can easily cause a split of the Western allies, specifically the United States and Britain. If Kennedy does not go along with the British solution, the propaganda potential of the Communist bloc will be greatly increased, especially in view of the United States' plan to resume atmospheric nuclear tests next month. SO FAR the United States has remained noncommittal on Britain's concession to Soviet demands for non-inspection. After Home proposed Britain's solution, Secretary of State Dean Rusk issued a statement saying the critical problem on a test ban treaty is how to get "the necessary amount of objective international scientific information and inspection." His statement hints that the United States will be taking a close look at the British "sampling" plan. But right now the British proposal has caused a split between the United States and her strongest ally. How Kennedy resolves his side of the problem should make an interesting contribution to the history of international politics. —Karl Koch The Journalism School Issue The department of journalism at Kansas State University and the William Allen White School of Journalism at KU received severe criticism last week from Whitley Austin, publisher of the Salina Journal and a member of the Board of Regents. Mr. Austin suggested that the department at Kansas State should be incorporated in the English department and that the School of Journalism at KU should be reduced to a department of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This, he asserted, would give the journalism students at the two universities a liberals arts background. Now it is an admirable idea that journalism students should have a liberal arts background. It is so admirable in the opinion of the School of Journalism that its students have long had to meet the College's requirements in English, Western Civilization, speech, biological sciences, foreign language and distribution of courses. THE BASIC PROBLEM with Mr. Austin's charges is that they are unsubstantiated generalities which can be easily disproved. Mr. Austin also charged that some of the faculty at the KU School of Journalism are incompetent. This charge ignores the fact that the School has been accredited by the American Council on Education for Journalism (an organization consisting half of educators and half of practicing journalists). Mr. Austin did not attempt to substantiate this charge either. AS A SIDELIGHT, we might note that four of Mr. Austin's staff at the Salina Journal are KU graduates. This is true despite the fact that he could have hired graduates from other journalism schools, liberal arts graduates (since the need for a liberal arts background was one of his main points) or experienced journalists to build his staff. Mr. Austin's charges appear to be whimsical notions that occurred to him in some of his idle moments. Their lack of substantiation and disregard for actualities do not qualify them as anything else. —William H. Mullins letters to the editor An Incident at the AUFS Lectures Editor: The first line of my general beliefs, as a student and as a journalist, was always: "Knowledge is for everybody." And it was my pleasure, as well as my gratitude, to find myself always able to enjoy practicing this belief throughout my schooling days at KU. Though I am enrolled in courses which would qualify me as a candidate for a Master's degree in journalism, yet I was always keen to attend other activities and lectures in different fields and subjects in which I might be interested. I was always admiring KU for its many lecturers and visitors from other universities and various areas who, however, offered us the chance to gain extra knowledge and better understanding. I had to have a copy of Mr. Gallagher's schedule from Professor Heller's office. I found myself interested to hear numbers of his lectures. Besides my obvious interest, as an Arab, to hear about my country from a non-Arab speaker, I felt so much interested, THIS WEEK I heard about Mr. Charles F. Gallagher's 10 day visit to the campus. Mr. Gallagher is an American Universities Field Staff member. His field is "The Arab World." Unfortunately Mr. Gallagher was scheduled to speak only in regular classes and none of his lectures was arranged to be in the Music room or the Forum room, as it is usually expected, for the interest of the general students in the campus. as a graduate student in journalism, to learn from the scholarly studies of a field staff professor, about one of the main spots in the world news today. I believe that we, everybody, have to look at our faces in other's mirrors, not always to defend ourselves, but more important, to realize ourselves! With that belief I went on to get permissions from Professors Ericksen, Laird, Pickett and Kuchler to attend their classes during Mr. Gallagher's lectures. They all welcomed me and I was expecting that. The thing which I did not expect and what surprised me indeed was when I went to attend a 3 p.m. Graduate seminar in Regional Geography in 322 Lindley: THE TEACHER. Professor Kuchler, said that he did not mind my attendance. I thanked him and was about to step in the class room when Mr. Gallagher stopped me by saying in front of the class: I really felt funny rather than embarrassed. "Personal things???" I whispered to myself. I held my step at the door and excused myself out of the whole Lindley building! Yet I am still feeling funny and wondering what could be personal in science? What or whatever geography is? What could be THAT personal that some students might hear and some others might not? "I think it would be better not to be with us, we are going to discuss personal things." I WAS SURE that Mr. Gallagher was going to talk about a certain geographical topic which concerned the Arab world, and was not going to give the secret of the American atomic bomb. And I was sure, however, that I am not a Soviet spy! I was trusted enough to be a member in this institution, in other words to be a student in MY University of Kansas! If Mr. Gallagher were going to say factual things about my country, the Arab Nation, I would have been very thankful to learn them from him—facts, whatever they may be, they never cause offense! P. S. I am not complaining, I am just curious! Mr. Gallagher knew that I was an Arab. He asked me if I were from the Middle East, and I told him that I am an Arab from Cairo. I don't think that this—if it did—should have bothered him. Safynaz Kazem Cairo, U.A.R. graduate student Dailu Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became bweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2730 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Services and News service. United States International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during University year except Saturday and Sundays. Periods of examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. SNARK TO KRID LOVE MOVIE LIFE LOCK TIM Bauer R37 PC BORA, EICHARD KAUFMAN "IF I TAKE COURSES I DON'T NEED,I FIGGER ILL GRADUATE IN TIME TO WORK LONG ENOUGH TO GO ON SOCIAL SECURITY." From the Magazine Rack A Look at Goldwater Arguing such points with the Senator would produce little clarification. Many have tried to debate with Senator Goldwater. It is a little like running a race with a man who is running on a different track. For example, if he were to say that the moon is made of green cheese and therefore there is no point in sending a man to the moon because what could we do with green cheese—you might reply: "But the moon isn't made of green cheese." Or, if you are more cautious, "I don't think it is, and anyway let's find out." NOW HOW would he reply to that? He wouldn't reply at all. He would merely restate the self-evident proposition that the moon is made of green cheese. This is an old device, long a favorite of politicians, the device of proof by definition. Thus, one sets forth a premise (it is not described as a premise, it is described as a fact): the more government, the less freedom. To anyone interested in genuine discussion, that is a proposition to be tested against experience. For example, was Hitler the result of too powerful a Weimar regime? Was Lenin the result of too powerful a Kerensky regime? And by freedoms precisely what is meant? These would be questions to consider in debate. But one does not engage Mr. Goldwater on these grounds. He very devoutly believes that power corrupts. Some power. Not the power to run a business without governmental interference. Not the FBI's power. Not the power of the 50 states—that should be increased. THE POWER that corruits is wielded by labor unions and the federal government. Each battens on the greedy side of our natures. In return for their favors, we give them our souls, and thus we swing "down the well-traveled road to absolutism." The nation today is menacled by "a Leviathan, a vast national authority out of touch with the people and out of their control. This monolith of power is bounded only by the will of those who sit in high places." Not high places in New York or Pittsburgh or Detroit, not in state legislatures, not in General Motors or the headquarters of the American Medical Association. In Washington. Mr. Goldwater fears "the accumulation of power in a central government that is remote from the people" —remote geographically, He seems to believe that the nearer one is physically to the "seat of power," the more he is in the driver's seat. A really "free" nation would be governed to the maximum extent possible by the smallest possible units—beginning with the family, then perhaps the Town Meeting. The disenfranchisement of people in the states through gerrymandering and rotten boroughs, the corruption of the cities are something to which he never alludes. (Excerpted from an article by Gilbert A. Harrison in The New Republic) the took world GREEN MANSIONS, by W. H. Hudson (Bantam Classics, 60 cents). Few novels have the magic of this one, and one does not have to be a confirmed escapist to enjoy it. It has the fine-woven quality of a spider web yet the lasting power of steel. By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism It stays with one for years. When other novels have been forgotten, the story of the birdlike Rima of the Amazon rain forest remains. Is it an incredible tale? Yes, but this does not matter. One can laugh at Tarzan but believe in Rima. "... once, for a moment, she raised herself to reach her finger nearer to the bird, and then a gleam of unsubdued sunlight fell on her hair and arm, and the arm at that moment appeared of a pearly whiteness, and the hair just where the light touched it, had a strange lustre and play of iridescent colour." Thus Hudson describes Rima. When Rima is sacrificed by the natives, who have learned she is human after all, one feels a sense of loss while understanding that this is how such stories must end. 44 Thursday, March 22, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 LOOK HOW FAST AND EASY COIN-OPERATED DRY CLEANING CAN BE! Along With Economy I'll put the clothes in the dryer. All you need to do is place the garments inside one of these self-service drycleaners — Big 8 Lb. Load. DEPOSIT QUARTERS ... close the door and drop the quarters in the handy slot. 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 50 mins. . . in just 50 minutes your garments are fresh and clean. A woman holds a dress on a rack. . . . then simply remove and hang up the practically wrinkle-free garments (of course, permanent pleats and creases stay in). Also Coin- Operated Washers and Dryers Independent ALL SERVICE CENTER 9th & Mississippi OPEN 'ROUND THE CLOCK Independent ALL SERVICE CENTER 9th & Mississippi K University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 22. 1962 University Party Presents Platform (Editor's Note: This is the complete text of the University Party platform for the Spring elections as approved by the party Tuesday, March 20 1962. The platform was then sent to a writing committee for stylistic changes. The University Party believes that student government at the University of Kansas progresses only through positive and practical suggestions for its improvement. The University Party also believes that such progress is beneficial to the student body as a whole and that it may be best promulgated through efficient party action. With these views in mind, the University Party presents the following platform. I. HUMAN RIGHTS The University Party, realizing that the problem of human rights is a present and pertinent problem upon the campus of the University of Kansas, believes that a student has a right to be judged according to individual merit and that discrimination based on categorical definitions infringes upon the freedom of the individual. The University Party also believes that to force an organization to choose an individual because of his or her membership in a certain category is to deny that organization the right to choose its members on the basis of individual merit. Because the question of human rights is an individual one, the University Party believes that the problem can best be solved by the elimination of prejudice in individual attitudes. We feel that this should be accomplished through support of the Human Rights Committee of the All Student Council. II. CLASS FUNDS The University Party realizing that class spirit has been woefully lacking at the University of Kansas due primarily to the lack of funds available for class functions and projects, advocates the creation by the All Student Council of a fund to be divided equally among the four classes of the University to finance said functions and projects. III. ASC FUNDS The University Party recognizing the present and future expansion of the scope of student government activities, proposes that new sources of revenue be investigated and exploited by the All Student Council. IV. DIRECT PRIMARIES In accordance with democratic principles, the University Party proposes that elections be held under the "direct primary" system so that any candidate who so wishes may run for office. The system of uncontested primaries now in use by one campus political party denies the student, who so desires, the right to run as a candidate in the primary and further denies the student voter his right to choose from a fair and ample sampling of the candidates of his party. V. PERMANENT QUALIFICATIONS BOARD Recognizing that the effectiveness of student government depends upon the efficient functioning of the committees of the ASC, the University Party advocates the establishment of a bi-partisan Qualifications Board. The Party proposes that the ASC establish such a board on a permanent basis to control appointments to ASC committees, making selections on the basis of qualifications rather than on political affiliation. Since all committees should have some experienced members at all times, there should be overlapping terms of office for members of these committees. The Party proposes to amend ASC Bill No. 3 to accomplish this. The University Party realizing that the Freshman Orientation program is a significant service to the new student, recommends the following additions or changes in order to implement a more positive program for the future. - An orientation lecture by the President of the Student Body on the structure, operation, and powers of the All Student Council. - A pamphlet on the same subject (i.e. student government) and election procedures should be distributed to all entering students. - Student leaders in other activities should present a brief summary of the opportunities their organizations offer to students of the University of Kansas. Russia May Develop New Nuclear Weapon LONDON — (UPI) — Lord Schackleton told the House of Lords yesterday that the Soviet Union may be developing a 500-megaton nuclear weapon which could be exploded in space. The 51-year-old Labor MP said Soviet development of such a weapon was conceivable, "although it would be very difficult to make it clean enough not to finish off a large part of the world and not only her enemy." BRAKE SERVICE WHEEL BALANCING FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY WHEEL ALIGNMENT Pharmacy School To Start Circuit PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP KU will provide information concerning recent developments in pharmacy for druggists of the state next month when the school of pharmacy makes it biannual circuit. LAW DAY SPEAKER — Thurman W. Arnold, author and former assistant attorney general, will speak on "Economic Folklore of 1962" at the Judge Nelson Timothy Stephens lecture at 3:30 p.m. Saturday in Fraser Theater. D. S. MURRAY This extension work will be done at Concordia, April 18; Dodge City, April 19; Wichita, April 20, and Kansas City, April 23. First street north of the river 229 Elm VI 3-2250 More than 150 pharmacists from Kansas, western Missouri, southern Nebraska and northern Oklahoma are expected to hear these traveling educational programs. Lecturers at all four schools will be Edward E. Smissman, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry; Raymond E. Hopponen, associate professor of pharmacy; Duane G. Wenzel, professor of pharmacology, and Mathias P. Mertes, assistant professor of pharmaceutical chemistry Sponsors are the KU School of Pharmacy, the Kansas Pharmaceutical Association, the Kansas State Board of Pharmacy and the University Extension. NEW YORK—(UPI)—Two medical scientists take a highly critical view of the ever-increasing superabundance of pills and other medications said to lessen illness, improve health and prolong life. Scientists Explain Hullabaloo on Pills Too many people, including physicians, are being kidded and are kidding themselves, said Drs. Mindel C. Sheps and Alvin P. Shapiro of the University of Pittsburgh in addressing doctors through a technical organ of the American Heart Association. FOR INSTANCE. there is the national hullabaloo over cholesterol blood levels, they continued. The scientific evidence that lowering these levels will slow artery-hardening is all circumstantial. Leading scientific authorities hedge their recommendations with many ifs and buts. "The adoption of therapeutic measures and of medical theories on the basis of poorly documented evidence or no evidence at all is of course not a new phenomenon," they said. "The process is, however, out of keeping with our aspiration to make the practice of medicine a rational, scientific endeavor." Yet anti-cholesterol drugs are multiplying wildly and additional choices for cholesterol lowering are unsaturated fats and low calorie liquid diets. The result is "we have become a 'fat conscious' people" and egg and milk producers suffer. THERE HAS been a "drug explosion" over the past decade or so, and "for the critically minded physician there is cause for bewilderment." After 15 years of widespread use there still is medical argument over the effectiveness of drugs which keep the blood in a non-coagulant state. "Hypotensive drugs hailed five years ago are discarded as newer and seemingly more potent ones are introduced with the same fanfare," they continued. "Through various media the physician is adjured to --- MOTHER AND DAD KISSING BABY WITH BOYS YOU CAN DO YOUR WASH FOR JUST PENNIES AT... --- COIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY Yes, for just pennies you can wash your clothes to sparkling brightness. Dry them, too! At Smith's you'll find plenty of machines — there's no waiting. Come down soon — You'll like the ease and speed of washing at Smith's — and you'll like the results! --- © Wash . . . . 20c DRY . . . . 10c SMITH'S LAUNDRY Sixth and Arkansas OPEN 24 HOURS. tranquilize and to reassure, or, alternatively, to exercise and motivate his cardiac patient, while particularly disturbing to him are the occasions when treatment of one symptom results in a new set of side effects requiring additional medications." 10 FURTIERMORE, there has been no real improvement in mortality statistics for artery-heart diseases despite the multiplication of drugs for their treatment, they said. In their view, the medical profession should be much more critical of new drugs. As it is now these "new remedies are adopted rapidly and apparently widely at times in the face of poor or inadequate evidence. Many of these remedies, helpful or not, are not innocuous but produce unpleasant side effects, toxicity and sometimes even death. "Individually or collectively, the members of the medical profession must accept their responsibility for therapy," they said. "In the short term a great deal might be accomplished if we took seriously a variant of the war-time admonition: 'Is this prescription really necessary?' In the long term, we need to take the initiative to ensure that the control of therapy will remain where it belongs—in the hands of scientific, objective and conscientious physicians." CHICKEN DINNER Slaw, French Fries, Roll, Gravy & Pickles $1.25 BIG BUY How to get rid of TYPERTENSION Use Eaton's Corrasable Bond Typewriter Paper The crase-without-a-trace surface does away with the annoyance of retying. If you make a mistake, a flick of an ordinary pencil eraser will quickly remove it! Cure your case of "Typertension" today - save time, temper, and money, too! W.G. TUNS CORRASABLE BUILDER E EXTON'S CORRASABLE TYPEWRITER PAPER EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. VI 3-6133 Page 5 ; al- ivate ular- ccca- vmp e ef- dica beenality causes drugs pro-oco- these h瞧ly s in evi-help- but, ceutts, bath, the the session for hort- zariz- ari ? ar? Iry? takeak take re it re it phy- ASC Chairmanship To Be Discussed The All Student Council will face a major functional problem at its regular meeting Tuesday when it takes action on a proposed constitutional amendment defining the chairmanship of the council. An amendment was proposed at the last meeting to change the present system of electing the chairman. Since then there has been opposition and a counter proposal has been offered. Shabtai Teveth, an Israeli journalist, will speak on "Israel and the Middle East" at 8:30 Sunday evening in the Kansas room of the Kansas Union. THE CURRENT CHAIRMAN, Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior. is Israeli Journalist To Lecture Here Teveth is on a 3 month lecture tour of the United States under the joint sponsorship of the United Jewish Appeal and the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundations. not a member of the council. His term as a representative has expired but he has retained his position. The amendment is designed to make such a situation illegal and impossible. The counter move would make the existing situation legal. A dinner at 6 p.m. will precede Teveth's talk. Admission is $1. Reservations for the dinner may be made by phoning 522. The amendment, submitted by Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission sophomore, states that the ASC "shall elect from its membership one person to serve the entire session as chairman." A session is defined as being from spring to spring. His new idea would perpetuate the present situation but would take the voting power from the chairman, even in cases of a tie vote. WHITMAN SAID LAST NIGHT that in light of the counter proposal he would probably submit another amendment which "has the nature of a compromise." "It is not consistent with logical thought to have the chairman vote without representing any one," Whitman said last night. The argument that the living group or school whose representative is chosen chairman would thus lose a vote on the council has also arisen. HE ALSO POINTED OUT that the party in power will get an extra vote because it will be able to substitute a new member to take the chairman's representative position. "The loss of the vote is not a valid argument," Whitman said. "Only in case of a tie will it be harmful to a living group. The chairman can have another member of the council take the chair and thus be able to vote." THE COUNTER PROPOSAL, to be presented by Dean Salter, Garden City junior, allows a chairman to retain his position if his term expires during a session. A chairman in this situation would thus be a member at large. Salter's proposal is in line with the present situation and would retain the vote in case of ties for the chairman. Palmer has never voted in the capacity of chairman. Salter's argument against the original amendment is that it might result in a representative just elected immediately becoming chairman. Salter said this is detrimental to the council because it takes time and experience to acclimate oneself to the operation of the council and it would be extremely difficult for a newcomer to start off as chairman. WHITMAN AGREED it would be unfortunate to have to elect a newcomer to the council as chairman Palmer said he could understand both arguments and see benefits from either proposal. "I think the situation needs to be cleared up and stated, one way or the other," the present chairman said. WHITMAN'S PROPOSAL at the last meeting was brought up, discussed and submitted by Hollace Cross, Kansas City, Mo., junior. Cross asked the council for a straw vote on the possible amendment and got only one vote in favor of it. Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior and student body president, said the source of the problem was the switch from only one election each year to the present dual elections. He said the position of the chairman was not clarified. For either of the proposals to become effective a two-thirds majority of the ASC would be necessary as would a majority approval by the student body at the spring election. Whitman then immediately re-submitted Cross's amendment. "It will be well and good to have the situation defined and I don't expect any opposition," Eberhart said about Whitman's original proposal. Thursday, March 22, 1962 University Daily Kansan 1700 High School Musicians To Compete in Festival at KU KU will host approximately 1700 high school students Friday and Saturday for the northeastern district music festival. The students will compete in vocal and instrumental music for an opportunity to enter the state contest to be held April 14 at Emporia. The festival is sponsored by the Kansas High School Activities Association, in cooperation with the Four members of the KU speech and drama faculty will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the "Don Juan in Hell" episode from George Bernard Shaw's "Man and Superman." The performance will be given at the Presbyterian Westminster Student Center, 1200 Oread. William Kuhike, instructor, will play Don Juan; Caroline Kriesel, instructor, will play Dona Ana; William Reardon, associate professor, will play the Commander (Ana's father, whom Juan killed in a duel), and Virgil Godfrey, assistant professor, will play the Devil. F. Cowles Strickland, visiting professor of speech and drama, will direct the performance. He also directed the recent KU production of Gian-Carlo Menotti "The Consul." 'Don Juan To Be Given "Don Juan in Hell" comprises most of Act III of G. B. Shaw's "Man and Superman." The sequence will be presented only slightly cut, to allow time for a discussion of the work immediately following the performance. KU School of Fine Arts and University Extension. The biggest representation will come from Kansas City. Bands will be present from Wyandotte, Argentine, Rosedale and Sumner High Schools, Central Junior High and the State School for the Blind. Other bands will come from Shawnee Mission, Turner, Ottawa, Leavenworth, Bonner Springs, Olathe, Lansing, De Soto, Paola, Eudora, Gardner, Valley Falls, Troy, Louisburg, Osawatomy, Tonganoxie, Baldwin, Quenemo, Stillwell, Appanoose, Wathena, Winchester, Spring Hill, Basehor, Robinson, Powhattan, Oskaloosa, Wellville, Nortonville, Lawrence, Atchison, Gardner, Highland, Midway, Willis, Stanley, Elwood, Wea Rural, Patton Jr., Lecomppton, Washington, Coro- TUBA CITY, Ariz.—(UPI) The Tuba City Sportsman's Club, whose members all are Navajo Indians yesterday reported considerable interest in its new course—how to use the bow and arrow. KU's Associated Women Students (AWS) will be host to about 250 delegates at the biennial convention of the southern region of the Inter-collegiate Association of Women Students (IAWS), April 1-4. Indians Take UD Arms Aaain Admission is free. Regional Convention Of IAWS Here April 1 The theme of the convention is "Contemporary Comprehension" and will center on a concern for the individual's place in society. Foreign Food, Song Planned for Meal A diversified menu and a variety of foreign music will be presented to an expected crowd of 500 at the International Club banquet April 15. International Club members from 12 nations will prepare foreign dishes for the meal to begin at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Background music during the dinner will feature native compositions from 15 different nations. Tickets for the dinner are $1.75 for International Club members and $2.50 for non-members. Tickets are on sale at the information desk in the Kansas Union, and at the 3 Raney Drug stores off campus, the Douglas County State Bank, the First National Bank and the Lawrence National Bank. Swimmer Wants Music LONDON—(UPI) —Scottish-born Margaret Lindsay, 29, probably feels she may get homesick when she tries to swim the English Channel this summer. She asked yesterday that the boat following her carry a Scotsman playing a bagpipe. The (IAWS) convention will open at 7:30 p.m. Sunday with a panel discussion moderated by Francis Heller, associate dean of the College. Panelists will include Charles Landesman, assistant professor of philosophy; Frank Dance, assistant professor of speech and drama; Sarah Byram, Lenexa senior, and Carol Sue McMillen, Coldwater senior. THE CONVENTION business meetings will be held in Lewis Hall, where the delegates will stay. Approximately 200 Lewis women have offered their rooms to the delegates for use during the convention. Prof. Dance will speak again Monday on the individual and communication in society. The same day, Prof. Landesman and Richard DeGeorge, assistant professor of philosophy, will discuss ethics and values, contemporary philosophy and the meaning of life. DEAN HELLER will speak on the adequacy of modern college education for the individual on Tuesday. Marilyn Stokstad, acting director of the Museum of Art, and Gerald Bernstein, curator of the museum, will direct a program on contemporary art. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, will close the convention Wednesday with a speech, "Comprehension Compounded." Barrel of Chicken 25 pieces, 10 hot rolls $5.00 BIG BUY Typewriters sales - service - rentals Olympia - Olivetti Smith-Corona - Royal Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 Free Pick-up & Delivery BORN IN 1926, AND LIVED TO 1995. HER NAME IS BURTON, AND HER FIRST MARRIED IN 1947. AND SHE WAS A FAMILY MEMBER OF THE PHILIPPINES FOR 50 YEARS. AND IN 1981, HER SON BURNED IN FLORIDA. AND HER Daughter HELEN GRANT BURNED IN CHICAGO. SHIRLEY CULLEN Alpha Chi Omega A Knit Suit Love it now for Spring and later for travel TAXI COACH HOUSE Clothes Fox Town and Country On the Campus WEEKEND SALE Short Sleeve White Dress Shirts SPECIAL- Pullovers, Snap tabs or Button-downs 2 for $5 BERMUDA SHORTS Good looking Checks & Plaids Reg. $4.95 $3^{98} Levis $398 TAN JEANS Short Sleeve BANLON SHIRTS REVERSIBLE PONCHOS $398 Reg. $10.95 $888 One Large Group SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS Reg. to $3.98 $199 LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 Mass. VI 3-3933 --- Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 22, 1962 472 Alpha Chi Omega Remember Still GREE HOMES Alpha Kappa Alpha Delta Delta Delta Come take part in all th AJT Alpha Omicron Pi THE MUSEUM Delta Gamma 1850 Kappa Kappa Gamma KU MONTROE CITY, MA -- The City Council has voted to approve a proposal to add a fire station to the city's fire department. Pi Beta Ph Thursday, March 22. 1962 University Daily Kansan er...This Is EEEK WEEK! Page 7 all the planned activities (2) Alpha Phi THE HOUSE OF THE VILLAGE Gamma Phi Beta WESTON Pi Beta Phi THE GARDEN CENTER KU Alpha Delta Pi Chi Omega CENTRAL MUSEUM THE LANDING AT CHRISTIAN HOLLOW. Kappa Alpha Theta 2016 Sigma Kappa Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 22. 1963 De Gaulle Stands Hard Against Allies By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst PARIS—If or when peace truly is restored to Algeria, President Charles de Gaulle will be able to give full sway to his dreams of "La Grandeur De La France." These are the dreams which, even as France lay prostrate in the midst of World War II, caused Sir Winston Churchill and the late President Roosevelt to throw up their hands in despair. THEY LED CHURCHILL to say that of all the crosses he had to bear the "Cross of Lorraine" which De Gaulle had made his symbol was the heaviest. DE GAULLE walked alone in those days of crisis and he walks alone in these days of crisis, his dream of French grandeur as enduring now as then. Partly as result of these dreams, peace in Algeria may be expected to see an increase in the strains which already exist between De Gaulle and his allies, particularly the United States. De Gaulle is determined that French defenses depend only upon herself, and upon no alliances or single ally. BE IS EQUALLY DETERMINED that French leadership in Western Europe re-assert itself after 40 years of decline. De Gaulle is determined that France shall have its own nuclear striking force and he is deeply angered by U.S. opposition. A high French official made clear in strong language less than a month ago that Franco-U.S. relations would remain unsettled so long as the United States maintained its present position. The French demand equal treatment with the British as a nuclear nation. While tradition and necessity binds the United States and France as allies, there are other deep differences between the two nations. DE GAULLE IS CONTEMPTUOUS of the United Nations, which remains a keystone of U.S. foreign policy. He has remained aloof from U.S. exploratory talks with the Soviet Union over Berlin, and he has boycotted the disarmament talks in Geneva. For each of these actions he has similar reasons—that the Russians have shown no desire to settle problems which they themselves created, and that their only clear objective is to obtain a propaganda forum by which to influence or frighten world opinion. DE GAULLE ALSO DIS- approves of U.S. actions in South East Asia. But perhaps the deepest difference of all springs from his determination to build his own nuclear force, which meets opposition even within France. These opposition forces and the United States regard such a program as an unnecessary and heavy burden on the French economy. Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 HOUSE OF CHINA & GLASS We will be pleased to ren champagne glasses or other glassware 906 New Hampshire VI 3-3980 P-T-P Seeks Rides For Foreign Students Foreign students needing rides to Wichita for the foreign student festival during the spring vacation are requested to telephone the People-to-People office. Any foreign student who needs a place to stay in Lawrence over the vacation is also asked to call the office. Sharon Foster, Birmingham, Mich. junior and hospitality chairman of P-t-P, asks that students who could give foreign students rides to Wicnita or who could accommodate the students in their homes during vacation also call the P-t-P office. Western Alliance Is Tested In Current Berlin Struggle LONDON—(UPI)—Berlin, the focal point in the current world wide East-West struggle, has become a major test of the Western alliance. Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev considers divided Berlin a "bone stuck in the Communist throat" and a cancerous tumor that should be eradicated from the heart of Europe. The United States, Britain and France stand committed to the defense of West Berlin as a "lighthouse of freedom in the darkness of the totalitarian sea." The conflict over Berlin has brought East and West to the brink of war three times since the end of World War II and has put the Allies to a two-fold test: - To stand fast and together against continued Communist attempts to oust the West from Berlin, and - To maintain a united policy on how best to go about it. Until now, Western firmness has stood the test and stood it well in the face of adverse circumstances. Britain and France have endorsed this policy stand and NATO, the West's principal defense alignment On July 25, 1961, President John F. Kennedy warned the Russians: "We cannot and will not permit the Communists to drive us out of Berlin, either gradually or by force." Russia, meanwhile, has tried to interest West Germany in a separate deal bypassing the Western Big Three. France, which considers the Berlin crisis artificially stirred by Russia, has regarded negotiations as a waste of time and effort until Russia changes it tune. West Germany, caught between her major allies, has sided in principle with the United States strategy. The British foreign office put it this way: "If Soviet Russia managed to break the will and nerve of the Western nations over Berlin, its rulers might draw the conclusion that the whole of Western Europe, perhaps the whole world, lay open to their demands. "For the Western Allies, free Berlin is the symbol, the evidence and the acid test of their unity, strength and determination. It has become in a real sense the keystone of the defensive arch of NATO." Tune Up for Spring at Leonard's Standard Service "PAST HISTORY shows that if any man, or any country, gets into this state of mind, war inevitably follows in the end." The West's troubles over Berlin are by no means over, but the signs are the Allies can hold their own there — unless Khrushchev is prepared to go to war over the city. Most informed experts on Communist affairs do not think he will. He knows force would be met with force. THE BIG THREE of the Western alliance have differed over how best to tackle the Berlin problem in the diplomatic field. stands committed as a whole to defense of the city. 9th and Indiana Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. The United States and Britain have maintained the necessity for sounding out the Soviets to determine whether there is a basis for negotiating a more permanent Berlin settlement. This "probing" began in Moscow early this year by U.S. Ambassador Llewellyn Thompson. One reason for continued Allied firmness on Berlin was defined by a U.S. State Department publication in these terms: BUT THE DIFFERENCES among the Allies seem largely tactical. They reflect no really dangerous rift in overall policy, nor in the mutual determination to stand by Berlin. Meet Your Date under the checkered awning at the BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. WHOLE CHICKEN $2.00 BIG BUY D & G Front End Alignment Tune Up General Repair Don Barnett — Glen Freeman ½ BLOCK EAST OF HASKELL E. 12th St. VI 2-0753 YOU CAN WIN $1,000 Cash Playing BOWLO IT'S A NEW TOURNAMENT GAME! IT'S EASY! IT'S FUN! You do not have to belong to a league to win Bowl five splits in a row & win $5.00 Cash Bowl five strikes in a row & win $2.50 Cash Fill the BOWLO CARD with spares & win Fill the BOWLO CARD with strikes & win $50 Cash $1,000 Cash Try it this weekend at HILLCREST BOWL 9th & Iowa YOU CAN BANK ON US Any Time . . . Any Place . . . 14 MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION J ST FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence 746 Mass. The LIMELITERS on RECORD Now you can have the Sensational Limeliters on RCA Victor and Elektra Records 925 Mass. BELL'S V1 3-2644 Thursday, March 22, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 9 KU Freshmen Finish Second In Conference The KU freshman indoor track team finished second in the annual Big Eight freshman postal indoor meet with 45 13/21 points. Colorado is the new league champion accumulating 63 29/42. Herald Hadley of Shallow Water set the only new record in running the two-mile in 9:17.8. KU'S STRENGTH rested in the 1000-yard run and the broad jump. Hadley picked up his second victory in winning the 1000 while Paul Taylor and Bill Cottle finished fourth and fifth. In the broad jump, which has been a weak spot for the varsity Hawks since Ernie Shelby left, the frosen placed first, third and fourth. Glen Martin won the event with a leap of $ 2 2 - 7 \frac{1}{2} $ . Football player Gale Sayers finished third with 22-3 while Rich Cordell was fourth with 22-2. THREE KANSAS runners tied for second in the 60 yard dash with four other runners. The three were Dave Crandell, Charles Dean, and Sayers Ed Wiberg tied for second in the 60-yard high hurdles with a time of :07.5. Bill Chambers tied for fifth with a :07.7 clocking. Cottle placed third in the 800-yard run and fourth in the 880 yard run in 1:14.5 and 1:58.9 respectively. Taylor, a transfer from Coffeyville junior college placed fifth in the 600 and fourth in the 1000 yard run. Hadley completed his four events with a fifth in the 880 and a second in the one mile run. Runner Hits 125 m.p.d. A Norwegian runner, Mensen Ernst, was probably the greatest runner that ever lived. Among his performances were: 1—A dash from Paris to Moscow in two weeks, averaging 125 miles a day. 2—Constantinople to Calcutta, and return in 59 days, averaging 95 miles a day. In all of his races he swam rivers, ran over bad roads and endured unbelievable hardships. International Meet Held The first international track and field meet was held in 1895 at New York between athletes of the New York Athletic Club and the London Athletic Club. KU Baseball Team Prepares For Next Week's Opener By Mike Miller The 1962 edition of the Kansas Jayhawkers baseball team went through their first outdoor practice last week. TEMPILE PREDICTED a fourth or fifth place finish for his team in the Big Eight this season providing the pitching holds up and the many sophomores on the squad are able to adjust to Big Eight playing conditions. Bundled up in sweat clothes and warm-up jackets, the Jayhawks went through hitting and fielding drills under the supervision of head coach Floyd Temple. The Jayhawkers had been working out in Allen Field House since late January. He praised the mental attitude of his squad. "They are a pretty young squad," Temple said, "and their morale is definitely improved over that of last year's team." He said that the team has improved its defense 50 per cent over last year, but hitting is the big question mark. "WE HAVE TO have runs to win games, we can't beat them on defense alone," he said. The addition of Hubert Bumgardner, an All America from Wright Junior College in Chicago, at second base should be a big asset to the team. "We are positive he is a Big Eight caliber fielder, and he should be able to hit Big Eight pitching." Temple said. "He should add the hustle to the team which was so sadly lacking last year." DICK FANNING should hold down the first base spot with junior Jim Evilisers and sophomores Dick Rader and Don Miller battling for the shortstop and third base positions. Keith Abercrombie, last year's leading hitter with a .345 mark, will be the first string catcher this year. The bespectacled junior will have ample backing in sophomores Pete Quatrochi and Dave Culp. Quatrochi is a linebacker on the football team. The pitching staff will be composed mainly of veterans. Temple said that his number one hurler will be senior right-hander Jerry Waldschmidt. Temple described him as "a fine competitor with a good fast ball." LANKY CARL NELSON should be another of the Jayhawker starters. Temple said that Nelson, also a fastballing righthander, "has been hampered by control problems, and must improve this to be effective." Four lefthanders will be battling for the other starting position in Temple's three man rotation. They are junior Sam Tryon and Roger Brock, and sophomores Monte Stewart and Steve Lumsford. WITH THE TEAM playing four games in five days, March 30-April 3 on a southwestern tour Temple said that all of his pitchers should get plenty of work. "The relief pitching will probably have to be all left handed," Temple added. "With good weather and outside workouts for the next two weeks, our starters will be given a chance to go seven and possibly nine innings during the trip." If bad weather forces the Hawks inside again, however, Temple will let each pitcher throw only three innings at a time. The outfield will be centered around veterans Ken Hensley and Jim Marshall. Temple said that neither of these have hit over .260 in previous years and both will have to improve to keep their positions. Footballers Tony Leiker and Ken Coleman will be given a chance to break in the outfield as will sophomore prospect David Robinson. Temple said that there are other players on the squad who may be surprises and break into the lineup. TEMPLE SAID that he has some excellent prospects from last year's freshman team with four of them having good chances to start. The team starts its season next Friday against Texas Lutheran at Seguin. The season schedule is: March 30 Texas Lutheran at Seguin April 11 Houston University at Seguin April 12 Houston University at Houston April 3 Houston University at Houston April 6 (2) Nebraska at Lincoln April 7 North Carolina at Lincoln April 13 (2) Kansas State at Lawrence April 14 Kansas State at Lawrence April 16 (2) Missouri at Columbia April 19 Wisconsin at Lawrence April 20 Wasburn at Lawrence April 24 Washburn at Topeka April 27 (2) Iowa State at Lawrence April 28 Oklahoma State at Lawrence May 4 (2) Colorado at Boulder May 5 Colorado at Boulder May 7 (2) Oka. State at Lawrence May 12 Oklahoma State at Lawrence May 18 (2) Oklahoma at Lawrence May 19 Oklahoma at Lawrence Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 Birds on a branch 908 Mass. BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service EXPERT AUTO REPAIR Mignot & Sawyer Garage 620 Mass. CAR RADIO Kansan Classified Ads Get Results TRAVEL POSTERS only $1.00 each at Keeler's Book Store Decorate your room with a foreign touch. Large, full-color scenes from these beautiful lands— - Spain - Holland - Mexico - Mont St. Michel - Germany - India - London Keeler's also carries Japanese silk screen prints and Bull Fight posters. Come in and browse over our fine selection of playing and greeting cards, office supplies and stationery. KEELER'S 939 Mass. — VI 3-0290 Dari- King King BURGERS Rain or Shine You'll always be pleased when you visit the Featuring the King Burger "the burger with the outdoor taste" DARI-KING THE JAYHAWKER IS OUT The 2nd Edition of the 1962 Jayhawker will be distributed Today and Friday at the Information Booth Booth open 8 till 5 Bring Your Receipt (attached to your ID) and You Can Pick Up Your 1st and 2nd Editions and Your Cover You Can Buy Your Jayhawker Now for Only $6.50 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 22, 1962 Conditions Ease in Argentina By William L. F. Horsey BY William L. F. Horsey BUENOS AIRES —(UPI)—President Arturo Frondizi appeared today to have weathered one of the worst political squalls of his stormy career—the crisis set off by Peronist victories in Sunday's provincial election. Frondizi had made his peace with the generals and the admirals who usually have the last word in Argentine politics, and protest demonstrations by Peronist unions were not expected to affect the situation greatly. NEITHER THE CGT Union Federation nor the nation's independent Phyllis Wertzberger Is ASC Candidate Phyllis Wertzberger, Lawrence senior, is the University Party's candidate for All Student Council representative from the School of Pharmacy. It was incorrectly reported in the Kansas Wednesday that Marsha, rather than Phyllis, Wertzberger was the UP candidate. unions were expected to support the 24-hour "general strike" scheduled tomorrow by hard-core Peronist labor groups, although Communist unions probably will back up their Peronist allies. Non-Peronist union leaders appeared to have adopted a "wait and see" attitude toward Frondizi's efforts to form the military-civilian coalition cabinet demanded by the leaders of the armed forces. Ex-President Juan D. Peron, who had hailed the election results as a "victory of the people," was still living as a refugee in Madrid, and there was no indication that he would attempt an early return to Argentina. (IN SANTIAGO, CHILE, the conservative organ Diario Illustrado reported yesterday that Peron might seek asylum in that country, just over the towering Andes mountains from Argentina. Foreign Minister Carlos Martinez Sotomayor declined comment on the report.) Initial indications were that Frondizi faced tough sledding in his efforts to form a coalition. Leaders of the conservative and socialist parties and of the opposition "people's" faction of the president's own radical party had rejected invitations to confer on the makeup of the new cabinet. The consultations were restricted to leaders of "Democratic Parties," excluding the Peronists and the Communists. RELIABLE SOURCES said some of the civilian cabinet ministers who resigned under military pressure yesterday would be reinstated in the coalition. Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION Although the government had ordered banks, stock exchanges and moneychangers' offices to remain closed all week to "avoid speculation and instability," the Argentine peso appeared to have slipped only slightly in value. The arrival today of Britain's Prince Philip, who is winding up a Latin American tour with a visit to Argentina, was expected to help ease the situation here. IF You want a CONVENIENT, PLEASANT, INEXPENSIVE Evening, you've got a date at the Jay Bowl. BREAK TIME IS BOWLING TIME Jay Bowl AT THE Jay Bowl Daily 8 a.m. - 11:30 p.m. Sun. 1 p.m. - 11:30 p.m. 20th CENTURY PRESS PRINTING WILLIAM HOLDEN | CLIFTON WEBB in LEO McCAREY'S SATAN NEVER SLEEPS CO-STARRING FRANCE NUYEN The crowning achievement of the man who gave you"Going My Way"' and"The Bells Of St.Mary's" Produced and Directed by LEO McCAREY·CLAUDE BINYON and LEO McCAREY·PEARL S. BUCK Screenplay by Based on a novel by SCOPE NEXT ATTRACTION NOW SHOWING! "THE FOUR HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE" 7:30 Only Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 The New CRESTAURANT Located in the NW Corner of Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa Featuring the Complete Self Service SALAD BAR Free Parking ONE QUESTION remaining to be resolved was the makeup of the new congress. Forty-four Peronist congressmen were elected Sunday, but the election of 25 of them had been nullified and it was expected that the generals and the admirals would find means of excluding the other 19 from the congress before its first meeting May 1. With the Peronists excluded, the government would have a majority in the 148-member lower house of congress. The Senate is firmly under government control. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Fraternity Jewelry Fraternity Jewelry Badges,Rings,Novelties Sweatshirts,Mugs,Paddles Cups,Trophies,Medals Double Edge Razor Blades Finest Surgical Steel, honed in oil. Full money back guarantee. 25 — 30c 100 — $3.50 200 — $1.50 500 — $3.30 1000 — $5.75 Postpaid. Packer brings blades to package, 20 packages to carton. C.O.D. orders accepted. Postcard brings general merchandise catalog. EMERSON COMPANY 480 South Fourth Alhambra, California THURS.-FRI.-SAT. 7:00 & 10:30 THE FUN IS ASTRONOMICAL! KENNETH MORE in MAN in the MOON also starring SHIRLEY ANNE FIELD MICHAEL HORDERN A TRANS-LUX RELEASE THE FUN IS BALLET Open 6:45 8:30 Only THERE'S NO LIMIT TO THEIR OFF-LIMITS FUN! 20th Century Fox Pictures "Marines, Let's Go!" CINEMA SCOPE COLOR BY DE LUXE Cinema for youth Marines, Let's Go! CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUXE Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 Adults 85c Kids 35c Put Some Fun In Your Life... WITH THIS DRIVE IN THEATRE! Put Som OPENING FULL TIME TOMORROW It's Family Time at the Movies Again! TREATS FOR THE KIDDIES! Put Some Fun In Your Life... WITH THIS DRIVE IN THEATRE! Spring is here! We've been mak- ing plans all winter . . . selecting program after program that we think will put some fun in your life! OPENING FULL TIME TOMORROW It's Family Time at the Movies Again! OUR OPENING PROGRAM! JOURNEY TO THE LOST CITY IN COLORSCOPE TREATS FOR THE KIDDIES! cinemaGIC AND YOU INVADE THE ANGRY RED PLANET SUNSET DRIVE-IN THEATRE WEST ON HIWAY 40 OUR OPENING PROGRAM! JOURNEY TO THE LOST CITY IN COLORSCOPE cinemagic AND YOU INVADE THE ANGRY RED PLANET AS E! Thursday, March 22, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RENT SUNNY, comfortable, furnished apt. 4 rm. including study rm. & bedroom. private bath, private ent. Large closets storage space. Call VI 3-3863 or VI 3-3338 4. ROOM, nicely furnished apt. Large. 5. bathroom, kitchen, large basement, bath, phone, garage. Also full basement. Laundry privileges, newly decorated, nobly priced. For boys. Call 8750. 7830 APT, for 2 or 3 boys. Utilities pid, 1 block sooner. 1142 Indiana. 1st of April, 3-30 LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. CV VI 3-6294. fax LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 0731 BUSINESS SERVICES PROFESSIONAL party planning. for those with impeccable tastes. Parties for any occasion, completely arranged. For most impressive party, call V 3-271 1241. 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 RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. Tee Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. — VI 3-0152 INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re- woven so damage cannot be seen. Cig- arette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- warder of the book, Ola Smith. 939' 85'. Mass. Cali VI 3-5263. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 8-7551, or 921 Miss. tf GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. The notes are revised for comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752. Free delivery. tt TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3-3644. 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. ff FOR SALE GUNS: Lawrence Firearms Company. New and used guns, and ammo. Handguns reblied. This week as every week a, fistful of tremendous buys. 1346 Ohio. New heavy retreads $10 each, ex., plus tax for most all small cars: Sizes 650-14, 590-15, 600-13, 640-15, etc. at Ray Stoneback's, 829 Mass. 4-13 '57 Chevrolet: Excelent condition, white over a lirquiose, radio and std treads. 3-26 3-26 ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch Call V 3-8877 or come to 907 Ark. for more information. $ G.E. Mark. tape recorder. Never used. 8x343a. Call VI 3-0151. 3-26 GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, compilations, charts, and charts. Handy cross index for quick reference to the delivery. Phone VI 3-1558 VI 3-5758 1956 PLYMOUTH 2. dr, Automatic trans. 1956 PLYMOUTH 3. dr, Automatic trans. VI 3-7583 after 5 p.m. 3-26 Gibson guitar — $60 and Ludwig tenor banjo — $30. Both with case. Also 10 watt Hi Fi amplifier and 12-in. Hi Fi speaker — $35. Call VI 3-1647. 3-27 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriter, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lawnace Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3t-3644. HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete phone service. Pet phone 2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. **tf** 1 WEDDING dress. Size 9. Call VI 3-9211 2 p.m. 3-26 WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised. 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. tf PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 prescriptive diagrams and definitions; new edition: formerly known as t the he Thea 2-0742 anytime Free教 dency $4.50. HOLTON TRUMPET with case. Good condition. $50. Call 3-8475 after 7 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent or paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. ice Plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI. 0350. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results LOST GLASSES with thick light brown rims probably lost near Duck's Restaurant or in 110 Indiana block Call Jack Vetter at VI 3-8446. 3-26 Two girls' dress costs valued at $200. Left dress is pink, and right dress is blue. Saturday night. One camel colored boy coat with Weaver's label. One Van Dyke coat with Weaver's label. One Reward Call Hamill at I 3-5770. 3-57 Aeronautical engineering laboratory report in Kansas Union Reading Room. Friday, March 16. Phone V1 3-9354 for Brian Liebst. Reward!! 3-27 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED. Male or female, part or full time. Opportunity for exceptional settings. Set your own hours for work. Write AmBiCo. P.O. Box 8129. KC 12-32 Mo. YOUNG MAN wanted part time. 20-25 hrs. per week. Good hourly wage. Call VI 3-7446 for appointment. Dixon's Drive-In. 2500 W. 6th. 3-27 Nice apts, for rent in Redbud Apts. south of 21st St. and West of 7th St. change jantor and yardwork for one nice a bedroom apt with wall-to-wall carpet in a quiet room. Contact J. Uh- wood at 1117 Mass. 3-27 WANTED: A male student available daily from 2:30-5:00. See Betty, 111 Flint Hall, Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with or for math and Greek letters. Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. 3-30 "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOL PAPER, and creates a favorable impression for instructors." For excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope. VI 3-1097. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf TYPING FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution of the Service. S917 B Wilson, Mission, HE 2-7718 Evers or Sat, R 2-2186 HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. Eng. teacher who teaches standard rates & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers reports. Electric security work. Reasonable. Electric workwork. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-568 EXPRIENDED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, I 3-8379 EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing home - call VI 3-1186. Moe L. Gekibaini SECRETARY WILL DO TYPING in home. Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at VI 2-1749. Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc. Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. **tf** THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter Reasonable rate. Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. C.I. 3-0483. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates. Call VT 3-2611 any time. Fying: Will type reports, thesis, etc. a.e. electric typewriter, Mrs. Arnus Nur Burke, 62, 71, 80, 91, 103. Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric type- writer, fast accurate service. Respon- sibility. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 2 1648 VFIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 2-1409 FORMER SECRETARY with electric writerwishes to do typing. Reason- able rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Caim at VI 3- 1524. WANTED PERSON HAVING MRS. AUSTIN'S PURSE: Keep the cash, but please return it to Room 125 or to Room Lindley or ext 275. No questions. Check and papers desperately. 3-27 They're Back! THE TORNADOS Big in what goes into it - Big in performance FREE Pizza Delivery FILL UP UNDER ONE ROOF Good in any weather CITIES SERVICE Friday 8-12 & Saturday 8-12 BIG GALLON GASOLENE "5-D" or "MILEMASTER" FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire NEAR EVERYTHING CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE That's Cities Service Phone VI 3-9640 Tom VI 3-9640 CITIES SERVICE Ron 644 Mass. CAVERNS D N FORD Quick Service . MINOR TUNE-UP BATTERIES LUBRICATION TRANS. OVERHAUL BODY - PAINT - GLASS . UNIVERSITY FORD 24 HOUR AAA WRECKER SERVICE DAY V13-3500 NITE V13-8845 Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 22, 1962 State Representative Says Lansing Prison Inadequate By Ron Gallagher Wayne Angell, a member of the State Legislature, said yesterday that the condition of the state penal system is the next problem which must be resolved by the state of Kansas. The Republican legislator made this comment in an interview following his appearance at an economics seminar sponsored by the department of economics. He is a professor of economics at Ottawa University. He termed the prison situation the "most pressing immediate need" the legislature will face next January. He said the present prison at Lansing is in such bad condition that it is unable to accomplish the real function of a prison—that of rehabilitation. "THIS IS THE SHABBIEST thing we are doing in Kansas," he said. "It is really criminal." He said the Legislature presently seems to be in favor of constructing a medium security prison to supplement the present facilities. Most of those imprisoned at Lansing have been convicted of offenses that usually do not require confinement in a maximum security prison. "The warden tells us there are only 400 to 500 people in the prison who need maximum security." He said most of the prisoners have been convicted of charges such as writing bad checks. HE SAID THE present conditions at the prison compound the problems of rehabilitating a criminal. "They (the prisoners) are less well adapted after they get out than they were before they went in." He said in the ways and means committee of the Legislature the sentiment for an addition to the prison system is "very, very high." The main thing likely to block a move to expand the penal system is a lack of money to finance the project. he said. In his remarks to students and members of the faculty of the economics department, he said the problem of increasing state finances would be debated at the next session of the Legislature. He indicated that there is a good chance that some type of revenue producing measure will be adopted. He favors adoption of a measure that would set up a withholding system for state income taxes. This would allow the state to deduct state income taxes from salaries as national income taxes are now withheld. There is no withholding arrangement on the present state income tax system. HE SAID STATE revenue could be appreciably increased by adding this feature to the state income tax law. He explained that under the present system some people whose incomes are not very high often neglect to pay their state income tax because the sum is so small. In these cases the state cannot afford to sue for the small amount of money involved so the tax is not paid. Under a withholding system the individual's income tax would be automatically withheld from his salary leaving no way a person working in Kansas could avoid the tax. He said the more efficient collecting system could provide the necessary increase in state revenue without an increase in the tax rate. Prof. Angell said the increase in state aid to education from nothing to $25 per pupil in the last five years is the main factor that has led to a needed increase in state revenues. JOHN BALDWIN He said the Republican party's stand against aid to education on the federal level had made it necessary to support educational improvements through state aid. Since the Republican party is the majority party in the Kansas Legislature this policy has led to the marked increase in aid to education in Kansas. The high standards of Kansas mental health institutions was also listed as a reason for the need of increased revenue. Prof. Angell said Kansas is one of the leading states in providing for mental health needs. Wayne Angell AN INCREASE IN THE sales tax is also viewed by Prof. Angell as a suitable way to increase state revenue. "The sales tax has turned out to be a very efficient tax in Kansas, at least according to the budget director," he said. Prof. Angell said he would not vote against the sales tax, if the legislature fails to adopt the withholding plan. He called the sales tax "the old reliable in Kansas." Charges Made- (Continued from page 1) group, is "one of the few capable leaders in the party." Bee continued, "I am surprised that in the face of the hypocrisy expressed on all sides of him, that Art Miller (Pittsburg junior and another of the organizers) still pursues the goal of serious student government and I commend him for it." He said a one-half per cent increase in the sales tax seems to be the most popular proposal in the Legislature. DISCUSSING THE PLANKS of the party's proposed platform, Bee said. "I question the ability of the leadership in view of the fact that had they properly investigated the issues, they would have found that at least two of their planks are worthless." In regard to the party's plank that advocates the bi-annual publishing of financial reports by the Kansas Union, Bee said that a statement of this nature is already provided by the Union. Patterson said there is a contradiction between the plank on discriminatory clauses and the one on the Human Rights Council (HRC) of the ASC. HE ALSO SAID THAT the leaders of the party are not informed concerning the student seating plan. The Action platform calls for the investigation of why a petition signed by 2,500 students last spring concerning the football student seating plan was "stifled." He explained that as it was worded, the piece of paper which was circulated did not constitute a legal petition. Bee said that the petition was never brought up before the ASC because it was an illegally worded petition. HE EXPLAINED THAT support of the HRC would put the responsibility of handling discrimination problems in their hands. But an Action plank, he said, calls for action by the party through bringing up in the ASC a resolution to remove recognition from living groups not eliminating discriminatory clauses from their constitutions by September. 1965. O'Heron clarified the contradiction saying, "It was decided that the most effective way to approach the HRC was to have a resolution introduced into the ASC which would be automatically referred to the HRC." "If the group is to support the HRC, it should leave the problem of discrimination up to the HRC. If they want to support the CRC, they should say so in their platform. Patterson said, "Many members of Action are also members of the Civil Rights Council (CRC). They would like to take the power from the HRC and put it with the CRC. Discussing the party's plank on working for reformation of the House Un-American Activities Committee, Patterson said, "I don't deny the right to complain about the HUAC, but I see nothing that the ASC can do about it. This should be left to the CEC and such organizations which are established channels in the University for this." IN REFERENCE TO the party's plank concerning broadened vision by the ASC on national and international affairs, Patterson said that it is "imprecractal and unrealistic" for the ASC to work with them. He added "National and international affairs can be covered by the Current Events Committee rather than the ASC itself." O'Heron said, "It seems that most of the statements by these two boys are unfounded because they themselves admit that they did not attend many meetings, therefore how are they in the position to know who proposed the individual planks of the platform. If they had been to a few meetings they would also have had an opportunity to become acquainted with Bob Bosseau." "It seems to me that their platform is simply appeasement," he continued. Action Comments On Its Planks Official Bulletin (Continued from page 1) torney General and the President of the United States. Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:00 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd - THE ABOLISHMENT OF THE University's practice of the traditional student-University relationship of "In Loco Parentis" or in lieu of parents. The group believes the students should be allowed more freedom in such areas as campus newspapers, regulations on controversial speakers and unnecessary social regulations. Confessions; Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11-45:12 noon; Satdays, 4-5 and 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd. - Funds be provided for the KU Pep Clubs and the Associated Women's Students (AWS) through the University rather than through the ASC as they now are. The scheduled meeting of the Civil Rights Council failed to materialize last night. **Foreign Students:** Students interested in taking the trip to St. Joseph this Friday, March 23, should sign up today at the People-to-People office in the Kansas City area in opportunity to visit four industrial plants. St. Joseph and a free lunch will be provided. - Investigation into the possibility of lengthening stop day before final week into as much as a stop week - Action on the new traffic control plan. At 8 p.m. no one was present in parlor C of the Kansas Union, where the CRC meeting was to be held. A few minutes later a head or two popped into the room, looked around and left. Four girls entered a few minutes later and sat down. One man entered, took off his coat and sat down. In a few minutes, he left. Still no executives appeared. The four girls left their seats and drifted out into the Ballroom to listen to students practicing group singing. No CRC Action; It's All Downstairs International Students: Those students planning to attend the Wichita International Festival on April 6-8 are to register for the host Padel Patel, 1329 Ohio, Viking, 3-1695 Fremont, and transportation will be provided for those students participating in the Festival. Finally Arthur Miller, Pittsburgh junior, came up from the Action meeting being held in the Forum Room. "C'mon downstairs," he said, "you can all vote." TODAY Der Deutsch Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 22. Maerz, um fuenf Uhr in raser. Herr Professor Caws wird ueber Philosophie der Existenz sprechen. Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 pages 1211 Oread. Bible study & devotional Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Ballo Production Center: 7:30 p.m. 220 Flint. TOMORROW AMURROW Episcopal Heirloom Communion & Breakfast: 7 a.m. Capitol Episcopal Holy Communion & Breast fast: 7 a.m., Canterbury House. KUOK: 3—News & Weather; 3:05—Top Forty Tunes; 4—Hilltopping; 5—Hillton- Latin American Band Set For Happy Hour The Latin American Band will provide music for dancing at the "Happy Hour," 3 to 5 p.m. tomorrow at the Delta Delta Delta house, 1630 Oxford Road. ping; 6—News & Weather; 6:15—Sports; 6:20—Society News; 6:25—Spotlight on Science; 6:30—"Bonjour Mesdames"; 6:45 —Public Service Program; 7—Counted- ness; 8—Night Flight, Stage I; 10—News, Night Flight, Stage II; 12—Portals of Prayer. Refreshments will be served, and American and International students will have an opportunity to meet on an informal basis. Everyone is welcome. Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m. 1221 Olaudah Underferner Farm, will speak on "The Portion of the Vegetable." Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: Kansas Union, Bible study, Hebrews; 5; 6. International Club: After film in Hoch. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Martha Burgess sing German and American folk songs, followed by refreshments and dancing. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Exhibition to Show Prints for Festival An exhibition of Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery will open Wednesday at the Museum of Art. The showing which ties in with the Festival of Arts includes a series of prints illustrating scenes from the dramatic works of Shakespeare. The 18th century exhibition was painted by the artists of Great Britain and published by John and Josiah Boydell. It will run for three weeks. BIG BUY Tub of Chicken 15 pieces, 5 hot rolls $3.50 They're New S E In Hopsacking Square Toe Sneakers $495 Completely washable as all Keds are. Available in orange, nile green, ocean blue, beige, white, and black. T Ma of of LOOK FOR THE BLUE LABEL U.S. Keds The Shoe of Champions McCoy's Daily hansan Friday, March 23, 1962 59th Year, No. 109 LAWRENCE. KANSAS Election Faulty Says Oldfather The winning candidates of the March 14 Young Democrats election of officers have been found guilty of an "improper course of conduct." Prof. Oldfather made his charge of improper conduct today after hearing almost five hours of testimony from both sides at a hearing last night. At last night's hearing, Aylward asked if he would be allowed to match YD treasury receipts with the number of memberships listed. Bennington was treasurer of the organization prior to the March 14 election. The charge was levied against the slate of Young Democrat officers headed by Barry Bennington, Cheney junior, the new YD president. The charge that the March 14 election was fraudulent was made by Peter Aylward, Ellsworth junior and defeated candidate for president of the KU Young Democrats. The leaders of both the Bennington and Aylward factions agreed to allow Charles H. Oldfather, professor of law, to arbitrate the case. In a telephone interview this noon, Prof. Oldfather said that as a result of his decision, the YD faculty adviser will not certify the Bennington officers as delegates to the state Young Democrats convention. Aylward said he checked the YD bank records and found them to show $154 in deposits. The treasury report listed the total receipts as $205. Bennington said he had the remaining funds in his apartment. AYLWARD SAID HE would drop his charges if Bennington would allow Prof. Oldfather and members of both factions to see the YD treasury funds Bennington said were in his apartment. Bennington refused. Asked why, he said, "It's a matter of principle." Aylward maintained that a shortage in the funds Bennington claimed to have in his apartment would indicate that illegal free memberships had been distributed. Before Aylward asked for an examination of the funds Bennington claimed to have in his apartment, witnesses called by the two factions gave contradictory testimony. SANDRA ROBINSON, Ellinwood junior and candidate for treasurer on the Benington slate, said Bennington asked her to get more members from her sorority (Chi Omega) house after the Feb. 21 deadline for memberships with voting privileges in the March 14 election. She said Bennington told her she would "take care of" the $1 membership fees so she would not have to sell the memberships but could give them away. She said she issued 13 free memberships to her sorority sisters after the Feb. 21 deadline. Kay Arnold, Wichita sophomore, said she was given a card shortly before the election meeting. She said Gauby wrote the name of Anne Simpson, Newton sophomore, on a card and gave it to her (Miss Arnold). Miss Arnold said that Gauby told her Miss Simpson was a member on the voting list and she (Miss Arnold) could vote when Miss Simpson's name was called at the balloting. Nancy DeFever, Independence sophomore, said she had not bought a membership in the Young Democrats but was allowed to vote in the election. She said that on the night of the election she was given the card of Jane Lutton, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore. Much of this testimony was contradicted by witnesses called by the Gauby-Bennington faction. "MR. GAUBY HAD quite a number of cards and he was signing them," she said. The will directs that preference in the use of both funds be given to students in nursing, medicine and medical technology. Michael T. Thomas, Fort Riley junior and membership chairman of the Young Democrats, said Miss Robinson gave him the names of 26 Chi Omegas and the money to pay for their memberships before the Feb. 21 deadline. He said no names of Chi Omegas were turned in to him and put on the list after the deadline. KU Endowment Willed Big Scholarship Fund University officials who have been advised of the provisions of the will have indicated that selection of recipients of awards from the Lundquist and Jones funds will be made on the same basis used for the Summerfield and Watkins scholarships. GARY CONKLIN. Hutchinson law student and elections committee chairman said, "Any Chi Omega who was on the membership list was a member before the 21st (of February)." A will admitted to probate in McPherson County apparently will establish the third largest endowed scholarship fund at KU. The income from the Effie J. Jones memorial Fund, in memory of Mrs. Lundquist's late sister, is to be used for scholarships and loans to students from the town of Reading and from Osage County. The will of the late Mrs. W. E. Lundiquist of McPheron bequests to the KU Endowment Association property with an estimated value of $100,000. The money is to be used to establish two scholarship funds. The income from the W.E. Lundquist Memorial Fund is to be used for scholarships and loans to KU students from McPherson County. THE INCOME from each of the two scholarship funds is expected to yield $2,500 or more a year for awards to KU students. Settlement of the estate will take about a year, making the first awards from the fund available for the 1963- 64 school year. "Many distinguished graduates of the University, as well as many outstanding students now on our campus, came from McPherson and the Reading vicinity. Through Mrs. Lundquist's generosity, in the years to come, many young men and women from these areas, who would have found higher education beyond their means, will be able to achieve this goal. "The University depends entirely on gifts and bequests from friends and alumni for student financial aid, and we are deeply grateful for Mrs. Lundquist's bequest, which will provide one of the largest scholarship funds at KU, being exceeded only by the Summerfield and Watkins awards which are on a state-wide basis." WHEN CHANCELLOR W. Clarke Wescoe was informed of the bequest, he said: Property in the bequest includes a quarter section of pasture land near Reading, a 400-acre tract northwest of Marquette (the former Lund-quist home) and a partial interest in a 110-acre tract north of Lyons. 108479 Jerry Dickson Dickson Named Vox Candidate For President Jerry Dickson, Newton junior, is Vox Populi's candidate for student body president in the spring elections. In a meeting last night, Vox's general assembly unanimously ratified the nomination of Dickson George Hahn, Scotch Plains, N.J. junior for student body vice president and a slate of 10 school candidates for the All Student Council The ASC candidates are Greg Turner, Seattle, Wash., sophomore, college men; Janice Huffman, Junction City sophomore, college women; Judith Fitts, Topeka junior, School of Education; Larry Milne, Lawrence senior, School of Pharmacy; Dennis Branstiter, Independence, Mo., junior, School of Journalism; Anne Peddie, Wichita junior, School of Fine Arts; Rab Malik, Karachi, Pakistan, Graduate School; Leo Kelly, Kansas City, Mo., School of Law, and Larry Borcherding, Kansas City, Mo., junior, School of Business. Vox criticized the University Party's platform plank which calls for direct primaries, instead of the closed primaries which Vox uses. "If UP is concerned about direct primaries," he added, "why are they running only one student body president candidate?" After his nomination, Dickson said that although Vox has made many reforms in the past, "it cannot stay where it is, it must look toward the challenge of the future. "I have been called an 'Angry Young Man' by certain people, and I am angry at such things as mediocrity, at those persons who will not accept responsibility, and at those persons who do not realize the potentialities of a thorough student government at KU." Weather Increasing cloudiness and windy this afternoon and tonight with scattered showers or thunderstorms developing over the extreme west portion this evening and moving eastward across the state tonight. Saturday cloudy and windy with rain or snow northwest and showers or thunderstorms East. Turning coldest west and central portions Saturday. Low tonight near 30 northwest to near 50 southeast. High Saturday 30s northwest and near 70 southeast. Menghini Charged With Taking Plank University Party leaders last night charged Charles Menghini, Pittsburgh senior, of taking a former UP platform plank. The action came in a meeting called to answer charges of Brian O'Heron, Lawrence senior and Action party temporary president, that previous UP platforms have included the present Action plank supporting All Student Council consideration of national and international issues, but that the planks were never acted upon. Gerald Kepner, Wichita junior and UP candidate for student body president, said the plank was one advocated by Menghini when he was a UP member in 1961. "But," Kepner said, "Menghini took that plank with him when he left UP." "Action currently has a misconception of what student government is. The purpose of the University is to educate, and it should be the express purpose of the campus political parties and representatives to the ASC to represent the student body in campus and University affairs. "Various organizations on the Hill, such as the Current Events Committee, the Minority Opinion Forum and the Model UN offer students ample opportunity to hear and express student opinion on national and international affairs." UP party leaders also criticized these two planks in the Action platform as inconsistent: - Granting the Faculty Senate power to set University policy in areas of direct student concern. - Jim Anderson, Lawrence senior and UP co-chairman, said that the two Action planks are "inconsistent." - The abolishment of the University's practice of the traditional student-University relationship of "In Loco Parentis" or "in lieu of parents." The Action ggroup believes the students should be allowed more freedom in such areas as campus newspapers, regulations on controversial speakers and unnecessary social regulations. "In this platform, they want to give more power to the students in one plank, and grant the Faculty Senate power to override the chancellor in the other," he said. "These two planks are diabolically opposed to each other," Anderson added. Scholarship Trophies Given at Greek Dinner Representatives from 39 Greek letter organizations last night attended the annual Greek Week Scholarship dinner and distributed seven trophies to organizations which ranked high in campus scholarship in the 1961-62 year. Kappa Alpha Theta won the Camilla Swayze, Shawnee Mission junior and president of the Panhellenic Council, awarded the trophies for the sororities. THOMAS M. HAHN, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Kansas State University challenged top scholarship students to take the lead in campus activities. Dean Hahn, the principal speaker, said Greek letter organizations should urge their top students to assume more leadership both on and off the campus. Susan Cole, St. John sophomore and member of Gamma Phi Beta sorority, received the award for the pledge with the highest grade-point average. She had a 3.00 average for the year. trophy for the sorority with the highest grade average, 2.02. Paul Ingemanson, Topeka junior and president of the Inter-Fraternity Council, awarded the five fraternity trophies. Beta Theta Pi won trophies for the pledge class with the best grade-point average, and for the highest house average. Sigma Nu was awarded the Scholarship Improvement Trophy. The 38-inch trophy is a traveling trophy. It was passed on to Sigma Nu, which improved its house grade average .41. from Phi Kappa Tau. PHI DELTA THETA placed second in overall grade averages and Alpha Tau Omega placed third. Two events are left in the Greek Week schedule, the Greek Week Sing, at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom, and the Greek Week project, which is scheduled for Saturday. Members of Greek organizations will clean and paint the tree stands along Massachusetts Ave. for the project. Soviet and Western Blocs Make Rounds at Model UN Representatives of the Soviet and Western blocs visited other bloc delegation meetings of the Model United Nations at the Kansas Union last night. The Western bloc submitted resolutions to the other blocs for approval, while the Soviet representatives introduced themselves and discussed their stands on crucial issues. Daily Kansan reporters were barred from reporting some of the bloc meetings last night. One bloc closed its meeting to the press, and others attempted to exercise control over the reporters. THE ENTIRE SOVIET bloc did not meet last night. The bloc's representatives included chairman Pat Piggott, Kansas City, Mo., senior, Sally Smith, San Antonio, Tex., senior, and Jim May, Shawnee Mission junior. The Soviets first visited the Western bloc. Piggott explained that his purpose in visiting the meeting was that the delegation might know who the Soviet representatives are. The Soviet chairman called for a meeting of foreign ministers from Great Britain, the United States and the Soviets before the General Assembly meeting to discuss disarmament, nuclear testing and space control. The Soviets also visited the meetings of the African, Arab, Latin American, Southeast Asian and nonaligned European blocs. In each visit, Piggott called for friendly relationships between the two blocs and offered assistance in backing concurring proposals of the two blocs. THE WESTERN BLOC proposed three resolutions to the groups it visited which called for member assessments to raise money to meet (Continued on page 12) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 23, 1962 The Rock Chalk Issue The KU Rock Chalk Revue has long been recognized as one of the best student productions in the area and has a tradition of meticulously written scripts and well produced skits. This tradition has been under fire the past three weeks in relation to the charge of unoriginality against the Kappa Sigma-Delta Delta Delta skit which won this year. The KU-Y Cabinet voted not to disqualify this skit because, to quote the Cabinet statement, "there seems to be not enough justification in view of previous infractions." THE KU-Y CABINET thus admitted that there have been instances of unoriginal work in the Rock Chalk Revue in the past. Members of the Cabinet also said that there was unoriginal work in the winning skit this year but that a penalty should not be assessed, apparently because such action had not been taken in the past The soundness of this type of reasoning is questionable. The decision shows that the KU-Y has let one more group get away with something which should not even have been condoned. The reasoning is that although instances of unoriginality have existed in the past, the publicity and action pertaining to the problem this year will prevent further instances. A KU-Y official said, "We are going to let the past be a positive guide for the future." BUT IT SEEMS highly unprecedented that one group should be allowed to break rules simply because it has been done in the past. KU was placed on athletic probation by the NCAA for actions which have been taking place for years on other campuses without punishment. The NCAA made an example of KU, as it has many other schools, in an effort to strengthen the observance of its rules. This is something which should have been part of the regulations from the start. A production like Rock Chalk should be something which the participants can be proud of, not only because they have done a good job of production but because they presented new and original ideas. The KU-Y has said it will draw up specific rules dealing with the area of unoriginality to eliminate any future problems. ROCK CHALK has become somewhat stagnant in the past few years because an overwhelming number of skits have been aimed at blasting some campus institution, principally the administration. This is beginning to become tiring. It seems that one of the reasons why the Kappa Sigma-Delta Delta Delta skit won this year was because its theme was different than the others in the show and the general trend of the past few years. This is an indication that a change in the recent pattern of skits is needed, in addition to original work, to bring some new life back into a faltering tradition. -Bill Sheldon The Moneyed Class One of the impressions widely held by both liberals and conservatives of our generation is that the social reforms launched nearly three decades ago by President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal have resulted in a steady trend toward the equalization of the ownership of wealth in the United States. Now, an investigation has exposed this notion as a myth—a myth shattered by the revelations of a ground-breaking study by Professor Robert J. Lampman, chairman of the economics department of the University of Wisconsin, published by Princeton University Press. Lampman's data reveal that not only is wealth as unevenly distributed as in the early Thirties, but the current trend is toward even greater concentration in a few hands. NEARLY THREE decades after the New Deal began, the wealthiest one per cent of American adults once again own twenty-eight per cent of the nation's entire personal wealth, only a minute fraction less than that held in 1933, and their share is increasing. In contrast, the poorest "one third of a nation," whose plight was dramatized by Roosevelt in depression days, now owns only about one per cent of America's privately-held material assets. Furthermore, Lampman's researches show that ninety per cent of the adult population, which includes the newly "affluent" middle class, accounts for less than half of the total wealth. A particularly disturbing finding in Lammans's detailed report is the disclosure that the percentage of wealth held by the top one per cent of adult population did indeed decline during the depression and the war-marked years between 1929 and 1949. But then the figure began to rise again: it has now reached pre-depression proportions and is still rising. ONE OF THE ironic aspects of this fluctuating but little-changing pattern of ownership of wealth lies in the nature of corporate stock-holding. For years we have been subjected to a barrage of skillful advertising, sponsored mainly by the largest of corporations and stockbrokers, which has attempted—with considerable success—to persuade the nation that ownership of American corporate stock is now so widespread that our system has evolved into a "people's capitalism." Yet Lampman's painstaking researches show that while in 1929 ownership of 65.6 per cent of corporate stock was concentrated in the hands of the top one per cent of wealthholders, that figure had risen to seventy-six per cent by 1953, and estimates place the percentage even higher now. The same small group of extremely wealthy individuals holds thirty-two per cent of U.S. government bonds, and virtually all state and local bonds. A CURIOUS factor concerning Lammman's study is the unusual impact it has had on economic analysts and commentators. With all the statistical attention we give to our society, little of this data on who owns what has ever before been available. After reading Lampman's statistics, Sylvia Porter, the informed syndicated writer on economics, reported, "I freely admit they stunned me." Similarly affected, apparently, was Business Week, which led off its review of Lampman's book with the defensive headline. "'Rich get richer'—but not for long,' and concluded with an apprehensively hopeful forecast that the richest group's share of the wealth "would again start to decline." SOAP PINK KER LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Week's forecast seems based more on the business interests' fear of public reaction to the news of continuing inequality than on firm economic evidence; In 1953 there were 27,000 millionaires in the United States; today there are more than 100,000. In 1953 there were 2,113 individuals whose wealth exceeded $5 million each; today they number some 10,000. Some months ago the Wall Street Journal acknowledged that despite high taxes "more individuals have become millionaires since World War II than in any comparable earlier period." EUT AT THE moment, Business It is true that factors in the economy such as the reforms of the 1930's and the rapid growth of unions in the two decades that followed appreciably increased income from wages and social security programs, creating the greatest middle class in history, and markedly alleviating the privation of those below the middle class. Yet only a few weeks ago, in a message asking for a broad expansion of public welfare programs, President Kennedy could point accurately to a pressing need to end "the poverty that persists in the midst of abundance." THE ULTRA - CONSERVATIVES—a description that fits most of the richest one per cent—like to draw a picture of an America where a power-hungry government promoting creeping socialism is destroying free enterprise, robbing the hard-working rich to support the indolent poor, and reducing its citizenry to robots drained of initiative. An objective, scientific analysis like Lampman's study of the distribution of wealth exposes the glaring fallacies of this interpretation of recent American history. The truth is that the very persons who complain most bitterly about the direction they claim the nation has taken are among its chief beneficiaries. (excerpted from the March 1962 Progressive) Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone VIking 3-2700 Fettington 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. THE SECRET SHOW BARLEY R42 "I'M AFRAID WE'LL HAVE TO MOVE WILCOX BACK TO TEACHING THE ADVANCED GROUP" Sound and Fury OUR KNOWLEDGEABLE elders overlook one important point: The United States is not such a fragile institution that it cannot stand the questioning of even the most radical groups, regardless of their political leanings. The Student's Position The panic is ill-founded and worthless. College is the time to test and question ideas. And then someday we can grow up and complain about the wild-eyed brigands who threaten the security of our country. What I refer to specifically is the activities of students in politics and current events. Students at Kansas University are in the too usual position of being damned if they do and damned if they don't. Those who promote or voice favor for "liberal" issues usually are labeled as "pinks" or "comsymps." Students who favor "conservative" viewpoints are just as quickly labeled "reactionaries" or pseudo fascists. THE VAST majority of students belong to the group which favors neither of these outlooks and being less full of fire and zeal they don't reach the public eye as weirdos. But even this group comes under the gun. They are cussed and discussed for anpathy. The only way to avoid getting struck with such names is to swallow everything that is put out by professors or government leaders and nod their heads in violent agreement. —T. M. the took world By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism John O'Hara has always had an extraordinary feeling for the American vernacular, and he has been an apt chronicler of the middle class. "Butterfield 8" is early O'Hara, and really much better than the recent bedroom monsters that have arisen out of his typewriter. The novel achieves a kind of classic status by being added to the Modern Library series. It's about a New York tramp named Gloria Wandrous, who had a sordid experience with an Army major when she was but a child and then proceeds to turn into a gal who is available to almost all comers. BUTTERFIELD 8, by John O'Hara. Modern Library. $1.95. SHE MEETS HER FATE. AS MANY doubtless know (not having seen the Elizabeth Taylor movie I can't comment on how closely film parallels novel), in the waterwheels of an excursion vessel. When O'Hara published the book in 1935 there was some belief that he was leaning upon the mysterious death of Starr Faithful in 1931. That being the year of "Butterfield 8" there is every reason to believe that he was doing just that. There are a set of excellent portrayals in this short but swiftly moving novel, and there are touches that only a social historian like O'Hara would incorporate. There is talk about the depression, there is blame for Coolidge. There is a discussion about going to see Herbert Marshall and Zita Johann in "Tomorrow and Tomorrow" and Jimmy Cagney in "The Public Enemy." There is much atmosphere of speakeasy living, and a bad pun about the then mayor of New York who, in the words of one character, is a "jaywalker." Friday, March 23.1962 University Daily Kansan Bibler Page 3 BOLTER on tion of in poli- usually or "con- ries" or which and zeal s group pathy. es is to gernment t point: cannot ldless of time to up and security MID for the of the much out of added to named Army into a w (not how on how cursions s some Starr there is swiftly historian session, going to and To- there is but the er, is a SILVER SMITH HIGH TEMPERATURE CHEMISTS—Paul Gilles, professor of chemistry, and Hugo Frazen, research assistant, look up data on metals that can be converted to gases. Chemists Probing Temperature Stress By Murrel Bland The mechanical pen on the mass spectrometer makes a mark across a graph as a metal becomes a gas. High temperature chemists are busy working on basic research. The scene is in the basement of Malot Hall in the high temperature chemistry laboratory. HUGO FRANZEN, RESEARCH assistant for the department of chemistry, said this research is an attempt to determine how hard metals react when subjected to extremely high temperatures. "We use the mass spectrometer in much of our research."Mr. Franzen said. "This device has instruments to heat the metals and to record data as the metals are heated." Mr. Franzen told how the mass spectrometer works. "The metal is surrounded by a tungsten filament to be heated," Mr. Franzen said. "As the metal turns to a gas, the spectrometer records the reactions of the gas molecules." Kent Smith, Lawrence graduate student, said the metal does not suddenly become a gas when it is heated. "The gas is given off gradually." Smith said. "Of course, the rate that the gas is given off increases as the metal gets hotter." Smith said that all metals give off extremely minute amounts of gases at room temperature. "We can tell how molecules from the metal gases react at different stages," Mr. Franzen said. "This method saves time because it is precisely controlled." MR. FRANZEN SAID that the information recorded by the spectrometer makes it possible to accomplish in a week what formerly took years. BUSINESS MACHINES CO. 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 The mass spectrometer was purchased for $90,000. Research in the high temperature area is financed largely by the Atomic Energy Commission and directed by Paul W. Gilles, professor of chemistry. "We aren't working on any certain project to develop a metal that will withstand heat in outer space," Mr. Franzen said. "We are interested in obtaining knowledge for the sake of knowledge. That is the purpose of all basic research." Mr. Franzen explained why he and his colleagues are carrying on this research. Smith said that the IBM computer in Summerfield Hall is used to compute the data that is obtained from the spectrometer. 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up SALES — SERVICE — RENTALS Employment Data Sheets Reproduced Printing, Mimegraphing and Duplicating Pick up — Delivery Mr. Franzen said that all the information obtained by the laboratory is published in journals and reference books. "WE USE AN X-RAY device before we heat the metals to determine how they are arranged," Smith said. "It would be impossible for anyone to build a nose cone or a missile without the information published in journals and reference books," Mr. Franzen said. "We feel we have a responsibility to continually add to this reservoir of information." Around the Campus Debate Team Ends Concert Set Season in Texas For Sunday The KU debate season will close this weekend with four students visiting Austin, Tex., to participate in the three-day tournament of the Missouri Valley Forensic League. Ralph R. Tremain, Salina sophomore; Dean Salter, Garden City junior; John E. Stuckey, Pittsburgh sophomore, and Joy Bullis, Davenport, Iowa, freshman, make up the KU team. Tremain will speak also in the E. C. Buehler Oratorical Contest, a competition named for KU's speech teacher. Coaches in the forensic league, made up of 11 state and two private universities, voted two years ago to name the contest for Prof. Buehler in recognition of his 30 years of work in the league. SUA Elects New Officers New Student Union Activities officers for the 1962-63 school year were chosen last night by members of the SUA board. John Neal, Hutchinson sophomore, was elected president; Breon Mitchell, Salina sophomore, vice-president; Melinda Hall, Coffeyville junior, secretary; and Robert Bruce Null, Grand Island, Neb., sophomore, treasurer. The new officers will take charge May 1, after a training period under the direction of the present SUA officers. The new officers will be responsible for selecting chairmen to handle activities during Orientation Week next fall and planning SUA activities for this summer. Among the major activities sponsored by SUA are the carnival, special concerts, Orientation Week special events, and the Homecoming Dance. Other events throughout the year include art exhibits, TV parties, Trail Room dances, film series, forums, and sport and hobby lessons and tournaments. Other new officers are Betty Reynolds, Wellington junior, vice president; Katherine A. Buxton, Kansas City junior, secretary; Martha J Yonally, Shawnee Mission sophomore, treasurer; Dixie A. Luellen, Kansas City junior, house manager; Catherine L. Blede, Overbrook sophomore, social chairman; Ella M. Forrest, Kansas City, Mo., junior, freshman counselor. Kathryn A. Wohlford, Genesco junior, has been elected president of Miller Hall. Miller Hall Elects Semester Officers Doreen G. Voigt, Atchison freshman, assistant social chairman; Carolyn A. Locke, Minneola sophomore, assistant house manager; M. Marcie Morgan, Baldwin sophomore, house co-ordinator; Jacqueline S. Volkland, bushton sophomore, AWS representative; and Phyllis Brown, Humboldt senior, and Patsy L. Goins, Marysville freshman, Inter-Residence Council representatives. Some like it hot HOT FUDGE sundae Rich-flavored hot fudge . . . smooth, smooth Dairy Queen! This delectable hot-cold combination is always a favorite! © 1957. DAIRY QUEEN NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CO. DAIRY QUEEN 1835 MASS. DAIRY QUEEN The KU Symphony Orchestra will present its annual spring concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in University Theatre. The 85-piece orchestra will be conducted by Robert Bausian, associate professor, and will play the first midwest performance of John La-Montaine's overture, "From Sea to Shining Sea." This overture was commissioned in honor of the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy and first performed in Washington Jan. 19, 1961. The orchestra will tour jointly with the University Concert Band March 27-30, presenting concerts in Oksaloosa, Salina, Ellinwood, Stafford, Larned, Beloit, Concordia, Clay Center and Topeka. The orchestra also will play suites from Leonard Bernstein's "Fancy Free" and Stravinsky's "Firebird," to honor Igor Stravinsky in his 80th year. Religious Council to Meet Members of the Baptist Student Center are sponsoring a Student Religious Council meeting at 2:30 Sunday in the Baptist Student Union. Members of all religious youth groups may attend the meeting. Stammler Reads Pushkin's Poetry Heinrich Stammler, associate professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, read the poems of Alexander Pushkin at the Poetry Hour Thursday. Pushkin was born in 1799 and died in a duel in 1837. Although he is called Russia's "national poet," the term "national" is misleading, Prof. Stammler said. Pushkin was the poetic spokesman for the Westernization set forth by Frederick the Great, who appeared to Pushkin as a "cultural hero." Prof. Stammler said. Prof. Stammler read several of Pushkin's poems, including one in both English and Russian. Mrs. Barbara Backus, Lawrence graduate student, and Sam Anderson, instructor in German, read from their own translations of Pushkin. Like other romantics, Pushkin's poems are often disillusioned and melancholy, Prof. Stammler said. However, he is an ultimately affirmative poet, uttering a "yes" that emerged from "his will to life," according to Prof. Stammler. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers CHICKEN DINNER Slaw, French Fries, Roll, Gravy & Pickles $1.25 BIG BUY Who'd Plant a Garden? Any smart person who wants to forget food prices. If that's you, get seed and all equipment at BARTELDES SEED CO. 804 Mass. VI 3-0791 LATER, BABY, LATER... LET ME FINISH MY CI FIRST." CAMPUS LEADERSHIP This boy has the right idea. Don't let anything stand in the way of your reading C A M P U S I LUSTRATED — the new national magazine for all college students. What's in the April CI for you? SUMMER JOBS — how to get yours! CAMPUS INTEGRATION—how far, how fast? UNCLE SAM WANTS YOU — latest on deferments! WHO APPEALS TO COLLEGIANS? — 20 top choices. CAROL BURNETT—fame, fortune and frustration. and: RIBICOFF, KILGALLEN, SULLIVAN, SAROYAN BRUBECK. PLUS: NEWS, BOOKS. RECORDS. CAREERS, FASHIONS. "SO NOW, BABY, NOW...GET APRIL CI AT NEWSSTANDS & BOOKSTORES" Page 4 --- University Daily Kansan Friday. March 23.1962 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Steve Clark Contradicting rumors, Kansas track coach Bill Easton says he is not considering any job offers from other schools and is very happy at KU. There have been rumors that the KU mentor will accept a position at a West Coast institution, likely Southern California, UCLA or Stanford. EVER SINCE former Chancellor Franklin Murphy assumed the chancellorship at UCLA rumors have circulated that Murphy will lure Easton away from KU. Easton claims he would not be a candidate for the Southern California opening because USC will likely hire one of its graduates. Easton says he is not interested in the Stanford job. The head track coach becomes quite disturbed when the subject of his leaving arises. "I don't know why people say that I am leaving here. Where do these rumors start? No one ever asks me. These rumors make it look as if I'm not happy and job hunting. This is absurd, I am very happy here." *** Coffeyville junior college, which defeated the KU Freshmen, extended its season record to 30-0 last night by defeating San Angelo (Tex.) junior college 82-69 at the National Junior College basketball tournament at Hutchinson. The victory put Coffeyville into the semi-finals which means the Red Ravens have to win only two more games to become the 1962 NJCAA champion. IF THE RED RAVENS win the basketball title, they will become the only school to win national titles in football, basketball and track over the past six years. Coffeyville won the NJCAA football title in 1956 defeating Grand Rapids, Mieh., at the Coliseum in Los Angeles. The Coffeyville track team won its national title in 1960 and finished second last year. This Southeast Kansas city supports its athletic program strongly, especially at the junior college level. The only inhibitions of the city's Quarterback Club and the Basketball Boosters organization is the Jayhawk Juco Conference. THERE ARE REPORTS that the conference will split, because of the objections of several schools over recruiting practices. The case as it stands is one of the "have-nots" objecting to the "haves." If there is a conference split, it will be nothing new to Coffeyville. When the state's Eastern and Western divisions merged it was largely responsible to Coffeyville. The Red Ravens had walked away with the Eastern division football title for so many years there was no incentive or support at the other schools. Several eastern schools dropped out, and Independence, Parsons and Coffeyville merged into the Western division. Roger Maris, New York Yankee slugger, is being branded as an "angry young man." As a matter of fact, when it comes right down to it, ol' Rog just ain't sociable. First he attacked sports writers and then he turned on Hall of Famers. THE FIRST of the week he and Oscar Fraley, United Press International sports writer, almost came to fisticuffs. Maris approached Fraley and threatened to punch the sports writer one, because of an article Fraley had written. (Comment: Now Rog, do you think this is nice?) Yesterday. Maris asserted himself as a hitter of 61 home runs by refusing to have his picture taken with Hall of Famer Rogers Hornsby. Hornsby, in turn, branded Maris as a "bush leaguer." The next thing Maris will probably try is spitting toward sports writers. This is a little courtesy that Ted Williams invented and Maris could perpetrate it. Maris may find this baseball season a long one. It's always a lot nicer to have the fans and the press on your side. There will be a lot of pressure on this young man if he doesn't change his ways. Action Sunday, March 25, 1962 8:00 P.M. Student Union General Assembly Cabinet and Parliament Elections All Interested Students Are Invited to Attend Kansas Closes Indoor Season At Kansas State Tomorrow The undefeated Kansas Jayhawkers close their 1962 indoor track season tomorrow night in the annual Kansas State Indoor Invitational. The record was set by Drake last year in edging the Jayhawkers in just one of running battles in which the two teams engaged. TWO WEEKS AGO a four-man, two-mile relay unit ran at the Chicago Daily News meet and set a new American record of 7:30.8. Manhattan's Ahearn Field House record of 7:37.4 stands in jeopardy. The last outing for KU was the Big Eight meet which it won by 11/12ths of a point, the narrowest winning margin in league history. The record established at the Chicago meet has been bettered only once by a Big Eight team. Last year's Jayhawker unit turned a 7:28.6 to establish a new record at the Drake Relays in Des Moines. THREE MEMBERS of that team, Kirk Hagan. Bill Thornton and Bill Dotson, will be running tomorrow. The other spot will be filled by either Tonnie Coane, who ran at Chicago, or Ted Reisinger, another promising rookie. Some combination of these five boys will return to defend KU's distance medley championship that was a near-record 10:06.1 last year. Only Billy Mills, who ran the number three 1.320 yard carry, is missing from the team of Bill Stoeddart, Thornton and Dotson. The record, 10:04.6, is held by KU's 1960 team The Jayhawkers have but one defending individual champion returning. Larry McCue in the 75 yard dash. McCue was runner-up in the Big Eight 60-yard dash this year. NCAA Finals This Weekend notable absentee, Jack Stevens in the pole vault. Stevens injured his shoulder at the Big Eight meet and has not been vaulting. The injury may keep Stevens out of action another three weeks. OVERALL, EASTON will send 24 men into action. There will be one The individual entries are: Ron Swanson and Charles Twiss, high jump; Yul Yost, shot put; Roger Schmanke, pole vault; Larry Cordell and Schmanke, broad jump; Charlie Smith and Rich Anderson, 75-yard high hurdles; Smith, Anderson, Cordell and Bob Covey, 75-yard low hurdles; Dan Lee and Bob Martin, 360-year run; Kirk Hagan, 1000-year run; Charlie Hayward and Dan Ralston, two-mile run. LOUISVILLE, Ky.—(UPI)—Cincinnati and Ohio State, marching inexorably toward a replay of their championship battle of 12 months ago, are solid favorites tonight in the semi-final round of the 24th annual NCAA basketball tournament. Barrel of Chicken 25 pieces, 10 hot rolls $5.00 BIG BUY Although the defending champion Bearcats and this season's no. 1 ranking Buckeyes are expected to romp over UCLA and Wake Forest, respectively, a haunting refrain from out of the West whispered, "remember 1959." And Cincinnati was the team most likely to heed that warning. It was voiced by Johnny Wooden, whose Far West regional champions from UCLA flew into town Thursday afternoon a little late and little known in these parts. The Bruins, delayed 45 minutes in their departure from Los Angeles by radio repairs, were much later than that getting started this season as they lost seven of their first 11, including a 105-84 liking by Ohio State. They've come fast since then, now boasting an 18-9 record that still looks a little pale beside Cincinnati's 27-2. Harnar Auto Supply 836 Mass. St. Keys Duplicated Complete Locksmith Service Day or Night Day Phone VI 3-2362 Night Phone VI 3-7576 SIC FLICS Chesterfield "If it's all right with you Captain, I think I'll drop R.O.T.C." Chesterfield KING CIGARETTES LUGSFT & LANFORD PUBLISED CO 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD- THEY SATISFY ST S rath to t ther salu Tl ant secr sista rela Th was that thin sign Pr as a wou boa plun IT stan- in a office shou pan was exece A B BB troo thro West "one Tr battl lin U.S. tegic Arm Bc Ll Lachun and this Miss Chu Sir nort Street to l two Pa build pres Luth beca an c The sepal having gatic on w evens iniured his acet and injury an-ion an- reon Ron ss, high Roger Cor- jump; aderson, Ander- ley, 75 and Bob Hagan, fayward run. en ollis ( ) Symbols Needed To Clarify Ranks By Dick West United Press International WASHINGTON - Although the Pentagon is widely recognized as the symbol of our military establishment, it is populated to a sizable extent by civilian executives and employees. The place is crawling with assistant secretaries, deputy assistant secretaries, and assistants to the assistant secretaries, who labor in relative anonymity. SINCE THEY ARE clad in mufti, rather than uniforms, the only way to tell them apart is to run one of them up the flagpole and see who salutes him. This lack of identifying markings was pointed up recently by a report that some Pentagon civilians were thinking of designing their own insignia to display their rank, or caste. The idea would be for them to wear shoulder boards, similar to those used by Navy officers, upon which would appear heraldic symbols representing their place in the Pentagon hierarchy. IT WAS POINTED OUT, for instance, that the number of windows in an office is one measurement of official standing. Therefore, the shoulder boards would have glass panes showing whether the wearer was a one, two or three-window executive. Private lavatories were mentioned as another sign of status, and these would be shown on the shoulder boards by means of miniature plumbing fixtures. It seems to me that the insignia suggestion is an excellent one, which should be adopted not only in the Pentagon but throughout the government at large. I can think of several ways that the systems could be used in Congress. LAST YEAR, you may recall, our congressmen considered, and then discarded, a plan to create their own private flags. To offset this self-imposed privation, they could start wearing shoulder boards showing whether they were senators or House members. Army Holds Berlin Exercise BERLIN — (UPI) — U.S. Army troops raced to key positions throughout the American sector of West Berlin today in a surprise "operational readiness test." Troops and vehicles of the 2nd battle group which joined the Berlin garrison last week manned the U.S. Sector borders and other strategic points early this afternoon, an Army spokesman said. The spokesman said the exercise was a "routine test to familiarize the new unit with its mission and surroundings in Berlin." Yesterday West Berlin police reported that a contingent of Communist troops moved along the edge of West Berlin, apparently enroute to maneuver grounds in the Soviet Zone. Board Purchases Lutheran Property Land on which the new Lutheran church will be built for KU students and faculty members was purchased this week by the Kansas District Mission Board of the Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod. Site of the five-acre tract is the northwest corner of 15th and Iowa Streets. The building is expected to be completed within the next two or three years. The present center for Lutheran students is at the Immanuel Lutheran Church, 1645 Vermont Street, of which Daniel DeBlock is pastor. Last fall 275 KU students were participating in activities at the cent- rastor DeBlock said the new building is necessary because of present and anticipated growth of Lutheran student participation and because of the growth of the Lutheran church, generally. The new building will be entirely separate from the existing church, having its own pastor and congregation. their committee assignments and other prerogatives. FOR THE SENATE insignia. I would suggest a weathervane indicating high winds, and for the House a pork barrel. Membership in the House Ways & Means Committee would be depicted by the figure of a taxpayer impaled on the end of a skewer. The Senate Agriculture Committee would provide for its members the figure of a prostrate farmer. And so on. Committee chairmen would be entitled to wear on their boards crossed gavels overlaying a water pitcher. The head of a subcommittee would be symbolized by an abstract arrangement of paperweights. Finally, there would be need of an insignia showing the number of junkets a lawmaker had taken. I recommend that each trip be denoted by the silhouette of an airline stewardess rampant on a field of counterpart funds. Missile Flight Called Success CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI)—The Air Force is building more muscles into its Minuteman "Instant ICEM," and it flexed them for the first time last night with a spectacular ocean-spanning flight. The three-stage intercontinental rocket, shorn of some of its weight "fat," hurled a dummy warhead more than 4.000 miles squarely into a target in the South Atlantic ocean The launching was the first at night. Minuteman spectators got a brief but brilliant view as the 55-foot missile thundered from the bottom of an underground launching pad and rode a fiery column of smoke and flame into the cloudy sky. THE SUCCESS, seventh straight in firings from underground "silos," demonstrated that two new ways for trimming weight from the Minuteman would work fine. In missile science, a pound of weight saved in building the rocket means an additional pound of nuclear warhead, or another pound of rocket fuel. Lighter weight nozzle control units were used and more weight was saved with the first use of "skirts" between stages that could be jettisoned in flight. MINUTEMAN, a three-stage solid-fueled rocket, is the smallest of the nation's three intercontinental ballistic missiles. The liquid-fueled Atlas and Titan ICBMs can carry larger warheads greater distances. THE AIR FORCE already is building 150 underground silos over a 15,000-square mile area in Montana, near Great Falls. The first Minuteman rockets equipped with nuclear warheads are expected to be installed in the concrete-lined holes this summer. But what it lacks in a large "bang," it makes up in its ability to be fired on almost a moment's notice. Should an alert of an enemy attack come now, precious minutes would be spent fueling up the liquid-fueled ICBMs before they could be fired. Eventually, about 900 nuclear-tipped Minuteman missiles will be buried throughout the United States, ready for almost instantaneous retaliation in event of a nuclear war. Portraits of Distinction 摄像师 HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Vacation Flights May Be Reserved VI 3-0330 Students interested in making vacation flight reservations may do so at the information counter in the Kansas Union by March 26. The Student Union Activities travel committee has made arrangements for airlines representatives to be at KU March 27. Students may reserve seats to New York, Chicago or Los Angeles. Tickets will be issued by the airlines representatives in the Kansas Union lobby. Friday, March 23.1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5 MILWAUKEE, Wis. — (UPI) — Lester Fox was serving a 60-day jail time today because one of his children talked out of turn during a visit by a county welfare worker. Child Talks; Daddy Arrested "Daddy, is this the man who is going to take away our car?" the child asked. and Daddy was arrested for failure to report a change in circumstances as a relief recipient. Use Kansan Classified Ads Kirsten's Hillcrest Shopping Center Sportswear ● Majestic ● White Stag ● Helen Harper ● Open evenings ... without a lot of strings attached One of the big benefits of THE BENEFACTOR, College Life's famous insurance policy, is the way it pays off in case of accidental death: DOUBLE—if you lose your life in an accident; TRIPLE—if your death results from an auto accident or as a passenger in a plane or other common carrier. THE COURAGE LIFE MAGAZINE OF THE NORTH WEST 1937-1942 But the Real Pay-Off is that THE BENEFACTOR doesn't have a lot of strings attached to it which prevent payment of the extra money. 