Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tuesday, April 10, 1962
59th Year, No 114
Pakistan's UN Delegate To Speak at Model UN Friday
Muhammad Zafrulla Khan, Pakistan's permanent representative to the United Nations, will speak to an all-University convocation to open the Model UN at 9:20 a.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium.
Ambassador Zafrulla Khan will speak about "The Significance of the Expanding Membership of the UN."
The ambassador became foreign minister of Pakistan in 1947. He led his country's delegation to the UN annual sessions and to the Security Council debates on the India-Pakistan dispute.
He was a member of the International Court of Justice at the Hague from 1954, and was the court's vice president from 1958-61.
HE ALSO HELD government positions in India before independence was granted to India and Pakistan. He was agent-general to China, judge of the Federal Court of India and leader of the Indian delegation to the League of Nations. He has written several books on Indian law.
Sir Zafrulla Khan will arrive in Kansas City Thursday evening and is expected to meet with Model UN delegates at a "diplomatic reception" when he arrives in Lawrence. The reception will be held from 9 p.m. until midnight in the Crystal Room of the Eldridge Hotel.
Model UN blocs will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union to prepare resolutions for the Friday sessions of the General Assembly.
The General Assembly will begin its meetings with a roll call of delegations at the beginning of the convocation on Friday, and will begin debate on resolutions after the convocation.
THE FIRST RESOLUTION to be presented will propose UN membership for Red China and the termination of China's permanent place on the Security Council. The resolution is to be presented by the Indian delegation.
[Picture of a man with a white beard and dark hair, wearing a suit and tie.]
After the noon recess, a resolution dealing with the financing of the United Nations will be presented by the delegations of Venezuela and Mexico. The resolution will propose the addition of 10 per cent to international air mail rates to supply funds for the United Nations.
At 5 p.m. a third resolution, proposing international control of waterways, will be placed before the assembly. The general area for a fourth resolution may also be announced. Delegations will meet to discuss their positions on these resolutions Friday evening and will submit amendments and resolutions to the Model UN Steering Committee by 10 p.m.
The assembly will meet continuously from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. The Kansas Union catering service will provide sandwiches and beverages for the delegates in the foyer of Hoch Auditorium. The third and fourth resolutions will be introduced and debated in Saturday's sessions.
Muhammad Zafrulla Khan
In addition to addressing the opening Model U.N. session at the All-University convocation on Friday, Sir Zafrulla Khan will speak to the International Club at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Kansas Union.
ASC Member Airs Gripes About Support From UP
By Mike Miller and Murrel Bland
A University Party member of the All Student Council said last night that he was not given full party support either during his campaign or during his term on the ASC.
Michael E. Miner, Lawrence freshman and ASC representative from the unmarried-unorganized district, made the charge during an impromptu political discussion last night in the Daily Kansan newsroom.
"I DONT THINK I was given as much support during the election in proportion to the size of my district as the other UP candidates were." Miner said.
"I thought the Vox Populi support of Charles Allphin was far superior to the UP support of me," he said. Miner defeated the Vox candidate by two votes of the 179 cast by the unmarried-unorganized students.
James Anderson, Lawrence senior and Greek co-chairman of the party, said that each candidate sets up his own campaign.
"We only refer the candidates to people in the district that we know are interested," he said.
Miner said he has not been regularly notified of party meetings, but added that he does not think he has ever missed a meeting. Tom Hardy, Hoisington junior and independent
co-chairman of UP, said it is possible that Miner's name was "accidentally left off the calling list."
MINER ALSO SAID he was not given fair consideration during the pre-ASC meeting party caucuses held to discuss resolutions to be brought up in the Council meetings.
"Any candidate running from the unmarried-unorganized district must win on his personal appeal and not on party organization," he said. "The chief advantages of party membership for a candidate from the unmarried-unorganized district lies in the fact that once he is elected, the candidate has other members of the Council who will support his views."
Miner said he was inexperienced and lacked background in campus
Miner said he had not discussed his grievances with UP leaders before coming to the Kansan.
"I have been to some caucus meetings where I have sat and not learned an awful lot." he said.
Discussing the UP support during the election, Miner said, "My name ran on the UP list of candidates. This was the only support which I received from the University Party. Although I was helped by one UP man with contacting foreign students, most of my support came from my personal Lawrence friends."
political affairs, but added. "I don't see any reason why I should have to ask the party leaders to give me the information which I need. The parties should take more interest in their candidates after they are elected."
HARDY EXPLAINED the UP point of view.
Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and independent vice president of Vox Populi, originally informed the Kansan that Miner was dissatisfied with UP.
Grace, who said he had been a personal friend of Miner's for some time, accompanied Miner to the Kansas last night. Grace said he had been trying to convince Miner to shift his allegiance to Vox, in view of his complaint against UP.
But Miner said last night he had not yet decided what his political future would be.
He said he was not given as much help in learning about ASC affairs as the member from the freshman women's dormitory district, Annette Luyben, Kansas City, Mo.
"If some changes are not made real quick, I will become anti-UP but not necessarily pro-Vox." Miner said.
Hardy explained, "We logically try to inform the freshman members of the ASC, but we did not consider that Miner needed too much help because he seemed to have a good grasp of campus affairs. We
(Continued on page 9)
Moslem to Command Security Force
ALGIERS, Algeria — (UPI)—The French government today named a virtually unknown smalltown Moslem official as commander of the 60,000-man Moslem local security force which will enforce the Algerian cease-fire. It also turned over many government powers to the territory's provisional executive.
Both moves were expected to trigger new violence by the outlawed Secret Army Organization (OAS), fighting to sabotage President
Despite reinforced security precautions yesterday, 24 persons were killed and 13 others wounded in a series of terrorist attacks across Algeria. It brought the casualty toll since Jan. 1, when the OAS beban its campaign of terrorism, to 3.543 dead and 7.759 infured
Charles de Gaulle's program for Algerian independence.
ficial government journal. Mokdad, who studied law, served as an infantry officer in the France Army from 1943 to 1961.
The surprise appointment of Omar Mokdad, 44, prefect of the interior village of Saida, to head the security force was announced in the of-
The official journal also announces decrees turning over to the mixed Moslem-European executive and the high commissioner powers formerly held by the French Sahara Department. Department of Public Works and France's Delegate General in Algeria, including control over local gas and electric services, railways, finance, justice and public order.
Vox OKs Planks After 2nd Try
After two wrangling meetings, Vox Populi last night ratified an eight-point platform for the coming All Student Council elections.
Vox members had originally hoped to ratify the platform before Spring vacation, but considerable discussion was raised and the platform was returned to committee for style changes.
THE PLATFORM is based on three planks which are:
- A reorganization of the Student Court which will give more direct aid to the students.
- A campus parking system which calls for certain zone permits being available to any students who request them.
- Increasing the efficiency of Statewide Activities in order to attract more qualified high school students to KU.
The complete text of the Vox Populi platform is on page eight.
THE PARTY PROPOSES that the Student Court at KU can be more effective through more publicity of its actions and through a change in the Court's organization.
Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore, explained that in the past it was necessary for the Campus police to restrict the number of parking permits to certain parking zones such as Zone S, O, X and N because the officers were busy on campus directing traffic. Since the on-campus traffic will be greatly curtailed by the proposed traffic plan, the officers will have the time to patrol the zones.
THE STATEWIDE ACTIVITIES plank is aimed at improving the current system which Ted Childers, Wamego senior and president of the party, describes as "not as effective as it might be."
He proposed a Student-to-Student plan which he hoped would attract the high ranking Kansas high school student to KU rather than to other colleges.
CHILDERS SAID THAT Vox proposes that the ASC's Current Events Committee be used to secure speakers regardless of the speaker's political viewpoint. He explained that the plank did not call for restricting the rights of other campus groups to bring in speakers.
He criticized groups outside the University for trying to censor speakers at KU.
The Vox platform calls for additional money for the ASC to meet the needs of Council-supported activities such as People-to-People, efficient operation of ASC committees such as the Current Events Committee, and future activities such as the proposed secretary to the ASC, and the Big Eight Government Association.
THIS PLANK ALSO calls for the source of funds for the All Women's Senate be changed from the ASC to the University.
Childers said that if the action for removal of discriminatory clauses in the constitutions of some KU living groups is going to have meaning and if it is going to be more than just an empty action, it must be done by the individual living group on its own accord.
The plank also calls for continued support of the Human Rights Committee of the ASC.
The idea for a College Bowl came out of the enthusiasm shown at KU over the campus College Bowl, he said. He said, "it might be interesting to get the Big Eight schools to compete on an intellectual level as well as the usual athletic.
He said this might help KU take the lead in setting the Big Eight Student Government Association moving again.
HAVANA — (UPI) — Four Cuban exiles representing the families of 1,179 captured Cuban invaders arrived today to bargain with Fidel Castro on his 62-million ransom demand for the prisoners' freedom.
The delegation, which flew here from Miami, has been authorized to offer $28-million in "goods and products" to meet Castro's stiff ransom demand.
The Cuban premier is seeking cash for the release of the men sentenced last Saturday to 30 years at hard labor in an unprecedented four-day trial at Havana's Principe prison.
The three men and a woman represent the "Cuban Families Committee for the Liberation of Prisoners of War." Before leaving Miami they expressed confidence their mission would be successful and they expected to meet personally with the Cuban leader who authorized their visit here.
4 Cuban Exiles Plan To Aid 1,179 Others
In sentencing the men to prison the court martial grouped them into four ransom categories—$25,000,$50,000,$100,000 and $500,000. The three leaders of the invasion force, which landed on the southern coast last April 17, are in the half million dollar category.
The four negotiators are Alvaro
Before leaving Miami they outlined their hopes and general conditions for bargaining.
Sanchez, Jr., who is chairman of the committee; Enrique Llaca, vice treasurer; Mrs. Virginia Betencourt and Enrique Frevre.
In Washington, U.S. officials estimated Cuba is holding an estimated 25,000 to 50,000 political prisoners in overcrowded jails.
The 1.179 invasion prisoners represent only a small fraction of the total political inmates of Cuban nails.
However, the Kennedy administration, while keeping out of the invaders-for-ransom affair, is placing no obstacles in the way of the private negotiation effort by Cuban exiles, officials said.
Weather
Mostly cloudy with showers and locally heavy thunderstorms southeast and extreme south central and scattered light showers most of remainder of state this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow. Little change in temperature. Low tonight 30s northwest to near 50 southeast. High tomorrow generally in the 50s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 10. 1962
The Kansas Situation
Reapportionment
The March 26 decision of the U.S. Supreme Court on the reapportionment of state legislatures will unquestionably bring reapportionment of the Kansas legislature. There may be attempts to evade equitable reapportionment, but if the Kansas legislature wants to avoid court action it must apportion its members more equitably.
This does not mean that the urban areas in Kansas will gain control of the legislature. The rural-small town element will definitely continue to control at least one house of the legislature, but the urban areas will gain increased representation.
A suit is presently before the Shawnee County District Court designed to force more equitable apportionment of the Kansas legislature. The suit was brought by four newspapermen. One of them, John McCormally, executive editor of the Hutchinson News, made the following comment in a letter to this editor about what action the Kansas legislature will take in view of the Supreme Court decision:
"MY GUESS is that an effort will be made to squeeze under the wire stretched by the court by reapportioning the Kansas senate on a population basis, while letting the house represent area by reducing its membership to one from each county. Initial efforts will be made to frustrate this by placing a limit on the number of senators from any county rather than letting them truly represent people. But if this change is made (the opposite of the federal system) it will signal some progress, for, while the house will be even more rural dominated, the senate will be urban dominated and in the mechanics of legislation, compromises will be necessary between the two houses which will give urban areas more consideration than they now receive."
The method of using one house to represent counties that Mr. McCormally mentions is used by several states already, including Kansas. It is one method by which a rural-controlled legislature can insure continued domination of at least one house of the legislature. This is true even in states that are predominantly urban; New Jersey is a good example. This system follows the pattern of the U.S. Senate, which provides for two senators from each state.
THUS THE Kansas legislature can easily insure continued domination of at least one house by the rural population. It will have great difficulty in continuing rural domination of the senate, however.
Naturally the fears the rural population has of urban domination in the legislature will be an obstacle to fair and just reapportionment. But these fears and prejudices have served the rural conservatives badly in the past and they will continue to do so in the future. It is the failure of the rural-controlled legislatures throughout the nation to recognize and understand urban problems that has caused the cities to turn to the Federal government for aid. The Tennessee case is itself an example of this. The citizens who brought the reapportionment suit against the Tennessee legislature were forced to take their case to the federal courts because the rural-controlled legislature in Tennessee had refused them justice.
The Kansas legislature still has time to act on its own, but its time for voluntary action is limited. The suit presently under consideration in the Shawnee County District Court can undoubtedly be considered as only the opening skirmish. Unless the legislature acts, other suits will obviously be brought against it to force equitable reapportionment.
THE ONLY thing really in question is what form the Kansas legislature's action will take, for it is obvious that it must act. Its response to the Supreme Court ruling may be a series of delaying actions, designed to avoid an equitable reapportionment as long as possible. But it is both logical and inevitable that some form of more equitable reapportionment will have to be made.
The Supreme Court's decision makes token reapportionment impossible.
A series of delaying actions would be an unfortunate development. They would lead to bitterness and they would only delay the inevitable. What is needed is a program that would meet the requirement for equitable reapportionment calmly and with careful regard for the Supreme Court's ruling. This is the only responsible and in reality the only possible solution.
—William H. Mullins
Focus on Reapportionment
The Tennessee Case
The Tennessee case which the U.S. Supreme Court used as the basis for its March 26 decision on the apportionment of state legislatures is a good example of the charges brought against rural legislatures across the nation, including Kansas.
The Tennessee state legislature was last reapportioned in 1901. Yet Tennessee's constitution requires that the state legislature reapportion every 10 years. This reapportionment is supposed to be done on the basis of the number of qualified voters in each county or district. The legislature has refused to consider any bill brought before it for reapportionment.
THE RESULT of this refusal to reapportion was a state legislature that was heavily and unconstitutionally (according to Tennessee's constitution) weighed in favor of the rural population. In actual figures, it meant that 37 per cent of the voters elected 20 to 33 members of the state senate and that 40 per cent of the population elected 63 of 99 members of the state senate.
The reapportionment problem has been taken to both state and federal courts in many states. But prior to last month's decision of the Supreme Court, both state and federal courts had refused to act on it. The arguments by the courts were that the problem of reapportionment was a political issue and therefore did not fall within the
sphere of judicial action, that a ruling by a court would violate the separation of powers doctrine and, in the case of the federal courts, that a ruling by federal courts would violate the sovereignty of the state.
JUSTICE WILLIAM J. Brennan delivered the majority opinion in the Supreme Court's decision on the Tennessee case, which said that "We hold today only (A) that the court possessed jurisdiction of the subject matter; (B) that a justifiable cause of action is stated upon which appellants would be entitled to appropriate relief; and (C) . . . that the appellants have standing to challenge the Tennessee apportionment statutes."
The majority opinion also said that "Beyond noting that we have no cause at this stage to doubt the district court will be able to fashion relief if violations of constitutionality are found, it is improper now to consider what remedy would be most appropriate if appellants prevail at the trial."
The majority opinion noted also that some apportionments could be so unfair as to violate the clause of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution providing that no state shall "deny to any person . . . the equal protection of the laws."
Daily Hansan
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher ... Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEBARREMENTS
Iron Camghee Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Editorial Editor
Bill Mullins BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Manager
Charles Martinache
L. MARTEN
"You folks have enough room back there?"
Power Shift Seen
... Until yesterday's decision by the Supreme Court, however, imbalance in the state legislatures had been primarily a local, and state issue, with regional politicians and political scientists arguing it out without producing any major change.
"In this situation," he wrote, "as in others of like nature, appeal for relief does not belong here. In a democratic society like ours, relief must come through an aroused popular conscience that sears the conscience of the people's representatives..."
This points up one of the odd paradoxes in the majority and dissenting opinions. Justice Frank-furter, dissenting, argued that the court's intervention was wrong and would be ineffective.
YET, WHEN some experienced politicians looked over the court's decision, their opinion seemed to be that the court's decision might very well produce that "informed, civically militant electorate" that local political and pedagogical analysis had failed to arouse in the past.
Justice Frankfurter was particularly critical of injecting the court into what he called the clash of political forces in political settle-ments.
"The court's authority—possessed neither of the purse nor the sword—ultimately rests," he argued, "on sustained public confidence in its moral sanction. Such feeling must be nourished by the court's complete detachment, in fact and appearance, from political entanglements..."
THERE WAS little support here (Washington) for the view that the courts, "possessed neither of the purse nor the sword," would decide these cases themselves. Many observers made the point that it would be much more difficult for the courts to come up with a formula for just representation in a state legislature than to produce a formula for public school integration.
The political consensus seemed to be about as follows:
- The rise in the nation's population—up by 3,000,000 every year—and the movement of the people off the land into the cities and suburbs, have created urgent problems of city renewal, education, and transportation.
- The court has dramatized a critical situation.
- THE STATE legislatures, increasingly weighted to the farm areas, are not dealing with these problems effectively. Therefore, once the court has brought the issue to the center of national attention, public opinion will produce the pressure for greater representation from the urban and suburban areas.
That this will be a slow process nobody doubts—probably as slow as the school desegregation process—but the feeling is that the process has now started, that it will proceed mainly in the headlines for a time, but that in due course it will move—probably leftward from where it is now.
(Excerpted from a column in the March 27 New York Times by James Reston)
The Kansas legislature is presently much like the Tennessee legislature that the Supreme Court used as the basis for its March 26 decision. Its members, if the Kansas constitution is accepted as the authority, include many who are unconstitutionally seated.
The Kansas Legislature
There is an arrangement for both geographic and population representation in the Kansas legislature. The 40 member senate is supposed to represent population, yet it does not. Sedgwick, Wandyote, Johnson and Shawnee Counties had a 1980 population of 813,804. This is 57 per cent of the total Kansas population. According to the Kansas constitution, these four counties are entitled to a total of 15 senators. They have a total of four.
IT MIGHT be further noted about the senate that 584,840 out of a 1960
population of 2,178,611 control 21 of the 40 senate seats. These 21 seats constitute a quorum and are the majority necessary for passing any bill or joint resolution. Thus the majority of the senate is elected by and is responsible to 26.84 per cent of the people of Kansas.
The Kansas House of Representatives is based on area. Each of the 105 counties is entitled to one representative. There also are 20 floating seats that are assigned to the larger counties.
THE KANSAS constitution requires both the house of representatives and the senate to be re- apportioned every five years. They have been reapportioned only twice each since 1930. The last reapportionment in both houses was in the 1950s.
---
Tuesday, April 10,1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3
ADVERTISING DAY on campus
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11 1:00-Big Eight Room
FOLGER'S COFFEE
Don Atha, Advertising Manager assisted by Don Flanagan
ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN "Moving the Mountains to Chicago"
FILM "This Is Advertising"
EVERYONE INVITED Folger's Coffee Will Be Served
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 10. 1962
KU Grad Included In Oscar Awards
SANTA MONICA, Calif. — (UPI) — Sophia Loren, whose fear of losing kept her from appearing at the scene of her greatest triumph, today was acclaimed by Hollywood as the best actress of 1961 for her role in "Two Women."
Sharing her victory was Germanborn Maximilian Schell who won the Best Actor Oscar for his performance in "Judgment at Nuremberg," at last night's 34th annual Academy Award presentations at Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, making it a double win for foreign stars. Other awards:
\* \* \*
William Inge, KU class of '35, won the Best Original Screenplay Oscar for "Splendor in the Grass," at last night's Academy Award Presentations.
In 1953, Mr. Inge was awarded the Pulitzer prize in drama for "Picnic," a play whose setting like "Splendor in the Grass" was a small Kansas town.
His other plays include "Come Back Little Sheba," "Bus Stop," "The Dark at the Top of the Stairs," and "A Loss of Roses."
\* \* \*
"West Side Story," Best Picture of the Year.
"West Side Story's" 10 awards placed the picture second in all-time Oscar competition, topped only by "Ben-Hur" which collected 11 golden statuettes two years ago. It also won an honorary award for "The Art of Choreography on Film," given to Jerome Robbins.
TWO OF ITS winers were Rita Moreno and George Chakiris who were voted Best Supporting Actress and Best Supporting Actor respectively.
The best song "Moon River," the theme for "Breakfast at Tiffany's."
In addition to Best Picture, the Best Supporting Actor awards and Best Direction, "West Side Story" also recorded Oscars for Best Art Direction of a Color Picture, Best
Cinematography of a Color Picture,
Best Costume Design of a Color Picture,
Best Film Editing, Best Music,
Best Sound Achievement.
BOB HOPE, the master of ceremonies, was mastered by a polished gate crasher who presented him with a gold statuette.
Stanley Berman, 35, a Brooklyn, New York, taxicab driver, calmly walked up to the stage while an award for the Best Cinematography for a Black and White Picture was being presented.
THE AWARD went to "The Hustler."
Berman, dressed in a tuxedo, approached Hope and said, "To you, Bob Hope, from the world's greatest gate crasher." Then he handed Hope a small golden statuette. Hope was so surprised he actually accepted the statuette.
Later the smooth operator from Brooklyn walked back to the audience and sat in a vacant seat. The seat belonged to the representative of the award winning "Ersatz," a Yugoslavian cartoon.
WHEN THE Yugoslavian representative returned to his seat, Berman nonchallantly got up and found another vacant seat.
During this award-worthy performance before one of the largest gatherings of actors and actresses, Berman was never approached by ushers or police.
"To the world's greatest comedian from the world's greatest gate crasher."
Berman told newsmen after the ceremonies the trophy cost $2, and was inscribed:
As Berman's moment of glory was drawing to a close, a husky policeman grabbed him by the arm and said, "Come on, sonny. It's over."
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
The National Science Foundation has granted pre-doctoral fellowships to eleven KU students.
Eleven Graduates Receive Fellowships
One faculty member and a graduate student have received NSF post-doctoral fellowships and ten graduate students received honorable mention.
FIRST-YEAR WINNERS, who will receive $1,800 at prize draw.
al receive $1,800 stipends, are:
Harold W. Fearing, Lawrence senior;
Ferdinand J. Fisher, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Craig E. Nelson, Mankato senior; and Gerald M. Simmons, Parsons graduate student.
Intermediate-level winners have been awarded $2,000 grants. Intermediate recipients are graduate students:
3 Films Featured At 4 p.m. Tomorrow
Three films will be shown at 4 p.m. Wednesday in 3 Bailey by the Bureau of Visual Instruction.
Clifford L. Coon, Lawrence, Gottfried Hogh, Detroit, Mich., Larry G. Mason, Wyandotte, Mich., and Alvin W. Wiens, Hillsboro.
They are "Walkabout" and "Forbidden Islands" both in color, and "Africa and Schweitzer." "Forbidden Islands" describes the natives of the Fiji Islands, and "Walkabout" describes the Australian aborigines. "Africa and Schweitzer" depicts the building and operation of the Albert Schweitzer mission in Lamborene. Each film is approximately 20 minutes long.
Terminal year winners, who will receive $2,200 grants, are graduate students;
Auto Wrecking & Junk
Cheerleader Session Tonight
The first practice session for cheerleader tryouts will be held at 7 tonight in the women's gym in Robinson Hall. The next practice session will be Thursday night.
New & Used Parts and Tires
David K. Brice, Sulphur Springs,
Tex., John K. Garland, Lawrence,
and John F. Zimmerman, Monticello,
Ia.
East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956
NSF POST-DOCTORAL fellowships were awarded to David W.
Appel, professor of engineering mechanics, and to Frank J. Rohlf, Lawrence graduate student.
The ten graduate students who received honorable mention are:
Jon C. Barlow, Lawrence; Mrs. Suzanne Tubby Batra, Lawrence; William D. Baxter, Lawrence; Thomas M. Jenkins, Lawrence; Ronald L. Cox, Lawrence; George G. Gastl, Shawnee; Loren C. Larson, Lawrence; Daniel C. McColl, Arkansas City; John W. McCrary, Raleigh, N.C., and Jean M. Odell, Lawrence.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters.
Everybody Come!
Bring a Date
or
Come Alone
to the
Informal Bridge Session
on
Wednesday, April 11
in the Cottonwood Room
of the Kansas Union
7:30 to 10:30
C.U.L.G.A.
PARIS
1937-38
1962 KANSAS RELAYS PARADE
10:00 SAT. APRIL 21
Downtown Lawrence
K. W. HOUGH PARUSE
2nd Prize - Pi Beta Phi - Phi Delta Theta
1st Prize - Alpha Delta Pi-Triangle
1961 Relays Float Winners
3rd Prize - GSP-Delta Tau Delta
SUPPORT THE '62 RELAYS PARADE
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Joao Goulart Controls Brazil Land of 'Tragic Contrasts'
For all practical purposes President Joao Goulart wields the executive power in Brazil—a nation of 3,288,000 square miles and 70.5 million people.
This is a land of tragic contrasts.
Lush tropical rain forests cover the Amazon valley in contrast to the sun-baked semi-desert of the so-called "Poligono das Secas" in the northeast.
Larger than the continental U.S. excluding Alaska, Brazil borders on every South American country except Chile and Ecuador. The climate ranges from tropical in the north to subtropical and temperate in the south and interior highlands.
Huge herds of cattle range over rich pasture land in the south and seek nourishment in the north on land which can hardly support goats. Brazil's 72 million head make up the third largest herd of cattle in the world.
KNOWN MINERAL resources are practically untapped. Brazil only recently began exporting iron and manganese from huge deposits in Minas, Gerais and Amapa.
Gold, diamonds and other precious stones are found in interior streams. The gold and diamonds rarely appear in official export figures because they are smuggled abroad where the rate is higher than that which the government pays.
Berylium and radioactive minerals are also found in substantial quantities, some of which are exported to the U.S.
Many parts of the sprawling hinterland are practically unexplored. Eighty-five per cent of the population still lives in a narrow strip along the nearly 5,000 miles of coastline.
Little was done to facilitate interior settlement until the administration of former President Juscelino Kubitschek.
KUBITSCHKE devoted an estimated billion dollars in construction of the new capital of Brasilia in the Goias Highland, some 700 miles in land. Brasília became the capital April 21, 1960.
The Kubitschek administration also built thousands of miles of roads to connect the new capital with the major ports of Santos, Rio de Janeiro and Belem.
Though it already has a population exceeding 100,000. Brasilia is still an incomplete city. Work has slowed since Kubitschek ended his term in January 1611 and it will be many years before the capital can be considered finished.
BRAZILIAN industry is expanding at a tremendous rate.
This country is now producing 2.7 million tons of steel per year. New plants under construction, plus expansion of the American-financed Volta Redonda mill will boost this to about four million tons by 1955.
The auto industry which did not exist at the beginning of the Kubitschek administration has already delivered 500,000 vehicles and will
RICHARD TUCKER:
THE WORLD'S PRIZE
WORRY- WART
Opera star Richard Tucker lives in constant fear. He's afraid of losing his voice—and even his life. In this week's Saturday Evening Post, you'll meet the Brooklyn-born tenor. Learn why he gets the shakes when he thinks of Leonard Warren's death. And why he feels his resemblance to Caruso is a "mystic sign."
The Saturday Evening
POST
APRIL 14 ISSUE NOW ON SALE
Page 5
Verolme and Ishikawaiima, the large Dutch and Japanese combines, have built shipyards here during the past three years which are already delivering vessels to government-owned lines. When completed in 1965 both yards will be able to build and repair ships of all sizes.
Other industries such as the manufacture of electric appliances, machine tools, railroad rolling stock and chemicals, are growing apace.
During the past decade electric power capacity has been expanded from 1.9 to about 4.6 million kilowatts. However, it is estimated that power output will have to be increased at a rate of 12 per cent per year to keep pace with the demands of industry.
The 70 per cent of the population which lives on the land accounts for only 28 per cent of the national income.
Average per capita income in Brazil is about $300, but it does not pay the per capita income some rural areas such as the world's least inhabited by 25 million persons.
BRAZIL'S TWO major problems of the moment are land reform and education.
Over the years Congress has shelved more than a dozen land reform bills without action. Two are now pending before the House of Deputies.
According to a recent report by Premier Neves. Brazil has an estimated 2,117,500,000 acres of arable land. But only 30 million acres are cultivated while 300 million are used for grazing.
It is estimated that 30 per cent of annual harvests rots on the ground because of lack of transportation. There is an acute storage of farm financing. The government has usually sought to channel financing into industry.
RURAL ILLITERACY and ignorance are great obstacles to expansion of agricultural output. Brazilian illiteracy is estimated at 50 per cent, which is probably low. In most backward rural communities illiteracy runs as high as 90 per cent.
Only 30 per cent of Brazilian children old enough to enter the first grade matriculate and only ten per cent complete the fourth grade. Over 80 per cent of those that go to school attend private institutions because of the lack of public facilities.
The Brazilian constitution requires that at least ten per cent of the federal budget and 20 per cent of each state budget be dedicated to education. This requirement has never been respected.
University Daily Kansan
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 10, 1962
Persian Shah, Prime Minister Differ in Political Viewpoints
By United Press International
Two strong but totally different men run modern Persia. One is the Shah, Mohammed Reza Pahlevi, king of kings, the shadow of God. The other is his tough prime minister, Dr. Ali Amini, wealthy lawyer, economist, diplomat.
The Shah, at 42, is, as UPI reporter Robert Musel once put it,
"very close to the storybook image of a potentate . . slender, wavy-haired, handsome, with great personal magnetism for women." Until he began breaking up his fortune and giving away his lands he was rated one of the world's richest men. He probably still is. Estimates of his wealth in lands, palaces, jewels have ranged from $50 million to three times that.
WEARER SINCE 1941 of the crown of the oldest continuous monarchy in the world — dating from the victory of Cyrus the Great over the Medes in 559 B.C.—the Shah in 1960 achieved what he called his “heart's desire,” a son. The boy was born to his third wife, Farah Diba, daughter of a wealthy but non-royal Iranian family, and secured the line of inheritance to the Peacock Throne.
Two other beautiful women were discarded by the Shah because they bore him no son. His first wife was Princess Fawzia, entrancing sister of then King Farouk of Egypt. She bore him a daughter. They were divorced in 1948. Then the Shah married beautiful, aquamarine-eyed Persian Princess Soraya. It was believed a great love match. But there were no children of the mating and the Shah divorced her in 1958. Soraya still is considered one of the world's great beauties. In December, 1959, the Shah wed Farah Diba and this time the union brought the cherished son. Life, said the Shah, was now complete.
AMINI SWITCHED to government as a career in 1933, joining the Ministry of Finance. He became the ministry's director general five years later, and in 1940 was elected to Iran's Majilis, or lower house of Parliament. He served several terms and in the process became Deputy Prime Minister.
Starting in the 1930s and continuing for the next decades Amini served for Iran on various world opium and narcotics control councils. In 1950 he was named Iran's Minister of National Economy. He went out of office during the 1951-53 regime of Mohammed Mossadegh but came
back into the Finance Ministry under the succeeding government, served briefly as Minister of Justice, then in 1957-58 was Tehran's ambassador to Washington.
On his return from Washington Amini appeared to have fallen into the Shah's disfavor, and after two inactive years he again ran for the Mailis under the label of the Independent Party. He lost, then raised charges that the entire national election had been rigged by the victorious National Party. The Shah voided the election and made it stick although riots in Tehran indicated the country might be on the verge of revolution.
THE POLITICAL turmoil reached a height in May, 1960. Unrest continued for months and in May, 1961, the Shah reached out to Amini. The Paris-educated lawyer showed his strength from the start. Accepting the premiership he announced that the Shah "must reign but not rule." When Amini insisted on a free hand to carry out reforms the Shah dissolved Parliament so Amini could rule by decree.
Since getting the power he wanted Amini, a gray-haired man of medium height and build, large nose and what has been called "a puckish smile," often has been rumored on the verge of dismissal by the Shah. But as week followed week in 1962 Amini still was working 18 hours a day in Iran's "Presidence du Conseil des Ministres." And the Shah still was, to Amini's satisfaction, at least, "reigning but not ruling."
IRAN LEANS heavily on its oil resources for its economic life and future development. Last year the country's production of crude oil rose to better than 57 million tons and in 1960 the eight international companies of the oil consortium
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which operates in South Iran handed over to the Tehran government revenues of 285.6 million dollars. This was somewhat less than 30 per cent of the national income, but oil easily is the country's biggest single earner, particularly of foreign exchange, since oil is Iran's main export.
Basically the country is agricultural. Four-fifths of its people live off the land and produce hides, wool, cotton, fruit. Caviar from the Caspian Sea is another product. Iran's industries—other than oil—are carpet weaving, cotton and wool processing and the production of silk goods. It has meat canning, brewing, distilling and tobacco manufacturing plants.
In 1960, the last year for which complete import-export figures are available, the country's imports cost better than 5.4 billion dollars, while total exports, excluding oil, were 1.001 billion dollars. Iran's leading trading partners are Britain, the United States, Germany, Japan and the Soviet Union.
George Anne Porter, Kansas City junior, was chosen vice-president of the Associated Women Students (AWS) Senate March 29 after the AWS Senate debated for two hours in an effort to break the tie for vice-president.
AWS Veep Picked Following Tie Vote
Miss Porter and Kay Timberlake, Leawood junior, tied for AWS Senate vice-president in the all-school elections March 28.
Miss Timberlake, as a runner-up in the elections will be a member of the AWS Senate.
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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.
C K F
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Tuesday, April 10,1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Campanile Is KU Landmark For Travelers
One of the most significant sights on the KU campus today is the 120 foot tower of the Campanile just south of the football stadium.
This World War II memorial, which was dedicated on May 27, 1951, rises majestically over the "Hill" in honor of the 276 KU men and women who lost their lives in the war.
These names are inscribed on the inside walls of the Memorial Room in the base of the Campanile.
THE TOWER, which is 22 feet, 10 inches across the base, has doorways decorated with sculptured bronze figures. The exterior has truncated corners of oread limestone in rubble form while the concave sides of the tower are open and trimmed with sawed Silverdale stone.
Before the carillon was constructed, a great deal of research was done in an effort to make it one of the best in the nation. Members of the carillon committee visited carillons throughout the United States and Canada as well as the Netherlands and Belgium to determine the best type of bell and bell manufactures.
Bells which chime over the campus daily emanate from a 53-bell carillon which was cast in England.
The bells which finally played a special recital on dedication day and which still chime every quarter hour today are made of solid bronze.
THE RIM OF EACH EELL gives the fundamental pitch but each segment of the inside influences the pitch of an harmonic. Each bell has five overtones.
The carillon itself slightly resembles the organ or piano. A row of foot pedals actuate the heavy clappers of the big brass bells which swing only two inches or less against the inner rim of the bells. The bells do not move since they are anchored to the steel beams.
Today terraced walks and drives connect the tower with various points on the campus. All of the walks leading to the Campanile come in at the corners of the 65 foot square terrace surrounding it.
Four benches have been constructed on points of the star shaped terrace while flowering trees and evergreens beautify the area around the tower base.
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Officials Seek Death Cause
Tissue samples from the body of the University of Nebraska student who died here Saturday are currently being analyzed by the Kansas State Board of Health.
The Douglas County coroner, Dr. James Reed, said the results should help determine the cause of death of the student, John Melvin Abrahamson of Shelton, Neb. He said the results of the analysis will be available in a week.
AN AUTOPSY performed Saturday morning failed to reveal a definite cause of death.
Abrahamzon died early Saturday morning. He arrived at KU Friday to attend the Big Eight Inter-Fraternity Council and Panhellenic conference. He checked into the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house to spend the night, then went to a local restaurant for about one and one-half hours.
On his return, he sat around the house, friends said, then started to bed. Others in the house said he appeared to have been ill in the bathroom, and a small pool of blood was found there.
HE SLUMPED TO the floor after entering the second floor dormitory. Tom Bornhold, Topeka sophomore, administered mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and the fire department sent a respirator. However, Abrahamzon could not be revived.
Dr. Reed said there is a possibility a coroner inquest will be held after all the information concerning the student and his health history has been gathered. Foul play has been ruled out, the coroner said.
Arabamzon's body was taken to Lincoln late Sunday for services and burial.
Official Bulletin
Teacher Interviews:
Teacher interviews:
Asst. (Elem. & Sec.) Shambaugh, Ast.
Tiem. (Elem. & Sec.) Downy, Calef.
International Students: Students wish to apply for the 1962 Summer Cross-Springs, Colorado, on June 9-16, should see the office of the Dean of Students for further information. It is at no cost to the student providing he or she is returning home during 1962.
Ham Club Meeting has been postponed to April 18, 1962.
TOMORROW
People-to-People Flight Orientation Meeting; 4 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. Spain — Speaker, Pedro Martinez Bonet.
KUOK — 2-News & Weather; 3:05-
Top Forty Times; 4- Hiltopping; 5- Hill-
opping; 6- Whittaker's Wax; 7- Works;
8.25-Spotlight on Science; 8:30-Bon-
jour Médames"; 8:45-Public Service
Program; 7-Countdown; 8-Night Flight,
Stage II; 9-Weather; 10:15-Night Flight, Stage II;
12-Portals of Prayer.
Teaching Opportunities in East Africa
Teachers College, Columbia University, is recruiting '62 college graduates for secondary school teaching in Tanganyika, Kenya, Uganda and Zanzibar.
---
Openings exist in Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Mathematics, English, History, and Geography. Upon completion of training, candidates will receive 2-year appointments as salaried education officers.
They will join 150 Americans already serving in East Africa.
For further information, write:
TEACHERS FOR EAST AFRICA P.O. Box 850, Teachers College, Columbia Univ New York 27,New York
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University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 10, 1963
Vox Populi Party Election Platform
CURRENT CAMPUS ISSUES
ACADEMIC FREEDOM
Since the basis of higher education is achieved through freedom of thought and objective discussion and since this principle has been subjected to uncalled for attacks from organizations outside the immediate University family; Vox Populi calls upon the All Student Council to:
(1) Continue its active defense of this student right.
(2) Effectively utilize the Current Events Committee with the cooperation and support of other recognized campus organizations.
CIVIL RIGHTS
Vox Populi, firmly believing in the "worth of the individual," holds the following premises to have been proven true by history.
- That no man should be judged on a basis of race, creed, or place of national origin.
- That discrimination on the basis of any or all of these has been and will continue to be a blight on the American Character.
- That persuasion, suggestion, (i.e., "moral suasion") and the individual action will do far more towards the ultimate defeat of prejudice than will punitive action with its associated threats and force.
Based on these three premises, Vox Populi asserts and supports the following proposals:
(1) That continued support be given to the Human Rights Committee, the All Student Council, and the Administration to deal with discriminatory matters.
(2) Concerned specifically with the current issue of "Greek discriminatory clauses," Vox Populi urges those houses in question to remove their clauses but does not support punitive action on the part of the All Student Council or the Administration.
GENERAL LEGISLATION STUDENT COURT
The Student Court's function is to receive student appeals for traffic fines, disciplinary matters, etc. Despite the fact that the Student Court is one of the major branches of student government, it has not been used to its full potential. Vox feels that this lack of use is due to the insufficient publicity coupled with organizational deficiencies. To remedy these problems we will make the following four changes:
(1) Publicity
The activities and functions of the Student Court will be publicized by the All Student Council.
(2) Organizational
(a) The associate justices will be appointed by the Student Body President, the Dean of the Law School, and the immediate past Chief Justice of the Student Court.
(b) The appellate provisions will be revised to provide a clear method of direct appeal to the entire Student Court and then, if necessary, to disciplinary Committee.
(c) The jurisdictional boundaries between the Student Court and the
Disciplinary Committee will be defined by the All Student Council.
ALL STUDENT COUNCIL FUNDS
The expanding scope of student government requires additional money in order to:
- Meet the growing needs of Council-supported activities, e.g. People-to-People.
- Provide for efficient operation of All Student Council committees, e.g. Current Events Committee.
- Meet the expense of future activities.
To increase the operating funds for the All Student Council, Vox Populi proposes the appropriation for AWS be made directly by the University.
Vox Populi proposes that Statewide Activities be revitalized by:
STATEWIDE ACTIVITIES
(1) Establishing a student-faculty committee to select qualified students to represent KU in high school, civic and other community groups throughout the state.
(2) Establishing a conference for high school leaders to acquaint outstanding high school leaders with the advantages of attending KU.
BIG EIGHT COLLEGE BOWL.
Vox Populi will work to establish a Big Eight College Bowl in continuation of our revitalization of the Big Eight Student Government Association.
STUDENT UNION FACILITIES
Vox Populi proposes the extension of student services to include the sale of sundry items in the Student Union and the university residence halls.