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Get the full BENEFACTOR story from your local College Life representative.* LICA THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA INDIANAPOLIS, INDIAANA The Original and Only Life Insurance Company Serving College Men Only - JACK FISCUS Area Director P. O. Box 272 LAWRENCE, KANSAS VIking 2-3206 Friday, March 23, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 2-THE BEST EVER Phi Delta Theta 1621 Edgehill Delta Sigma Phi 1233 Oread Lambda Chi Alpha 805 Ohio Delta Chi 1245 West Campus Kappa Sigma 1045 Emery Delta Upsilon 1125 Emery Alpha Tau Omega 1537 Tennessee Alpha Phi Alpha 1014 Mississippi Delta Tau Delta 1111 West 11th TERNITIES Part of University Life Alpha Kappa Lambda 1144 Louisiana Acacia 1225 Oread Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday. March 23. 1962 Peronists Protest Argentine Elections BUENOS AIRES — (UPI) — Supporters of ousted ex-President Juan D. Peron began a general strike today in protest against President Arturo Frondizi's action in nullifying their victories in last Sunday's elections. In Madrid ex-President Peron last night laughed off reports that his supporters would turn to Russia for help if the U.S. government continued its alleged support of President Arturo Frondizi. Reports from the provinces said garrisons in some places had been alerted for possible trouble, but an armed forces announcement said there had been no notable disorders anywhere in the country. The 66-year-old refugee denied that his aides had charged the Pentagon with interference in Argentine affairs and had threatened to ask Russia for help. BE INDICATED WITHOUT explanation that Soviet agents had tried to get in touch with him here, but said he and his friends refused to talk to them. "The United States should understand that Argentines are grown-up people," he said. "They don't need nurses or tutors, either American or Russian." Feron, who had stuck close to his home here for the past three weeks following developments in the campaign for the elections in which his supporters were victorious in 11 Argentine provinces, spent the day yesterday in the mountains. Reports of military unrest in up- country Argentina and of Peronist demonstrations in Buenos Aires Province were dismissed as "false alarms" by defense minister Justo P. Villar, in Buenos Aires. AN EX-ARMY OFFICER identified only as "Col. Favio," who turned up at the official radio station with the intention of broadcasting a "communique" reporting an "army uprising" was arrested on orders from the war ministry. Late-running buses, trains and subways in Buenos Aires operated as usual, and movie crowds were as large as on any other early morning. FREE PIZZA DELIVERY ANY PLACE In LAWRENCE The strike was expected to cripple operations later today in the industrial suburbs which are regarded as Peronist strongholds, but make little impression on central Buenos Aires First editions of morning newspapers appeared on schedule. Reg. 10" Lrg. 14" Mozz. Cheese .85 1.40 Olive ----- 1.15 1.65 Green Pepper --- 1.15 1.65 Onion ----- 1.15 1.65 Mushroom ----- 1.25 1.90 Sausage ----- 1.25 1.90 Hamburger ----- 1.25 1.90 Pepperoni ----- 1.25 1.90 Anchovy ----- 1.25 1.90 Pizza Supreme 1.40 2.40 ½ Cheese — ½ Sausage -- 1.05 1.65 Added Ingredients 10c ea. 20c ea. VI 3-9640 Ron D Tom CAVERNS VI 3-9640 644 Mass. A week of political crisis did not diminish the enthusiasm with which street crowds in Buenos Aires welcomed Britain's Prince Philip on his arrival here yesterday. THE SOCIALIST AND independen ent unions to which most employees of service industries belong were not supporting the strike. A "White House" announcement issued late yesterday said Frondizi expects to have a new government ready to be sworn in Monday. Ron Tom CAVERNS N VI 3-9640 644 Mass. Frondizi is trying to form a military-civilian coalition cabinet, demanded by Argentina's military leaders as their price for allowing him to continue as President. Colored Pavement for Highway NEW YORK — (UPI) — Illinois highway officials plan to test stretches of red, yellow and off-white asphalt paving. The colored surfaces are supposed to eliminate pavement glare, extend headlight vision and warn of dangerous intersections. Peter Allen, national secretary of the Student Peace Union, will discuss the "Washington Peace Demonstration" at the Minority Opinion Forum at 4 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Coffee will be served. Peace Demonstration To Be Forum Topic The U.S. Secretary was more emphatic than ever before in declaring that President Kennedy would never accept a test ban without international inspection U.S. Halts Search For Air Victims test ban at this time had virtually vanished, he was offering Russia a last-ditch chance to sign a foolproof agreement and thus win suspension of the proposed new U.S. series. CLARK AIR FORCE BASE, Philippines — (UPI) — The United States today called off a massive but futile search for a flying Tiger Line transport plane that disappeared eight days ago with 107 persons aboard. Maj. Gen. Theodore R. Milton, commander of the 13th Air Force at Clark, said the search had been ended with "no trace" found of the airliner or its passengers and crew. The Secretary said the United States could never again afford to risk free world security by accepting an unpoliced moratorium or agreement such as the one Russia shattered last fall with its massive series of blasts. Aboard the plane were 93 U.S. Army Rangers, three Vietnamese soldiers and 11 crewmen. The fourengine Super Constellation disappeared March 15 on a six-hour flight from Guam to Manila. The flight was headed for South Vietnam. The search comprised one of the largest air and sea hunts in the history of the Pacific. It covered more than 200,000 square miles of open sea. Planes in the seach fife 153 missions totaling 1,150 flight hours. U.S., Russia Clash In Test Ban Talks GENEVA — (UPI) — Secretary of State Dean Rusk today accused Russia of paralyzing the test ban talks in apparent preparation for more atmospheric nuclear blasts to satisfy "military needs." Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko lashed back with a charge that the American test series scheduled to begin next month in the Pacific constituted an act of "aggression." He said it would set back efforts to halt the nuclear arms race. The comparative calm prevailing thus far at the 17-nation general disarmament conference was shattered abruptly when the foreign ministers of the two nuclear giants took the floor to exchange sharp charges of bad faith. A People-to-People industrial tour for international students will be conducted during the spring vacation. Rusk spoke first, appealing to Russia to reverse its stand before the United States was forced to begin its new tests. But he acknowledged he saw "no hope." Buses will leave the Kansas Union, 1 p.m., April 2. International students will tour the Kansas City stockade and return shortly. $20 Gromyko denied the existence of a moratorium last fall and said Russian tests were in reaction to an attack by Russia. Rusk said, that while hope for a "This is a risk to national and international security which the United States cannot and will not take," Rusk said. Reservations for the tour may be made at the P-t-P office, in Room 113 of the Kansas Union, or in the office of the International student adviser, 228 Strong. Industrial Tour Planned by P-T-P Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers 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.T. Cox DUAL FILTER Tareyton Product of The American Tobacco Company - Tobacco is our middle name University Daily Kansan A group of teenagers, sitting in a circle, are engaged in a discussion. They appear to be sharing ideas or stories. The background is indistinct but suggests an indoor setting. CONVENTION COMMITTEE—Members of the IAWS Convention Steering Committee receive instructions on the art of flower-making from Patricia Kendall, Holton sophomore (left center). The flowers will be used as table decorations at the regional IAWS convention to be sponsored by KU's Associated Women Students (AWS). Kneeling on the front row, left to right: Carolyn Hauser, Howard junior; Susan Callender, Bonner Springs junior; Patricia Kendall, Holton sophomore; Diane Coen, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Mary Nan Scanman, Tarkio, Mo., junior; Karlene Howell, Kansas City senior. Seated on the back row (left to right): Ann Leffler, Pittsburg sophomore; Rita Wright, Salina junior; George Anne Porter, Kansas City junior; Susan Flood, Hays sophomore; Karen Jordan, Great Bend junior. Not pictured: Jeanne Maxwell, Lawrence senior, and Priscilla Camp, Lawrence junior. Uneasy Algerians Still Fear French Page 9 ALGIERS — (UPI) — “Wait until tonight, swine! Wait until tonight!” The two olive-drab mobile gendarmerie half-tracks crunched across the broken glass littering the Place Lvautey this morning. They were full of white-faced gendarmes in steel helmets and bulletproof vests. The gendarmes were trying to watch the crowd, the windows along the street, the roof-tops and the street in front of them and behind, all at the same time. "Al-ger-ie Fran-cause, Al-ger-ie Fran-caise!" "Swine!" the crowds roared. "Swine! Wait until tonight!" The two half tracks slowly turned out of the Place Lyautey and went away down the Rue Charles Peguy in the blazing sunshine. An old woman in a purple rain-coat stood in the boulevard Saint Saens on the western side of the Place watching the half-tracks move away. She held a string-net shopping bag full of groceries. "Swine," she croaked. "We drove them off. We made them run." She shifted the shopping bag to her other hand and picked her way up the boulevard, stopping now and then to kick a piece of glass out of her path. She was a Frenchwoman. The crowds shouting and jeering at the passing half-tracks were French. Thegendarmes themselves were French. The snipers that opened fire from behind roof-top parapets, balconies and darkened windows shortly after 9 p.m. last night were French, too, and the gendarmes shooting back at them were French. There used to be a chestnut about Frenchmen firing upon Frenchmen. It was a kind of "it can't happen here" complacency. It happened here last night. It is happening today and from all the indications it will happen again tonight-by order of the Secret Army Organization (OAS). Double Edge Razor Blades Double Edge Razor Blades Finest Surgical Steel, honed in oil. Full money back guarantee. 200 - $30 100 - $50 200 - $1.50 500 - $3.30 1000 - $5.75 Postpaid. Packed five blades to package, 29 packages to carton. C.O.D. will accept. Brings general merchandise屯制 EMERSON COMPANY 406 South Second Alhambra, California Early yesterday army helicopters went across the city just above rooftop level scattering government leaflets that said things like: "The negotiations at Evan succeeded in bringing about guarantees for the Algerian communities, the maintenance of French security forces, the organization of Franco-Algerian cooperation . . ." "They must be read. Have you read them?" An hour later, mimeographed OAS leaflets floated down into the noontime streets from rooftops and windows. "These documents concern each one of you." Friday, March 23. 1962 "Attack the enemy." it said "Throw Molotol cocktails and grenades from your windows at the CRS and the mobile gendarmeric, particularly after 9 p.m." The shooting here last night started shortly after 9 p.m., which is the beginning of the curfew for vehicles. "Go into the streets when they search your neighborhood." "Smash barricades." "Swine!" the crowd roared. "Wait until tonight." "Long live French Algeria." Snipers opened fire on the mobile dendarmerie in a least eight different areas. The gendarmerie fired back. German national students and instructors collected $55.25 recently for relief of German flood disaster areas. The money has been sent to the German Red Cross. American students and citizens of Lawrence also contributed to the fund. Students Collect $55.25 JERUSALEM, Israel — (UFI) — Attorney General Gideon Hausner said today that Adolf Eichmann's crimes against the Jews were of such wide scope and nature that his death sentence could not be set aside on a technicality. Hausner Fights Eichman Appea Hausner told the Israeli Supreme Court it could not accept the defense argument that Eichmann, a former SS officer in Adolf Hitler's Nazi regime, acted only under orders of his superiors in the murder of six million Jews during World War II. He denied the defense contention that the Jerusalem district court was not competent to convict Eichmann and he said Israel is "in good company" in using a retroactive law to cover the case. HAUSNER MADE his statements during the second day of Eichmann's appeal against a conviction and death sentence for mass murder of Jews. He took the floor after Eichmann's attorney, Dr. Robert Servatius, ended his opening statement with a request that memoirs written by the former nazi in prison be produced as evidence. Servatius contended that the district court's ruling against Eichmann last December was in disregard of international law. He said only the leaders who gave orders to Eichmann were guilty of the crimes Hausner sharply attacked these points before court recessed until Monday. "SUCH CRIMES were by their nature extra-territorial and therefore not bound by national boundaries." he said. I "The oath of allegiance to the flag does not justify any of Adolf Eichmann's deeds. Official Bulletin Applications for Men's Residence Hall Applications must be returned by March 30. For additional information contact the Dean Men, 228 Strong Hall. Applications must be returned by March 30. Teacher Interviews: March 26 — Franklin Mathewson, Supervisor, (Elem. & Sec.) White Plains SANDY'S Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m., 1221 Oakley Farmer, will speak on "The Purpose of Baptism" Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: Inter-Kansas Union, Bible study, Hebrew; 8 extends its appreciation to you in helping to make our St. Patrick's Day celebration a great a great success. TODAY Thank You International Club: After film in Hoch Jawahry Room, Kansas Union. Martha will will sing German and American folk songs, followed by refreshments and dancing. Hillet Services: 7:30 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. Soccer Team Practice: 2 p.m.. Intracultural fields. SUNDAY Catholic Mass; 9 & 11 a.m. Fraser Hall (Newman Club). Great Friends Worship Meeting: 10:30 a.m. Danforth Chapel. VJA Dinner: 6 p.m. Kansas Room, Kansas Union. Speak, Shabiat Tevth, an Israeli journalist. Those unable to attend are welcome at the speech at 8:15 p.m. Lutheran Church Services; 8:30 & 1 am. Immmanuel Lutheran Church, 127 & Vermont; 5 p.m. Wed:sdays, Dan fonthall Chancel. Newman Club Meeting 7 p.m. St. Lawrens in Oxford Rd. Genera meeting and discussion. 'Don Juan in Hell To Be Presented The scene: hell. The conversationalists: Don Juan, Dona Ana (once seduced by Juan), Ana's father, the Commander (killed by Juan in a duel) and the devil. The topics: love, death, and immortality. Four members of the KU speech and drama faculty will present the "Don Juan in Hell" episode from George Bernard Shaw's "Man and Superman" at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the Westminster Student Center, 1200 Oread. Instructor William Kuhlkle will play Don Juan. Instructor Caroline Kriesel will play Dona Ana, Associate Professor William Reardon will play the Commander, and Assistant Professor Virgil Godfrey will play the devil. F. Cowles Strickland, visiting professor of speech and drama, will direct. The sequence comprises most of act III of "Man and Superman." It will be slightly cut to allow time for a discussion following the performance. Admission is free. Book Contest Announced Seniors entering the Taylor Book Collection Contest will be competing not only for the Taylor awards but also for an opportunity to enter the Amy Loveman National Award contest. The national contest—which is sponsored by the Book-of-the-Month Club, "Saturday Review" and The Women's National Book Association—will award a final prize of $1000. THE AMY LOVEMAN National Award is made yearly to a college student who has collected an outstanding personal library. It was established in memory of the late Amy Loveman, an associate editor of "Saturday Review," a book-of-the-month Club judge and a member of The Women's National Book Association. Nominations of senior students for the Award will be made by Chairmen of Campus Library Award Committees who will have selected a local winner. Separate application may be made for the contest through Watson Library directors. The deadline for application is April 30. The award will be made at Commencement to the winning student. "How I would start building a home library," "The next ten books I hope to add to my personal library and why." "My ideas for a complete home library," and an annotated bibliography of the local winner's present collection should accompany his application for the national award. NO COLLECTION of less than 35 books will be considered. Collections will be judged on the basis of intelligent interest, scope and imagination shown in creating the collection and knowledge of the books as revealed in the annotations. Collections (excluding textbooks) of any type are eligible; whether centered in a subject or avocation or a single author or group of authors. Tub of Chicken 15 pieces, 5 hot rolls $3.50 BIG BUY AUSTIN Top Ad Salesmen of the past two weeks: JACK CANNON and DAN MEEK. The Daily Kansan provides Advertising counseling service throughout each school day. The services of a senior in Advertising are as near as your phone. Just Call KU 376 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 23, 1962 --- A. Clos to Be Next Speaker In Humanities Lecture Series "Is Tragedy Still Possible on the Twentieth Century Stage?" This is the question which will be answered in a Humanities Series lecture by a visiting British scholar Tuesday at KU. The speaker will be A. Closs, head of the German department at the University, Bristol, England. He will lecture at 8 p.m. in Fraser theater and the Faculty Club will have an informal reception afterward. During his four-day visit to the KU campus, Mr. Closs will also speak to classes in German literature, humanities, and drama, and will confer with faculty members and graduate students. ON HIS AMERICAN TOUR, he will lecture at California, Princeton, PHOENIX, Ariz. — (UPI) The scientific pioneer who has maintained unwavering faith in one of the most terrifying chemicals ever devised by man, believes he has been fully justified by events. New Anti-Cancer Drug Is Potent In Early Tests Three persons who over four years ago were at death's door because of cancer are not only alive but functioning. There are 91 more who by the usually unchangeable law of advanced cancer should have been dead for as long as three years. DR. FRED J. ANSFIELD conceded these 93 are paying a stiff price in monthly installments for life. Monthly they must have a sickening treatment with this poisonous chemical. This is to renew the poisoning of cancer cells which originally spared them from dying. These survival statistics are his vindication, Ansfield feels, even though the 93 are the survivors from over 1,100 terminal cancer patients whom Ansfield and his associates at the Cancer Research Hospital of the University of Wisconsin, Madison, have treated with the prime cell-poisoner, 5-fluorouacil — or 5-FU for short. To have any chance of being effective, the drug must be administered in doses so large it poisons the whole body as well as the cancerous cells, Ansfield said in addressing the annual science writers' seminar of the American Cancer Society. OF HIS MORE than 1,100 patients, 21 were actually killed by the drug rather than by their cancers, he said. On the other hand, surgery and radiation had failed to help any of the 1,000 and more. Nothing more could be done for them except this chemical of desperation—5-FU. For the past two years Ansfield has been using a relative of 5-FU, 5F-LUORO-2' — deoxyuridine — 5-FUDR — and with it has had some patients who developed no poisoning of normal cells whatever. This is "a circumstance which was never observed with 5-FU," he said. But some patients can't "tolerate" 5-FUDR at all. BOTH DRUGS INTERFERE with the cancer cell's manufacture of its nucleic acids which contain the recipe for the making of more cells like itself. All normal cells also make their own specific nucleic acids, and the drugs interfere with them, too. So far it has proved impossible to poison the cancer cells without poisoning normal cells, although to a lesser extent. Both 5-FU and 5-FUDR are difficult to make and expensive. A course of treatment with 5-FU costs about $40, which means $40 a month. With 5-FUDR the monthly cost is $200. Ansfield said the prolongation of life is worth what it costs in the periodic sickness of the patients, in the difficult labors of administering physicians and in money. The average survival of 100 terminal breast cancer patients at Madison before 5-FU was devised, was 13 months. The average survival of 100 such patients treated with 5-FU has been over 29 months. Brown, Harvard, and Toronto universities. He has held visiting professorships at several universities in India and at these European universities: Amsterdam, Berlin, Heidelberg, Ghent, Vienna, and Rome. His latest books include "The Genius of the German Lyric," "Medusa's Mirror" (covering topics from medieval German literature to the plays of Hauptmann), "The Harrap Anthology of German Poetry," and "Woge im Westen." He also has contributed articles, reviews, and criticisms to the Contemporary Review, the Times Literary Supplement, and to many other English and American publications. He and his late wife did many outstanding translations of German epic and lyric poetry. His daughter teaches English at the University of California. He was born in Austria but is a British citizen. He was educated in Berlin, Vienna, Graz, and London, and has lectured at Sheffield University and at University College, London. Dance Committee Chosen The Steering Committee for the KU Relays Dance April 21 was chosen last night by the SUA Board. General chairman is Gary Buller, Buhler junior. Other committee chairmen are Nick Stucky, Buhler junior, tickets; Becky Williamson, Wichita sophomore, decorations; and Fred Dellva, Kansas City sophomore. M-G-M presents CARY GRANT EVA MARIE SAINT JAMES MASON ALFRED HITCHCOCKS NORTH BY NORTHWEST IN VISTAVISION AND TECHNIICOLOR M-G-M presents CARY GRANT EVA MARIE SAINT JAMES MASON ALFRED HITCHCOCKS NORTH BY NORTHWEST IN VISTAVISION AND TECHNICOLOR* FREDRIC MARCH BEN GAZZARA DICK CLARK INA BALIN EDDIE ALBERT These are the young doctors with no masks to hide behind! THE YOUNG DOCTORS FREDRIC BEN GAZZARA DICK CLARK INA BALIN EDDIE ALBERT These are the young doctors with no masks to hide behind! THE YOUNG DOCTORS [ ] STARTS SUNDAY COME EARLY FRIDAY And SATURDAY STAY LATE! JOURNEY TO THE LOST CITY IN COLORSCOPE SUNSET LIVE IN THEATRE ... West or Nebraska IN COLORSCOPE PLUS cinemaGIC AN ADVENTURE INTO THE 4TH DIMENSION THE ANGRY RED PLANET Two Bonus Features Sat. "REVOLT OF THE SLAVES" And "A MATTER OF MORALS" PLUS "REVOLT OF THE SLAVES" And "A MATTER OF MORALS" SUNDAY Cont. 2:40 - 4:50 - 7 & 9:10 A STRANGE NEW EXPERIENCE in Shock FROM JACK CLAYTON The Director of "Room at the Top" Did she really see those evil spirits ... or was she really the love-starved spinster 'the innocents said she was? BE FOREWARNED In your own interests see this picture from the very beginning to the mind-stunning end! Based on the story "The Turn of the Screw" by HENRY JAMES and co-starring PETER WYNDARDE and MEGS JENKINS with MICHAEL REDGRAVE as "The Uncle" PAMELA FRANKLIN and MARTIN STEPHENS as "The Innocents" Screenplay by WILLAM CIRCOLAD and TRUMAN CAPOE 20th Century Fox Writers DEBORAH KERR the Innocents — ENDS SATURDAY — 7:00 & 10:20 8:30 "MAN IN THE MOON" 8:30 only Kenneth Moore Shirley Anne Field Michael Hordern "Marines, Let's GO" 20th CINEMA SCORE COLOR BY DE LUXE VARSITY THEATRE ... telephone VARSITY 32063 STARTS SATURDAY!! WILLIAM CLIFTON HOLDEN WEBB in LEO McCAREY'S SATAN NEVER SLEEPS The crowning achievement of the man who gave you "Going My Way" and "The Bells Of St. Mary's" NRS CHEYENNE LEME FRANCE NUYEN Ends Tonight "The 4 Horsemen of the Apocalypse" 6:30 & 9:10 PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY LEO MCAREY SCREENPLAY BY CLAUDE BINYON and LEO MCAREY BASED ON A NOVEL BY PEARL S. BUCK CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUXE Sat. Mat. 2 p.m. Eve. 7:00 & 9:15 Sun. Cont. 2:30 - 4:50 7:10 & 9:30 GRANADA AT&T ... telephone VOX 1-800-623-7450 Friday. March 22. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms cash; All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. FOR RENT SUNNY, comfortable, furnished apt. 4 rm. including study rm. & bedroom. private bath, private int. Large closets, storage space. Call VI 5-3863 or VI 3-356 4 ROOM, nicely furnished apt. Large. 21 blocks from campus. Private entrance, bath, phone, garage. Also full basement. Laundry privileges, newly decorated, reasonably priced. For boys. Call VI 3- 7830. APT, for 2 or 3 boys. Utilities pid. 1 block toozer. 1142 Indiana. Park Plaza South Apartments Central Air Conditioning Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking We will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 3-8253 Office -- 1912 W. 25th. LARGE FURNISHED apartment, easi- side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI-3 6294-1. LARGE NICELY FURNSHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-67f BUSINESS SERVICES PROFESSIONAL party planning, for those with impeccable tastes. Parties for any occasion, completely arranged. For most impressive party, call V3-1241. EXPERIENCED MOTHER — would like child to care for, 3 to 4 yrs, old, in her home. Also would like ironing, 156 per piece. 340 Indiana, VI 2-3473. 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. INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or smears repaired Call VI 2-2533. if DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formal, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. $939_{1/2}$ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tf ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. tf GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Notes are revised and a comprehensive price: $4. Call VI 2-7572 Free delivery. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Corn. Personal service — sectionalized — one stop — save time & money. Fish. birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles. guinea pigs, etc., plus complete lines of pet supplies. tt FOUND Hood to raincoat — 3 scarves — men & women's gloves — 4 pairs GLASSES — 4 assignment books — 5 sets of keys — 6 book bags Basic French Reader, The Press & Society, Introduction to Mass Communications, Better Paragraphs) — Jewelry, Claim at 111 Flint. FOR SALE 1959 MGA, red, both tops, wire wheels, radio, heater, running lights, motor fast overloaded. Excellent condition. Call VI 2-1989, 5-7 p.m. Used TV. Must sell. See Lain at 1244. after 5 p.m. 3-27 New heavy retreads $10 each, ex. plus tax for most all small cars: Sizes 650-16, 590-15, 600-13, 640-15, etc. at Ray Stone-back's, 292 Mess. 157 Chevrolet, Excellent condition, white 350 Chevy, radio and, std. treadle. VI 5-8642 ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bauch and remove scopes immediately. $250 Call VI 3-8877, come to 807 AFr. for more information. G.E. Mark. tape recorder. Never used. Merk. tape recorder. Never used. 3*x34*. speed. Caill VI 3-0181. 3-20 GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts Handy cross index for quick reference $8.50, free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553, VI 3-5778. 1956 PLYMOUTH. 2 dr. Automatic trans. Chirysier V-S engine. Contact L.A. J. lings. VI 3-7583 after 5 p.m. 3-26 Gibson guitar — $80 and Ludwig tenor banjo — $30. Both with case, Also 10 watt Hi Fi amplifier and 12-in. Hi Fi speaker — $35. Call VI 3-1647. 3-27 LYMFIA PORTABLE typewriter, precision made to perform like an upright typewriter, sales, service, rentals, at Lawrence Typewriter, 733 Mass. VI, at 8641 Wacker Drive. HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In. Pet Center — most complete pet center. Phone VI 3221. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days 1 WEDDING dress. Size 9. Call VI 5-9211 2 up 5 p.m. 3-26 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. 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 HOLTEN TRUMPET with case. Good condition. $50. Call VI 3-8475 after 10AM. 1-233 HELP WANTED Afternoon secretary help wanted. Real estate experience preferred. Give qualification in first year. Mail to Lawrence, University Daily Kensner, Lawrence, Kansas. 3-20 HELP WANTED. Male or female, part or full time. Opportunity for exceptional hobbies. Set your own hours for work. Write AmBliCo. P.O. Box 8129, K. C-32. YOUNG MAN wanted part time. 20-25 hrs. per week. Good hourly wage. Call VI 3-7446 for appointment. Dixon's Drive- in, 2500 W. 6th. 3-27 Nice apts. for rent in Redbud Apts. south of Holiday Inn. Would like student to exchange junior and yardwork for one nice 2 bedroom apt. with wall-to-wall carpet and air conditioning. Contact J. Underwood at 1117 Mass. 3-27 WANTED: A male student available daily from 2:30-5:00. See Berry, 111 Flint Hall. BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-packs. ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Picnic. party supply paper bags. Gh & Vermont. phone VI 9350. DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. MISCELLANEOUS LOST GLASSES with thick light brown rims probably lost near Duck's Restaurant or in 1100 Indiana block. Call Jack Vetter at VI 3-8446. 3-26 DON'T DRIVE AN UNSAFE CAR Two girls' dress coats valued at $200. Left at Big Barn between 11:30 and 12:30 Saturday night. One camel colored boy coat with Weaver's label. One Van Dyke beige with fur collar. Reward. Call Tim Hamill at VI 3-5770. 3-27 Aeronautical engineering laboratory report in Kansas Union Reading Room, Friday, March 16. Phone VI 3-9354 for Brian Lieben, Reward. 3-27 TYPING Have yours checked before that vacation trip. Do it now! Get the best tune-ups in town electronically by Dynavision Art Nease, Mgr. BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- tion for rates." For excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1057. SECRETARY WILL DO TYFING in home. Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at VI 2-1749. AND EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type thesis, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, VI 3-0558, Miss I.M. tt VI 3-9849 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 8-5379. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type the thesis, term papers and conference presentations. Work. Responsible rates. Electric typwriter. Mrs. M. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing in my home -- call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lou Geltibba. 601 Mass. HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. coach James McFarlane, covers & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. **t**f Experienced typist would like typing in ner home. Accurate, neat, reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. tf THESES. reports, term papers typed nearly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter. Raremanable rata Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware, Call I 3-0483. Experienced typist will type these, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with writing for math and Greek letter calculator. Standard lett VI 2-1548. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert 3-30 FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing Special rates to students. Execution Service, S917 B Woodson, Mission, HES 2-7718 Eves or SA RA 2-2186. Experienced Typtist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Veqlust, 1935 Barker, Call VI 3-2001. TYP1ST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger. VI 3-4409. tf FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 9524 Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. on electric typewriter. Mrs. Amos Russell. 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. tf Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electronic typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. M. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI, af 1648. PERSON HAVING MRS. AUSTIN'S PRISE. Keep the cash, but please return the room. Room 102. Hold in hand. indley or ext. 275. No questions. Check check and papers desperately. 3-27 WANTED JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT 1402 How would you forecast your next few years? Today, the young man planning his life realizes as never before that in today's world his own future is tied inevitably to America's future. How can he serve both? Many college graduates, both men and women, are finding a rewarding answer on the Aerospace Team - as officers in the U.S. Air Force. Here is a career that is compelling in its challenge and opportunity. And it is a way of life that holds the unsurpassed satisfactions that come with service to country. As a college student, how can you become an Air Force Officer? If you have not completed Air Force ROTC, Officer Training School provides an opportunity to qualify for a variety of vitally needed jobs in the Aerospace Age. A graduate of this threemonth course earns a commission as a second lieutenant. Also open to college men is the Navigator Training program. For full information – including the chance to obtain graduate degrees at Air Force expense — see the Air Force Selection Team when it visits your college. Or write: Officer Career Information, Dept.SC23, Box 805, New York 1, N.Y. U. S.Air Force FOR AMERICA'S FUTURE AND YOUR OWN...JOIN THE AEROSPACE TEAM. UNITED STATES AIR FORCE Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, March 23. 1962 Model U.N. Group Picks Resolutions The Steering Committee of the Model United Nations last night decided on the first two resolutions to be discussed at the General Assembly on Friday, April 13. The first resolution calls for the admittance of Red China to the Model U.N., while the second proposes an international postage increase to provide financial support for the United Nations. THE FIRST RESOLUTION, SUBMITTED by India is: Whereas the Peoples' Republic of China is the legitimate established government of continental China, and Whereas, the Republic of China is the legitimate established government of certain islands off the mainland of Asia, The General Assembly resolves: 1. That the Peoples' Republic of China be admitted as a member of this assembly as the representative of Continental China. 2. That the Republic of China continues as the representative of certain off-shore islands in this assembly. 3. That the permanent seat of China on the Security Council be terminated leaving only four permanent members and that the remaining seats on the Security Council be allotted in accordance with the resolution passed by the Second Plenary Session of the Model United Nations General Assembly on April 15, 1961. ALAN REED, CHAIRMAN OF THE STEERING COMMITTEE, said the resolution passed by the Plenary Session expanded non-permanent membership on the Security Council to 13 members. The first resolution will be discussed in the morning session following the convocation. The second resolution, submitted by Venezuela and Mexico, is The General Assembly, realizing the financial strains of recent military operations incurred by the United Nations in the Congo and previously in the Middle East, Recognizing the value of the United Nations in its goal to maintain world peace in a world of conflict and diversified interests, and Reaffirming our faith in the organization of the United Nations and the desire to contribute to its support, Resolve that the United Nations assess an additional 10 per cent to all international air-mail postage of the member nations. This additional 10 per cent postage on international air-mail is to be paid by the individual nations directly, or indirectly by raising the postage of the individual country itself to the United Nations. This second resolution will be discussed at Friday's afternoon session. CLEAN UP! FIX UP! (Continued from page 1) Congo expenses, the censuring of India for overthrowing Portugal's enclaves in the Indian area, and the expanding of the Security Council to include all influential nations. Organized Houses . . . We Have Everything for Your Spring Cleanup Super Kem Tone and Kem Glo The Asian bloc decided at its meeting to submit separate proposals to the Steering Committee for the admission of Red China to the U.N. rather than submit a single proposal. The group did not approve the Western proposal for financing United Nations emergencies such as the Congo crisis. Mesh coop — High test Kentucky Blue Grass Seed SUPER KENI-TON For Made in the USA Tons of Power Lawn Seed The Arab bloc also refused to accept the Western proposal in favor of its own resolution which William F. Tyler, Caney sophomore and head of the Iranian delegation, said "had teeth in it which will make members pay." Magic Carpet Lawn Seed mixture for shady spots. Contains 56% Blue Grass Seed TYLER SAID THE ARAB proposal is more inclusive than the U.S. proposal. "The Western Resolution deals only with finances for emergency police action. The Arab measure provides for a complete finance program." Hammers — Saws — Staplers, etc. . . . Poultry Netting and small wire for RELAYS floats and decorations In other resolutions the delegations voted to recognize Algerian independence and to condemn Israel for her recent attacks on Syria. (Continued from page 1) Soviet - "Call Green Bros." - VI 3-5252 The African bloc listened to Western and Soviet representatives discuss their proposals. It drew up one resolution and submitted it to the Steering Committee. TAKE A SHORT CUT Park Behind Our Store and Come Thru Our Store to Mass. St. Green Brothers Hardware Action Will Meet The non-aligned European nations met with Charles Schooler, Leawood freshman and Swedish delegate, presiding. Schooler said his country recognizes the Chinese Peoples Republic and favors its admission to the U.N. Action, the proposed third political party, will hold a meeting at 8 Sunday evening in the Kansas Union. They will announce candidates for the coming Spring All Student Council elections, try to get approval on their platform for this election, and elect permanent officers for the party. Anyone interested in the party may attend. DON'T BUY! Don't buy any portable typewriter until you have tried an electric portable. That's right... an electric portable. It's a Smith-Corona — world's first electric portable. It does things no other portable can. It gives you the touch of an expert. Every letter is typed with the same even blackness. There's no pounding, electricity does the work. You can make ten clean carbons. And there are 5 repeat actions. Touch the key once, and you have rows of dashes, underlines, dots, spaces and the letter "X". Come in today. Try it- and you'll never want to type on a manual! LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER Sales - Rental - Repair Free Pickup & Delivery 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 Laotian Strongman Reveals Plans to Call up Reservists VIENTIANE, Laos — (UPI) — General Poumi Nosavan, Laos's pro-Western "strong man," announced plans today to call army reservists to active duty in apparent defiance of U.S. efforts to force him into a coalition with his "neutralist" and pro-Communist enemies. At the same time, the government was reported preparing to issue additional paper money to meet the need for funds created by the suspension of U.S. aid. Phoumi, who is deputy premier and defense minister, said he plans to strengthen regular army units by "mobilizing reservists as they are needed." He also said that the training of reserve officers, government officials and militiamen will be intensified Kansan Classified Ads Get Results so that everyone in Laos can "participate in the defense of his fatherland." Phoumi denounced "neutralist" Prince Souvanna Phouma and pro-Red Prince Souphanouvong, charging that they are trying to cover up "intervention" by Communist North Viet Nam in Laos's affairs. "The Viet Minh (Communists) ...pretend it is we who want war, when it is they who mask their intervention behind a Souphanouvong and a Souvanna." WHOLE CHICKEN $2.00 BIG BUY NATIONAL Fit for a Queen Meet regal Pat Weaver. America's National College Queen. She and her court of Regional College Queens chose ten beautiful rings from Artcarved's award-winning designs. Somewhere among them, or among other Artcarved traditional and modern designs, you will find the ring of your heart's desire. Ask your Artcarved jeweler, listed below, to explain all the other reasons for choosing a beautiful Artcarved diamond-its 100-year quality reputation, superb color and cutting, plus the famous Artcarved Permanent Value Plan, the world's strongest proof of guaranteed diamond value. Learn why you'll be prouder with an Artcarved. Artcarved DIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGS Two of the lovely designs chosen by America's College Queens. From $100. Evening Star Evening Star Tytone Tytone A0 Get your National College Queen Contest entry for yourself or your candidate at: MARKS JEWELERS 817 Mass.Ave. University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Lawrence Ellison Declines Action Nomination By Mike Miller One of the four All Student Council candidates announced last night by Action turned down the party's nomination this morning. Nolen Ellison, Kansas City junior, declined the party's nomination from the School of Education. He said, however, he will run for the ASC seat as an independent candidate. "I am interested that my ideas be brought forth in the ASC and not those of any particular political party," he said. HE CONTINUED. "I am not a Negro running for office, but quite naturally my views on housing, discriminatory clauses and discrimination in general will be different because I am a Negro seeking rightful opportunity to express my ideas. Action's platform appears on page 4 of today's Kansan. "I would be capable of running as an individual and not as a Negro, but because I feel capable and because I am a Negro, my ideas should be worthwhile. "I feel that in an election, a man should be judged on his ideas and not on preconceived ideas concerning some particular party affiliation." Ellison explained, "I do not want to run to promote any particular organization, but to represent my views on the ASC." THE THREE OTHER candidates Action announced as running on the still unrecognized third campus political party last night are: Don Warner, Topeka junior, College men; Robert Serra, Frontenac, School of Law, and Hans Krause, Caracas, Venezuela, Graduate School. Harold Johnson, Ft. Leavenworth senior and vice president of Action, said that if the group did not get formal recognition by the All Student Council, the candidates would be run on a non-partisan ticket but still receive the backing of the Action members. Apportion Ruling By High Court WASHINGTON - (UPI) - The Supreme Court ruled today that voters can sue in federal courts to correct unfair apportionment of seats in state legislatures. Justice William J. Brennan Jr wrote the landmark decision. The decision ordered a special three-judge panel in Nashville to hear a lawsuit started by a group of Tennessee who complained that their votes were diluted by malaportionment of the general assembly. The case, however, is likely to have ramifications far beyond Tennessee. In most states, city residents complain that they are grossly under-represented compared with voters living in rural areas. The Tennessee complainants sued under a 1871 civil rights law which allows an individual to go to federal court if a state is denying him a federal right. In today's decision Brennan held that the issue raised in the Tennessee case was not political in the legal sense. The ruling was a victory for the Justice Department, which sided with the complaining voters. The government had argued that only federal action could achieve a more equitable apportionment of lawmakers among city and rural districts. They said that about 37 per cent of the voting population of Tennessee see now controls 20 of the 33 members of the state senate; and about 40 per cent of the voters control 63 of the 99 members of the house. The three-judge Nashville court previously had dismissed the case on grounds that federal courts have no jurisdiction over the dispute. This action was based on a 1946 Supreme Court decision that apportionment cases are "political" and therefore outside the province of federal courts. THE ASC CONSTITUTION requires that 10 per cent of the student body be active (card carrying) members of a political party before the group will be given ASC recognition. Johnson said Action has received more than the required number of signatures to a petition requesting that the group be recognized by the ASC. He indicated, however, that since this petition did not require that the students signing it be potential Action members, the petition has no bearing on formal recognition. The group is now selling membership cards at 25c apiece, but Johnson said, "At this time, I don't think we'll have the necessary 1000 cards sold." IN EARLIER SUGGESTING that the party charge 50c for the membership cards, Charles Menghini, Pittsburgh senior and one of the party's organizers, explained that (Continued on page 8) Monday, March 26, 1962 Daily hansan OAS Leader Captured; Rebels Quickly Quieted Two All Student Council officers last night said the proposals of Action, KU's proposed third political party, to widen the scope of student government are impractical. LAWRENCE, KANSAS "First of all, when the petitions were started we made ourselves available to the persons circulating the petitions. There are certain forms and regulations which all petitions must meet before they can be accepted. Many persons who signed the petition later said they were not aware of what they were signing. Action's preamble called for the ASC to explain why a referendum on the student seating plan was not presented to a student vote after 2,500 persons had signed petitions. "Action's plank on the student-administration relationship is really an allegation against the administration. They infer that there is censorship of the campus newspaper, that there are stingent regulations on campus speakers and unnecessary social regulations." "THE MEMBERS of student government are fullfilling what they consider to be the proper function of student government. There is a definite discrepancy between the two viewpoints, that of UP and VOX as opposed to Action's, on the jurisdiction of student government." Palmer said. ASC Leaders Hit Action Proposals ALGIERS, Algeria — (UFI) — The French government today announced the capture of former Gen. Edmond Jouhaud, a key leader of the outlawed Secret Army Organization (OAS), and wild shooting broke out shortly afterward in the streets of Algiers. "Edward Shaw, Alexander Fomin and Robert Love have made speech- ice devices that allow an idea of administrative regulations on speakers," Palmer said. Palmer said the administration does not have control over the social regulations. Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior and student body president, and Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior and ASC chairman, said that from looking at the platform, Action's leadership is composed of interested but uninformed students. (Both men are members of VOX.) Jouhaud and three associates were captured yesterday in Oran, and OAS commandos attacked a gendarmerie barracks in a futile attempt to free them. French forces fought off the attack, but one gendarmie was killed and a number of gendarmes and marines wounded. "Furthermore if they (Action) would look into the situation they would find out that the social regulations are set by the students. They are set by the Associated Women Students and the ASC social committee." "THE SEATING PETITIONS did Weather PALMER SAID THE inference that the administration imposed restrictive regulations on speakers is not consistent with past events. Max Eberhart gave an explanation. Fair to partly cloudy this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow. Some fog again tonight east and central. Warmer this afternoon. Continued mild tomorrow with the lows tonight in the 30s and the highs tomorrow in the 60s northeast to near 70 southwest. THE CAPTURE OF Jouhaud. who 59th Year. No. 110 not meet the requirements that all petitions have to conform to. As a result they could not be accepted." "The furor started before they were informed on the specifics of the seating plan. After they became familiar with it they felt that it was the best of the alternatives available. That the originators did not bring up the referendum again this fall serves to support the feeling that the plan was satisfactory to the persons originally circulating the petitions." Palmer said. is under sentence of death for his role in the "generals' rebellion" of last April, was a crippling blow to OAS hopes for keeping Algeria French despite the cease-fire agreement signed a week ago. Jouhaud was flown to Paris. (Continued on page 8) Stung by the seizure of Jouhaud and other defeats, the European extremists of the OAS have resorted to mass demonstrations by civilians. It was during one of these demonstrations that the shooting started in Algiers. French troops and police smashed the demonstration in a roar of gunfire that killed at least 15 persons and wounded an estimated 40 more. OBSERVERS NOTED that the demonstration came on the heels of defeats inflicted on OAS commandos in bloody street fighting in Algiers and Oran in the past few days. They said it appeared the Europeans who want to keep this North African land forever French were trying to force a solution in their favor now through mass demonstrations of civilians similar to those which accompanied the Algiers revolts of May 1958 and January 1960. But the forces of President Charles de Gaulle broke up today's move in a flurry of gunfire, inflicting heavy casualties on the demonstrators. THE CAPTURE of Jouhaud and the decisive moves in putting down the demonstrators were evidence of the government's determination to crush the OAS defiance of the ceasefire arrangement. The arrest, announced both in Algiers and Paris, was a major triumph for the French government in its effort to wipe out fanatical European settler resistance to Algeria's march toward independence. Jouhaud was right hand man to OAS leader Raoul Salan, another former French general, and one of the figures in the "generals revolt" in Algeria last April. FRENCH OFFICIALS said Jouhaud was captured during a house-to-house search by troops sweeping through the big western Algerian port city of Oran yesterday. Four other persons were arrested with him and also flown back to Paris. One was reported to be a woman. Another was reported to be a former Foreign Legion major named Camelin. All were lodged in Paris, in Sante Prison. Jouhaud and Salan escaped at the collapse of their pocket revolt last April. Two of their colleagues, Gen. Maurice Challe and Gen. Andre Zeller, surrendered. JOUHAUD AND SALAN were tried in absentia, found guilty and sentenced to death, but it was believed Jouhaud now would be put on trial again. French officials said Jouhaud had been found hiding in an Oran apartment under the name of "Monsieur Gerber." Besides depriving them of leadership, Jouhaud's arrest was a stunning blow to the morale of the European extremists battling to sabotage the cease fire between France and Algerian nationalists. Decreasing Financial Support Could End Performing Arts By Richard Bonett (This is the first article in a three-part series on the financial troubles confronting the performing arts in the United States.) Americans grappling with the cold war, a nuclear arms race, dizzying space developments, and a myriad of other questions are hardly aware of another problem facing the country: What to do about the performing arts. The problem is at the root of a battle that has been brewing under the surface of the country's cultural life for the past decade and a half. The first open skirmish took place last summer in New York City when musicians of the Metropolitan Opera Company threatened to quit the orchestra unless they received a substantial pay raise. For a time it appeared that the famous opera company's season would have to be canceled. AT THE LAST MINUTE, Secretary of Labor Arthur Goldberg stepped into the controversy to personally arbitrate a settlement, granting the musicians more money. The crisis was met, but the malady lingers on. The problem is simply this: the performing arts in America—opera, symphony, ballet, and theater are hanging onto the financial ropes as their means of support become more and more inadequate. Brushing aside an expected amount of emotionalism from partisans in the fight, few persons contest the existence of the problem. The fighting begins over proposed remedies. After studying the Metropolitan Opera situation last year, Secretary Goldberg reported: "THE PROBLEMS OF THE performing arts in America today are not the problems of decline. They are problems of growth: a growth so rapid, so tumultuous, and so eventful as to be almost universally described as an explosion..." While the artistic "explosion" may be at the core of the over-all problem, the ramifications are so many and complex that often even the "experts" seem to run off on tangents in trying to explain the situation. To find out just what the facts are, the Select Subcommittee on Education of the House Committee on Education and Labor, under the chairmanship of Rep. Frank Thompson Jr., D-NJ., held a series of hearings in November and December in New York, Washington, D.C., and San Francisco. Appearing before the subcommittee in New York, Leopold Stokowski, one of the nation's foremost symphony conductors before he retired several years ago as conductor of the Philadelphia Symphony, said: "The future of the arts in America is in great danger. The Philadelphia Orchestra almost did not begin this season; the Metropolitan Opera season began late, and it looked as if it could not go on at all. All operas today are under-rehearsed and not well prepared." STOKOWSKI CONTINUED, "We have (in America) a conflict between quality and quantity. Many performing artists have to have two professions, music and something else. This subtracts from their quality because it takes a lifetime of study to be a good artist." The maestro's concern was echoed by Herman Kenin, president of the American Federation of Musicians, who told the subcommittee that fewer than one-fourth of the union's 268,000 members are able to earn a livelihood in the profession. Even these figures are misleading to some degree. A considerable number of union musicians fall in the category of "weekend" musicians, reasonably proficient performers who make up the many local bands and orchestras scattered around the country. The men and women in this group are often music teachers, salesmen, housewives, bankers and bartenders, who may have been more active as musicians in their youth and whose love of music keeps them attached to it as a hobby. (Continued on page 8) C9 Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday. March 26, 1962 The Political Clowns The KU Young Democrats contributed the greatest measure toward hitting the heights of inanity with their recent elections. Politics on the KU campus came close to achieving a new low last week. The University Party and the newly formed Action Party made a lesser contribution, but a significant one by playing the game of "who took the plank," as though party planks were a sacred thing. Action retorted that the plank in question was contained in two previous UP platforms, but that no moves had been made by UP to institute the platform in campus government. The UP-Action conflict started with UP finding fault with one of Action's platform planks asking for expansion of All Student Council operations to include national and international issues. NO DOUBT it was a lively week in campus politics. But there is considerable doubt if it was a profitable week for anyone concerned. The president of UP replied that the planks reflect the ideas of the party membership at the time the platform is set up. He said the people who ran under these platforms (the ones to involve the ASC in national and international issues) are no longer in the party. The UP approach is relatively sound. The Action retort implying that they should not be criticized for a plank because another political party had it first only clouds the issue. IT'S THE SOUNDNESS of the plank at present that should be the issue. Criticism between parties should be based on this, not on who had the plank first, or who took it with him when he left the party. People voted who had received membership cards without paying the required fee. People voted who had established membership long after the Feb.21 deadline. People voted under assumed names. Campus politicians bemoan student apathy, yet beg for it by actions such as the Young Democrat's election. The time is long overdue for a few changes in attitude and methods. The KU Young Democrats held an election March 15 that was a pure farce. It judged nothing but the political manipulative ability of the candidates. THE ELECTIONS were a mockery. They were an insult to this campus. Any faith that KU students may have had in campus politics has surely been shattered, or at least has taken a long step backward, because of this election. Last Friday, a professor of law who was asked by both party factions to arbitrate the case, found the winning candidates guilty of an "improper course of conduct." —Karl Koch From the Newsstand Red Speaker Ban Ended The ban on speeches by known Communists on city college campuses was reversed yesterday. The Administrative Council of the City University ruled that each college could approve or disapprove invitations to members of the Communist party. This is the same rule that had been in effect before the ban was imposed on Oct. 26. IN REVERSING ITSELF, the five-man council cited a report on the issue by the Committee on the Bill of Rights of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York. The report concluded: "Accordingly, it is our considered opinion that faculty or administration of the City University is legally entitled to permit known United States Communist party members or officers to speak on their campuses." The Communist speaker issue had come to a head with the revocation in October of an invitation to Benjamin J. Davis, then secretary of the Communist party, to speak at Queens College. It is part of the more general issue of who shall and shall not be permitted to speak at municipal educational institutions. Other incidents have arisen involving speakers or sponsors with viewpoints as disparate as those of William F. Buckley Jr., editor of The National Review; Assemblyman Mark Lane, Manhattan Democrat who had been indicted in Jackson, Miss., in connection with the Freedom Riders campaign, and Malcolm Little, a leader in the Black Muslim movement who calls himself Malcolm X. THE NATIONAL REVIEW case, involving use of a hall at Hunter College, has been taken to the State Supreme Court. At the time the ban on Communists was announced, the council said it had been based "upon the best and most competent legal advice the council could obtain." Recently the council, made up of the university chancellor, John R. Everett, and the presidents of the four city colleges, preceded its formal agreement with the bar committee's finding with the assertion: "The fact seems to be that excellent legal advice can be in conflict on this issue." The council's conclusion was: "Until there is further judicial or legislative determination of this question, the educational authorities on each campus are legally free to approve or disapprove invitations to members of the Communist party of the United States as they were heretofore." ANALYZING PERTINENT decisions of the United States Supreme Court, the lawyers committee found that "a member of the Communist party who spoke at an open meeting in which the student body and the faculty were invited would not commit a criminal act no matter how ardently he might argue his party's objectives." And: "A faculty or administration would not be violating the law were it to proffer a platform to a member or more than one member of the Communist party." Recent decisions of the Supreme court, the bar committee said, hold that a speech "is not a criminal act unless it is made under specific conditions." The high court has held, the committee continued, that "advocacy of forceable overthrow as an abstract doctrine is constitutionally protected speech." "ADVOCACY VIOLATES the Smith Act only if it takes the form of 'indoctrination of a group in preparation for future violent action, as well as exhortation to immediate action . . . when the group is of sufficient size and cohesiveness, is sufficiently oriented toward action, and other circumstances are such that action will occur." It appears clear, the committee found, that: This came from findings in the cases of Dennis v. United States and Yates v. United States. The Smith Act is the popular name for the Alien Registration Act of 1940. Its provisions make it a crime to "advocate overthrowing any government in the United States by force or violence." The law committee also asserted that criminal intent could not be imputed to the Administrative Council if it allowed Communists to speak. The council, the committee said, "would be seeking to further educational, rather than criminal objectives by giving students an opportunity to listen to and question committed Communists." In The New York Times yesterday, a group of 212 members of the faculty at City College—including twelve departmental chairmen, forty-three professors, twenty-four associate professors and thirty-nine assistant professors — endorsed in an advertisement an editorial condemning the Oct. 26 Communist speaker ban as an insult to the intelligence of faculty and students. And on Friday, more than 100 members of the faculty at Hunter College also protested the prohibition, which has now been rescinded. The Hunter group declared its opposition to "any ruling based on administrative discretion or disputed legal advice which would infringe on this most necessary freedom." THE EDITORIAL had appeared in The New York Times on Oct. 28. The "disputed legal advice" on which the Oct. 26 ruling was based had not been attributed by the council to any lawyers by name. Some who have followed the controversy closely note that at the time this advice was sought, the city was engaged in a Mayoral campaign. The Communist speaker issue, particularly in Queens, had strong political overtones, these sources believed. Robert Glynn, Donald H. Kallman, David M. Levitan, Martin F. Richman, Alan U. Schwartz, George J. Solomon, Robert M. Blum, John Carey, Shirley Wingerhood, Murray A. Gordon, Samuel H. Hofadster, Louis Pollak, Herbert Monte Levy, Robert B. McKaye, Herman Schwarz, Jeanne R. Silver, Henry Spitz and Bruce M. Wright. Yesterday's statement by the council included the text of the report of the Bar Association committee, but did not list its members. According to the library of the Association the Committee on the Bill of Rights is headed by William A. Delano. Other members were listed as: (From The New York Times, Dec. 24, 1961) Daily Hansan Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East St. St., New York 22. N.Y. Mail subscription. National Press International. Mail subscription semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday days and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Extension 711. business office Extension 276. University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1883, became biweekly 1904, trieweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711. news room NEWS DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Mullins ... Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache . Business Manager LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler THE POCKET KING "GORRY, PROTHER HAMMOND, WE JUST DON'T HAVE ROOM HOMEWHERE. IF THIS BOY IS AS GOOD AS YOU SAY—" letters to the editor Menghini Replies to Attack Editor; I am sure words cannot express the blow which I received as I read the slanderous statements made in Thursday's UDK about me. I sincerely believed that Mr. Eee and Mr. Patterson were good friends. We have worked closely together for the past five months. Never was there a hint of the gap that eventually was to develop. Both realized that Action was to be a political party which would squarely face controversial issues. Both knew what the final decision probably would be in relation to the problem of discriminatory clauses which we discussed in November of last year. BOTH KNOW that they were informed of every meeting, except the one held by the platform committee. Both know that they were informed of the happenings of each meeting they missed. Both know that there are only four planks (of 15) in Action's platform that were not discussed at the first organizational meeting. It was held in December. Both know that I have tried to keep this party from being anti-Greek. Both know that the method of individual membership is an attempt to construct a party along ideological and not living group lines. If their purpose was to turn this party anti-Greek, they may have succeeded; it's too early to tell. If their purpose was to alienate me, they did. If they wished to split Action, they failed. If their purpose is to prove the old "Hill" dictum that "where one lives determines his ideology," I and many others are still not convinced. WHY DID THEY make charges that they know to be untrue? I am not sure and would not attempt to say what their motives are. These are my last public remarks on the subject. I shall be glad to talk to them privately, if they will talk to someone with whom they, apparently now have nothing in common. Chuck Menghini Pittsburg senior * * * I was at the Action meeting Wednesday night and have closely followed the party from its inception. I would like to make the following comments about the charges of Mr. Patterson and Mr. Bee. Charges Against Action Contested Editor: Mr. Bee charged "the unstated goals of the party have become primarily an extension of Menghini's ego. His lust for power is fantastic." First, the goals of the party are written in the party platform, which was distributed to the audience at Wednesday night's meeting. Secondly, I believe the charge that Mr. Menghini is interested in personal power is absurd. Mr. Menghini has no office in the party, and will not be a student at KU next year. THE CHARGE that the control of the party is in the hands of a few is false. It was to be expected that the steering committee which founded the party was a relatively small group. However, the party's platform and candidates for office are subject to approval of the General Assembly, which is composed of all party members. The party membership is open to all regular KU students. Action is not anti-Greek; it is anti-discrimination. There are several Greeks in the party. ACTION HAS been courageous enough to take a stand on issues which affect all KU students. All KU students are interested in the efficiency of the Union, the student seating plan and the proposed traffic plan, to name three of the planks in Action's platform which are not covered in the platform of UP and which will probably not be covered in the platform of Vox. Steve Long Prairie Village junior * * * Kansan Article Protested Editor: Let me thank Mr. Musil for his romantic account of the life and times of KHP. But I must protest on three points. (1) My eyes are blue, not green. (2) My hair is dark-brown, rather than black. (I was actually blond when I was Mr. Musil's age.) (3) The reason that I did not become a student at the University of Southern California in 1947 was financial (I had no money, and SC is an expensive private school) rather than academic. Klaus H. Pringsheim instructor of political science Short Ones It is the dull man who is always sure, and the sure man who is alway dull—H. L. Mencken The more things a man is ashamed of, the more respectable he is.—George B. Shaw I think even a bad verse as good a thing or better than the best observation that was ever made upon it.—Thomas Gray Page 3 Scheid Presents Clarinet Recital Wednesday night L. Don Scheid, assistant professor of wind and percussion, presented his annual clarinet recital on the Faculty Recital Series in Swarthout Recital Hall. The program included Brahms second clarinet sonata, a concerto by Manevitch (a contemporary Russian), and the trio K. 498 by Mozart for clarinet, viola and piano. His performance was intelligent and very musical. His tone was pure and full, not squeaky and shallow. Prof. Jersild had her hands full with the Brahms sonata and the Manevitch concerto. The sonata is a large-scale duet for clarinet and piano, not simply a piece for clarinet with piano accompaniment. Brahms himself was a pianist. The concerto accompaniment is a condensation of a full orchestral score. ASSISTING PROF. SCHEID were Marian Jersild, associate professor of piano, and Karel Blaas, associate professor of string instruments, violist. But Prof Jersild was certainly equal to the demands upon her. Her playing of Brahms was robust. We have never heard her playing sound quite so full before, and she has played here close to 10 times in the past three years. PROF. BLAAS joined Prof. Scheid and Prof. Jersild in the Mozart trio, one of three big works in which Mozart used the solo clarinet. The ensemble was delicate and beautiful. It is interesting to note that Brahms wrote his two sonatas opus 120 with both the clarinet and the viola in mind. The range of both instruments is practically the same, but the mood each instrument evokes is obviously quite different The viola has the more melancholy tone and is capable of more emotional intensity. The clarinet is capable of profound, mellow tones, but it is not capable of sustaining a serious mood, however sinister it may be made to sound on other occasions. IT IS THEREFORE fitting that Prof. Blaas, a violist, appeared on Prof. Scheid's recitals both this year and last, when Prof. Scheid played the first of the sonata, in F minor. Neither time, of course, did Prof. Blaas play the same work as Prof. Scheid. It would be most interesting, and pleasing, to hear a recital on which Prof. Blaas played one sonata and Prof. Scheid played the other. The Manevitch concerto is a darkly playful work in one movement, dating from 1955. Stylistically it falls somewhere between Prokofieff and Shostakovitch. Besides some mock seriousness for the clarinet it has some bright clangor in the accompaniment. SUA to Sponsor Tour of Europe Student Union Activities, in cooperation with Kansas State University, will sponsor a European trip for students this summer. Students will visit 9 countries in 40 days at a cost of $750. German guides will be provided. The tour is part of an exchange program. For further information, students may call the SUA office, KU Extension 477. Topeka Alumni Start Gift Drive A drive is under way in Topeka and Shawnee County to collect gifts to KU through the Greater University Fund (GUF). Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and a panel of faculty members and administrative personnel spoke this week at a meeting of about 200 alumni in Topeka, to launch the campaign seeking contributions from nearly 1,800 alumni living in Shawnee County. Mrs. R. Charles Clevenger, chairman of the Shawnee County drive, said, "We hope to obtain a large number of modest contributions from Topeka alumni and friends, to help KU meet needs which are beyond limitations imposed on state funds. "We have set no dollar goal for the campaign. Our objective is to obtain some contribution, regardless of amount, from each alumnus in the county. Most contributions received by the fund range from $5 to $100 in amount." More than 150 alumni are working on the Shawnee County drive, which is aimed particularly at obtaining unrestricted funds for student loans and scholarships, research facilities and library acquisitions. FRESNO. Calif. — (UPI) — The annual daffiness that spring brings to college campuses was in full bloom here today. Oh No! It's Spring Again Sore-handed Fresno City College students proudly claimed a world's record after applauding for $11_{1/2}$ consecutive hours. "We think it's a record because we don't think anybody else has ever tried it before," a spokesman explained. --- 3 Students Producing For Radio Networks 100 Three KU students have undertaken a non-credit activity that may in the future become national or international in scope. Members of Newman Club, the Catholic student organization recently elected officers for 1962-63. The Man in the Airplane Monday, March 26, 1962 University Daily Kans RPC's international coverage may grow even larger, since the Voice of America has asked the center for samples of tapes for possible distribution. Newman Club Elects Here's a college shirt with the distinctive tab collar minus the nuisance of a brass collar button to hold the tabs in place. New Tabber Snap "Hands Between Nations" is the third aspect of the center's work and undoubtedly will have the widest distribution. The series originally began as an exchange project among schools having People-to-People, an international good-will program which got its start on the KU campus. The center also is engaged in special projects, including five-minute radio discussions on "You and the Law" and "You and the Weather." Bush, who coordinated the three-man policy committee, said these programs are aimed at being both helpful and interesting to the layman. The authentic British tab collar. The three students, Lawrence Knupp, Great Bend sophomore, Larry Wagner, Lawrence junior, and Robert Bush, Webster Groves, Mo. sophomore, are engaged in a project known as "Radio Production Center" (RPC). The three students spend from five to 15 hours a week producing, directly, writing, announcing and distributing recorded programs to radio stations. The tabs snap together under the tie knot giving you the crisp, clean "savoir faire" look. Try Tabber Snap for a change of pace in striped oxford white and colors. Faculty adviser is Donald Hansen, instructor in the radio and television department of the School of Journalism. Mr. Hansen said although the Radio Production Center is a service group, it also is an educational medium, both for those who hear the distributed program and for the students who produce them. New officers are Mike Mason, Omaha, Nebr., senior, president; Edward Hokanson, Shawnee Mission junior, first vice-president; Barbara Thomas, Tulsa, Okla., freshman, second vice-president; Judy McCahill, Alton, Ill., freshman, recording secretary; David Miller, Dodge City graduate, treasurer; Judith Hulse, Ellinwood junior, historian, and Marian Jun, Webster Groves, Mo., sophomore, social chairman. From the "Cum Laude Collection" >ARROW $5.00 The project focuses on interviews with faculty and outstanding international students on the KU campus. Through the People-to-People headquarters in Kansas City, the KU recorded programs may be distributed to some 400 commercial stations in the U.S. and possibly to student groups and schools in other countries. MEN'S DRESS SHIRT ARROW introduces a new tab collar profile --- Give your neckline a lift with the Tabber Snap collar so ingeniously contrived it takes only seconds to adjust the tabs under the tie knot. Smart for college men who want a distinctive collar change and true comfort. See us for a complete Arrow selection of shirts, ties, underwear. CARL'S $5.00 ATTENTION!! Housemothers and House Managers RUGS RUGS CLEANED REPAIRED Attend to Your House cleaning Jobs During Spring Vacation Simply call or come in and we'll give your furniture and rugs a new look UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS REPAIRS - ALTERATIONS - REWEAVING NewYork Cleaners VI 3-0501 926 Mass. Merchants of Good Appearance Delivery Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday.March 26.1962 Action Announces First Party Platform I. INDIVIDUAL MEMBERSHIP Action affirms that student government can function in the best interests of the student community, only if the student political parties are in a manner consistent with their party platforms. In the interest of more responsible student government, Action calls for the ordeal to be organized on the basis of individual membership opposed to the system of block membership. II. STUDENT SEATING PLAN 2500 students signed a petition in the spring semester of 1961 demanding a referendum on the student seating plan. Act one sees students lining up specifically states that if twenty per cent of the body学生 petitions for a referendum, the All Student Council shall set a date for the referendum on three weeks of the receipt of such petition. III. DISCRIMINATORY CLAUSES In order to effectively support the University's anti-discrimination policy, as presupposed by the presupposus housing, Action urges that the All Student Council and the Faculty Senate support the withdrawal of the privilege from student living group which, according to their constitutions and by-laws, discriminates on the antiquated bases of race, color or national origin with exception of those groups primarily religious in purpose. However, we feel that no student living at a school would be a member. This would be just as inconsistent with the standards of a free school, race, color, religion, or national origin. IV. FACULTY SENATE The faculty are the life blood of any University. However, at the University of Kansas the Faculty have little or no importance in important matters of University policy. Therefore, be it resolved, that a bill immediately be introduced in the All Student Council to withdraw University recognition from those student living abroad, to be discriminatory clauses in their constitutions or by-laws by September 1, 1965. V. NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION EVENTS AND PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE Because the Faculty are closer to the students, and therefore are more aware of the trends of student thought, Action Research and the Chancellor grant the Faculty Send the power to set University policy in areas which directly concern the students. Realizing that the United States National Student Association is the only organization for the students of the United States both domestically and internationally, we believe that Associated Students of the University cannot not be denied a voice in this organization. In the area of national and international community are many. Often the accomplishments are few and can only be fulfilment combined efforts of several organizations VI. NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL ISSUES Therefore, while supporting the Current Events Committee and People-to-People, Action urges the All Student Council to urge the associated students of the University of Kansas with the United States National Student Association. There is growing awareness among college students that they cannot divorce themselves from national and international events. The only student organization in Kansas which is authorized to speak for the students is the All Student Council. Action firmly believes that the All Student Council must broaden its vision, discuss important national and international issues, and formulate opinions to be sent to the proper agencies of our country. The Student Council through this direct method can we hope to make our views known on the vital issues which face our society. VII. STUDENT NON-VIOLENT CO-ORDINATING COMMITTEE The Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee is coordinating activities in Alabama and Mississippi to register Negro voters who have been denied their vote. To vote through the use of poll taxes, the misuse of literacy tests, and coercion. It is our duty to guarantee that no nicol- tes United States be denied the right to vote. Action feels that these students deserve our moral and financial support. They may be paid for or for their operating expenses, i.e., traveling rates, bail, lawyer's fees, and doctor bills. Action will conduct a campus-wide contribution campaign in April in behalf of the selected funds will be sent to the Southern Freedom Fund in Philadelphia. VIIL IN LOCO PARENTIS In the absence of a precisely defined relationship between the student and the University, there exists the traditional relationship summarized in the words, in loco parents, in lieu of parents. The theory establishes the University as a pluralistic institute in calling the moral, intellectual, and social standards of the students. Believing that academic freedom and freedom of association are indispensible to the concept of a free university, we oppose the following: - Arbitrary expulsion of students dividualism are necessary to prevent our society from becoming stagnant. Having been informed that the Kansas Union is operated for the benefit of the students, the following questions come to mind: IX. STUDENT UNION - Unnecessary social regulations - Why is it more expensive to eat at the Union than at various privately operated, profit making restaurants near the campus? - Censorship of the campus newspaper In loco parens induces and reinforces cognitive flexibility, whose critical talent and imaginative in- - Why doesn't the Union believe that the campus needs a good 50 cup of coffee. - Why doesn't the Union publish a complete financial statement annually? L. HOUSE COMMITTEE ON UN- AMERICAN ACTIVITIES The practices of the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HCUA) have violated the principles of freedom of access to information and opinion on politics and public policy in society. In actuality investigations by this committee have thwarted the freedoms which they claim to protect and preserve —freedom of speech, of the press, and of Moreover, it has directly and indirectly encroached upon the academic freedom of students, and it has conditioned individuals to an unnecessary fear of controversy and has threatened the vigor of free institutions which our democratic social order depends. This organ of Congress has usurped the legal powers of the Executive and Judiciary, which in the appellation of criminals is a function which properly belongs to the executive branch, specifically to the FBI. The official purpose of apprehending innocence is the function of the courts. - Cease its practice of guilt by association. - Action demands that this committee be thoroughly reformed as follows: - Adopt the Anglo-Saxon tradition of a innocent until proven guilty, not vice versa - Allow each witness to confront his accused through the process of cross-examination. - Quit denying the Constitutional guarantees of the first and fifth amendments, those who hold unpopular opinions, through the method of contempt of Congress. Action urges the ASC to pass a resolution that mandates the forms and that copies of it be sent to our Congressmen, the HCUA, the Attorney General, and the President of the United States. XL. AWS—PEP CLURS Action proposes that, in order for the All Student Council to distribute its limited budget in more academic and intellectually stimulating pursuits, both the Women's Students and the KU Pep Club should be involved from the University and not from the AFS. Action suggests that the funds which the school provides for Pep Club activities be used for an expanded budget for the Current Events National Student Association projects. XII. HUMAN RIGHTS COMMITTEE The Human Rights Committee is finally a functioning committee of the All Student Council. After months of inactivity the team has been prodded into the role of an integral member. Its plan to conduct a scientific poll of the students in relation to their attitudes on discriminatory clauses is certainly a step forward. Action urges that no All Student Council district be without a representative. Action supports the Human Rights Committee and will continue in its support as long as the committee performs all of investigating racial and religious discrimination wherever it exists together with other violations of human rights. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results XIII.LIVING DISTRICTS March 28 — Scott Norton & Mr. Sherra- raden, Salina Pub. Schools, Salina, Kan- International Students: Those students planning to attend the Wichita International Festival on April 6-8 are to register with the Good Patel, 1339 Ohio, Hall A-165. Fare is $165. Transportation will be provided for those students participating in the Festival. Official Bulletin Applications for editorship and business management be filed in office of the Chancellor by April 25. Any University student can apply. Tom Yome, 231 Strong, for details. Teacher Interviews; Applications for Men's Residence Hall Campus, the Dean of Men, 228 Strong. Applications must be returned by March 30. For additional information contact the Dean Men. Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road Confessions; Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11:45-12 noon; Saturdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion & Breakfast: 7 a.m. Canterbury House. **KUOK:** 3-News & Weather; 3:05-Top Five times of stuttopping; 2:15-News & Weather; 6:15-Stutt扑着; 2:15-News; News; 6:25-Spotlight on Science; 6:30- "Bonjou Mdesmades"; 6:45-Public Service program; 7-Countdown; 7-Bonjou Flight. Program; 8-Weather; 10-Night Flight. Stage II: 12-Sion Off. for Mr. Parnell's Lecture. 'Thomas Mann to for Patrick Mulligan, for 6:45 p.m., 205 Flint, because of the death of his son,' wrote Blunt. Psychology Graduate Students: The Psychology Department at 8 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. Chairman of the department, Dr. Anthony Churchman, Director of the Future of the Psychology Department at KU. Official Urges Friendliness An education official in the U.S. State Department said Saturday night that good personal relationships are the important factors in educating the foreign students in U.S. universities. The official, Philip Ireland, chief of American-sponsored Education Institutions Abroad, spoke at the Arab-American Club banquet held at the Plymouth Congregational church. "While they are here, foreign students are impressed most by the people they meet," Mr. Ireland said. "These impressions usually last longer than the impressions they receive in the classroom." HE SAID THAT all Americans must have a sincere desire to extend their friendship to the foreign student. "The United States has been accused of being a very materialistic nation," he said. "It is our responsibility to show the foreign students that accusation is a myth." Mr. Ireland said his institution is doing several things to improve foreign student personal relationships. "WE ARE TRYING to strengthen our foreign student advisory services," he said. "We are also trying to set up a program to insure foreign students of summer jobs. "The typical American university has a program that exists for the American student who has lived here all his life, attended school here and will remain here after graduation." Harnar Auto Supply Keys Duplicated 836 Mass. St. Complete Locksmith Service Day or Night Day Phone VI 3-2362 Vicker's Night Phone VI 3-7576 presents Sid, the Snid Sid's a grimlet, Sid's no toy, Sid's the id of a grown-up boy; A snide idea of the inner you, An ear to tell your troubles to. A Freudian friend to share psychoses, A safety valve for your neuroses. An effigy to stick with pins, A fellow rogue who loves your sins. A head with eyes and feet, no kidney; A ball of fur-a Snid named Sidney. P. S. Sid makes a whimsical "special friend" gift . . . $1.95 each at Vickers Gift Shop 1023 Massachusetts St. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers --to be a colorful character with good taste II How We've balanced our crew of classics with plenty of the unusual. from $4 men's diebolt's wear 843 Mass. Monday, March 26.1962 University Daily Kansan P-T-P Panel Urges Active Arguments Page 5 International students yesterday encouraged the American student ambassadors who will travel in Europe next summer to "speak up for the U.S." in the discussions they will have with European students. The action came in the first of a series of People-to-People sponsored "America from the Outside" discussion groups. The students who spoke at the forum emphasized that American students may be called upon to answer questions about U.S. internal affairs as well as U.S. foreign policies. "There are prejudices of one kind or another in every country," Jost Wehrli, St. Gallen, Switzerland, graduate student, said. "Don't be afraid to fight back. "INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS are not used to a passive argument." Wehrli said. "In fact, we don't like it. Sometimes American students feel that we are angry when we discuss things, but it is just that we sometimes get carried away—we like lively arguments." "Americans swallow propaganda easier than any other people," Mayor said. "You should not be afraid to question and disagree with what anyone tells you." Luis Mayor, Placetas, Cuba, junior, agreed with Wehrli. ALTHOUGH SEVERAL SPECIFIC points were brought out, the segregation question drew most of the attention. Truman Equates Birchers and KKK BUFFALO, N.Y. — (UPI) — "Nothing but the Ku Klux Klan without nightgowns." That is how former President Truman described the John Birch Society. Truman, who receives an honorary doctor of laws degree today from the Jesuit fathers at Canisius college, volunteered an opinion on Birchers but declined to be drawn into the controversy over former Vice President Richard Nixon's "carpetbagger" reference to President Kennedy's visit to California. Truman said he saw no chance of a test ban agreement being reached at the current Geneva negotiations. He also indicated little hope for agreement in the immediate future. "The main difficulty with dealing with the Russians is that they won't tell you the truth," he said. Wehrli said that in many parts of Europe there are few Negroes, and Europeans do not understand the situation in the Southern U.S. "If you tell them you are against segregation." Wehrli said, "They may ask, 'well, why don't you just do away with it?' They are puzzled by what they read about segregation in the U.S. You should know the arguments on both sides—especially the positions some Southern senators have taken on segregation." Mayor said, "Europeans I have met here are sharp. They generally know what is going on in their countries. And even though sometimes the positions of their countries are hard to defend, they can do it. Some Germans I know can defend Germany's position in World War II better than most Americans can explain segregation in the U.S." "We must remember that many Southerners feel they are solving the problem, and slowly overcoming segregation. They resent the federal government interfering with something they believe comes under state's rights. They feel that people from the North don't understand their problems because they haven't lived in the South. CONSTANCE (CONSY) HUNTER, Hutchinson junior, made it clear that she does not defend segregation, but that in the position of student ambassadors, American students will have the responsibility of answering questions about many issues, including segregation. "We need to be prepared to point out the progress we have made, and to explain that there are differing opinions in this country, depending on different localities and educational facilities." Turning to another topic Wehrli said Europeans make a greater differentiation between socialism and communism that many Americans do. "AMERICANS MAY BE ASKED questions about attitudes toward socialism." Wehrli said. "It is important that you know they are not necessarily talking about communism when they speak of socialism. "Try to speak as distinctly as possible," Wehrli said. "We learn English pronunciation. Sometimes it becomes difficult for us to understand Americans from the midwest and the South if they do not speak clearly." Anonymous Bureau in 1948 Arranged Date for 10 Cents By Dorothy Burton Having trouble finding dates? Kansas University students in 1948 did not have this trouble because of the existence of a date bureau set up by an anonymous male student who had the approval of the women's adviser for his undertaking. The rules for assistance from the bureau were simple. Anyone interested was to send his name, address, phone number, age, height, weight, color of hair, dancing ability, make of car if he had one, and a photograph to the Date Bureau and specify the night he wanted a date, and the type of date he desired. A fee of ten cents was charged for each application, which covered the cost of registration. It entitled the applicant to one date. Each additional date through the bureau cost ten cents also. The Date Bureau ended abruptly when the name of the KU founder was published in a local paper. After several weeks of publicity and many requests from the students the bureau was re-opened. The date bureau also offered a CHICKEN DINNER Slaw, French Fries, Roll, Gravy & Pickles $1.25 BIG BUY special service. Anyone wanting a date with a special individual might send in this person's name, address, and phone number, in addition to the information above. This of course was a little more expensive—25 cents for the added service. If you need a date or need money you might consider establishing a date bureau. It could prove to be profitable both ways. Free Pizza Delivery Any Place In Lawrence Ron Tom CAVERNS CHICKEN DINNER VI 3-9640 N 644 Mass. Specialist Is From Boston U. A former Boston University Human Relations Center staff member is the second full-time member of the KU human relations department. He is Richard L. Burke, assistant professor of human relations, a specialist in small group theory and research, organization behavior, social perception and human relations training. Prof. Burke served last year as a special lecturer in psychology at Boston University. time KU human relations professors. Prof. Burke received his A.B. at City College of New York in 1954, his M.A. in 1958 and his Ph.D. from Boston University in January of this year. He and Howard Baumgartel, associate professor of human relations and psychology, are the only full- Prof. Burke was an instructor at Northwestern University in Boston, in the MIT School of Industrial Management and at the Boston University School of Nursing. Prof. Burke, his wife and two children live at 933 Michigan. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Double Edge Razor Blades Finest Surgical Steel, honed in oil. Full money back guarantee. 25 — $30c 100 — $40c 200 — $1.50 500 — $3.30 1000 — $7.75 Postpaid, Packed five blades to package, 20 packages to carton. C.O.D. orders accepted. Postcard brings general merchandise catalog EMBRION COMPANY 406 South Second Alhambra, California Look More Handsome The Sanitone Way!! Smart appearing college men always expect their clothing to complement their natural good looks. That's why we know you'll be pleased when your clothing is cleaned and pressed by the nationally advertised Sanitone process, exclusive at Lawrence Laundry and Sanitone process, exclusive at Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners. Stop in soon!! Or phone for prompt pick-up and delivery. S "Quality Guaranteed" LAWRENCE 10th & N.H. VI 3-3711 launderers and dry cleaners "Specialists in Fabric Care" Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 26.1962 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Jayhawk Relay Teams Establish New Records The University of Kansas two- mile and distance medley relay teams bettered two KU-established American records in the Kansas State invitational indoor relays Sat- sarday. The Jayhawker two-mile relay crew of Bill Thornton, Bill Dotson, Kirk Hagan and Tonni Coane knocked six-tenths of a second off its own American record set a week ago in the Chicago Daily News relays. The Jayhawks' new record is 7:29.2. Thornton, Dotson, Bill Stoddart and Ted Riesinger shaved two-and-six-tenths seconds off the previous American best in the distance medley event set in 1954 by KU. The foursome posted a 9:48.8 effort for the two-and-one-half mile distance. Despite the two record-breaking performances, KU finished second in team scoring. Oklahoma State edged the Jawhawks 15-14. Charlie Hayward, Mike Fulghum, and Ron Swanson gained the other KU first places. Fulghum won the 1,000-yard run in 2:16.6. Swanson jumped 6-6 in a three-way tie in the high jump event for a new meet and field house record. HAYWARD SET A new Ahearn Field House record with a 9:05 time for the two-mile run. The old record was 9:13.4. Larry McCue finished third in the 75-yard dash. Charles Smith placed fourth in the 75-yard low hurdles and Charles Twiss jumped 6-2 in the high jump in a four-way tie for fifth place. Kansas Bowlers Are Second In Big Eight Postal League Four pins separate runnerup KU and first place Missouri in the Big Eight postal bowling league. The latest report reveals Missouri in the top spot with a 27-7 record. The Jayhawker bowlers own a 23-13 mark. KU, which has been in and out of the second and third place slot during the season, has a chance to capture the loop trophy with five matches left in the season. In women's bowling, KU placed eighth in the National Intercollegiate Postal American Ten Pin Tournament for the month of February with 2257 pins. Out of 24 schools in the B division of the program, KU is fifth with 30 points for season play. Oklahoma State Captures Second Straight NCAA Wrestling Title STILLWATER, Okla. — (UPI) — It's difficult to watch Oklahoma State's wrestling team without being impressed. The Cowboys, cheered on by partisan throngs that reached a tournament record 7,500 in the finals, showed speed, skill and poise along with sheer strength and the evidence of excellent coaching in dominating the field. They showed with definite clarity why wrestling tradition at Stillwater runs deep. The fact that Oklahoma State had won the NCAA mat championship again became apparent early in the tournament, which the Cowboys hosted last week. Before Saturday night's finals, Myron Roderick's Roughnecks had formally clinched the team title. But their superiority was obvious from the start. Ed Rakow Pitches A's Past Detroit WEST PALM B E A C H. Fla- (UPI)—Pitcher Ed Rakow allowed only five hits yesterday as Kansas City defeated Detroit 6-2. The A's now 9-6 in exhibition games, did most of their scoring in the second inning, rapping out five hits off loser Don Mossi good for four runs. Jose Azcue and Bobby Del Greco doubled to highlight the action, Azcue's two-bagger driving in a pair of runs. Detroit came back with two runs in the top of the fifth as Steve Boros singled across Al Kaline and Rocky Colavito. Rakow, who walked eight and struck out two, is one of the most effective pitchers in the A's camp this year. He had control troubles, but managed to work out of every jam, except the one in the fifth inning. The winners collected nine hits, two each for Azcue and Rakow. Kaline led the losers with three singles. Finley Moves KC's Spring Training Site NORTH MIAMI, Fla. — (UPI) — Charles O. Finley, president of the Kansas City Athletics, has signed a 10-year agreement to hold spring training here instead of West Palm Beach. Fla. According to the agreement, the city of North Miami will build a 20,000-seat stadium for the A's. OSU, for the record, now has won 23 of the 32 national wrestling championships determined by the NCAA; has taken two in a row and four in the past five years, and for the second straight year, scored a record 82 points. Tournament Play Ends Cage Season Another basketball season went down in the annals of history Saturday night with the finals of the NCAA, NIT and NJCAA tournaments. Remaining on the cage ledgers are tournament finals in the two professional leagues. THE CINCINNATI Bearcats have been trying to live down the name "fluke" for a year. Saturday night they lived it down by crushing the Ohio State Buckeyes, everyone's number one team, 71-59. Last year in the NCAA finals these same two Ohio teams met with Ohio State expected to coast to victory. The Bearcats had different plans and defeated the Bucks in overtime 70-65. The Bearcats were dubbed "flukes" because of their surprise, narrow victory. During the regular season the Bearcats were considered a good team, but were not given a chance of holding their own against Ohio State. PAUL HOGUE, a 6-9, 240 pound center, and Tom Thacker scored 22 and 21 points respectively. The KU Has Its Attractions Overheard, a conversation between a jayhawker and one of the herd of high-schoolers swarming over Mt. Oread last week: "Is that there building the Student Union?" "No." "Which door you go in at to play pool?" JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Kansan Classifieds Get Results Wake Forest eked out a 82-80 triumph over UCLA to take third place honors in the tournament. burly Hogue in addition held "Mr. College Basketball" Jerry Lucas to a mere 11 points. With Lucas potent scoring punch silenced the Buck-eyes attack was stifled. Dayton became a bride at the National Invitational Tournament held at New York's Madison Square Garden. After having been a bridesmaid (tournament runner-up) five times the Flyers finally broke into the winners circle by defeating St. John's 73-67. BILL CHMIELEWSKI, a 6-10, 235 pounder, led the Dayton attack with 24 points. Ken Loughery of St. John's scored 26 points to take the game scoring honors. Coffeyville, Kas., junior college won the National Junior College basketball title at Hutchinson handling Lon Morris of Jacksonville, Tex., with ease, 74-49. VARSITY MOW SHOWING GRANADA MOW SHOWING VARSITY NOW SHOWING! At 7:00 & 9:00 Deborah Kerr In "The Innocents" At 7:00 & 9:10 Leo McCarey's "Satan Never Sleeps" With William Holden Clifton Webb "North By Northwest" SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Alfred Hitchcock's And "The Young Doctors" Starring Ben Gazarrd Kansan Classified Ads Get Results SUMMER JOBS How to get yours! plus Campus Integration . . . Military Deferments . . . Burnett . . Ribicoff . . . Brubeck . . Saroyan. plus News . Books . Records . Careers . Fashions . and more in CAMPUS ILLUSTRATED The New National Magazine for ALL College Students At Newsstands & Bookstores Spring Vacation Special This Week Only 10% off On all parts & labor on any job Tune-ups, Brake Jobs, Alignments, etc. D & G Don Barnett VI 2-0753 Glen Freeman $ \frac{1}{2} $ Block East of Haskell Street on 12th You'll Be Glad You Did!! Organized Houses, Dorms, Fraternities, Sororities Here's an opportunity to keep forever cherished songs of your heart. Recorded in high-fidelity at your house or dormitory. Ask the A D Pi members how they liked their record. Then you'll learn the fun of being a recording singing group. αίpha detta μ επαιδης Century CUSTOM RECORDING Audio House SERVICE HIGH FIDELITY Beautiful customized album . . . or your group may design its own . . . to protect your treasured recordings. Average LP Price----$4.98 —45's about $2.00 (Prices dependent upon number of records purchased) Audio House HIGH FIDELITY Franchised Associate 909 New York VI 3-4916 One d Sure, we still supply dance and party music to make your house or dorm party the swingin'est on the Hill. JOB S see yo Profes first in service "GOO PAPEI sion typing Pope, SECRE Fast, a with VI 2-1 EXPE in my Gehlt TYPII secret report rates. Eldow EXPE theses on ne Fulche EXPE tentio etc. Nrates. FROM typing tive son, MA 2- HAVE punctu major & rep Mrs. ( Exper paper symb Stand VI 2- THES neatly Elect Maria VI 3- TYPI paper able 4409. Typin on ex sell, Experi thesis writer rates. 1648. FORI typev able 0524. PROI those any your 1241. RENT mach rente Sewi EXPI child home piece INVI wove arett repai DREs mals. 9391½ ALT 7551. GEN. Lab. avail comp Free TYPI Office Type 3644. GRA Conn or birds gui pet s GLA prob in 1 at V Two at I Satu coat beig Ham Aero port Frid Brie Monday, March 26,1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Results OBS s! SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS --yan. 1 ... ords . . and One day, $0c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25 Terms cash. All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25e for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the UPS office on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. JUS EDUCATIONINE FOR S stores TYPING JOB SEEKERS: Prospective employers see you thru your letter of application, and can write you to create favorites first impressions. For fast accurate service call VI 3-0483. 4-10 "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- typing at standard rates. Call Miss Louise POpe, VI 3-1097. tf SECRETARY WILL DO TYPING in home Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at VI 2-1749. FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execu- sional Dental Service. 597-7. sson, Mission. HE 2-7718. Eves or Sat, R 2-2168. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mr. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. ts HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former, Eng. teacher for English courses & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3 TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, booklets, Research Reports, Request rates. Electric typewriter, Mrs. Mc-Eldowney, Ph. VI 3-8568. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-9136. Mr. Lloyd Gelbach. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, Vl 3-8373. Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with math and Greek. Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. Call VI 2-1546. Experienced typist would like typing in seasonal or seasonal rates. Call VI 3-2551 any time. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001 THESES. reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist, typewriter Reasonable Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. Calh I-3 0483-8 Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc., on electric typewriter. Mrs. Amos Russell, 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. BUSINESS SERVICES FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Elective course. Just a fuel card required. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th. VI 2-1648. PROFESSIONAL party planning, for those with impeccable tastes. Parties for any occasion, completely arranged, for most impressive party, call VI 3-271241. 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 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. INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re- woven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mation, Cal. VI 5-2833. Smith 939%1. Mass. Cal. VI 5-2833. GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752 Free delivery. ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. LOST TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies. school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 N. Fifth Street, Wilmington, DE. one stop = save time & money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, etc., plus complete supplies. pet supplies. 1f GLASSES with thick light brown rims probably lost near Duck's Restaurant or in 110 Indiana block. Call Jack Vetter at VI 3-8446. 3-26 Two girls's dress coats valued at $200. Left in the room is a white jacket, a blue Saturday night. One camel colored boy coat with Weaver's label. One Van Dyke jacket, a white sweater. Reward. Call Van Hamil at VI S-3770. 5-27 Aeronautical engineering laboratory report in Kansas Union Reading Room. Friday, March 16. Phone VI 3-3254 for Brien Liebst. Reward!! 3-27 FOR SALE White dinner jacket by "After Siz." Size 44. Call VI 3-2551, preferably after 7 p.m. 1959 MGA, red, both tops, wire wheels, radio, heater, running lights, motor just overhaulped. Excellent condition. Call VI 2-1989, 5-7 p.m. 3-27 Used TV. Must sell. See Lain at 1244 La after 5 p.m. 3-27 New heavy retreads $10 each, ex., plus tax for most all small cars: Sizes 560-15, 590-15, 600-13, 640-15, etc. at Ray Stoneback's, 292 Mass. 4-13 '57 Chevrolet: Excellent condition, white TV1-3AQioseo, radio and std. tape. 3-26 3-26 ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch Cali V. 3-8977 e come to 907 Ark. for more information. Gibson guitar — $60 and Ludwig tenor banjo — $30. Both with case. Also 10 watt HI Fi amplifier and 12-in. HI Fi speaker — $35. Call VI 3-1647. 3-27 G.E. Mark. tape recorder. Never used. 1. 3x343, note 2. Call VI 3-0151. 3-26 GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. e-mail delivery. Phone VI 3-7581 VI 3-5778 1956 PLYMOUTH 2. dr, Automatic trans. 1957 PLYMOUTH 3. dr, Automatic trans. 1958 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1959 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1960 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1961 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1962 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1963 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1964 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1965 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1966 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1967 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1968 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1969 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1970 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1971 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1972 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1973 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1974 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1975 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1976 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1977 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1978 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1979 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1980 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1981 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1982 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1983 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1984 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1985 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1986 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1987 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 1988 VI. 3-7593 after 5 p.m. 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Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete phone. 2921. Modern self-service. 3 to 6:30 p.m. week days. tf 1 WEDDING dress. Size 9. Call VI 3-0211 after 5 p.m. 3-26 PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition; formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All notes must be typed on the graphed and bound. Extremely com- prehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call 1-800-1430 for 4:30 p.m. for free de- livery MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent close paper bags. Picnic, party supplies. Plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI .fl 3507. FOUND WANTED Hood to raincoat — 3 scarves — men's and women's gloves — 4 pairs GLASSES — 2 assignment books — 5 sets of keys — 2 boxes. Back Pack Press, The Press & Society, Introduction to Mass Communications, Better Paragraphs) - Jewelry, Claim at 111 Flint. tf PERSON HAVING MRS. AUSTIN'S PURSE: Keep the cash, but please return to the police. Call Lindley or ext. 275. No questions. Need check and papers desperately. 3-27 FOR RENT Overloaded With Unwantables? BOOK LUST Afternoon secretary help wanted. Real estate experience preferred. Give qualification in first letter Mail to Real Estate, University Dailly Kansan, Lawrence, Kansas. 3-29 HELP WANTED Try Kansan Want Ads---- Get Results WANTED. A male student available daily from 2:30-5:00. See Betty, 111 Flint Hall. SUNNY, comfortable, furnished apt. 4 rm, including study rm. & bedroom, private bath, private ent. Large closets, storage space. Call VI 3-1863 or VI 3-3356. Sleeping rm. for rent for men students. Sleeping rm. for rent for men students & refrigerator. 1315 Tenn. VI 3-390. 4-10 4. ROOM, nicely furnished apt. Large, blocks from campus. Private entrance, bathroom. Welcome desk. Laundry privileges. newly decorated, 荣厚ly priced. For boys. Call Viv. 7830 3-26 APT, for 2 or 3 boys, Utilities pl. 1 block sooner, 1142 Indiana 3-30 LARGE FURNISHED apartment, east side, utilities paid. $50. VI Cl 3-6294. LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-973 tt MORE JOBS BETTER PRODUCTS LOWER PRICES Advertising works for you! Sparkling Fresh as the S Signs of Spring ...that's ACME Laundering At Acme, we take special care to clean your clothes and return them sorted and folded right. Call right away for prompt pick-up, or see your route-man. CLEANED AND PRESSED JUST RIGHT Acme Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Downtown VI 3-5155 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 "THAT'S THE WAY I LIKE MY SHIRTS LAUNDERED" Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, March 26, 1963 Ellison Declines— (Continued from page 1) since KU would be the midwest headquarters for the Inter-Campus Relations Committee, the group will need to work year round and will therefore need extra money. He continued saving that as the head of the midwest region of the proposed national confederation of campus political parties, Action will need money to cover the mailing expenses of coordinating the member schools in the midwest area with the national headquarters at the University of Chicago. The Inter-Campus Relations Committee is a proposed group which would act as a coordinating body for information submitted from the different campuses and would distribute these ideas to the other member campuses. HE ADDED THAT even if Action does not receive the ASC's recognition, as a political party, it will need the money to continue its work. After other discussion, the group voted to charge 25c for the membership cards. In commenting on the candidates, Johnson said "The fact that we are running two Greeks (Warner and Ellison) exemplifies that Action is not anti-Greek." (The party had been charged of being anti-Greek by Bruce Bee. ASC Heads (Continued from page 1) Palmer said the Action plank concerning the House Committee or Un-American Activities pointed out an inconsistency. "Action condemns HUAC for usurping its legal powers and its process of determining guilt or innocence which is properly the function of the courts. "YET IN THEIR plank on discriminatory clauses, Action asks the ASC to withdraw university recognition from living groups. Point one, I can't see it as a function of the ASC to withdraw recognition from living groups. This is outside of the legislative powers of the ASC. Point two, they are asking a legislative body to take on the process of determining innocence or guilt. This appears somewhat inconsistent." Mission senior and a former member of the group.) IN FURTHER ACTION, the group elected 27 members to its parliament. The parliament is to be composed of two members from each ASC living district and ten members elected at large by the party's general assembly. Since no members were nominated from the small womens dorms and only one was nominated from the small mens dorms, the full 30 members were not elected. Those elected are; Large Mens Dormitories, Greg Swartz, Overland Park sophomore; and Myron Calhoun, Mildon, Fla., junior; Professional fraternities and co-ops, Jack Klinknett, Kansas City, Mo., fresman and Reynold Gumucio, Kansas City sophomore; Large Womens Dormitories, Sue Church, Atchison senior, and Marsha Dutton, Colby sophomore. Parliament members from other districts are: Fraternities, Don Warner, Topeka junior and Cordell Meeks, Kansas City sophomore; Sororities, Gloria Amershek, Pittsburg sophomore and Jo Anne Holbert, Kansas City sophomore; Freshman Women's Dormitories, Beverly Nicks, Detroit, Mich., freshman and Michele Sue Sears, Kansas City freshman. REPRESENTING un-married and un-organized students are Mike Dunlop, St. Louis, Mo., senior and Arthur Miller, Pittsburg junior; Married, Bruce Wright, Lawrence junior and Larry Laudan, Lawrence graduate student; and Small Mens Dormitories, Steve Long, Mission sophomore. Members elected at large were; Kenneth Ciboski, Lawrence graduate student; Tom Black, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Dave Peck, Wichita freshman; Allan Davis; Walter Bgoya, Tanganyika freshman. Steve James, Lawrence freshman; Bessiefrances Meador, Kansas City freshman; Russell Rogers, McDonald freshman; Franklin Shobe, Great Bend sophomore, and George Bufford, Kansas City junior. These members will compose the parliament until the fall General Assembly elections. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results SPU Speaker Opposes U.S. Nuclear Testing The Midwest field secretary of the Student Peace Union (SPU) said Friday that the United States should take "unilateral initiatives" to end the arms race. Peter Allen, here to organize a KU chapter of the SPU, was speaking at the Minority Opinion Forum in the Kansas Union. He said the United States should not resume nuclear testing, but should instead submit to U.N. inspection on an initially unilateral basis. He said the United States should also withdraw its missile bases around the immediate perimeter of Russia because these bases are indefensible and thus constitute an aggressive force. The bases, he said, are "quite logically taken as a threat" by Russia because they would be destroyed in a surprise attack and are therefore useful only if the United States strikes first. "OUR ARMAMENTS are specifically the thing which strengthens the Stalinist element in Russia," Allen said. Six Juniors Named To Phi Beta Kappa Six juniors at KU have been elected to Phi Beta Kappa, national honor society for liberal arts. Election after five semesters of college work is the highest honor the KU chapter bestows. Each of the six have cumulative grade point averages of 2.81 or better with 2.93 being high. The six will be initiated on May 10 with a larger group from the senior class whose records will be considered next month. The new Phi Beta Kappas are: John Blair, Wichita junior, is majoring in English; Mary Cowell, St. Louis, Mo., junior, is majoring in both art history and history; Gail Eberhardt, Wichita junior, has the triple major of English, history and French; Donald McKillop, Prairie Village junior, is majoring in chemistry; Nadine Prouty, Newton junior, is majoring in English; Martha Sipes, Mission junior, is majoring in Germany in psychology. End of Performing Arts- (Continued from page 1) Still, with very few exceptions, there is strong evidence that serious musicians and other performing artists are not faring well economically. IT HAS BEEN ESTIMATED that the average salary of musicians with the Metropolitan Opera Company is about $8,000 for a 31-week season. But this appears to be the exception rather than the rule. Kenin has cited figures showing that 2,300 musicians in the 24 top-budgeted "serious" music organizations in the U.S. earn about $117 a week for an average season of 27 weeks. He points out also that this figure is bloated somewhat by the so-called "big-five" symphonies—Chicago, Boston, Cleveland, New York, and Philadelphia—where about 500 musicians average $167 a week during the average season. It might also be pointed out that the "big-five" orchestras, along with a few others, account for a large chunk of recordings, which would add to the musicians regular income. But the plight of the serious musician is part of the general woe of the performing arts. Mrs. Helen Thomson, executive secretary of the American Symphony League, reported following a recent survey that the 1,182 orchestras of all sizes in the United States will need $30 million to operate on a break-even basis this year. Income from performances will total about $16 million. The rest will have to come from private philanthropy or various types of public fund drives. THE ECONOMIC SITUATION has inevitably had its effect on the development of new artists and the providing of outlets for them. Abba Bogin, concert pianist and conductor, estimates that of 400 "highly rated" concert pianists Many American artists go abroad to find an opportunity to perform. George London, noted opera and concert singer, recently was quoted as saying that at an opera performance in West Berlin last year, five leading roles were sung in German by Americans. in this country, fewer than 15 are able to sustain themselves wholly by their art. HOWEVER, AS EUROPE'S war-depleted artist ranks are again filled out, there will be fewer opportunities of this type for Americans, Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra at KU, says. Prof. Baustian spent several years studying in Europe. The annual sale of musical recordings is a billion-dollar business and according to the reports of the major recording companies, sales in the "serious" music category have shown the biggest increases in recent years. Concert halls are reporting excellent attendance, and the sale of music and musical instruments is setting all-time highs. Perhaps the most perplexing problem in connection with the financial state of the performing arts is that they are in economic distress while enjoying a popular boom. It is already the concensus of American singers that they must be better than, not just as good as, Europeans to gain such employment. TO CITE ONE EXAMPLE. Ray Kendall, dean of the school of music at the University of Southern California, estimates there are 9 million school children now playing musical instruments as compared to 2.5 million 15 years ago. Only a very small percentage of these children will ever try to forge a career in the performing arts. Whether there will be any artistic institutions in America worthy of their efforts is a question many conscientious Americans have started asking. In an interview before the Forum. Allen said such unilateral initiatives are not proposed as the first step toward complete unilateral disarmament. "What happens after the first steps are taken is open-ended," he said, and added that further action would depend on the reaction of Russia. At the Forum. Allen was asked if Communist China should be admitted to the United Nations. HE REPLIED that Communist China will be admitted no matter what moves the United States makes to block her. "It's just a fact of history," Allen said, "not a question of being for or against admission." Later, Allen described a student demonstration in Washington, D.C., organized by the SPU against the resumption of nuclear testing by the United States. Approximately 7,000 students participated in the demonstration, held on February 16 and 17. ALLEN SAID the students visited more than 20 Congressmen, the State Department, the Pentagon and the White House. They picketed the White House and the Russian embassy. "People really felt as if they had done something there," Allen said. "Everybody felt as though they had made some impact." Duo to Present Concert Tonight Violinist Alan Grishman and pianist Joel Ryce, who make up the Grishman-Ryce Duo, will present a recital at 8 o'clock tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. Grishman has studied with violinists Georges Enesco and Max Rostal and cellist Pablo Casals. Ryce has studied with pianists Rudolf Serkin, Dame Myra Hess, and the late William Kapell. Their program includes "Sonata No. 7 in G, Major, Op. 96" by Beethoven, "Sonata in A Major" by Caesar Franck, and the sonata by Ernest Bloch. Tickets are available for $1.79 at the fine arts office, 4th floor Murphy Hall, until 5 p.m., and at the Murphy Hall box office at 7:30 p.m. Fire Department Puts Out Blaze Near Hashinger Hall The Lawrence Fire Department was called last night at 8:30 to put out a trash fire on the 1500 block of Engel Road in front of Hashinger Hall, the new unoccupied dormitory. The fire department made no damage estimate. The origin of the fire has not been determined. 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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 --- and up the present a right in ith viod Max ls. Ryce Rudolf and the "Sonata by Bee- or" by nata by $1.79 at r Murat at the :30 p.m. artment to put block of winker shinger mityory. dae no of the 1. Daily Kansan Receives National Award The University Daily Kansan today became the first student publication that has ever won the National Brotherhood Mass Media award for editorials. The award, made by the National Conference of Christians and Jews, is normally presented to commercial newspapers. THE GOLD MEDALLION was awarded the Kansan for editorials on discrimination "which achieved their goal of enlightenment and correction," states the citation. Melvin Mencher, assistant professor of journalism, accepted the award for the Kansan today in New York. Prof. Mencher was faculty adviser to the Kansan during the period for which the award was granted. The Minneapolis Star and Tribum received the citation—for editorial which helped to defeat a discriminatory bill in the legislature—the last time it was given in 1960. An award for editorials was not made in 196 because there was no suitable recipient. This year the Minneapolis paper ranked behind the Kansan by winning a recognition certificate for editorials. Broadcasting Company won an award for a radio program on civil rights and the Columbia Broadcasting System won the award in the network television category for its program "CBS Reports." This year the Reporter magazine the Cincinnati Enquirer and the Long Island Press were among printed media to receive awards in other categories. The Nation' SOME PREVIOUS winners of Brotherhood awards are the Christian Science Monitor, Look magazine, Redbook magazine, the New York Journal-American and the Cleveland Press. The awards are given each year for "outstanding contributions to good human relations." Prof. Mencher relayed the acceptance of the award by Ron Gallagher, Fort Scott senior and managing editor of the Kansan, Galagher's statement said: "We are honored at this recognition of the Kansan's continued concern for all members of its community. As these awards are also made for professional excellence, we are especially proud that a student newspaper was able to win in competition with commercial newspapers. "THE KANSAN has long subscribed to the idea that community progress comes not through self-praise but through self-criticism. "The worthy deeds of members of the community should not go unrecognized. But neither should the weaknesses of the community go unreported. "The Kansan belongs to every one of its readers, and it has always felt that the right of the minority is just as important as the right of the majority. "In reporting the news and writing editorials reflecting this concern the Kansan has attempted to act maturely and responsibly in its community. We are honored that the national Conference of Christians and Jews recognized the Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No.111 (Continued on page 8) Tuesday, March 27, 1962 KU May Become First College To Join Co-Op Peace Corps KU probably will become the first American university to officially participate in joint Peace Corps projects will work directly under local school authorities." Thomas Gale, assistant professor of history, said this yesterday when he outlined a program of cooperative education between Costa Rica and KU. Under the program, 35 graduate students will go to Costa Rica under a two-year plan to help teach in Costa Rican schools. Gale said the students will serve in schools outside the large cities and that rural schools are badly in need of good educators. "IT IS NOT OFFICIAL YET," said Prof. Gale who just returned from Costa Rica to explore the possibilities of the joint venture. "Contracts must be signed before the University can plan specific details of the program or recruit applicants. An exchange of diplomatic notes between the Central American country and the United States must also be made. "Our objective is to increase mutual understanding between the two countries," said Prof. Gale. "Costa Rica's ministry of education and other government officials agreed that we might try to work out something on the secondary education level." "THE COUNTRY'S (COSTA Rica) educational level is high, as it should be, and the Peace Corps will have no authority over Costa Ricans in any project there. All volunteers Prof. Gale said that the Costa Rican people were very sensitive about their education level and proud of it but that "They feel they might be able to improve their educational resources through a cooperative program..." Prof. Gale said that initial preparations to set the program up will be made before May 15. Costa Rica, about 4,000 miles from KU, is deep in the tropics of Central America. It's chief product is coffee. Costa Rica's main problem is a rapidly increasing population. Costa Rica has one of the highest population [Picture of a man in a suit] Prof. Thomas Gale growth rates in the world-four per cent. At this ratio, the country's population doubles every 25 years. PROF. GALE SAID THAT about 35 persons will form the nucleus of the education team and that they will serve in schools outside the large cities. He said that rural schools are badly in need of good educators. Prof. Gale said, "We want someone who has a good background in Spanish with a college degree. And for those who wish to teach a science they should have a major, or at least a minor, in that science." He said that biological and physical sciences would be stressed. In addition to teaching English and the basic sciences, the Peace Corps members who participate in the project will take part in counseling and guidance, Gale said. They will concern themselves with finding out the backgrounds of the student, why he drops out, encourage him to continue his education, etc. PROF. GALE SAID THAT Costa Rica was changing governments soon and that both the old and new government had assured him that they welcome the project. He said that R. Sargent Shriver, Peace Corps head, is interested in the possibility of "continued education." This means that the University will be able to provide supervision in formal and informal ways after the project has been dropped from Peace Corps direction. Prof. Gale said that the University has carried on a "junior year exchange program" for the past three years and that 35 students have traveled and studied in Costa Rica under the program. "Everybody is aware of our programs there," Prof. Gale said. "They are friendly towards Kansans and I imagine everyone knows of KU." He said, "Kansas is perhaps the best known part of the United States in Costa Rica." Alumni Head to Coach CU Football DENVER. Colo. — (UPI) — The University of Colorado regents today named as head football coach William E. (Bud) Davis, a man who had never before coached a college team, and charted a course for the good graces of the NCAA. Davis, 33, current CU alumni director and a former highly successful high school coach, was a dark horse candidate selected after a faculty committee responsible for a recommendation to the regents ran up against opposition to the top contender, CU end coach Bob Ghilotti. The opposition stemmed from the belief that all assistants of head coach Everett (Sonny) Grandelius, fired by the Regents March 17 for alleged recruiting violations, should take the rap with him. The letter said the players had BUT THE DECISION was expected to draw strong reaction from the football team, 39 members of which called Davis an "unqualified handshaker" in an open letter to the Regents Monday night. The Regents took the action on a 5-1 vote—the same vote by which they fired Grandelius, but the lone vote was cast by a different Regent today. Regent Fred Bromley of Denver, lone member of the board to vote against firing Grandelius, voted with the majority today to hire Davis. Regent Fred Betz, Jr., of Lamar, cast the negative vote today. He said he did not believe in the de-emphasis of football at CU, and that Ghilotti was the best man for the job. nothing against Davis personally, but that Ghilotti would make a vastly better coach. Newton said Davis had not agreed to accept the choice and wanted two CU PRESIDENT Quigg Newton said the entire Colorado football program would be "thoroughly reviewed" after the 1962 season. Colorado is expected to draw a stiff penalty this spring from the NCAA for alleged recruiting violations. It was these charges which led to Grandelius' firing. Newton said the new coach would have a one-year contract, and would be free to select his own assistants subject to approval by athletic director Harry Carlson. or three days in which to make his decision. The CU President said Davis told him he had never been a candidate for the job. THE REGENTS' action was in the form of approval of a report by the faculty senate's athletic committee, headed by music professor Storm Bull. The committee said Davis was "a man of high ability, intelligence and integrity...(who) has had a successful career as a high school coach and a sound conception of football in relation to the academic program." Neither Davis or Ghiliotti attended the meeting, but four football players did, including captain Ken Blair. Bill Frank, another player, interrupted Newton at one point in the meeting and asked him to read the telegraphed "open letter" which an estimated 40 to 50 players dispatched to the board Monday night. Action Answers Critics' Charges Harold Johnson, Ft. Leavenworth senior, and one of Action's cabinet members, said, "The objections that the other parties seem to have to the platform of Action are not disagreements with the issues we represent. Rather, they are attempts to make Action appear weak and worthless. Let me say, to the contrary, Action is much stronger than they anticipate and they should expect competition. Action party leaders met in a closed session last night and decided that they had been "quiet long enough" and issued answers to "accusations" so students will know what is "really going on under all the mud-slinging." "WE DID NOT expect the members of student government to agree with us that they are ineffective. But we did expect constructive criticism and not a battle of personalities." In answer to charges that Action is run by a few individuals, the party's leaders said: "Action's constitution and platform were changed markedly by the party's general assembly, indicating that Action is not controlled by a few members." Regent Says No To Wichita Plan HAYS-(UPI)-The Chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents yesterday punctured attempts to make Wichita University a state school. Clyde Reed Jr., head of the Regents and publisher of the Parsons Sun, said there was "no conceivable or plausible need for another state university." Reed made the statement before the Wooster Scholarship Endowment Fund dinner at Fort Hays State College. He said, "Kansas has no need for another state university, and moreover, it cannot support another such university within its present resources." Referring to attempts to get the 1961 legislature to annex Wichita University into the state system, Reed said the 1963 legislature is certain to be confronted with the same issue. "It is most unfortunate there are those who see this subject only in the light of a civic promotion, and now are beating the publicity drums accordingly," he said Gov. Anderson said he believes Reed actually is for Wichita's entrance into the state system, and said he thinks he and Reed basically agree that it should not be brought in as a university. "I'll support a plan to bring it into the state system at the next legislature," Gov. Anderson said. "I believe it will be a step forward in the higher education program in the state, and ultimately it will mean economy to the state." Concerning a Vox party member's charge that the ASC is not concerned with withdrawing University recognition from living groups because of discriminatory clauses, the leaders said; "Jerry Palmer is urged to read the All Student Council bill seven, section one which says, "The All Student Council shall not support either in name or finances, any student function or organization which permits discrimination against any student because of race, color or creed." COMMENTING ON the statement by Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior and ASC chairman, that administrative regulations on speakers were not practiced, Action said: Johnson said valid criticisms of Action seem hard to come by and that the others parties are picking at little technicalities in order to discredit the party. "Mr. Edward Shaw of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee was not allowed to speak in classes when he appeared at KU in the spring of 1961. This constituted University regulation of a controversial speaker." The party's statement concerning criticism of ASC for not taking a stand on national issues said, "KU students, as citizens of the United States, are involved in foreign affairs as is the country itself. Therefore, students should involve themselves as deeply as possible in issues of this nature." The leaders attending the Action meeting decided that their purpose for having Action in student government had become lost "in all the mud that has come from the other parties." \* \* \* Nolen Ellison last night reversed his decision to run for ASC representative as an independent and accepted the Action party nomination which he had previously declined. Ellison Accepts Action Nomination In a prepared statement Ellison gave his reasons for finally accepting Action's nomination. He said: "I was forced to make a premature decision yesterday because I was not able to attend the Action nominations meeting Sunday and because I was uncertain about the issues involved. "It had been my impression that the Action discriminatory clause plank would force integration on fraternities and sororites. Now I feel that the Action party stand on discriminatory clauses is consistent with my own views. That is, the Action platform is opposed to forced integration...but is also opposed to discriminatory clauses. "I also firmly believe that the leaders of Action are neither anti-Greek nor unrealistic in their approach to discriminatory issues. "I do endorse the platform of Action in its entirety and think this will clarify my views and allow me to take a definite stand on what I believe and what I don't believe." Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 27.1962 The Student Peace Union Tonight an organizational meeting will be held by a representative of the Student Peace Union (SPU). The SPU is a young and growing organization that wants an end to the arms race and the growth of militarism. It suggests no quick or radical solutions and recognizes that there is no simple solution. Its statement of purpose reads as follows: "The Student Peace Union is an organization of young people who believe that war can no longer be successfully used to settle international disputes and that neither human freedom nor the human race itself can endure in a world committed to militarism. "Without committing any member to a precise statement of policy, the SPU draws together young people for a study of alternatives to war and engages in education and action to end the present arms race. The SPU works toward a society which will insure both peace and freedom and which will suffer no individual or group to be exploited by another. After years of bad faith shown by both East and West in disarmament negotiations, the Student Peace Union believes that to be effective any peace movement must act independently of the existing power blocs and must seek new and creative means of achieving a free and peaceful society." THE GENERAL statement is one few people would disagree with. A program statement adopted at the 1961 National Convention of the SPU gives a more specific idea of what the SPU works for and the people who compose it. That program proposes limited unilateral steps toward disarmament, but emphasizes that such steps would be such that they would not constitute a crippling effect on U.S.military capacity. The steps would be taken one at a time and each successive step would depend on reciprocal action on previous steps by the Soviet Union. Such first steps as ending the production and testing of nuclear and biological weapons (under U.N. supervision) and the withdrawal of military bases from one or two foreign countries are suggested. At the same time, multilateral negotiations would be initiated. NO INDIVIDUAL chapter of SPU has to accept the 1961 program as its policy. Each chapter (and member) is required only to agree with the statement of purpose. The program is provided for information and to promote discussion. The SPU is growing rapidly. This is an encouraging development, for it shows that students are becoming interested enough in the important issues of the nuclear age to join responsible movements such as SPU and contribute what they can to the solution of these issues. The SPU's literature clearly indicates that its members realize the issue of disarmament is a complex one. Their statements touching on the military, economic and social problems of disarmament are evidence of this. In terms of specific action on the question of disarmament, the nature of SPU necessarily makes it a pressure group. There is nothing inherently wrong or unusual in this. Farmers, the American Medical Association, labor unions and many other groups function as pressure groups to further their own ends. All of them have a right to present information and opinion to government officials and to conduct whatever nonviolent demonstrations they wish to organize. THE SPU'S FUNCTION as a pressure group can be misused. This is one of the dangers of giving the local chapters autonomous status. But as a whole, SPU has indicated that it realizes the complicated realities of the arms race and is devoted to responsible action by its members. Considered overall, the SPU is a positive development. Its actions and policies have been lawful and conducted in a responsible fashion. Provided it recognizes the various pressures operating on the leaders of the countries involved in the arms race, it can serve as a constructive and sane element in the often emotional and irrational controversy surrounding the disarmament issue. —William H. Mullins The Brotherhood Award The National Brotherhood Mass Media award for editorials the National Conference of Christians and Jews presented to the Kansan today is both recognition of the efforts of the Kansan staff and a tribute to the entire University. THE KANSAN is a student newspaper. It is owned by the students of the University and could not long exist without their support. As a student owned paper the Kansan owes its existence to the University administration, as do all similarly constituted organizations. Thus the award that the Kansan has won reflects credit not only on those who are and have been actively engaged in its operation but also upon the student owners and the administration which have allowed it to do its job. It has not always been easy for either the administration or the students to support the Kansan. The Kansan has taken positions that have been opposed to both administration policy and the thinking of a majority of students. Some Kansan opinions have even brought criticism from outside the University. YET, THE STUDENT OWNERS and the University responsible for the Kansan's existence have always allowed the Kansan the right to express these opinions. There is no doubt that a free and independent student newspaper can exist only where there is a university administration and student body that is strong enough to guarantee its operation. The history of the free press reveals that it has only been able to exist in an atmosphere where those with the power to control its existence have had the strength not to exert it. There have been threats to the Kansan's continued operation as a completely free and independent newspaper. Some individuals, who contend that the Kansan is "irresponsible," have attempted to pressure those who can control the Kansan into using this control to effect certain changes. These individuals invariably refer to the Kansan as "irresponsible." Is it possible that what they are really trying to say is that they do not agree with the Kansan? It seems that one man's "irresponsibility" is another's Brotherhood award. THOSE NEWSPAPERS that attempt to do their job in their communities know well the same pressures that the Kansan has experienced from time to time. There is always the subscriber who cancels his subscription in disagreement with the paper's policy or the advertiser who threatens to discontinue advertising. Yet these papers continue in the job that they think important without yielding to those who bring pressure. For yielding would end the paper's free and independent policy and make it a tool of those outside pressures. The Kansan won this award, in competition with the best commercial newspapers in the country, for daring to discuss problems that many would rather have left unmentioned. Since the Kansan began commenting on discrimination at KU we have noted that conditions, which were at that time comparatively good, have become better until today KU students are more tolerant than ever before. BUT THE DISCRIMINATION problem still exists at KU. It is a problem that has met its solution in only a few places. Thus discrimination shall continue to be a subject for Kansan editorial comment until that day when equality of the races will be a fact rather than an ideal. The Kansan is proud of this Brotherhood award and it hopes that its student owners and the University administration share this pride. This accomplishment is proof of the merits of a truly free university. —Ron Gallagher LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler BOLLER P.27 "I HAVE TWO BOOKS FOR MY COURSE. I GET ALL MY LECTURES FROM TH' BEST ONE...TH' LOUSY ONE IS MY REQUIRED TEXT." Memo to Peace Groups To begin with, the peace movement in America has become a reality and is gathering momentum. For the first time since Pearl Harbor, peace-oriented periodicals are burgeoning, increasing numbers of scholarly articles on disarmament are appearing, letters to editors are no longer dominated by professional patriots, ad hoc pressure groups are springing up, and even the allegedly apathetic college generation has been able to mobilize a massive demonstration in Washington. Second, the peace movement is no longer the exclusive domain of pacifists, that is, of people who see only the moral issues of violence and refuse to establish a common ground for discussion with any who do not share their ethical conviction. Nor is the peace movement dominated by an "America is always wrong" attitude. There is in it sufficient political sophistication to dismiss the simplistic idea that either power is primarily to blame for the arms race. There is, in short, an increasing understanding of the inherent dynamics of the present impasse. IN THESE two factors—a spontaneous growth on the grass-roots level and a respectable measure of political sophistication — lies the strength of the present peace movement. In the days to come, it will be important to use that strength wisely. The "inherent dynamics" of the present impasse can be understood and intellectually accepted by anyone who is reasonably well informed and reasonably free from hate-blindness. We live in an international system pervaded by scarcities, real or apparent. scarcity of resources, of territory, of prestige and, above all, of security. Moreover, we live in a climate of ideas in which all these tangibles and intangibles are implicitly believed to be "conservative quantities." That is, one nation's gains are interpreted as another's losses. As the adversary increases, or seems to increase, his security (having no basis for it but relative power), our security seems to decrease, and vice versa. IT IS NECESSARY to understand this situation in order to appreciate the decision maker's predicament. The decision maker believes that he is tightly constrained to the vicious circle of threats and distrust. To put it concretely, the peace workers must realize that neither Kennedy nor Khrushchev is a warmonger or a fool. Each is largely a victim of perpetuated illusions (i.e., convictions of the other's inherent ruthlessness and duplicity). These illusions have become realities by virtue of the fact that each sides actions (which are overt and demonstrable) are motivated and dominated by these illusions and corroborate the illusions. The effects are reciprocal. The peace worker must give expression to his awareness of this situation. As long as the national policy maker sees the peace worker as either blind to the constraints under which the policy maker must operate or in uncompromising opposition to the demands placed upon him, the policy maker has little choice but to dismiss the peace worker as naive or as dangerous. (excerpted from the March 24 Nation) Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904. triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 11, news room 0560-249-8960 Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Mullins...Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache ... Business Manager Tuesday, March 27, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Around the Campus Coffee Hour To Open Debate Teams Return Boydeli Exhibition With 3 Wins, 3 Losses The Museum of Art will sponsor an informal coffee from 4 to 4:45 p.m. on Wednesday at the official opening of the Boydell Shakespeare Gallery. The exhibition will be composed of a series of prints depicting the dramatic works of Shakespeare. Law Library Group To Meet Here in April The Southwestern Chapter of the American Association of Law Libraries will hold its fifth annual meeting here on April 6 and 7. Representatives from eight surrounding states are expected to attend the meeting. People-to-People will sponsor a meeting for out-of-state students at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union. Employment Meeting Scheduled by P-T-P The purpose of the meeting is to enlist the help of out-of-state students during the spring vacation in the P-t-P summer employment program for foreign students. Pamphlets on the P-t-P program will be available, and summer employment forms for foreign students will be handed out to aid in securing summer jobs for International students. Positions Open On Jayhawker Staff Applications from students for the positions of editor and business manager of the 1962-63 Jayhawker will be received through April 25. The application should include one letter from the applicant outlining his qualifications, and three letters of recommendation including one from a faculty member and one tion from Tom Yoe, faculty adviser cants may obtain further information from Tom Yoe, faculty adviser to the Jayhawker. Peace Union to Meet An organizational meeting for a University of Kansas chapter of the Student Peace Union will be held at 7:30 tonight in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Larry Laudan, Lawrence graduate student, said that about 35 KU students had indicated interest in a KU chapter of the SPU. ASC Meeting Set Tonight A proposed constitutional amendment—defining the selection of the All Student Council chairman—will be the principal piece of legislation to be discussed at the regular ASC meeting at 7 o'clock tonight. The amendment, presented at the last meeting by Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission sophomore, would require that the chairman be a current council member. At present it is legal to elect a chairman whose term on the council will expire during his tenure as chairman. A counter proposal is expected to back this ruling. ANOTHER MAJOR piece of legislation is expected to be tabled. A proposed change in the secretarial bill to establish an executive secretary on salary and change the structure of the secretarial area of the ASC, was presented by Ron Gallagher, Fort Scott senior, last meeting. Gallagher has said he will probably table the motion in order to have more time to investigate the financing of the executive secretary position. The only other carry-over legislation is a request by Dean Salter, Garden City junior, that $100 be appropriated to the Peace Corps committee of the ASC for operating expenses. The request has been in the finance committee for discussion under an ASC rule about appropriations over $50. A report by the publications committee, requested at the last meeting, is also expected to be presented. Two debate teams which attended the Missouri Valley Forensic League Tournament at Austin, Tex., on Friday and Saturday both finished with three wins and three losses. Dean Salter, Garden City junior, took second place in extemporaneous speaking and Ralph Tremain, Salina sophomore, placed third in oratory. The teams were composed of Joy Bullis, Davenport, Iowa, freshman, and Tremain; John Stuckey, Pittsburg sophomore, and Salter. Color Photography Speech Set Tonight "Why Shoot Negative Color Film" will be the title of a public speech to be given by a professional color film processor at a meeting of Kappa Alpha Mu at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. The speaker will be Roland Jeanneret of Kansas City, Mo., who owns and manages a color film processing company. Annual Fashion Show To Be Given Tonight The annual fashion show sponsored by the University Women's and Newcomer's Clubs will be held at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. A wedding party featuring Lois Ann Ragsdale, Kansas City senior, and Kay Cash, Fairview Park, Ohio, sophomore, will highlight the evening. Proceeds will go for a scholarship for a Kansas woman. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results Applications for the nine SUA Board Chairmen are available in the Union. The applications must be returned by March 30. Jack Fiscus* says... All Premium Payments Are Refunded as an Extra Benefit if death occurs within 20 years after you take out The Benefactor, College Life's famous policy, designed expressly for college men and sold exclusively to college men because college men are preferred risks. Let me tell you about all 9 big Benefactor benefits. No obligation. Just give me a ring. $ \textcircled{9} $ *JACK FISCUS P. O. Box 272 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Vlking 2-3206 Area Director representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA ... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men / / / / / / BOX STORAGE is less expensive this year at Acme! Let Acme Laundry clean and store your winter clothes this year. You can store 25-30 items in cold storage until next Fall for only $3.95 This low price includes free moth proofing and $200 insurance. Save the wear and tear on yourself and your clothes by leaving your winter items in Lawrence. SAVE Acme guarantees quality Acme LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Downtown VI 3-5155 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0995 131602149644 C.I. University Daily Kansan Page 4 AWS to Select Senate Officers Associated Women Students (AWS) Senate elections will be tomorrow from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Polling booths will be in Strong Hall, Murphy Hall, Fraser Hall and the Kansas Union. All women students including seniors are eligible to vote in the elections by showing their identification cards. Seven women will be elected for the positions of president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, All Student Council (ASC) Greek representative, ASC Independent representative and Cwen adviser. Runners-up in the elections will serve on the AWS Senate and act as chairmen of AWS committees. Those running for AWS Senate offices are: President—Juniors; Susan Callen- der, Bonner Springs; Marilyn Mueller, St. Louis, Mo., and Sharon Saylor, Morrill. Vice President — Juniors: Constance Fry, Prairie Village; George Ann Porter, Kansas City; Joanne Stover, Colby and Kay Timberlake, Leawood. Secretary—Freshmen: Sydnie Bowling, Garden City; Susan Gerlash, Tarkio, Mo.; Mary Hughes, Des Moines, Iowa; Karen Indall, Ottawa; and Sharon Menasco, Wichita. Treasurer—Priscilla Camp, Lawrence junior; Patricia Kendall, Holton sophomore; Jeanne Maxwell. Mission sophomore; Diane Mullane, Oklahoma City, Okla., junior, and Patricia Zogelman, Norwich sophomore. ASC Greek representative—Hilda Gibson, Lawrence sophomore; Leslie Hagood, Prairie Village sophomore; Susan Hardisty, Salina junior; Ann Lefler, Pittsburg sophomore, and Martha Parmley, Wichita sophomore. ASC Independent representative—Kathleen Baysinger, Kansas City sophomore; Jane Breckenridge, Louisburg freshman; Joan Fowler, Shawnee Mission freshman, and Judith Gottberg, Hoisington freshman. Tuesday, March 27, 1962 Cwen Adviser—Sophomores; Betty Dwyer, Wichita; Barbara Edwards, Leavenworth; Donna Gould, Kansas City; Karen McCarty, Wichita; and Wendy Wilkerson, Wichita. Official Bulletin Teacher Interviews: March 28 -- Norton & Mr. Sherra- raden, Salma Public Schools, Salina, Applications for editorship and business management will be filed in office of the Chancellor by April 25. Any University student can ap- praise Tom Yoe, 231 Strong, for details. Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 a.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Abbey Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11:45-12 noon; Saturdays, 4-5 & 8-9 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. TODAY Prof. Martin's Lecture, "Thomas Mann o Bertolt Brecht," has been rescheduled or 6:45 p.m., 205 Flint, because of the maniatures. Psychology Graduate Students: The Psychology Department at 8 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas University Chairman of the department, Dr. Anthony Smith, will speak on the future of the Psychology School. Quill Club: 8 p.m. Kansas Union. Room 106. Bring manuscript on the bulletin board. Bring manuscript. African Student Fund Drive Started Wesley Foundation has launched a campaign to provide funds for an African student to study at KU. Don Warner, Topeka junior and past-president of the Methodist group, said the foundation is attempting to contact 1800 Methodist preference students to ask them to donate $1. The funds will provide the tuition, room, and books for the student. A letter from the foundation states that the need for such programs at American Universities is especially accented by Communist countries' large scale activity in these programs. The letter says that many of the African students who attend Communist universities would rather attend colleges in the United States. The Methodist Board of Missions has arranged to pay transportation Warner said that Methodist students in all living groups on campus should be contacted in the next week. He set a deadline on the contributions as April 13. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Arnold Says U.S. Must Produce More Thurman W. Arnold, former assistant attorney general of the United States, said at the annual Law Day speech that until American businessmen adopt the practice of balancing the fiscal budget America will continue to face a dark economic future. Arnold presented this cure for America's economic ills at the Judge Nelson Timothy Stephens Lectureship which is presented twice every seven years at Law Day. The lectureship was founded by a gift of the late Kate Stephens, KU alumna, in memory of her father, pioneer Lawrence attorney and judge, and a founder of the KU Law School. ARNOLD SAID, "By balancing the fiscal budget I mean taking appraisal of our ability to produce. Russia regards wealth as production capacity, while the United States regards wealth as money." As a result, Russia will outproduce the United States in 20 years if she keeps up her present rate of growth." He suggested that instead of placing so much emphasis on wealth the United States should plan for the use of, for example, the farm surplus. Arnold advocated placing a goal for agricultural products, instead of continually restricting production. Arnold said "Russia progressed and grew strong because she placed emphasis on production!" He said Russia's establishment and maintenance of planned production goals was "the only good idea that came out of the Russian revolution." He suggested that the United States could progress as Russia had Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals if she would place more emphasis on production, instead of such emphasis on money. Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER men recommend it to other men Old Spice OLD SPICE WITH SMALL GOLIOTY Cool, clean Old Spice After Shave Lotion always gets you off to a fast, smooth start. Feels just as good between shaves as it does after shaving. Rates A-OK with dates. 1.25 and 2.00 plus tax. Awards were presented to: The annual KU Law Day was Saturday. The day featured, as well as Arnold's lecture, an address by James K. Logan, dean of law, on leave this year at Harvard; a Moot Court competition, and the presentation of awards honoring law students for outstanding work. Old Spice S H U L T O N Moot court team; Graham McIntyre and Wetzel. Marysville second-year student. AFTER SHAVE LOTION Individual winners of the Moot Court competition: Graham McIntyre, Livonia, second year student, first place. Robert, Meekes, second and fourth-year student, second place. McIntyre, Wetzel and Meeker will present in international Mourt Court Competition next year. Donald Loudon, Kansas City third-year warrence third-year student. Order of the Loudon and Maier also were awarded the C. C. Stewart award of $100 for the second student and leader from the second-year class. The award was divided between the two groups. Louden also received the Lawyers Title Award for outstanding senior in property law outstanding senior in property law Sallina second-year student; Burdick idea outstanding first-year student for 1960-61. Robert C. Crawford, Sallina second-year student; Petelich and Posthaw award of $105. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Mrs. Lowen Leaves Greece ATHENS — (UPI) — Mrs. Esther Lowen, 55, of Chanute, Kans., left for home yesterday after visiting her son, Roger Ranney, who is under death sentence on charges of killing two Greek seamen. Mrs. Lowen, who will make a stopover in Rome, then fly direct to New York, told airport reporters she is sure Ranney is innocent and believes justice will be done. ] Last year in Moscow, Khrushnev spelled out his master plan in no uncertain terms. But what is Kennedy's strategy? In this week's Post, in an authoritative article based on talks with the President and his chief advisers, Stewart Allsop reports on Kennedy's long-range thinking. And tells how such crises and Cuba, Vietnam and Berlin shaped the President's views, Kennedy outlines his cold war strategy The Saturday Evening POST SOURCES FOR POST MARCH 31 ON SALE bathroom shelfmaker WeaverS TOILET STORAGE SHELVES P Ei T perfect for Stouffer Place - solves storage problems - uses no extra floor space! $998 satin black finish "T frier Pro stay Mos $14.98 all-chrome or all-brass A clever answer to space shortages—designed to use wall space that usually goes to waste. Poles extend from 3 ft. 3 in. to 9 ft. 3 in. Includes 3 shelves and non-tarnish towel ring—all adjustable. Goes up in minutes, easy to disassemble into compact size for moving. Weaver's Home Furnishings - Third Floor H rent hou buil plai new Tuesday, March 27, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Prof. Describes Eight-Day Trip To Soviet Union An associate professor of physiology at KU who spent eight days in Moscow last August said yesterday that the Russian way of life is not as depraved as Americans seem to think. Frederick Samson spoke on "Eight Ebusy Days in Moscow" and showed picture slides to about 30 members of the Faculty Club. PROF. SAMSON ATTENDED the 5th International Biochemistry Congress in Moscow last August. The Congress lasted seven days but Prof. Samson spent eight days in the Russian city observing the Russian way of life. While in Moscow Prof. Samson stayed in the Ukraine Hotel, one of Moscow's most elegant hotels. "The people were always very friendly and pleasant in the hotel," Prof. Samson said. Prof. Samson said that from his hotel room he could look out over the city of Moscow. He pointed out and showed in the slides that the large buildings of Moscow are built different than those in America. "They are more uniform. There were no towering skyscrapers like you see in America," he said. HE SAID THAT Moscow is currently engaged in building a new housing development. "They are building 90,000 flats a year," he explained. He described "flats" as being new apartment houses. Prof. Samson said that one of the things that impressed him most during his stay in the Communist city was the stylish look the subways had "There is no comparison between these subways and the ones in America." he said. PROF. SAMSON SPENT several days at the University of Moscow. He said he was surprised the way the classrooms were built. "I thought I would see a very utilitarian type of classroom, but I was surprised. The rooms had high ceilings and it was not as elegant as I expected." Prof. Samson visited the tomb of Lenin and, at that time, Stalin. He said he was impressed by the way the bodies were so well preserved. Prof. Samson said he spent two hours one day standing in one of Moscow's busiest squares scrutinizing the people as they walked by. "I found that the Russian people dressed and looked much like the Americans." he stated. EXPERT AUTO REPAIR Mignot & Sawyer Garage 620 Mass. Tune Up for Spring at Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Auto Wrecking & Junk New & Used Parts and Tires KU students want the United States to continue atmospheric nuclear testing but also want gradual total disarmament. These are the opinions indicated in the latest sampling by the KU Young Republican sponsored Student Opinion Poll Group. The poll was conducted Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of last week. East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 Students Favor Testing, Disarming Dead Cats, Food Don't Mix WOODLAND. Calif.—(UPI)—A sympathetic City Council said it would help a businessman who asked that the street name be changed where he plans to open a food market. The street now is known as "Dead Cat Alley." Tub of Chicken 15 pieces, 5 hot rolls $3.50 BIG BUY Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers THE THREE QUESTIONS AND sets of answers are: - "Do you believe that the United States should continue atmospheric testing?" - Of the 142 students polled, 117 answered yes, 17 no and 8 no opinion. - “Are you in favor of gradual total disarmament?” One hundred three answered yes 33 no and 6 no opinion. state of the nations possessing nuclear weapons?" SEVENTY-EIGHT ANSWERED yes. 51 no and 13 no opinion. - "Do you forsee any value in immediate conferences by the heads of The students polled were selected by University IBM machines using a random number selection method to guarantee a random sample. Rav P. Cuzzort, associate professor of sociology and anthropology, checked the questions for accuracy and objectivity. The next poll will be conducted after spring vacation. BIRD TV - RADIO 908 Mass. VI 3-8855 TAPE RECORDERS - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service PETER LENNINGTON "He never gave an inch," says Kennedy Last spring, Kennedy and Krhuschev faced each other for the first time. Says the President grimly "He never gave way at all." In this week's Post, in an authoritative article based on talks with the President and his chief advisers, Stewart Alspo reports on why the meeting was so "somber." Why Kennedy feels the Reds have the "advantage of a dictatorship." And what JFK's own cold-war strategy is. The Saturday Evening POST MARCH 31 ISSUE/NOW ON SALE The Saturday Evening LUCKY STRIKE presents: LUCKY PUFFERS BUCKY STRING "SPRING MADNESS" "O.K., girls. When they reach the third floor, we let go with the fire hose." "You guys go wherever you want. I'm going where the girls are." "When I was a freshman, the seniors won. When I was a sophomore, the seniors won. When I was a junior, the seniors won. Now this." --- CLASS A TOGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE 175 TOGARETTES CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. GO NEAR THE WATER. Spring is the time when students start thinking about water fun. We say: Splash up a storm. Have a lark. But please be careful. Each year, a few careless students get water on their Luckies. Imagine their remorse! Imagine yours if you were to spoil a Lucky-that great cigarette that college students smoke more of than any other regular. So have a swell time at your favorite watering hole this spring. And keep your Luckies dry. CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change! $ \textcircled{c} $ A. T. Co. Product of The American Tobacco-Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. March 27. 1962 Financial Aid Is a Factor in Contemporary Arts By Richard Bonett (This is the second in a three-part series of articles dealing with the financial troubles confronting the performing arts in the United States.) Under present economic conditions, the New York Philharmonic Orchestra can play to a near sell-out audience at top prices of $7.50 a seat and produce only 62 per cent of the performance's costs. This is symptomatic of the paradoxical plight of the performing arts in the U.S., that while popular acceptance of the arts is increasing, their financial basis is rapidly deteriorating. THE PROBLEM RELATES to a fundamental fact: the performing arts in Western cultures have never fared well under the laws of economic competition—laws which are proving excessively rigorous in the present technological age. The performing arts as they have developed in Western culture were historically an aristocratic pastime, wholly dependent for survival on princely patronage. King Gustav III decreed the existence of the Stockholm Opera in 1773, and Frederick the Great gave Berlin its first opera house in 1740. West Germany today supports 60 state and local opera companies. With the spread of industrialization, centralization and democracy in Western countries, governments took over where the vanishing courts left off. FATHER C. J. McNASPY, associate editor of "America," the National Catholic Review, has written . . . while each of the countries of the West has found some way to subsidize music and other performing arts, the U.S. alone has pursued a hit or miss policy." Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Open 6:45 Show At 7:00 "North By Northwest" — Plus — "The Young Doctors" 1 Kennedy sums up his first year in office "I don't think most Americans realize," says JFK, "the way the situation has changed." In this week's Post, in an authoritative article based on talks with the President and his chief advisers, StewartAlspo tells how Kennedy has revamped U.S. strategy. What was behind his struggle with the Pentagon. And how the new plans are working out. POST MARCH 31 ON SALE For decades the burden of making up the financial deficits of the major symphony and opera companies, and many of the lesser ones, has been carried by wealth "angels." This support was drastically eroded after the economic crash of 1929, when the survival of many of the country's artistic institutions was threatened. In the United States, state and local government units were spared concern for the financial support of artistic institutions by the American counterpart to European princes, the millionaire philanthropists. arts through government subsidy. Today, numerous artists, including George London, concert and opera singer, credit the federal Works Progress Administration of the 1930's with having helped prevent the collapse of the performing THE INFLATIONARY trend of the economy since World War II is rapidly out-pacing the resources of the Met and other companies. Figures cited earlier show that it is the musician and other performers who have been most seriously hurt in the economic squeeze. It is largely this deteriorated basis of financial support, coupled with the frustration expressed by Fr. McNaspy of those who are trying to shore up that support through public solicitations, that has led to increasing concern about the future of the arts in America. The U.S. came closer perhaps than is generally realized to suffering national disgrace last summer when a wage dispute between the Met and Students Erect Whatzit Engineering students directed by Willard Strode, assistant professor of architectural engineering, are building a hyperbolic paraboloid in the area between Lindley Hall and Marvin Hall. The structure, which consists of a roof resting on three supports, has been named a "triboloid." It is an equilateral triangle with 30-foot sides that enclose about 400 square feet. It will be about 24 feet high. The purpose of the structure will be to weather-test and weight-test a plastic wood called "hardboard." The project is being sponsored by the Masonite Corporation. pletion by April 21, when the two-day engineering exposition will be held here. It will remain standing for about a year. The last structure erected by students on that lot was a flat grid roof system built by mechanical engineering students last year. The project is scheduled for com- 'Prestige Car Planned NEW YORK — (UPI) — Studebaker-Packard Corp. plans to introduce this summer a new "prestige car" with a glass fiber body, it was disclosed in the annual report today. No details of the new car were given. STARTS THURS. DOUBLE FEATURE Yul Brynner In "THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN" | its musicians threatened to cancel | | the season. | - PLUS - Gregory Peck in "THE BIG COUNTRY" Both Are Really Great Westerns Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 STARTS THURS. FREE! Get your Magic Mystic Mask to see the movie thrill of thrills. THE MASK A EVIROR GROFTMAN PRODUCTION - A BEWARED CONNECTION ATTRACTION produced and directed by JULIAN ROFTMAN - DISTRIBUTED BY WARNER BROS. IN DEPT OF DIRECTION AND ELECTRIC MOVING COORDINATORS - PLUS - "BLAST OF SILENCE" IN AN ARTICLE in the November, 1961, issue of International Musician, the official publication of the American Federation of Musicians. Bliss remarks that when it was announced the Met could not meet the musicians' demands and would be forced to abandon its season, invitations came from Japan, Austria, and the Philippines. Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-7065 For Tonight's Study-Break You Deserve Fresh Baked GOODIES Submarines, Too From Joe's Bakery 412 W. 6th Drop In Any Hour Day or Night Closed Sat., 6 p.m.; Reopen Sun., 4 p.m. Submarines, Too Have a Big Order? Call VI 3-4720 Bliss gives no indication that the invitations to move the Met were seriously considered. The emergency was resolved when Secretary of Labor Arthur Goldberg intervened to arbitrate a settlement. If the Met had accepted one of these invitations, U.S. claims of cultural leadership would have received a serious blow. Because of the dramatic effect such an event might have had on the American public, Fr. McNaspy was moved to speculate if "it might not have been better if the Met had closed. "HOWEYER ADROITLY Secretary Goldberg may work out the VARSITY MOW SHOWING! 7:00 & 9 p.m. Deborah Kerr In "The Innocents" See it from the beginning --- Met's immediate crisis," he said, "he can only offer one more makeshift remedy and not a real cure. The illness lies deep. . . I am inclined to agree with Herman Kenin (president of the American Federation of Musicians) . . . that the 'musical performing arts can't survive in today's market place." There is some indication that Sec. Goldberg fosters the same feeling. In his report on the Met dispute, he observed: "... as we become more and more a cultural democracy, it becomes less and less appropriate for our major cultural institutions to depend on the generosity of a very few of the very wealthy. ... The answer is evident enough. We must come to accept the arts as a new community responsibility" Ends Tonight William Holden - Clifton Webb in "Satan Never Sleeps" Ends Tonight Starts Tomorrow Tennessee Williams' "Summer and Smoke" Nominated for 5 Academy Awards GRANADA TREATRE ... telephone VKMNG 2-3701 Spring Sale! SPECIALS IN STYLE Blouses . . . . . 40% off Jamaicas . . . 2.98 & 3.98 Lingerie . . . . . 40% off Spring Wool Dresses . 30% off Jewelry .25.501.00 Marked down half and more One The CAMPUS Jay SHOPPE 12th & Oread Phone VI 3-9544 1952 raci VI Usaft No 87 590 ba Axe va & cam GC cond $33 GI ba wa se Old Tyl 864 Dh dr 29 pn. We gre pr liv Pa pa ce No liv Ph an y 121 Ex ch ep R m re In wre Di m 33 Al 75 GL la co Fi FI TO t 36 G " Tuesday, March 27,1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 d, "he reshift The slined presi- pression of musical evaluation in SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS t Sec.eling. te, he NEED HELP? more comes our do de- very The must new Outline your requirements, and let us display it in type and style similar to the printed page. Display ads stand out and are more casually read than those in body fonts and ad to the University Daily Kansan, 11 Flint Halt, or call it in, KU 376. One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms cash: All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office, in Flint, Hall, by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. HELP WANTED LOST Aftermon secretary help wanted. Real estate experience preferred. Give qualification first letter. Mail 10 to Aftermon. University Daily Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. 3-29 BURSE at Jayhawk Cafe Friday night. Lane, Wastalk Hall. Reward. 1-3-29 Two girls dress coats valued at $200. Left at big Barn between 11:30 and 12:30 Saturday night. One camel colored boy coat with Weaver's label. One Van Dyke beige with fur collar. Reward. Call Tim Hamill at VI 3-5770. 3-27 Aeronautical engineering laboratory report in Kansas Union Reading Room Friday, March 16. Phone VI 3-9354 for Brien Liebst. Reward!! 3-27 WANTED PERSON HAVING MRS. AUSTIN'S PURSE: Keep the cash, but please return it. No money or checks. Lindley or ext. 275. No questions. Need check and papers desperately. 3-27 FOR SALE GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. SPECIAL THIS WEEK. 1537 Magnum (or a power tool) a price lot on quote. A few inexpensive .22 revolvers left, 1349 OHIO. 3-29 1953 8' x 28' Travelite Trailer Home. Excellent location in private yard. Garden and yard space. Good for student couple. Available end of May. Call VI 2-1063. White dinner jacket by "After Six" Size 44. Call dinner 3-2551, preferably with a bell. 1959 MGA, red, both tops, wire wheels, radio, heater, running lights, motor just overhauled. Excellent condition. Call VI 2-1989, 5-7 p.m. 3-27 Used TV. Must sell. See Lain at 1244 Lafter 5 p.m. 3-27 New heavy retreads $10 each. ex., plus tax for most all small cars: Sizes 560-15, 590-15, 600-13, 640-15, etc. at Ray Stoneback's, 829 Mass. 4-13 GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. complete with diagrams, comprehensive charts, Handy cross index for quick reference to delivery. Phone VI 3-1558 VI 3-5778 ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch Call VI 3-8977 or come to 407 Ark. for more information. Gibson guitar — $60 and Ludwig tenor banjo — $30. Both with case. Also 10 watt Hi Fi amplifier and 12-in. Hi Fi speaker — $35. Call VI 3-1647. 3-27 OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, service, rentals.ENCE Typewriter, 733 Mass. VI 3-8644 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet photo set. Photograph 2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. tf WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All papers bound and archived. graphed and bound. Extremely com- prehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call Cool 101 after 4:30 p.m. for free de- livery. 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. BUSINESS SERVICES PROFESSIONAL party planning, for those with impeccable tastes. Parties for any occasion, completely arranged. For most impressive party, call V 3-27-1241. EXPERIENCED MOTHER — would like child to care for, 3 to 4 yrs, old, in her home. Also would like ironing, 15c per piece. $34 Indiana, VI 2-3473. 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. GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 A new pet store - one stop - save time & money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, etc., plus complete lists of pet supplies. ALTERATIONS -- Call Gall Reed, VI 3-7551, or 921 Miss. tt INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tt GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY L. Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Price: $4. Call VI 2-9752 free delivery. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- Smith 839' Bs, Cali. Mail I-3-5263. u TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. **tf** FOUND Hood to raincoat — 3 scarves — men & women's gloves — 4 pairs GLASSES — 2 assignment books — 5 sets of keys — 10 catalogs, book back reader, The Press & Society, Introduction to Mass Communications, Better Paragraphs — tt Jewelry. Claim at 111 Flint. MISCELLANEOUS BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent paper bags. Plicc. Phone supply Ice Plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 3-9350. FOK RENT 2 single rooms & one double room for boys. Available now. Call I3-4534. 3-29 WANTED a roommate for nice apt. $30 WANTED 2213 Naitsmith. I-2-2562 B. Bergman. Sleeping rm for rent for men students. Bathroom for rent for men students & refrigerators 1315 Tenn, V 3-3990 4-10 Park Plaza South Apartments Central Air Conditioning Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking We will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 3-8253 Office -- 1912 W. 25th. APT, for 2 or 3 boys. Utilities pid 1 block April 11st of April 1st of April 11th sooner. 1142 Indiana. 3-50 LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2-9731 ti LARGE FURNISHED east side, utilities paid. $50. Call VI 3-6294. fax 3-6294. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, application letters. Electric typewriter — Special symbols & signs. Prompt service. Robert Cook, 2006. Rhode Island. VI 3-7485. TYPING JOB SEEKERS: Prospective employers see you thru your letter of application and then create own first impressions. For fast accurate typing service call V 3-0483. 4-10 "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting ability. For excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. CREETARY WILL DO TYPING in home Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at VI 2-1749. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution of the Service. 5917 B Woodson, Mission, HE 2-7715 Eves or Sacr Ari 2-2186 HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. instructor who teaches reports & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt, apt. 3. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers and articles in Journal of Reasonable Rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles PVII, VI 3-8379 EXPERIENCEIED TYPIST will do typing home — call VI 3-9136 Mr. Loren Gehlbach Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with a math and Greek keyboard Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. Call VI 2-1546. Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001 Experienced typist would like typing in various languages as a requisite rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist typewriter. Reasonable rate Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware CI 3-0483 TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-1409. tj Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Sale: 1511 W. 21 St. CALL VI 3-6440. ttl sell, 1511 W. 21 St. CALL VI 3-6440. ttl Experienced typist 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 21-1648. FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. tf COLLEGE STUDENTS IN THE VACATION RIOTS What touches off the vicious vacation riots in resort towns from coast to coast? What madness causes the drunkenness, open immorality, violent battles with police? What sudden mob impulse can motivate a crowd of 30,000 educated young men and women into a rampage of destruction? Perhaps it's a new way to "let off steam" . . . a savage kind of self-expression. But why are so many college students—presumably the nation's most "adult" and sophisticated young people—involved? Why do they knowingly risk their futures, even their lives for a few hours of wild abandon? In the new April McCall's, don't miss the unbelievable, yet true, report on the spread of this insane activity . . . the terrible price you may have to pay if you're involved . . . and how you can help stop the insanity. in the new April McCall's NOW ON SALE AT ALL NEWSSTANDS BULLY On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) CRAM COURSE NO. 1: MODERN EUROPEAN HISTORY We will start with Modern European History. Strietly defined, Modern European History covers the history of Europe from January 1, 1962, to the present. However, in order to provide employment for more teachers, the course has been moved back to the Age of Pericles, or the Renaissance, as it is jocularly called. The school year draws rapidly to a close, and it's been a fun year, what with learning the twist, attending public executions, and walking our cheetahs—but are we ready for final exams? Some of us, I fear, are not. Therefore, in these few remaining columns, I propose to forego levity and instead offer a series of cram courses so that we may all be prepared at exam time. The single most important fact to remember about Modern European History is the emergence of Prussia. As we all know, Prussia was originally called Russia. The "P" was purchased from Persia in 1874 for $24 and Manhattan Island. This later became known as Guy Fawkes Day. Persia, without a "P" was, of course, called Ersia. This so embarrassed the natives that they changed the name of the country to Iran. This led to a rash of name change. Mesopotamia became Iraq, Schleswig-Holstein became Saxe-Coburg, Bosnia-Herzegovina became Cleveland. There was even talk in stable old England about changing the name of the country, but it was forgotten when the little princes escaped from the Tower and set fire to Pitt, the Elder. Meanwhile Johannes Gutenberg was quietly inventing the printing press, for which we may all be grateful, believe you me! Why grateful? I'll tell you why grateful. Because without Gutenberg's invention, there would be no printing on cigarette packs. You would not know when you bought cigarettes whether you were getting good Marbors or some horrid imitation. You could never be sure that you were buying a full-flavored smoke with a pure white filter, a cigarette that lets you settle back and get comfortable—in short, a Marbrolor. It is a prospect to chill the bones and turn the blood to sorghum—so if you are ever in Frank-furt am Main, drop in and say thanks to Mr. Gutenberg. He is elderly—408 years old last birthday—but still quite active in his laboratory. In fact, only last Tuesday he invented the German short-haired pointer. But I digress. Back to Modern European History. Let us turn now to that ever popular favorite, France. France, as we all know, is divided into several departments. MONROE He invented the German short-haired pouter There is the Police Department, the Fire Department, the Gas and Water Department, and the Bureau of Weights and Measures. There is also Madame Pompadour, but that need not concern us because it is a dirty story and is only taught to graduate students. Finally, let us take up Italy—the newest European nation. Italy did not become a unified state until 1848 when Garibaldi, Cavour, and Victor Emmanuel threw three coins in the Trevi Fountain. This lovely gesture so enchanted all of Europe that William of Orange married Mary Stuart and caused a potato famine in Ireland. This, in turn, resulted in Pitt, the Younger. All of this may seem a bit complicated, but be of good cheer. Everything was happily resolved at the Congress of Vienna where Matternich traded Parma to Talleyrand for Mad Ludwig of Bavaria. Then everybody waltzed till dawn and then, tired but content, they started the *Thirty Years' War*. *War.* © 1962 Max Shulman \* \* \* Today you can buy Marlboro all over Europe, but you might have to pay a premium. In all 50 of these United States, however, you get that fine Marlboro flavor, that excellent Marlboro filter, in flip-top box or soft pack at regulation popular prices. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 27.1962 Daily Kansan - (Continued from page 1) Kansan for maturity and responsi- bility. "TISHS AWARD highlights the role an independent and free student newspaper can play when it is confronted with a situation that calls for mature and responsible action." The Kansan won the award for a series of editorials discussing discrimination at KU. Three years ago the Kansan pointed to discrimination in the way in which a University housing list was drawn up. At that time separate lists of landlords willing to rent to KU students were kept for Negro and white students. When the practice was called to the attention of the administration, it was immediately stopped. In October of 1960 the Kansan's attention was called to its own practices. It was discovered that the Kansan was printing advertisements which promoted discrimination in housing. The governing board of the Kansan unanimously resolved to ban such advertising. An editorial explaining the Kansan's decision said: "The newspaper can only keep faith with the ideals of racial equality and actively reflect them in its editorial matter. We believe that if discriminatory matter is banned from our newspaper, we may, in a small way at least, contribute to the spirit of tolerance." THIS YEAR THE Kansan became concerned with the listing of discriminatory renters on the University's housing list and urged the discontinuance of this practice. On Wednesday, Nov. 8, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced that discriminatory landlords would no longer be listed on the University housing list. A Kansan editorial the following day called the new housing policy, "the most significant advancement in human rights the administration has made since W. Clarke Wescoe assumed the chancellorship. "The revised University policy concerning the housing list is a barometer of the desire of the University and student body for progress in the field of civil rights. However, the new housing list policy is but a small step in a long march toward complete racial equality." This is the second major national award the University student newspaper has received in the last year. Last year, the Kansan reporters and editorial writers won first place for the School of Journalism in the Cambridge Staffer To Lecture Here A senior staff member of the Cambridge University Library in England will give a public lecture at 3 pm, April 5 in the Watkins Room of the Kansas Union. J. C. T. Oates will discuss the 18th century author Laurence Sterne. He will speak on "The Sterne Vogue, 1760-1890," and will present a group of Sterne songs recently taped in England. Mr. Oates is a former editor and the author of articles and reviews on bibliographical and literary subjects. Stockpiling Action Soon WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The White House said today that President Kennedy is ready to act to correct what he considers the alarming federal stockpile of strategic materials. Kennedy's Commitment to Help South Viet Nam Weighed Carefully By Charles W. Corddry WASHINGTON—(UPI)—A war is under way in South Viet Nam and every day the United States is getting more deeply involved. It conceivably could bring on a major confrontation with Communist China. But the fact remains that the Kennedy administration has weighed all the risks and decided that South Viet Nam must be held against the attacks of Communist guerrillas. One question the administration had to ask before it made the commitment was this: Will Red China become involved? THE DECISION HAS BEEN that the answer is no. The administration has decided that Communist China is not likely to move in openly and actively. The result has been that U.S. involvement has been carried out in semi-secrecy. It is the first big test of the administration's strategy of counter-guerrilla operations in the peripheral areas of the free world where the Communists hope to take over by indirect aggression and subversion. In the administration view, the Communists have resorted to this tactic out of fear that even Koreatype conventional war could grow into a nuclear holocaust. ONE REASON THE United States does not think Communist China will intervene is said to be the certainty — conveyed to Peiping through neutral channels — that active intervention would bring decisive Western reaction. This in turn could precipitate a major conflict. This theory has its opponents, one of whom is Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. In an interview last week with William R. Frwe, United Nations correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor, Nehru Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers W Jim Piersall's wife asks: "Why do they call my husband crazy?" said there was danger of "large scale intervention" in response to U.S. aid in South Viet Nam. To the fans Jim Pierisall is a hot-tempered screwball. But to his wife, he's "calm and sensible, an understanding husband." In this week's Post, Mary Pierisall tells how the fans made Jim "a marked man." Says how close he came to a breakdown in 1960. And why she's confident about this season. The Saturday Evening In its effort to avoid this, the United States is steering a cautious course of all out aid but no outright employment of combat forces. THERE IS CONFIDENCE this will work, and that the United States can avoid the next dilemma of either all out conflict with U.S. Forces, or the abandonment of South Viet Nam. It is held that this loss could mean the collapse of all of Southeast Asia. No official will acknowledge how many U.S. soldiers, sailors and airmen are in South Viet Nam to aid a native army that is expanding to 200,000 men. But the current accepted figure is more than 4,000. This apparently means that there is one American for every five or six Communist Viet Cong guerrillas. Sometimes it almost seems that U.S. spokesmen explaining the American position resort to the "doublethink" practiced in George Orwell's novel, 1884. This requires someone to accept two contradictory ideas at once — such as that Americans are not engaging in combat, but do go on combat missions with Vietnamese troops and shoot if they are shot at. The Americans are providing the Vietnamese as realistic on-the-job training as probably ever has been given soldiers. POST MARCH 31 NEW/REAL ON SALN A member of Israel's largest independent morning daily newspaper, the Haaretz, said Sunday the outcome of the Cold War will determine if there will be unity in the Middle East. Newsman Says Cold War Will Decide Mid-East Unity He is Shabtai Tevet who is currently on a three month lecture tour of the United States. He is visiting more than 30 colleges and universities. He addressed about 60 persons in the Kansas Room on "Israel and the Middle East." He said that Nasser is attempting to build a united Arab world. "Nasser is a brilliant stateman who makes few mistakes," he said. The journalist said that Nasser is trying to unite the Asian Arab states with Egypt to form an Arab union. Eight years ago, he said, Syria united with Egypt, but in 1958, Egypt separated from Syria. After Nasser attempted to unite the Arab world various independent states, including Israel and Tunisia, refused to join with Egypt. Although Nasser failed in this attempt, he did Tevet said that four months ago Nasser received his biggest setback. This was when Syria seceded from the United Arab Republic. This meant that unity in the Arab world will be delayed for an indefinite period. not lose his respect and popularity with the people. Prepared Noon Special WEDNESDAY Kentucky Fried Chicken and Kentucky Fried Giblets Free Parking Self Service Salad Bar Wednesday March 28 C CRESTAURANT NW Corner of Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa Trail Room LONDON — (UPI) — A British doctor believes the twist is turning British teen-agers into wrecks. In a letter in the English Medical Journal, Dr. David Nachsen, of Willesden, says the twist is directly responsible for a growing number of injuries. Twist Called Harmful BROWSERS... WELCOME THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. The BIG BUY offers you fast service with the most tasty menu in Lawrence. The Big Buy features their famous charcoal broiled meats along with the finest of fried foods. Dance Col. Sanders recipe of Kentucky Fried Chicken is the specialty of the Big Buy chef. Come on out and see for yourself. BIG BUY 23rd & Iowa 9-10 in the FORD Quick Service FORD Quick Service MINOR TUNE-UP BATTERIES LUBRICATION TRANS. OVERHAUL BODY-PAINT-GLASS UNIVERSITY FORD 24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE DAY V13-3500 NITE V13-8845 . . . . British turn- wrecks. Medical en, of is di- rowing THE ARMS RACE OR HUMAN RACE? TURN TOMMAS' PEACE! STUDENT PEACE UNION—Larry Laudan, Lawrence graduate student and one of the or- organizers of the KU Student Peace Union, posts one of the group's slogans. Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 59th Year, No. 112 Army Overthrows Syrian Government DAMASCUS, Syria—(UPI)—The Syrian Army overthrew the government and seized power today in a bloodless coup aimed at eliminating "corrupt" and "reactionary" politicians. An army communique said the military would continue the principles of last fall's revolution which split Syria from Egypt and broke up the United Arab Republic. The army takeover toppled the short-lived government of moderate rightist President Nazim Ekudi, who resigned along with $ ^{+ + }$ Weather Fair and warm this afternoon. Windy eastern Kansas with southerly winds 25 to 35 miles per hour. Increasing cloudiness tonight and turning colder by morning. Scattered light showers likely extreme western Kansas late tonight. Thursday partly cloudy to cloudy and colder with scattered showers likely extreme eastern Kansas. Low tonight near 30 northwest to 50 southeast. High Thursday 40s northwest to 50s southeast. KU Election Debates Set The two student body presidential hopefuls plan to follow the footsteps of Nixon and Kennedy and hold a "Great Debate." Dickson, who originally suggested the idea to Kepner, said. "This is the only way for the voters to be fully informed on the candidates. This will insure that the race will not be a personality contest and voters will be able to decide on a criterion other than personal contact." Jerry Dickson, Newton junior, running for Vox Populi and Gerald (Kep) Kepner, Wichita junior, University Party's candidate, plan to discuss campaign issues in Templein, Joseph R. Pearson, Lewis, Corbin, and Gertrude Sellards Pearson sometime after Spring vacation. "These will not be as much debates as they will be speeches to present ideas and get people in the dorms interested." Keppner said. Dickson added that the audience will be given a chance to question the candidates on such things as personal ideas, background, and political philosophies of student government. He said they also will be able to compare the platforms of the contending parties through this questioning. Wednesday, March 28, 1962 cabinet of Premier Said Ghazzi and the 172 members of parliament who were elected last Dec. 1. A series of communiques was broadcast over Damascus Radio outlining details of the takeover and promising eventual return to civil government. "PENDING THE formation of a transitional cabinet, the army will shoulder the legislative and executive functions in Syria," one broadcast said. Leaders of the coup assured the United States they do not intend to change Syria's neutral foreign policy, according to Washington officials. THE COUP apparently stemmed at least partly from resentment over the elected Syrian government's policy on reversing nationalization of economic enterprises instituted when Syria was part of the United Arab Republic. Leaders of the coup also asked for continued "friendly relations" with the United States. BUENOS AIRES — (UPI)—The armed forces at noon EST today (11 a.m., Lawrence time) ordered the withdrawal of the palace guard from President Arturo Frondizi's Casa Rosada government house. The heads of the army, navy and air force called on the President and demanded his immediate resignation. His downfall appeared inevitable. Military Demands Frondizi Resignation U.N. Pakistani Ambassador Will Speak at Mock Session John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, advocated today that the starving millions of Communist China should be fed with the surplus food from the "bread basket of America." Kansans Urge Wheat for China The Model U.N. Steering Committee announced yesterday that the speaker at the opening mock General Assembly session will be Pakistani ambassador to the United Nations. Muhammad Zafrulla Khan. Prof. Ise is one of a group of Kansans who met yesterday afternoon to discuss their campaign to support the sending of surplus food to the people of Communist China. THE GROUP, including Will Menninger, psychiatrist; the head of the Roman Catholic seminary in St. Mary's, Kan., and the Methodist bishop of Kansas, plans to address an open letter to President Kennedy endorsing the action. KHAN LED THE Indian delegation to the 1939 League of Nations Assembly. They also plan to distribute 4,000 petitions to obtain the names of 100,000 persons in Kansas who are willing to express support for the The ambassador, who is active in the diplomatic corps and in international law, was elected a member of the International Court of Justice in 1954 and served until February 1961. He was vice-president of the World Court from 1958 to 1961. He became foreign minister of Pakistan in December 1947 and led (Continued on page 12) the Pakistan delegation in the U.N. General Assemblies from 1947 to 1551, and in the U.N. Security Council on the India-Pakistan disputes. 1948-51. The ambassador is the author of several books, "Indian Case," "The Criminal Law Journal of India," "Fifteen Years' Digest," and "Reprints of Punjab Criminal Rulings, Vol. IV." THE OPENING session of the Model U.N. will be at 9:20, Friday morning, April 13 in Hoch Auditorium. Khan will arrive in Lawrence the night before, and remain until Saturday. He will attend the KU International Club meeting Friday night. Students Form Peace Union By Terry Murphy A small, portable file sat in a corner of a room of the Kansas Union. Letters written in indelible ink spelled out "Student Peace Union Organizer's Kit, Fluorescent-framed letters read "End the missile race—Let mankind live." This was the scene at the organizational meeting of the KU chapter of the Student Peace Union last night. SEVENTEEN OF the 23 persons attending the meeting agreed to form the first chapter in Kansas of a national organization that has the stated purpose of studying the alternatives to war. Larry Laudan, Lawrence senior and temporary chairman of the local SPU, explained that members of the local chapter would be committed by SPU membership only to the stands and policies determined by themselves. Laudan read the national statement of purpose: "THE STUDENT PEACE Union is an organization of young people who believe that war can no longer be successfully used to settle international disputes and that neither human freedom nor the human race itself can endure in a world committed to militarism. "Without committing any member to a precise statement of policy, the SPU draws together young people for a study of alternatives to war and engages in education and action to end the present arms race." Laudan emphasized to those attending the organizational meeting that they should not expect the Student Peace Union to work miracles in such ways as changing or even greatly influencing national or international policy on such questions as armament and nuclear testing. "OUR PURPOSE is to provoke thought on these subjects," Laudan said. "We want other people to understand our viewpoints if not share them." Laudan and Peter Allen, a SPU national field secretary, emphasized the need for the group to study the issues which SPU expresses interest in. Allen said: "The real constructive thing that we can and should do is form small elements, that are in contact with the community, to take a public stand on these issues. "WE SHOULD TRY to make these issues and the possible alternatives a part of the everyday life of as many people as possible." The stated goal of the SPU is to take action in the form of educating and informing the public of the possible alternatives on certain issues. Laird Wilcox, Topeka resident and regional SPU coordinator for Kansas, reported he has made contact with interested persons who may form future SPU chapters at four other colleges in Kansas. Wilcox said the organization may establish chapters at Bethel College, Newton; Friends University, Wichita; the University of Kansas City; and Washburn University, Topeka. ONE OF THE ISSUES Allen said would be of interest at KU is whether military training is a legitimate function of an educational institution. Allen said that the national organization is trying to establish contact with students in the Soviet Union to talk with them on issues of world peace. "WE PLAN to circulate a letter of petition to college campuses to gain signatures calling on the Kremlin bureaucracy to permit SPU members to go to Russia to discuss these ideas," he said. Laudan and Allen urged the members to read as much as possible on the issue of the United States decision to resume nuclear testing before the next meeting, April 10. "Kennedy's decision to resume nuclear testing and the coming of Armed Forces Day will bring these issues to the public's attention and will afford us an opportunity to express our views on these thoughts," Laudan said. LAUDAN URGED the members to study the issues of nuclear testing and militarism and be prepared to discuss them with the idea of taking a stand. He said members, at the next meeting, should decide whether or not they would demonstrate in protest of the tests. "Our aim is not to alienate any element," Laudan said, "Instead, we should try to provoke thought as to the alternatives available to the proposed course of action presently being pursued." Harris Receives Roberts Award An internationally known authority in the philosophy of science will hold the first Roy A. Roberts Distinguished Professorship at KU. Errol E. Harris will come to KU as professor of philosophy in September. He is now at Connecticut College, New London, Conn. THE DISTINGUISHED Professorship was established in 1958 by a $200,000 gift to the Endowment Association from Roy A. Roberts, president of the Kansas City Star. Income from the endowment is to provide two professorships in the fields of the humanities, and science and mathematics. The endowment income is added to the regular state salary. Prof. Harris was educated in his home country, South Africa, and at Oxford University. He received the M.A. degree from Rhodes University in 1929, the B. Litt, from Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1933, and the D. Litt, from the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg in 1951. HE HAS WRITTEN a number of books and articles for scholarly journals. His books include "South African Survey" (1947), "The Survival of Political Man" (1950), "Nature, Mind and Modern Science" (1954), and "Revelation Through Reason" (1958). He is now working on a twovolume study of the philosophy of science. The first volume will be on the scientific foundations of a metaphysics of nature and the second volume on scientific method and the epistemology of science. Prof. Harris wrote "Revelation Through Reason" on the basis of research for his Dwight H. Terry Lectures at Yale University in 1956-57. He has held scholarships and fellowships at Rhodes University and Oxford. He also has held positions with the British Colonial Service, the South African Informational Services, the South African Institute of Race Relations, the University of Witwatersrand and Edinburgh University. AWS Elects Senators Associated Women Students (AWS) polling booths will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today. All KU women, including seniors, are eligible to vote in the AWS Senate elections. Voters must present student identification cards to booth officials. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 28, 1962 The Apportionment Fight The United States Supreme Court ruled this week that voters can sue in federal courts to correct unfair apportionment of seats in state legislatures. The ruling is extremely significant for states whose legislatures presently are dominated by their rural areas, despite a greater population in urban areas. The attorney who represented the Tennessee city voters who won the decision of the Supreme Court said the ruling "not only will have an impact on Tennessee but on every state in the Union." KANSAS IS CERTAINLY one of these states. At present, there is a suit in the Shawnee County District Court seeking to force reapportionment of the Kansas legislature. The judge in the action said he would now delay his decision to permit all concerned to study the Supreme Court's decision. A look at the present make-up of the Kansas legislature is clear evidence of the need for Kansas reapportionment. Four Kansas counties — Sedgwick, Wyandotte, Johnson, and Shawnee have nearly 40 per cent of the state's population, yet have only four seats in the state Senate, ten per cent of the membership. The Kansas Constitution requires the Senate to be apportioned according to population only. The population of Kansas in 1960 was 2,178,611. Each of the 40 state Senators should represent then 54,465 persons. Yet Sedgwick county has only one Senator to represent its 343,231 residents. Wyandotte county has only one vote for its 185,495 residents. In the 31st Senate district of Jewell and Mitchell counties, 16,083 residents have one vote. Thus, the vote of a resident of Jewell or Mitchell counties is worth about 21 times as much as a resident of Sedgwick county. In the state House of Representatives a similar situation exists. The House has a membership of 125. Each of the 105 counties is required to have one representative. This leaves only 20 seats to be divided among the more populous counties. THIS INEQUALITY in the Kansas legislature can lead to several problems. One is partisan political advantage. It sets up that tool of politics, gerrymandering, which leads to unequal representation. It can lead to unsolved urban problems since the urban areas are not getting an equal representation in the legislature. The predominance of rural area power in the Kansas legislature can lead to discriminatory tax benefits, and unfair balance of state expenditures to city areas vs. rural areas. The main drawback to reapportionment is that many of the incumbents in the Kansas legislature would be voting themselves out of office by going along with the plan. It would be a tricky business indeed to get anyone to vote himself out of existence. BUT THE SUPREME Court decision puts the problem in a new light. Now federal court action can force reapportionment. This of course shifts a great deal of power to the federal courts. If state legislators refuse to act, however, this appears to be the only answer to the reapportionment problem. The legislators of Kansas should take a long, hard look at the implications of this Supreme Court decision. Perhaps they will want to act to correct the inequities in Kansas representation before someone else acts for them. —Karl Koch Action Proposals Defended Editor: I see that the present leaders of our student government are accusing the proposals of Action of being impractical. It seems to me that these people feel that anything that they didn't think of is impractical. "The members of the student government are fulfilling what they consider to be the proper functions of student government." Eberhart and Palmer tell us, and therefore it is "impractical" to suggest that anything more can be done. AFTER 2.500 students signed the seating petitions, it must have occurred to the "members of student government" that a sizable portion of the student body wanted a referendum (in which a sizable portion of the student body un doubtedly planned to vote no). It should seem that rather than throw the petitions out on a legal technicality, the ASC could have initiated a referendum itself, but "the members of student government are fulfilling the proper functions..." In the matter of the discrimination platform, a bill is called for that would withdraw (with the signature of the chancellor, which is called for in the ASC constitution) university recognition from living groups maintaining discriminatory clauses after Sept. 1, 1965. The plank does not call on the ASC to determine which (if any) fraternities or sororities still have such clauses. That I would imagine would be a matter for the student court. Michael W. Dunlop St. Louis, Mo., senior Comment on Discriminatory Clauses Among the things that present problems on the abolition of discriminatory clauses from fraternal living groups is the popular phrase "the infringement on our right to choose our brothers." We use our understanding to interpret the constitution (and our understanding by the way is not always right). The right of exclusion from an organization is a matter of interpretation of the constitution. When there is a question of the exact way the constitution should be interpreted, the final ... Letters ... authority rests with the jurisdictional membership which in a democracy is the people through a duly elected representative body. What do the people think about categorical seclusion in an organization? WE HAVE. AS individuals the right to choose those with whom we want to live. Organizations (including those in question), have the right to decide which applicants qualify for admittance into the organizations. When, however, an applicant has all the qualifications except for his race, color or beliefs and an organization rejects him, then the organization has not properly exercised its right, rather it has unlawfully discriminated against the applicant. The UP platform for the spring elections says, (article I Human Rights-March 22nd UDK) "... discrimination on categorical definitions enfringes upon the rights of an individual"; also, "UP believes that to force an organization to choose an individual because of his or her membership in a certain category is to..." (guess what finishes the sentence). I wonder whether UP realizes that the discrimination here is not on individual merits in the minority groups but a pure and naked mass discrimination. Leaving aside morality which not only the discriminating groups lack anyway, the constitution so inadequately interpreted camouflages illegal discrimination and the sooner we know that it is neither moral nor "our right" the better and surely the nearer to the goal we shall be. W. S. Bogya W. S. Bgoya Tanganyika freshman A Report Termed Inadequate Editor. A very major point—the courageous and forgiving spirit of the Christian Africans in Angola—was omitted from the UDK report of talks here by two Methodist missionaries. Instead, the story concentrated on the reports of Portuguese reprisals for revolts against their repressive government in their African possessions. were Christians, and a convenient focal group for reprisals. Both Fred Brancel and the Rev. Malcolm McVeigh spoke again and again Wednesday of the Christ-like spirit of the Africans who were killed simply because they "THE AFRICANS dared to believe," said Mr. Brancel, "that 'the blood of the martyr is the seed of the church,' and that 'he who loses his life for my (Jesus)' sake shall find it.' There is no bitterness or resentment in their heart, but forgiveness. "We have been challenged to dig deep into our own faith by the African Christian witness. We went to teach, and they have witnessed to us." "Tragic and dangerous" was the description used by the Rev. Mr. McVeigh for what he said is the lack of any legal outlet for African dissatisfaction and frustrations. "There is no place for political activity," he explained, "and no way to correct social and economic abuses. The Africans want to sit down with the Portuguese to work out a plan for self-development, but the Portuguese insist their possessions are provinces of Portugal. The Africans finally thought peaceful reforms were impossible." THIS SITUATION led to the revolts which were met by the reprisals which were reported so well in the UDK. Both of the speakers said they have been appalled to find that Americans don't seem to realize that 200,000 Africans have fled Angola, which is as tragic as was the Hungarian situation in 1956. Short Ones Since this was a talk by missionaries that aimed at citing the position of the church in Angola, as well as to describe the extreme difficulties there, it seems that this point should be brought out equally well in the report of the talk. Mona Millikan j'53 His imagination resembled the wings of an ostrich. It enabled him to run though not to soar.-Dryden Resolved, never to do anything which I should be afraid to do if it were the last hour of my life.— Edwards LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler YES YES, THAT'S A WONDERFUL IDEA YES, I CERTAINLY AGREE WITH THAT... YESSSS THAT WILL BE SPLENDID, YES— I'LL NEVER UNDERSTAND HOW HE GOT PROMOTED TO FULL PROFESSOR R-13 B.Bier YES YES, THAT'S A WONDERFUL IDEA YES, I CERTAINLY AGREE WITH THAT... YESss THAT WILL BE SPLENDID, YES— I'LL NEVER UNDERSTAND HOW HE GOT PROMOTED TO FULL PROFESSOR R-13 B. BEEK PO BOX 48600 MILWAUkee, WI On Other Campuses AUSTIN, Texas—The Texas Educational Microwave Project, a closed-circuit network enabling 11 colleges and universities in five cities to share faculty resources is now in its second semester of televised classes. Eight courses are being offered, including the new "Introduction to Visual Arts" by Dr. Donald L. Weismann, University of Texas art professor. The lectures were videotaped before Dr. Weismann left last Autumn for a research assignment in Europe. --- MONMOUTH, Ill.—In contrast to the 124 semester credit hours now required for graduation, the Monmouth College student entering next fall, under the newly-adopted three-year, three course curriculum program, will fulfill the requirement of 36 "term courses," that is, normally nine subjects a year. Each subject, however, except for fractional courses of music, art, and speech, will be given equal academic credit valued at three and one-third credits on the basis of the present semester system. Beginning with the class of '66, all seniors will be required to pass a comprehensive examination which includes a four-hour written test and an hour-long oral examination. The written essay examination will consist either of one four-hour paper or two two-hour papers on questions which show the student's comprehensive grasp of the problems of his major field and a broad acquaintance with its literature. The leaders of campus organizations and two representatives from each class were invited to attend the conference. Dr. Hanson, Dean of the College Charles H. Glatfelter, Dean of Students John Shainline and Dr. Basil Crapster, chairman of the Academic Policy Committee, answered the questions of student representatives. GETTYSBURG. Pa.—Marking the first in a series of "press conferences" conducted by Gettysburg College to promote communication among faculty members, administrators, and students, President C. A. Hanson said that he feels any questions by the students are legitimate. $$ ** $$ $$ *** $$ According to Dr. John W. Sattler, head of Eastern's Department of English and Speech, the entire project is geared towards bringing about a better understanding of the purposes, problems, courses of study, teaching methods and materials in both high school and college English classes. YPSILANTI, Mich.—Eastern Michigan University has been selected by the In-Service Education Committee of the North Central Association of Secondary Schools and Colleges to participate in a pilot project for the improvement of communication among high school and university teachers of English. Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, trine weekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Viking 3-2700 Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711 news room Extension 11, news 100m Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Mullins ... Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache Business Manager --- 7 Page 3 Wednesday, March 28, 1962 University Daily Kansan THE WOMEN OF THE UNIVERSITY JAYHAWKER QUEEN CANDIDATES—Standing, left to right: Janet Benson, Kansas City freshman, GSP; Harriet Harber, Leawood sophomore, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Carol Stotts, Leawood freshman, GSP. Seated, left to right: Marilyn Huff, Wichita freshman, Corbin; Sarah Walker, New Smyrna Beach, Fla., senior, Delta Gamma; Julie Winkler, Caney freshman, Sellards; Joyceylan Cade, Quenemo junior, Watkins; Jeannette Ross, Washington, D.C., junior, Alpha Phi. Front Row: Margaret McNulty, Coffeyville senior, Chi Omega, and Patricia Wilson, Kansas City junior, Sellards. ASC Grant Will Aid Peace Corps Group The All Student Council appropriated $100 for the Peace Corps committee in its meeting held last night. The ASC also moved to endorse this year's Kansas Relays and tabled holdover legislation dealing with the establishment of an executive secretary for the Council and a motion defining the selection of the Council chairman. The money appropriated for the Peace Corps committee will not be given in a lump sum but allocated as needed, with the total not to exceed the $100 limit. Other action was the announcement that night bus service will begin on a trial basis on the first Tuesday following vacation. There will be nightly service for one-half hour each night. The time will be announced later this week. THE ENDORSEMENT of the Kansas Relays included an acceptance of the 50-cent daily charge for students. This is the third year this charge has been necessary. Stu Barger, Harrisonville, Mo, senior and member of the relays committee which runs the annual track meet, said this sum actually was not a charge but a "donation to the relays which is justified by the publicity which the event brings to the University." BARGER EXPLAINED that the fee would be used to bring the best possible athletes to Mt. Oread for the meet. The relays receives no money from the student activity fee. Track Coach Bill Easton said there would be passes issued this year which would allow spectators to leave and re-enter Memorial Stadium without further charge. Barger said that an ID card will allow a student to purchase as many tickets as desired. THE RELAYS WILL BE held April 20-21. Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior and student body president, reported that the next ASC meeting will feature a report from a member of the Student Court. Eberhart explained that the function of the court would be explained and that legislation dealing with the court should be considered at that time. The Parliament of Action, KU's proposed third political party, will meet today at 5 p.m. in the Kansas Union. Members of the General Assembly are invited to attend, although only members of parliament will vote. Action Meeting Tonight Kansan Classified Ads Get Results Jayhawker Queer Finalists Chosen The results of the Jayhawker Queen contest will be announced when the fourth section of the 1962 Jayhawker comes out in May. Ten semi-finalists out of 30 original entries have been selected by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. A special portrait of each of the semifinalists will be sent to a personality in the entertainment world for the final selection of the Queen and the four princesses. Caws to Read Paper Peter J. Caws, associate professor of philosophy, will read a paper entitled "Whitehead's Heresy" at the Philosophy Club meeting tomorrow at 4 p.m. in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. The meeting is open to the public. AWSers Vote! Wednesday, March 28 A. Closs, head of the German department at Bristol University in England, said at the Humanities Lecture last night that great tragedy still exists in the 20th century despite the problems it must overcome Murphy Hall Mr. Closs said that although there are writers of tragedy in this 20th century, they have to overcome the great problem of dialogue. They have to "speak and write in the jargon of the 20th century" yet still create a great tragedy. Mr. Closs defined tragedy as a "form which deals with suffering as a means of gaining knowledge." Mr. Closs cited T. S. Eliot's play, "Murder in the Cathedral," as an example of a recent tragedy. However, he said, Eliot also had to overcome the problem of jargon. "Murder in the Cathedral" is a great tragedy, but it "takes its life from poetic reminiscences," Mr. Closs said. Words, he said, have become ambiguous in the 20th century and no longer are as capable of transmitting the idea of tragedy. Strong Hall Mr. Closs said that another problem modern tragedy must contend with is that modern man has chosen to love life more than truth, and tragedy simply cannot exist under these circumstances. He emphasized the importance of the element of human dignity if a work is to be classed as a tragedy, "Tragedy allows no just solution, but it upholds man's claim to human integrity," he said. Fraser Hall Mr. Closs said another barrier hindering the execution of good tragedy today is the void in the art of suspense, a blindness toward color, and a tendency to preach through literature. Mr. Closs condemned the gentle "soft-souled hero of today's theater." Bristol Speaker Defines Tragedy P-T-P Plans Three Ambassador Flights Student Union The students will land in Stuttgart, Germany. For the first week of the tour they will be guests in the homes of West German student members of the P-t-P organization Tentative plans for the People-to-People student ambassador flights call for three separate flights, leaving on three different weekends beginning in the middle of June. After that week, the student ambassadors will split up into small groups to travel to various parts of Europe to continue the ambassador program. The KU P-t-P office announced today that the money for the flight will not be kept at the KU office but will be sent to the national office in Kansas City. ENGLISH BIKES KU Special $3854 - Accessories - - Saddle baskets - Lights - Tires - Parts - Trade-ins Also . . . fishing supplies, tennis balls, badminton sets, and intramural equipment WESTERN AUTO He listed two prerequisite characteristics of a true tragedy. They were a play that the author, actors and audience can lose themselves in, and a play in which human dignity must be discernable even in the lowest of the plays characters. saying that "out of such theater no tragedy could be created." Mr. Closs said a true tragedy leaves the audience or reader in no doubt as to each character's destiny. The knowledge of that destiny makes for a tranquility found in no other type of drama. DOWNTOWN Study Shows Inadequacy A Governmental Research Center study of nine first class Kansas cities shows that property tax is inadequate to support city government costs. The nine cities studied were Lawrence, Atchison, Coffeyville, Fort Scott, Hutchinson, Leavenworth, Parsons, Pittsburg and Salina. The report states that one of the reasons the tax is inadequate was the large shifts in population in the last ten years and the recent population explosion. Recent negotiation of defense contracts, deactivation of temporary military installations, gradual changes in tax resources and pressure from increased governmental services were also cited. WASHINGTON —(UPI)—Dr. Edward Teller told a House space subcommittee yesterday the United States must gain control of the moon for its own security. Teller Says U.S. Must Gain Control of Moon The distinguished scientist, sometimes called the father of the hydrogen bomb, urged a program to establish a large, highly independent colony on the moon. "We need the moon for our own safety," Teller said. --- FREE PIZZA DELIVERY ANY PLACE In LAWRENCE Reg. 10" Lrg. 14" Mozz. Cheese _ .85 1.40 Olive ___ 1.15 1.65 Green Pepper _ 1.15 1.65 Onion ___ 1.15 1.65 Mushroom ___ 1.25 1.90 Sausage ___ 1.25 1.90 Hamburger ___ 1.25 1.90 Pepperoni ___ 1.25 1.90 Anchovy ___ 1.25 1.90 Pizza Supreme 1.40 2.40 1/2 Cheese — 1/2 Sausage -- 1.05 1.65 Added Ingredients 10c ea. 20c ea. VI 3-9640 Ron Tom CAVERNS VI 3-9640 644 Mass. N Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 28, 1962 Summer Is Season for European Festival Vamos a la fiesta! Ole! Europe is always in season but summer especially offers festivals and pageants for the traveler. Almost every country will offer some entertainment the traveling KU student will not want to miss. Students can send for tickets ahead of their trips abroad, often getting better tickets than those offered to that country's own people. But he would be a busy person indeed who could attend even the highlights of European entertainment. Great Britain offers a myriad of events from its small countries. In Ireland, the International Choral Festival will open May 18 in Cork. LANGOLLEN, WALES, will be the scene of the yearly Eistedfodd, July 10-15, and Scotland's International Festival at Edinburgh will run from Aug. 19 to Sept. 8. In Coventry, England, a threeweek festival featuring the Covent Garden Opera, Royal Ballet, Sadler's Wells Opera and the Berlin Philharmonic will open May 25. The Shakespeare Season of Plays will be presented at Stratford-on-Avon from April 10-Nov. 24. And the Glyndebourne Festival in Sussex will provide chamber opera in a pastoral setting May 23-Aug. 19. Seandirling also May 23-Aug. 19. LUX. RHINE R. Scandinavia also will provide n o t-to-be-missed entertainment for the traveler. Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland combine talents in a four-nation "Festival of Festivals" in May and June. THE ROYAL DANISH BALLET and Music Festival will be held May 15-31 in Copenhagen. And American visitors will certainly want to be in Denmark July 4. Denmark is paying a tribute to the U.S. with its golden anniversary celebration of American Independence Day at Rebold National Park in Jutland and at nearby Aalborg. The International Grieg Festival featuring the music of the famous composer played on his own piano will run from May 27 to June 7 at Bergen, Norway. SWEDEN WILL HOLD its Stockholm Festival May 30-June 13. And the Sibelius Festival in Helsinki, Finland, will present pianist Van Cliburn June 1-8. famous Theater-an-der-Wien will be reopened. Austria also has the Bregenz Festival with its "Play on the Lake," July 20-Aug. 20; and the Salzburg Festival, July 26-Aug. 31, whose program includes 28 operas and nine major concerts. In each of these Scandinavian cities, national opera companies and orchestras will be heard, and the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra and violinist Zino Francescatti will appear in Bergen, Stockholm and Helsinki. GERMANY'S FESTIVAL SUMMER opens for the KU traveler with the Mozart Festival June 16-30 at Wuerzburg. This can be followed with the 12th International France's notable tourist events IN ITALY, the May Music Festival will draw music lovers to Florence from April 28 to June 15. The "Maggio Musicale" will put all of Florence's fine theaters to use. The oldest open-air opera in Italy will开 its 40th season July 15 in Verona. Performances in the Roman Arena theater with its perfect acoustics will run until mid-August. GERMANY MUNICH ZURICH BREGENZ LUZERN AUSTRIA ITALY VERONA THE ACROPOLIS in Athens, Greece, will be the setting for the FRANCE RHONE G. MARSEILLE PAMPLONA PAMPLONA SPAIN SPAIN SPAIN are "Son et Lumière" spectacles in the farnished chateau of the Loire Valley. The histories of such castles as Chambord and Chenonceaux are recreated in these "sound and light" programs. STRASBOURG'S FESTIVAL. June 13, will present first performances of contemporary music. At Aix-en-Provence the 14th International Music Festival, July 9-31, will present Mozart operas. In Switzerland the entire month of June will be given over to the Zurich June Festival, featuring an open-air medieval mystery play in addition to operas, symphony concerts and exhibitions. HOLLAND'S 15TH FESTIVAL of Music and Drama will be held June 15-July 15 in Amsterdam, the Hague, Rotterdam and Utrecht. The World Music Contest, sponsored by Prince Bernhard and featuring amateur bands from over the world, will be held July 20-Aug. 15 in Kerkrade. Lucerne's International Music Festival, Aug. 15-Sept. 8, will present eight symphony orchestras, and feature as soloists Van Cliburn, Francescatti and organist Karl Richter. Film Festival June 22-July 3, in Berlin. Germany then offers the Wagner Festival on July 25 until Aug. 27 in Bayreuth and ends her summer with the Munich Opera Festival, Aug. 12-Sept. 9. Austria is offering such "best sellers" as the Festival of Vienna, May 26-June 24, during which the Tiny Luxembourg will share entertaining honors with the rest of Europe. The Open Air Theater Festival will be held from the end of July to mid-August in Wiltz. Belgium also offers the Fourth International Jazz Festival Aug. 4-5 in Complain-la-Tour. IN BELGUM a special summer attraction will be one of the most celebrated religious festivals in Northern Europe. The "Sanguis Christi," the play of the holy blood, presented every five years, will be given from July 30 to Aug. 19 in Bruges. The annual "Procession of the Holy Blood" is May 7. BUT NORTHERN EUROPE has no monopoly on the festival season. Granada, Spain, will host the 11th Music and Dance Festival, June 25-July 4. The St. Fermin Festival on July 7 will be the scene of the thrilling "running of the bulls" through the streets of Pamplona. Pastels, Gold Accent Show Floral pastels and gold accessories sparked the annual fashion show last night in a setting of pink and white decorations. The fashion show was sponsored by the University Women's and Newcomer's clubs. Turkey will have its National Folk Dance Festival at Istanbul the last week in July. And the Feast of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary will be celebrated Aug. 15 at Ephesus, near Izmir. Mrs. Betty Broat, narrator, described the array of fashions which were modeled by faculty wives, college women, teens and children. A grand finale to the show was a wedding party featuring Lois Ann Ragsdale, Kansas City senior, as the bride and her attendants in bridesmaids' gowns. "The American influence" display of fashions featured red, white and blue costumes for travel, dress and casual wear. College co-eds showed what the vacationer will be wearing this summer as she is "heading for water." Casual dress and sportswear were accented by gold accessories and shoes, the emphasis on gold seeming to indicate that this color will be an important part of the summer's wardrobe. Navy and white dresses and a cashmere traveling coat highlighted the "travel right" group. Gold accessories accented a white knit dress. AKL Selects Spring Officers Children paraded their Easter outfits of navy dusters, polished cotton dresses and white orlon coats. Elaborate dresses of silk, linen and cotton demonstrated the "jet age" where, as far as prices were concerned, the sky was the limit. Simple frocks and cotton knits were modeled to illustrate outfits available for reasonable prices. Alpha Kappa Lambda announces the following officers for the spring semester: Brian Rowland, Ellis senior, president; Dave Huffman, Hays junior, vice president; Rick Duwe, Lucas sophomore, recording secretary; Don Ringstrom, Mission sophomore, corresponding secretary; Jim Young, Kansas City senior, treasurer; Roger Tisch, Grandview, Mo., senior, house manager; and Charles Cruthird, Caldwell junior, rush chairman. Yugoslavia's 13th Festival of Drama, Music and Folklore will be presented July 10-Aug. 10 in Subrovnik. "sound and light" spectacles from May through September with nightly performances in Greek, French and English. AND A FESTIVAL of light music and songs will open in Athens early in July. The Festival of Ancient Greek Theater will be presented June 17 to July 8 in the acoustically perfect open air theater at Epicarus. Watkins Hall Women's Houses Announce Officers Sigma Kappa The newly-elected officers of Sigma Kappa are Cam Sawyze, Shawnee Mission junior, president; Carol Walker, Peabody sophomore, and Gale Quinsey, Corvallis, Ore., junior, vice presidents; Julia Jarvis, Winfield sophomore, assistant pledge trainer; Sandra Colvin, Kansas City junior, recording secretary; Jean Scott, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, corresponding secretary; and Diane Renne, China Lake, Calif., junior, treasurer. Watkins Hall announces the election of the following officers: president, Marian Jun, Webster Groves, Mo., sophomore; vice president, Ruth Lindquist, Wilsey sophomore; secretary, Susan Shotliff, Kansas City, Mo., junior; treasurer, Linda Hamilton, Kansas City, Mo., junior; house manager, Judy Rickettts, Ness City junior; freshman counselor, Joyce Leasure, LaCygne freshman; social chairman, Patty Barnes, Osage City freshman. Newly-elected officers of Alpha Omicron Pi are Martha Obert, Red Cloud, Neb., junior; president; Sonja Halvermont, St. Joseph, Mo., junior; vice president; Lynn Niswonger, Overland Park junior, treasurer; Janet Burnett, Lawrence junior, recording secretary; Marcia Kyle, Colby junior, corresponding secretary; Dana Sullivan, Ulysses sophomore, rush chairman; and Patsy Deam, Shawnee Mission sophomore, social chairman. Alpha Omicron Pi *** . . . It's Potter's 66 Service For Your Car's Spring Tune-Up Free Pick Up & Delivery Call VI 3-9891 6th & Mich. --- 2. 4. 10. 20 Wednesday, March 28. 1962 University Daily Kansan Anti-Poll Tax Bill Okayed by Senate Approval of the anti-poll tax amendment sponsored by Sen. Spessard L. Holland, D-Fla., came after the Senate beat down attacks by both northern liberals and southern Democrats. WASHINGTON — (UFI) — The Senate, breaking an 11-day tieup, has approved a proposed constitutional amendment to outlaw poll tax as a voting requirement in federal elections. Sen. John J. Sparkman, D-Ala., who fought the anti-poll tax measure, was the leadoff witness before a subcommittee headed by Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., D-NC. By a 77 to 16 vote—15 more than the two-thirds majority needed—the Senate adopted the proposal last night and sent it to the house where its fate depends largely on the rules committee. THE ANTI-POLL tax measure was not expected to have any trouble getting through the House judiciary committee, and appeared sure of House approval if it gets rules committee clearance. The northerners backed a proposal to outlaw the poll tax by simple legislation rather than a Constitutional amendment and the southerners contended any anti-poll tax measure would be unconstitutional. But five of the rules committee's 10 democrats are from southern states, making it necessary to get the votes of at least three of the five GOP members. WITH THE POLL tax issue out of the way, the civil rights fight in the senate switched to a hearing on bills to ban the literacy test as a voting qualification. To become a Constitutional amendment, the Holland proposal still needs approval of a two-thirds vote in the House and ratification by 33 states within seven years. Only Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, Texas and Virginia collect a poll tax. Although the poll tax issue stalled Senate business for 11 days, the fight over literacy tests promised an even bigger civil rights battle before the current session of congress ends. Study Center Set for KU For the 12th straight year KU will be an official Orientation Center for at least 55 International students beginning study in the United States J. A. Burzle, professor of German and chairman of the KU Germanic and Slavic languages and literatures department, said he received a $21,477.83 contract for an orientation program Aug. 4 to Sept. 3. Prof. Burzle, who has directed the KU program since its establishment in 1950, will head the 1962 center. The KU center is one of nine in the United States and is the oldest in existence. The centers introduce International students to life in the United States. The program is designed to help the visitors become familiar with U.S. customs and culture, and with classroom procedures and educational characteristics of this country. Page 3 Templin Resident Files Theft Report A Templin Hall resident recently discovered he had to file a police report on clothes valued at $88.85 that were stolen on September 25 and February 21. The resident, John Evjen, Kansas City, Mo., junior told KU police yesterday that his insurance company would not make a claim on stolen clothes unless a police report was filed. Police said Evjen's clothes were stolen from his room in September and the laundry room in February. The police report listed the stolen items as several pairs of trousers, dress slacks, a sweater and a suede jacket. NORTHERN LIBERALS, with the Kennedy administration's backing, are backing bills to make a sixth grade education evidence of literacy for voting in any federal election. Erwin yesterday termed the proposals "completely unconstitutional" and called for long, thorough hearings. In his prepared testimony, Sparkman said establishing a sixth-grade education as a standard of literacy not only violated the constitutional powers of the state but was in itself discriminatory. He said it would discriminate against persons who were intelligent voters but had not completed six years of school by subjecting them to literacy tests. Argentine Government Stops Revolt BUENOS AIRES — (UPI) — The Argentine government announced that a civilian and military revolt was crushed early today. Army troops were defeated after they seized radio and television stations in Buenos Aires and took control of La Pampa Province in central Argentina. The interior ministry said an attempt had been made by the plotters to seize Radio Nacional, key station in the nationwide radio hookup but that it failed. He said the armed forces had ordered an immediate alert to keep order. FRONDIZI ARRIVED at the Casa Rosada, Argentine government house, at 8:37 a.m. (CST). His private secretary, Eduardo Gonzalez, said "complete calm" existed throughout the country. "Everything is fully normal," Gonzalez said. The Argentine Army reportedly remained loyal to the regime of President Arturo Frondizi and promptly seized key facilities in the nation as the country's political crisis plunged toward a showdown. ALL BUENOS AIRES stations continued broadcasting their usual programs after the army's communications battalion units took control of the transmitting stations. The army action came hours after the armed forces served a new demand on President Arturo Frondizi that he resign to break the political deadlock created by the victory of followers of ousted dictator Juan Feron in elections earlier this month. Frondizi refused to quit, but a showdownt appeared certain this afternoon when a meeting will be held on a compromise solution proposed by Defense Minister Rodolfo Martinez, Jr. SEIZURE OF THE Buenos Aires broadcasting and television facilities was preceded by the arrival of an "order" from an unidentified source saying: "Attention the city's radio and television stations. In a few minutes you must connect with Radio Nacional." At 6:30 a.m. (CST) military detachments moved in and took control of the transmitting equipment of almost all radio and television stations in the city. However, transmission of normal programs continued. Rumors spread throughout Buenos Aires of uprisings by military garrisons in the interior. But phone calls to Cordoba and Bahia Blanca indicated everything was quiet in those places. First Signs of Spring ...and your yen for a spirited sport jacket when the birds return and you get a yen for color, it’s time to turn up in our sport jacket section. You’ll see spring in full glory . . . in jackets cut, tailored and priced the way you like them! from $22.95 - $39.95 diebolt's 843 Mass diebolt's Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 28, 1962 HAVE A GOOD Art Kerby's Mobil Service 9th & Kentucky VI 3-9608 But Fir Have Your Ca For a Trouble Motor In 827 Vermont A&W Auto Service E. T. Anthony 796 N. 2nd. VI 2-0499 Bill's Apco 9th & Iowa V1 3-9808 Tenneco Service Station 23rd & Ousdahl Street VI 3-9691 Ridgway's Sinclair Service 9th & Iowa VI 3-9602 Jim's Apco Service Stations Lawrence, Kansas R.J.'s Apco 1010 N. 3rd VI 3-9660 Ray Wiley Texaco 23rd & La. VI 2-0381 Wednesday, March 28, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 OD VACATION ut First, Car Serviced able-Free Trip Altic Oil Company CHAMPLIN A great name in the Great Plains Ralph Altic, Owner 906 North Second St.—V1 3-9765 Shaw Auto Service 612 North 2nd St. Sawyer's Texaco Service 23rd and Barker VI 3-9628 Broyles & Son Texaco 600 Fla. VI 3-9785 Elm's Sinclair Service Co-op Service Station Highway 10 & Haskell VI 3-8080 West 23rd Street VI 3-5307 R. A. Bucheim's Conoco 19th & Mass. VI 3-8298 Hartman Standard Service 1300 Mass. VI 3-8072 Service for Volkswagen Hunsinger Motors 922 Mass. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. March 28,1962 Camp to Observe 25th Anniversary By Janice Pauls A quarter century of service and inspiration for high school students will be observed this summer, June 17-July 29, when the Midwestern Music and Art Camp celebrates its silver anniversary. Russell Wiley, professor of band and orchestra, has directed the camp since he founded it during the depression days of 1935. The first session of camp had an enrollment of 25 high school students. THE FIRST PARTICIPANTS primarily were from Kansas, but today although Kansas still boasts the largest attendance, the national scope of the program includes high school students from all over the United States. The band camp, as it was called in those days, started out with a small instrumental band. Later, it expanded to include orchestra and then choir, and gradually it began a multi-phase program. Last year 33 states were represented and the number is expected to reach 40 this summer, according to Prof. Wiley. The camp anticipates a record attendance for the silver anniversary session. Approximately 13,000 high school boys and girls who have attended the camp over the past 25 years have come from all the 50 states and seven different countries. IN ADDITION TO THE KU music faculty, the campers will be instructed by several guest conductors Iszler Solomon, conductor of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra; Commander Charles Brendert, leader of the U.S. Navy Band, and Gene Kenney, choral director of Texas Technical College, are three of the conductors. In addition to the senior high music division, two sessions of junior high music also will be conducted. July 1-14 will feature band, orchestra and chorus. However, orchestra will be dropped during the second session, July 15-28. Prof. Wiley will direct these sessions, assisted by Gerald Carney, associate professor of music. THE SENIOR HIGH GROUP, which has grown annually for 25 years, is expected to have 400 participants this summer. Prof. Wiley said he hopes for as many in the junior high group. Other divisions and their directors are art, Marjorie Whitney, professor of design; theater, William Kuhike, instructor of speech and drama; speech, Wilmer Linkugel, assistant professor of speech and drama; ballet, Robert E. Bell, director of ballet at Oklahoma City University, and Mrs. Marguerite Reed, of Tulsa, Okla. The divisions of theater, speech, ballet, and engineering are limited to 20 to 50 participants while art and science may handle 120 and 100 respectively. Science, Robert Baxter, associate professor of botany; engineering, Fred Smithmeyer, assistant professor of engineering, and a combination of journalism and TV, Burton W. Marvin, Dean of the School of Journalism, and Bruce Linton, professor of journalism. The campers will live in Lewis and Templein Halls and receive food service in the dining rooms of Lewis Hall. Seniors Win Award Two KU seniors have been awarded three-year law scholarships to New York University. They are Con Poirier, Topeka, and Bob Thomas, Marysville. They were two of 20 students throughout the nation to receive the Eliju Root-Samuel J. Tilden Award. The award is given to aid young men who give promise of becoming outstanding lawyers in the American tradition," and amounts to $2,630 per year each. Two students are selected from each of the 10 Federal judicial districts. Chemistry Professor Will Speak At Special Colloquium W. F. Kieffer, professor of Chemistry from the College of Wooster, (Ohio) will speak at a special colloquium Saturday, at 10 in the morning in Room 124 Mallott. Prof. Kieffer's subject will be "Elements—From Aristotle to Seaborg." The public is invited to attend. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results STUDENTS! Fill up with "5-D" or "Milemaster" gasolenes. With Spring Vacation coming, be sure to stop in at Fritz Co. for a complete mechanical check-up. Remember, Fritz Co. works hardest to keep students happy. Drive safely when you go home. We'll see you after vacation. FRITZ CO. Phone VI 3-4321 8th and New Hampshire NEAR EVERYTHING CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE KU Is P-T-P Job Placement Center The National People-to-People organization has designated P-t-P at KU as the national center for summer job placement for International students. A meeting will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union to enlist the aid of KU's out-of-state students in carrying out this program. REUBEN McCORNACK, ABI lene sophomore and national job placement chairman for P-t-P, said the KU P-t-P will office会 co-ordinate job placement programs from colleges throughout the United States McCornack said that "under this program, KU International students will have the opportunity to work in other states, and International students from other universities will be able to come to Kansas to spend their summer vacations." members or not, in putting this program into effect. At the Thursday meeting, materials describing the P-t-P program and employment brochures will be handed out. P-t-P is soliciting the aid of all out-of-state students, whether P-t-P THE KANSAS CITY CHAMBER of Commerce has mailed 2,500 employment brochures to prospective employers in the Kansas City area. Individual P-t-P members will carry on campaigns in their home towns over spring vacation to place International students in summer jobs in Kansas. Personal interviews will be conducted between the employers and the International students before actual employment. Democrat Announces for Governor GARDEN CITY - (UPI) - Date E. Saffels (D-Garden City) today announced his candidacy for nomination as Governor of Kansas. Saffels, seeking the nomination on the Democratic ticket, is completing his eight consecutive year in the Kansas House of Representatives. sive leadership, not the 'do nothing, let's put it off' variety which is being given to the people by the present Republican administration," Saffels said in making his announcement. "I believe Kansas needs progress- The 40-year-old former Finney County Attorney is a past president of the Kansas Democratic Club. PATRONIZE YOUR - ADVERTISERS • 1 Check your opinions against L'M's Campus Opinion Poll #19 $\textcircled{1}$ What will the cold war turn into? - an even colder war - a hot war - an industrial and trade contest $\textcircled{2}$ Do a coed’s chances of getting the right man diminish after college? $\textcircled{3}$ With a friend’s pack of cigarettes on the table, would you... - Yes - No - take one? - pull out one of your own? Get lots more from L&M Yes No take one? pull out one of your own? L&M gives you MORE BODY in the blend, MORE FLAVOR in the smoke, MORE TASTE through the filter. It's the rich-flavor leaf that does it! THE MIBACLE TIP L&M FILTERS L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. HERE'S HOW MEN AND WOMEN AT 56 COLLEGES VOTED. friend's ... 42%... 43% your own... 58%... 57% 2 Yes ... 48% ... 44% No ... 52% ... 56% colder war ...25% ...31% hot war ...27% ...27% contest ...48% ...42% MEN WOMEN L $ ^{*} M $ 's the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke. Wednesday, March 28, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 9 1 car- towns Inter- bbs in con- s and re ac- thing, being resent affels ent. SANTA TERESA NATIONAL CHAMPION—Pat Lane, Kansas City freshman, won the national AAU women's junior three-meter diving championship as a 16-year-old. She is a KU student planning to major in political science. Heavy Weekend For KU Athletes Although KU students will be heading home this weekend for their spring semester break, KU varsity athletes will be engaging a heavy weekend of athletic competition. The KU swimming team, coached by Jay Markley travels to Columbus. Ohio, for the NCAA finals to be held tomorrow, Friday and Saturday. THE JAYHAWKERS fielded their strongest team in years and almost knocked off defending champion Oklahoma, but finished second in the Big Eight conference meet. Kansas moves to Houston on April 2 and 3, and then to Lincoln, Neb., to meet the Cornhuskers on the 6th and 7th. Coach Floyd Temple's baseball team starts a six game road trip. The Jayhawks open against Texas Lutheran at Seguin, Texas, on Friday and Saturday. THE VARSITY tennis team meets Kansas State and Southwestern this weekend. Coach Denzel Gibbs' crew won their season opener against Washburn Saturday. Golf opens an 11-match schedule on April 6 and 7. Coach Markley's squad takes on the Wichita Wheatshockers at Wichita. 10,000-Meter Race Named for Jeweler The 10,000-meter run, inaugurated last year as the opening event of the Kansas Relays on Thursday afternoon, has been named the "Marks 10,000" in honor of Julius Marks, retired Lawrence jeweler. "Julius is donating a trophy for this event and has long been a benefactor of the Kansas Relays," meet director Bill Easton said. "We added this event to our program last year because it is an Olympic event and we hope it will stimulate long distance runners and give them an opportunity to compete." This event, like the decathlon, hop-step-jump, 400-meter hurdles, 3000-meter steeplechase, and Glenn Cunningham mile, is open to any amateur. The inaugural was won by Kansas junior Bob Lindrud in 34:43.1. HAMBURGERS 15c At SANDY'S Temple Asks Frosh Players To Report Head baseball coach Floyd Temple asks all freshman boys interested in baseball to report to the K Room of Allen Field House at 4 p.m. Tuesday, April 10. No equipment will be required as the meeting will be organizational. Boxers Rebut Brown's Criticism SAN FRANCISCO—(UPI)—California boxing figures rallied to the defense of their sport today after Gov. Edmond G. (Pat) Brown termed the fight game "dirty, rotten and brutalizing." Brown told reporters that he expected action to outlaw pro boxing in California would be introduced in the 1963 legislature. But later he said he had "no plans at this time" to ask for abolition of the sport. The governor made his first statement in San Francisco, where he talked to reporters at San Francisco State College. The second came from his office in Sacramento "A boxer who is properly conditioned and knows how to defend himself is in a lot less danger of getting hurt than persons in many other sports," said Archie Moore, one of boxing's all-time greats. Meanwhile, fight men rallied to defend their sport. SUMMER JOBS How to get yours! plus Campus Integration . . . Military Deferments . . . Burnett . . . Ribicoff . . . Brubeck . . . Saroyan. plus By Steve Clark and Lee Ayres An attractive blonde approaches the end of the diving board. She springs off the end of the board and soars gracefully through the air. Her entry into the water below is almost unnoticed as only a few ripples mar the smooth surface of the water. By Steve Clark and Lee Ayres TODAY as a KU student, she looks to a major in political science, and someday working for an embassy or diplomatic service in Washington, D.C. News . . Books . . Records . Careers . . Fashions . . and She is Pat Lane, Kansas City freshman, who as a 16-year-old won the national AAU junior women's three-meter diving championship. As a diver, Miss Lane is temporarily retired. She comes out of her retirement in June. The KU coed will start diving again, practicing for the national senior women's competition. Miss Lane did not learn how to swim until she was 12 years old. "THERE WAS no place nearby where I could swim," she said. "When my parents joined the Homestead Country Club, a swimming pool became available." Kansas Coed Wins National Diving Title as 16-Year Old more in C She seemed to be naturally attracted to a diving board. One day after making several dives the pool manager asked her if she would like to be in a water show. She replied yes. CAMPUS ILLUSTRATED The manager coached her and at the end of the summer she entered the Kansas state meet at Coffeyville. She had little trouble in walking away with first place. The New National Magazine for ALL College Students Bad luck started befalling her. At the age of 14 she had bronchial pneumonia and at the age of 15 while practicing before a meet she burst an eardrum. MISS LANE explains that she did not really become interested in diving until she was 15. She entered local meets before that, but no big meets. At Newsstands & Bookstores Her victory in the national meet was called an "upset." The pre-meet favorites were Dee Gee Reynolds and Kathy Igoe of Phoenix, Ariz. The girls started in the morning and finished in the evening. There were 11 dives and on her last dive. Miss Lane executed a near perfect, difficult forward and one-half somersault to win her national title. ALSO THAT summer she won the one-meter and three-meter Missouri Valley Association diving titles and the AAU Junior Olympic title. She placed 14th at the national senior meet and 17th at the Olympic try-outs. Last summer she did not compete because she worked as a secretary to help finance her college education. This summer she plans on returning to competitive diving and will start training for the national senior women's meet the first of June. Miss Lane combines seriousness and fun in diving. While she works hard at improving herself, she is also having a good time. HER TRAINING schedule entails getting up at the break of dawn. She is usually at the pool by 7 a.m. She dives for several hours before taking a break and working out with the swimmers. In the afternoon she practices some more before calling it a day. Miss Lane is not all work and no fun. She is popular among her classmates and has her share of dates. While at Shawnee Mission East High School she was a cheerleader and reigned as homecoming queen. Miss Lane has one handicap as a diver. She is nearsighted. "When I start to dive, I cannot see the end of the board," she said. Innumerable times she has run to the end of the board, dived high into the air and landed right where she started, on the end of the board. "MY MOTHER won't watch me dive," Miss Lane said. "She is scared I will hurt myself by landing on the board." Opponents are often amazed by the closeness in which Miss Lane comes to the end of the board on her way down into the water. "Many times they will tell me that I came awful close to hitting the board. I just reply 'Oh.'" Miss Lane said psychology is important in competitive diving. She said she always practiced her best dive before the meet in hopes of frightening her opponents. TO DEVELOP more spring on the board, she practices, on a diving board in her back yard extender over a sand pit. The board has a minimum of spring to it, and by practicing on it, she can get more spring during a meet. Miss Lane would like another chance at making the Olympic team. She will be 20 when the next tryouts are held (1964). She will not be handicapped as she was in 1960. She will be older, stronger and more experienced. Martin Enters Decathlon Oklahoma's J. D. Martin, one of the Big Eight's all-time pole-vaulting greats, will expand his talents into the decathlon in the 37th Kansas Relays here April 20-21. Although he's tackled the 10-part event only once, Martin owns an auspicious record. He placed third in the national AAU last July with 7005 points, a total good enough to win seven of nine Relays crowns since the IAAF scoring system was invoked. Among those he beat at Albuquerque, N.M., was Phil Mulkey, who has won the last four decathlon titles here and owns a pending world record of 8709 points. The former Wyoming athlete, now competing out of Memphis, was a heavy favorite at Albuquerque, but pulled a muscle in the 100 and limped home fourth on 6807. High point of Martin's effort in this meet was a $15-11\frac{1}{2}$ hoist in the pole vault, highest ever posted in decathlon competition. Typewriters salos - service - rentals sales - service - rentals Olympia - Olivetti Smith-Corona - Royal Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 Free Pick-up & Delivery Redman's Have Done it Again! The last Sale of Boots was so successful we have another shipment. - Children's Boots - Boots for Boys Men's Boots Same Low Prices On Acme Seconds $3.99 to $13.99 Value to $22.95 Buy Now and Save R REDMAN'S SHOES 24 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 28, 1962 Moves Made to Halt Arms Race GENEVA — (UPI)—The Western powers urged Russia today to join them in an effort to stop the spread of nuclear weapons on earth and in space. The Communists replied with a renewed call for a free nuclear zone in central Europe, involving the withdrawal of American atomic bomb planes and missiles from forward positions in West Germany. THE TWO POSITIONS were put forth at the 17-nation disarmament conference which settled down to a detailed examination of Communist and Western plans. Italian foreign minister Antonio Segni carried on for the NATO powers. He said the conference should agree without delay on measures to prevent war by surprise attack. "Such an agreement would allow us to proceed in peace of mind with our task," he said. SEGNI GAVE VIGOROUS support to American proposals for ending production of nuclear weapons and transferring 50,000 kilograms of fissionable material to peaceful purposes. He called for early agreement on a Canadian proposal that would ban stationing of nuclear weapons in space. Poland presented the Communist case. Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki said the denuclearized zone should include Poland, Czechoslovak vakia, East Germany and West Germany. HIS PROPOSAL would forbid the manufacture or stationing of any nuclear weapons or delivery vehicles for them in the zone. Such weapons already in the zone would be withdrawn and conventional armaments reduced. It included provisions for international controls, but was vague as to whether this actually would be reduced to self inspection. The West has objected to this plan because it would remove such U.S. weaponry as F104 Starfighters from range of the Soviet Union but leave West Germany within easy Soviet Range. “What had the other women done with him... the young one, the wild one? Could she be as fearless in her love?” LAURENCE HARVEY GERALDINE PAGE ] An Adult Movie! No One Under 16 Admitted HAL WALLIS' Production IN HAL WALLIS' Production Summer and Smoke BASED ON THE PLAY BY TENNESSEE WILLIAMS ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE GERALDINE PAGE... Best Actress UNA MERKEL... Best Supporting Actress And 3 More! A Pamela Tiffin COSTARRING Rita Moreno - Una Merkel John McIntire - Thomas Gomez EARL HOLLIMAN DIRECTED BY Peter Glennville James Bee and Meade Roberts SCREENPLAY A Paramount Release Technicolor PANAVISION AND --- NOW SHOWING! At 7:00 and 9:15 Adults 85c Granada THEATRE...Telephone V1 3-5788 Opposing candidates in the disputed March 14 Young Democrats election will battle for recognition at the state convention in Kansas City next Friday and Saturday. Young Demos Fighting for Recognition Those who are recognized by the convention will be the official officers for the KU chapter. have not been certified by Frank McDonald. Democratic county chairman. Without McDonald's certification the officers will not be officially accepted as delegates to the convention. The winners of the March 14 election, headed by Barry Bennington, Cheney junior, as president. Bennington said Monday night that a special election to settle the dispute cannot be held before the convention because the YD constitution makes no provision for such an election. STARTS TOMORROW! THEY WERE SEVEN... AND THEY FOUGHT LIKE SEVEN HUNDRED! YUL BRYNNER CO-STARRING ELI WALLACH STEVE McQUEEN Released thru UNITED UK ARTISTS THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN" SECOND GREAT WESTERN GREGORY PECK JEAN SIMMONS CARROLL BAKER CHARLTON HESTON BURL IVES WILLIAM WYLER'S THE BIG COUNTRY Released by UNITED ARTISTS in TECHNICOLOR and TECHNIRAMA ENDS TONIGHT "North By Northwest" — PLUS — "The Young Doctors" SUNSET LIVE IN THEATRE ... West on McKinney STARTS TOMORROW! FREE! Get your Magic Mystic Mask to see the movie thrill of thrills!* VOL 1 Only by looking through the mask will you live the terrors of THE MASK A TAYLOR ROFFMAN PRODUCTION • IN DEPTH DIMENSION AND ELECTRO-MAGIC SOUND starring PAUL STEVENKS CLAUDETTE NEWNS' produced and directed by JULIAN ROFFMAN A BEER-WHIPPON ATTRACTION - DISTRIBUTED BY WARNER BROS. One Are Benet more STUl — 8:30 ONLY — INVIS woven arette repair AN UNFORGETTABLE EXPERIENCE IN SUSPENSE ENDS TONIGHT Deborah Kerr In 'THE INNOCENTS' "BLAST OF SILENCE" GENI Lab. avail comp Free RENT mach rentee Sewir ALLEN BARON *MOLLY McCARTY* *LARRY TUCKER* An Alfred Crown-Dan Enright Production *A Universal-International Release* Conn on birds guine pet s VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VAKING 2-3033 Wednesday, March 28, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms cash: All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 25c for billing. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. BUSINESS SERVICES Are YOU wasting time on your studies? Benefit from our unusual methods. Learn more quickly, effortlessly. Mail $2.00 to STUDY AIDS, Box 342, City. 4-12 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 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. INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re- woven so damage cannot be seen. Cig- arette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. If DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 939 $^{1}$ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tf ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. tt GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3522 Free delivery. TYEPWITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 3644. 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 HELP WANTED EXPERIENCED posting machine operator N.C.R. or Burroughs for part time work Sr. Custodian, Apply Lawnis Memorial Hospital, Mr. Holle, IV 3-3680 Afternoon secretary help wanted. Real estate experience preferred. Give qualification in first letter. Mail to: Real Estate, University Daily Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. 3-29 FOUND Hood to raincoat 3 ~ scarves - men & women's gloves 4 ~ pairs GLASSES ~ design journals books 5 sets of keys Book The Press & Society, Introduction to Mass Communications, Better Paragraphs) Jewelry. Claim at 111 Flint. tf FOK RENT TYPEWRITER for rent, cheap — call VI 3-0031 between 5 and 7 p.m. tf 2 single rooms & one double room for boys. Available now. Call IV 3-4594, 3-29 WANTED: a roommate for nice apt. Sites wanted in 121 Naismith Street I-2-5266 J 3bergman. I-2-5266 J-4-11 APARTMENTS FOR RENT Large kitchen cabinets and closet space. Brick construction, fully insulated. Garbage disposal, carpeted central air-conditioning, and laundry $ _{1/2} $ -block. MARRIED AND GRADUATE STUDENTS PARK PLAZA SOUTH APTS. 1912 W. 25th VI 2-3416 APT. for 2 or 3 boys. Utilities pd. 1 block from campus. Available 1st of April or sooner. 1142 Indiana. 3-30 Sleeping rm, for rent for men students. Sleeping rm, for rent for men students & refrigerators 1315 Tenn., VI - 3-890. 4-10 LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. rooms, kitchens, and bath, and ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2 9731. BILFLOLK, sometime Sunday. Contained Milford, NJ. (4) 2-5500. Ian Wicker, 1200 La., VI 3-2550. 3-28 LOST PURSE at Jayhawk Cafe Friday night. Lane, Watkins Hall. Reward. 10-35 3-29 TYPING EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, theses, dissertations, manuscripts, & application letters. Electric typewriter — Special symbols & signs. Prompt service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 Rhode Island, VI 3-7485. tf JOB SEEKERS: Prospective employers see you thru your letter of application. They may create form for first impressions. For fast accurate typing service call VI 3-0483. 4-10 "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ment for instructors. Call Miss Velvetle typing at standard rates, call Miss Louse Pope, VI 3-1087." SECRETARY WILL DO TYPING in home. Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at VI 2-1749. tf FROM TERM TO TERM a paper needs typing. Special rates to students. Execution time: 597, SFT 12, Jason, Mission, HE 2-7718. Eves or Sat, RA 2-2186. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric writerwriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former. Eng. teacher. Ready to teach & reports accurately. Standard rates. See Mr. Compton, 1319 Vt. apt. 3. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers and resumes. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mt. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattie, VI 3-8379. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name — call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lo- Gebhach. TYPIST. experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-1409. tf Experienced Typist; Electric typewriter Interested in theses, term papers, etc Student rates. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001 Experienced typist would like typing in ner home. Accurate, neat, reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2651 any time. tf THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter. Reasonable rate. Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. CI 3-0483. Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with standard for math and Greek Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. Call VI 2-1546. 3-30 Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. on electric typewriter. Mrs. Amos Russell, 1511 W. 21 St. Call VI 3-6440. tf Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Responsible to Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI 2-164. Mrs. Bellow. 408 W. 13th. VI 2-164. FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plenic, phone supply. 6th, 8th & Vermont. Phone VI 30350. 1951 Ford-6, 2 door. Blue, good condition. Four good tires, new brake lining, new muffler, exhaust & tail pipe. $150. Call Martin Lang, VI 3-4179. 4-12 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE Magnavox Stereo Console — 2 years old. Call VI 2-2365. 4-10 New heavy retreads $10 each, ex., plus tax for most all small cars: Sizes 560-15, 590-15, 600-13, 640-15, etc. at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-13 M.G. '52 TD sports roadster. Real nice cars. $695. Call VI 3-7497. 4-12 GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. SPECIAL THIS WEEK. 357 Magnum (or 38 special) Ruger at a price too low to be negotiable inexpensive .22 revolver left, 134 OHIO 06H You Are Served Freshly Fried French Fries At 1953 ' S' x 28* Travelite Trailer Home. Excellent location in private yard. Garden and yard space. Good for student couple. Available end of May. Call VI 2-1063. SANDY'S White dinner jacket by "After Size." Size 44. Call V1 3-2581, preferably after 7 hrs. 1953 Super 88 Oldsmobile. Extra clean. $00.00. Call VI 2-2769. tt ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch Lomb microscope immediately. $200 Cal. come to 907 Ark. for more information. GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES, complete with diagrams, comprehensive definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference. $3.50, free delivery. Phone VI 3-7553. VI 3-5778. tf OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. Typewriter sales, service, rental, a档案 Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI i-6444 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet center. Pet phone 2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. 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. 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 PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS This Week Only Align & Balance Front Wheels $7.50 most cars PETE'S ALIGNING SHOP First street north of the river 229 Elm VI 3-2250 Cuddly Easter TOYS Fluffy Easter Rabbits for your favorite girl Other Stuffed Animals priced from $1.95 - $35.00 - Dogs - Kangaroos - J-Hawks - Giraffes - Hoohawks - Skunks - Squirrels - Lambs KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, March 28. 1962 Performing Arts Subsidy Discussed By Richard Bonett (This is the final article of a three- week economic crisis in the performing arts.) What is the solution to the economic difficulties that some experts fear will bring about the collapse of the performing arts in the United States? Anthony Bliss, president of the Metropolitan Opera association, sees the providing of expanded employment opportunities for the artists—musicians, singers, dancers, and actors—as part of the central problem. Few in favor of a performing arts subsidy propose that the federal government take over the entire responsibility for operating the hundreds of artistic institutions spread across the nation, or even a selected group of the more famous ones. VARIOUS PROPOSALS HAVE been put forth to accomplish this goal, including longer seasons, more and expanded tours, special performances and possibly more live appearances on television. All but the last of these suggestions, however, appear to depend heavily on some type of subsidy. In testimony before the Select Subcommittee on Education of the House Education and Labor Committee in New York last November, Herman Kenin, president of the American Federation of Musicians and one of the most vocal backers of a federal subsidy, said: A broad-scale subsidy for the performing arts—either on a federal, state or local level—is, in fact, the central issue of the debate over the financial difficulties of these arts. "Subsidy for music and the performing arts—with a substantial assist from the box office—should operate at federal, state, and community levels. "WE DO NOT CONTEMPLATE that government would or should foot the bill—only that it will pick up a share of the burden at the point at which it is becoming intolerable." Similarly, Bliss warned that subsidy "should be approached very circumspectly. . . . Individual public support of musical organizations is indispensable." Bliss, supported by others, suggests the formation of a national council for the arts, under federal auspices, as the first step in developing a comprehensive assistance program for the arts. Various proposals for such an arts council have been made in Congress over the past four years, each time with the backing of the President. All were defeated. ANOTHER MEASURE IS currently under consideration. Its author, Rep. Frank Thompson Jr., D-N.J., proposes a council under the Department of Health, Education and Welfare to "assist the growth and development of the arts in the United States." The council would be composed of 21 citizens representing all major fields of artistic endeavor. In a recent magazine article, Thompson listed the objections to federal subsidy for the arts and commented that arguments against such assistance "must not be dismissed lightly." While the Thompson measure is considered to be meek, past experience indicates strong Congressional opposition to any form of federal involvement in the arts. He wrote, "There are those who fear . . . that government assistance will lead to government control. Others argue that whatever government sponsors in the arts would be mediocre in concept and performance." Also feared, he said, is the development of "official" schools or cliques in the allocating machinery. But, Thompson contends, the arguments add up to "kicking a straw man" since his bill proposes to set up only the machinery to provide "leadership and tools for a broad look at American culture and artistic life in order to form some recommendations for its enrichment." You Can Get PEPSI At SANDY'S PROPONENTS OF DIRECT federal and state subsidy are more critical of the arguments against support for the performing arts. Kenin is outspoken on this point: "Centuries of governmental benignice for the arts in foreign lands and more than a century of practiced subsidy in the United States for many, many endeavors other than the arts prove the hypocrisy of these timid critics (of subsidy)." ASIDE FROM KEEPING THE more famous artistic institutions solvent, supporters of government aid programs argue, the effect of the subsidy in these countries also has been to keep down the price of an admission ticket. A West German opera enthusiast may purchase a ticket for as little as 25 cents, while even local productions in this country are "pricing themselves out of existence." Perhaps what has most angered proponents of an aid program for the arts in this country, in the face of arguments used by the critics, is evidence of direct and indirect subsidy to foreign culture as a result of U.S. foreign aid and cultural exchange programs. During the Congressional subcommittee hearings in New York last November, Kenin made a special point of showing that while Turkey was receiving a half-billion dollars from the U.S., the Turkish government spent $3.3 million for an opera house in Istanbul. Similarly, he said, Austria restored the Vienna Opera House, after it was almost destroyed in World War II, while receiving Marshall Plan aid. ROBERT SABIN, A MUSIC commentator, calls it a "tragic irony" that while American artistic institutions are struggling for economic survival, the U.S. government, since 1954, has sponsored foreign tours through the State Department exchange programs of more than 175 attractions, more than half of these musical. A program such as Bliss suggests already is being tried in at least three states, New York, Kentucky and North Carolina. But these efforts are regarded only as a good start in the right direction. Like Bliss, however, Goldberg believes the general public "must expect to provide a greater part of the cost of the performing arts. . ." Bliss sees the financing of tours within the U.S. as the most effective means of subsidy allocations. Whereas he conceives of the tours as being state subsidized, Secretary of Labor Arthur Goldberg feels the federal government should participate on a matching-funds basis. IN KENTUCKY. STATE SUBSIDY- referred to as the "government-in-culture-program" - sends the Louisville Symphony orchestra to state colleges and remote communities for eight pairs of concerts a year. The Arts Council of New York State subsidizes a tour of the Buffalo Philharmonic to the smaller communities. "... the answer must not be found in what will amount to tyranny—be it of Red Square or Madison Avenue, for that matter, of Capitol Hill. There are alternatives, and creative minds should be able to find them." America, the National Catholic Review, crystalizes the thinking of many in a recent article comparing Soviet cultural institutions with those in the U.S. and summarizing the question of government support for the arts: (Continued from page 1) idea of sending food to the people of Communist China. Kansans Urge— Prof. Ise, in an interview with the Daily Kansan, said sending food to Communist China is "a matter of humanity with me. If your neighbor is starving you ought to feed him. "IT'S THE PEOPLE of Communist China who are starving not the dictators." Official Bulletin Teacher Interviews: March 30 — Dale T. Hobson, Public Schools, (Elem. & Sec.) El Centro, Calif. March 30 — G. C. Ekermann, Supervising Prin. Dist. 6, Littleton, Colorado Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road Applications for editorship and business applications in office of the Chancellor be filled in office of the Chancellor by April 25. Any University student can apply. See Tom Yoe, 231 Strong, for details. Confessions; Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) and 11:45-12 noon; Saturdays, 4-5 and 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. TODAY People-to-People Forum: 4 p.m. For- um Room, Kansas Union. Orientation meeting for students planning to visit the school. Jan Robert Ritsaume Van Eck in charge. EL ATENEO se reune el micróleo dias 28 a las 4 de la tarde en la saia 11 Fraser. Walker y el Sr. Ben Morris, los dos recién llegados a Lawrence del II Año 1950 en la Cultura (en Costa Rica), Van a hablar sobre el Instituto de Educación Politica al que ellos asistieron durante si ano en San José, en la cultura hispana y en espanol, en la cultura hispana y en los programas de KU en el extranjeron estarEMENT invitados. Se servirán refrescos. Mathematics Colloquium: 4:15 p.m. 109 Strong, Prof. Richard Anderson, Louisi- omphism and Mapping Theories Home: Homemorphism and Mapping Theories Coffee: 3:50 p.m. 119 Strong Hall. Young Democrats: 7 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m. 306 Kansas Union. Instructor, Larry Bodle. TOMORROW Episcopal Holy Communion & Lunch: 12 noon. Curbarbury House. KUOK: 2-News & Weather; 3:05-Top Forty Tunes; 4-Hilltopping; 6-News & Weather; 6:15-Sports; 6:20 Whittaker's Wax Works; 6:25-Spotlight on Science; 6:35-Bonjour Mesdames'; 6:45-Public Service Flight, Stage I; 6:55-Night Flight, Stage I; 10-News & Weather; 10:15-Night Flight, Stage II; 12-Portals of Prayer KING SIZE Winston FILTER • CIGARETTES FINER FILTER FOR 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 smokingthat's Filter-Blend. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N. C. WINSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should! Furor Continues In YD Election By Dennis Branstiter Last year's president of the KU Young Democrats was accused this morning of trying to make a deal to cover up the disputed March 14 election of officers. In a telephone interview this morning, Lawing said, "They offered Pete (Peter Aylward, Ellsworth junior and defeated candidate for YD president in the disputed election) a deal. They wanted to make him president to take the heat off" Jim Lawing, Lawrence graduate student, accused Verne Gauby, Grand Island, Neb., graduate student, of trying to make the deal. This morning's charge came in the aftermath of a special YD meeting last night in which the memberships of Gauby and four other Young Democrats were suspended. New officers and delegates to the state convention in Kansas City this weekend were also elected at this meeting. The Gauby - Bennington (Barry Bennington, Cheney junior elected YD president in the disputed election) faction boycotted the meeting. Both Gauby and Bennington were among those suspended. THESE ACTIONS, however, may not be constitutional. The club's constitution states that members can be suspended and officers and state convention delegates elected at "general" meetings. Last night's meeting was a "special" meeting requested by a petition signed by 28 Young Democrats. According to the constitution the club's president is obligated to call such a special meeting if he is presented with a petition and if no general meeting has been called during the month. Lawring circulated the petition for the meeting. He said last night that the March 14 meeting was invalid because the election held at the meeting was invalid. He said last night's meeting was the only valid meeting held in March and the actions taken at the meeting were therefore legal. This morning Bennington said, "Tuesday night I talked to Pete Aylward on the phone and he told me he would not recognize this meeting (last night's)." "We do not recognize the legality of this meeting or any of the results thereof. "IN THE EYES of the elected officers (elected March 14) this action by Mr. Lawing and Mr. Aylward constitutes bad faith on their part...They have no interest in the future of the Young Democrats at KU." In a telephone conversation a few minutes later, Lawing said, "Aylward didn't say that. I was there." Lawing then charged Gauby with offering to make a deal. After last night's meeting, Lawing said, "I'm confident that the state convention will seat the delegates elected here tonight and that the officers elected will be fully recognized by all interested parties. "It would be a welcome investigation if anybody wished to challenge the propriety of this group to act as it has here tonight." MICHAEL THOMAS, Ft. Riley junior and YD membership committee chairman, one of the five members suspended in last night's meeting, said in a telephone inter- (Continued on page 8) Weather Cloudy this afternoon with occasional light rain. Much colder this afternoon with strong northherly winds 25 to 40 miles per hour. Partly cloudy to cloudy and colder tonight with diminishing winds. Friday partly cloudy, colder. Lows tonight 30 to 35. Highs Friday near 40. Kennedy Hits GOP For Tax Opposition WASHINGTON—(UPI)—President Kennedy accused Republicans today of trying to block his tax revision program and called on "every member of the House of Representatives who believes in spreading the tax burdens fairly" to support the bill. Kennedy devoted much of his 10th news conference in the last 11 weeks to defending the measure, which has been approved by the House Ways and Means Committee. A House showdown was expected late today. ALTHOUGH HE DID NOT single out the GOP by name, he said he had "great difficulty in understanding the position of any political party which tries to kill proposals" such as are contained in his tax proposal. Defeat of the measure, he said, would deprive businessmen of capital investment incentives which would help them compete with foreign companies. It also would mean abandonment of "an effort to close foreign tax havens" to American investors overseas, he said. "If it is killed," he said, "we will have lost a valuable opportunity to find jobs for college and high school graduates." He said it would mean losses of American gold reserves abroad and additional harm to this country's balance of payments in international trade. Other subjects covered during the conference included the nation's economic outlook, the steel industry settlement, the Berlin situation and a nuclear test ban treaty. He also discussed the nuclear test ban issue in a lengthy statement issued after the conference. THE MEASURE'S TWO main points opposed by Republicans would provide business tax credits of more than a billion dollars a year and set up a withholding tax system on interest and dividends. In the statement, he said efforts to agree on a treaty with Russia on the subject had reached "a real impasse." The Soviet Union, he said, refused flatly to accept inspection controls in any form. HE TOLD THE CONFERENCE that the United States cannot accept an agreement which does not provide adequate assurance against cheating. On the basis of a first-hand report yesterday by Secretary of State Dean Rusk on Geneva negotiations, Kennedy told the conference the Russian roadblock to an acceptable inspection system seemed solid. Daily hansan The President also called on national state government officials to try to solve the problem of under-representation of urban areas. The Supreme Court ruled Monday that Federal Courts can consider cases involving charges of unfair apportionment of seats in state legislatures. 