PARKING
The traffic control system to be instituted next fall will inconvenience students driving cars. Vox Populi proposes that the Traffic and Security Office grant parking permits for zones on the perimeter of the campus to any student desiring to purchase one.
Columbia Professor To Speak Tomorrow
Cheves Walling, professor of chemistry at Columbia University, will be the guest speaker at the fourteenth Dains Memorial Lecture at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Room 411, Summerfield.
Prof. Walling has been a member of the Columbia faculty since 1952 and has served as a research chemist and technical aide for industry and government.
The lecture is being sponsored by the Kappa chapter of Alpha Chi Sigma and the chemistry department.
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15 minutes from Lawrence — $ \frac{1}{2} $ mile East of Tonganoxie on Highway 40. Admission — 75c per person.
Events for tomorrow morning and afternoon will be two more composer-faculty forums at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
All events are open free of charge to the public. The 8 p.m. concerts are broadcast over KANU-FM radio.
Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of choral music, will direct all numbers. The University Brass Choir will assist him.
Symposium Will Continue
The Symposium of Contemporary American Music continued here today with orchestra readings at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. A composers' forum is scheduled for 4 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall, and the concert by the Concert Choir and Chorale at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre will conclude today's offerings.
Tonight will be the premier of Mr. Davye's missa brevis, Tonsing's "Song" and Mr. Whear's "Winter."
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THE MENNINGER APPROACH TO MENTAL LINESS; NO PATIENT IS
A patient at the Menninger Hospital had been hate-ridden for years. So the doctors let her work off her anger by hitting golf balls. And it worked! In this week's Post, you'll learn why the Menningers feel no patient is hopeless. And you'll read case histories from their files.
HOPE- LESS
The Saturday Evening
POST
APRIL 14 ISSUE NOW ON SALE
Stokstad Gives 'Great Cities Lecture'
Marilyn Stokstad, assistant professor of art history, opened the Great Cities Lecture series yesterday with an illustrated lecture on Barcelona, Spain.
The travel-log lecture series, which is sponsored by the art history department, deals with a number of great cities and their art.
Prof. Stokstad discussed the architecture and paintings of Barcelona, the major industrial center of Spain. In the illustrations, she
distinguished between various types of Gothic and Benedictine architecture.
Included in the lecture were illustrations of art from the medieval and later periods.
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'Strangers' Reign in Murphy Hall
Page 9
Bv Bob Hovt
A gladiator stands in Murphy Hall between the ladies powder room and the coffee bar.
The gladiator is the creation of Jack Spillman of Tulsa University. Near the opposite end of the exhibition gallery is a thing called "Figure," by James B. Clover of the Kansas City Art Institute. Without a nametag, "Gladiator" might pass for something else. But "Figure" resembles nothing so much as a charred human corpse, suggesting nuclear holocaust.
Between these two works are numerous others, created by artists from various parts of the United States. One noticeably realistic abstraction is "Water Buffalo" by Imao Absulmari of the Rhode Island School of Design.
What are the visitors saying?
"Good night! What is it?" one woman asked when confronted by the "Gladiator."
"I DON'T KNOW what it is," her companion answered. "What I want to know is how they do it."
One teacher walking down the hall muttered that the exhibit "looks like an army obstacle course."
"Oh, they pound metal together, and weld it, and things like that."
University Daily Kansan
One man and woman walking hand in hand looked askance at the exhibits on either side of them. "Close your eyes," he said, "and maybe you won't see it."
CHANCES ARE THAT if you close your eyes you will still see that charred corpse.
"Skidmore College it says on this one. Ever hear of that?" "Saw."
One bevy of women giggled in unison when one of them said, "This one would make a good coattack." The man standing near them did not laugh as he looked at a seated metal figure and said, "Looks like she's got her face bashed in."
"This one is a bug," said another man, directing a woman's attention to the figure. "See the stingers."
"Antennaea," she corrected, sounding as if she might be a little perterbed with his interpretation, but not certain he was mistaken in it.
One man said, "I've never been in this building before."
BEFORE THE EXHIBIT is over, many KU students may be drawn to Murphy hall for the first time.
What does the exhibit mean?
As the man said, "I've never been in this building before."
in this building before.
Perhaps the artists exhibited there are saying, 'I've never been in this world before.' Here we write I make of the past. Here's what I feel around me. And here's what I see for the future."
The exhibit is a gathering of creative attempts to express reality in abstract terms. What does that mean? Perhaps it means nothing to those who look for some practical surface value.
If it is a coatrack, it is a coatrack. If it has meaning in terms of the progress of the human spirit, it is difficult or impossible to analyze.
ART IS COMMUNICATION, but it sometimes speaks an unfamiliar language. The artist abstracts from the world around him and attempts to give it symmetry through his medium. Those exposed to it
can only take it for what it suggests in terms of their individual existences.
Perhaps the two eagles in flight and the water buffalo fighting flies means more than the woman with the bashed in face and the charred human corpse. It becomes a matter of taste and experience.
Artists have an irritating habit of looking at the human race in its entirety. Some of what he sees is not too pretty, nor is it all line and shadow or black and white.
Unfortunately, or fortunately, also according to taste, when the artist abstracts, he does not always pick up the hearts and flowers and reject the so-called "bad" things.
Architects Confer On Aged's Houses
Problems of retirement, health, shelter and the government's role in aged housing will be the key topics at the ninth annual State Architects Conference to be held in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union, Friday.
Speakers will be Rev. George Nelson, United Presbyterian Foundation of Kansas; Dr. Sidney Spector, Housing and Home Finance Agency; Dr. Donald Rose, KU Medical Center; and Dr. Walter Virett, University of Minnesota.
Tuesday, April 10, 1962
ASC Member-
(Continued from page 1) thought that he would come to us if he had any questions."
MINER SAID THAT HE now has accumulated the experience to become familiar with campus situations, but said he got this on his own initiative and not through the help of UP.
Asked why he ran for the UP in the first place. Miner said:
Hardy said that the situation might have come up through a faulty line of communication. Since UP won only two seats in last Spring's election, few carry-over ASC representatives were available to orient the new members with campus affairs, he explained.
"Anderson and I discussed running for the ASC from the unmarried-unorganized district, and I went to a couple of UP meetings. I wanted to run for the ASC and Vox already had a candidate (Allphin). UP seemed like a good party, they were available, so I entered the direct primary from UP against Mike Thomas. Thomas at the time was the treasurer of the ASC."
AWS Senate Members Meet This Afternoon
The '61-'62 Associated Women Students (AWS) Senate members and the newly elected '62-'63 Senate members will meet at 4 p.m. today in the Dean of Women's office, 220 Strong.
P-T-P Film Set For Tomorrow
The next foreign travel conference sponsored by People-to-People will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
The conference will cover travel in Spain. It will be conducted by Pedro Bonet, Huesca, Spain, graduate student.
The conferences are chiefly for students planning to travel abroad with the P-t-P student ambassadors program, but they are open to anyone planning to travel in foreign countries next summer.
A film is shown at the beginning of each meeting, presenting a broad picture of the country under discussion. A foreign student conducts each of the meetings and is assisted by two or three other foreign students and at least one American student. There is a panel discussion after the film and an open question and answer session follows.
The programs are designed to aid American students in gaining background information concerning foreign countries and customs so they will be able to make the best use of their foreign travel.
The conference scheduled for April 18 will cover Scandinavia. It will be conducted by Jannik Lindbaek, Oslo, Norway, graduate student.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 10
Tuesday. April 10. 1962
Relay Teams Win; Dotson Top Athlete
Take a bit of sunshine for atmosphere, some Kansans for home-state pride, and 11 runners from Texas Southern for thrills, mix, and you have the makings for what could be one of the great Kansas Relays April 20-21.
Only the sunshine remains in question. Based upon performances at the Texas Relays last week the other two elements are ready.
KANSAS AND Texas Southern had a hand in seven of the 10 records in the University-College divisions at Austin Saturday, and a repeat performance by these two teams next week in Memorial Stadium is possible.
Given any weather break at all, the athletes in the annual Kansas showing will have two days in which to prove that there are seemingly no limits in sight in lowering track records of any sort. That wasn't the case at Texas.
Day-long rains Friday forced the first postponement in the 37-year history of the meet at Austin. The scheduled Friday night program was run off Saturday morning, with the normal second-day program following that afternoon.
KU SET TEXAS Relays records in both the distance medley and the two-mile relay. The Jayhawkers came from behind each time on sparking anchor carries by senior Bill Dotson and for his efforts the KU captain was voted the meet's Outstanding Athlete award.
Dotson made up a 15-yard deficit and went on to win by 25 yards on his mile carry in the distance medley. He ran a 4:03.9 mile to equal his mark he ran two weeks ago when Kansas set an American indoor record in this event at the Kansas State indoor meet.
The Jayhawks ran 9:48.8 at Kansas State, which until Saturday was the fastest time in the event-indoors or out-by any Big Eight school. KU was timed in 9:46.4 at Texas.
BILL STODDART led off with a 49.0 quarter mile, Bill Thornton added a 1:52.2 half mile and Ted Riesinger turned in a fine 3:01.3 three quarters.
the performance knocked five seconds off the Texas Relaws record.
Tonnie Coane replaced Stoddart in the two-mile a few hours later as the Jayhawkers continued the buffeting of the record in this event. (They set an American indoor record three weeks ago, lowered it two weeks ago, then saw Missouri lower the all-time Big Eight record in the event last week.)
KANSAS RAN the event in 7:27.7 three seconds under the Texas Relays record set by California in 1958.
Thornton ran 1:53.1, Coane followed with a 1:55.3 and then Riesinger turned in his all-time best performance with a 1:49.7 to put Dotson five yards back of Southern Illinois' Bill Cornell with a half mile to go.
THESE TWO EVENTS were the only ones entered by Kansas in the relays field.
Dotson—timed in 1:49.6, also his best ever—caught the Englishman 50 yards from the finish, matched him stride for stride down the stretch, then lunged forward at the end for a narrow victory. The Southern Illinois team was awarded the same time as Kansas.
Pete Talbott finished fifth in the javelin with a throw of $ 206-2 \frac{1}{2} $ and Doug Stoner placed fifth in the discus at 157-$ 7 \frac{1}{2} $
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The Jayhawkers operated without two of their top distance hands. Defending Big Eight half-mile champion Kirk Hagan missed his second straight meet because of the flu and Charlie Hayward—who won the Texas Relays 3000-meter steeplechase last year—also missed the trip because of illness.
DESPITE THE two records by Kansas and some exciting performances by Abilene Christian relay teams in the University class, Texas Southern dominated the meet.
It was the first time the Houston Negro school was allowed to run in the meet and the 12,000 Austin fans howled in amazement as a combination of 11 runners not only set five records but became the first team (either college or university) to ever win five relay titles in one of the major relay carnivals.
Texas Southern finished the day with a 3:09.0 mile relay time—the fastest in the nation this year and a full second better than Abilene Christian used in winning a tight mile relay title in the University class. And in that University mile relay Olympian Earl Young ran a 45.2 anchor 440 to nudge Oklahoma State and Missouri for the victory.
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TEXAS SOUTHERN'S narrowest margin of victory was 15 yards in the 440-yard relay. There could be a bit more competition for the speedy Texans next week at Lawrence, however.
Loyola of Chicago—anchored by Tom O'Hara—could push them in the sprint medley or two-mile relays.
Jayhawker Tennis Team Victorious
Waldschmidt relieved starter Roger Brock in the bottom half of the sixth inning to end a Cornhusker rally and preserve the Kansans' victory.
IN THE FINAL GAME of the Nebraska series Waldschmidt came back to strike out 11 Cornhuskers as the Jayhawkers scored a run in each of the first two innings and then scored another in the top of the sixth. Waldschmidt's victory was his third straight of the year without a defeat.
The Jayhawkers won their Big Eight openers by scores of 6-4, 8-6 and 3-2. Pitcher Jerry Waldschmidt supplied the spark for the last season's cellar dwellers surge into a tie for first place.
THE JAYHAWKERS at this early stage of the season have won as many games as they did the entire season last year.
The Jayhawker tennis team, riding the crest of a four-game winning streak, travels to Kansas City this weekend to meet the University of Iowa, Oklahoma State and Southern Illinois in a quadrangular.
Based on Texas Relays performances, at least 12 Kansas Relays records will be endangered next week. Texas Southern's five records at Austin were all better than current Kansas Relays records in the college class.
In the second games of the series it was Monte Stewart, Chattanooga sophomore, who put out the fire for the Jayhawkers. KU jumped to an early lead 5-0, before falling behind 6-5. The KU reliefer blanked the Cornhuskers the rest of the way while the KU bats added three more runs.
The Jayhawkers after splitting doubleheaders at Texas Lutheran at Seguin, Tex., and the University of Houston rallied in a three-game series against the Nebraska Cornhuskus at Lincoln to give Coach Floyd Temple's crew a 3-0 league record and a 5-2 overall record.
The Jayhawkers defeated Kansas State 7-0, Emporia State 7-0 and Oklahoma State 5-2.
The Kansas Jayhawk baseball nine opens its 1962 home baseball season Friday and Saturday against Kansas State atop the Big Eight conference standings.
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The Marriage-GO-ROUND CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUXE Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 90
The University of Kansas golf team opened its 1962 season over the weekend participating in the third annual Oklahoma Intercollegiate golf tournament at Shawnee. KU's four man team of John Hanna, Paul Carlson, Dick Haitbrink and Reid Holbrook shot a 950 to tie with Wichita U. for sixth place.
Golfers Sixth At Oklahoma
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Defending champion Oklahoma State won the meet which was composed of 11 schools from Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas. O.S.U. had a four man team total of 871-7 over par.
Sergeants3
Fifty-four holes were played in the meet, par being 72-72-72—216. O.S.U.'s Labron Harris Jr., won medalist honors with a one-under par 73-69-73—215. Low score for KU was carded by Holbrook—74-76-79—229.
The Hawks travel to Wichita Thursday for a triangular meet with Wichita U. and K-State. First home match for KU will be April 20 with Missouri.
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Tuesday, April 10, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
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BEVERAGES ALL = kinds of six-paks,
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paper bags. Picnic, party supplies
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FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Calm at VI 3-0524.
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DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 10, 1962
An Interpretative Report
The Negro's Fight Against Discrimination
By James E. Alsbrook
(Editor's note: The following article was prompted by the recent fires in a newly purchased Negro home in Kansas City and was written after several days of investigation. What worse is an attempt to discover what home of the current trends and developments are within the Negro community itself in the fight against discrimination.)
KANSAS CITY, KANASAS — Four separate fires apparently set by segregationists on April 2 did $1,000 damage to the Vinyard Woods home of Lorenzo Worten, a Negro who was preparing to move into that all-white residential area of nearby Kansas City, Missouri.
"Whoever set those fires was trying to burn a ghost — the old Negro stereotype has practically ceased to exist," a Negro doctor told me as I sat in his office the next day.
We were discussing the new method Negroes here are using to fight racial discrimination.
This new method — according to sociologists and Negro business and civic leaders — is creating a new image of the Negro: the respectable, well-to-do business or professional man who is making a good contribution to society.
- High standards of personal performance that will earn admiration and help create a more desirable image.
- MORE SUBTLE than NAACP law-suits and more diplomatic than sit-ins, this new method calls for:
- The getting and using of money in ways that will reflect credit upon the Negro and combat racial discrimination.
The success of this new method is reflected in a statement made by Ellsworth Green, executive secretary of the Chamber of Commerce:
"Negro chemists and engineers are being quietly integrated into local industry, and manufacturing plants and unions are tending to upgrade persons solely on the basis of their ability."
This trend is explained by Felix
Moos, KU sociologist and anthropologist:
"Whereas in bygone days the exposure of whites to Negroes was most frequently a master-servant relationship, the role of the Negro has changed so that now he is frequently a public official, a physician or a businessman whose very responsibilities and performances invalidate the Uncle Tom stereotype."
Even the Black Muslims, a fanatical sect of Negro segregationists who oppose NAACP and interracial harmony, say more prestige and money are desirable for the Negro. The Muslims, however, would use these tools to conquer the white man.
SINCE PRESTIGE and money are most effective only when the basic voting and educational rights are practiced, the use of them here can be either the final stage of the Negro's ascent into first class citizenship or the first stage in the development of a black fascism led by a talented Negro elite.
Local leaders, white and Negro,
say now that civil rights battles are
being won — the Negro is being
thrown into fair competition with
whites and judged on merit. And the
community is saying, "All right —
the barriers are coming down! Show
us what you can do."
Following repeated victories in competition with all other high schools in the metropolitan area, those Sumner students who had lacked confidence gradually became convinced that they had whatever brains it took to keep pace with white students.
Reaction to this challenge was made by local Negroes in the early 1950s and is shown in the aftermath of Sumner High School victories in the Science Fair.
This new confidence was buttressed when they saw their friends compete successfully for high honors at KU, UCLA, the University of Chicago, Yale and elsewhere.
Infecting older Kansas Citians, this
confidence and desire for personal prestige resulted in the training and departure of many local Negroes to other parts of the country. They are lawyers like Arthur McLendon of Chicago, businessmen like William P. Grayson of New York, physicians like Melvin Jenkins of Howard University and teachers like Dr. Nicholas L. Gerren of Houston.
Some like James H. Browne, president of the Crusader Life Insurance Company, Cordell D. Meeks, Commissioner of Wyandotte County and the Robbins brothers, suburban area developers, remained in Kansas City.
THESE AND other achievement-conscious Negroes base their claims for prestige and equality not upon the fact they are law-abiding citizens but upon the fact that by dint of their accomplishments they are more valuable as citizens than are the average American white men who get better treatment.
There is also a growing number of employers who simply do not believe in racial discrimination, a growing number of state governments that practice non-discrimination in employment and a growing tendency on the part of the federal government to hire and upgrade without respect to race and require the same practice on the part of companies having government contracts.
A Negro educator in Kansas City summed up the new Negro attitude this way:
Lonneuer Pemberton, executive secretary of the Urban League of Kansas City, says the change of community attitude that made possible this increased Negro desire for personal accomplishment resulted from several things: The Kansas and Missouri State Fair Employment Practice laws, Federal government regulations, Supreme Court decisions and the altruistic activities of churches—all of which evolved in an atmosphere of protest created by the NAACP and the sit-ins.
"Winning theoretical and legal
equality of opportunity is all right, but we must go one step ahead of white people in order to reach equality with them. We must produce ACES to go with their KINGS.
THIS IDEA IS already reflected in Negro society. There the word "doctor" is magic and the title is avidly sought after, whether it is Ph.D., D.D., Ed.D., M.D. or any kind of D. The prestige of personal attainment, they believe, will justify their being treated as first class citizens and do what no Supreme Court edict can do: destroy the myth that the Negro is inherently inferior.
The founding of the Douglass State Bank, the Twin City Federal Savings & Loan Association and the Crusader Life Insurance Company—all owned and operated by Negroes—provided new and sympathetic financial resources for the ghettoo Negro desiring a different location for his home or business.
The use of money to fight racial discrimination in Kansas City is a post-war development. Negligible in 1946, the strength of local anti-discrimination money has grown to millions and is getting bigger.
"Before Douglass State was founded in 1947, there was a general reluctance of the financial community to lend money for projects in minority group areas," said H. W. Sewing, president of the bank.
"So Douglass State took by default what amounted to a captive market," he said, and cut a pathway to success—a pathway in which its business customers are moving ahead.
Now the "gentlemen's agreement" which gave white financial institutions a veto power over Negro business venture and home ownership has been broken. And some Negro business and professional people have developed their competence and resources to the extent that they are competing along with white men in all neighborhoods.
FINANCIAL CLIQUES are developing and they use the power of
money to break down racial barriers. One such group is the Midwesterners, a social organization, who recently outbid several white groups to buy a country club site overlooking Wyandotte County Lake.
Dr. Carl M. Peterson, former president of the club, said of the purchase, "Money is color-blind and doesn't give a damn whose pocket it's in."
The Brentwood Hills suburban development with some homes in the $50,000 and $80,000 class manifests the aspirations of an emerging group of money-wise Negroes. Others are in savings clubs, investment clubs, and mutual fund plans now popular in Kansas City.
The stock market has begun to interest Negroes more than ever. In one case a young professional man has pyramided $8,000 to over $56,000 in the few years he has been out of military service. He is a willing contributor to civil rights programs, and has been offered a position as stock salesman by a downtown Kansas City, Mo., brokerage firm.
There are a half-dozen "business clubs" whose tight-lipped members are looking for and getting "good money-making deals" which include the buying and selling of white-occupied real estate without the tenants knowing their landlords are Negroes.
THESE PEOPLE believe the power of money earned in fair competition will cause them to deserve and get first class citizenship.
The opposite view is taken by the anti-Christian Black Muslim sect. They say no amount of prestige or respectability or money will persuade the white man that the Negro is his equal. They say the white man is inherently evil and that manhood in America is possible only if you are "free, WHITE and twenty-one." They advocate preparation for a race war in which it would be better for the Negro to "die like a man rather than live like a dog."
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Faculty Senate Backs Wescoe
The KU Faculty Senate yesterday backed Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe in his decision to refrain from administrative action on fraternity discriminatory clauses here.
In a report released by the Senate, the Chancellor was commended for his position "with respect to the problem posed by the existence of discriminatory clauses."
THE REPORT SAID the trend away from discrimination in fraternities and sororites should be accelerated, but that direct action in this direction should be initiated within the chapters themselves and is not likely to be attained by University mandate.
Since the fraternities and sororites are essentially social groups, the report said, they should have the freedom to select their members without interference from the University.
The University, it continued, should not participate either directly or indirectly in the process of selecting and pledging prospective members of fraternities or sororities.
THE FIRST SECTION OF THE seven-section report says national fraternity or sorority constitutional discrimination on a basis of "race, color, religion, or national origin—except for a religious clause in the case of a group primarily religious in purpose—is both
The full text of the Senate's statement appears on page 4.
ethically wrong and also incompatible with the status of the local chapter as a living group enjoying recognition by the University of Kansas."
The second section of the report says that since the only discriminatory clauses in the constitution of KU fraternities may be waived by local chapters, the problem created by the existence of these three clauses is far less significant than actual discriminatory practices.
The report expressed satisfaction with the progress made during the last 20 years by KU sorority and fraternity chapters toward lessening the practice of discrimination.
THE REPORT WAS presented to the senate by A. W. Davidson, professor of chemistry and chairman of the Senate Advisory Committee yesterday at the senate meeting.
The senate is composed of all faculty of the ranks of associate professor and professor.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe stated his policy towards discriminatory clauses in fraternity constitutions at an open Human Rights Council meeting March 18. He said he disapproved of discriminatory clauses, but that individual action and not University pressure is the best way of dealing with them.
KU Officers to National Job
Lovell (Tu) Jarvis, Winfield junior and chairman of People-to-People at KU, and Robert Thomas, Marysville junior and P-t-P vice chairman, plan to drop out of school next week to go to Europe on a liaison mission for P-t-P's student ambassador program.
Jarvis and Thomas said they plan to continue their education at KU some time in the future.
In the meantime they will establish a headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, from which they will tour Europe discussing the P-t-P program and compiling a directory which will be used by future student ambassadors.
Interviews will be held Sunday for replacements for Jarvis and Thomas.
Anyone interested in applying for one of their positions is requested to submit an application to the P-t-P office by Friday.
Profits Questioned
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Sen.
John L. McClellan said today he would keep his investigations sub-
committee in session all summer if necessary to determine why a defense contractor claimed profits of $1,325,000 on work to which he contributed $3,300.
For the fourth day, the Arkansas Democrat recalled executives of the Douglas Aircraft Co. to testify about alleged profit pyramiding on components for the Nike antiaircraft missile, which Douglas had subcontracted to other firms.
Wednesday, April 11, 1962
P-T-P to Discuss Program Rules
People-to-People has scheduled a mass meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union Ballroom to explain restrictions which have been placed on the P-t-P student ambassador program.
Daily hansan
59th Year, No. 115
Marianne Olson, national secretary for P-t-P from Kansas City, will answer questions about the restrictions put forth in travel packets sent to the 150 KU students who have signed up for the summer tour.
"ADVICE AND COUNSELING from Washington has made us aware of the responsibilities involved in such student travel," said James Murray, Leawood sophomore and local travel committee chairman.
Under the amended plan, the traveling students will have a choice of six itineraries, or they may submit an itinerary of their own for approval by the P-t-P national travel committee.
The national committee will screen prospective student ambassadors individually and will decide whether or not they should go on the tour.
"This program is not just a cheap way to get to Europe. Exceptions to the itineraries will be made, but the rules will be enforced," he said.
THE ORIGINAL PROGRAM was called "American Students Abroad," and the chief role of P-t-P was to arrange for transportation to and from Europe. Under this program, the students were to be more or less left to themselves for the summer tour.
However, the name of the tour recently was changed to "Student Ambassadors Program," and several restrictions have been added to the original plan.
The basic requirements of each of the six proposed itineraries are:
- All flight members will be required to attend a two-day orientation in Washington, given by the State Department.
- All will be required to make an initial stop in West Berlin where they will meet West Berlin students and spend a week in their homes.
- All will be required to check into the Brussels office regularly by mail to establish their locations in relation to those proposed on their itineraries.
"In spite of the restrictions, P-t-F is offering the students a flight plan that they can't get anywhere else," Murray said.
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Weather
Considerable cloudiness but no precipitation of consequence today and tonight. Thursday partly cloudy. Highs today and Thursday 55 to 60. Lows tonight around 40.
Strike Cripples NY Schools
There were reports from other
The United Federation of Teachers struck this morning at nearly all of the city's 840 schools, the nation's largest school system with one million students. By noon, only 42 per cent of the high school teaching staff had reported for work, only 23 per cent of the junior high staff, and 58 per cent of the elementary school staff.
NEW YORK —(UPI)—A systemwide strike of public school teachers seeking higher pay seriously affected hundreds of New York City schools today. Several were closed when students rioted and hurled books out of windows.
SEWARD PARK and Bryant High Schools, with only a token number of teachers on the job, were closed after police were called to quell rioting and rowdiness. At Seward students fought in the auditorium and ran through the building flinging books, paper and pencils out of windows. At Bryant there was book-throwing and general unruliness.
high schools that students had thrown tomatoes and eggs at teachers and sprayed each other with fire extinguisher. Thousands of parents, fearing violence, kept their children home from school.
Most students reported to their classrooms this morning and were encouraged to do so by picketing teachers, who began to march outside schools in the five boroughs at 6:30 a.m. (EST). Many classes were being conducted in orderly fashion by teachers who crossed the UFT picket lines or by supervisory emplovers.
At Evander Childs High School someone hurled an orange and broke a window and the front steps were pelted with eggs. Students at Bayside High School turned on the school's fire alarm system.
THOUSANDS OF older students were sent home so that none of the teachers who reported to work would have more than 40 pupils. Some schools kept all students together in auditoriums where movies were shown.
The exact number of teachers participating in the strike was not known. George Washington High School reported only 52 teachers in attendance out of a faculty of 127, while the Manhattan High School for boys reported 100 per cent teacher attendance. The union claims 15,000 members among the city's 40,000 public school teachers.
THE UNION CLAIMED the strike was 90 per cent effective and said 700 schools were "not working." A UFT spokesman said the strike was "three times as effective" as the first teacher strike, a one-day walk-out in 1960 of 4,600 teachers which caused unruly conditions and mass truancy at 129 schools.
THE TEACHERS, who voted to strike 2544 to 2231, face loss of their jobs under the state Condon-Wadlin bill. They currently earn $4,800 to $8,600 a year and have been offered wage increases totaling $28 million—a $700 annual increase—by the school board. The union's final demand was for wage increases totaling $53 million.
The questionable status of the University Party presidential and vice presidential candidates was eliminated last night as the All Student Council unanimously re-approved the candidacy of the pair.
ASC Reconsiders; UP Men Approved
The eligibility of the two, Gerald Kepner, Wichita junior, and Thomas Hardy, Hoisington junior, had been doubted because both had been absent from an ASC meeting. Such an absence would disqualify them since neither is presently on the council and attendance is required for candidates for the two positions.
EVIDENCE WAS presented last night that Kepner had been in the
Results from the English Proficiency test taken March 1 will be published in the Daily Kansan tomorrow.
Daily Kansan to Print English Pro Results
James Seaver, professor of history and Director of the Western Civilization Program, said the results will be released to the deans of the various schools today.
UP Officer Leaves Party
The treasurer of the University Party has resigned his position and may soon be appointed press secretary for Action, the still unrecognized third political party.
Michael McCabe, Topeka sophomore, said he did not resign because of any personal grievance, but "because I thought that my feelings were more in accord with those of Action than with the University Party.
"I just prefer Action's platform," he said. "I personally like many of the UP candidates in addition to supporting the Action candidates."
He explained that he had discussed the matter with UP party leaders before changing his party affiliation.
Thomas Hardy, Hoisington junior and independent co-chairman of UP. declined to comment on McCabe's resignation.
Harold Johnson, Ft. Leavenworth senior and vice president of Action, said that McCabe is being considered for press secretary and will fill the vacancy on the party's parliament from the small men's dormitory district.
Johnson said that McCabe contacted Action, rather than vice versa.
hospital and Hardy was taking examinations at the time of their absences.
The eligibility question of presidential candidates was mentioned later in the meeting by Mel Saferstein, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student and chairman of the elections committee, who commented upon one of the present requirements of eligibility of candidates.
SAFERSTEIN SAID the ASC should go back to a previous rule which stated that presidential and vice presidential candidates must be members of the council to be eligible to run.
He said he felt this qualification would be good since it would assure the student body of experienced candidates who have served on the council and know its workings.
There was no action taken last night on the comment.
THE ONLY LEGISLATION acted upon aside from the approval of Kepner and Hardy was the unanimous passing of a constitutional amendment defining the tenure of the chairman of the council.
The amendment provides that the chairman shall be elected from the council membership and if the membership of the chairman should expire during his tenure as chairman, he shall retain his position as chairman as a member-at-large.
ALSO INCLUDED was a statement that the vice chairman, secretary and treasurer shall serve only during their tenure as council members.
This amendment will require a majority vote of the students voting and will appear as part of the ballot in the general election.
Dick Jones, Lawrence law student and chief justice of the Student Court, gave a report to the council and made suggestions for
A student who suffered a broken leg when he fell yesterday on the slippery pavement near the construction site of Dyche Hall Annex is reported in good condition today at Watkins Hospital.
A hospital official said Hans H Krause, Caracas, Venezuela, graduate student, suffered fractures of both bones in his lower leg.
(Continued on page 4)
Harry Buchholz, director of buildings and grounds, said that he planned to ask officials of the construction company working on the annex to rid the pavement of slippery mud.
Muddy Sidewalk Fractured Bones
Two KU students are among 97 college men who have been selected to receive Danforth graduate fellowships providing for four years of study at any graduate school in the United States.
Two KU Men Chosen As Danforth Fellows
ALAN D. LATTA, Wichita senior, and Larry L. Laudan, Lawrence graduate student, were selected from among 1076 candidates from more than 400 colleges.
The fellowships, provide for $1,500 a year for single men, and $2,000 a year to married men plus $500 for each child, in addition to tuition and fees. They are designed for students who intend to teach on a college level.
The fellowships may be held for life and stress personal contacts between Fellows both during their
study and after they begin teaching.
DANFORTH FELLOWSHIPS are awarded on the basis of intellectual promise and character, a genuine interest in and commitment to religion and potential for effective college teaching. They were started in 1951.
Latta, a German major and Laudan, a philosophy major, join 478 other fellows who are now in graduate study and 181 more who have completed their study and are teaching in 112 U.S. colleges and in 20 institutions abroad.
Both Latta and Laudan also hold Woodrow Wilson fellowships which provide for complete fees and tuition at the graduate school of the Fellow's choice plus $1,500 a year for living expenses.
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Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 11, 1962
U.S.-Soviet Exchanges
An American cellist, Leslie Parnas of St. Louis, was named Sunday to compete in the final round of the international Tchaikovsky contest being held in Moscow. He seems to be following in the footsteps of Van Cliburn, the American pianist who won the competition in 1958.
This event is important as a symbol of programs which help the antagonists of the cold war to understand each other and lessen the tensions of the East-West conflict. Similar events involving visits of musicians, writers, scientists and other people who are not directly concerned with military and security matters aid in developing a more friendly attitude between the people of Russia and the United States.
EXCHANGE PROGRAMS of this type are
limited at present and as a result so is their effect. But what has been done is good on the whole and more exchanges would be desirable. The exhibitions that the United States and Russia exchanged portraying their countries is one example of an effort that should be continued.
Such exchanges are difficult due to the closely regulated nature of Soviet society, but the Kremlin has agreed to many in the past, especially when cold war tensions are relaxed.
Certainly they are beneficial to the United States, for the exchange of various groups helps to give the Soviet people a better understanding of the United States and its people. It is for this reason that the exchange programs the United States has with the Soviet Union are one of the few positive elements of U.S.-Soviet relations.
-William H. Mullins
Guest Editorial
Patience a Cold War Virtue
PATIENCE is not at the top of the list of American virtues. We like to get things done, one way or another, and proceed to something else.
Impatience and frustration, we suspect, are the principal factors underlying the long wrangle over the censorship of U.S. military leaders' speeches. Sen. Strom Thurmond (D-S.C.), who has led the attack on the State Department's blue penciling, reflects a widespread sinking feeling when he accuses the department of a "no-win" philosophy.
THERE IS no sign that Undersecretary George W. Ball got through to Thurmond or like minded critics with his denial, but what he had to say deserves attention. To interpret U.S. foreign policy as either "win" or "no win," said Ball, is oversimplification that "does not reflect the realities of today's world."
In the over-all view, he assured the Senate Preparedness Subcommittee, the State Department's aim is to advance the interests of the United States "so that a world of freedom may prevail against a world of Communist tyranny." This does not sound like a "no win" philosophy to us.
Galling though it may be to Sen. Thurmond or certain military men, it should be obvious that there are times when toning down fire-eating phrases is not only the better part of discretion but a calculated step toward "winning" the Cold
War. Ball cited examples of threatening talk toned down on the eve of important conferences bearing some hope of progress.
It is only natural for military men to talk in terms of military victory. That is what they are trained for. But such talk from top military figures can easily be interpreted as an overt threat, giving point to Russian charges of "warmongering" and frightening our friends or those we seek as friends.
THE COLD WAR cannot be won by threats, and it cannot be won by stumbling into a holocaust. The old military definitions of win and lose are not even applicable to the long struggle in which we are now engaged.
Some of the military men have grasped this idea even though others have not. We recall hearing a young Polaris submarine commander say: "If we ever have to fire these missiles, we have already lost."
Ball put it succinctly when he said, "The Cold War is not an adult game of cops and robbers. The conduct of foreign affairs is an intricate, subtle, changing, and always uncertain task."
He might have added that it is also frustrating in the extreme to be deprived of pat solutions and quick victories. But conquering that frustration and learning patience may be the biggest victory of all.
(From the March 5 Chicago Daily News)
Senior Pictures Program Criticized Editor:
I called Estes Studio yesterday for an appointment for a senior picture and to my dismay I was informed that the deadline for pictures was two weeks ago. I had seen no notice of this but to make sure I checked past issues of the Daily Kansan to last December 18. Not only was there no notice of a deadline, but there wasn't an Estes Studio advertisement of any kind.
1 THOUGHT this odd in light of the fact that Mr. Estes, in our conversation, had informed me that I was the only senior who didn't know about the deadline. If being a senior means possession of such intuitive knowledge, then maybe I'd better take this year over again.
Further investigation showed that only 800 out of 1700 seniors have had their pictures taken and that many, especially those who had been practice teaching the first half of this semester, were faced with the same dilemma. Therefore, I suggest that all seniors who weren't aware of the deadline and who would like to have a senior picture in the yearbook, call Mr. Estes as soon as possible in the hope that we can get a couple days' extension on the shutter action.
John F. Ryland
Caldwell senior
* *
Student Apathy Criticized Editor:
The charges made by Action against Vox and UP concerning their apathy and indecisiveness are essentially true. Not a single piece of legislation has come out of the ASC this year that had a profound effect upon the great majority of students.
... Letters ...
However, Vox and UP have not caused apathy, they are its result. The students could have long since had effective student government if they had taken an interest in these parties. As a result, campus politics is characterized by Greeks, who are interested primarily for the sake of "prestige," and independents, who are hardly interested at all.
Congratulations on the Brotherhood Award given the Daily Kansas by the National Conference of Christians and Jews. The recognition should demonstrate the value of journalism education, and the role a student newspaper can play in campus and community.
Kansan Congratulated Editor:
I WRITE, ALSO, so that you would know my interest in UDK is not solely critical. You might have felt this from my comments on the omission of any report of the Christian African attitude toward the Fortuguese repression in Angola, in a recent UDK story.
Jack Zinn Shawnee Mission freshman
* *
My concern for the whole story on matters of this type comes from the reporting of the Congo situation. The "other side"—the existence of very fine constructive activities by the church (African and foreign), the local government, and the United Nations (UNESCO)—is almost completely ignored. Instead, the activities which seem to attract
THIS KIND OF one-sided vision is often used in many situations, here and overseas, that include aspects of violence or grave injustice and involve strong vested interest. It is especially important that both eyes be used when dealing with events in the so-called under-developed nations.
Only giving all sides of a story can nurture true understanding of a situation, and aid effective solution of a problem.
the interest are the events demonstrating violence, confusion, ignorance, etc.
My very best wishes to the J-School, and the UDK.
Mona Millikan KU graduate and university employee
Dailu Hansan
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Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East St. St., New York 22103. Published by International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence. Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and weekends. Annual examination periods. Second class postale nailed at Lawrence, Kansas.
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"BY GEORGE, IT'S THOSE ARMY BOYS AGAIN — WE MUST BE GETTING ABOUND TO FINALS"
An Analysis
Music and Tradition
By Richard Byrum
The fourth annual symposium of contemporary American music began Monday with an address by Elliott Carter, this year's guest composer. The symposium is sponsored by the School of Fine Arts and will continue tonight and tomorrow night.
Mr. Carter is professor of music at Yale University. His compositions have brought him such awards as the Pulitzer prize, the prix de Rome, and the Sibelius Medal. The subject of Prof. Carter's address was "Tradition in American Music."
The precise extent to which traditional concepts influence seemingly new developments in any artistic expression is difficult to ascertain. It depends upon which aspects of the art form are to be considered. No idea is ever new of itself. It is always related in some way to what has gone before. A painting will usually have a frame and employ combinations of colors known to us all. A musical work will usually be performed before some sort of audience on some familiar instrument. Yet, within these curious bounds great departures from tradition have occurred.
PROF. CARTER defined tradition as an absorption of previous ideas. He further added that these must be comprehended before one can communicate new thoughts.
Prof. Carter's definition, when applied to music, concerns not only its media — harmony, melody, rhythm and instrumentation, but also the employment of this media to create an aesthetic experience for the listener.
Therefore, any sudden break with traditional concepts of the technical aspects of musical composition immediately opposes traditional aesthetic values. This was clearly brought out in Prof. Carter's
point that often in the past a radical departure from tradition met with vehement opposition from the listening public. Since music is constructed of sounds that may or may not be familiar, new styles that introduce quite unfamiliar combinations of sounds require time for the listening ear to adjust and evaluate. Certain composers in every period have felt that their music could not be appreciated during their own time. It was music for the future. With composers of high artistic insight this theory has proved to be true. Yet, not all music is eventually understood. The determining factor seems to be the degree to which the listener is conditioned to accept new techniques artistically employed to create a new aesthetic experience.
THE LAST POINT which Prof. Carter discussed relates the aesthetic principles of music to the contemporary American scene. He brought out the fact that the performance of serious music is not a part of our present social pattern. Only a scant number of works of the present or near past are being played. The gap between the styles of contemporary works and those represented in the average civic orchestra repertory is wide. Therefore this gradual adjustment to new departures from tradition is not easily possible. Even the most talented of today's American composers are having difficulty communicating their ideas. Hence they dwindle in number for want of understanding and encouragement.
It is with this feeling in mind that composers like Prof. Carter attach great value to institutions such as our music symposium. It allows them the much needed opportunity to explain and illustrate the aesthetic ideals of their music and how they may be understood in relationship to traditional patterns of development.
Worth Repeating
The plain truth is that, unbanned, "Tropic of Cancer" is not very interesting. In Paris, Miller made what he calls "the heroic descent to the very bowels of the earth, the dark and fearsome sojourn in the belly of the whale." He came up, however, not reborn like Jonah or Jesus, but the same old Brooklyn adolescent. "Art consists in going the full length," Miller writes. He could not be more wrong. Art may deal with the whole range of experience, but it consists in ordering that experience by means of form. It is thus a moral act, the replacing of disorder with order. It is in that sense, a want of craft, that "Tropic of Cancer" is an immoral book, not in the scenes on which it casts the beam of its dim little flashlight.—Stanley Edgar Hyman
t es r t r d g r h s e e s a f. e e e a n o f g s e c w o t l a y f o t a t ch as s v t y e a d i n ns
Page 3
Doctor Says Sleep Obsolete; Man Breaking Sleep Habit
LONDON—(UPI)—Guess what's going out of style. Sleep.
Dr. Mangalore Pai said today after 37 years of research, that modern man is slowly breaking the habit of sleep imposed on him by his ancient ancestors.
"By the year 2000 most of us may only need about three hours," said Dr. Pai, who is consulting psychiatrist at Belmont Hospital Neurosis center.
"AS IT IS WE HAVE been cutting down the length of time spent in bed within this century. Eight hours a night is now just an old wives' tale. There are many people around the world who make
do with three or four or five hours without any ill effects."
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Back in the days of the saber tooth tigers, primitive man slept through the hours of darkness. He had to—it wasn't safe to leave the cave.
"Then came the discovery of fire," said Dr, Pai, "and prehistoric man found he could do some work in the cave at nights. Right then we began to cut down on our hours of sleep. The candle, the oil lamp and the electric light accelerated the process. Then came radio and the movie and television."
"THERE IS NOW SO much to do at night that we are not as anxious as we used to be to go to sleep.
In fact our brains are more active, our bodies better fed and as we keep pace with modern times we need and want less and less sleep."
Dr. Pai said people stay awake when there are reasons for staying awake. He gave as an example African natives who used to doze off at sunset in their villages but who stayed awake hours longer when they went to work in cities.
D. Pai did some of his research in air raid shelters during the war and he found that people who had only four or five hours sleep a night for weeks on end during the German bombings of London were no worse for it.
Atomic Tests in Air To Resume April 30
A well-informed official said he could not give an exact date, but either of those two days would be a "very close guess."
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Indica tions today were that the first atmospheric nuclear blast in the new U.S. test series will be set off April 30 or May 1.
Wednesday. April 11. 1962 University Daily Kansan
The United States thus was giving Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev 20 days to reverse his position and agree to an inspected test ban treaty if he wants to halt the proposed U.S. series.
Officials said the offer to suspend the tests in return for a cheat-proof treaty would be kept open until the last minute.
They acknowledged, however, that they had no real hope that Russia would change its position and agree to an international inspection system to police a ban.
Secretary of State Dean Rusk apparently became convinced at the Geneva disarmament conference
that Russia planned another series of atmospheric experiments of its own—whether or not the United States tests—and had no desire for a treaty at this time.
British officials still clung to the hope that some last-minute "give" in the Soviet attitude might permit postponement of the U.S. series.
The British also have argued that progress on some other sector of the international front, such as Berlin, would justify delaying the tests. But the Americans claim the new series is vital to free world security, irrespective of other developments, unless Khrushchev agrees to a foolproof ban.
Officials said pressure from London caused President Kennedy to join Prime Minister Harold Macmillan in yesterday's statement reaffirming Western willingness to call off the tests if Khrushchev would "accept the principle" of international inspection.
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"Most wartime leaders like Sir Winston Churchill also slept only a few hours a night," he said.
DR. PAI SAYS THAT people who "can't get up in the morning" ought to try an after-lunch siesta of half or three quarters of an hour, such as Churchill takes.
Hiqley's
"This sleeping by installments prevents the accumulation of fatigue," he said. Dr. Pai believes anyone can throw away his sleeping pills and doze off within 15 minutes if he will learn this one word lesson:
RELAX.
Negro Plans Move to Russia
NEWARK, N.J. — (UPI) — William Clark, Negro worker who sent his 14-year-old daughter to Russia last year because he did not want her going to "Jim Crow schools here," announced today that he and his family plan to join her behind the iron curtain.
In a personal letter to President Kennedy, the 44-year-old Clark said he and his wife. Carrie, planned to renounce their U.S. citizenship and take their five young sons to live in Moscow.
For the last seven months the couple's daughter, Huldah, has been attending school in Moscow under an all-expenses paid scholarship provided by Soviet Premier and Mrs. Nikita S. Khrushchev.
"I and my family would like very much to join my daughter in the Soviet Union so we, too, can escape Jim Crow and injustice," Clark wrote in his letter to the President.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 11, 1962
Unicycling Student Avoids Hill Traffic
By Ron Wilcox
There are many means of transportation used at KU. Students use bicycles, motor scooters, and cars to get from one place to another.
A KU student has found a way to beat the traffic congestion between classes. He does not ride a bicycle or motor scooter or drive a car—he rides a unicycle.
Don Homrighausen, Paola senior, has mastered the art of riding a unicycle after months of practice. A unicycle consists of one wheel,
one seat, and two pedals. Perfect balance is required to keep the machine upright.
Homrighausen has been riding the one-wheeled bike for over a year and a half. He learned on a friend's bike and after a couple of months he got one of his own.
HOMRIGHHAUSEN SAID the rare bike costs around $60. The reason for the high price, he said, is that they are hand-made.
The hardest thing to learn, he said,
is to keep balance. Contrary to a bicycle,
there are two more way to fall.
Homrighausen said it takes more practice to learn to handle a unicycle than a bicycle.
"UNLIKE A BICYCLE, you can't coast—you have to pedal all the time," he said.
"It takes at least two weeks to get the feel of it," he said. "Patience is the most important thing during this period.
Homrighausen receives some amusing comments because of his unique transportation. People often yell "Where are the handle bars?" or "Lost part of your bicycle?"
One of the hardest things to do is to ride up hills. "If you hit the smallest bump it will spill you," he said.
Homrighausen, on rare occasions, can jump curbs, although he does not recommend it for beginners.
HE SAID MANY PEOPLE try to persuade him to let them try to ride the unicycle.
"Many people say they can operate a pogo stick and think a unicycle would be easy to ride," he said. "They sure have a big surprise when they get on it."
TOM BACKEY
Homrighausen does not rely entirely on the unicycle for transportation. He also owns a car.
---
ASC Reconsider—
UNICYCLING—Don Homrighausen drives to class.
(Continued from page 1)
legislation which would bring the present practices of the Court more strictly in line with the ASC Constitution.
THE CONSTITUTION states that if a student wishes to appeal a case from the lowest level, a three man court, it is taken directly to the disciplinary committee of the University.
Jones said that there has been an intermediate step included which provides the student with an additional source to which a case can be appealed. Present procedure is for a case appealed from the lower court to be heard by the full sevenjustice court and then, if desired, appealed to the disciplinary committee.
A second suggestion by Jones was that the present method of selection of the chief justice and the six associate justices be incorporated into the constitution.
The constitution provides for the chief justice to be appointed by the student body president and for the associate justices to be chosen by the president in consultation with a Faculty Advisory Committee.
JONES EXPLAINED that, as it now works, the chief justice is appointed by the dean of the law school and that these two then select the associate justices.
Jones mentioned that the faculty group is non-existent and that the present system is best since it keeps the responsibility of choice within the law school by the people who have the best opportunity to make the best selections.
Jones suggested a third change in the constitution which would eliminate the statement that there must always be both males and females on the Court. He said there are times when a female is not available or does not wish to serve on the Court and that this regulation can therefore not be satisfied.
Hollace Cross, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission sophomore, argued that the position of a candidate's name on the ballot could conceivably influence the outcome of the election.
The pair stated that it has been shown that five per cent of the voters in elections will cast their ballot for the person whose name appears first.
THE COUNCIL ALSO discussed the form of the ballots for the coming campus election.
In a brief meeting of the elections committee following the council session the problem was debated but no decision was reached. Saferstein said a decision would be made Monday.
Saferstein explained that there would be a large cost increase in implementing such a system and that the time element in counting the ballots would possibly be doubled.
The Senate's Statement
THUS THEY FEEL that there should be a rotation of the names on the ballot to equalize any such chance.
(Story on page 1)
Ad Day Today
The KU chapter of Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity, is sponsoring Advertising Day on campus today.
1. We believe that the presence, in the constitution of a national fraternity or sorority, of a discriminatory clause based upon race, color, religion, or national origin — except for a religious clause in the case of a group primarily religious in purpose — is both ethically wrong and also incompatible with the status of the local chapter as a living group enjoying recognition by the University of Kansas.
3. We note with satisfaction that during the last two decades the policies and practices of fraternity and sorority chapters at the University of Kansas have been gradually changing for the better in several respects, including the selection of members from an increasingly wide range of diversity of social and economic backgrounds.
Folger's Coffee Co. of Kansas City will present the program. Open House will be from 1 to 3 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
2. IN VIEW OF THE FACT that at present none of the sororites and only three of the fraternities represented at the University of Kansas have such a clause in their constitutions, and that in these instances the local chapter has the right to waive the clause if it so desires, we believe the problem created by these clauses to be far less significant than the actual practice of local chapters, especially since it is obvious that the absence of a discriminatory clause in the constitution of a national organization cannot insure non-discriminatory practice on the local level.
4. We desire strongly to recommend and encourage the acceleration of the trend noted in the preceding section, and its extension toward inclusion in fraternities and sororites of members of diverse racial, national, and religious groups. We are of the opinion, however, that this result is not likely to be attained by University mandate, but can come about only through action initiated by the chapters themselves.
5. SINCE FRATERNITY and sorority chapters are essentially social groups, we believe that the freedom of their members to select for future membership only those individual students with whom they desire to be closely associated should not be infringed upon by the University.
6. For the same reason, we seriously doubt the wisdom or desirability of direct or indirect participation by the University, in any manner or through any of its agencies, in the process of selection or pledging of prospective members by fraternities or sororities.
7. We commend the publicly expressed position of Chancellor Wescoe with respect to the problem posed by the existence of discriminatory clauses.
Official Bulletin
Teacher Interviews:
April 12 - C. F. Shambaugh, Asst.
Supt. (Elem. & Sec.) Downey, Calef.
Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m.
Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd
Confessions; Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11:45-12 noon; Saturday, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Ham Club Meeting has been postponed to April 18, 1962.
International Students: Those students were opinionnaire found in the April issue of the International Campus newsletter are so today. Send them to 228 Strong Hall.
Applications for interviews for 'People-to-People' Executive positions for next week. Please contact the office. 113 Kansas Union until 5 pm. Friday. The interviews will be this Sunday.
TODAY
People-to-People Flight Orientation Meeting; 4 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. Spain — Speaker, Pedro Martinez Bonet.
SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m. 306 Kansas Union. Instructor, Larry Bodle.
THURSDAY
Episcopal Holy Communion and Lunch:
12 noon, Canterbury House.
Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 pages 1221 Oread. Bible study & devotional
Radio Production Center: 7:30 p.m.
220 Flint.
Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m., Danforthe Chapel.
Cheves Walling, professor of chemistry at Columbia University, will present the 14th Dains Memorial Lecture tomorrow at 8 p.m., instead of today as was reported in yesterday's Daily Kansas. The lecture will be held in Room 411, Summerfield.
Business School Receives $70,000
A $70,700 grant by the Ford Foundation to the School of Business will establish a summer institute to help close the gap between the development of modern mathematics and its application to the business world.
"We consider this grant a great contribution toward assurance that collegiate education for business in this area will be kept abreast of the newest application of mathematics to business administration." James R. Surface, dean of the school of business, said.
Ten other universities will cooperate in the study. They are Nebraska, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Oklahoma State, Tulsa, Creighton, St. Louis and Washington.
Each of the ten schools will send four members of its business faculty to an eight-week summer institute on the KU campus in 1963. During the institute they will be instructed by a faculty of mathematicians.
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 12. April, um ufnief Uhr in 502 Fraser. Frauulein Ursal Lienowski wird unes neue deutschen Lieder lehren. Es gibt natürlicher auch Erfrischungen. Die Morgens Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Dornfaff Church
**KUOK** — 3-News & Weather; 3:05—Top Fort Tunes; 4-Hilltopping; 6-News & Weather; 6:15-Sports; 6:20-Whit-taker's Wax Works; 6:25-Spotlight on science; 6:25-Bonjour Mesdames"; 6:25-Good Public Service Countdown; 8-Night Flight, Stage I; 10-New & Weather; 10:15-Night Flight, Stage II; 12-Portals of Praver.
Shakespearean Singer Here
Elric Hooper, a member of the Old Vic Players, will sing Shakespearean songs Friday at 1 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Mr. Hooper also will give explanations of his interpretations.
The program is sponsored by Student Union Activities and the English department. There will be no admission charge.
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Small Group at Choral Concert
By Tom Winston
A small gathering of 300 people, composed mostly of visiting composers and a few curious persons, heard the Concert Choir and Chorale present the choral concert of the KU Fourth Annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music last night in the University Theatre. Eight numbers made up the program.
WELL RECEIVED were two pieces called "Musicians Wrestle Everywhere" and "Heart No So Heavy As Mine" by Elliott Carter, special guest composer from Yale University. The pieces are settings of poems by Emily Dickinson and were sung by the Chorale.
The most traditional of the numbers was a setting of Psalm 47 for chorus and brass choir by Alvin King, Midland College, Nebraska. It, too, was very well received.
Evan Tonsing, Topeka senior, was represented by an "Elizabethan Love Song" for double choir. Tonsing wrote both words and music. The text is reflective and tender, the harmony stable with just enough dissonance to be pleasantly spicy.
The favorite of this reviewer was "Winter" by Paul W. Weher of Doane College, Nebraska. It has a gossamer harmonic texture and its text is a series of instances supporting the question "Old man, where will you go when spring comes?"
OF MILD INTEREST — but deserving of more — was a "Te Deum" by Daniel Moe of the University of Iowa. It is for choir and full orchestra minus strings. Mr. Moe's piece seems to lack the required variety of texture. Prayerful or joyous, the difference seems merely a matter of dynamics. The harmonic treatment is chordal rather than linear.
The missa brevis by John Davye of the Oswego Free Academy in New York was a case of too much of too little. The only variety here was in the "Gloria" section. Using unison instead of parts, it was based on the same tone device.
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Crisis-Torn Argentina into Austerity
BUENOS AIRES—(UPI)—Argentina, gripped by a political crisis that could flare into civil war, appeared today to be heading into a period of deeper economic austerity.
Provisional President Jose Maria Guido and members of his caretaker cabinet signed four decrees last night which raised import duties, gasoline prices and sales taxes in an effort to boost Argentina's sagging economy.
gress starting tomorrow through April 25 to deal with the problem of presidential succession.
At the same time, Guido and interior minister Rodolfo Martinez signed a decree officially convoking an extraordinary session of con-
Wednesday, April 11, 1962 University Daily Kansan
No mention was made of the nullification of the election victories by followers of ousted dictator Juan D. Peron, who won 43 seats in congress. The Peronist leaders have predicted a civil war if their election victories are not recognized by the government.
Argentina's military leaders, dissatisfied with the Peronist showing at the polls, ousted President Arturo Frondizi, arrested him and banished him to Martin Garcia Island. Guido succeeded Frondizi.
Grand Opening Tavern Peppermint Club
Home Of The Twist
Talented floor shows Friday, Saturday. Two shows 9-11 Enter if you dance, sing, or play a musical instrument and are good. 3 cash prizes. Band starts at 8:00. Come early and get a seat. No stags, dates only. You must be legal age.
15 minutes from Lawrence — 1/2 mile East of Tonganoxie on Highway 40. Admission - 75c per person.
For reservations call VI 5-2331 between 6-10 p.m.
Owners — Ted & Ted Weeks
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 11, 1962
Kansas City Wins On Cimoli's Homer
By Steve Clark
Predictions that the Kansas City Athletics are a team with a solid infield, improved pitching, but lacking scoring punch appear to be true.
Yesterday was opening day at Kansas City's Municipal Stadium and the A's planted their best foot forward with a 4-2 win over the Minnesota Twins.
A SPARSE OPENING day aggregation of 21,012 fans withstood 50-degree temperatures and drizzling rains to see the Athletics fall behind one run in the opening inning $ ^{ \textcircled{9}} $ground ball, hurried his throw and then rally in the fourth.
Gino Cimoli and Ed Rakow were Kansas City's heroes yesterday. Cimoli, acquired during the winter season from the Milwaukee organization and playing in his first American League game, clouted a three-run homer in his second trip to the plate.
Rakow, who after a disappointing 2-8 season last year became the A's hottest pitcher in spring training, pitched seven-hit ball and was in trouble only three times.
RAKOW'S worst inning was the first when he was tagged for singles by Pumpsipe Green and Vic Power. Green moved to third base on Power's single and scored when Herman Killebrew hit into a double play.
The Athletics went down in order for the first three innings. In the fourth inning centerfielder Bobby Del Greco lined a single to left field. Jerry Lumpe followed and hit a hard grounder to deep shortstop. Zoilo Versalles fired to second putting out Del Greco but Bernie Allen couldn't throw out Lumpe.
Norm Siebern singled to center field to move Lumpe to third. Leo Posada followed with a looping fly ball to right field which landed safely for a hit driving Lumpe across the plate for the A's first run.
WITH SIEBERN on third and Posada on first the stage was set for Cimoli. On a 3-2 pitch, he orbited a high fly ball over the 364-feet left field fence to account for the last of the A's scoring.
It looked as if the Twins were going to rally in the sixth inning, when Early Battey connected on a double with two out and Allen hit a triple. Versalles, the next batter, grounded out to the pitcher to end the Twins scoring for the afternoon.
Jack Kralick, who pitched for the Twins, turned in a stellar performance for six innings with the exception of the fourth. He retired the first 10 men that faced him and put the side down in order in the fifth and sixth. He was removed in the seventh for a pinch-hitter.
THE A'S DEFENSE was sharp. The infield handled 20 chances without error and made one double play. The Twins played errorless until the eighth inning when Versalles, handling what appeared to be a routine
ground ball, hurried his throw and fired the ball several feet over the head of first baseman Power.
GAME SHORTS: "How Long?" is the question that was most asked after the opening day pre-game ceremonies. This question referred to the appear-to-be-reconciliation between A's owner Charles Finley and Kansas City Star sports editor Ernest Mehl.
Finley and Mehl have been at odds-and-ends for over a year now. Mehl, who was instrumental in bringing the A's to Kansas City, has accused Finley of trying to move the ball club to greener pastures. Finley denies Mehl's accusations.
THE TWO paired up for a game of pitch-and-catch in the pre-game ceremonies. In doing this Mehl became the first sports editor to ever throw out the first ball at a major league game. Finley was his catcher.
The A's meet the Twins again tonight at 8 p.m. The Athletics' games are being aired this year by KCMO with Bruce Rice and Monte Moore, former KU Sports Network director, handling play-bv-play.
MINNESOTA AB R H
Green, cf 3 1 1
Power, lb 4 0 1
Killebren, if 4 0 1
Allison, rf 3 0 0
Battley, c 4 1 1
Altena, 2b 4 0 1
Versalles, 4 0 1
Rollins, 3b 3 0 2
Kralick, p 2 0 0
aMincher 1 0 0
Moore, p 0 0 0
Totals 12 2 7
Totals ... 32 ... 2 ... 7
KANAS S CITY AB R H
Howser, ss 4 0 1
Del Greco, cf-lf 4 0 1
Lumpe, 2b 4 1 0
Jabern, b1 3 1 1
Posoda, lf 3 1 1
Tartabul, cf 0 0 0
Cimolr, fb 3 1 1
causey, tf 3 1 0
Sallivan, c 3 0 0
Rakow, p 3 0 0
Total - - - -
Totals ...30 4 5
n-Grounded out for Kralik in 7th
0000-0000-0000-0000-0000-
KANSAS CITY 000 400 400 000-
E- Versalens. DP- Howser-Lumpe-Siebern. Left-Minnesota 5, Kansas City 2 B-Battey. 3B-A11en. HR-Cimoli WP Rakow (1-0) LP Kralk (0-1)
The
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CINEMASCOPE • COLOR by DE LUXE
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ENDS TONIGHT
1st 2nd
M.G.M. Presents AN ARCOLA PRODUCTION
Written by GLENN·FORD·DEBBIE·REYNOLDS
"IT STARTED WITH A KISS"
in CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR
The Marriage-Go-Round
CINEMASCOPE • COLOR by DE LUXE
STARTS THURSDAY
Africa does strange things to a woman...
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ELEPHANT GUN
BELINDA LEE · MICHAEL CRAIG · PATRICK McGOOHAN · ANNA GAYLOR
A Bank Organization presentation • Distributed by Lauren Film, Inc.
SECOND FEATURE
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STARTS THURSDAY
Africa does strange things to a woman...
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ELEPHANT GUN
"LOST CONTINENT"
Friday is the deadline for entries in the men's intramural spring sports program, Walter J. Mikols, intramural director, announces. Team competition will be held in badminton, handball, horseshoes, tennis and softball. Entry fee is $2.00 per softball team and $1.00 for the other sports.
The Kansas relays will open here April 20 with the first seven-foot high jumper in the event's history participating.
Colin Ridgway, whose Lamar Tech entered the relays yesterday, hit the figure with a 7 ft. $ \frac{1}{2} $ in. leap to win the Border Olympics. He followed by winning the North Texas Games with 6-7 and, Saturday tied for first at the Texas Relays with 6-8 with Gene Johnson of California.
Deadline Is Friday For Intramurals
SUNSET
DEAREATE WESTERN COAST
Others entering yesterday were Texas Tech with 11 men; Tulsa, eight; Colorado State, 17, and two junior colleges, Garden City, Kan., and St. Joseph, Mo.
Ridgway managed 6-10 last year as a freshman. Overall, Lamar Tech filed a five-man entry.
A one-day golf tournament will be held, the date to be announced later.
All intramural managers are asked to meet in Robinson Gymnasium, room 203 at 4 p.m. next Monday.
Relays Land Top Jumper
TODAY'S PROBABLE PITCHERS (1961 won-lost records in parentheses)
National League Philadelphia at Pittsburg (night)—Hamilton (0-0) vs. Veale (0-0). New York at St. Louis (night)—Craig (5-6) vs. Jackson (14-11). Chicago at Houston (night)—Hobbie (7-13) vs. Woodeshick (4-3). Cincinnati at Los Angeles (night)—Drabowsky (0-2) vs. Koufax (18-13). Milwaukee at San Francisco (night). Willow (6-12) vs. O'Dell (7-5).
Friday
THE 13TH
Special
LATE
American League
Cleveland at Boston — Taylor (0-0)
vs. monbuquette (14-14).
Minnesota at Kansas City (night)—
Kaat (9-17) vs. Wyatt (0-0).
Detroit at Washington (night)—
Regan (10-7) vs. McClain (8-18).
(only games scheduled)
WE DARE YOU
TO SEE
OUR
TWIN
TERROR
WE DARE YOU
TO SEE OUR
TWIN TERROR
Friday
THE 13th
Special
LATE
HORROR
SHOW
11:30
VARSITY
The Kansas Jayhawker football team moves into its second session of spring football practice today.
The most important switch in the Jayhawks' spring football blueprint appears not to be personnel as in the past, but tactics.
HORROR
SHOW
This alignment will mount the same slot-back and slot-side linenes regardless of whether the formation is right or left. Also, of course, the same back will always be aligned in a standard-T position next to full-back with the linenes in front of him always playing the T-side.
COACH JACK MITCHELL can his new attack a "flip-flop offense." This is not a new offense but merely a revision of last year's sliding-T with a slot-back. This year there is a breakdown into a slot-side and a T-side.
"We want to keep our best blockers in the slot," Mitchell said. "Also we have a very young squad. With this plan they will have only half an offense to learn."
LINED UP for slot duty is only one veteran, Tony Leiker, Hays junior, who was a Jayhawker breakaway threat last year. Behind him will be Willis Brooks, Hutchinson junior, who lettered primarily as a deep defender last year; and two sophomores, Robert Robben and Mike Woolf.
Football Team Works On 'Flip-flop' Offense
To these falls the demanding task of replacing Curtis McClinton as a runner, blocker and pass-catcher. No one candidate can be expected to handle all three as well as the graduated triple all-leaguer.
VARSITY
INFATIF . . . Johanna VIKIM 3.1845
THEATRE . . . . Joseph VEKEN 3 (BUS)
There'll be even less experience on the T-side with Lee Flachsbarth the lone letterman. Three flying newcomers are grouped behind him, Gale Sayers, sensation of last year's freshman club; freshman Dave Crandall and Lloyd Buzzi, hard-luck Arkansas Cityan, who has been injured the past two seasons.
MOST IMPORTANT personnel change isn't a change at all since it will send Rodger McFarland back to his original station at quarterback from left half. The spirited Fort Worth, Tex., player moved between the two positions through the first half of last season before settling at left half.
In the line Mitchell will experiment with veteran guard Marvin Clothier at end; return Mickie Walker from tackle to guard, and give Phil Reinking, promising Arkansas City freshman, a trial at end after working at halfback last year. Bill Buck, Kansas City, Mo., junior, moves from halfback to guard.
FOLLOWING A pattern inaugrated last year, coming seniors will be excused from the first two weeks. "This," explains Mitchell, "will give us more time to work with the young prospects."
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Wednesday, April 11, 1962 University Daily Kansan
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All ads must be called or brought to the three days office on the day before publication is desired.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Will baby sit in my campus, $2 a day.
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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.
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267.
DRESS MAKING and alterations For-
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GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. These notes are revised and updated. Price: $4. Call VI 2-6795 Free delivery.
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies, Lawrence
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GRANT'S Drive-In pet Center, 1218 West 13th Street, New York, NY - one stop -- save time & money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, etc., plus complete lists of pet supplies.
FOUND
FOUND IN FRAASER HALL: 1 purse of cosmetics, 8 head scarves, 1 Parker fountain pen, 1 pair men's glasses — brown glue, Stendhal book — "The Red and the Black"; 2 neck scarves, 3 brown men's gloves, 4 brown glove, 2 black leather gloves, 1 white ladies' glove, ladies' black suede gloves, 1 blue ladies' glove, 3 men's black gloves, 1 brown glove, 1 white ear muff, 1 brown ear muff, 3 umbrellas. Claim at 111 Film
Hood to raincoat 3 *scarves* - men & women's gloves 4 *pairs GLASSES* 2 *assignment books* 5 sets of keys 8 *books* Basel Barra The Press & Society, Introduction to Mass Communications. Better Paragraphs) Jewelry. Claim at 111 Flint. tt
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FOR RENT
Private entrance, private bath and show-
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Quiet, studious sophomore roommate,
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TYPEWRITERS for rent, cheap — call VI 3-0031 between 5 and 7 p.m. tf
VI 2-3416 or VI 3-8253
Office --- 1912 W. 25th.
ROOM- IDEAL for Spring or Summer.
Converted sleeping porch. Share kitchen.
Private entrance. $15 per month. 1045
Tenn. VI 2-3251. 4-16
Large single room for KU young man
Linens furnished, utilities paid. No drinking
or smoking. See first house south of
campus, 1616 Ind. Available June 1. 4-13
WANTED: a roommate for nice apt. $30
Bergman. 123 Nismith. V1-2-5268
Bergman.
LARGE NICELY FURNSHED apt. 2
rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or
3 students. Available now. 520 La. VI
2731.
FOR SALE
Arguus C-4 camera with leather case. Like
Hiveon light meter. $40. Phone
1-765-7655.
Bulova Stereo. Brand new. Wen in con-
trol. New York, NY 1200-1200.
Wayne Rimmer. VI 2-1200. 4-17
Nice 52 foot 1960 CATALINA TRAILER
HOUSE. 10' wide, 2 bedrooms, automatic
bathroom. 4 car garage. $300,000
Balance owing — $200 down. Underwood
Inv. Co. V 3-3875, 1117 Mass. St. tt
1957 Ford convertible with radio & heater; Fordmatic. Black and red. Reasonable. See at 1940 Naismith Drive. Kent McCormick. 4-17
1951 Chevrolet: A-OK. Must sell now.
$150. Cal IV 3-7461 after 5 p.m. 4-17
EXOTIC DOGS OF APHGANISTAN.
Proud, elegant Afghan Hound Puppies.
The dog of distinction! $100 up. Mrs.
Primm, RFD No. 7, Topeka GR 8-4284.
GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO.
SPECIAL THIS WEEK 357 Magnum (or
superior n a price too low)
quote A few inexpensive .22 revolver
lead, 1346 Ohio. 4-13
SMALL ELECTRIC ORGAN with chord stops. Excellent condition. Call VI 3-207-416-416
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
New heavy retreats $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**
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.
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES.
definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
delivery. Phone VI 3-758f.
VI 3-5778.
M.G. '52 TD sports roadster. Real nice
shape. $695. Call VI 3-7497. 4-12
1953 Super 88 Oldsmobile. Extra clean.
$300.00. Call VI 2-2769. tt
ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch and Kosco microscope immediately. Call Csi 3-8871 come to 307 Ark. for more information.
OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriter, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter, sales, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 733 Mass. VI 3-3644.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete digital self-service. Pipe phone 2921. Modern self-service. 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. tf
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition: formerly known as the Theta Notes; Call VI 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
TRANSPORTATION
Need two riders — Shawnee to Lawrence,
1-8 MWF, 8-11 Tues, 8-2 Thursday. Don
Carlson. 10405 Johnson Dr., Shawnee.
H 2-5370. 4-13
TYPING
Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, manuscripts, etc., on electric typewriter with signs & symbols. Stunne Call II 1-2546, Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert.
Call VI 2-0267, VI 3-5019 evenings for neat and precise typing. Phyllis Spinetto
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-
typing vector." For excel-
typing at standard rates, call MS Looft
POE, VI 3-1097.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524.
tt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate. Reasonable. McEldowney, pc. VI 3-5868. Mcc. McEldowney, ph. VI 3-5868.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti. VI 3-8799.
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typeatures, fast accurate service. Resonate-rates. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 19th. V1 2-4634. Mrs. Bralow, 408 W. 19th. V1 2-4634.
THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist, typewriter Reasonable rates Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. Cpl I-3 0483-8
ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi-
sion of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc.
Broadcast: 1511 W. 21 St. St. Call VI 3-6440. tf
1511 W. 21 St. St. Call VI 3-6440. tf
Taping by experienced typist, electric
machine. Mrs. Dorel
Patterson, VI 3-5833.
EXPERIENCED typist—Will do all types
prompted. Call V1 2-0926. 4-13
prompted. Call V1 2-0926. 4-13
EXPERIENCED TYPST will do typos
Experience - call VI 3-8136. Mrs. Lo-
gebhach.
Experienced typist would like typing in
reasonable rates. Call VI T-2651 any time. **if**
LOST
GREEN BILLFOLD. If found, please re-
transcribe. CVI. W-1-6536. Cards 4-13
important.
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World War II Memorial Chapel
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The Holy Island Church of St. James, Lower Clyde
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Alpha Tau Omega
Beta Theta Pi
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Gertrude Sellars Pearson
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Chi Omega
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 11, 1962
Two Programs Set for Tonight
The Symposium of Contemporary American Music programs for tonight will be a carillon recital by Ronald Barnes, university carilloneur, at 7 p.m. and a concert of chamber music at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
The carillon program will feature six pieces for carillon by Gian-Carlo Menotti and "Summer Fanfares, 1956" by Roy Hamlin Johnson, associate professor of piano.
The other pieces will be "Three Designs" by Milford Myhre, "Prelude and Toccata Costante" by Johan Franco, "Ostinato" by Paul Breske, and "Toccata and Fugue" by Gary C. White, Lawrence graduate student.
The concert in Swarthout will include a quartet for brass by Stanley Shumway, instructor of organ and theory, a trombone sonata by Paul W. Whear, a song cycle on Edna St. Vincent Millay poems by Robert Kelley, a "Sonata Brevis, Op. 80" by
Gardner Read, and a quintet for brasses by Arthur Frackenpohl.
The concerts will be broadcast over KANU-FM and is open to the public free of charge.
Symposium Tryouts Set
Open tryouts for the drama symposium will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. and from 7 to 10 p.m. Thursday in the Experimental Theater, Murphy Hall.
UN Delegate Speaks To International Club
Muhammad Zafrulla Khan, Pakistan's permanent representative to the United Nations, will speak at the International Club meeting at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union.
He will speak on "The Role of Students in International Relations." All students, both American and International, are welcome
MARSEILLES, France — (UPI) — Eight Cezanne paintings worth an estimated $2 million which were stolen last year were recovered today in an abandoned automobile.
Stolen Art Works Recovered in Car
The paintings had been removed from their frames but were undamaged.
The art works, including "The Card Players," valued at $1 million, were stolen the night of Aug. 31 from an exhibition hall at Aix-en-Provence near this southern French city.
One of the paintings belongs to
Sydney Simon, a New York art collector, and another to the St. Louis, Mo., museum.
No arrests have been made in the art theft-one of the largest in modern history.
Japanese Film Set
"The Phantom Horse," a Japanese film with English subtitles, will be shown for KU faculty and students at 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 13 in Fraser Auditorium.
Have a Library Date?
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Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
59th Year. No. 116
Thursday, April 12. 1962
CRC Considers Legal Action Against KU
The Civil Rights Council last night passed a resolution threatening legal action against the University for alleged University discriminatory practices.
A CRC MEMBER reported that the NAACP is willing to take the issue to court unless the CRC and the University can reach an agreement.
The action was taken on the basis of a Kansas statute which reads in part:
SPU to Protest Nuclear Tests
The KU chapter of the Student Peace Union will demonstrate against nuclear bomb testing on the day following the resumption of tests by the United States.
Larry Laudan, Lawrence graduate student and acting chairman of the KU chapter, said last night the demonstration is only one way the group will protest the resumption of nuclear bomb testing by the United States. The chapter will also put up posters and arrange for speakers on the topic.
President Kennedy has set April 30 as the date for resumption of tests by the United States. Russia has said they will resume testing if the United States resumes.
Laudan said the SPU is trying to increase student interest in nuclear testing. The group will try to eliminate the idea "that the best way to destroy your enemy is with a bomb or the best way to protect yourself is with a fallout shelter.
"By our (United States) resumption of tests we are putting the Russians in a position where they can resume also," he said. "We've got to find a way to get off this crazy spiral."
Laudan said the group hopes to show that the civil defense program is a fraud and a hoax. Arnold A. Strassenburg, associate professor of physics, will speak about the problems of testing and civil defense at the April 18 SPU meeting.
"Denying civil rights on account of race, color, religion, national origin or ancestry; penalty. If any of the regents or trustees of any state university, college, or other school of public instruction, or the state superintendent . . . shall make any distinction on account of race, color, religion, national origin or ancestry, the person so offending shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof in any court of competent jurisdiction shall be fines in any sum not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000)."
ALTHOUGH NO mention was made of the discriminatory practice, informed sources indicate the CRC was referring to the University requirement that freshmen women send their pictures to the Dean of Women prior to their acceptance and the restrictive clauses of certain KU fraternities.
The CRC maintains these pictures are used in assigning Negro women to separate rooms in the freshmen dorms. Emily Taylor, dean of women, recently told a CRC member that the pictures were merely for identification and "personality reference" for the benefit of her staff.
Dean Taylor also said, though Negro and white freshmen women are roomed separately, they may live together if they wish. She said the room assignments were made in this manner because of the initial difficulty freshmen women have in adjusting to college life.
STRESSING THE need for a close relationship between the Chancellor and the CRC, Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior and CRC co-chairman said. "We need very close cooperation with him on this issue."
In this interest, the council formed a committee composed of Nolen Ellison, Lawrence junior, Donald Warner, Topeka junior and Leland Holbert, Kansas City senior, to discuss the matter with Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
The CRC resolution says in part: "The CRC has recently discovered a statute concerning discriminatory practices in state universities in the 1959 Supplement to General Statutes of Kansas, certain University policies may prove to be in violation of this statute.
"The CRC has conferred with the NAACP on this statute and found them willing to litigate it unless the parties involved can otherwise reach an agreement.
"Therefore, the CRC believes it would be in the best interest of the University to meet with the Chancellor for a discussion of certain discriminatory policies, and hereby requests such a conference."
NAACP Plans Investigation
- * *
Sam C. Jackson, Topeka lawyer and vice chairman of the NAACP Legal Redress Committee, said this morning that the NAACP would not sponsor legal action until a thorough investigation is made and until it is certain no other solution can be reached at KU.
He said he had talked to CRC representatives recently and he told them the NAACP is definitely interested in the situation here. He indicated that the NAACP would soon begin its investigation.
He pointed out that the Legal Redress Committee would not consider the complaint of the CRC but would work only through the Lawrence branch of the NAACP.
He said he told the CRC that the procedure for them to follow would be to have an individual student take his protest to the Lawrence NAACP branch.
He said he does not anticipate court action in the near future. He said, however, that such action could be taken on the basis of the Kansas anti-discrimination statute or on the fourteenth amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Mr. Jackson said the NAACP soon would contact the Chancellor and the State Board of Regents in its investigation of the matter.
Kepner, Dickson Clash Over ASC
The two candidates for student body president last night clashed over whether or not chairmen of major ASC committees have been given opportunity to carry out their duties.
Gerald Kepner, University Party candidate, said that the chairmen of the Traditions Committee and the Campus Chest Committee last fall were notified of the appointments only a few days before major activities of the committees were to be held. Kepner also said that some committee members were not notified of their appointments.
(The student body president appoints the committee members and it is his duty to notify the appointees.)
JERRY DICKSON, Vox Populi candidate, replied that all appointments are reported in the Daily Kansan and that all persons applying for committee positions should have interest enough to watch for the announcements.
The debate last night took place at Corbin Hall and was the first in a scheduled series of debates between Dickson and Kepner to explain their stands on campaign issues. The debates will be held in large dormitories on the campus.
MAX EBERHART, present student body president, said after the debate that the president of the Campus Chest Committee, Charles Hess, had been notified last spring of his appointment by Jerry Palmer, chairman of the ASC. Hesc verified that Palmer had notified him of the appointment last spring.
Palmer said that Hess was notified within a week of his appointment. Eberhart also said that he did not feel it necessary to explain the duties of the Campus Chest chairmanship to Hess because Hess had been an active member of the committee prior to his appointment and was well aware of the chairman's duties.
THE CHAIRMAN OF the Traditions Committee, Charles Lynn, bolstered Kepner's charge, saying that the first notice he received of his appointment came late in the summer through a letter from the administration that outlined some of the duties of his job.
The two candidates also argued as to which of their parties has the best method of choosing candidates for ASC offices.
"The University Party believes in the direct primary system," Keper said. "These are not popularity contests."
Dickson said that Vox Populi's closed primary provides the University with strong political leaders while the direct primary weakens the party. Dickson said that the direct primary system does become a popularity contest.
DICKSON SAID that the weakness of the direct primary system is reflected by the replacement of 9 of 22 University Party representatives elected to the ASC in the year and a half that UP has been a campus political party.
Dickson said that these replacements hinder the ASC because the replacements are often "inexperienced and incompetent people."
"The University Party is more representative of all Kansas University students," Kepner said. He added that UP has representatives from all but one of the 10 living districts, while Vox lacks representatives in three districts. He said that Vox has more representatives from the schools, but UP leads in living group representation.
DICKSON CONSTESTED Keperner's statement. He said UP does not have representatives from at last three living districts. The three districts are: Small Men's Dormitories; Married, which has no voting representative and Professional Fraternities and Co-ops, which also have no representative.
In discussing the parties' platforms, Dickson said that "We in Vox feel that the UP platform is very nebulous." He continued that there is not expansion of student government in the UP platform and that his party, Vox, has taken definite stands on campus problems.
Khan to Speak at Opening Convocation
Muhammad Zafrulla Khan, Pakistan's representative to the United Nations, will speak at the all-University convocation, opening the annual Model U.N. at 9:20 a.m. tomorrow in Hoch Auditorium.
Ambassador Zafrulla Khan will speak about "The Significance of the Expanding Membership of the U.N."
The class schedule for tomorrow will be: 8 a.m. classes—8-8:30 a.m.
9 a.m. classes—8:40-9:10 a.m. Convocation—9-20-10:30, 10 a.m. classes—10-40-11:10, 11 a.m. classes—11:20-11:50.
Model United Nations Has a Rocky History
By Steve Clark
The Model United Nations conference is now as permanent at KU as the campanile, but it has traveled a rocky road in becoming an annual feature.
The first Model United Nations was called the Mock U.N. Plans for it were started in the spring of 1946, but it was postponed until the fall of 1946 so that "plans could be more adequately prepared" and a sponsor could be found.
A previous attempt was made in the fall of 1945. But the plans for it fell through quietly upon recommendation of the planning committee chairman that the Forums board and two members of the conference committee formulate a project to replace the one scheduled.