59th Year, No.113 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, March 29, 1962 Candidates May Be Ineligible for Election By Mike Miller An unheeded amendment to the All Student Council constitution may prevent two University Party candidates from running for office. Gerald (Kep) Kepner, Wichita junior and UP candidate for student body president, and Thomas Hardy, Hooisington junior and one of UP's candidates for student body vice president, may be declared ineligible to run for the offices. Kepner signed a statement authorizing two Kansan reporters to look at Watkins Hospital records to verify that he was in the Hospital. The unheeded amendment says any candidate for the presidency or vice presidency of the student body, who is not a member of the ASC, must attend all ASC meetings after the first meeting in December "except that the council may, by a two-thirds vote, permit the aspirant one excused absence." KEPNER MISSED A MEETING Feb. 27 because of illness and Hardy missed a meeting Jan. 9 and one last Tuesday night because of an evening examination. However, Dr. Maurice Gross, Watkins Hospital staff physician, refused to let the reporters look at Keper's record. A Watkins Hospital official said that Kepner's record would be released if a written statement by Kepner was presented. "I see no reason why the information should be released," Dr. Gross said. "We don't want to become involved in anything political." The two candidates' eligibility will be voted upon by the ASC when it meets April 10. A two-thirds vote of the ASC delegates would allow the candidates to remain in the race. Gross told the reporters to tell Kepner to come to the hospital if he wanted any information released. Mel Saferstein, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student and chairman of the ASC elections committee, explained that the amendment had been added to the original constitutional article which read, "No student shall be eligible for the presidency or the vice presidency who has not served on the All Student Council previously, for at least one full school year." He said that the amendment originally was passed in 1958 when one party, Vox Populi, had control of all the ASC seat. Candidates not affiliated with Vox, therefore, were unable to run for offices. MAX EBERHART, GREAT BEND senior and student body president, said, "It is in the hands of the ASC now. The two-thirds vote of the council will mean that some of the Vox Populi members on the council will have to switch over and vote for the UP candidate. "It would seem likely that the Vox members would do this, because they probably would want to see a race for the student body president," Eberhart added. The trouble arose because Kepner and Hardy are the first two candidates running for the positions since the amendment was passed who are not members of the All Student Council. When asked about the situation, Kepern said. "If I'm ineligible to be a candidate for student body president because I was in a hospital bed the night of an ASC meeting, I will lose much confidence in the judgment of some of the student representatives to the ASC. I will continue to campaign because I don't think the ASC will deny me the right to run." HARDY AGREED WITH Kepler, saying, "If the ASC decides to rule against us, it would lower the level of the spring elections." Jerry Dickson, Newton junior and Kepner's opponent in the race for student body president, said, "Even though Mr. Kepner is not a member of the council, he should be given a chance to run. I will do everything within my power to give Vox to excuse Mr. Kepner for this meeting which he missed." "It is fortunate that this was brought to light at this time rather than at a time when Mr. Kepner could not have been in a situation to restore his candidacy condition," he added. Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior and chairman of the ASC, said, "It is an unfortunate situation that neither Mr. Kepler norMr. Hardy had been on the council. I don't doubt that both of the men have good excuses, but I do think they should have been informed of the rules and taken the proper measures. "I anticipate that all will be well, but no one except the council has the right to judge; good excuse or no good excuse, it must go through the Council," he added. Unions Cause Space Delay WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Vital missile and space programs were "intolerably delayed" over a four-and-a-half year period while union members and their local officers put greed ahead of country in wildest strikes and work stoppages, a Senate subcommittee reported today. In a speech prepared for delivery on filing the subcommittee's report, chairman John L. McClellan, D-Ark., suggested that the Senate "consider immediate action" on his proposal to prohibit strikes at defense establishments including missile bases. He said "extremely beneficial results" followed subcommittee hearings almost a year ago but added that work days lost through stoppages are again on an upward trend. Last Issue of Kansan The Kansan will suspend publication today until after the spring vacation. The next issue of the Kansan will be Tuesday, April 10. AWS ELECTS OFFICERS—Elected in yesterday's Associated Women Students elections are left to right (front row), president, Marilyn Mueller, St. Louis junior; secretary, Susan Gerlash, Garden City freshman; (second row). Cwen Adviser, Wendy Wilkerson, Wichita sophomore; vice president, (There was a tie for this office THE COUNCIL OF ELEVEN WOMEN which will be broken at a special meeting of the AWS Senate tonight at 7 p.m.) Kay Timberlake, Leawood junior; and George Anne Porter, Kansas City junior; (third row), treasurer, Patricia Kendall, Holton sophomore; All Student Council Independent Representative, Jane Breckenridge, Louisburg freshman. 2. $9 \mathrm {a r}^{2}$ Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 29, 1962 The Campus Politicians Campus politics have degenerated considerably in the last few days. After opening the spring election campaigns by issuing platforms and statements of purpose, the three campus political organizations have forsaken constructive action and are now engaging in a game of charges and counter-charges. Criticism and discussion of opposing parties is normal and expected. However, this should be secondary to the constructive proposals and discussion of issues by the candidates and party leaders. The fountainhead of all this negative activity was the organization of Action and the subsequent opposition of Vox and UP to it. Action adopted a platform which included several controversial points, including reaffiliation with the National Student Association, withdrawal of university recognition from any living group still having a discriminatory clause by Sept. 1, 1965 and a concern with and involvement in national issues by the All Student Council. In many ways, the Action platform expressed a different philosophy of student government and its legitimate concerns than is held by Vox and UP. THESE DIFFERENT concepts of what student government should be concerned with is undoubtedly the key factor. Action has advocated a far wider and more active concern with both campus and national affairs than the other two political organizations advocate. The statements of Vox and UP indicate that they feel student government cannot legitimately concern itself with some of the issues Action discusses in its platform. This question of what the legitimate concerns of student government are is obviously one of the reasons Action was formed. It disagrees with the more limited concept advocated by Vox and UP and wants an increased role for the ASC. The speeches and debates in the coming campaigns this April should prove useful in helping to define what the legitimate role of the ASC is. But this factor must not be allowed to reduce the campaigns to mutual vindictiveness. Both in trying to define what the legitimate concern of student government is and in supporting their platforms, the candidates can best serve their causes by placing the greatest emphasis on the positive elements of their proposals. —William H. Mullins How They Handled Discrimination At Amherst Editor: In your March 20th issue, you carried a letter from Bill Gissendanner concerning the Greek restrictive clauses. In that letter, reference was made to the fraternity systems of Amherst and Williams. I took my undergraduate work at Amherst and was a member of a fraternity there. The social customs of that school (I cannot speak with any authority for Williams) are, perhaps, unique, and may be of some interest to your readers. If I understand Mr. Gissendanner's reference, he is either poorly informed or has grossly misinterpreted the situation. During World War II, all fraternities were taken over by the college for use as dormitories. In 1945, the faculty wished to discontinue the fraternity system on the grounds that it fostered ant-intellectualism and that its discriminatory clauses ran counter to the aims and principles of the college. IN 1954, PIII Delta Theta, Mr. Gissdanner's fraternity, suspended its local chapter for pledging "socially undesirable elements" (a Jewish boy). In 1957, this particular socially undesirable had become president of the house and the local chapter was dropped from the national. That same year, another house disaffiliated with its national because of a dispute involving rushing policy. In 1958, PhiGamma Delta pledged a Negro and was suspended by its national. Contrary to local Fiji opinion, the boy in question was not forced on the house, but was obtained only after long wooing in competition with two other houses. An undergraduate body largely composed of returning veterans readily embraced the faculty's policies. The house to which it subsequently pledged was informed by its national organization not to open in this unfavorable atmosphere. The house opened as a local. About a year later, another house broke with its national over the pledging of a Negro. This occasioned headlines throughout the country. ALUMNI FEELING against such action was strong enough to induce the administration to allow the thirteen fraternities (then all nationals) to reopen, but under permanent probation. The college reserved the right to terminate its recognition of any chapter which condoned anti-intellectual practices or maintained discriminatory clauses, either written or understood. So much for history. What of the present situation? Both Amherst and Williams enjoy 100 per cent rushing. That is, all freshmen wishing to join a fraternity do. At the beginning of rush, all freshmen are escorted through smokers at each of the thirteen fraternities and the ... Letters Lord Jeffrey Amberst Club, the latter being a social dorm for independents, with all the advantages of fraternity life plus lower dues. The freshman then declares for rush or decides to remain independent. In my class, 100 per cent of the freshmen chose and pledged fraternities. Each house is then assigned one-thirteenth of those declaring for rush as its quota, with any "left over" numbers being assigned according to a rotating schedule. The quota is not one which the house must fill, but one that it may not exceed. RUSH, WHEN I graduated, comprised the first four days of spring vacation. During the last twenty-four hours of rush, the rush chairmen of all the houses are in continuous contact, making sure that all candidates are met and bid. If it becomes clear that some boys are not being approached, either because they are not well known or because one or more houses have decided to close short of quotas, then extended quotas are granted to those houses desiring them. At the end of rush, all participating freshmen have joined fraternities or LJAC, albeit some may not find themselves in the house of their first choice. Because of the quota, the problem of fitting the freshman to a house which he wishes to join has at times been critical. Generally, one goes with his friends, and houses tend to drop groups, some of the members of which may not be well known to the brothers. This practice is reinforced by the short rush period and by school rules and a freshman schedule which effectively isolates the freshmen from the members of the three upper classes. Last year, one house decided to eliminate all selection by declaring that it would pledge whoever asked to join after a given hour on the last day of rush. It continued to pledge all comers in this manner until the quota was filled. ASIDE FROM its liberal approach, several other salient social factors have emerged from this system. First, after the initial faculty ruling, all of the major changes in rushing procedure, including the decision to go to 100 per cent rush, have been initiated The greatest minds are capable of the greatest vices as well as of the greatest virtues.—Rene Descartes Impossible is a word only to be found in the dictionary of fools.— Napoleon Short Ones --by the fraternities, sometimes under pressure from a small but vocal group of independents, but more often spontaneously. The nationals have had far less trouble from the administration than from their own undergraduate members. THIS PRESENTATION represents only the crudest of sketches of a highly complex and integrated social system. It is a system which may well be incompatible with a school such as KU. The differences between the Amherst-Williams type of institution (please! we are not Ivy League) and a large, midwestern public university are legion and so vast as to be appreciated only by those who have enjoyed the opportunity to spend considerable time at both. However, I feel strongly that any school whose undergraduate body sincerely desires to do so can develop a fraternity system (the peculiar psychology of the female of the species suggests caution in holding similar notions concerning sororities) without the inanity of the discrimination clause. Third, the fraternity system is a social organization which tends to unite rather than segment the student body. The pledge finds that in joining a house his approach to the college in toto is broadened. Rather than restricting himself to a small, exclusive portion of the student body, he is introduced to the college at large via his house. To the pledge, the usage of the word "fraternity" moves away from that of the Greeks and approaches that intended by the French. Second, once started, the liberalization of fraternity policies has run a spiral course. Today, most of KU's Greeks would probably consider the majority of fraternities at Amherst to be social dorms with initiation rituals. This is but weak criticism to those who are more interested in the social aspects of fraternity life than in the exclusiveness of having endured a particular form of mystic rites. History is little else than a picture of human crimes and misfortunes.—Voltaire * * The burden of development lies on the student body. The administration at Amherst has never forced a house to fill to quota, much less pledge an unwanted member. I doubt that the student body at KU can achieve comparable results as long as it feels that action is dependent upon a dictum from Strong. Finally, let me urge interested persons to take Mr. Gissendanner's advice to write to Amherst and/or Williams. These are dynamic little schools, and I imagine things have changed considerably since last I was there. I am sure that letters addressed to Peter Schragg at the Amherst Publicity Bureau, to the chairman of the House Management Committee, to the presidents of Kappa Theta or Phi Alpha Psi or to persons in similar positions at Williams would be welcomed. Abbot S. Gaunt Amherst '58 Lawrence graduate student LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler MENU GIVE THE TEST TODAY LEWIS CUPERTIN HUMAS "I JUST BOOSED THEIR MORALE...I TOLD THEM SOMEONE IS GOING TO PAGE." THE PEOPLE letters to the editor Warner Defends Letter Editor. Although my term as president of Wesley Foundation has now expired, I am compelled to answer some questions which have arisen following the letter which three other members of the executive council at Wesley and I sent to Chancellor Wesoee a month ago regarding discriminatory practices in fraternities and sororities and in women's dormitories. An excerpt from this letter which was printed in the Kansan two weeks ago expressed to the chancellor our belief that pressure should be exerted on certain fraternities to get them to remove clauses of racial discrimination from their national constitutions. It also stated that the discriminatory practice of placing Negro girls together in women's dorms (unless a white girl explicitly requests a Negro roommate) should cease. ED. After the Kansan article, a couple of persons expressed their belief that the church has no right to "middle" in such affairs. Some have pointed out that three members of the executive council, including myself, are active on the Civil Rights Council—as if something were "fishy" about this. (Only one was a member of the CRC when we began our correspondence with the chancellor last November.) Some have asked if Wesley might not be a "front" for the CRC. THERE IS NO reason why those of us in the foundation who are concerned about this issue should stay away from the Civil Rights Council. There are areas where the church simply cannot work as effectively outside the political structure of our society as from within. The church is not called to "keep her nose clean" by avoiding the realm of politics. Dr. Peter L. Berger, a sociologist, blasts those who would contend otherwise in his recent work, "The Noise of Solemn Assemblies." This book, which deals with the establishment and mission of the church in the United States today, has been adopted by the National Student Christian Federation as this year's basic study guide. Dr. Berger writes, "Christian action may be defined as any attempt not only to deal with individuals but also to modify the social structure itself. Another way of putting this is to say that such action will try to induce social change in some direction thought desirable from the viewpoint of Christian ethics...that is, the mobilization of Christians as groups or individuals within the political processes of democracy. The typical course of events here will consist of the formation of committees that will seek to organize political propaganda and will put pressure on governmental agencies to pass a certain bill, or to revoke a certain practice, or to infiltrate or terminate a certain program. What is done here from a Christian motivation will not be different politically from similar actions carried on by groups without this motivation." NOW, CHANCELLOR Wescoe and the administration have not been mistaken for "governmental agencies," but the political hierarchy of authority within the university clearly differs from the structure of government without; and no one should protest to our working within the university structure. The letter we sent to the chancellor did not differ politically from action which has been taken by the CRC although the CRC and our exec council were motivated by different forces. With this point clarified, it does not seem reasonable that we should refuse to support the Civil Rights Council. Don Warner Topeka junior Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newsnamer Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904. triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Viking 3-2700 Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 111, news room Extension 276, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas NEWS DEPARTMENT EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Ron Gallagher ... Managing Editor Bill Mullins ... Editorial Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache ... Business Manager Page 3 Action Continues To Plan Campaign Although leaders of Action admit that the party probably will not take part officially in the spring All Student Council election, the group is continuing to organize its campaign. In a meeting last night, Action! parliament named a membership and a publicity committee and discussed the party's chances of getting ASC recognition before the primary elections April 17-18. HAROLD JOHNSON, FT. Leavenworth senior and temporary vice president, said it appears unlikely that the group will receive the necessary ASC recognition before the primaries April 17. However, the party will continue working in hopes that it will receive this recognition, he said. Johnson said the group needs to sell 1,000 membership cards by April 17, the first day of the primaries, to be eligible for recognition. He named a committee to promote membership and to help Bob Bosseau, Pittsburgh junior and temporary treasurer of the group, with the financial problems involved in selling the membership cards. Members of the committee are Steve Long, Mission sophomore; Myron Calhoun, Milton, Fla., junior; Walter Bgoya, Tanganyika, freshman; Dave Peck, Wichita freshman, and Michele Sue Sears, Kansas City freshman. THE PUBLICITY COMMITTEE includes Russell Rogers, McDonald freshman; Gloria Amershek, Pittsburg sophomore; Mike Dunlap, St. Louis, Mo., senior, and Brian O'Heron, Lawrence senior and temporary president of Action. Johnson said Action candidates will have to run independently in the spring election if the group is not officially recognized by the ASC by April 17. He added that it is possible for Action party members to support the candidates even if the party's name does not appear on the ballot. Texas Senator Says Plan Is 'Giveaway' WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Sen. Ralph W. Yarborough, D-Tex., charged today that proposals by President Kennedy and key Congressmen to deliver space communications to a profit-making monopoly constitute the biggest "giveaway" in American history. Rather than permit this "shocking and unconscionable" giveaway, Yarborough said, the government should keep control of satellite communications and operate the system for the benefit of all citizens. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Tub of Chicken 15 pieces, 5 hot rolls $3.50 BIG BUY BIG BUY Tune Up for Spring at Leonard's Standard Service 9th and Indiana Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Portraits of Distinction Pringsheim to Hong Kong A HIXON STUDIO Mass Trial Begins For Cuban Rebels Bob Blank 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Klaus H. Pringsheim, instructor of political science, left for Hong Kong yesterday to purchase books and periodicals for the East Asian literature collection of the KU libraries. He also will conduct an informal study of the food situation in Communist China. HAVANA — (UPI) — Premier Fidel Castro's government announced that the Bay of Pigs invaders captured last April would go on trial at 8 a.m. today before a five-man military tribunal. It will be the biggest mass trial in Cuba's turbulent history, and it was considered likely that the death penalty will be asked for many of the 1,182 defendants. The prisoners are the remnants of the Cuban refugee force which stormed ashore in Las Villas Province April 17 in an attempt to overthrow the Castro government. After 72 hours of bloody fighting, they ran out of ammunition and water and then surrendered piecemeal for weeks later. Harnar Auto Supply 836 Mass. St. Keys Duplicated Complete Locksmith Service Day or Night Day Phone VI 3-2362 Night Phone VI 3-7576 GREYHOUND COSTS SO MUCH LESS Chances are, you know that Greyhound fares are less than any other form of public transportation. What you probably don't realize is how much less. For a pleasant surprise, check the money-saving Greyhound fares below. You'll see at a glance why it always pays to insist on exclusive Greyhound Scenicruiser Service...and leave the driving to us! NEW YORK CITY One Way 36.25, Round Trip 65.25 No other form of public transportation has fares so low. For example: BUFFALO, N. Y. One Way 28.50, Round Trip 51.30 OMAHA, NEB. One Way 24.45, Round Trip 44.05 NEW ORLEANS One Way 21.65, Round Trip 39.00 NEW YORK CITY OOMMA. NEB. One Way 6.50, Round Trip 11.70 ATLANTA, GA. DALLAS, TEXAS One Way 10.94, Round Trip 19.65 One Way 15.55, Round Trip 23.25 SEATTLE, WASH. One Way 46.15, Round Trip 71.75 BAGGAGE You can take more with you on a Greyhound. If you prefer, send laundry or extra baggage on head from Greyhound Express. It's there in hours, and costs you less. LOS ANGELES, CALIF. Once W 43.85, Round T 78.95 UNION BUS DEPOT 638 Mass., VI 3-5622 GREYHOUND Thursday, March 29, 1862 University Daily Kansan Kennedy Urges Passage of Wiretap Bill WASHINGTON — (UPI) -- Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy today urged Congress to permit Federal and state police to eavesdrop on telephone conversations under strict limitations. Kennedy said there was a "very great" need to authorize some wiretaps to combat subversive activities and organized crime. He said, in testimony prepared for the Senate Judiciary Committee, that the administration-backed bill contains adequate safeguards while clearing the way for use of wiretap evidence in Federal and state courts. Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION YES We will be open during the spring vacation. For your continued bowling pleasure, the Jay Bowl will remain open through April 9th. Bowling is fun at the Jay Bowl Daily 8 a.m. - 11:30 p.m. Sun. 1 p.m. - 11:30 p.m. The Magnificent Sound of THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA Eugene Ormandy Conducting TWO 12" COLUMBIA LPs $2.98-Monaural $3.98-Stereo A SPECTACULAR BUY! BELL MUSIC COMPANY 925 Mass. St. VI 3-2644 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 29, 1962 'Boy Friend' to Start Resident Theater Plan The University Players' production of Sandy Wilson's "The Boy Friend," a musical re-creation of England's "twittering twenties," will be the first production in a plan to bring a permanent resident theater company to the Kansas City area. At 8:30 p.m. Friday the University Players, who presented the show in the Experimental Theatre last December, will perform "The Boyfriend" in battenfield Auditorium at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City to an audience paying from $1.80 to $3.60 per ticket. THE PROPOSED COMPANY would offer high quality entertainment to the area and would provide job opportunities for KU theater graduates who wish to remain in the area. "The Boy Friend" is also the first step in a continuing program of theater production in Kansas City by the University Theatre. Lewin A. Goff, director of the University Theatre, said many alumni and friends of the KU theater group have expressed interest in establishing such a company. As a resident professional theater, which the plan eventually calls for, it would be similar to one being started by Sir Tyrone Guthrie in Minneapolis in collaboration with the University of Minnesota. The resident professional theater is, among other things, a device which theater people hope will make the business of acting or directing a stable and money-making enterprise, as financially respectable as any other business. Each year the theater would employ the talents of a professional actor, actress or director to appear in or direct several shows. He would remain with the theater for a specified period, and then move to a similar program elsewhere in the country. SINCE MURPHY HALL OPENED in 1958 the KU University Theatre has employed professional actors or directors to do shows at KU. In this capacity, actor-playwright Jerome Kilty, singer Virginia Copeland, actor-singer Norman Atkins, and actress Vera Zorina have taken part in this program. In addition, Broadway director Bill Butler directed "The Ballad of Baby Doe" at KU in 1960. F. Cowles Strickland directed the recent production of "The Consul," and is currently a visiting professor of speech and drama at KU. Dr. Goff said he hopes to have these professionals extend their KU engagements long enough to help with the Kansas City project. NEXT YEAR THE UNIVERSITY Theatre plans to take five productions to Battenfeld Auditorium. They will be the KU Summer Theatre production of Archibald McLeish's "J.B." a staged reading, a small musical, a second large play, and the final Experimental Theatre production. Dr. Goff said the program must be self supporting. He said he expects the production of "Boy Friend" to succeed on box office receipts. "The Boy Friend" company also will travel to Junction City for a performance Saturday night. It will be a benefit in honor of Betinna Coover, director of the Junction City Community Theatre and mother of Leslie Coover, Junction City senior, who died in an automobile accident Clarion Call Brings Woes EAST LANSING, Mich. — (UPI) — Helen Goldberg, of Valley Stream, N.Y., will be more cautious with her next clarion call. Firemen had to be called to extricate her finger from between the valves of a trumpet. WHOLE CHICKEN $2.00 BIG BUY Dairy Queen SUNDAE SALE Thursday and Friday Only BUY ONE AT REGULAR PRICE GET ONE FOR ONLY OFFER LIMITED 1¢ ENJOY LIFE! Make a SUNDAE STOP at... Dairy Queen ...famous for that "Country Fresh Flavor" 1835 MASSACHUSETTS sday Dairy Queen JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 BUSINESS MACHINES CO. A. A. M. 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up SALES — SERVICE — RENTALS Employment Data Sheets Reproduced Printing, Mimeographing and Duplicating Pick up — Delivery Pick up — Delivery SOME PENS WILL GO TO ANY LENGTH TO MAKE A GOOD IMPRESSION Case in point – the Lindy UTRACTAPen™ non-refillable retractable ball pen Case in point - the Lindy UTRACTAPen™ nonifiable retractable ball pen Extra length, Extra-long ink supply. Long long-lasting. You never refill. Long (fine or medium) point. You see what you write. Retractable. Easy top-button action. Six colors. Color of the pen is color of the ink. Perfect balance. No writing fatigue. Smooth writing. 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Royal College Shop Royal College Shop C In Thlationalong The this p. sonality such a cause place gether Cha- ior, an, reason this p. - T for pe are pl later n - S difficult life if man for solve Men future out b saying may lories. Mar and a with I about room explain men o quest Miss any t friend women concern Miss Unive form a would with a Tom the KI parent usually proble dents. "Pa. daugh said. the I discriu Moc KU th are p "In versit integr ful." "Th terpre I wa CRC any v I No more sow let me grow Baby 80 3 Bai 80 Page 5 CRC Debates Bias In Women's Dorms The Civil Rights Council last night discussed the University regulation requiring freshmen women to provide pictures of themselves along with other registration materials. The University's policy states that this picture be provided for "personality references." The CRC feels such a policy is discriminatory because it allows the University to place women of the same race together. Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, and CRC co-chairman, gave two reasons why the University follows this policy: - The University needs pictures for personal records. The pictures are placed in the woman's file for later reference. - Some freshman women have a difficult time adjusting to university life if placed in a room with a woman of a different race. Pictures for classification purposes help solve this problem. Marsha Dutton, Colby sophomore and a CRC member, recently talked with Emily Taylor, dean of women, about alleged discrimination in roommate selection. Dean Taylor explained that Negro and white women can room together if they request it. Menghini suggested that in the future the University should send out brochures to freshman women saying that white and Negro women may live together within the dormitories. Miss Dutton suggested that the University could also send out a form asking if the freshman woman would be willing to live in a room with a woman of a different race. Miss Dutton said, "I don't think any two women have to be close friends to be roommates, but the women are getting more and more concerned about this problem." Tom Moore, executive secretary of the KU-Y and CRC adviser, said the parents of women students are usually more concerned about the problem than parents of men students. "Parents seem to look after their daughters more than their sons," he said. "That is probably the reason the University does not practice discrimination in men's dormitories." Moore said it has been proven at KU that integrated women's rooms are possible. Later Menghini said during the CRC meeting it is not the policy of the CRC to force integration. "In the 1940s, a few of the University's houses on campus practiced integration and it was very successful." "This question has been misinterpreted many times," he said, "and I want to make it clear that the CRC does not force integration in any way." Prepared Specials FRIDAY NOON Fish Casserole and Kentucky Fried Chicken Free Parking Self Service Salad Bar CRESTAURANT NW corner of Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 兵 PLANT A GARDEN! Laugh at HIGH FOOD COSTS! No matter how small your plot...plan now to have a GARDEN! Have fun let nature furnish your food. and save! B Barteldes SEEDS SOLD BY Committee to Plan Seminar Program Barteldes Seed Co. 804 Mass. • VI 3-0791 Plans for seminars and evening panel discussions on vital world issues will be discussed at a World Crisis Activities Committee meeting at 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Union. The seminars and discussions will consider the world situation from various points of view and explore the ways that individuals can influence world problems. World Crisis Activities also will consider other questions, comments suggestions, and ideas that students attending the meeting might present concerning present and future activities of the group. World Crisis Activities sponsored World Crisis Day Dec. 14 at KU. Governor for Wichita Plan WICHITA — (UPI) — Kansas would benefit by bringing Wichita University into the state system, Gov. John Anderson told WU Collegeiate Young Republicans last night. "The state would be well served educationally and economically by bringing Wichita University into our state's system," he said. "It should be brought in under the Board of Regents." - No legislative directive as to the function of the university if brought into the state system, this is to be left to the judgment of the Board of Regents. - Anderson said three points should be observed in any move. - The transfer should occur immediately or within the shortest time possible. - All property should be debt free insofar as a state obligation is concerned. "Municipal Universities in Wichita and Topeka have experienced a great increase in enrollment in recent years and expected enrollments have caused concern as to their ability to continue to serve students seeking higher education," Anderson said. Thursday, March 29, 1962 University Daily Kansan Applications for Men's Residence Hall Committee of the Dean of Men, 228 Strong. Applications must be returned by March 30. For additional information, contact Dean at cgw@univr.edu. Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 pm. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road Official Bulletin Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11-45:12 noon; Saturdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. Applications for editorship and business management of 1962-63 Jayhawker must be in office of the Chancellor by April 25. Any University student can apply. See Tom Yoe, 231 Strong, for details. March 29 — Harvey McArthur, Public Schools (Elem. & Sec.) Liberty, Missouri March 29 — Evelyn Swartz. Public Schools (Elem. & Sec.). St. Joseph, Ohio. March 30 — Dale T. Hobson, Public Schools, (Elem. & Sec.), El Centro, Calif. People-to-People Industrial Tour will be this coming Monday, April 2. The bus will leave from the Kansas Union at 1 p.m. Sign up in the P-t-P office in the union International Students: Turn in the sheet of the Dean of Students. 228 Strong, by noon Saturday. The form is on page 9 March issue of the International Campus. TODAY Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 29 Maerz, maerz fum uefhr Kupfer in der Kugel, das vor dem Reise nehmt seine Reise nach Griechenland spreechen und Diapositive darueber zeigen. DANCER Birds on a branch BIRD TV - RADIO VI 3-8855 PACKED? 908 Mass. STEREO HI-FI SANDY'S READY TO GO? B Sure To Stop At Sandy's Before You Leave. Quality Parts - Guaranteed Expert Service The Newest Spot in Lawrence! 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The Jockey Power-Knit T-shirt is man-tailored . . . from the exclusive nylon reinforced Seamfree® collar that stays snug and smooth . . . to the extra-long tail that stays tucked in. It's Call Today Lawrence Typewriter for SPRING CLEANING and repair for your typewriter. For excellent service while you vacation, call VI 3-3644. Free pickup and delivery. LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER 735 Mass. St. VI 3-3644 Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, March 29. 1962 Winter, Ward, Murdock and Kemp Represent Kansas at Nationals Four members of the KU swimming team left yesterday afternoon to participate in the NCAA swimming derby to be held this weekend at Columbus, Ohio. The four men, which constitute the largest group ever to enter the nationals from KU, are George Winter, Big Eight 100-yard backstroke champion; Bill Murdock, conference 100 and 200-yard breaststroke champion; John Kemp, conference 100-yard breaststroke winner, and All America Eldon Ward, holder of the Big Eight 50-yard freestyle championship. The swimmers will be accompanied by coach Jay Markley and manager Thom Tripp. THESE FOUR swimmers will compete in two races in their individual events and will compose the 400-yd medley team. This medley team, with Bill Mills swimming the freestyle rather than Ward, holds the American record for the event in a 20-yard pool. In discussing his swimmers' chances, Markley said, "If they swim well, they could all have a chance to make All America." He said that all of the swimmers have the potential to make an excellent showing in the nationals. He added that each of the swimmers is well qualified in his event, but Ward might do better than the others because of his added experience. COACH MARKLEY praised Kemp, who is only a sophomore, by saying that they had not expected him to be Army Deserter Taken to Hospital KANSAS CITY, Kan—(UPI)—An Army deserter accused of passing nuclear and missile secrets to the Russians was taken to a psychiatric hospital today, while U.S. Attorney Newell A. George sought a grand jury indictment against him. A federal grand jury reconvened here today for a two-day session, and George said he would present the Government's case against Pfc. George John Gessner as the first item of business. Federal District Judge Arthur J. Stanley Jr, ordered the 25-year-old former Army nuclear technician committed for mental observation at a hearing yesterday. Gessner, whose military records show he has an IQ of 142, was sent to the U.S. medical center for Federal prisoners at Springfield, Mo., for a 60-day examination. Jaywalks to Safety Board NEW YORK — (UPI) — The City Traffic Department opened its safety campaign recently by erecting a safety thermometer in Times Square. Traffic Commissioner T. T. Wiley reached the exhibit by jaywalking across Broadway. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Think of KEELERS Book Store for all Relays Float Materials And drop in to look over our fine selection of books, stationery $ \mathcal{G} $ office supplies swimming as well as some of the others, but he has worked hard and is showing increasingly better speed. He added that Kemp has as good a chance in his event as the others do in theirs. 939 Mass. He said that the swimmers have been working especially hard on their 100-yard events because they will also be swimming the 100 in the medley relay. VI 3-0290 He estimated that each of the four swimmers would have to go a half-second faster in their leg of the relay in order for the relay team to qualify. HE SAID that the substitution of Ward for Mills in the freestyle leg of the race should help increase the team's time. He explained that Ward is a faster swimmer than sophomore Mills, and that he has done an excellent job in previous relays. After the NCCA meet in Columbus, the team will travel to Bartlesville, Okla.. to participate in the National AAU meet later in the week. Kirsten's Hillcrest Shopping Center Sports Wear ● Majestic ● White Stag ● Helen Harper ● Open Col. Sanders Recipe KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN "it's finger lickin' good" Dinner - plus cole slaw $1.25 Tub - 15 pieces, 5 hot rolls ------- $3.50 Barrel - 25 pieces, 10 hot rolls ---- $5.00 BIG BUY GRANADA (LOW SHOWING) Now Thru Tues. 7 & 9 p.m. "Summer & Smoke" 5 Academy Award Nominees! Starts Wed. "The Pit & the Pendulum" VARSITY NOW SHOWING! VARSITY HOW SHOWING Now Thru Sat. 7 & 10 p.m. "The Mask' Free Mask Viewe — PLUS "Blast of Silence" Walt Disney's "Moon Pilot" "Walk on the Wild Side" Have a nice time on your vacation. When you return we will welcome you with... GRANADA CREATIVE ... Telagome VIRING 3-EXPO VARSITY THEATRE JEWELS VIVIAN'S 3-400 "Sergeants Three" "Light in the Piazza" "The Outsider" "Magic Sword" And "The Mighty Ursus" DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK "The Bank of Friendly Service" Will Help You Fatten Me Up! Lawrence's Most Modern Bank at 9th & Ky. serves KU students with friendly service every day. ... Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers NOW THRU SAT.! HERE IS TREMENDOUS DIMENSION... TWO TITANS AMONG OUTDOOR EPICS...PROBABLY DIMENSION... AMONG OUTDOOR EPICS...PROBABLY TWO OF THE BEST WESTERNS OF ALL TIME! GREGORY PECK·YUL BRYNNER·CARROLL BAKER CHARLTON HESTON·JEAN SIMMONS·BURLIVES WILLIAM WYLER'S THE BIG COUNTRY The Magnificent Seven BOTH IN COLOR STEVE McQUEEN Of TV's "Womied Dead Or alive!" CHAS. BRONSON Of TV's "Man With A Camera!" CHUCK CONNERS Of TV's "The Rifleman" day One day All and INTRODUCING HORST BUCHHOLZ EXCITING NEW START! large sh suniens fu org or sr campus. YYPEWN VI 3-003 2 single bavies Avv WANEI month derman Released thru UA UNITED ARTISTS PLUS — TWO BONUS FEATURES SAT. Starts Sun. — "Operation Petticoat" & "By Love Possessed" Par Ce Bri Ful Ca Ga Of loc Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 10 LARGE rooms, 1 3 studer 0731. Sleeping Shower 1315 Ter BEVERA ice cold closed price Plan 0350. Are YO Benefit more qu STUDY EXPERI child to home. A piece. 34 RENT a machine rented sewing ALTER/ 7551, or INVISIB woven aarette b repaired DRESS mals, w 939 $ _{1/2} $ M GRANT Conn. I — one birds, guinea pet sup TYPEW Office st Typewri 6444. GENER Lab. Dl availab comprel Free de Kansar Thursday. March 29, 1862 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, 50c; three days, $1.10; 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 U.S. Office on the day before an publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. FOK RENT large single room for KU young man. mens furnished, utilities paid. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus, 1616 Inc. Available June 1. 4-13 TYPEWRITERS for rent, cheap — call 30-331-2081 between 7 and 5 p.m. tf 2 single rooms & one double room for 25. Available now. Call VI 34584- 3592. KER VES WANTED: a roommate for nice apt. $30 Friday, 2513 Nismuth VI: 2-2526 4-11 Berman. Park Plaza South Apartments MISCELLANEOUS Central Air Conditioning Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or 3 students. Avail. Feb. 1. 520 La. VI 2- 0731. Sleeping up for rent for men students. 1315 Tenn. VI 3-3590 4-10 We will pay local moving expenses VI 2-3416 or VI 3-8253 Office -- 1912 W. 25th. BUSINESS SERVICES Are YOU wasting time on your studies? Benefit from our unusual methods. Learn more quickly, effortlessly. Mail $2.00 to STUDY AIDS, Box 342, City. 4-12 EXPERIENCED MOTHER — would like child to care for, 3 to 4 yrs. old, in her home. Also would like ironing, lce per piece. 340 Indiana, VI 2-3473. RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentation. Ola Smith 3091$\cdot$891. Mass. Call SI 3-5263. ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3- 7551, or 921 Miss. **ti** GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now comprehensive. Price: $4 Call VI 2-3752. Free delivery. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals. Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3- 6444. 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. tt Kansan Classified Ads Get Results FOR SALE 1951 Ford-6, 2 door. Blue, good condition. Four好 tires, new brake lining, new muffler, exhaust & tail pipe. $150. Call Martin Lang, VI 3-4179. 4-12 Magnavox Stereo Console — 2 years old. Call VI 2-2365. 4-10 New heavy retreads $10 each, ex., plus tax for most all small cars: Sizes 560-15, 590-15, 600-13, 640-15, etc. at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 4-13 M. G. '52 TD sports roadster. Real nice shape. $695. Call VI 3-7497. 4-12 GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. SPECIAL THIS WEEK. 1357 Magnum (or, 33 special) Ruger at a price too low to wear inexpensive 22 revolver, late 1346 OHIO. 1953 8' x 28" Travelle Trailer Home. Excellent location in private yard. Garden and yard space. Good for student couple. Available end of May. Call VI 2-1063. 1953 Super 88 Oldsmobile. Extra clean. $200.00. Call Vi I 2-2769. tf ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch mounted microscope immediately. Call VI 3-8871 come to 807 Ark. for more information. GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES. Handy cross index for quick reference, definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference, definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference, definitions, and time saving charts. Handy cross index for quick reference, definitions, and time saving charts. OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright, writer sales, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-3644. HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In. In Pet Center — most complete pet center. In Best Pet phone 2821 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days tt WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All books, manuscripts, grapted and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call 012345 at 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. HELP WANTED PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete with maps, compilations, diagrams and definitions. edition: formerly known as the Theta Delivery I: 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. 3-29 EXPERIENCED posting machine operator N-CR, or Burroughs for part time work. Serve as Coordinator for days per month. Apply Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Mr. Holle. VI 3-2680 Afternoon secretary help wanted. Real estate experience preferred. Give qualification in first letter. Mail to: Realtate, University Daily Kansan, Lawrence, Kansas. 3-29 FOUND Hood to raincoat - 3 scarves - men & women's gloves - 4 pairs GLASSES - 2 assignment books - 5 sets of keys - OBServation catalog - French Reader, The Press & Society. Introduced Man's Communications, Better Paragraphs) - jewelry. Claim at 111 Flint. -- tt GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS TYPING Sudden Service East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 AUTO GLASS DON'T DRIVE AN UNSAFE CAR EXPERIENCED typist~ Will do all types prompt service. Call VI 2-0296, 4-13 prompt service. Call VI 2-0296, 4-13 Have yours checked before that vacation trip. Do it now! Get the best tune-ups in town electronically by Dynavision AND EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, application letters. Electric typewriter. Special symbols & signs. Prompt service. Apple Cook, 2004.岫岩岛, VI 3-7485. BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. C01 Mass. Art Nease, Mgr. VI 3-9849 JOB SEEKERS: Prospective employers see you thru your letter of application. You will create favorites first impressions. For fast accurate service call VI 3-0483. 4-10 "GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting of standard actors, call Miss Louise typing at standard roles, call Miss Louise POC, VI 3-1087. RECETARY WILL DO TYPING in home. fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at VI 2-1749. EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1021 Miss. tf EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing name - call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lei- Gehbach. Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, etc. on electric typewriter with math and Greek letter Standard rate. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546. 3-30 HAVE TROUBLE WITH SPELLING punctuation & grammar? Former Eng. teacher, theses, these, reports accurately. Standard dates. Sa. Mrs. Compton, 1319 Vt., apt. 3. TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, and articles. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568. Experienced typist would like typing in reasonable rates, and VI T-2-3681 any time. EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. Experienced Typist: Electric typewriter In interested in these, term papers, etc. Student rates: Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker Call VI 3-2001. t TYPIST, experienced in theses and term papers. Fast & accurate work at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Mehlinger, VI 3-1409. tf Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc. Troubleshooting: 1511 W. 21 St. St. Caul V1 3-6440 1511 W. 21 St. St. Caul V1 3-6440 FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. Experienced typist, 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 21-48 DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results. PURSE at Jayhawk Cafe Friday night. Beeley, Watkins Hall. Reward. 10-35 Lane, Watkins Hall. Reward. THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist, typewriter. Reasonable rate. Marian Graham, 1613 Delaware, CA VI 3-0488. LOST MORE JOBS BETTER PRODUCTS LOWER PRICES Advertising works for you! NASA Our future is in the hands of men not yet hired At Western Electric we play a vital role in helping meet the complex needs of America's vast communications networks. And a career at Western Electric, the manufacturing arm of the nation-wide Bell Telephone System, offers young men the exciting opportunity to help us meet these important needs. Today, Western Electric equipment reduces thousands of miles to fractions of seconds. Even so, we know that our present communications systems will be inadequate tomorrow; and we are seeking ways to keep up with-and anticipate-the future. For instance, right now Western Electric engineers are working on various phases of solar cell manufacture, miniaturization, data transmission, futuristic telephones, electronic central offices, and computer-controlled production lines-to name just a few. To perfect the work now in progress and launch many new communications products, projects, procedures, and processes not yet in the mind of man - we need quality-minded engineers. If you feel that you can meet our standards, consider the opportunities offered by working with our company.In a few short years, you will be Western Electric. 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 DELL STATE UNIVERSITY Principal manufacturing locations at Chicago, I.; Kearny, N. J.; Baltimore, Md.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Allentown and Laurelfield, Pa.; Winston-Salem, N. C.; Buffalo, N. Y.; North Andover, M.; Omaha, Neb.; Kansas City, M.; Columbus, Ohio; Oklahoma City, Okla. Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J. Teletype Corporation, Skokie, Ill., and Little Rock, Ark. Also Western Electric distribution centers in 33 cities and installation headquarters in 16 cities. General headquarters 195 Broadway, New York, N. Y. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday. March 29. 1983 Riots Break Out After President Frondizi Ousted BUENOS AIRES — (UPI) — The armed forces ousted and arrested President Arturo Frondizi today and violent demonstrations broke out in downtown Buenos Aires. Frondizi, deposed in a bloodless coup, was flown to exile on lonely Martin Garcia Island. HOURS LATER, an estimated 1,000 demonstrators formed in groups in Mayo Square in front of the presidential palace, clamoring for Frondizi. Federal police fired a dozen tear gas shells into the crowds. Two truckloads of riot police charged them with drawn batons. Demonstrators scattered and ran but reformed on the nearby Avenida De Mayo. Police freely used tear gas and their clubs to keep them moving. THE FRONDIZI ouster left Argentina temporarily without a president. The armed forces did not appear immediately able to convince any of Frondizi's constitutional successors to take the post. The commanders of the army, navy and air force convened in urgent session shortly after 8 a.m., EST, to consider the situation. It was believed they would form an interim juntatype government to run the country if constitutional processes could not be carried out. HOWEVER, FRONDIZI, who boarded an air force C-47 at Buenos Aires' downtown Aeroparque Airport appeared to be traveling voluntarily. He rode to the airport alone in a chauffeur limousine at the head of a motorcade carrying members of his government and, apparently, a military escort. However, no police guards or secret service cars were in evidence. At the airport, Frondizi walked alone to the waiting plane. Some persons joined him in the plane after he boarded, but their identity was not immediately established. FRONDIZIZ DESTINATION, Martin Garcia Island, lies in the Plate Estuary near the Uruguayan shoreline. Previous presidents in much the same political situation also have been confined there, including Perou A war ministry spokesman said the armed forces had asked secrecy the president pro tem Jose M. Guide constitutionally next in line for the presidency, to take the post but he had refused. It was expected the military chiefs would seek out the reaction of the men next in line — Congress Speaker Federico Fernandez De Monjardin and Supreme Court Chief Justice Benjamin Villegas Basavilabo—before forming a military junta government. FRIENDS OF VILLEGAS said they doubted the 78-year-old justice would take the post. He has been previously represented as feeling that there should be an immediate call for general elections for a successor to Frondizi. If the armed forces form a junta possibilities for members include: Furor Continues In YD Election (Continued from page 1) view that last night's meeting, election and suspensions were unconstitutional. Karen Stewart, Hutchinson senior and YD secretary last year, is another of the suspended members. She said this morning, "According to our constitution, it provides for no election in this case. I'm quite sure that the whole matter will be settled at the state convention." Gary Conklin, Hutchinson law student and elections committee chairman, was also suspended. He could not be reached for comment The officers elected in last night's meeting are: Peter Aylward, Ellsworth junior, president; Jo Snyder, Bethesda, Md., sophomore, vice president; Gloria Mays, Lyons junior, secretary; Bruce Knight, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, treasurer; and John Potucek, Wellington sophomore, collegiate council representative. Admiral Teodoro Hartung, present Argentine Ambassador to London; Gen. Pio Martijena, director of military factories; Brig.-Gen. Jorge Rojas Silveyra, former air secretary, and Admiral Isaac Rojas, vice president in the military junta that succeeded Peron's ousted administration in 1955. Frondizi's early morning ouster was carried out with military precision. The armed forces personnel were the first to be notified. All garrisons were advised by Army Commander Lt.-Gen. Raul Poggi that "the president of the nation has been deposed." The message added: "This situation is definite." Edmiston's ROBERT EDMISTON STORES, INC. SUIT SALE CURLEE - COLLEGE ROE Fine Quality Suits SUITS to $40.00 ------ NOW $25 SUITS to $65.00 ------------ NOW $35 Sizes 34-46 MEN BUY THESE SUITS francis sporting goods 731 Massachusetts You'll find a slug of softball equipment for your intramural season team prices, too! balls: A312W, Rawlings game ball . . top quality leather cover, precision molded kapok center, double gum wound, extra lively. team price 2.35 1512, Rawlings practice ball . . . select grade leather cover, kapok center, gum wound. team price 1.65 R12 Rawlings practice ball . . . rubber cover for wet grass practice, kapok center, lively, durable. team price 2.10 masks: SB Rawlings official mask, leather covered kapok pads tied to sturdy wire frame, adjustable V-style head harness. team price 3.95 SB80 Rawlings official mask, wire frame, elastic head harness, snap-on Cushok vinyl pads. team price 3.75 bats: Louisville Slugger, an unbeatable selection of over 60 dozen softball bats, 25 different styles to choose from. team price 2.00 and 2.95 SOCIAL PUBLIC RELATIONSHIP "everything for the outdoorsman" Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers The Annual KU ENGINEERING EXPOSITION IS COMING APRIL 20-21