A series of discussion groups in the homes of faculty members was substituted and John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, opened the first and only meeting with a speech on "The Fundamental Requisites of World Peace" at the home of Chancellor Deane W. Malott.
Another attempt at organizing the conference was made when a group of international students attended an International Relations club convention hgld at Emporia.
Five groups volunteered to jointly sponsor the conference and organized an executive committee. The first sponsors were the International Relations club; Forensic league; Alpha Phi Omega, national service society; Pi Sigma Alpha, national political science society; and Delta Sigma Rho, national debating society.
THE ATTEMPT was successful
ROYAL
this time and on Saturday, May 18, the first Mock U.N. conference was held in Hoch Auditorium. Chancellor Deane W. Maltog gave the opening address and Prof. Norman Hill, chairman of the political science department at the University of Nebraska, spoke that afternoon on "The United Nations and the Possibility of Permanent Peace."
Delegates from 10 midwestern colleges attended the conference. Among these were Emporia State Teachers College, Wichita University, Kansas State College, Missouri University, Park College, Rockhurst and St. Teresa. Six Kansas City high schools sent students to the meeting.
THE ALL STUDENT Council appropriated $100 to cover expenses. Radio station WREN covered the conference and did two 30-minute programs. Four students selected on their participation in General Assembly meetings discussed basic issues on the two programs.
A WREN announcer who was also enrolled as a special student in the College served as commentator for the conference. He summarized each proposal before it was voted on .
Students were instructed not to take stands necessarily as they thought their countries would, but according to how they personally felt toward an issue. Therefore the conference served as a reflector of
student opinion toward world issues.
The first Mock U.N. saw, as many sessions have, a clash between delegations from the United States and Russia. The western world forced Russia to present a list of demands, which included a demand for complete de-industrialization of Germany.
USSR 021CM
Attendance at the conference was sparse. Fewer than 75 persons were in the audience, but Prof. H. B. Chubb, faculty adviser for the conference, said that those who attended "went away with a more thorough knowledge of the U.N. pattern.
"It is the research work of the delegates that makes a conference of this kind desirable and worthwhile," he said. "We'll have another meeting next year, and plan it earlier."
THE NEXT year the planning was started early and greeted with much enthusiasm. A KU delegation attended an intercollegiate United Nations conference at the University of Missouri on Nov. 14, 1946 as the United States delegation.
At the intercollegiate conference Jean Moore, College senior, was elected convention chairman. Eight days later the announcement was made that KU would play host to 200 American universities and colleges at a National Intercollegiate United Nations convention planned for 1947.
The second KU Mock United Nations was held on Feb. 22, 1947 in Hoch. Pre-conference sessions were held, with conflicts flaring between the United States and Russian representatives.
(Continued on page 7)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 12, 1962
Ravings From the Right
"I was a scapegoat of an unwritten policy of collaboration and collusion with the international Communist conspiracy."
Thus did General Edwin A. Walker explain his Army resignation last November and join the bandwagon of political irresponsibility.
Testifying before the Special Senate Preparedness Subcommittee last week, he attacked the "traitors" who are "selling out" the Constitutional form of government.
He charged there exists in America a "control apparatus" that "will not tolerate militant anti-Communist leadership by a division commander."
BEFORE HIS resignation from the Army in November, Walker was a division commander in Germany. While there, he was officially "admonished" for engaging in partisan political activity in his troop indoctrination program. He is presently a candidate for the governor of Texas on the Democratic ticket.
When Walker made his "control apparatus" charges, he was asked to name the people he thought were traitors and who were ready to let this country go over to the enemies. Walker replied:
"I cannot identify those that are completely in control of the apparatus... I question the following people with respect to our Constitutional system, our sovereignty, our security, our independence:..."
At this point, Walker named Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Walter Rostow, a special
assistant to President Kennedy in the Policy Planning Council in the State Department.
In previous testimony, Walker had criticized President Kennedy, former President Eisenhower, Secretary of Defense McNamara and others.
AT THE END of last week's testimony, Chairman John Stennis of the Senate group called Walker's testimony "quite general in nature without revealing anything specific or definite justifying further inquiry."
The reasoning behind Walker's charges is hard to figure. He possibly is making a move to take over the leadership of the far right, or to strike back at the people who helped him on his way out of the army. His sincerity is probably above reproach, but his overgeneralized accusations, unsupported by pertinent data, put him in the class of the John Birchers.
His charges, and others of the same type, hurt anti-communism rather than aid it. A man who screams "traitor" charges at public officials of unquestionable loyalty will certainly not gain the following of any thinking American, although Walker and others of his type appear to feel differently.
Their efforts constitute a sad commentary on American politics. Their demise depends on the American people looking for responsibility in their government.
From the Magazine Rack
A Union Man on the YAF
(Editor's note: The meeting this article refers to has already taken place, but the content of this article still retains its value.)
A rally of conservatives in Madison Square Garden March 7 is having a hard time. First, General Walker was dropped from the program, at Senator Goldwater's insistence. Then, Senator Dodd sent his regrets. Finally, the brightest star, Moise Tshombe, won't be there because he has been denied a visa; anyway, his presence might have been embarrassing. Only last week, Mr. Tshombe repeated his charge that the United Nations has intervened in Katanga "for the profit of the United States capitalists."
BUT THE absence that interests us most is that of Sal B. Hoffmann, International President of the Upholsterers International Union. When the Young Americans for Freedom, Inc., appealed to him to support their rally, Mr. Hoffmann declined with an explanation worth quoting at length:
"I am certainly interested in the fight for freedom. . . For some 80 years my International Union, and for some 42 years I, as an individual union officer in every type of post, paid and unpaid, have battled for freedom from want, freedom from fear, freedom from tyranny of arbitrary authority. . . on behalf of the least educated, the lowest paid, the most lowly born of our population, the thousands of industrial workers following my own and my father's trade. For 40 of those years, since their first appearance on the American scene, my Union, like the AFL as a whole, and I, have been notable for our recognition and continuous resistance, both in our Union and public life, and now internationally, to the Communists, who, though they frequently speak to us falsely in the name of various freedoms, are freedom's bitterest foes.
"WHILE SOME of your officers and, presumably, your members also, are too young to have borne any part in this battle against Communism or to even have firsthand experience with this struggle or with fighting off the real article, I have no doubt that your education and advantages in today's America have ensured that you are arrayed with us against these obvious foes of freedom. (But) when I read your program, I find some doubt as to whether your political education has taught you all of the real history of the unfolding of freedom in these United States.
With all of the certainty of youth, you assert the superiority, in accord with the genius of the Constitution, of state power as against federal powers. I seem to remember that a hundred years ago it was state powers which guarded and perpetuated the institution of chattel slavery, and that it was federal power alone that destroyed this institution of complete denial of freedom. And, I also remember that federal power alone was able to wipe off the books of the most vociferous of the states now asserting the sacredness of state power, such infamous laws as the Black Codes, which even in 1865, after four years of costly Civil War, still made it a capital offense to teach a black man to read and write.
"As I read my country's history, every major subsequent advance made since the legal extinction of slavery by federal enactment, and aimed to remove its odious remnants in law and practice, has required the use of federal power.
"As a trades unionist, I certainly know that every major advance in my lifetime, in freedom from want and economic oppression of the people who earn their bread with their daily labor, has been by the exercise of federal power, frequently not only at the expense of, but, as in the case of slavery, over the bitter opposition of state powers.
"BEFORE YOU or most of your members were born, I lived and worked in this country when there was no protection against the arbitrary will of an employer or his foreman, whose power over the economic life of the workmen was so great Chief Justice Taft once declared that the very one of voice, independent of the words used by the master to his workmen, could constitute intimidation. It was federal power superseding state power that ended virtual industrial serfdom in big industry...
"I am certain that your two listed keynote sneakers, Senators Goldwater and Tower, do not understand the whole and indivisible nature of the freedom you assert. I have listened and heard them speak only for that portion of freedom which is useful for the already rich, well born, well educated, powerful and comfortable. . . All of this brings me to inspect your more elderly advisers. At least two of them spent long years forwarding the Communist cause in literature, in teaching and in labor,
while organized elements, like my Union and myself, were fighting that Communist offensive, including their part in it. These are high grade intellects and they are properly welcomed back to freedom's side. But they, in all proper humility, might well refrain from lecturing organized labor in such patronizing tones, as John Dos Passos and Dr. Bella Dodd have unpardonably done, to those who only a few years ago were holding the line against the Communists, while Dos Passos and Dr. Dodd, in Communism's era of much greater domestic strength than now, were passing up the ammunition to our Communist foe.
"CAPTAIN EDDIE Rickenbacker is also on your list. I remember that in the days of the great illusion about Soviet co-belligerency on the part of almost every large section of America, except organized labor, Captain Eddie Rickenbacker came back from a visit to the Soviet Union, with its state-controlled slave trade unions, and publicly praised to the skies the "no-nonsense" treatment of labor in the territory of our "great" Soviet ally as compared with the presumably lily fingered softness to organized labor back here in the USA. I have never heard Mr. Rickenbacker repudiate that wartime nonsense and may be forgiven for doubting if he has ever understood the nature of freedom here, except an anarchic, selfish individual part of it, which is no guide for you and me, any better than he understood what he saw in Soviet Russia in wartime...
"I will not send you money, since the men you sponsor as speakers and their supporters didn't seem to need it the last time I looked. I do send you much more valuable advice, and the cost of time, brain sweat and effort to a boy merely educated in tax-supported Philadelphia public schools and the hard college of the labor movement, is so considerable, that I feel like a very generous man."
Short Ones
(From the Feb. 26, 1962 New Republic)
If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him—Voltaire
You know who the critics are?
The men who have failed in literature and art-Benjamin Disraeli
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
R-42 J.B.
"WELL, LIKE YOU SAID WHEN YA FLUNKED ME OUT OF SCHOOL! WE CANT ALL BORN WITH A HIGH IQ—I JUST LUCKY I GUESS."
the took world
By Stuart H. Barger
Harrisonville, Mo., senior
THE PHILOSOPHY OF JOHN STUART MILL, edited by Marshall Cohen, The Modern Library, New York, 1961: 530 pp. $1.95.
This book contains eight selections from the works of John Stuart Mill, covering his ethical, political, and religious philosophy. The selections include essays on Bentham, Coleridge and de Tocqueville, "On Liberty" and "Utilitarianism" in complete texts, and parts of "Considerations on Representative Government," "An Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy" and the "Three Essays on Religion."
The introduction contains interesting material and a fresh viewpoint for the student of philosophy, but to the general reader, it is, in Bentham's phrase, "nonsense on stilts." Cohen's selections, however, are excellent. They are among Mill's more famous pieces of writing, and yet they give a complete understanding of the varied facets of Mill's philosophy. An excellent bibliography is included for those who wish to pursue their study further.
THE INTRODUCTION (38 pages) by Marshall Cohen is an incoherent combination of biographical and philosophical comment. Cohen is a learned writer on his subject, but a succinct statement, necessary to a better understanding of Mill, would be more apropos. The clarity and simplicity of Mill's prose, possibly unequaled in philosophical writings, makes many of Cohen's comments on sometimes insignificant points unnecessary.
COHEN REFERS to Mill as the last philosopher of any nationality to cover the whole range of philosophical problems with comparable distinction. His writing provides not only an opportunity for self-examination, but it offers a reflection on many basic principles upon which our society is founded. "On Liberty," for example, is an appeal for the relaxation of the middle class moral pressures which constitute the main threat to freedom in the contemporary democratic society.
In relation to the present world situation, this book arrives at perhaps an appropriate time. Although somewhat plagued by fallacies of logic incurred by the advancement of socio-economical theory, the basic principles discussed still maintain their value today. This book is recommended by the reviewer to those seeking a restatement of the principles of democratic society.
T C
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GENEVA — (UPI) — The Soviet Union today offered to refrain from further nuclear testing during disarmament negotiations if the United States calls off its projected tests.
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The United States promptly replied it had no intention of accepting another "paper pledge" from Russia without safeguards. It recalled that Russia broke the last voluntary moratorium with a series of tests last fall.
Editor
THE UNITED STATES has announced it will resume nuclear tests in the atmosphere later this month unless the Soviet Union accepts a test ban treaty with international controls and inspections.
Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin made the offer in a speech to the 17-nation disarmament conference.
Editor
It was the first official Soviet reply to the joint plea by President Kennedy and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan to Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev to accept a safeguarded test ban before the U.S. tests begin.
Zorin's call for a new moratorium, it was learned, was supported by Indian representative Arthur Lall.
anager
Speaking in behalf of the eight so-called neutral participants in the
conference, Lall said all testing was to be regretted. He said he hoped the nuclear powers would agree to refrain from testing while negotiations on the disarmament question continue.
ZORIN MADE NO mention of international controls in his offer of a moratorium. Russia last November made a similar offer of a voluntary moratorium depending on national detection systems. The West rejected it.
Zorin described the Kennedy-Macmillan appeal as a maneuver to place the blame for renewed Western testing on Russia. He charged that the West was serving an ultimatum.
The Soviet Union, however, is willing to refrain from testing during disarmament negotiations now in progress if the Western powers make a similar pledge, he said.
U. S. Ambassador Arthur H. Dean said the Soviet proposal was unsatisfactory. He recalled he had said yesterday the United States no longer is willing to accept "paper pledges" from Moscow because the Soviets unilaterally broke the last promise they made never to be the first to conduct more nuclear explosions.
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ACTION and Discriminatory Clauses
At the same time, ACTION realizes that many of these clauses are imposed by the national organizations and that it will take time to change the nationals. Therefore ACTION does not advocate withdrawal of recognition until 1965, and then only from those houses that are doing nothing to reform.
Action does not want to force Greek houses to pledge anyone: ACTION'S stand on discriminatory clauses is a moral stand. We feel it is wrong for the University to continue to recognize any organization that maintains as an official part of its structure racial or religious discrimination (excepting houses operated for religious purposes).
ACTION'S PROPOSAL IS LEGAL: ASC bill No. 7, Section 1, says "The All Student Council will not support, either in name or in finances, any student function or organization which permits the discrimination against because of race, color, or creed." This bill was passed in 1947. ACTION proposes that it be enforced.
We hope that this brief explanation of ACTION'S policy will clear up many of the misunderstandings that have arisen concerning ACTION'S stand on discriminatory clauses.
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 12, 1962
UP Attacks Vox's Platform, ASC Role
The University Party last night added another chapter in the annual pre-All Student Council elections log of charges and countercharges by attacking Vox Populi, its platform and its leadership in the ASC.
In the party's General Assembly meeting Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission sophomore, accused Vox of a "lack of knowledge of campus affairs" in regard to their platform plank which calls for the establishment of a Big Eight College Bowl.
HE SAID HE IS A MEMBER OF the College Intermediary Board, and that this board has initiated a Campus College Bowl and is already investigating the possibility of the extension of the event into a Big Eight College Bowl.
He continued, saying the previous action on the Bowl makes it an area for the College Intermediary Board and not of a political party. He added that he was viewing the subject from the eyes of an Intermediary Board member and not a campus politician.
Gerald (Kep) Kepner, Wichita junior and UP's candidate for Stuart Roberts.
Student Body President, said, "The big place where Vox is lax is on the ASC committees." He said that the committees of the ASC should be under direct control of the Council and because this is not currently the case, some are functioning inefficiently.
He pointed to two planks of the Vox platform to substantiate his accusation. These planks called for the establishment of the Big Eight College Bowl and for the increased action by the Statewide Activities program.
HE SAID THAT IF THE COMMITTEES of the ASC had been functioning efficiently, both of the matters would have been taken care of in the publicity committee instead of in the platform of a political party.
He said the Peace Pact with the University of Missouri which appeared in the UP platform last fall should have been taken care of in an ASC committee. He said, "There was no need for this to be a political issue."
Jim Anderson, Lawrence senior and Greek co-chairman of UP, said that Vox has put "a fog cloud over what it has done in the past and what the committees have not done."
HE SAID IT was a "beautiful cover-up job." He said that the plank which says that Vox will back the committees of the ASC is an example of this. He said some of these committees have never met.
In further action, the party discussed the coming campaign. Anderson stressed that candidates would have to run their own campaigns until after the primary elections next week.
Laird to Discuss 2 Views of Socialism
Roy D. Laired, assistant professor of political science, will speak at the People-to-People "America From the Outside" forum at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union.
Prof. Laird will discuss the differences between American and European views of socialism, and the Communist threat in Europe.
The series of "America From the Outside" discussion groups is sponsored by P-t-P to help members of the P-t-P student ambassador program prepare themselves for problems they may encounter during next summer's European tour.
Following a talk by a faculty member, American and International students will meet in informal groups to discuss differences in political and social views and American foreign policy.
Sachem Applications Ready
Juniors desiring membership in Sachem, honorary senior society, may pick up applications in the Dean of Students office, 222 Strong Hall. Applications are due April 20.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 12, 1962
Nominations Deadline Set for HOPE Award
Nominations by seniors for the HOPE award are due Wednesday, April 18.
The Honors for Outstanding Progressive Educators is an annual award given by the senior class to the faculty member who has made the greatest contribution to insuring the welfare of his students and increasing the prestige of the university.
The HOPE award was established in 1959 as that senior class' gift to the university. The first award was given to Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music education. The 1960 award went to R. Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry. Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama, received the 1961 award.
The Alumni Association acts as an advisory group to the award committee, but the winner is entirely student nominated and elected.
This year's committee includes John Erickson, Clay Center, chairman; Marty Rowe, Leawood, secretary; Jon Henderson, Stanberry, Mo. Fine Arts; Dave Brooks, Kansas City, Mo., Engineering and Architecture; Frank Wiebe, Lawrence, Business; Virgil Thompson, Lawrence, Pharmacy; Marcia Casey, Hutchinson, College; Joyce Viola, Abilene, Education, and Susanne Ellermeier, Norton, Journalism.
Seniors should consider the following factors in making their selections:
2. Success in stimulating students to engage the students toward thinking.
1. Willingness to help students.
3. Devotion to profession
4. Contribution to general cultural life of the university.
5. Publications and creative work will be considered but not to the extent as will the instructor's contribution to students.
Nominees must be full-time members of the faculty and must be in at least their second year of teaching at KU. Nominees should also be persons who plan to stay at KU. No professor may be given the award more than once.
Seniors should turn in or mail their nominations to the Alumni Association, 127 Strong. The winner will be announced at the Senior Coffee.
Two Students End Debate Year at IU
Two KU students are serving as delegates to the Delta Sigma Rho national student congress at Indiana University today through Saturday on the last debate trip of the year.
Fred Kauffeld, Atchison sophmore, and Tom Beisecker, Topeka junior, will take a stand on the question of what the United States' trade policy should be in relation to the free world nations.
Engineers Ready For Exposition
Persons attending the 1962 Kansas Relavs April 20-21 can get two shows for the price of one thanks to the work of some 150 engineering students who are preparing exhibits for the 42nd annual Engineering Exposition.
This year it will be possible to see, free of charge, all the exhibits in one building, Allen Field House. Visitors will enter under an arch 30 feet high and 100 feet long that will span a three-dimensional standard bearing the exposition theme, "Engineers Today." Past exposition themes have centered on the future.
Department and organization exhibits will be displayed under the permanent bleachers on the second floor of the fieldhouse.
THE ARMED FORCES displays will be inside the field house except the featured Nike Hercules missile, which is too large to be shown inside.
The activities of contemporary engineers will be shown in displays which range from precision measuring devices to model homes, drilling rigs, motion and time studies. Kaw Valley flood control projects and wind tunnels.
THERE WILL BE a continuous showing of a 23-minute film during the two-day exposition showing the variety of work open to a modernday engineer. It will be shown on the third floor of the fieldhouse.
The climax of the exposition will be a Saturday night banquet when awards will be presented for the best displays.
Prof. McCoy Named
Donald R. McCoy, associate professor of history and director of correspondence study at KU, will be a visiting professor of history at the University of Bonn, Germany, during the spring-summer semester there. Prof. McCoy will teach a lecture course and a seminar on recent American history. He and his family will leave for Europe late this month.
WASHINGTON—(UPI) President Kennedy held an unusual meeting with high cabinet advisers on the steel price increase today and a top congressional leader forecast swift government action in the situation.
The White House meeting, summoned by the President to explore a broad range of possible federal moves to combat effects of the $6 a ton price hike, lasted 40 minutes. The Chief Executive sat in on the conference for about 15 minutes.
LATER, SENATE Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana predicted that the Senate and House Antitrust Subcommittees would move in quickly with investigations and that the Justice Department would take a "more than ordinary interest in this . . . unnecessary rise."
It was learned that the Justice Department was considering an antitrust suit aimed at breaking up U.S. Steel Corp., pace setter in the price increase, into several smaller firms. It was emphasized, however, that the idea was only in the discussion stage.
"The time for talking is past," Mansfield said, "the time for action has come."
ALTHOUGH THE PRESIDENT arranged the White House meeting, he had not been expected to participate personally. However, he joined the group for about 15 minutes to take part in the discussion.
JFK Hits Steel Raise
As the administration was charting its course of action here, a seventh steel company—National Steel—announced in Pittsburgh that it was raising prices effective at midnight tonight. National is the nation's fifth-ranked producer.
One of the first results of the session was expected to be a statement before tomorrow by Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara concerning steel purchases by his department.
Kennedy told his news conference yesterday, during a scathing attack on the steel industry, that
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--the price hike would increase defense costs by about $1 billion a year.
Assistant Defense Secretary William P. Bundy told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee today it also will boost the cost of foreign military aid by as much as $50 million to $75 million. This, he said, will force a cutback in such assistance.
ROGER M. BLOUGH, board chairman of U.S. Steel, called a 3:30 p.m. EST news conference in
New York City where he was expected to give the industry's reply to the President's denunciation.
Washington sources said they had found no indication the industry would back down on its insistence that the price increase was necessary to cover higher operating costs.
Any Justice Department suit to break up U.S. Steel would be based on a contention that the firm has monopoly control of the industry because of its average 40 per cent share of the market and its power over pricing.
Teaching Opportunities in East Africa
Teachers College, Columbia University, is recruiting '62 college graduates for secondary school teaching in Tanganyika, Kenya, Uganda and Zanzibar.
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Thursday, April 12, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Model United Nations Has a Rocky History
(Continued from page 1)
Chancellor Malott again opened the conference and WREN again handled radio coverage. The 1947 session was especially trying for the Russian delegation and it twice walked out. The first walkout came after a protest over Poland's proposed political and economic sanctions on Franco Spain.
THE SECOND walkout occurred when Turkey proposed U.N. control of Dardenelles. The Russian leader grabbed a microphone and cried, "I see that the Soviet delegation, which would like to participate in an aura of trust and cooperation, can no longer endure the gangling up tactics of certain nations."
blah blah blah
blah blah blah
blah blah blah
He then stormed out of Hoch followed by Poland, Ukraine and Czechoslovakia.
After the conference Capt. H. Cotton Minchin, British consul in Kansas City, who attended the meeting as a guest called the meeting "extremely encouraging." He said that similar meetings should be conducted throughout the world especially in Russia."
In March 1947 KU students attended a mock United Nations conference at Oklahoma A&M college at Stillwater to serve as the Russian delegation. The convention was the first time that mixed racial groups met on the Stillwater campus.
Two hundred delegates from Oklahoma, Arkansas, Texas and Missouri participated. The Russians (KU students) walked out of the conference to force U.S. acceptance of Russian proposals.
AFTER THE Oklahoma A&M conference, plans were started for the National Intercollegiate United Nations association conference to be held on Nov. 17, 1947.
Former Secretary of State James F. Byrnes accepted an invitation to address the 2,000 delegates. An invitation was extended to the then Secretary of State, George Marshall.
Edward Stettinius, former Secretary of State and chancellor of the University of Virginia, was the featured speaker at the conference.
Byrnes had to cancel his appearance because of poor health, while Marshall was in London and President Truman was touring the country.
The original group of 2.000 was cut to below 1.000 delegates because of housing difficulties and the fact that extremely large groups were too unwieldly in past conferences.
An international university in Benares, India, accepted an invitation and sent five delegates to the conference.
MOCK UNITED Nations interest cooled off in the next few years and no Mock United Nations was held in 1948 or 1949. But a Model General Assembly of the United Nations was held on Saturday morning, Nov. 20, 1950 to give high school students an idea of U.N. procedure. Four hundred and fifty high school students attended the conference.
A KU student from Russia, Milan Zvonicek, a delegate from the U.S.S.R., presented Russia's proposal for removing the threat of a new war and strengthening the peace and security of nations.
Zvonicek, speaking in his native tongue—which was interpreted by a graduate student—called for reduction of armaments and accused a number of countries of distributing propaganda for a new war.
The Russian proposal was defeated.
The session was held in Fraser Theater and was sponsored by the International Club, the International Relations Club, the All Student Council, the Inter Co-op Council, the Independent Student Association, the Negro Student Association, the Intra-Fraternity Council, the Panhellenic Council, Tau Sigma and the Y.M.C.A.
THE FOURTH United Nations conference was planned and sponsored by the University Extension Bureau under the leadership of Frank T. Stockton, dean emeritus of the School of Business.
Three speakers were featured at the meeting. They were V. G. D. Stavridi, director of the reference and publication division of the U.N. department of public information, Amiya Chakravarty, visiting professor of humanities and former adviser to the U.N. delegation from India and Mrs. Florence Reynolds, U.N. representative for the food and agriculture organizations.
The theme for the conference was "Know Your United Nations Better." The public information department of the United Nations joined in the presentation of the program.
"We want to bring the United Nations and its program and problems within the reach of people in this area," Dean Stockton said.
THE UNIVERSITY Extension continued to spearhead the Model United Nations by joining with the International Club in presenting a U.N. session at Leavenworth on Nov. 5, 1951. The meeting was opened by Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism, who spoke on "Do You Know Your United Nations?"
A similar session was held Saturday, Nov. 17, in Strong Auditorium and 250 high school students attended. The speakers were Chakravarty and Chubb.
A Model United Nations Assembly was not held again until March of 1958 and 65 students from 14 colleges and universities in a four-state area attended the meeting.
ficer in the Middle East, Miss Emile B. Ader, former member of the United States Information Agency, and Roy D. Laird, assistant professor of political science.
Special speakers were John Steiniger, former foreign service of-
IN 1959 the KU-Y and the political science department joined in the sponsorship of the Model United Nations. A steering committee of students was formed to serve as the administrative body for the event. Faculty advisers were Clifford Ketzel and Roy Laird, assistant professors of political science.
Robert Nebrig was chosen as chairman of the steering committee. "We felt that the University students, as a campus, were doing nothing in the area of international relations. Since starting the ball rolling for the Model U.N., we have found much enthusiasm for the project among student groups."
Enthusiasm built up for the event. Red China used marchers, banners slogans and other tricks to attempt to gain recognition hoping to gain admission to the United Nations.
Three hundred students expressed interest in the event, a surprising number over the 40-65 students hoped for.
Former President Harry Truman accepted an invitation as speaker for the opening convocation in Hoch Auditorium. After his speech the conference moved to Allen Field House for the General Assembly meeting.
The Communist Chinese attempts to gain admission were halfway successful. While the students voted as nations to table China's admission, as individuals they voted to admit Red China.
Immediately following the assembly vote nearly one-third of the member nations stalked disgustedly out of the meeting.
An Indian spokesman angrily said before walking out: "This assembly is completely prejudiced and narrow minded. We will join the Soviet bloc."
The Soviets had already walked out.
Students voted as member nations on Friday and as individuals on Saturday and there were no similarities in the voting.
LAST YEAR there were 87 nations and eight blocs represented with over 400 students participating. James J. Wadsworth, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and president of the Peace Research Institute, delivered the keynote address.
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The session was marred by a riot during the opening session with approximately 25 men and women chanting, throwing bundles of chopped-up newspapers and holding a sign that said "Cuba, Si! Russia, No!"
Firecrackers were shot in the first
balcony and after the Secretary-General was unable to restore order, he dispatched the guards, members of the Pershing Rifles, to break up the riot, but they were unable to stop it.
This year the Soviets have been accused of hiding a microphone in a Steering Committee meeting.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 12, 1962
SPU Circulates Petitions Urging Food for China
The KU chapter of the Student Peace Union is circulating a petition urging President Kennedy to make U.S. food surpluses available to Communist China.
Fetitions are to be carried by all members of the SPU, posted in the large dormitories and made available at the information booth.
Larry Laudan, Lawrence graduate student and acting chairman of KU's chapter, said last night that a goal of 100,000 names has been set for Kansas by the Kansas Freedom from Hunger Committee, a group supporting the aims of the U.N. Freedom from Hunger Campaign. The SPU is circulating the petition at KU for this group.
THE PETITION CALLS for the President and Congress to offer famine relief to Red China under a public law permitting grants of food to friendly people regardless of the friendliness of their government.
The petition says the food should be given through United Nation's channels. It suggests working under the auspices of the U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization's current "Freedom from Hunger Campaign."
The petition also suggests that arrangements be made through the United Nations for Red China to repay the United Nations in money or in food. The amount repaid would be used to meet future families in other parts of the world.
THE PETITION LISTS 18 supporters, many of them either clergymen or persons connected with religious organizations.
Included in this list are John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, and Dr. William C. Meninger of the Menninger Foundation, Topeka.
Laudan described the petition as an "appeal to America's humanitarian motives." He said "seven to eight million people are dying annually in Red China while surplus
grain is rotting in storage bins in the United States.
Laudan said there are two other advantages — economic and political. The United States would reap economic benefits by eliminating its surpluses and the cost of storage could be eliminated. U.S. farmers would be able to sell their products on the open international market without competing with government farm surpluses offered at lower prices.
LAUDAN SAID U.S. surpluses given to Red China would not interfere with Canadian and Australian grain sales to Red China because the demand is great enough to take both U.S. surpluses and Canadian and Australian grain
He said the United States would benefit politically because the gift of surpluses would show that we
are "willing to transend petty political differences and really help." He said this would show that the United States is not just trying to buy friends with foreign aid but actually wants to help starving people.
Laudan said President Kennedy indicated interest in the plan when Sen. Hubert Humphrey, D-Minn., introduced a bill in the Senate that would implement the actions urged by the petition. However, the President was hesitant to offer support because he was not sure the American people favored the move.
LAUDAN SAID A recent Gallup Poll showed that 55 per cent of those polled favor sending U.S. food surpluses to Red China and 38 per cent oppose the move. The remaining seven per cent were undecided.
First Engineering Exposition Exhibit Goes to Smithsonian
An exhibit built by two University of Kansas students for the first Engineering Day in 1923 has been accepted by the Smithsonian Institution for display in a new wing which will show scientific and industrial exhibits.
The honored exhibit is a 14-foot high scale model of a wooden cable oil drilling rig assembled by Robert C. Mitchell and Arthur T. Sewell during their idle moments while working at the KU power plant.
IN THE 1920's THIS type drilling rig was a common sight in Kansas and Midcontinent oil fields. Presently, the replica is on display on the second floor of Lindley Hall.
The scale model is still in mint condition. Each piece was meticulously reduced to scale. The rig still
works and the drilling is accomplished by raising and dropping the bit by means of a "walking beam" which is powered by an electric motor.
The model contains a motor shed to house the engine, extra drill bits and a bailer to remove the cuttings from the well bore.
MITCHELL LIVES in Florida with his wife where he retired to in 1960 after spending seven years at KU as a research associate. Sewell is a retired commander in the U.S. Navy Reserve and operates a gun shop in Phoenix, Ariz.
Mitchell and Sewell demonstrated their rig during the 1923 Engineering Day by drilling in a sample of Douglas County shale.
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
It's Time to PLAY GET YOUR SPORTING GOODS HERE!
SPECIAL TEAM DISCOUNTS ON SOFTBALL EQUIPMENT
Balls
- Gloves
Shoes
Bats
T
ALSO
SPRING SPECIAL ON TENNIS
Converse
Concrete
Tennis Shoes, reg. $8.95 Special $7.95
Beach Shoes, reg. $7.55 Special $5.50
— RACKETS —
Wilson Jack Kramer, reg. $27.00 -------- Now $18.75
McGregor Tourney, reg. $27.00 -------- Now $18.75
McGregor Service Ace, reg. $24.00 -------- Now $17.95
ALSO OTHERS
Professional Restringing ___ $4.50 & Up
The
Sportsman's
Shop
715 Mass. V13-6106
The Magnificent Sound of
Use Kansan Classified Ads
THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA
Eugene Ormandy Conducting
A SPECTACULAR BUY!
TWO 12" COLUMBIA LPs
$2.98 - Monaural
$3.98 - Stereo
BELL MUSIC COMPANY
925 Mass. St. VI 3-2644
Thursday. April 12, 1962
Page 9
...
FOREIGN STUDENTS PREPARE—These three International students will assist in preparing dishes from their native lands at the International Club Banquet to be held at 6:30 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. They are, left to
right: Ritva Halinen, Myllykoski, Finland junior; Frierieder Worouunig, Klagenfurt, Austria graduate student; and Ursula Lipowsky, Regensburg, Germany graduate student. Tickets can be bought at the Kansas Union.
KU College Bowl To Be Held Sunday
The second round of the KU College Bowl will be held this Sunday at 2:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
The pairings for the bowl are:
Foster Hall vs. Templin Hall,
Joseph R. Pearson Hall vs. Pearson Hall,
Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall vs. Phi Delta Theta, Alpha Kappa Lambda vs. Alpha Tau Omega, Delta Tau Delta vs. Pi Beta Phi, Beta Theta Pi vs. Delta Upsilon, Signa Nu vs. Stephenson Hall and the Corbin-Gertrudse Sellards Pearson Halls counsellors vs. Gamma Phi Beta.
The time for the final two rounds has not been positively set.
Tune Up
for Spring at
Leonard's Standard Service
9th and Indiana Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Typewriters
sales - service - rentals
Olympia - Olivetti Smith-Corona - Royal
Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 Free Pick-up & Delivery
GLASS
AUTO GLASS
East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416
AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service
Medal
Winning
F
MUNICIPALITY OF MONTE CLOUD
MUNICIPALITY OF MONTE CLOUD
$14.95
FREEMAN Hand-Sewn
Royal College Shop
The vamps are hand-sewn in Freeman workrooms by custom craftsmen who specialize in sewing only Freeman Hand-Sewns. That's why Freeman Hand-Sewns are best! Black or Brown.
GRAND OPENING Tavern Peppermint Club
Tavern
837 Mass.
Home Of The Twist
Talented floor shows Friday, Saturday. Two shows 9-11 Enter if you dance, sing, or play a musical instrument and are good. 3 cash prizes. Band starts at 8:00. Come early and get a seat. No stags, dates only. You must be legal age.
15 minutes from Lawrence — $ \frac{1}{2} $ mile East of Tonganoxie on Highway 40. Admission — 75c per person.
For reservations call VI 5-2331 between 6-10 p.m.
Owners — Ted & Ted Weeks
---
It's your
tapered shape
and your
hopsacking look
that get me...
Mother always told me to look for the blue label*
Ketf
The Shoe of Champions
---
Keds "Court King" for tennis and all casual wear
Keds taper-toe Champion® in new, breezy hopsacking
Nobody's really suggesting romance will be yours if you wear U.S. Keds.But it is true that Keds are the best-fitting,the most comfortable, good-looking and long-wearing fabric casuals you can buy.Because Keds are made with costlier fabrics.With an exclusive shockproofed arch cushion and cushioned innersole.In short,with all those "extras" that make them your best buy in the long run. Head for your nearest Keds dealer.Get that Keds look,that Keds fit...GET THAT GREAT KEDS FEELING!
US MUST BE
*Both U.S. Keds and the blue label are registered trademarks of United States Rubber Rockefeller Center, New York 20, New York
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 12, 1962
403 Pass English Proficiency; 129 Will Have to Try Again
Four hundred three students have cleared a major hurdle between them and graduation. They have passed the English proficiency examination given March 1.
Another 129 will have to try again some other time. The 24.2 per cent failing the examination shows a slight increase over last semester's 23.4 per cent. Last spring 21.1 per cent failed the examination. The percentage of failures has shown a slight upward trend for the past three examinations.
Gerald D. Adams, Shelton Lee Adell,
Nancy Ann P. Albright, Larry D. Allen,
Charles F. Walphin, Alen R. Anderson,
Charles F. Walphin, B. B. Anderson,
Harold Asner, Michael C. Auer, Donald
I. Baird, Wallace D. Barnes, Terry L.
Barnhart, Roberta J. Barrow, Judith K.
Rosenbach, Daniel P. Emmett, Luise Bee, Bruce Bee, Louis J. Beindorff, Rebecca Bell, Brent L. Benkelman, Demnis Wayne Benner, Brooke A. Bork, Lynn S. Berkstresser, Nancy E. Best.
Judith L. Beymer, Sally L. Billingsley,
James T. Black, Lillian Ann Blair, Murray
Sweat, Evan Blair, Emily Swatzer.
Susan Bratcher, Barbara E. Brenner, Nancy
Brethour, Donald Brinkman, James R.
Brooks, Charles L. Brown Jr., Sharon W.
Coleman, Carolyn P. Conrad, F. Burchem,
F. Burchem, Gary D, Burgess, Katherine
Ann Buxton, Lloyd David Buzzi, John
Cooper Byers, Charles A. Campbell,
W. Ferguson, Donald B. Case,
George P. Castle, Marilyn D. Castle,
Margaret G. Catcart
Cerniglia to Hall
S. Joseph Cerniglia, Mary Ann Chailnor, Marilyn I. Chamney, Stephen W. Chill, Lana L. W. Christian, Pamelia Christiansen, Marie Clancy, Eliza Corbett, A. Mark Elroy, Emrich Joole, John S. Collins, Robert L. Constable, Charles Wm. Cooper, Gary Alan Copeland, Larry D. Cordes, Jacque Sue Corporon, Manley H. Cosper Jr., Carolyn J Craig, James Crandall, Norma Lee Pruitt, Peter P. MacArthur, Maurice Dale Crocker, Deanna Gail Dalbon, Betty Udella Davis, Nelson E. Davidson. John William Davis, Samuel R. Davis, Robert Paul Day, Carl William Deane, Richard Alan DeBaule, Laverne J. Denning, Judith Lynn Dial, Marcin Dicks, Richard A. Dodder, Philip L. Doughty, Doris Kay Durham, Dwaine K. Duval, Jack C. Dysart, Kenneth S. Ellington, Beth C. Ellis, Edward Ellis, Stephen T. Sweeney, Emrich Devereux Epps, Jeffrey Estes, Nancy Jo Farren, William M. Finley, Brian Lee Firkins.
Hammar to Lyle
Paul Edward Hammar, Donald H. Harding, Helen RO Haren, William R. Hargrave, Carol D. Harlin, Larry Joe Harper, Scott A. Harrington, Sharon L. Harrington, Mary M. Haskell, Larry A. Haftfeld, Judy M. Hawkins, James Louis
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
Prepared Specials FRIDAY NOON
FRIDAY NOON
Fish Casserole
and
Kentucky Fried Chicken
Free Parking
Self Service Salad Bar
CRESTAURANT
NEW corner of WILLIAM BAY
9th & Iowa
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W.14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
Hayes, Terrel Glen Hays, Charles W. Hayward, Lavona Lou Heasley, Allan D. Hendrick, James V. Heyffernon, Steven Mayer, Hohen Tchen, Henderson, S. Nelson, Howard Ray Frant, Alethea L. Hensleigh, Fred R. Heryer, Jerry Howard Hess, Lawalta D. Dheye.
Patrick N. Hill, Orlene Joan Hodgden,
Arnold Hoffman, Ann C. Holmes, Nelson
Milton, Brian L. Miles, James R. Wooldridge
Jane Hull, Eason L. Hunton, Jack B.
Hurst, Donald E. Iglesias, Judges Ray
Jarrett, Kay Alien Jeffrey, Carston Jo-
carra, Michael J. Miller, Barbara A.
Johnson, Robert B. John's Klim
Jones, Lois Irene Jones, Richard T.
Jones, Roger J. Jones, Vaun Kampschro-
ne, William W. Karr, Robert
Keller, William S. W. Kiang,
Philip Glen Kimball
Billie Jo Ann King, Alberta Rinky, Gary Lee Kirk, James Henry Krannawitter, Stanley Koch, Arthur Krannawitter, Stanley Koch, Arthurbert E. Kraulik, Darcy LaFollette, Ethel F. LaGalle, Floyd W. Lampton, CharlesLaemon, Liam Lawrence, TheodoreE. Lawn, John H. Lee, Warren W. Leith, John W. Leitner,Nancy Lintecum, John E. Long, LaurenceJean, Jean Anne Low, Marvin G.Lutrell, Samuel Edward Lux, KennethC Lyle.
Lyon to Peukert
Stephen A. Lyon, Robert L. Lyons,
Susan Jane Mahan, Judith K. Mallory,
Marcoux, Daryl L. Marshall, Judith Kay,
Carl T. Martinsson, Michael E. Mason,
Charlotte A. Masters, William A. McCane,
Marcel A. Masters, Jeremy A. Cuee,
Philip A. McGee, Kenneth D. Maryl
Mary I. McGuire, Floyd Ray McHenry,
Ralph W. McIwaina, Betty Jo McLain,
Michelle B. Mirthd, Indida M. McReynolds,
Michael B. Bed, Danny L. Meek,
Wiley P. Messer
Lee Edward Meyer, Sandra Lucille Meyer, George Allan Meyers, Richard M. Meier, Benjamin Meyer, William Mervin Mills, Joyce E. Mitchell, Samuel T. Milner, Marilyn Kay Moore, Jack Lee Morrison, Jerome M. Moore, James J. McGee, David Maueller, David Henry Murphy, Worth Daina Murphy, Dian C. Murray, Conrad B. Nagel, John H. Nally, Yamuna Navarro, John L. Nally, Carl Andre Nelson, Darrell Lee Nelson, Eugene W. Nelson, Linda Diane Nelson.
mer, Philip E. Riskeck, Mary Grace
J. Robinson, Edward C. Robinson,
L. Robinson, Edward C. Robinson,
Pfuetze to Taylor
Norma R. Nesmith Jerome A. Neubert,
Jack L. Nichols, Margaret K. Norfeet,
Jack E. Nuttall, John E. Norris,
Martha Jane Obert, Donny H. son,
Robert Lewis Omer, Robert Wrae
Orr, Lee Lee Otto, Karen Louise Ott-
ton, Marsha Lee Otto, Paul Palmer,
Merle D. Pattengil, Duan Edi
Patton, Janet Marie Pavola, Joseph
Payne, Penne Louie Payne, Louis David
Payne, Penne Louie Payne, William H.
Herry, Charlotte Persinger, Nathaniel A.
Peters, Carol A. Peukert
Karl D. Pfuetz, Robert S. Phillips,
Robert N. Pinckard, Thomas John Pitner,
Robert N. Pinckard, Martin Wayne Pitt,
Sandra L. Lee Plaskey, Robert W.
Roy D. Pointer, Roger Louis Poppe,
Patrick M. Prosser, Daniel Kent Ralston,
Gary W. Rexford, Allan L. Reynolds,
Joseph L. Reynolds, Stanley F. Ricker,
Lois A. Reynolds, Stanley F. Ricker,
Jerry Dean Riffel, Wayne Calvin Rim-
Patricia A. Rockey, Mary Lynn Rogers, Roger Lawrence Root, Stephen Leroy Ross, Brian A. Rowland, Ronald Rubin, Mary C. Rudolph, Timothy J. Sartorius, Mary C. Fayle, J. Sartorius, Rosemary S. Schenck, Elizabeth A. Schiever, Lawrence H. Schmidt, Betty Lou Schultz, Sylvia Swearz, Nancy Gay Scott, Joyce Elaine Searl, George Kraft Sheen, Darla J. Settneichre, Jon Karen Sheen, Jacki Kraken, Naara Karen Sheets, Janice M. Shelley, James F. Shonkwiler, Penny M. Shortman.
Keith E. Sickafoose, Sandra G. Siemiski, Diana J. SIGley, Jim Lewis Simms, Diana J. SIGley, Dales D. Doberg, Linda S. Smith, Larry D. Donna J. Sparks, Robert C. Springsteen, Judith Anne Stamos, Gary E. Stamper, Duane T. Stenson, Rossell Y. Stewart, Jan Stamps, William E. Tanner, Nelson Earl Stump, Darrrell D. Sumner, Anne C. Sutherland, James Swartzel, Anne C. Sutherland, William E. Tanner, Joan M Tarwater, George Harytate, Gayle Lake Taylor,
Theno to Zimmerman
Allen H. Theno, Roger Keys Thomason,
William G. Thornton, Frederick C. Tiffrin,
William G. Thornton, John Richard Todd, Linda Alyne Treece,
Evelyn L. Tucker, William Ford Tyler,
John D. Underwood, Diane Vile Upton,
Dianne Vile Upton, Diana Deplanas,
William Vandervoort, Gretheen P. Van Dyne, Clarence L. Vaughan, Virginia E. Vaughn, Mary Daniee, Vienne,
Vienne, Vienne, Shari L. Waetzig, Carol Am Walker,
John P. Ward Jr., Barry Lee Warkentin;
Michael G. Warren, Jackie L. Wash,
W. John Weaver, Gary Lee Weerts, Rob-
bert H. Reed, Gary Lee Weerts, Allen
Allen Whisler, Harold B. White, William
B. Whitney, Jerry Allen Wiens, Margaret
Jo Willey, Betty L. Willard, Clyde T.
Dean Wilson, Marcelie Am Wilson,
Patricia Wilson, Roger K. Wilson, Charles
R. Wohlenberg, Preston Wood, Janet
Mormall, Jack D. Worley, Robert
W. Wormall, Donald E. Worster, Beverly
J. Yates.
Robert H. Yates, James Bernard
Louise Ziller, William G. Zimmerman,
Louise Ziller, William G. Zimmerman.
GRANADA
HOW SHOWING
Sinatra - Martin
Davis Jr. - Lawford
and Bishop
"Sergeants
3"
JUNE 1970
AMAZING!
AWESOME!
ASTOUNDING!
AFRICA
ELEPHANT GUN
FROM
BELINDA LEE - MICHAEL CRAIG - PATRICK McGOOHAN - ANNA GAYLOR
Produced by JOHN STAFFORD - Directed by KEN ANNAKIN - Screenplay by GUY ELMES
In thrilling
EASTMAN
COLOR!
AWESOME!
ASTOUNDING!
AFRICA
THE NEW YORK TIMES
— SECOND FEATURE —
"LOST CONTINENT"
NOW!
Open
6:45
Show At Dusk
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40
Friend of Harry Truman Will Speak Tonight
A personal friend of ex-President Harry S. Truman will speak at 7:30 p.m. today at the KU Faculty Club.
She is Sue Gentry, associate editor of the Independence, Mo., Examiner who will address a dinner meeting of the Theta Sigma Phi, a professional fraternity for women in journalism.
Miss Gentrv will speak on "Reporting a President's Home Town." She helped with national and international news coverage of Mr. Truman while he was president.
The Kansas City professional chapter of the Tega Sigma Phi awarded Miss Gentry the Woman of the Year Achievement Award. She is a member of and past president of the Missouri Press Women.
NOW SHOWING
7:00 and
9:00
Forever etched across our proudest history is the record of Ira Hayes' glory
But... this is the story behind the fame he won... behind his fall from honor... behind his memorable struggle to be worthy again... to belong again!
TONY CURTIS
THE OUTSIDER
Forever etched across ouroudest history is the record of a Hayes' glory!
But...
this is the story behind the fame he won...
behind his fall from honor...
behind his memorable struggle to be worthy again...
to belong again!
JAMES FRANCISCUS - BRUCE BENNETT - GREGORY WALCOTT
VIVIAN NATHAN - EMINUN HASHIM
Screenplay by STEWART STERM - Directed by DELBERT MANNER
by SY BATTERT - AINVERSALINTERNATIONAL PICTURE
I WOULD BE HAPPY TO BE A FIGHTER IN THE MARINES
WE DARE YOU TO ATTEND OUR
TWIN TERROR
FRIDAY the 13th
HORROR SHOW
11:30
"GHOST OF DRAGSTRIP HOLLOW"
DO YOU HAVE THE NERVE TO SIT THRU THESE TWO BIG-HORROR HITS
IF YOU HAVE, WE'LL REWARD YOU WITH A FREE PASS TO A FUTURE ATTRACTION
12:30
"The HEADLESS GHOST"
Extra CARTOON ALWAYS IN COLOR
All
ats
85c
Plea
De
F
WE DARE YOU TO ATTEND OUR
TWIN
TERROR
FRIDAY the 13th
HORROR SHOW
Show Starts 11:30
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1002
Thursday. April 12. 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms账. All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 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.
Hood to raincoat 3 scarves - men's &
women's gloves 4 pairs GLASSES 2 assignment books 5 sets of keys 2 assignment books 5 sets of keys The Press & Society, Introduction to Mass Communications, Better Paragraphs) Jewelry, Claim at 111 Flint. tf
FOK RENT
Near K.C. — Unfurnished 3 bedroom,
ranch house; attached garage; fenced-in
back yard; close to shopping center. $100.
Call I.V. 3-4071 evenings. 4-16
Private entrance, private bath and show-
room. Door: Linens laundered, not furnished.
Quiet, studious sophomore roommate.
block from Union. 1301 La. V-4
4082.
Modern apartment in 8 plex for a couple or two boys interested in summer housing. Available now. Pay starting May 1st. August is free. Call VI 2-0763 at 5:00.
We will pay local moving expenses
Central Air Conditioning Brick Constructed Fully Insulated Carpeted Garbage Disposal Off Street Parking
Park Plaza South Apartments
VI 2-3416 or VI 3-8253
ROOM- IDEAL for Spring or Summer.
Converted sleep porch. Share kitchen.
Private entrance. $15 per month. 1045
Tenn. VI 2-3251. 4-16
5 rm. furnished house, $75 plus utilities
appt spt. 35, utilities call. Dcail
1966
4-16
Office -- 1912 W. 25th.
Large single room for KU young man.
Linens furnished, utilities paid. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus, 1616 Ind. Available June 1. 4-12
TYPEWRITERS for rent. cheap - calls VI 3-0031 between 5 and 7 p.m. tf
LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. rooms, kitchen, and bath. ideal for 2 or 3 students. Available now. 520 La. VI 2-971
TYPING
Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, manuscripts, etc., on electric paper with signs & symbols. Standby rate: Call VI 2-1846, Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert.
Call VI 2-0267, VI 3-5019 evenings for neat and precise typing. Phyllis Spinetto.
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type
tresses, term papers, and themes, neatly
on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs.
Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1021 Miss. tt
FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter writes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-6524.
SECRETARY WILL DO TYPING in home Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at VI 2-1749. tt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these. term papers, articles. Responsible. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mt. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568.
THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typat writer typewriter. Reasonable rate Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. Cali T 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 rates. Marie. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI-2f. 4648. Mm.
Typing: Will type reports, thesis, etc.
Type: will report on thesis, etc.
Seel, 1511 W. 21 St. Cauli V1 3-6440.
Seel, 1511 W. 21 St. Cauli V1 3-6440.
ADVERTISSE YOUR NEEDS in the classi-
cation of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN.
Typing by experienced typist, electric
dresser. Rates: Mrs. Don
Patterson. VI 3-5833.
EXPERIENCED typist--Will do all types
prompting. Call VI 2-0296. 4-13
prompt message. Call VI 2-0296. 4-13
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
name -- call VI 3-9136. Miss. Loehbach.
Gelbach.
Experienced typist would like typing in
English, French, Russian, Chinese, or
rates. Call VI 3-255 any time.
FOR SALE
61' Ford Starliner; Powder blue, cruise-
omatic, power steering, padded dash, radio, new tires — Immaculate condition.
Or financial reasons. Cali Host
VI 2-2923. AJ 4-16
STUDY AIDS for Chemistry 2 and 2A
and complete 2B, and complete 2C,
15 per copy. YI S-7538.
COMPLETE skin digging gear. Call VI 3-
1764 after 5 p.m.
4-18
Argus C-4 camera with leather case. Like
Epson light meter. $40. Prices
5-7655. 4-17
Bulova Stereo. Brand new. Won in com-
petech. I2-1200. bidder.
Wayne Rimmer, YI 2-120. 4-17
1957 Ford convertible with radio & heater; Fordomatic. Black and red. Reasonable. See at 1940 Naismith Drive. Kent McCormick. 4-17
Nice 52 foot 1960 CATALINA TRAILER HOUSE. 10" wide, 2 bedrooms, automatic refrigerator. Balanced balance owing = $200 down. Underwood Inv. Co. I: 3-3875, 1117 Mass. St.
EXOTIC DOGS OF AFGHANISTAN
Proud, elegant Afghan Hound Puppies.
The dog of distinction! $100 up. Mrs.
Primm, RFD No. 7, Topeka G-8 4-4284
M.G. '52 TD sports roadster. Real nice
shape. $695. Call VI 3-7497. 4-12
1951 Chevrolet: A-OK. Must sell now.
S150. Call VI 3-7461 after 5 p.m. 4-17
1953 Super 88 Oldsmobile. Extra clean.
$300.00. Call VI 2-2769. ff
OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriter, precision made to perform like an upright writer, sales, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 5-3644.
ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch. In microscope immediately. $200.
Call Vi. 316777 to come to 907 Ark. for more information.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's
Drive-In Pet Center — most complete
phone number. Call the Phone 1-800-
2921. Modern self-service. Ring 8 to 5:36
pm. week days. **tf**
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES
with diagrams, comprehensive
definitions, and data.
Handy cross index for quick reference
delivery. PHONE VI 3-755I
VI 3-7587
GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO.
SPECIAL THIS WEEK. 357 magnum (cm)
a tougheruger at a price too low
quoit. A few inexpensive 22 revolvers
lead, 1346 Ohio.
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
comprehensive diagrams and definitions.
edition: formerly known as the Theta
library: 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery.
$4.50
SMALL ELECTRIC ORGAN with chord stops. Excellent condition. Call VI 312-465-3466
4-16
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
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
BEYERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
paper bags. Picnic, party supplies
I plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI -
0350.
FOUND
Bothered by the
MORALS
of Nuclear
EXTERMINATION
We Petition For
PEACE
Student Peace Union
BUSINESS SERVICES
Will baby sit in my home. $2 a day.
from campus. References: 4-23
5-22634
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 3-1257. tf
INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re-
woven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags
repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tt
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
more, call Ola Smits 192491995, Mass. Call VI 3-5263.
ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI s-
1551, or 921 Miss.
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and
Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now
available. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752.
free delivery.
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3-3644.
td
GRANTS Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
parking lot, one stop - save time and money. Fish,
birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles,
etc., plus complete lines of
set supplies.
TRANSPORTATION
Need two riders — Shawnee to Lawrence,
1-8 MWF, 8-11 Tues, 8-2 Thurs. Den
Carlson. 10405 Johnson Dr., Shawnee.
HE 2-5370. 4-13
DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results.
Friday Is Chocolate Day
Between 11 a.m. and 11 p.m.
Dari-
King
King
BURGERS
MORE JOBS BETTER PRODUCTS LOWER PRICES Advertising works for you!
at Dari-King
6th & Florida
Chocolate Cones
10 - 15 - 20 - 25c
King
BURGERS
Shakes
Malts
Sundaes
Slushes—4 Flavors
Banana Splits
Sodas
FOUND IN FRASER HALL: 1 purse of cosmetics, 8 head scarves, 1 Parker fountain pen, 1 pair men's glasses — brown case, Stendhal book — "The Red and the Black", 2 neck scarves, 1 brown men's glove, 1 brown women's glove, 2 black leather gloves, 1 white ladies' glove, ladies' black suede gloves, 1 blue ladies' glove, 3 men's black gloves, 1 brown glove, 1 white ear muff, 1 brown ear muff, 3 umbrellas. Claim at 111 Flint.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 12, 1962
Around the Campus
Music Symposium Will End Tonight
The fourth annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music, in progress here since Monday, will end tonight with a concert by the symposium orchestra at 8 o'clock in the University Theatre.
The program will be works selected from the reading sessions earlier in the week. The complete list from which the works will come is available in Murphy Hall.
The symposium orchestra is composed of members of the KU student body and faculty and members of the Kansas City Philharmonic.
There is no admission charge. The program will also be broadcast over KANU-FM radio.
Student Wins Award In Writing Contest
James T. Heaton, Baldwin graduate student, has received honorable mention in a creative writing competition sponsored by the Texas Agricultural and Mechanical College, College Station, Texas.
Heaton's poem, "An Early Evening Shortly Before Christmas" placed among the top five in 200 entries.
To Play Profs Music
The "Second Symphony," composed by John Pozdro, associate professor of organ and theory at KU, will be performed this month during the Festival of Contemporary Music sponsored by San Jose State College in California.
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Douglas County State Bank
Observatory Open To Public Tomorrow
If the sky is clear, the KU observatory will be open to the public tomorrow night from 7:30 to 10:00 to view the moon through the 6-inch telescope.
"The Bank of Friendly Service" 9th & Kentucky
N. W. Storer, associate professor of astronomy, said the halfmoon stage which started last night is ideal for observing the shadows cast on the moon's surface by its mountains. Entrance to the observatory is through room 500 in Lindley Hall.
Action Meets Tonight
Action, KU's proposed third political party, will hold a parliament meeting in the Kansas Union tonight at 7:30. The group will discuss campaign strategy and will collect money from the sale of party cards.
Rothwell at Poetry Hour
Kenneth Rothwell, assistant professor of English, will read Edna St. Vincent Millay at the Poetry Hour today at 4 p.m. in the Music Room of the Kansas Union.
Partly cloudy and colder this afternoon. Strong northerly winds especially east portions of Kansas. Clearing with diminishing winds and colder tonight. Frost or freezing temperatures tonight. Tomorrow fair and warmer. Lows tonight in the 20s west to near 30 east. Highs tomorrow in the 50s east to near 60 west.
Weather
A drag race, in which a car went out of control on a curve and overturned, claimed its second victim Tuesday night.
Death Wins Drag Race Near Eudora
John Valcour, 18, of Lawrence, died in a hospital from injuries suffered in the accident Monday night. Killed instantly in the accident, one mile south of Eudora on a Douglas County road, was Sam Penn Armstrong, 18, of Eudora.
Official Bulletin
Douglas County Attorney Wes Norwood filed charges of fourth degree manslaughter against Knight Tuesday in connection with Arm-strong's death.
The driver of the car, Donald Knight, 17, of Lawrence, was reported in fair condition. He suffered a broken back.
Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:30a
Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd
Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11-45.12 noon; Saturday, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
International Students: Those students were opinionnaire found in the April issue of the International Campus newsletter are so today. Send them to 228 Strong Hull.
The annual International Dinner will be Sunday at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas University Museum, sponsored by the KU International Club, will be: saurbraten, dolima, empanadas, polou, kottbullar, & karjalipirakat. Entrance will be provided by members of the Club.
Applications for interviews for 'People-to-People': Executive positions for next three weeks. Interviews will be 13 Kansas Union until 5 p.m. Friday. The interviews will be Sunday, April 15.
TODAY
Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5 pages 1221 Oread. Bible study & devotional
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 12. April, um fuenf Uhr in einem Haus zu leben. Ein wiskw wird uns neue deutschen Lieder einbringen. Es gibt natürlicher auch Erfrischungen.
Radio Production Center: 7:30 p.m.
220 Flint.
Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel.
TOMORROW
Episcopal Holy Communion & Breakfast: 7 a.m., Canterbury House.
International Club: 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. Sir Mohammed Zafrullah Khan. Pakistani delegate to U.N., will speak, followed by party games
Baptist Student Union; 7:30 p.m., 1221 Oread. Dr. Robert Craft, Leawood Baptist Church, Kansas City, Kansas, "The Priesthood of the Believer."
KUOK: 3 — News & Weather; 3:05 —
Tilt-mapping; 6 — News & Weather; 6:15
Sports; 6:20 — Society News; 6:25 — Spot-
tacular dames; 6:45 — Public Service Program;
7 — Countdown; 8 — Night Flight; Stage I;
9 — Flight; Stage II; 12 —
Portals of Prayer.
from many lands, dancing, and refreshments.
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Burgstahler to Give Newman Lecture
The compatability of science and religion will be the topic of a speech Sunday at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Albert W. Burgstahler, associate professor of chemistry, will give the speech, the fourth in the current series of Newman Lectures. A discussion period will follow.
Tub of Chicken 15 pieces, 5 hot rolls $3.50 BIG BUY
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PRODUCTS
INDI
many a knight
P
was spent in rusty armor
In days of yore, men feared not only their mortal enemies, but the elements too. It was the medieval armorer's task to protect his chief against foemen, but weather-protection was a more difficult matter. Thus many a knight was spent in rusty armor.
Engineers and scientists at Ford Motor Company, engaged in both pure and applied research, are coping even today with the problem of body protection (car bodies, that is). Through greater understanding of the chemistry of surfaces, they have developed new paint primers and undercoatings, new rustproofing methods, and special sealers that guard entire car bodies against nature's corrosive forces—all of which add armor-like protection to Ford-built cars.
From other scientific inquiries will undoubtedly come new materials with protective properties vastly superior to those of today. This is another example of Ford's leadership through scientific research and engineering.
Ford
MOTOR COMPANY
'The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan
PRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD • THE FARM • INDUSTRY • AND THE AGE OF SPACE
P-T-P Foreign Travel Plans Hit
Action last night blasted the University People-to-People "Student Ambassador" travel program, charging it is "fraternalized" and set up "to send a bunch of kids abroad."
The thirty-two persons at the parliament gathering unanimously resolved:
"WHEREAS the ideal in student travel plans is to provide travel with a minimum of supervision, transportation to and from Europe, or elsewhere, which we feel to be the only effective means of FREE contact between people; and WHEREAS the present travel plan at KU has strayed from this ideal;
"Resolved: That Action urges People-to-People, which it supports in its platform, to restore the original travel plan."
THE ACTION came on the heels of protests of persons who signed up for the old P-t-P travel program called "American Students Abroad" and received information concerning a new travel program which restricts the students in their freedom abroad.
Under the new program, the students must undergo a two-day orientation in Washington, must spend a week in Berlin, and must check regularly with the Brussels office and send it postcards indicating their whereabouts.
FOR OVER AN HOUR, students at the meeting charged that the P-t-P program is sending the students abroad to "spread American propaganda" instead of to find out about various countries visited.
A deep blue blazer, "with the University People-to-People emblem on the breast pocket, will be required dress for orientation meetings in Washington, at Berlin meetings, and at various other times during the trip. In addition, it will prove a useful means of identifying you to people in the countries you visit," says an application sheet.
DENIS KENNEDY, Lawrence resident and a German resident for two years. said, "They (the European people) will be very resentful of American students who run around with blue blazers on and People-to-People inscribed all over them. I've talked with several students from other countries in the last couple of days and they think the new program is ridiculous.
"They say that only free travel by American students is successful in making the contacts necessary to understand the people. They're so fraternalized in their travel now they tell them that it is not necessary to bring their own toilet paper."
Mike McCabe, Topeka junior who recently switched to Action from the University Party, said. "To me it sounds like they think they're sending a bunch of kids over."
[Name]
Denis Kennedy
"... program is ridiculous"
Harold Johnson, Leavenworth senior, added, "All this goes down to one of our planks on NSA (National Student Association)."
ARTHUR MILLER, Pittsburg junior, said, "Maybe it would be better to wait and set up some sort of travel program ourselves. At least..."
"People-to-People is getting completely the wrong the idea of selling America instead of showing them America and finding out what their countries are like," said Mike Dunlop, St. Louis, Mo., senior.
"A BOY FROM Greece said that he hadn't even heard of People-to-People until a month ago and that it wasn't doing a thing to pull the foreign and American students together—and practically everyone at the grievance hearing agreed with him. I just saw about 30 of them over at the Union (before the People-to-People hearing) who agreed with him."
Miller said, "People-to-People, as it was originally introduced onto the campus, was an organization to allow American and foreign students to get together. The program has now changed. People-to-People started off with a lot of good publicity and not once has it had any bad publicity. It's become some sort of a 'sacred cow' in a sense.
Brought under strong criticism at the meeting were statements in the new program outline which:
- Schedule the students' trips, not allowing them freedom to go how and where they please.
- Make mandatory attendance at "conferences and seminars on world problems as they travel." Kennedy suggested that these were but meetings to inform the students on how to answer questions correctly.
- Make it necessary for the student to be interviewed "by the American Student Abroad Committee and satisfy this committee that he or she ... is capable of meeting students and portraying the American student as a serious morally sound person."
AN UNIDENTIFIED member in the back said, in answer to the reading of this part of the program outline, "Just who do they think they have who can decide what student can best represent the United States?"
Daily Hansan
Weather
59th Year, No. 117
Fair eastern Kansas, partly cloudy western Kansas, warmer this afternoon and tonight. Widely scattered showers likely southwest this afternoon and evening. Tomorrow partly cloudy and warmer with scattered showers or thunderstorms west and central Kansas. Lows tonight in the upper 30s northeast to the middle 40s southwest. Highs tomorrow 65 to 75.
Vox Populi Hits UP's Platform
By Mike Miller
Last night it was Vox Populi's turn to wield the political knife and slash the policies and platform of the opposing party.
After charges were made by the University Party earlier this week about the quality of the Vox party, Vox last night struck out at UP as being lax, apathetic and lacking understanding about campus situations by criticizing all six of the UP's platform planks.
TED CHILDERS, Wamego senior and president of Vox, charged UP with apathy because of the number of UP representatives to the ASC which have been replaced. UP has replaced nine of the 22 ASC representatives. Childers said that five of these replacements were made because of "personal reasons" which "shows that these representatives did not have the interest to continue on the ASC."
Friday, April 13, 1962
In his charge of UP laxity, Childers said that UP had made a "very poor showing" by introducing only about one-fifth of the measures brought up in the ASC. He said that this could be attributed partially by the turnover of UP representatives.
Mike Harris, Shawnee Mission junior and executive vice-president of Vox, described this as "a game of musical chairs with the All Student Council seats."
WHEN ASKED ABOUT this charge, Tom Hardy, Hoisington junior and independent co-chairman of UP, said that UP had brought up close to half of the major bills in the ASC last year.
Childers said that UP's lack of understanding of campus affairs was demonstrated in its platform.
HE SAID THAT UP'S first plank on human rights "says a lot of glorious things, but leaves a question in the mind of anyone who reads the plank exactly what stand the party is taking on the issue."
Roger Wilson, Wichita junior and Greek vice-president of Vox, outlined the party's objection to the UP platform which he described as "containing a few errors."
He explained that the plank makes no suggestion where the ASC is to get the money and said that the freshman class did have a party which did not prove to be a success.
He said that the plank which is designed to get more money from the ASC to support class functions and therefore help promote student spirit shows "a lack of vision on the part of the party."
In discussing the direct primaries which the University Party endorses, Wilson said that UP wants to make the elections nothing but a popularity contest.
HE ALSO SAID that the UP plank for increased ASC funds was "rather nebulous" because it did not make any provision for where this money would come from.
Childers said that this was exemplified in last Fall's sorority living district primary when each of UP's five sororities put up a candidate. The election ended up with three of the five girls being eliminated. Childers said that these three girls had ASC experience while the two who won the primaries did not have any prior ASC experience.
(Continued from page 12)
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
(ACCORDING TO previous official election results one of the two
Pakistani Ambassador Says:
New Members Strengthen U.N.
By Walt Blackledge and Dennis Branstiter
Pakistan's permanent representative to the United Nations, Sir Muhammad Zafrulla Khan, said here today that expanding U.N. membership within the Afro-Asian bloc is an advance towards peace rather than a threat to U.N. strength.
The largest member group in the United Nations is the Afro-Asian bloc, with 51 of the 104 members, he said.
"The main concern of the group is the rapid advancement of the dependent and colonial territories towards complete self-government and independence and the economic development of the Afro-Asian states," he said.
THE AMBASSADOR SAID that in spite of the bitterness felt by the newer nations towards colonialism, they have shown a surprising capacity for responsible political action in the United Nations.
"When specific issues bring to light a conflict of views or approach they are ready to accept reasonable compromises and ultimately lean towards moderation with wider support rather than seeking to push through extreme measures with narrow margins."
"Once the emotional steam is let off in speeches, the way is open for the acceptance of compromise," he said. "The Afro-Asian states as a body . . . lend their weight to and cast their votes in support of all causes of freedom, justice and human dignity.
The ambassador traced the causes of Afro-Asian feeling towards colonialism:
"COLONIALISM IN ASIA and Africa . . . was stark and unmitigated domination and exploitation of vast sections of the peoples of Asia and Africa by certain European powers. Such a system practiced over a long period leaves deep scars on the minds and souls.
Related story on page 7.
"It is not surprising, therefore, that many of us from Asia and Africa should appear to be hyper-sensitive on this subject.
"The great significance of the expanded membership in the United
(Continued on page 12)
P. M. Patterson
Sir Muhammed Khan "...cast their vote for freedom..."
People-to-People met last night to discuss the summer student ambassador program and restrictions placed on it by Civil Aeronautics Board regulations.
Tour Changes Forced By CAB, Jarvis Says
In order to meet CAB regulations covering charter flights for organizations, it has become necessary to change the original program.
Marianne Olson, secretary to the national travel chairman, helped to explain travel forms and some of the restrictions which have been placed on the original travel plans.
Tu Jarvis, Winfield junior and chairman of P-t-P said:
"THIS IS A YOUNG organization, and the student ambassador program is a pilot program. We hope what we learn this year can be used to improve future programs."
He emphasized that P-t-P is still a student organization run by students.
One of the changes in the concept of the original program is that some evidence must be presented by the flight members that they have a definite purpose in mind. In line with this, each student is required to fill out a student ambassador interview form which will be reviewed by the national P-t-P office.
"We want some evidence that you have put some thought in what you want to do in Europe, and that you are sincerely interested in working for P-t-P."
**IN ANSWER TO** a question from the audience as to what constitutes a serious purpose. Jarvis said:
IN THE PACKET of flight materials recently mailed to flight members by the national office, it was stated that flight members would be required to buy blue P-t-P blazers which would be required dress for the meetings in Washington and Berlin.
"If you want to buy them, fine. If not, that's okay too." Jarvis said.
In regard to the blazers, Jarvis said that they were optional.
Flight members will travel from Kansas City to Washington by bus. In Washington they will attend a two-day orientation by the Peace Corps, The United States Information Agency, and the State
(Continued on page 7)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 13, 1962
Dissension in the Parties
Political parties are hectic things at election time. All sorts of interesting things begin to happen, and the parties are all fearful that something unexpected will happen to them.
Their fears are usually justified. Some party member is bound to muck something and then the party has a problem on its hands. The University Party got an early start on KU's other two political parties when two of its members (Michael E. Miner, Lawrence freshman and ASC representative from the unmarried-unorganized district and Michael McCabe, Topeka sophomore and UP treasurer) expressed dissatisfaction with it this week. McCabe changed his party affiliation to Action and Miner threatened to leave the party.
EVERY POLITICAL party has members who are dissatisfied with something about the party. The two UP members simply took more drastic action than is usually the case.
This dissension might seem to mean that there is general dissatisfaction among UP's members,
but it should not be interpreted in this way. It is all part of the campus political caldron. Action has attracted many people who formerly belonged to either Vox or UP, and it is worth noting that Brian Grace, Lawrence sophomore and the independent vice president of Vox, is a friend of Miner's and has been urging him to change his affiliation.
THE DISAGREEMENT of Miner and McCabe with UP is just one of the opening incidents in the annual spring revival of the campus political parties. Other altercations of various kinds will undoubtedly follow.
Disputes and disagreements of this kind are really no more than interesting sideshows. They do almost nothing to change the policies or make-up of the parties unless most of the officers or membership of the party deserts, and there is little chance of that happening.
—William H. Mullins
The Conservative Battle
The Republican counterattack against the violent spokesmen of the John Birch Society is finally beginning to make some progress.
This counterattack is being led by men long identified with anti-Communist and anti-statist causes within the Republican party, who feel that Robert Welch, the founder of the John Birch Society is tarnishing the conservative movement, betraying the cause he professes to serve, and gravely weakening the Republican party.
FOR EXAMPLE, the conservative weekly, National Review, this week asserts in a brilliant leading editorial: "Our opinion is that Robert Welch is damaging the cause of anti-communism . . . By the extravagance of his remarks, he repels, rather than attracts, a great following. . . ."
Fulton Lewis Jr., the conservative radio commentator, recently told an anti-Communist rally here that the John Birch Society was "silly" in waging a campaign to impeach Chief Justice Earl Warren and urged his audience to draw a distinction between conservative leaders such as Senator Barry Goldwater and Birchers like Welch.
"You're not going to get anything more to the right than Barry Goldwater, believe me!" Lewis told a conference called by the conservative Washington newsletter, Human Events.
ANOTHER PROMINENT conservative, Russell Kirk, also said recently that Mr. Welch was a "likable, honest, courageous, energetic man," who nevertheless, "by silliness and injustice of utterance," has become the "kiss of death" for any conservative enterprise.
More prominent leaders of the G. O. F., from former President Eisenhower and former Vice President Nixon to Representative Walter Judd and Senator Goldwater have recently talked privately about this same problem, so a move is now afoot to dissociate Welch and his kind from the Republican party.
As a general proposition, this is an argument that had better be left to the conservatives themselves, but one aspect of it may deserve some attention elsewhere. This is the tendency of some Democratic leaders not to help isolate the Welchers, to to identify them as much as possible with the Republican party.
For example, the chairman of the Democratic National Committee, John B. Bailey, recently said: "The Republicans are more and more taking their ideas from the reckless radicals of the far Right and echoing the efforts of those extreme agitators to breed fear and suspicion in our society."
MUCH MORE of this kind of thing has been creeping into Democratic campaign oratory, and it is obviously effective in scaring
the independent vote into the Democratic column. The trouble with it is that it just doesn't happen to be true.
As Mr. Bailey knows, Welch is not representative of a great many members of the John Birch Society itself, let alone the Republican party, and any organized effort to identify the G. O. P. with the extreme Right is as unfair as the Republican efforts in the past to identify the Democratic party with the extreme Left.
The Democrats have a large enough conservative target to shoot at without going to the right of Goldwater. The chairman of the Republican National Committee, William E. Miller, has been going around the country arguing that President Kennedy should have ordered the wall knocked down in Berlin. Barry Goldwater is dubious about the policies of collective security overseas and social security at home. There are fair topics for honest debate, but "guilt by association" is no more attractive coming from the Democrats than it was in the past from the Republicans.
If there is a major political problem developing in America today it is that the balance of power is swinging so heavily against the Republican party that the G.O.P. will no longer be a vigorous opposition in Washington or in the nation.
The Democratic majority in the Senate is 64 to 36 and in the House 260 to 174 (3 vacancies). The Democrats have 34 Governorships to 16 for the Republicans. The President's popularity is at a record high, and his Administration is dominating the news to a greater extent than any Administration since Franklin D. Roosevelt's first. In fact, if it weren't for the conservative Southern Democrats, there would be no effective opposition in the Congress right now.
ACCORDINGLY, NO matter what the provocations of the old McCarthy days might have been, the Democrats can afford to play the battle straight and fair. The
Welchers are not their problem, except may be in Texas, where General Walker has had the bad judgment to seek the Democratic nomination for Governor, and will no doubt destroy himself in the process.
The violent Rightists have been greatly overrated as a popular movement. They have money which can be effective in some Congressional races, and they are now the most active pamphleteers in the nation, but as a serious national political movement they are a tragic joke, and scarcely worth another divisive and dishonorable squabble between the two major parties.
(An article by James Reston in the Feb. 7 New York Times)
* *
"Song of a Modern Vigilante"
I sometimes fancy as I spy
That I excel the FBI
Right now I'm making little lists
Of folks I think are Communists
I have no proof on anyone,
And yet the lists are loads of fun.
All friends of foreign aid, I think,
Must be set down as rather pink.
A little pinker, not far off.
I list, perforce, the college prof.
And pinker yet the college crowd That lauds the Bill of Rights out loud.
U.N. supporters, as I've said,
Are also inso facto red;
And redder still, on my red lists,
Are all the integrationists.
Just for good measure in my labors.
I add a few of my good neighbors.
Thus I rejoice that you are,
Resides alone in you and me—
You may,good friend,be listed too.
Although, before my work is through.
Thus I rejoice that loyalty
This poem first appeared in the "Catholic News," publication of the Archdiocese of New York, and was later reproduced in "America."
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
*University of Kansas student newspaper*
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, trieweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912
Telephone 713.iking 3-2700
Extension 711. business room
Exhibition 776. business office
Extension 376 business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 12 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
EATON'S FRIDAY CARTOON
VOTE
WELL CAMPUS ELECTIONS COMING UP, AND WE'VE GOT A MILLION THINGS TO DO! POSTERS TO PAINT, DEBATES TO HOLD, SPEECHES TO WRITE, AND SINCE THIS IS FRIDAY AFTERNOON—LET'S GO DRINK!
From the Magazine Rack
Reflections on Teaching
In 25 colleges across the country, I have heard students say that their chief complaint is that there is no communication between students and faculty. The lack works both ways. The professors suffer by being isolated from the students, who, after all, are their reason for being there. Without contact, the teaching must necessarily become cut and dried. Let me repeat a noignant anecdote that I have published esewhere. At a small prestigious liberal arts college in the East a respected teacher was not promoted (read dropped). The students who, by waiting at tables, etc., know everything, indignantly told me the details. But the professor said to me, "How did you find out about it? And did they really care? If I had known they cared, I should have put up a fight."
THE LACK OF communication is often built into the architecture. A new building will have a good cafeteria for the students and a sumptuous common room for the teachers, yet there will be no place on the entire campus where a professor can have his cup of coffee with the students, signaling by his presence that he is available to chat. At some places—e.g., Carleton in Minnesota—they have tried to institute a regular common coffee hour, but few attend, it is too stiff.
Scheduled office hours also do not produce significant contact, because they are structured to "important questions," something to justify taking the teacher's time. (A student has remarked that he had to invent a "personal problem" if he wants an admired teacher to pay attention to him.) The worst abomination, though, is the English-type High Table, which subjects the faculty to being "with" the students during meals, without being with them at all.
Recent studies, reviewed by Rob
ert Knapp (in The American College), show that to the student the excellence of a teacher depends on his "interest in students," "fairness," "sympathy," "helpfulness," "sincerity," and "enthusiasm." (What is noteworthy, but not surprising, is that such student ratings correlate high with faculty ratings of one another in terms of "research" and "originality")
NEVERTHELESS, in our society, student-faculty relationships are inevitably embarrassed. Students are afraid of being rebuffed and "rejected." Teachers are afraid of becoming "emotionally involved." At its best, the teaching function is an erotic one; thus it always threatens to seem or to become, sexual. So the reinforcements of the idiotic sexual mores of society by the academic necessities of self-defense makes the professors timid altogether. It is an unusual scholar who, like Milton Konyvitz at Cornell, asks a fatherly question as a matter of course and follows up with practical concern.
To be sure, young people are cannibals and will mercilessly devour the time and the attentiveness of their respected elders, who have family and business of their own. Yet apart from the needs of the young, and the graceful and grateful rewards that the young know how to give, there is not much in teaching at a college. Teaching is worthwhile if it is teaching a subject matter for someone, or if it is teaching someone by means of a subject matter. If it is merely lecturing on a subject matter or hearing lessons, it is better done by tapes and films and teaching machines (which is, of course, what we are coming to).
(Excerpted from an article by Paul Goodman entitled "The Community of Scholars" in the March issue of Commentary)
Worth Repeating
A O
... professors are poor rebels. They have in fact, largely abdicated their responsibilities as members of the ideal faculty, probably for the same shabbily genteel reasons that have made them shy away from anything so sordid as the discussion of pay and working conditions. They have shown less professional character in making themselves respected than have plumbers and steamfitters...
"And the point behind the point is the fact that our faculties in all but the most depraved institutions still have the power if they will demand it and exercise it... A faculty incapable of self determination is incapable of governing a classroom dedicated to the discipline of mind in good order..."—John Ciardi
A Clear-Cut Case Of Black and White
MONTGOMERY, Ala. — (UPI) — A Negro girl, who lay injured in a street about 15 minutes while a white ambulance driver watched and waited for a Negro ambulance to show up, was improved but still remained in serious condition
Mary Louise Butler, 8, was struck by a truck Wednesday and 15 minutes elapsed before the white ambulance company rushed her to the hospital.
Investigating officer Roy Farnell said whoever called for the ambulance called a white ambulance company, "probably thinking the child was white." He said he heard the call on his police radio on the way to the scene.
"We waited, thinking every minute a Negro ambulance would show up," Farnell said. "and when nobody came, I asked the driver of the white ambulance if he would do me a personal favor and take the girl."
Upon arriving and finding the victim to be a Negro, Farnell said he suggested a Negro ambulance be dispatched.
"The driver said he would be glad to and backed the ambulance up and took the victim to the hospital," Farnell said.
Fake Flower Studied by KU Museum
By Janice Pauls
The three foot Kansas sunflower looked as though it had just been plucked from some dusty roadside or from the edge of a Kansas wheatfield. Tall, straight stems supported golden flowers. Brilliant green leaves reflected the atmosphere of a midwestern summer.
This specimen was not someone's backyard prize. It was standing in the center of the taxidermy laboratory on the top floor of the Museum of Natural History.
INVESTIGATION revealed that its appearance was rather misleading for even though it appeared authentic,it was completely man-made.
The tall stems were supported by wire and covered with paper toweling. Realistic painting made them look real. The golden flowers were made of plastic. The only real parts of the flower were the natural sunflower seeds which had been dipped in plastic before being inserted into the flower head.
George Young, taxidermist, explained that a similar procedure is used in making most of the background scenery for the museum displays. He described the steps involved.
ACTUAL LEAVES are set in a plaster cast or modeling clay. Plaster is then poured over the leaves, which leave their impression in the hardened form.
From these impressions, a twopiece metal mold is constructed. The mold is then placed in a hydraulic press with controlled heat and pressure.
Plastic cellulose sheets are slipped into the mold for a transfer of impressions. The plastic leaves are then cut and trimmed—the larger ones with a jigsaw.
OIL COLOR is applied to the artificial leaves to achieve the effect of daylight under artificial light. A base coat of pink paint followed by a light green coat is applied first, after which the leaves are hand-veined and given another coat of green color.
Similarly, grasses are constructed of plastic and formed in a mold. After the basic grass pattern is established, the blades can be trimmed and colored in any desired form.
Models of small cacti are made by removing the spines from the actual plant and then forming a rubber mold over the plant. When the final plaster cast is completed, the real spines are pasted to the cast.
Larger cacti are simply hollow shells as are the large trees. However, many branches and twigs are composed of natural wood. As often as possible, the natural sod is used for display purposes.
Page 3
Six Students Win Exchange Awards
Six KU students have been awarded direct exchange scholarships for study in European universities and two have been chosen alternates. The scholarships include tuition and complete maintenance.
Frances Mary Scholz, Kansas City, Mo., senior, has received a scholarship for study at the University of Mainz, Germany. She is a major in German, has maintained a 2.84 grade-point average and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa during her junior year.
SHE HAS HELD a residence hail scholarship at Sellards and was the recipient of the Inter-Residence Council, the German II and Carnegie undergraduate awards. In summer, 1960, she held a Carnegie scholarship for study at the University of Vienna. She also has been awarded a Woodrow Wilson scholarship for graduate study in 1962-63.
Alan D. Latta, Wichita senior majoring in German, has been given a direct exchange scholarship for study at the University of Zurich and Institute of Technology in Switzerland. He also has been awarded Woodrow Wilson and Danforth fellowships for graduate study next year.
Latta was elected to Phi Beta Kappa during his junior year with a 2.9 grade-point average. He is a Summerfield scholar, a member of Sachem, senior men's honor society; member of Alpha Kappa Lambda social fraternity, in which he has held several offices, and member of the KU Modern Languages Institute group that studied in France last summer.
Neal Richard Wagner, Topeka senior, has received a direct exchange scholarship for study at the University of Hamburg, Germany.
WAGNER HAS HELD National Merit and Summerfield scholarships. He is a member of Sigma Pi Sigma and Pi Mu Epsilon, professional societies.
Carol McMillen, Coldwater senior, has received a direct exchange scholarship for study at the University of Tubingen, Germany. She studied in Germany last summer as a member of the KU Modern Languages Institute.
Miss McMillen holds an Elizabetht M. Watkins scholarship, awarded to outstanding undergraduate women, and has been given a Woodrow Wilson fellowship for study next year. She has a 2.7 grade average and has been active in All-Student Council and Mortar Board.
MARY McCUE, Liberal senior, has been awarded a direct exchange scholarship for study at the University of Southampton, England. She has a 2.7 grade average and was elected to Mortar Board. She has been active in Junior Panhellenic and the People-to-People organization.
Judith P. Allin, graduate student and assistant instructor in Romance languages, will continue her studies with a direct exchange scholarship at the University of Clermont-Ferrand in France.
SHE RECEIVED her undergraduate degree from Graceland College, Lamoni, Iowa, and has been a graduate assistant in the freshman halls at KU.
Alternates for study at the University of Clermont-Ferrand are Janet Wright, Prairie Village senior, and Rosanna L. Thomas, Louisburg senior.
Symposium Orchestra Concert Ends Fourth KU Music Fete
By Tom Winston
KU's Fourth Annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music, in progress since Monday, concluded last night with the concert by the symposium orchestra in the University Theatre.
Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra, directed the symposium orchestra, which was composed of almost 50 players from the KU Symphony Orchestra, the KU faculty, and the Kansas City Philharmonic.
The "Variations for Orchestra" (1961) by Alvin King of Midland College, Nebraska, opened the program. The piece is a theme with eight variations and a tour de force for each section of the orchestra. The piano is used orchestrally, but it has a variation of its own.
A COMPOSITION by John Verrall of the University of Washington, called "Dark Night of St. John" (1949), was an interesting example
of four moods. The movements are called "Invocation," "Night Visions," "Meditation," and "Song of Praise."
An "Overture" (1960) by Wendal S. Jones of the University of Arizona opened the second half of the program. It is written in the 12-tone idiom pioneered by the late Arnold Schoenberg. The mood is other worldly, though not weird.
An "Overture for Strings" (1961) by H. Owen Reed, a teacher at Michigan State University, struck us as rather dull. It is written in the French style (slow, fast, slow) and it has a fugue in the middle, like Handel's "Messiah" overture.
THE PROGRAM ended with "Three American Dances" (1960-61) by James Niblock, also a teacher at Michigan State. Extremely listenable, and therefore quite appropriate to end the symposium, the dances are not particularly sophisticated in any way. They are just a lot of fun.
NORTH AMERICAN AVIATION WILL CONDUCT ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS TO DISCUSS HOW YOU CAN HELP AMERICA CONQUER SPACE
University Daily Kansan
At North American Aviation you can assist the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in the planned orderly exploration of space. NAA's Space & Information Systems Division is engrossed in some of the most exciting engineering and scientific space work in the world today. This includes manned, lunar, and earth orbital space vehicles. You can join in this work at North American if your major is in physics, math or engineering (electrical, mechanical, aeronautical, civil, or chemical)and if you are interested in any of the following fields:
- AERO-THERMODYNAMICS
- STRUCTURAL SCIENCES
- PROPULSION SYSTEMS
- POWER GENERATION SYSTEMS
- ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL SYSTEMS
- COMPUTER OPERATIONS
- OPERATIONS ANALYSIS
- FLIGHT DYNAMICS
- GUIDANCE AND CONTROL
EVIDENCE AND CONTROL
* SPACE COMMUNICATIONS
SPACE COMMUNICATIONS
- INSTRUMENTATIONS
ADVANCED SYSTEMS
- Interviews will be on April 13 - For time and place of interview contact your College Placement Office.
Friday, April 13, 1962
SPACE & INFORMATION SYSTEMS DIVISION
NORTH AMERICAN AVIATION
Shelter Information Available
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Three types of durable family fallout shelter systems can be do-it-yourself built and austerely equipped for about $1200 to $1650, according to a report available through the Office of Technical Services, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, D.C.
WHOLE CHICKEN
$2.00
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Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)
CRAM COURSE NO. 2: BIOLOGY
Biology is divided into several phyla, or classes. First is the protozoa, or one-celled animal. All life stems from the one-celled animal. Over a space of millions of years, life slowly evolved until today we have animals with as many as 12 cells. Some larger mammals claim they have 14 to 16 cells, but you know how larger mammals lie.
The grisly shadow of final exams looms over us, so today in this column instead of merry quips and homely saws, you will find hard facts—quick cram courses to help you through the ordeal ahead.
The second class of animals is the periphera—a shadowy category that borders often on the vegetable. Take, for example, the sponge. The sponge is definitely an animal. The washcloth, on the other hand, is definitely not.
Next we come to the arthropoda, or insects. Most people, of course, find insects fairly repulsive—and yet, if one will but look, there is exquisite beauty in the insect world. Who does not remember the lovely insect poems of William Cullen Sigafoos—such enchanting lyrics as *Tumbling Along* with the *Tumbling Tumblebug*, *Fly Gently*, *Sweet Aphid*, and *Gnats My Mother Taught Me*. Mr. Sigafoos has been inactive since the invention of DDT.
Our next category is the mollusca—lobsters, shrimp, and the like. Lobsters are generally found under rocky projections on the ocean bottom. Shrimp are generally found in a circle around a small bowl containing cocktail sauce. Marlboro Cigarettes are generally found at any tobacco counter or vending machine.
What have Marlboro Cigarettes got to do with biology? Well, actually, not very much. It must be remembered, however, that the makers of Marlboro pay me for writing this column, and they are inclined to get surly if I fail to mention their product.
Mind you, I enjoy singing the praises of Marlboro—and so will you once you try that flavorful tobacco, that fine filter which lets the flavor come through undiminished. It is a great pleasure to smoke Marlboros and a great pleasure to write about them, but sometimes, I must confess, I find it a bit difficult to work the commercial into the column. Some years ago, for example, I did a piece about Alexander the Great, and, believe you me, it took a heap of stretching to drop in a plug for Marlboro. The way I finally managed it was to have Alexander go to the Oracle at Delphi and say, "Oracle, I have conquered the world and tasted all its pleasures, but somehow I am not content. I know that somewhere there must be a joy I have not yet experienced." To which the Oracle replied,
J.C. PLEYER
There is no great difficulty distinguishing the two
"Yes, Alexander, there is such a joy, but, alas, the time is not yet. I refer to Marlboro Cigarettes which will not be invented for another 2500 years." Whereupon Alexander fell into a sulk from which he never recovered . . . Well sir, there is no question I sold a lot of cigarettes with this ingenious commercial, but the gang down at the American Academy of Arts and Letters gave me a mighty good razzing, you may be sure.
But I digress. Back to biology, and the most advanced phylum of all—the chordata, or vertebrates. There are two kinds of vertebrates—those whose backbones run horizontally and those whose backbones run vertically. Generally, there is no great difficulty in distinguishing the two varieties. A fish, for instance, has a horizontal backbone, and a man has a vertical backbone. Occasionally, however, you run into a problem—like a fish who swims upright and a man who spends most of his time in the sack. How, in such a case, do you tell one from another? Science struggled with this sticky question for centuries, but finally Sigafoos of M.I.T. came up with a brilliantly simple answer. Offer the creature a Marlboro. If it is a fish, it will refuse. If it is Homo sapiens, it will accept. In fact, the more sapient, the quicker the acceptance.
© 1962 Max Shulman
- * *
The makers of Marlboro, upright vertebrates all, remind you that their fine cigarettes are available in pack or box wherever cigarettes are sold in any of the 50 states.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 13, 1962
Around the Campus
Retirement Banquet Set
A banquet honoring four retiring members of the KU faculty will be held May 4 at the Kansas Union. The length of service averages over 44 years each and totals 177 years.
They will receive emeritus status on June 30.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will present each honoree a certificate of service.
The four are: Arthur R. Bailey, instructor of engineering manufacturing process since 1911; Ruth Hoover, associate professor of physical education, 1922; Worthie Herr, professor of botany, 1922, and Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology since 1916.
Alumni Meetings Set for Next Week
KU representatives will be in western Kansas next week to rally alumni enthusiasm for private support for the University.
The meetings, sponsored by the GUF advisory board, are aimed at acquaintng alumni with the role of private support and its significance to the University.
Irvin E. Youngberg, executive secretary of the Endowment Association; William A. Kelly, acting dean of the School of Law, and Maurice Barker, executive secretary of the Greater University Fund, will attend alumni meetings in Garden City and Colby Tuesday and Wednesday.
Barker said private gifts to KU make possible programs not supported by state funds. He said these include student loans, scholarships and research activities.
Approximately 1,000 alumni who live in the 31 western Kansas counties have been invited to the Garden City and Colby meetings.
KU Hosts Annual Panhellenic Meet
Duties of the junior Panhellenic Council, sorority pledge guidance, Panhellenic unity, and sorority chapter standards were discussed at the annual Big Eight Panhellenic convention Sunday at KU.
The presidents of the Big Eight Panhellenic Councils, a second council representative, and the council adviser from each Big Eight school attended the convention. Twenty-seven delegates were at the convention.
The KU delegates included Camilla Swayze, Shawnee Mission junior, president of the KU Panhellenic Council; Mary Jean Cowell, St. Louis junior, past president of the KU Council; Ruth Ann James, Kansas City, Mo., junior, vice president of the KU council, and Emily Taylor, dean of women.
The president of the Big Eight Panhellenic Council, Funice House from Kansas State University, was in charge of the convention arrangements. Delegates were housed at the Alpha Delta Pi house.
Six Faculty Attend Sociology Meeting
Carroll D. Clark, chairman of the KU sociology and anthropology department, gave the keynote address at the 25th anniversary meeting of the Midwest Sociological Society in Des Moines, Iowa recently.
Clark, the former president of the society, spoke on "Sociology and the Midwest in the Perspective of 25 Years."
E. Gordon Ericksen, professor of sociology and anthropology; Charles K. Warriner, associate professor of sociology and anthropology; Ray P. Cuzzort, associate professor of sociology and anthropology; Neale Carman, chairman of the department of Romance languages and literatures, and Stuart Levine, assistant professor of English also participated in the program.
6 Participate in Sociology Meet
Six KU faculty members are taking part in the Midwest Sociological Society's annual meeting in Des Moines, Iowa.
Carroll D. Clark, chairman of the department of sociology and anthropology, was the keynote speaker in yesterday's meeting. He spoke on "Sociology and the Midwest in the Perspective of 25 Years."
E. Gordon Ericksen, professor of sociology and anthropology and a member of the society's executive council, is chairman of the section on rural and urban sociology.
Charles K. Warriner, associate professor of sociology and anthropology, will give a research paper entitled "Some Changing Issues." Ray P. Cuzzort, associate professor of sociology and anthropology, will give critical evaluations of four scheduled papers.
J. Neale Carman, chairman of the department of Romance languages and literature, will speak on "The Czechs of Republic County, Kansas: Measured by Abandonment of Czech for English." Stuart Levine, assistant professor of English, will address the society on "Social Change and the Concert Audience."
Other faculty members attending the meeting are Marston McCluggage, professor of human relations and a member of the society's publications committee; Dale C. Johnson, instructor in sociology and anthropology; and Norman G. Jacobs, assistant professor of sociology and anthropology.
Pharmacy Committee at KU
Several members of the Accreditation Committee of the American Council on Pharmaceutical Education will speak at 4 p.m. Monday in 124 Malott.
The meeting, which all pharmacy students are required to attend, was originally scheduled for Tuesday but has been changed to Monday.
Jewish Passover Dinner
Scheduled for Thursday
Jewish students are invited to the annual Passover Sedar to be sponsored by the KU Hillel Counselorship. The dinner will be held at 6:30 p.m., Thursday at the Eldridge Hotel. Reservations can be made by contacting Joseph Rubenstein, head of special collections at Watson Library. The dinner will cost $1.25.
Teacher Charts British Fleas
GLOBUCESTER, England — (UPI)
— Starting from scratch, school teacher Robert George worked 11 years to locate, tabulate and chart the 52 species of fleas found in Britain.
GLOUCESTER, England — (IPL)
Ground-breaking for the construction of a new 10-story residence hall for men began this week in the "Daisy Field" tract near 15th and Iowa streets.
New Men's Hall Begun
The unnamed building will house 656 students and is scheduled for completion by September, 1963. It will cost $2,600,000, part of which will be private investment.
The new dormitory will be the building farthest south in a group that includes Lewis and Templin halls, each housing 432 students, and Hashinger, now under construction, which will house 444. They are eight stories high.
Land for the building was acquired from Emil B. Dade, professor of business administration at KU.
Engineering Now In Summer Camp
An engineering division open to high school juniors and seniors has been added to the Midwestern Music and Art Camp to be held June 17- July 28 at the University of Kansas.
The purpose of the six-week engineering camp is to stimulate interest in modern engineering materials, science and design. The students will be introduced to material during lectures, laboratory work and field trips under the direction of KU faculty members.
Laboratory classes of eight students each will be held in the laboratories of the aero-space, chemical civil, electrical, mechanical, metalurgical and nuclear engineering departments.
Field trips to modern engineering installations in the surrounding area will be made once each week.
In addition to the engineering studies, students may participate in a planned program of recreation, including athletic activities and cultural events.
Enrollment in the engineering division will be limited to 30 students. Cost of attending the camp will be $325 which will cover room, board, tuition, field trip transportation, hospital fee, camp activities and parties. The fee for students living in Lawrence will be $100.
A number of scholarships, provided by Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Burt of Hutchinson, are available for interested and qualified students who need financial assistance.
Dr. Craft Will Speak Tonight
Dr. Robert Craft, pastor of Leawood Baptist Church, Kansas City, will speak at 7:30 tonight at the Southern Baptist Student Center. His topic will be "The Priesthood of the Believer." All interested students and faculty are invited.
GRAND OPENING Tavern Peppermint Club
Tavern
Home Of The Twist
Talented floor shows Friday, Saturday. Two shows 9-11. Enter if you dance, sing, or play a musical instrument and are good. 3 cash prizes. Band starts at 8:00. Come early and get a seat. No stags, dates only. You must be legal age.
15 minutes from Lawrence — $ \frac{1}{2} $ mile East of Tonganoxie on Highway 40. Admission — 75c per person.
For reservations call VI 5-2331 between 6-10 p.m.
Owners — Ted & Ted Weeks
Foreign Food Will Spice Banquet
Home cooked foreign dishes from 15 nations will be served at the International Club banquet beginning at 6:30 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Preparations are being made to serve 500 persons. During the dinner, music of 15 nations will be played, and after the meal a program of foreign music and dancing will be presented by the International Club.
Tickets are on sale at the information desk in the Kansas Union. Members of the International Club may buy tickets for $1.75, tickets for non-members, $2.50. They may also be obtained from members of the International Club or from A. Abdul-Rahim, president of the International Club, at the club's meeting in the Kansas Union tonight.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
Library Features Western Display
Western Books 1961, an exhibition involving the work of printers and publishers from British Columbia and the western United States, including Hawaii, is now on display at Watson Library.
The exhibition is made up of 23 books chosen from 52 entries. Many of the books are concerned with western Americana, art and architecture, and there is a small number of poetry books, cook books and small gift books.
The exhibition, which travels mostly through the western United States, will be at KU until April 21.
Man Denies Poison Attempt
EVANSVILLE—(UPI)-Ralph W. Krauss, 54, a laundry owner, pleaded innocent recently to federal charges of sending poisoned chocolates to Miss Emma Miller, 82, a former employee.
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Page 5
University Daily Kansan
Couples Tell They Will Marry; Most Plan a June Wedding
Wilkinson-Bland
Mr. and Mrs. Sydney C. Wilkinson of St. Louis, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Ann, to Murrel W. Bland, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde M. Bland of Ottawa.
Miss Wilkinson is a sophomore in the School of Fine Arts. Bland is a junior in the School of Journalism. The wedding will be June 9 in St. Louis, Mo.
Mary
Carol Wilkinson
Smith-Mahaffy
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Smith of Penns Grove, N. J., announce the engagement of their daughter, Judith Suzanne, to Lorrence A. Mahaffy, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Lorrence A. Mahaffy of Coffeyville.
Miss Smith is a senior in psychology and a member of Alpha Micron Pi, social sorority. Mahaffy is a senior in aeronautical engineering and a member of the Navy ROTC program. He is in Scabbard and Blade and Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Tau, engineering fraternities.
No date has been set for the wedding.
1950.
Judith Smith
☆ ☆ ☆
NASHVILLE
Mary Anne Marshall
Marshall-Fisher
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Marshall of Belleville, Ill., announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Anne, to Charles B. Fisher, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fisher of Prairie Village.
Miss Marshall is a sophomore in sociology and a member of Lewis Hall. Fisher is a senior in business administration and will graduate from KU in August. He is a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Miller-Stephens
Mr. Charles A. Miller of Thomas, Okla., announces the engagement of his daughter, Margaret, to Jack D. Stephens, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otis J. Stephens of Oklahoma City, Okla.
Miss Miller is a senior in education. Stephens is a junior in the School of Medicine and a member of Phi Beta Pi, professional medical fraternity.
The wedding date has been set for June 5.
THE GREAT SMITH WOMEN'S CLUB OF AMERICA
Margaret Miller
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Riedmiller of Glasco announce the engagement of their daughter, Carole Ann, to Robert W. Scott of Fremont. Neb.
Riedmiller-Scott
Miss Riedmiller is a KU graduate and is currently teaching music in Kuiu High School.
Scott has a research assistantship at KU and is working towards a Ph.D. in geology.
The wedding date has been set for June 2.
THE COUNTY OF LANCASTER IS IN A GOOD WAY TO SAVE HER SELF.
Carole Riedmiller
Kirsten's
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Sports Wear
● Majestic
● White Stag
● Helen Harper
● Open evenings
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
GOOD FOOD
DAY and NIGHT
P. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
Friday, April 13. 1962
Martha Graves
Graves-Latta
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Graves Jr., of Independence announce the engagement of their daughter, Martha Ann, to Alan Dennis Latta, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Latta of Wichita.
Miss Graves is a junior and a member of Sigma Kappa social sorority. Latta is a senior and a member of Alpha KappaLambda social traternity, Phi Beta Kappa and Sachem.
A summer wedding is planned.
McGee-Lawson
Mrs. Hazel E. McGee of Butte, Mont., announces the engagement of her daughter, Jerilyn Ann, to Theodore E. Lawson, son of Dr. and Mrs. Earl L. Lawson of Medford. Ore.
Miss McGee graduated from Saint Mary College at Xavier and is now a graduate student in theatre. She is also an instructor of speech and Community Theatre assistant.
Lawson is a senior in theatre and drama and a sound and publicity assistant for the University Theatre. No wedding date has been set.
No wedding date has been set.
JULIE BARNES
Jerilyn McGee
Check your opinions against L'M's Campus Opinion Poll #20
1 Is a B.A. good enough for the job you want?
SAMSUNG
Yes
2 Do U.S. movies weaken our image abroad?
SAM GRAD
EXEC. V.P.
PRIVATE
Yes No
3 What's the smart way for a cigarette to dress?
LM
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LM
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L&M
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HERE'S HOW MEN AND WOMEN AT 56 COLLEGES VOTED.
box ... 54%...64%
soft pack ... 46%...36%
Yes...57%...72%
No...43%...28%
MEN WOMEN
Yes ... 34%... 51%
No ... 66%... 49%
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AC3-145-01678243
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 13, 1962
Along the
JAY HAWKER
trail
By Steve Clark
Here's a salute to the "Old Pro," whoever and wherever he may be.
COACH FLOYD Temple's crew did everything within their power to make the "Old Pro" eat his words by sweeping both games of a doubleheader.
First, a prediction that Nebraska would win the Big Eight championship in baseball. Second, the implication that the Jayhawkers are cellar-bound.
The "Old Pro" was persistent however, and the headline on that day's story was "Kansas Slows Down Nebraska's Title Hopes."
There was more baseball on tap for that afternoon, and Kansas again defeated the Cornhuskers again to move into a first place tie with Missouri and Oklahoma in the Big Eight.
THE JAYHAWKERS are off to a fine start. They stand 3-0 in league play and 5-2 overall. Last year they were able to win but five games overall and two in the league, so KU has already improved over last year with the season but one-third completed.
A KU baseball player related to me an incident that happened on the Jayhawkers recent trip to Lincoln, Neb., to meet the Cornhusker's in a three-game series.
He said that all Kansas had was a catcher (Keith Abercrombie) who somehow managed to hit .345 last year.
ON THE SPORTS page of an unidentified Lincoln newspaper was a column entitled the "Old Pro." Within the column were some astounding statements.
Another feather in KU's cap was their split with the University of Houston. Oklahoma State, which last year won the Big Eight was held scoreless in two games by the Cougars. The Jayhawkers tagged Houston for 14 runs in splitting the series.
The Jayhawkers open their 1962 home season at Quigley Field, south of Allen Field House, today against arch-rival Kansas State in two seven inning games. Tomorrow the two teams meet in a nine inning contest starting at 1:30 p.m.
THE GAME WILL be broadcast by KU Sports Network director Tom Hedrick over KLWN.
The Jayhawkers have an improved team this year and could be the surprise of the conference.
Fan support means a lot to athletes. The players report real good support at Texas Lutheran and Nebraska. The Cornhuskers fans filled the bleachers and about 200 persons stood along the fences for both games. Even after NU's most humiliating losses the fans returned the next day.
Jay Runners Top
KANSAS APPEARS to have a good team this year, worthy of fan support. Maybe the "Old Pro" was right in picking his team to win the Big Eight. The fans turned out to see the games.
O.K. if this will help, I'll do it.
The Kansas Jayhawkers will win the Big Eight in baseball.
Kansas' record-shattering Distance Medley triumph of 9:46.4 in the Texas Relays is the fastest ever by a Big Eight team at this distance, dipping under the Jayhawkers' 9:48.8 American Indoor record engineered in the Kansas State Invitational. Bill Dotson anchored both bursts with Miles of 4:03.9.
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Baseball, Track, Golf
Kansas in Action; Golf Team Second
KU is presently leading the Big Eight along with Missouri and Oklahoma, all with 3-0 records. The Jayhawks handed the Nebraska Cornhuskers three stunning defeats last weekend.
The Kansas Jayhawker baseball team opens its 1962 home season this afternoon at Quigley Field against the Kansas State Wildcats in two seven-inning games.
COACH FLOYD Temple will make his first lineup change against the Wildcats. Dick Rader, Wichita junior, will start at third base in place of veteran Jim Esliveris.
Although neither players are hitting well, Rader holds a slim .111 to .063 advantage over Evilsizer. Temple said he made the change "in hopes of improving the defense some."
Jerry Waldschmidt, who has a 3-0 record and a 1.59 earned run average, is the probable starter for the opening game of the series. Temple is expected to start Roger Brock (1-1) in the second game and go with either Monte Stewart (2-1) or Carl Nelson (0-0) in Saturday's single game.
OUTFIELDER KEN HENSLEY is leading the club in hitting with a .333 batting average and seven runs batted in. Behind him is catcher Keith Abercrombie with a .286 batting average and outfielder Tony Leiker, infielders Hubert Bumgardner and Richard Fanning, all with .250 averages.
Meanwhile the Kansas track squad meets Abilene Christian and New Mexico in a triangular tomorrow afternoon.
Abilene Christian, coached by Oliver Jackson, is undefeated in team competition this spring. The Wildcats have won the Southwestern Recreation meet, Border Olympics.
West Texas Relays and San Angelo Relays. In addition they beat Houston, Texas Tech and Texas A&M in a quadrangular.
THE NEW MEXICO Wolfback has a seven-two record in dual and triangular meet competition. NMU holds triangular victories over Texas Tech and Texas Western, and Wyoming and the Albuquerque Track Club.
KU's golf team showed surprising strength yesterday in a triangular meet with K-State and Wichita U. at the Wichita Country Club. The Hawks' four-man team, which does not have a single letterman, carded a 311 to capture second place in the meet. K-State won the event with a 307 and Wichita had 323.
In dual competition New Mexico has defeated Utah, Colorado State, Brigham Young, while losing to Arizona and to Colorado.
KU'S JOHN HANNA was matched against Wichita's ace Johnny Stevens, who won the Kansas State amateur title in 1960. Hanna's 38-37-75 topped Stevens' 39-37-76.
The meet was played in strong winds and cool temperatures over the par 35-36-71 Wichita Country Club.
Other scores for KU showed Reid Holbrook, 42-39-81; Paul Carlson, 37-38-75; Doug Kieswatter, 39-41-80 and KU's fifth man, Dick Haitbrink, 42-43-85.
JERRY SHAW of K-State won medalist honors with a one over par -72.
Markley said the players are playing as well or better than they were at this time last year.
KU travels to Missouri next Saturday for a dual meet with the Tigers.
By Dick West United Press International
"Brave" Riding Reporter Finds Race Car Floorboards Handy
There is a little ritual that takes place nearly every time a newspaper reporter interviews a champion racing car driver.
Moss and a group of other top sports car racers were here to participate in the American debut of the British Motor Corp.'s new Austin 850, which is being billed as the United Kingdom's answer to the Volkswagen.
The reporter will ask what is the most hazardous thing about racing and the driver will reply that it is driving through traffic on the way to the track.
"The best time to interview Moss is when he's driving," one of the BMC officials told me. "He is relaxed then and is more his natural self."
So I signed a waiver relieving the BMC of responsibility for life and limb, and climbed into a seat beside a small, bland, suntanned individual who is an acknowledged giant of the crash helmet set.
And it was this, as much as anything, that drew me out to the Marlboro raceway in Washington, D.C., to have a talk with Stirling Moss, the celebrated British break-neck.
Ever since Ben Hur, or one of those early speed demons, got a laugh with that line, it has been a staple commodity of pit stop journalism.
"Is it true that you fellows regard highway driving as more perilous than racing?" I asked as he slammed home the first gear and hurtled down the straightaway.
"That's a lot of ------ nonsense," replied Moss, whose use of the Queen's English is rather pungent. "The only thing dangerous about highway driving is that you never know what some idiot in another car will do."
I wanted to pin down, once and for all, whether these knights of the exhaust pipe really feel that highway traffic is more dangerous than speedway racing.
That was the end of the interview
as far as I was concerned, for we were then approaching the first curve, which Moss either didn't see or chose to disregard.
He, however, kept on talking, not only around the curve but around the hairpin turn at one end of the track. Evidently, he thought that I was interested in seeing the fine points of race driving demonstrated.
Actually, the only thing I was interested in was why I had been fool enough to sign that waiver.
Since I took no notes, the only thing I can tell you about the rest of the ride is this: the floorboards of the Austin 850 are able to withstand the continuous pressure of a 150-pound passenger pressing against them at maximum force with both feet.
P-T-P Workshops Meeting Today
Students interested in summer workshops to improve international human relations are invited to meet with a field representative of the Lisle Fellowship Foundation at 4 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union.
The program is part of the People-to-People program headed by former President Eisenhower. Summer workshops will be held in California, Washington, D.C., Denmark, Germany, Italy, Japan, Jamaica and Latin America. The foundation also sponsors an exchange program with the Soviet Union and an exploratory community development unit in Colombia, South America.
During the summer session's first week the fellows from different countries become acquainted with one another. They then will spend four days living in homes or institutions sponsored by community leaders.
In the closing days of the six-week session the fellows will meet again to relate their experiences to situations and relationships they might face at home, in school, in their work or in their community.
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Model U.N. Blocks Seating of Chinese
By Steve Clark and Jerry Musil
A resolution introduced by India to admit Red China to the United Nations was tabled at the opening session of the Model U.N. this morning in Hoch Auditorium.
The motion to table was made by Argentina.
LEGISLATION WAS bogged down in the opening session by continual points or order, points of information and calls for recess. A small crowd of about 100 watched the session.
The resolution on Red China was scheduled to be debated immediately after the start of the session. However, house rules were suspended by a two-thirds vote to allow debate of a resolution concerning nuclear testing.
The resolution, which was defeated, called for immediate cessation of nuclear testing, the opening of lands to continuous U.N. inspection teams, and the continuing of the arrangement until further agreements can be made.
THE DEFEATED resolution was an amended version of the original resolution introduced by the United States. Part "b" of the original resolution read;
To open their lands to U.N. inspection teams, to be formed immediately, whenever seismic evidence is presented by any nation followed by the charge that there may have been a test band violation."
Jordan introduced the amendment
to change part "b" to read. "To open their lands to continuous U.N. inspection teams, to be formed immediately."
Communist China was admitted an observer nation by the vote of the General Assembly in the first Mode U.N., held three years ago. The Soviet delegation contends that the Assembly, rather than the Steering Committee, should be allowed to decide what nations may observe.
THE SECOND SESSION WAS scheduled to begin at 2 p.m. today. The agenda called for introduction of a resolution dealing with U.N. finances.
The USSR said the General Assembly has the right to determine who will sit in on the Assembly's meetings as observer nations.
The session closed with the defeat of an appeal of the Steering Committee's decision to admit South Viet Nam, South Korea and West Germany as observer nations and to omit East Germany, North Korea and North Viet Nam from the Model U.N.
The appeal was made by Pat Piggott, Kansas City, Mo., senior and chairman of the Soviet delegation. He said the Steering Committee's decision was "an effrontry to the Communist Bloc."
Saturday's session is scheduled for 10 a.m., with recess scheduled for 4 p.m.
People-to-People will hold interviews Sunday for the position of chairman and vice chairman of KU p-T-p. Anyone interested in applying for one of these positions may obtain an application blank at the P-t-P office in room 113 of the Kansas Union. Applications must be in today so applicants can be notified of interview appointments before Sunday.
Masons, members of the Order of the Eastern Star, children of members of Eastern Star or Masons are eligible for the award which will be granted to a junior for use in his senior year.
Interviews Sunday For P-t-P Officers
Two $300 scholarships will be awarded to KU students again this year by the Kansas Order of the Eastern Star, a distaff organization of the Masonic Lodge.
DUBUQUE, Iowa — (UPI) -- Despite "caution," "danger," and "dead end" signs posted at the end of a street by police, hot rodders still crash through the barrier.
Bridle On Horsepower
Eastern Star to Give Two Scholarships
Deadline for filing applications with the Aids and Awards Office is June 1. The awards will be given solely on the basis of merit.
The cops are giving it one more try with a new sign that says "whoa."
Tour Changes Forced —
Department. They will travel on to New York by bus and take off from there for Brussels.
ANOTHER RESTRICTION placed on the tour is the necessity for following an itinerary. After the week in Berlin the students will travel to various parts of Europe, but they will be required to maintain mail contact with the Brussels office.
SOUTHERN PINES, N.C.-(UPI)
Mrs. Ernest L. Ives, sister of United Nations Ambassador Adlai Stevenson, yesterday resigned from the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), saying she does not agree with its policies.
"The main purpose of the itineraries and the requirement to report to the Brussels office," Jarvis said "is to let us know in the Brussels office where you are in case someone in the U.S. needs to locate you."
Some of the students on the tour will not be U.S. citizens. One of them asked if foreign nationals might have trouble getting out of West Berlin once they were in.
Jarvis said, "The West Berlin government extended the invitation to us, and the State Department is behind us." He stated that he did not think there would be any difficulties with the four-power governmental arrangement in West Berlin.
(Continued from page 1)
Jarvis could not give an exact figure on how much the summer in Europe will cost. He said it will vary with the amount each student wants to spend.
"The point has been reached at which I no longer can be a silent supporter of such official views. And membership constitutes such approval. Resignation is a wrench, but I feel I have no other alternative."
SOUTHERN PINES N.C.—(UPI)
Prominent DAR Member Quits Because of Policy
One student asked if it would be possible to sell their return trip tickets in case they decided they would rather not return with the P-t-P group.
"No," Jarvis said. "That would be a violation of the charter flight regulations, and you would run the risk of losing your passport."
(In a telephone interview this morning with a member of the passport division of the U.S. Government Office in Kansas City, Mo., it was revealed that a passport can be revoked under only "very few" circumstances. The official said that not staying with a tour like that proposed by P-t-P would in no way violate passport regulations.)
Mrs. Ives, a granddaughter of a founder of the DAR, said an increasing number of DAR policies "are wholly out of line with the policies of the United States of America as formulated by both the Republican and Democratic party, and as overwhelmingly endorsed by a majority of American voters."
"I find it hard to believe that disapproval of the United Nations, this great organization for peace, is representative of DAR membership as a whole," she wrote.
She said this trend reached its climax when the DAR "was unable to support the children's fund, the UNICEF program of the United Nations."
The letter was sent from her winter home here to Mrs. Ashmead White, DAR president general in Washington, Mrs. Ives said she offered her resignation "with very great regret."
In her letter of resignation, Mrs. Ives said the DAR has disregarded approval of its membership, discussion has been discouraged "and the holding of alternative views frowned on."
BUSINESS MACHINES CO.
Jarvis was asked why P-t-P did not take advantage of existing student travel programs rather than arranging one of their own. He answered that, "such flights have not worked in the past, and they are not in line with the purpose of the P-t-P program."
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 13, 1962
Live it up with a Lively One from FORD!
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U.S. Steel's Blough Answers Criticism
NEW YORK — (UFI) — Board Chairman Roger M. Blough of U.S. Steel answered his critics from President Kennedy to the man in the street by calling the announced increase in steel prices "almost negligible."
THE STATEMENT did little to stem the tide of criticism flowing from the White House, although some government economists said privately the price rise would not hurt business expansion.
Blough read a 1,500-word statement at a jammed news conference yesterday and declared the $6 per ton hike in steel prices would ultimately benefit the nation.
There were these immediate reactions to Blough's statement:
- In Washington, U.S. Atty. Gen Robert F. Kennedy ordered a Grand Jury investigation in New York of whether the price increase involved criminal violations of antitrust laws.
- Secretary of Commerce Orville Hodges held a news conference of his own in Manhattan and said the men responsible for the price increase "said in effect that United States Steel comes first, the United States of America second."
- Prices on the New York stock exchange plunged to a new low for 1962 with steel issues leading the decline. U.S. Steel fell 11 s.
BLOUGH, 58, closely guarded by city detectives and other security guards, opened the nationally televised news conference with an obvious reference to Kennedy, who has called the price increase "wholly unjustified and irresponsible."
"We do not question the sincerity of anyone who disagrees with the action we have taken," he said. "Neither do we believe that anyone can properly assume that we are less deeply concerned with the welfare, the strength and the vitality of this nation than are those who have criticized our actions."
BLOUGH SAID the "almost negligible" price rise was necessary to modernize steel plants. He said this would create more jobs, taxes and make the United States stronger in worldwide economic competition.
Blough said U.S. Steel had never given the administration a pledge not to raise prices. "No assurances were asked and none were given regarding price action as far as I am concerned or any other individual connected with our corporation," he said.
Blough, who earns about $300,000 a year as U.S. Steel board chairman, said that steel costs since 1958 "have gone up far more than the announced increase of yesterday."
Local Pageant Has Ten KU Finalists
Ten KU women were among the 12 finalists chosen in the preliminary Miss Lawrence Pageant last night.
The KU finalists include Joannie Burger, Prairie Village freshman; Mary Lynn Cooper, Prairie Village sophomore; Sherril Murrow, Topeka sophomore; June Owens, Alta-mont junior; Nancy Elaine Rusk, Lawrence sophomore.
Diana Sparks, Lawrence sophomore; Judy Stafer, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Mary Tramposh, Lenexa freshman; Susan Olsen, Topeka junior; and Sunday Searles, Leavenworth freshman.
Other finalists include Jacque Brahler and Mimi Frink, both of Lawrence.
The Miss Lawrence finals will be at 8 p.m. Friday in the Lawrence High School auditorium. The contestants will present a short talent act and model a long evening gown and a one-piece bathing suit.
The winner of the contest will receive a $100 scholarship and the two runners-up will receive $50 scholarships from the Pepsi-Cola Co.
Miss Lawrence will compete in the 1963 Miss Kansas Pageant preliminary contest of the Miss America Pageant.
HODGES, FORMER North Carolina governor, met with newsmen about 30 minutes after Blough made his defense.
Tickets to the Miss Lawrence Pageant are on sale in the Kansas Union. Tickets will also be on sale at the dorms and organized houses April 16-18.
He said that "any firm or industry is free to set prices as it sees fit." But he added that "it is free to make mistakes and I believe the steel industry's mistake is a tragic one.
"Its action is a disservice to the country and to the business community as a whole."
"AS A FORMER businessman," he declared, "I am confident that the business community as a whole is disturbed by this development."
Hodges admitted that while steel prices have not risen in four years labor cost per ton of steel did not increase "essentially" during the same period.
Blough brought laughter when he answered a reporter that there was no political motivation he knew of in the price rise.
"That is a field that I know nothing about as I think you gentlemen can see," he remarked.
Hodges said he did "not enjoy criticizing a major American industry." But he declared the government has "a clear responsibility to speak out when private actions are taken which may well jeopardize the continuation of a healthy free enterprise system."
Blough's announced price increase to $176 a ton came just five days after the industry signed a contract with the steelworkers union praised by Kennedy as noninflationary. Blough has headed U.S. Steel for seven years.
Page 9
International Students: Students wishing to apply for the 1962 Summer Cross-Campaign, a program of Springs, Colorado, on June 9-16 should see the office of the Dean of Students for application forms. This terminal program is at no cost to the student providing he or she will receive funding.
Applications for interviews for "People
Tell" may be obtained in the P-t-P Office.
113 Kansas Union until 5 p.m., Friday.
Interviews will be this Sunday,
April.
Official Bulletin
teacher interviews:
April 13 Jim Barcelow, Public Schools
Angeles, Calif.
Teacher Interviews;
April 16 — Walter Dingus, Dist. Supt.
Unif. Sch. Dist. San Marino, Calif.
nif. Sch. Dist., San Marino, ca.
715-462-3900, 800-345-2900,
Fridgedge Hotel, All Jewish students are invited. Those planning to attend please
include:
home, VI 3-0626. Dinner will be $1.25.
TODAY
Hiliel Services: 7:30 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Dr.
International Club: 7:30 p.m. Big 8
International Club: 10:30 a.m. Zafrulla Khan, Pakistan delegate to U.N., will speak, followed by party games from many lands, dancing, and refresh-
Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m., 1228
Oread. Dr. Robert Craft, Leawood Baptist Church, Kansas City, Kansas, "The Priesthood of the Believer."
inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
7.5 hours, Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union
Lutheran Services: 8:30 & 11 a.m. Immanuel Lutheran Church, 17th & Vermont, 5 p.m., Wednesday, Danforth Chanel.
SUNDAY
Catholic Mass: 9 & 11 a.m. Fraser Hall (Newman Club).
University Daily Kansan
a.m. Danforth Chapel.
"Inside-People Forum": 2 p.m., Kansas
State University.
Annual International Dinner: 6:30 p.m.
Kansas Union. Featured dishes for this affair, sponsored by the KU International Club, will be: saurabruttin, dolma, emparmanda, polen kottbullar, & karjaria, polen kottbullar. This service is provided by, members of the Club.
John Ryland, Caldwell senior, was one student who said he was not notified of the procedure for having his picture taken.
KUOK: 3—News & Weather; 3:05
WKUOK: 4—News & Weather;
Concert: 6—News & Weather; 6:15
Horizons; 8—Hagen's Hothouse; 10—News
Portals of Praver & Sign Off
"I CALLED ESTES STUDIO a couple of days ago and I was told that it was too late to have my picture taken," he said. "I was never notified of the deadline."
Episcopal Holy Communion & Lunch:
12 pcn, Cantorbury, House.
MONDAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Jayhawker Executives Say Seniors Knew About Pictures
Only about 800 out of the 1,700 seniors will have their pictures in the commencement issue of the Jayhawker. Several have protested that they were not notified about the picture-taking procedure.
Executives of the Jayhawkwer denied today that members of the senior class were not properly notified about when and where their senior portraits were to have been taken.
JANICE WISE, Kansas City, Mo. junior and Jayhawker senior picture editor, said yesterday that she did three things about March 1 to notify the seniors.
"I called all the presidents of all organized houses and told them that they should remind seniors in their houses to have their pictures taken," she said. "I told the presidents that the seniors had to have their pictures taken by Estes Studio by March 24."
Miss Wise said that she also wrote letters to all organized houses and that she told the presidents of several professional and honorary organizations about the senior picture situation.
"I checked the issues from Dec. 18 until the present issue," he said. "I found no notice about senior pictures."
Ryland said that he checked back issues of the Daily Kansan for an announcement about the pictures.
(Editor's note: In the Jan. 8 and Jan. 11 issues of the Daily Kansan, there were two-column advertisements urging seniors to have their pictures taken as soon as possible at Estes Studio.)
Ryland said he felt the posted letters from Miss Wise were ineffective.
"OUR BULLETIN BOARD (Joseph R. Pearson Hall) is large and very cluttered," he said. "It's so bad that a man couldn't even find his mother's death notice on it."
Blaine King, Emporia junior and Jayhawker editor, said Kenneth Anderson, dean of the School of Education, sent memos asking various education professors to tell seniors who were away student teaching about the pictures.
Tub of Chicken
15 pieces, 5 hot rolls
$3.50
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
BIG BUY
Take your pleasant choice!
★FLOATS ★SODAS
★FREEZES
It's a happy choice no matter which of these Dairy Queen favorites you choose. Your flavor . . . and smooth, freshly-frozen Dairy Queen!
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DAIRY QUEEN
1835 Massachusetts
choice!
ODAS
DADY QUEEN
DADY QUEEN
DADY QUEEN
DAIRY QUEEN
Friday, April 13, 1962
But fellow NATO member Canada sat silent under Zorin's prodding.
U.S.-Britian Still Reject Unpoliced Test Ban
GENEVA—(UPI) The United States and Britain repeated today they are unwilling to join Russia in a new unpoliced nuclear test moratorium, but the Soviet Union claimed the majority of the world is on its side.
"All the powers here but you two," Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian Zorin taunted the Americans and British at the 17-nation disarmament conference, "are for a moratorium."
ITALY PROMPTLY said Russia was deliberately misinterpreting its statements.
The exchange came as it was revealed in London that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev has sent a reply to Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's personal appeal Tuesday for a supervised nuclear weapons test ban.
AMERICAN Ambassador Arthur H. Dean opened today's 20th plenary session of the conference by reading into the record yesterday's State Department declaration that the United States "is not going to place its security at the mercy of an on-again off-again Soviet pledge."
Dean said he had asked his government for reaction to a proposal by Zorin yesterday for a new moratorium by all three great powers on nuclear testing for the duration of this conference, and that this was the reply.
THE STATE DEPARTMENT said Zorin's proposal must be judged in the light of past Soviet actions—when the Soviets agreed to a moratorium on testing for the duration of a conference to write a treaty prohibiting testing but nevertheless resumed testing while the talks still were in session.
Zorin said the American reply must have caused "a deep sense of disappointment" to all conferees and was "a heavy blow at the conference and cannot serve to strengthen peace."
THE INS AND OUTS OF COLLECTING SWEATERS (OR) WHY SWEATERSTHAT ARE VERY IN ARE VERY"ORLON"
acrylic fiber
VERY IN VERY OUT
--washing your sweaters in the nearest washing machine (you can, if they’re “Orlon”* or “Orlon Sayelle”**)
sending your sweaters home to Mother for fussy hand washing or whatever.
saving on cleaning bills with great sweaters of "Orlon" and "Orlon Sayelle". They come clean—but quickly in the wash.
digging deep into fun funds for seasonal and emergency-sweater cleaning.
all-season sweaters freed from rituals of mothballing and summer storage.
mishaps with moths and sweaters that hibernate in a box.
--bulky, good-looking knits that warm without weight—wash without worry.
burdensome sweaters too heavy in overheated classrooms, too dependent on demanding care.
10条56
classics pure and simple-plus new-fangled knits that know how to keep their shape with no assist from you.
the old saggy-baggys like Daddy used to wear—and Mommy has to fuss over!
the newsy textures and tweedy tones of "Orlon" acrylic,
"Orlon Sayelle" bi-component acrylic.
almost anything else,
almost anything else!
(So start collecting
sweaters of "Orlon"
and "Orlon Sayelle"
right now!)
RACING
DUPONT
BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING...THROUGH CHEMISTRY
**"Orlon" is Du Pont's registered trademark for its acrylic fiber.**
**"Oron Savilee" is Du Pont's registered trademark for its bi-component acrylic fiber.**
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 13, 1962
SUNDAY
SUNDAY 2:30 - 4:43 -
7:00 & 9:10
COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS CHARLES X FELDMANS
WALK ON THE WILD SIDE
a side of life you never expected to see on the screen!
a new kind of love-story!
LAURENCE JANE ANNE BARBARA
HARVEY CAPUCINE FONDA BAXTER STANWYCK
STARRING
WITH JOANNA MOORE Screenplay by JOHN FANTE & EDMUND MORRIS Based on the Novel by WELSON ALGREEN Produced by CHARLES K. FELDMAN Directed by EDWARD DMYTRYK
ADULT ENTERTAINMENT
FRANK DEAN
SINATRA MARTIN
SAMANTHA TER
DAVIS. LAWFORD
JORY
BISHOP
SERGEANTS
PANAVISION TECHNICOLOR
Released thru
UNITED AMA ARTISTS
FRANK DEAN
SINATRA MARTIN
BAMMY PETER
DAVIS LAWFORD
JOY BISHOP
SERGEANTS
PANAVISION TECHNICOLOR
Released thru
UNITED ARTISTS
FRIDAY
7 & 9 p.m.
SATURDAY
Sat. Mat. 2 p.m.
Eve. 7 & 9 p.m.
GRANADA
THEATRE ... Telephone VIEW 312-854-6000
FRIDAY 7 & 9 p.m.
FRIDAY
7 & 9 p.m.
SATURDAY
Sat. Mat. 2 p.m.
Eve. 7 & 9 p.m.
GRANADA
THEATRE ... Teléfono VÍRGAS 3148
GRANADA
THEATRE Telenotone VIENNA 3 ST.
SUNDAY!
THE TRAPP FAMILY
COLOR by DE LUXE
20TH
ANNUAL
20
Century-Fox
general
FRANCIS
of ASSISI
COLOR by DE LUXE
CINEMASCOPE
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Africa does strange things to a woman...
and to the men who desire her!
ELEPHANT GUN
BELINDA LEE · MICHAEL CRAIG · PATRICK McGOOHAN · ANNA GAYLOR
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Africa does strange things to a woman...
and to the men who desire her!
ELEPHANT GUN
BELINDA LEE · MICHAEL CRAIG · PATRICK McGOOHAN · ANNA GAYLOR
A Rank Organization presentation. Distributed by Lupert Films, Inc.
— AND —
"LOST CONTINENT"
PLUS SATURDAY TWO BONUS
FIRST RUN FEATURES!
A NIGHTMARE OF SUSPENSE!
Flight that disappeared
Released thru UNITEQ LA ARTISTS
Ernest Borgnine & Anne Baxter
"SEASON OF PASSION"
Features 4 Saturday
SUNSET
"LOST CONTINENT"
"LOST CONTINENT"
PLUS SATURDAY TWO BONUS FIRST RUN FEATURES!
A NIGHTMARE OF SUSPENSE!
Harvard Film Corporation presents
FLIGHT THAT DISAPPEARED
Released three UNITED ARTISTS
Features 4 Saturday
Features 4 Saturday SUNSET
SUNSET
NOW!
Week Nights 7 & 9 p.m. Saturday
Mat. 2 p.m.
Eve. 7 & 9 p.m.
TONY CURTIS
lives his most
electrifying role as
Ira Hayes ... hero
of Iwo Jima!
THE OUTSIDER
CO-STARRING JAMES FRANCISCIUS · A UNIVERSAL, INTERNATIONAL PICTURE
Sunday Continuous
2:30 - 4:45 - 7:00 & 9:15
SHOWING
CO-STARRING JAMES FRANCISCUS · A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE
FRIDAY,13TH,11:30 P.M. ALL SEATS 85c
THE DOUBLE SHOCK &
SHUDDER SHOW
OF THE CENTURY!
WEIRD
ADVENTURE
SOUL-SEARING
TERROR
THE WALKING DEAD
- 11:30 -
"GHOST OF DRAGSTRIP HOLLOW"
2 HORROR Pictures 2
2 HORROR Pictures 2
REWARE OF THE LIVING DEAD!
WARNING!!
TAKE ALONG A PAIR OF WARM SOX,
AND NOT WATER BOTTLE...BECAUSE
YOUR BLOOD will VUEN to ICE!
IF MIGHT GROW HAIR ON YOUR MOON
YOU ARE BOLD NEEDED?
IF YOU ARE BOLD NEEDED, YOU ME
JUDGE TO GROW TO THE HEIGHT OF
A GIANT AFTER SEEING IF
DEREINING THIS SHOW, MIGHT MAKE A
THINK WHAT WOMAN FAT... A FAT
WOMAN THIN!
"HEADLESS GHOST" Stay Through Both, Get Pass For Later Use
— 12:30 A.M. —
“HEADLESS GHOST”
Stay Through Both, Get Pass For Later Use
GRUESOME!
FIENDISH!
VARSITY
THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-1065
Hood t women
2 assig BOOK!
The Pr Comm
Jewel
1958 V
fect, r.
p.m. v
1958
home.
air co
'61 Fo omatic dio. n Selling VI 2-7
1955 hydra
$25. A
$15. A
VI 3-2
Friday, April 13, 1962
University Daily Kansan
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
FOUND
Page 11
Hood to raincoat — 3 scarves — men's &
women's gloves — 4 pairs GLASSES —
2 assignment books — 5 sets of keys
BOOKS (Versalog, Basic French Resear-
ch, French Grammar, Mass
Communications, Better Paragraphs)
Jewelry. Claim at 111 Flint. $t$
HELP WANTED
Hallmark Cards Registered Nurse
5 Day Week Mon. thru Fri.
Many Co. paid benefits.
Includes profit sharing,
medical & life insurance.
Paid holidays and vacations
Apply 8 - 5:30
Hallmark Cards Inc.
Lawrence, Kans.
FOR SALE
1958 Volvo, dark green, mechanically per-
fessional. Call VI 31-8020 after 4-
p.m. weekdays.
1958 45 x 10.2 bedrm. Buddy Moble
air conditioning. Reasonable. T-3 816-8
Hi-Fi 3-speed automatic changer — 10 watt amplifier, 8 & 3 inch speakers in enclosure. Must sell. $75. Call VI 3-1539. A10.
1955–62 "Chevy 14 grind cam" $15,
hydraulic lifts $15, 4.11:1 ring & pinion
$25. Also set of 15 '84 four lancers
for Roger between 2-5 pim.
VI 3-2239. 4-17
STDYD AIDS for Chemistry 2 and 2A
complete $24, per copy. VI 3-7553, $24
per copy. VI 3-7553, $24
'61 Ford Starliner: Powder blue, cruise-
omatic, power steering, padded dash, rai-
ter tires — Immaculate condition.
Sailing for financial reasons. Call IH.
V 2-12932.
COMPLETE skin diving gear. Call VI 3-
1764 after 5 p.m.
4-18
Argus C-4 camera with leather case Like
Bellenston light meter. $40. Phone:
714-5-7655.
Bulova Stereo. Brand new. Won in con-
flict with Gilligan. 2-library. 1-200.
Wayne Rimmer, VI 2-120. 4-17
1957 Ford convertible with radio & heater; Fordmatic, Black and red. Reasonable. See at 1940 Naismith Drive. Kent McCormick. 4-17
Nice 52 foot 1960 CATALINA TRAILER HOUSE. 10' wide, 2 bedrooms, automatic washer. Basket. Bedroom. Underfloor cewing - $200 down. Underfloor Inv. Co. V I-3-3875, 1117 Mass. St. tf
1951 Chevrolet: A-OK. Must sell now.
$150. VI Call 3-7461 after 5 p.m. 4-17
GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO.
SPECIAL THIS WEEK 357 magnum (48)
33 special Huger at a price too low
for it is inexpensive. 22 revolvers
left, 1346 Ohio. **4**-13
SMALL ELECTRIC ORGAN with chord stops. Excellent condition. Call VI 3-2410.
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
GENERAL BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES
BIOLOGY REFERENCE DOCUMENTS,
definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference
to the delivery. Phone VI 8-1554
VI 8-5788
1953 Super 88 Oldsmobile. Extra clean $300.00. Call VI Olds 2-2769. tt
OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 73S Mass. V1 t-8464
ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bauch and remove it immediately. Call Vl 3-8977 or come to 507 Ark. for more information.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In. Pet Center — most complete shop. Pet midwest — Pet phone 289. Baby-friendly-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All materials must be graphed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical $4.00. Call [518] after 4:30 pm. 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
BUSINESS SERVICES
BABYSITTING WANTED — nice home.
fenced yard, no traffic problem. $40 an hour or $10 a week. 8-5. References, VI 3-7828.
tf
DON ROSE BANDS Open Dates are
Sept. 25-Oct. 13
CEL-4 7E15, Topeka, Kansas 4-26
Will baby sit in my home. $2 a day.
from campus. References: 3-1 2-2643 4-23
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. tt
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
mato 3298 $3,500. Ola Smith 3299 $3,500. Call MI 3-5263.
ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3-
7551, or 921 Miss. tf
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Please note: $4 for comprehensive delivery. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752 Free delivery.
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3-
1644.
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
TRANSPORTATION
Need two riders — Shawne to Lawrence,
1- MWF, 8-11 Tues, 8-2 Thurs. Don Carlson.
HE 2-5370. 10405 Johnson Dr., Shawnee.
4-13
WANTED
WANT TO BUY used Classic Guitar. Wide
round hole - nylon strings
V1- 025447
4-19
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
paper bags. Picnic, party supplies.
i Plant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI.
0350
MISCELLANEOUS
Bothered by the
MORALS
of Nuclear
EXTERMINATION
We Petition For
PEACE
Student Peace Union
FOK RENT
1 bedroom furnished house. 2021 Ver-
flex, air-conditioned, very nice, $85 mo.
1822 Missouri. 2 bedroom apartment.
Temple, Tenn. 1984 Temple,
704 Massachusetts. 4-19
Near K.C. — Unfurnished 3 bedroom, ranch house; attached garage; fenced-in back vard: close to shopping center. $100.
Call VI 3-4071 evenings. 4-16
Modern apartment in 8 plex for a couple or two boys interested in summer housing. Available now. Pay starting May 1st. August is free. Call VI 2-0736 at 5:00.
Private entrance, private bath and show-
room. Private shower. Door: Linens laundered, not furnished.
Quiet, studious sophomore roommate.
block from Union. 1301 Lou V. 4-17
4092.
ROOM- IDEAL for Spring or Summer.
Converted sleeping porch. Share kitchen.
Private entrance. $15 per month. 1045
Tenn. VI 2-3251. 4-16
5. rim. furnished house. $75 plus utilities
apt. app. $35. utilities pad. Call 4-76
1966
LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2
rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 4
or 3 students. Available now. 520 La. VI 2-
1731.
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 single room for KU young man.
Linens furnished, utilities paid. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of campus, 1616 Ind. Available June 1. 4-13
TYPING
TYPEWRITERS for rent, cheap — call VI 3-0031 between 5 and 7 p.m. tf
Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, manuscripts, etc., on electric typewriter with signs & symbols. Stand- tall Call VT 2-1846, Mrs. Suzanid Gilbert.
Call VI 2-0627, VI 3-5019 evenings for neat and precise typing. Phyllis Spineto.
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress-
typing to the sector." For excellence
typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise
POPE, VI 3-1087.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will typeheses, 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. Reason-
able rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-
0524.
RECRETARY WILL DO TYPING in home.
Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar
with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at
VI 2-1749.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, be careful with writers. Reasonable res. Electric co-prewriter. Ms. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568.
EXPERIENCIED 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 type-writer, fast accurate service. Reasonable price. Barlow, Harlow. 408 W. 13th, VT 1248, 418.
THESES, reports, term papers neatly, accurately by experienced typographer. Raremanable Martian Graham, 1619 Delaware. V-3 04433.
typed
typist.
rate.
Call
tf
Typing by experienced typist, electric
Patterson, VI. 3-5833; Mrs. Donn
Patterson, VI. 3-5833.
EXPERIENCED typist—Will do all types
prompt service. Call VI 2-4296. 4-13
prompt service. Call VI 2-4296. 4-13
EXPERIENCED 7YPIST will do typing
name - call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lo-
gebach
Experienced typist would like typing in
reasonable time if available. If not,
Call VI T-2-3551 any time.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
NOW
FUN AND SUN DAYS
AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER'S
(where you'll find the nicest ways to get away!)
You won't find a vacation-brightening variety like this anywhere else. And now that spring has sprung, the buys are just as tempting as the weather. Your choice of 11 new-size Chevy II models. Fourteen spacious, spirited Jet-smooth Chevrolets. And a nifty, nimble crew of rear-engine Corvairs. Three complete lines of cars—and we mean complete—to cover just about any kind of going you could have in mind. And all under one roof, too! You just won't find better pickings in size, sizzle and savings anywhere under the sun. And you couldn't pick a better time than now—during your Chevrolet dealer's Fun and Sun Days.
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NEW CHEVY II NOVA STATION WAGON
Here's a wagon that sells at a compact with a longer over 9 ft. entrance down.
See the new Chevrolet, Chevy II and Corvair at your Chevrolet dealer's One-Stop Shopping Center
2.
University Daily Kansan
Page 12
Friday, April 13, 1962
Vox Populi -
(Continued from page 1) girls who ran in the general election for UP did not have ASC experience and one of the girls eliminated did not.)
In discussing the plank on a permanent bi-partisan qualifications board which would be established to make ASC committee selections on the basis of qualification rather than political affiliation, Wilson said, "This plank is very unclear, and does not state exactly what they want done."
(According to the official UP platform the plank says that the party "proposes to amend ASC Bill No. 3 to accomplish this.")
WILSON SAID that the sixth UP plank on making the Freshman orientation program a significant service to the student is repetitious of Vox action. He said that Vox has already established a student handbook which contains most of the subjects which the UP platform proposes be initiated.
Harris added that this student handbook has been proposed to University officials and should be published next Fall. "This plank is one of ours slightly changed," he added.
Wilson said that the provision for an orientation lecture by student leaders to acquaint the students with the opportunities in their organizations was repetitious of the SUA Carnival which he described as "doing a pretty good job."
Wilson said "This platform reminds me of a painter sitting back looking at a painting and dabbing at it to try to improve it." He said that the UP platform just sat back and dabbed at previous issues without introducing any new ideas for expanding student government.
IN COMMENTING on a charge made by UP Student Body Presidential candidate Gerald (Kep) Kepner, Harris said, "It seems rather humorous that Mr. Kepner can say that UP is better represented on the Council in one breath and turn around and blame all ASC inefficiencies on Vox in the next."
Last night Kepner said that UP represented the KU student better because it had voting representatives in more of the ASC living districts than does Vox. He also charged the current ASC, on which Vox has the majority of representatives, with being faulty in their committee systems.
Harris said "despite Kepner's complaint about the situation, the UP platform does not introduce anything to improve the committee system."
The UP platform, however, states that the Party proposes to amend ASC Bill No. 3 to accomplish the establishment of a bi-partisan Qualifications Board to control appointments to the ASC committees, and the overlapping of terms of office for members of these committees to provide experienced committee members at all times on these committees.
Press Club Awards to 2
Jerome Musil, Kansas City, Kansas junior, and William Sheldon, Williamstown, Mass., junior were awarded the scholarships from the Kansas City Press Club.
Two students in the School of Journalism have been awarded $200 scholarships.
Two students from Kansas State University and two from the University of Missouri were also given scholarships.
A program on wedding customs in eight foreign areas will highlight the University of Kansas International Festival. The festival which will also feature original exhibits from at least 13 nations and groups of nations, will be held at 7:30 p.m., May 5, in Hoch Auditorium.
To Feature Wedding Skits
Students from Latin America, Israel, Germany, Africa, India, Greece and the Philippines will present eight-minute skits on engagements, weddings, wedding parties and other customs of their respective countries.
Space Committee May Cut NASA Budget $100 Million
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The House Space Committee has tentatively decided to cut more than $100 million from President Kennedy's space budget next year, a congressional source reported today.
A large part of the reduction was said to come from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's program to develop the super rocket Nova, one of the two possible routes by which the United States hopes to send a man to the moon before 1970.
The Nova would develop between 12 and 18 million pounds of thrust and would be used for a direct assault on the moon. An alternate approach, using a smaller rocket which would be re-fueled
in earth orbit, is also under consideration.
The president asked Congress in January for $3.8 billion during the fiscal year beginning next July 1.
Though the reported cut of more than $100 million is relatively small when compared to NASA's total budget, it reflects a considerable change in Congress' attitude toward space.
Last year for example, the committee gave President Kennedy authority to spend about $200 million more than he had requested.
The source told United Press International that a majority of the committee was concerned about the space agency's requests for money it did not need in the immediate future.
New Members—
(Continued from page 1)
Nations is that the representatives o. the peoples who until recently had been denied freedom . . . now participate in the deliberations of the United Nations . . . as free and equal members. It is surprising how quickly they have developed dignity, self-respect, regard for justice and the mood of fellowship.
Another major point of the ambassador's speech was the opportunity given to the United States by having the United Nations headquarters in New York.
"TO WIN THE IDEOLOGICAL war you do not have to proceed to Moscow,you can wage it and win it right at home,in New York," he said.
"Representatives of states and peoples from all over the earth gather for long and short periods in this metropolis to ponder, to reflect, to discuss together and to come to joint
decisions in association with each other.
"In a sense the world is brought to your doorsteps. How will you use this opportunity? To what purpose will you employ this privilege? How well will you meet this challenge?"
"The manner in which these questions are answered will, to a large degree, determine the long-term significance of the expanded membership of the United Nations."
Sir Zafrulla Khan will speak to the International Club at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union. He will leave Lawrence tomorrow morning.
Barrel of Chicken 25 pieces,10 hot rolls $5.00 BIG BUY
Girl Watcher's Guide
Presented by Pall Mall Famous Cigarettes
Posy. Checked Promhonner
Rosy-Cheeked Promhopper
LESSON II - Where to watch girls
Although girl watching may be practiced in any place and at any time girls are encountered (see above), certain locations deserve special mention for their consistently high levels of both quality and quantity. The east side of Fifth Avenue between 51st and 59th Streets in New York City is perhaps the girl watching center of the
world. Other such locations are: Via Veneto in Rome, Champs Elysees in Paris, Oude Zyds Achterburgwal in Amsterdam and Sugarbush, Vermont (January through March). Experienced girl watchers recommend these places with utter confidence (just as experienced smokers recommend Pall Mall for complete smoking pleasure).
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- News Briefs -
By United Press International
ATLANTA—The Georgia General Assembly met in emergency session today to fight the nation's first reapportionment since the supreme court's ruling.
$$
* * *
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Gov. Ernest Vandiver called the session in an attempt to modify Georgia's rural-dominated legislative apportionment, and the closely linked county unit from the federal courts.
TOKYO—The Foreign Office today instructed the Japanese embassy in Washington to request the U.S. State Department to investigate the seizure of a Japanese fishing boat by Alaskan state agents for alleged violation of Alaskan territorial waters.
- * *
A spokesman for the Foreign Office said the government would protest to the U.S. should the investigation prove the boat did not intrude in American waters last Saturday.
GENEVA—The eight neutral members of the Disarmament Conference proposed today that a nuclear test ban treaty be policed by a commission of scientists from uncommitted countries.
The three nuclear powers promised to study the neutrals' plan. But the U.S. and Britain argued that the essential element of on-site inspection of suspicious events was passed over lightly and there was no provision for sanctions against the nation caught cheating.
**
MOSCOW—The Soviet Communist Party published its May Day slogans yesterday, promoting Cuba to a place alongside the Soviet bloc nations.
The slogans' wording serves as a key to current Soviet attitudes on both state and party relations, as well as on international problems.
The slogans carefully called for eternal friendship and cooperation with the peoples of the two countries in the same wording used for greetings to all other members of the Soviet camp.
- * *
CHICAGO—Joseph L. Block, board chairman of Inland Steel Co. was quoted today as saying an anti-trust investigation of big stee is unnecessary.
Block, whose decision not to raise Inland's steel prices is credited with starting the collapse of big steel's price rise order last week, was interviewed by foreign correspondent Keyes Beech of the Chicago Daily News.
"I'm sure there was no collusion." Block said of the decisions of major steel companies to raise their prices $6 a ton last week.
"Steel prices are inadequate, although we didn't feel that a price rise at this time was in the national interest."
- * *
WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court issued a ruling today strengthening the federal government's hand in civil rights efforts to safeguard Negro voting.
It upheld a Mississippi ruling that federal courts may block a state prosecution if the government charges it was aimed at intimidating prospective voters.
The court action came a few minutes after Byron R. White was sworn in as an associate justice with President Kennedy and White's family among the onlookers. White took no part in today's court actions.
Red Congress Ends With Blast at U.S.
TOKYO — (UPI) — Communist China's People's Congress wound up a 20-day secret session today with a blast at the United States, a proclamation of friendship for Russia and admission that it was having troubles at home.
Peiping Radio broadcast a final congress communique outlining what it said were the main points of Chinese foreign policy as presented by Premier Chou En-Lai.
Although Chou was believed to have opened the congress with a speech March 27, this was the first word on what he had said.
THE COMMUNIQUE said Chou attacked "the seizure of Taiwan by U.S. imperialism and its creation of 'two Chinas'" a charge that Red China has made frequently for years.
Chou proclaimed "unswerving" friendship with the Soviet Union and the rest of the Communist bloc. He called on the Communist world to "unite all forces that can be united" against the United States and what it stands for.
THE COMMUNIQUE proclaimed Communist China:
- "Consistently pursued a foreign policy of peace."
Action Parliament To Meet Tomorrow
Action will hold an open parliament meeting at 7:30 tomorrow night in the Kansas Union. Campaign plans will be discussed and money from the sale of party cards will be collected.
- "Strived for peaceful co-existence with countries having different social systems on the basis of the five principles of peaceful co-existence..."
- "Firmly and unswervingly developed its relations of friendship, mutual assistance and cooperation with the Soviet Union and the other fraternal Socialist countries."
- "Opposed the imperialist policies of war" and "supported" revolutionary struggles of the "oppressed" peoples and nations.
IN PAST YEARS the Chinese Communists issued sets of facts and figures about national production during the congress but they did not do so this year.
India's refusal to negotiate a new trade pact with Peiping apparently touched off the criticism.
Western diplomats believed that the recent record of agricultural and industrial production on the Chinese mainland has been so poor that Peiping was reluctant to give figures this year.
As if to take the country's mind off its domestic troubles, Peiping radio reported over the weekend that India had been criticized bitterly at the congress in connection with the Sino-Indian border dispute.
Past figures were open to suspicion anyway since there was no way of checking them independently.
Up to today this had bee, almost the only word of what had gone on behind the closed doors of the congress.
Daily Hansan
59th Year, No. 118
Model U.N. Squelches Red China Membership
Western nations overwhelmingly defeated a bid for Red China's membership in the KU Model United Nations and its Security Council Saturday after a four hour and 35 minute fight.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
In a ten-minute roll call vote, the opposition to the India-sponsored resolution piled up 43 votes to 37 votes in favor. There were 13 abstentions.
The resolution provided that:
The vote was 25 short of the two-thirds majority of 62 required for General Assembly admittance of a new IJN. member
- The Republic of China (Nationalist China) would continue as the representative of "certain offshore islands."
Consideration of the Indian resolution came a full day after being tabled Friday morning.
Monday, April 16, 1962
- The Peoples' Republic of China would be admitted to the United Nations General Assembly.
- The permanent seat of China on the Security Council would be terminated leaving only four permanent members.
Speaking at the International Club meeting last Friday night, Muhammad Zafrulla Khan said that "many people seem to forget that the International Court of Justice is a part of the U.N., established under the U.N. Charter."
Mr. Zafrulla Khan served as judge on the Court from 1954 to 1961. He is now Pakistan's permanent representative to the United Nations, and was on campus last week to give the opening address at the Model U.N.
Khan Discusses World Court
ONE REASON that the International Court is not always thought of as being a part of the U.N., according to Mr. Zafrulla Khan, is because the principle seat of the court is in The Hague rather than at the U.N. headquarters in New York.
The Court is the principal judicial organ of the U.N., and is the successor of the Permanent Court of Justice which was established by the League of Nations. The Court handles only cases between sovereign states.
Increasing southerly winds, partly cloudy to cloudy skies and warmer temperatures today. Another cold front is expected to move across the state tonight, setting off showers over eastern Kansas. Highs today were predicted to range in the 69s and 79s and lows tonight in low 40s. The Weather Bureau's five-day outlook for this week called for temperatures to be near or a little above seasonal normal.
The 15 judges of the Court are elected by the U.N. In addition to acting in an international advisory capacity to sovereign states, the court settles contentious questions between the states.
Weather
The reason for this, according to Mr. Zafrulla Khan, is because political means offer more chances for arbitration, bargaining, and pressure movements, whereas the decision of the Court has a finality about it which states are sometimes reluctant to commit themselves to accepting.
"The COURT is pretty much in the hands of the sovereign states." Mr. Zafrulla Khan said, "and naturally they must be accommodated. The jurisdiction of the court is based on consent."
Mr. Zafrulla Khan said that "sovereign states usually prefer to seek solutions through political rather than judicial means."
Immediately after the introduction of India's resolution, the Soviet Union introduced an amendment to it placing Red China on the Security Council in Nationalist China's place. It also listed the "certain off-shore islands."
For the next several hours, the General Assembly fought out the amendment proposal. First the amendment was divided into two sections, the first listing the offshore islands and the second providing for Red China's Security Council membership.
Eventually, the second section of the amendment was defeated and the first incorporated in the original resolution.
DURING THE BATTLE, at least five votes on different issues were taken, countless points of order, points of personal privilege and points of information were raised. Debate became heated and charges flew back and forth like shrapnel as the session progressed. Tempers began to fray, collars were loosened and there was a constant coming and going on the main floor as delegates conferred and bargained.
Informed sources in the Western bloc indicated their leaders were confident of defeating India's resolution. Several Communist bloc spokesmen were "cautiously optimistic" but preferred not to make any definite predictions.
rinally the Assembly President, Maurice Smith, Mission senior, banged his gavel and announced the clerk would read the roll for voting on the admittance of Red China, starting with New Zealand.
"New Zealand!"
"No!"
"Nicaragua!"
"No!"
"Niger Republic!"
"Abstain!"
"Nigeria!"
"No!"
"Norway!"
"Yes!"
AT THE END, the President announced the results which ended several months' work and more than four hours debate with defeat for some and victory for others.
At this point the President interrupted the action terming it "obstructionist tactics."
After a 15 minute recess, the Communist bloc initiated a series of parliamentary moves to delay debate. It started when the Soviet Union gained the floor and yielded to Poland. Poland yielded to Beylorussia SSR, Beylorussia yielded to the Ukrainian SSR.
Pat Piggott, Kansas City, Mo. senior, chairman of the Soviet delegation, then introduced a motion to censure the President, charging him with partiality and incompetence. The President turned over the chairmanship to Albert Palmerlee, Lawrence graduate and parliamentarian.
IN A HEATED exchange between Palmerlee and Piggot, Piggot amended his motion to include Palmerlee.
The censure motion was defeated and the entire Communist bloc resigned from the Model U.N. Upon
(Continued on page 8)
Primary Election Set for Tomorrow
Primary elections for the All Student Council school district seats and Student Body President and Vice-President will be held tomorrow and Wednesday.
The voting booths will be in Strong Hall. Students desiring to vote must present their identification card in the basement of Strong Hall in order to get their dean's card. The voting booths will be upstairs on the first floor.
Three Teams Protest College Bowl Methods
Protests concerning the mechanics and procedure of the College Bowl contest were lodged yesterday by three teams that participated in the second round of competition.
Stephenson and Sigma Nu, in a joint protest, stated that interpretations of the contest's rules were inconsistent. In another protest, Foster Hall objected to the conditions under which its match was played. The three teams each requested a rematch.
The protests will be considered at the College Intermediary Board meeting today.
Competing against each other, both Stephenson and Sigma Nu stated that playing time had expired when Sigma Nu was permitted to answer a bonus question that decided the match in its favor.
ACCORDING TO the rules established by the Intermediary Board, which is sponsoring the contest, a team is allowed to answer a bonus question provided that it previously answers a 10-point tossup question correctly. The rule, however, does not consider the time element, and such decisions have been made by the moderators in previous matches.
David C. Scott, Jackson Heights. N. Y., junior and captain of the Stephenson team. said:
"We decided that since both sides would feel they had won on a technicality, we would rather have a rematch than accept the present score as a final one." (Sigma Nu 150, Stephenson 140.) "Nobody really seems to know what the rules are," he added.
THE FOSTER Hall protest was explained by team member. David Specht, Prairie Village freshman:
None of the Sigma Nu team members were available for comment.
"The moderator was sitting on the side of the Templin team and facing them at the beginning of the match. We were sitting next to an air conditioner which was making quite a bit of noise, and it was difficult to hear the moderator's questions, especially the bonus questions. By the time we got the situation righted, we were quite a ways behind."
Templin team members were not available for comment.
Foster lost its match to Templin, 205-185.
Charles Anderson, Osage City senior and College Intermediary Board chairman, said he did not know how the Board would rule on the protests.
HE SAID, however. "We will re-examine the rules at the Board meeting and make them much more explicit for the future rounds of competition. We will take all precautions that the weaknesses in the procedure do not re-occur in the future."
Other results of the second-round competition were:
Delta Tau Delta 240, Pi Beta Phi 50; Beta Theta Pi 230, Delta Upsilon 200; Phi Delta Theta 215, Gertrude Sellards Pearson 185; Gamma Phi Beta 260, Corbin-GSP Counsellors 170; Alpha Kappa Lambda 420, Alpha Tau Omega 155; and Joseph R. Pearson 270, Pearson 130.
2 University Daily Kansan Monday. April 16, 1962
A New Step
Reapportionment
The question as to how effectively the federal courts would deal with individual state reapportionment moved toward a final answer Saturday.
A three-judge federal court told the Alabama legislature to reapportion before a new legislature is elected in November, or the court would draw up its own reapportionment plan and order it put info effect.
Thus the method by which courts will deal with reapportionment was tentatively established. On March 26, the U.S. Supreme Court established the right of a federal court to force a reapportionment. The question then became how much red tape and delay would be involved in a state finally reapportioning. For example, would the court just tell the state to reapportion its voting districts and let it go at that.
NOW THE federal court has shown that it will force reapportionment quickly by setting a deadline after which the court will set up the state's voting districts.
The court's decision and its deadline is of course subject to appeal to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals and the United States Supreme Court. Chances are a good case can be put up against the recent court ruling. The court's establishing a deadline for a state to reapportion
and giving the state the choice of meeting the deadline or accepting the court's plan for reapportionment represents an unprecedented invasion of a traditional political and legislative area by the judiciary.
Kansas is one of the several states that violate this principle of equal representation. For instance, Sedgwick County has one Senator in the State legislature to represent its 343,321 residents. In the Senate district of Jewell and Mitchell Counties, 16,083 residents have one vote. Thus, the vote of a resident of Jewell or Mitchell County is worth about 21 times as much as a resident of Sedgwick County. Other similar inequalities exist.
BUT STRIPPED away from its finery, the counter argument to the court's decision comes down to this—let us play our politics within the state. The argument is hardly valid. Each citizen of a state has a right to equal representation in his state legislature.
The recent court decision setting up a possible court plan of reapportionment for a state has tremendous implications for Kansas and other states. Perhaps this latest decision will start the Kansas legislators moving toward a plan for equitable state reapportionment.
-Karl Koch
The Fateful Issue
The Warfare State
(Editor's note: This is the first in a series of five excerpts from a special edition of The Nation by Fred J. Cook "Juggernaut: The Warfare State.")
On the evening of January 17, 1961, President Dwight D. Eisenhower, in the tradition of George Washington, the predecessor with whom he liked most to be compared, appeared before the television cameras to make his farewell address to the nation. He began with the usual Eisenhower expressions of good will, the usual Eisenhower platitudes.
Then abruptly, in midstream, he struck out on a new and decidedly uncharacteristic course. He picked this final moment of leave-taking with the attention of the country focused upon him, to deliver a grave warning. American democracy, he said in essence, was being threatened by a new and enormous and insidious power—that of "the military-industrial complex," employing millions of men, wielding the power of fantastic billions of dollars, developing an influence that "is felt in every city, every state house, every office of the Federal Government."
IN THE MONTHIS since the former President surprised his listeners by this novel indulgence in apprehension, events have served to invest his final words with the wisdom of accurate prophecy. For hardly had the new Administration of John F. Kennedy come to Washington before it was embroiled, not in just a series of headline foreign crises — Laos, Cuba, Berlin — but in a more secret and perhaps even more determinative battle affecting the future of American democracy. This second conflict on the home front, a form of rear-guard action, was and is being waged to preserve civilian — and democratic — control over the gigantic power nexus of our time, the alliance of a war-minded Military with a war-oriented Big Business.
The issue of civilian versus military and authoritarian control was joined "sub rosa" virtually before the new Administration took office. Kennedy appointed as his Secretary of Defense one of the toughest-minded, toughest-driving American industrialists, Ford executive Robert S. McNamara, and McNamara characteristically and predictably set out to establish his own rule over the Pentagon. Bound up in this personal issue was a national issue of great moment — the traditional American principle of civilian control of the Military.
THE REVOLT of the High Brass, instant and enduring, was both fierce and subtle, employing all the
infighting techniques in which a long-entrenched bureaucracy becomes adept. This internecine strife, for the most part hidden from public view, reached such proportions that, by June, it was being characterized by none other than Senator Stuart Symington (himself one of the nation's foremost advocates of military preparedness) as "a disloyal operation."
To the heat generated by this Pentagon power struggle has been added the explosive quotient of a second and allied cause. The Kennedy Administration's advocacy of mild social reform at home and its shift of emphasis from military to economic aid abroad, has been countered by a nation-wide wave of radical Right propaganda, symbolized by the John Birch Society and supported by a powerful military-business axis that merges liberalism with socialism and socialism with communism in a syllogism that defies sanity and perverts democracy.
EVEN THE gingerly efforts of the Kennedy Administration to curb such excesses and to reassert the traditional American principle that the Military should abstain from political activities precipitated on the floor of the United States Senate a wave of denunciation reminiscent in its fierence of the McCarthy past.
These twin developments — the internal power struggle of the Brass against the rule of a civilian Secretary, the passions aroused by the efforts to keep the Military from the most partisan political commitments — limn an over-all issue of great complexity and vital importance. Involved in this muted struggle are the basic elements of democracy—the essential requisites
that civilian control must outweigh the Military, that a civilian population must have the final say on the great issues that lead to peace or war, that these issues must not be decided for them by a military-industrial caste either through dictatorial decree or overwhelming propaganda pressure. At conflict, in essence, are traditional American democratic principles and the kind of Prussianized military-industrial concept that produced Hitler.
IN THIS context, then, hardly any issue of the moment, not even Berlin, is of greater importance than this relatively little-publicized tug-of-war at home, involving as it does the focus of the future. Not at issue here are any questions of our military capacity, of the military efficiency of Army or Navy or Air Force, the command of space, or the wastefulness and duplication of military contracts and military procurements.
All of these are important questions in themselves, but all are subordinate to the great issue—the influence that the military-industrial octopus wields on the affairs of state. Is this influence such that the very democracy we are preparing to go to war—if necessary—to defend is being vitiated in the process? Is this influence such that decisions are virtually predetermined before the issues calling for decision arise? Can we reconcile our need for defense, for multibillion-dollar armaments, with the principles of free discussion and free decision that remain democrys's greatest assets? Or must the word of the military-industrial complex become, on virtually every issue, the word of the nation? These are some of the vital questions that cry aloud for answer.
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Vik 3-2700
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
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.
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LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
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© PAUL WILKIN
FEB 804 A. BILCHATT KAUS
"IF YOU EXPECT TO TEACH FRESHMAN COURSES PROFESSOR NEW!
BLOOD - YOU'LL HAVE TO LEARN TO EXPECT STUPID ANSWERS!"
letters to the editor
CRC Castigated
Editor:
For months now I've watched with amused grin the antics of this group of approximately 30 to 50 noise-making moralists (representative of the campus of course) commonly known as the CRC. I laughed as I watched them romp through Lawrence barber shops and boarding houses on their shining white chargers, wielding the sword of this intangible, undefinable—yea, almost holy thing called "civil rights."
But lately the thing has disturbed me more and more because the insane hysteria is spreading. Now we're turning to fraternity and sorority "discriminatory clauses" — something to the effect that they cause mental trauma amongst the minority groups — whatever they are. It's sort of like Robin Hood, I think. Take group A's rights away and give them to group B.
LET'S EXAMINE criteria for just a moment — first that old bugaboo, the minority. Let's say, just for purposes of examination, that I am a Caucasian by race (I am) and a Christian Scientist by religion. I am now a member of a true minority. It may be little recognized, but the white race makes up only 1/7 of the world's population. The majority of the earth are Mongoloid and Negroid. Only about 7% of the population of the United States is of the Christian Science faith.
Then there's equality. That's a good one. Little did old Tom Jefferson realize, when he inserted the word "equality" in the Declaration of Independence to win the French over to our side, that the word would develop into a cow so sacred that Americans fear it today. Acusing a person of anti-equalitarianism is almost as incriminating as accusing him of communism. Jefferson himself remarked several times before his demise that equality among men is impossible, not only because of social and racial differences, but economic,
physical, mental and inherent characteristics as well.
The whole country is caught up in this civil rights insanity, equal to little else in American history. "We're losing face internationally, they scream." Losing face, hell! The only thing that's causing them to lose face is this mass hysteria. With this uncalled for "dogfighting" they are succeeding in only one thing, the undermining of our own country from within. Little do they know it, but this bickering is a thundering blow to the nation's Achille's heel.
Now back to the KU version of the NAACP, the Civil Rights Council (amen). They really resemble one another quite closely, you know—the CRC and the NAACP. I don't know exactly what they're accomplishing, but they sure do seem to be enjoying themselves.
"WE CANNOT limit the rights and privileges of the Great Majority (the shift from minority to majority is quite easy, you see)" our hysterical friends said the other day. They were discussing a poll (representative, mind you) of the campus to determine what they thought of "discriminatory clauses." The word "Great Majority" is lifted directly from George Orwell's "1984." I would imagine that Marx used it quite frequently, too. But maybe they have a point there. Perhaps people outside of every organization should decide what qualifications are necessary for membership in the organization. I'm going to run out and lobby for membership of Japanese war brides to the Daughters of the American Revolution. Then I think I'll organize to abolish any grade requirements necessary for membership in Phi Beta Kappa — all these groups have "discriminatory clauses" and they're nasty — at least they discriminate against me! Not only that, but Phi Beta Kappa is connected with the University and that makes it doubly bad!
Ken Costich
Ken Costich Chicago junior
Worth Repeating
America is by any standard a towering technology and culture, with economic, military, and political power, the only rival powermass being Russia. Wherever you find so much vitality packed tightly in a segment of human society, it is evidence of a striking convergence of history, environment, biological stock, psychological traits, institutional patterns, collective will and drive. When such a combination catches fire in the world's imagination and polarizes the emotional energies of men—whether for love or hate—you have a memorable civilization.—Max Lerner
Page 3
Ten World Crisis Discussion Groups Organize This Week
Ten discussion groups to discuss matters concerning key national and international topics are being formed on campus.
Melvin Painter, Lawrence graduate student and one of the organizers of the discussions, said that the groups will be coordinated by a larger body, the World Crisis Discussion Group.
The group, which is still in the organizational stage, plans to hold meetings this week to discuss the permanent organization of the various individual groups.
Each of 10 problems considered basic to the students understanding
Approximately 360 persons ate such things as Karjalanpiraikut and Patlican Kizar Tması at the International Club banquet held last night in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Dinner Features Foreign Foods
Translated, these two dishes are Karelian Rye Pies and eggplant, native dishes of Finland and Turkey. Other dishes represented Germany, Sweden, Pakistan, Venezuela, Cuba, France, Argentina, and Iran.
The entertainment following the banquet included songs and dances from different lands. A Filipino dance was given by Yvonne Mondragon, Sylvia Abraham, Minerva Agustin and Joyce Sakig.
Another group sang songs of Greece. Arabic music and songs were presented by Safynaz Kazem, Cairo, Egypt, and Amy Sequeira, Baghdad, Iraq. A Scottish dance featured Margaret Cameron in native dress from Stirling, Scotland.
To wind up the program, German folk songs were sung by Annemarie Peine, Frankfurt, Germany; Bruno Hundermund, Hongen, Germany; Bruni and Uwe Leonardy, Holstein, Germany; Eckard Wessling and Lothar Schweder, Wuppertal, Germany; and Ursula Lipowsky, Regensburg, Germany.
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of world problems will be discussed by individual discussion groups.
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The meetings, which are open to all interested, will be held at 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union. The rooms for each meeting will be posted on the bulletin board.
Today — Mid Eastern problems, American farm policy.
The meetings planned for this week are:
Wednesday—Soviet-Chinese Risks, American-Russian conflict, international law in solving the world crises, the psychology and politics of discrimination and prejudice.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday - Latin American problems, socialism, Communism in the United States, promoting international understanding in elementary school children.
P-T-P Forum Will Cover Republican, Democrat Parties
A People-to-People forum will feature a discussion of the Republican and Democratic parties in the U.S. at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Trophy Room of the Kansas Union. Jerry Dickson, Newton junior, and Peter Aylward, Ellsworth junior, will hold the discussion of the parties. After the panel discussion there will be an open discussion and questions from the audience.
No Faculty Forum Tomorrow There will be no Faculty Forum meeting tomorrow noon.
Art Termed Style Search
A nationally-known sculptor visiting KU said Friday that abstract art is "a process of searching, finding a style. It is a very personal, a very private and a very lonely process.
Seymour Lipton, New York sculptor, was speaking to KU students and members of the National Sculpture Casting conference in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Speaking of problems faced by young artists, Lipton said;
"If the artist has sufficient courage and will, he manages to work out some means of fulfilling himself. But to fulfill himself, he must find himself."
The big problem, Lipton says, is to be able "to appraise what happens during the process of trial and error. The artist must be able to exploit a chance incident. If you can pick up something which has no meaning, and give it life, you are creating life."
According to Lipton, the beginning of technique is more or less imitation, but this imitation can lead to a "sameness." Students learn how to copy proficiently and sometimes become unable to create effectively. Technique, he said, is not creativity.
Lipton judged the exhibition of sculpture in Murphy Hall. He said that he detected sameness in the work on display there, as well as evidence of imitation of older artists.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Class Officers Want Class Unification
Class officers and candidates for class offices met yesterday afternoon and decided to propose to the All Student Council an establishment of underclass councils and the appropriation of class funds for operational costs.
The class councils would consist of representatives elected from living groups. The proposal would call for an amendment to the All Student Council constitution saying that only the president, vice president, secretary and treasurer will be elected from each class.
THE SENIOR CLASS will retain its committee system because it has already proved itself effective. Each committee is assigned a special task such as the class ring or the class gift.
The group stressed the need for adequate funds in order for the classes to carry out activities.
The councils will be established so that there will be more individual living group representation in planning and informing students of class activities.
Gerald (Kep) Kepner, junior class president, said the junior class went $36 into the red for a class function this fall, and Bob Stewart, freshman class president, said his class lost six dollars on a TGF party.
THE MEETING WAS organized by Stewart to discuss the role of class officers. Two alternatives were discussed, the abolishment of officers and the delegation of defined responsibility and financial backing.
The group said it would meet again after the election of class officers and then make proposals at the first ASC meeting, if a business session is held. There is one ASC meeting remaining after spring elections and that is an induction ceremony for new officers.
The group concurred that the main problem lies in the freshman class. If unity is built there, it is felt that it will carry through for four years.
THE FRESHMAN CLASS recently attempted a Friday afternoon TGIF but received only a small attendance.
Marilyn Huff, freshman treasurer,
said that freshman girls are interested in upperclass men, sororities,
adapting to a new idea of studying
and are not interested in unification.
She suggested a junior-freshman party.
Max Logan, candidate for junior class president, said that the freshman males would not be interested in meeting junior women. He said, however, that some class organization was needed so that members of the classes can meet.
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FOR BOOKS, SWIM GEAR, PICNICS, TRAVEL, SHOPPING
Famous Brand Jewelry Clutch, Tapestry and Casual Bags
Hand-woven from natural palm leaves
Golden Fleur-de-lis Decorate Imported Italian Florentine Leather Wallets $4.80 plus tax
Sale - 1/3 Off
Off
Where?
COUNTDOWN
HOUSE
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday. April 16, 1963
KU Design Symposium Will Open Tomorrow
Four top industrial and interior designers will play major roles in the first KU Design Symposium to be held tomorrow, Wednesday and Thursday.
Several hundred design majors and art education students will attend the conference, which is being co-sponsored by Hallmark Cards and the KU department of design.
Design leaders attending are: Mrs. Dorothy Liebes, New York City; textile designer and color consultant who heads her own firm, Dorothy Liebes Design. Raymond Spilman, New York City; president of the American Society of Industrial Designers and chief executive of Raymond Spilman Industrial Design. Inc.
Morton Goldsholl, Chicago; who, as head of Morton Goldsholl Associates, has won over 200 awards in design and film making, including a first place in the recent Cannes Film competition. William Pahlmann, New York City; interior and industrial designer whose interiors in stores, offices, hotels and private homes have earned him a wide following in the United States and abroad.
The purpose of the conference is to stimulate the work and thinking of KU design students and to broaden their horizons by giving
Tub of Chicken 15 pieces, 5 hot rolls $3.50
BIG BUY
them an opportunity for personal contact with top professionals. Downer P. Dykes, assistant professor of design, is coordinator of the symposium.
MISS FLORA SAYS
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU
The program will include lectures and workshops on interior and industrial design, fabric and its role in design, color selection, film making, and product design and packaging.
THE LADY IN THE GARDEN
KNOW THE BEST WAY TO TELL HER SHE'S A "DARLING"?
Say it with FLOWERS from
from
Highlighting the conference will be a student recognition dinner at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union. Awards will be given to outstanding design students during the evening.
College Intermediary Board Applications Due April 24
REGNIER'S FLOWER BOX
VI 3-1701
The College Intermediary Board has extended its deadline for membership applications from tomorrow to April 24th. Letters of application should be sent to the College Intermediary Board, 206 Strong Hall, or given to a current member of the board.
20 E. 9th
Diamonds
Shop Before You Buy
Premier Jewelry 916 Mass.
RELAYS DANCE
BIGGER AND BETTER THAN EVER
15-piece Band
DANCE TO THE MUSIC YOU LIKE: GEORGE WINN
SAT. NIGHT, APRIL 21ST, UNION BALLROOM, SEMI-FORMAL
TICKETS: $1.50 couple at the Information Booth, Apr. 16-20
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
KING SIZE
Winston
It's what's up front that counts
Up front is FILTER-BLEND and only Winston has it! Rich, golden tobaccos specially selected and specially processed for full flavor in filter smoking.
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Alther-mi-co's A Christ Jayha a triac $50_{12}^{2}$ 49 Sa Tex.
Plur staged race in 46. event.
CAIR
to pace
half r
4.12.6
provides
dies i
22.8.7.
for Sis
a San
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Jacl meet champ 14-10
ens h should 11
WINSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should!
Cha jump 6-4 jump
0
YU but it
Page 8
Jayhawkers Win Triangular Easily
Although overshadowed by a quarter-mile dual between New Mexico's Adolph Plummer and Abilene Christian's Earl Young, the Kansas Jayhawks scored $70_{1/2}$ points for a triangular win over ACC with $50_{1/2}$ points and New Mexico with 49 Saturday afternoon at Abilene, Tex.
Plummer and Olympian Young staged a rematch of the 1961 NCAA race with Plummer winning again in 46.0, the nation's fastest in the event.
CAPTAIN BILL. Dotson continued to pace the Jayhawkers winning the half mile in 1:53.0 and the mile in 4:12.6. Charlie Smith, who is improving rapidly, won the high hurdles in 14.7 seconds and the lows in 22.8. This is the second double win for Smith who turned the trick at a San Jose, Stanford, KU triangular last week.
Jack Stevens, vaulting in his first meet since his Big Eight indoor championship winning pole vault of 14-10, won the event in 14-0. Stevens has been bothered by a bad shoulder that he injured while trying 15-0 at the indoor meet.
Charlie Twiss won his first high jump as a varsity Jayhawker going 6-4 to defeat Rwanson who jumped 6-2.
YUL YOST put the shot only 53-8,
but it was still good for a first place
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As if almost habitual Charlie Hayward pulled the Jayhawkers another first place in his speciality, the two mile. Hayward's time was 9:25.3
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Others who placed for KU were: Ted Riesinger, second, mile; Larry Cordell, second, broad jump; Pete Talbott, second, javelin; Rich Anderson, third, high hurdles; Bill Thornton, second, half-mile; Roger Schmanke, tie for second, pole vault; Larry McCue, second in 100-yard dash and third in 220-yard dash, and Doug Stoner, second in discus.
John Hanna Leads Golfers
Despite Loss to Missouri
The KU golf team ran into stiff competition Saturday at Missouri, losing $ 1 1 \frac{1}{2} $ to $ 3 \frac{1}{2}. $
Open 9 to 9 Noon to 5 Sundays
John Hanna, Lawrence sophomore, led the Hawkers with 36-40—76. He won $1\frac{1}{2}$ points. Paul Carlson carded a 37-40–77 and won 1 point. Dick Haitbrink had 40-39–79. Reid Holbrook, 40-41–81. He won 1 point. Doug Kieswetter shot a 40-43–83.
A rematch between marine John Uelses, world record holder in the pole vault (both indoors and outdoors), and Henry Wadsworth, former Florida vaulter who is now in the service, will be featured at the Kansas Relays Friday and Saturday, it was announced today.
Uelses, Wadsworth Enter Kansas Relays
Wadsworth defeated Ueles at the Chicago Daily News indoor vaulting 15-4 %. Ueles is the first man to pole vault over 16-feet. His record in both the indoor and outdoor is 16-0 %.
Monday, April 16, 1962 University Daily Kansan
KU placed second behind Oklahoma State in a quadrangular tennis meet at the Carriage Club, Kansas City, Mo., Saturday.
KU Second in Tennis Triangular Saturday
O-State compiled $ 17^{\frac{1}{2}} $ points to the Jayhawkers' 16 points. Iowa State placed third with $ 13^{\frac{1}{2}} $ points and Southern Illinois was last with seven.
KU downed Oklahoma State and Southern Illinois 6-3 in team competition before losing to Iowa State, 5-4.
Baseball Team Stays In First, Plays Tigers
The Kansas Jayhawker baseball team, tied for the conference lead with the Missouri Tigers, take a 5-1 record with them as they invade Columbia today to play the Tigers.
The Jayhawks saw a four-game conference winning streak snapped by the Kansas State Wildcats this weekend, but managed to win the other two games of the three-game series.
THE THREE-HIT pitching of Brock with relief from Jerry Waldschmidt and two sacrifice flies led KU to a 2-0 win in the first game of a Friday afternoon double-header.
The Jayhawkers went ahead 1-0 when center fielder Tony Leiker scored on a sacrifice fly to right after reaching third on another sacrifice fly after his double. They picked up an insurance run in the fifth when Dick Rader singled, moved to third on an error and scored on Leiker's sacrifice fly.
by Dean Pease and Sam Somer-
halder, and a sacrifice fly by Gary
Kaufman gave K-State their big
inning. The other run came on Somer-
halder's 380-foot home run in the
first inning.
The Hawks dropped the second game, 4-3, however, as the Wildcats got to Waldschmidt for three runs in the sixth inning. A walk, singles
THE JAYHAWKS made good use of their three hits, two of them by Rader to come up with three runs, but they were not enough. After Somerhalder's first inning homer, the Hawks tied the game in the fourth on two walks and singles by catcher Keith Abercrombie and Rader. KU took the lead in the fifth when Rader singled to score outfieldier Jim Marshall who had walked and stolen second base.
Their lead was short lived, however, as the Wildcats came up with their three-run sixth. Kansas scored another run in the last of the seventh, but the threat was put down by K-State's Brad Steele who relieved starter Al Bolte.
Brock took the rubber game of the series, 12-5, Saturday afternoon as the team broke loose for 14 hits off three K-State pitchers.
our scientists and engineers are in every Ford-built car
In truth, the men at Ford who are engaged in research and engineering have left their marks in the outstanding quality you'll find in every Ford-built car.
Today, the pioneering work of Ford Motor Company scientists and engineers has already given us newer and better rustproofing methods for longer-lasting automobile bodies . . . better sound insulation . . . paints that stay newer looking, longer . . . smoother riding, more comfortable automobiles . . better insulation materials for all-weather
driving comfort . . . many service-saving features that make Ford-built cars last longer, need less care and retain their value better.
From their continuing research will come future Ford-built cars, for example, with automatic control systems for safer, faster driving . . . new kinds of power plants and energy sources . . . stronger steels and plastics . . . new aerodynamic design for greater vehicle control. That's why Ford Motor Company is gaining a position of leadership through scientific research and engineering.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 6
Monday, April 16, 1962
Miss Sorel's Recital To Be Wednesdy
Claudette Sorel, guest lecturer in piano, whose recital was scheduled for 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall, has changed her recital to the same time and place Wednesday night. Miss Sorel requested the change because she will be making a recording for NBC Television in New York tonight.
Fred Wiemer, Drumwright, Okla.
pianist, whose senior recital was
originally scheduled for tonight, has
postponed his recital indefinitely
because of an injury to his right arm.
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 Rd.
**INFRAVIEWS:**
April 18. Richard Boozer, Personnel Director, Grand Jury Migh
April 18 — Dean D. W. Tieszen, Center Missouri State College, Warrensville, Mo.
German Ph.D. Reading Examination:
May 5, 9 a.m., 411 Summerfield. Deadline for signing in to 306 Fraser, Friday April 27.
Registration for Western Civilization
between April 30 & May 4
in 199 Strong
TODAY
TODAY World Crisis Discussion Groups: 8 p.m.
"Middle Eastern Problems." Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union. "American Foreign Policy." Meadowlark Kentucky, Kansas Union.
TOMORROW
Episcolic Holy Communion & Breakfast: 7 a.m. Canterbury House.
**UKOOK:** 3-News & Weather; 3:05-Top
Forum News; 4:15-Sports; 6:20-Society
News; 6:25-Spotlight on Science; 6:30-
Forum News; 7-Countdown; 8-Night
Flight. Stage I. 10-News & Weather;
11-Night Flight, Stage II. 12-Sign Off.
People-to-People Forum; 7 p.m. Tropical Union. *Union*: "Parties in the U.S."
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
VARSITY
HOW SHOWING!
"The Outsider"
Starring Tony Curtis
7 & 9 p.m.
GRANADA
LOW SHOWING
7 & 9 p.m.
"Walk on the Wild Side"
Starring Laurence Harvey, Jane Fonda, Anne Baxter. Based on the novel by Nelson Algren.
Tavern GRAND OPENING Tavern Peppermint Club
Home Of The Twist
Watkins Will Give Yellow Fever Shots
Talented floor shows Friday, Saturday. Two shows 9-11 Enter if you dance, sing, or play a musical instrument and are good. 3 cash prizes. Band starts at 8:00. Come early and get a seat. No stags, dates only. You must be legal age.
15 minutes from Lawrence — $ \frac{1}{2} $ mile East of Tonganoxie on Highway 40. Admission - 75c per person.
For reservations call VI 5-2331 between 6-10 p.m.
A Watkins hospital official said today that a center has been established here because of the increasing number of students that are going to yellow fever areas. The vaccination shots will be available from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Tuesdays by appointment only.
Owners --- Ted & Ted Weeks
The U.S. Public Health Department recently qualified Watkins Memorial Hospital as a Yellow Fever vaccine center.
The service will be offered to students, faculty and local residents. Local residents and staff members will pay a nominal fee, but students will receive the service free.
--by Ober's
CLIP THIS COUPON
SALE ENDS
APRIL 21st
TROUSERS
● SLACKS ● 5 TIES
● SPORT SHIRTS
● SWEATERS
● BLOUSES
● SKIRTS (plain)
44 $ ^{\circ} \mathrm{C} $ ea.
Define Cleaned, Beautifully Pressed
Note: No Limit. But Coupon Must Accompany Order. Minimum Order 25e
SHIRTS
20$^\circ$
NOW ONLY
Laundered to perfection! Starched as you like!
Business 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
--by Ober's
SUNSET NOW SHOWING
"The Trapp Family"
and
"Francis of Assisi"
Box office open 6:30
Show at Dusk
sounds for educated ears
TENNIS SEASON IS HERE
Kief's Record and Hi-Fi Malls Shopping Center Open Evenings
Wilson Kramer & Davis Imperial
TENNIS
New Tennis Racquets . . $5.95 and up
your TENNIS RACQUET
will be EXPERTLY strung
Tennis Shorts and T-Shirts
821 Mass.
Championship and X Heavy Duty Tennis Balls
OBER'S
---
Ph. VI 3-1951
3 bedroom
mont mont — plex,
airat at 1822
m furnished.
Hemphill.
Near K.C
ranch hot
back yard
Call VI 3.
Private e
er combi-
door. Lir
Quiet. s
Half bloc
4092.
Par A
VI Off
LARGE rooms, k 3 student 0731.
Cen
Bri
Full
Can
Gai
Off
5 rm. fu Basemen 1966.
TYPEWF
VI 3-003
FOUND
cosmetics
case, Ste
Black,"
glove,
dios
dies glo
blue lade
carmuff
carmuff
carmuff
ROOM
Converte
Private
Tenn. V
New hea tax for 1 590-15,6 back's,9
BEVERA ice cold. closed pi Ice Plan 0350.
WANT T
neck —
VI 2-054'
PA
---
1 said
estab-
creas-
at are
. The
illable
days
FOR RENT
3 bedroom furnished house, 2021 Ver-
plex, at-conditioned, very nice, $85 mgo
at 1822 Missouri. 2 bedroom apartment,
Tempe, Arizona. From: Tenn.
Hemphill, 704 Massachusetts.
4-19
CLASSIFIED ADS
Near K.C. — Unfurnished 3 bedroom,
ranch home; attached garage; fenced-in
back yard; close to shopping center. $100.
Call VI 3-4071 evenings. 4-16
Private entrance, private bath and show-
room. Door: Linens laundered, not furnished.
Quiet, studious sophomore roommate.
block from Union 1301 La. V-4-17
4092
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.
5 rim, furnished house. $75 plus utilities
appt. apt. 35, utilities call. Pd. Calhoun.
1966. 4-16
LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2 rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 on 3 students. Available now. 520 La. VI 2-10731.
ROOM-IDEAL for Spring or Summer
Converted sleeping porch. Share kitchen.
Private entrance. $15 per month. 1045
Tenn. VI 2-3251. 4-16
FOUND
TYPEWRITERS for rent, cheap — call VI 3-0031 between 5 and 7 p.m. tf
MISCELLANEOUS
FOUND IN FRASER HALL: 1 purse of cosmetics, 8 head scarves, 1 Parker fountain pen, 1 pair men's glasses — brown glass, Stendhal book — 'The Red and the Black', 2 neck scarves, 'brown men's gloves', 3 black gloves, 4 leather glove, 2 black leather gloves, 1 white ladies' glove, ladies' black suede gloves, 1 blue ladies' glove, 3 men's black gloves, 1 brown glove, 1 white ear muff, 1 brown ear muff, 3 umbrellas. Claim at 111 Flint.
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
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent loose soil paper bags. Plicnic, party supplies. Plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI . 0350.
WANTED
WANT TO BUY used Classic Guitar. W
round hole - nylon strings. W
2-0547. 4-19
PATRONIZE YOUR
- ADVERTISERS
HELP WANTED
MARKETING Jr. wanted for part time work for one desired actual experience in discount merchandising operation. Prefer male student who will attend summer camp in Lawrence in Lawrence during summer. Apply in person. Ray Stone during summer. 929 Mass. 4-20
University Daily Kansan
Hallmark Cards Registered Nurse
5 Day Week Mon. thru Fri.
Many Co. paid benefits. Includes profit sharing, medical & life insurance. Paid holidays and vacations
Apply 8 - 5:30
Lawrence, Kans.
Hallmark Cards Inc.
TYPING
Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, manuscripts, etc., on electric cable with signs and symbols and rate. Call VI 2-1548, Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. tf
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impres- ting ability to rate forces, call Miss Louise typing at standard rates, call Miss Lorelle Pope. VI 3-1097. tt
Call VI 2-0267, VI 3-5019 evenings for neat and precise讲. Phyllis Spinet
FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPEIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers,
memoirs, books, Rarebands. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mce-
Idowney. Ph. VI 3-8568.
SECRETARY WILL DO TYPING in home Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Call Marsha Goff at VI 2-1749.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles PVi. VI 3-8379.
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 193, V1-21648.
THESES. reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter, Reasonable rate Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. Cali T 3-0483.
Experienced typist would like typing in a reasonable number of minutes or reasons rates. Call VI T-2681 any time.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
name — call VI 3-9136. MoL.
Geblihch
Typing by experienced typist, electric
Mrs. Dorr Patterson VI 3-5833. Mrs. Don
Patterson
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
BUSINESS SERVICES
BABSITTING WANTED — nice home,
fenced yard, no traffic problem. $4.00
an hour or $10 a week. 8-5. References, V1 3-
7828. tf
DON ROSE BANDS Open Dates are
seasonally determined.
C-4 7E-251, Topeka, Kansas 4-26
Will baby sit in my home. $2 a day.
from campus. References:
VI 3-2263. 4-23
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-
more details, Ola Smith 3-5263, 39919 ma-
rks. Cali VI. Mail S-3263.
ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed, VI 3-
7551, or 921 Miss. tf
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Please note: $4 for comprehensive delivery. $4. Call VI 2-3752. Free delivery.
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI S-3644
Good HQ-100: Call Mike Metzler: VI 3-
922. 4-18
FOR SALE
1958 Volvo, dark green, mechanically per-
fect. Call VI 3-6920 for help.
weekdays, 4-17
1958 ~ 45 x 10 2 bedrm. Buddy Moble
air conditioning. Reasonable. T 3-8162.
Hi-Fi 3-speed automatic changer — 10 watt amplifier, 8 & 3 inch speakers in enclosure. Must sell. $75. Call VI 3-1553. 429
'61 Ford Starliner: Powder blue, cruise-
omatic, power steering, padded dash, ra-
ter, tires. Immaculate condition.
Selling for financial reasons. Call VI 2-2923. Call A-4-16
STUDY AIDS for Chemistry 2 and 2A
finals. Clear, concise, and complete. $2.50
per copy. VI 3-7553. .tf
COMPLETE skin diving gear. Call VI 3-1764 after 5 p.m.
4-18
Arguus C-4 camera with leather case. Like
Nikon Boston light meter. $40. Phone
NI 3-7655.
Bulova Stereo. Brand new. Won in cont-
rol of the Kodak 1200. Wayne Rimmer, VI 2-1200. 4-17
SMALL ELECTRIC ORGAN with chord stops. Excellent condition. Call VI 31-426-3-416
Nice 52 foot 1960 CATALINA TRAILER
HOUSE. 10" wide, 2 bedrooms, automatic
carriage, incl ramp. $200 Balance owing - $200 down. Underweld
Inv. Co. VI 3-3875, 1117 Mass. St. . tt
GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass.
1342 Ohio
THE LADY OF THE TUXEDO
You'll Be Debonair
from
Handsome Tux
This Spring in You
At House and Dorm Dances
FORMAL WEAR
You'll Be Fit Perfectly Whether You Rent or Buy Your Sir Knight Formal Wear
Sir Knight
VI 2-3466
Monday, April 16, 1962
1957 Ford convertible with radio & heater; Fordmatic. Black and red. Reasonable. See at 1940 Naismith Drive. Kent McCormick. 4-17
1951 Chevrolet: A-OK. Must sell now.
$150. Call VI 3-7461 after 5 p.m. 4-17
DISPLAY ADS IN THE CLASSIFIED section of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN attract attention and bring results.
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. tf
1983 Super 88 Oldsmobile. Extra clean.
$300.00 Call VI 2-2769. **tt**
OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, a precision made to perform like an upright. Lawrence typewrites, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-844.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grams
Drive-In Pet Center — most complete
phone. Call for phone 2812.
2821. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30
p.m. week days. **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 medical course immediately. Call VI 3-8977 or come to 901 Ark. for more information.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 8
Monday, April 16, 1962
Model U.N. Squelches
(Continued from page 1)
a plea made by the United States delegation, which was unanimously ratified by the rest of the assembly, the group later returned.
In other action, the Assembly passed a joint US-USSR resolution favoring "general and total disarmament" and cessation of atmospheric nuclear and thermonuclear testing. The resolution also provided that US-USSR cooperation "outlined in correspondence" between the governments of the two nations would be accepted as the basis of U.N. space policy.
Other resolutions passed were:
- One commanding withdrawal of The Netherlands' military personnel from West Irian, and commanding that nation to submit the territory to the U.N. Trusteeship Council for its administration.
- A resolution on Algeria, submitted by Morocco, which welcomed Algeria to the ranks of free nations and gave "full moral support and encouragement to the Algerian nation in its struggle against the colonialist army, the Secret Army Organization," and which expressed the hope that "the soil of Algeria will soon be rid of this agent of colonialism, oppression, and terror."
Test Ban Proposal Offered by Neutrals
GENEVA — (UPI) — The eight neutral members of the disarmament conference today formally proposed the establishment of an international control system they believed both Russia and the West could accept to monitor a ban on nuclear testing.
The proposals, introduced on behalf of all eight by Brazilian Sen. Alfonso Arinso de Mello-Franco, followed reports from Washington that the United States has advanced the date on which it will begin atmospheric nuclear tests in the Pacific to about April 25.
- The third resolution, submitted by Greece, which called for those nations controlling the Panama Canal, the Suez Canal, the Straits of Gibraltar, and the Dardenelles to allow the access to and use of these waterways to the shipping of all countries, provided that "these nations shall not be obliged to permit such use for the transport of arms, munitions, troops, or fissionable materials."
The eight unaligned nations, it was learned, proposed the establishment of an international control system to monitor a test ban. Although details were not immediately available, the plan was said to lie somewhere between the self-inspection proposed by the Russians and the web-like global network demanded by the United States and Britain.
The neutrals worked on the plan during the weekend, waiting for approval from each of their capitals
They had hoped to present it last week, but apparently one or more of the nations were slow in approving the new document.
It was submitted when the 21st plenary session opened this morning under the chairmanship of Ethiopia.
Mrs.Eichmann Stops Visa Application
The eight neutral members of the conference are Brazil, Burma, Ethiopia, India, Mexico, Nigeria, Sweden and the United Arab Republic.
JERUSALEM, Israel — (UPI) Official sources yesterday said the wife of condemned Nazi mass-murderer Adolf Eichmann has again canceled her application for a visa to Israel.
Eichmann currently is awaiting the result of an appeal to the supreme court against the death sentence imposed by a Jerusalem court which convicted him of a leading role in the murder of 6 million Jews during World War II.
Official sources said an application for a visa was submitted on behalf of Mrs. Vera Eichmann to an Israeli mission in Cologne, Germany, by her husband's attorney, Dr. Robert Servatis.
Sources said she would be given a visa if she applied again.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
The test ban deadlock was complete when the neutrals finally made their joint move. Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev last week refused to accept even the principle of international verification of a test ban, which had been President Kennedy's condition for postponing the forthcoming round of atmospheric tests in the Pacific.
Several high-ranking U.S. officials arrived here last night for a policy meeting with delegates of Britain, Canada and Italy. The group included Adrian S. Fisher, deputy director of the arms control and disarmament agency, and John L McNaughton, deputy assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs.
Members Okay Model U.N.
Five members of the Model United Nations interviewed agree that the Model U.N. was a tremendous success but was slightly bogged down by technicalities.
Phyllis Brown, Humboldt junior and member of the steering committee said that Model U.N. members failed to realize the number of technicalities that the real United Nations deals with.
Emerson Tjart, Baxter Springs junior and another member of the steering committee, agreed with Miss Brown. "Most of the issues were debated intelligently," he said. "I believe everyone learned a lot from the number of technicalities that really arise in the U.N."
Maurice Smith, Mission senior and Model U.N. assembly president, said one fault was that bloc members voted the way other bloc members voted and not as individuals.
Alan Reed, Leavenworth senior and secretary general, said that the Soviet Bloc "succeeded in pointing out that a few of the delegations were lacking in information." (The Soviet Bloc walked out of the General Assembly claiming the voting process used by other countries, did not reflect the actual U.N. voting record of those countries.)
Pat Piggot, Kansas City senior and chairman of the Communist Bloc, said the Model U.N. was a success because there were "more issues brought up and more qualified people interested in international affairs than there have been before."
Birds on a Branch
Junior class — president, David Brollier, Hugoton, and Carl Logan, Holliday; vice-president, Robert Bush, Webster Groves, Mo., and John Linden, Salina; secretary, Betty Carpenter, Kirkwood, Mo. Joyce Manville, Wathena, and Suzanne Runnells, Greeley. Colo. treasurer, Bruce Null, Grand Island, Neb. and Judy Southard, Springfield, Mo.
Alaskan Officials Seize 2nd Vessel
Sophomore — president, Gerry Bell, McLouth, Neil Juvenat, Columbus, Neb., and Doyle White, Arkansas City; vice-president, Charles Blaas, Lawrence; secretary, Carolyn Power, Kansas City, Mo. and Mary Louise St. Clair, independence; treasurer, Nancy Patterson, Wichita, and Allan Clark, Wichita.
BIRD TV - RADIO
Senior class—president, Chuck Patterson, Rockford, Ill., and Mike Mead, Kansas City, Mo.; vice-president, Phil McKnight, Wichita, and Chuck Burin, Imperial, Pa.; secretary, Judy Geisendorf, Salina, and Ruth Anne James, Kansas City, Mo.; treasurer, Cleve Howard, Wichita, and LaWalta Heyde, Shawnee-Mission.
908 Mass.
VI 3-8855
The final list of class-officer candidates has been announced for the elections April 24-25.
KODIAK, Alaska — (UPI) — Alaska officials seized a second Japanese catcher vessel, the Solichi Maru, in the Shelikof Strait late last night, apparently completing their crackdown on foreign vessels fishing in what they claimed are inland waters.
Gov. William A. Egan said the complaint was served on the captain of the vessel without incident and that the boat was proceeding to Kodiak.
He said the captain would be arraigned on the same charges as were the captains of the Ohtori Maru, another catcher vessel which was seized Saturday night, and the Banshu Maru, mother ship of the Japanese fishing fleet.
They are:
Candidate List Is Announced
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In the boarding of the Solichi Maru just before midnight, state policeman Jerry Williams became the first casualty of the operation when he slipped and broke his leg. He was to be airlifted to Kodiak for treatment.
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A spokesman for the Governor said the seizure of the Solichi Maru apparently wrapped up the crackdown. He said there were no plans to pursue and arrest any more of the Japanese vessels.
Jorge Lines, distinguished professor of history and anthropology at the University of Costa Rica, is scheduled to be on the campus today through Wednesday.
Lines will meet with the KU faculty members in the Costa Rica exchange program tomorrow evening to discuss the historical distinctiveness of Costa Rica.
Around the Campus Costa Rican SUA Selects Nine Visiting KU Board Members
He also will meet with faculty members from the departments of history and anthropology to talk on "Early Spanish Indian Contacts in Costa Rica."
Lines is in the United States on a grant from the Organization of American States to finish a work on early Costa Rican history. He has traveled extensively in the U.S., but this will be his first trip to KU.
Hall Gets $15,000 Grant To Study Recent Bears
Prof. Hall is director of the KU Museum of National History and of the State Biological Survey. He is the author of several books on zoological classification of mammals and is the co-author of "Mammals of North America," a two-volume work published in 1959.
E. Raymond Hall, professor of zoology, has been awarded a $15,000 grant by the National Science Foundation for a two-year study entitled "Systematics of Recent Bears (Subgenus Ursus)."
Craftsmen Exhibit Includes KU Art
About 1,000 entries were received from 280 craftsmens, from which 195 pieces were accepted. J. Shelldon Carey, professor of ceramic art, has three pieces in the show: a patio lantern, a candy jar and a branch bottle.
Herbert Schumacher, Lawrence graduate student, is represented by a textured vase and a spout pot. Dennis Weathers, Topea senior, has a silver bracelet in the exhibit.
Four University of Kansas students and one faculty member have their creative work exhibited in the 12-state Midwest-Designer Craftsmen show at the Kalamazoo Institute of Art in Michigan.
Robert W. Ebendorf, Topeka graduate student, is represented by a cast ring. Charles Fager, Lawrence graduate student, had two casseroles accepted.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
Nine students have been named to the Student Union Activities Board for 1962-63.
The students, chosen by the 1961-62 SUA Board, help plan and direct the Kansas Union sponsored activities, events and facilities, including special events such as concerts and Homecoming activities.
The students and their respective programs are: Hollis Walters, Prairie Village junior, Arts and Exhibits; Ruth Moyer, Shawnee Mission junior, Dance; Sondra Sue Ewald, Kansas City, Mo., junior, Forums; Nancy Lintecum, Prairie Village sophomore, Hospitality; Suzanne Runnells, Greeley, Colo., sophomore, Music and Drama.
Philip C. McKnight, Wichita junior, Public Relations; Robert J. Moutrie, Greendale, Mo., sophomore, Special Events; Thomas A. Ericson, Leavenworth junior, Sports and Hobbies; David Cassell, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, Tournaments and Lessons.
Arthur N. Prior, noted logician and professor of philosophy at the University of Manchester, England, will give the fourth Ernest H. Lindley Memorial Lecture at 4 p.m. today in Bailey Hall Auditorium.
Noted Philosopher To Lecture Today
Prior, now on leave to be visiting professor of philosophy at the University of Chicago, will speak on "Changes in Events and Changes in Things."
The first Lindley Lecture was held in 1954 as a memorial to Dr. Ernest H. Lindley who was Chancellor of the University from 1920-1939, longer than any other man.
Student Peace Union
He is the author of three books, "Formal Logic," "Time and Modality," and "Logic and the Basis of Ethics."
O
HOPE:
HONORS FOR OUTSTANDING PROGRESSIVE EDUCATORS is an award given
the university faculty member who has made the greatest contribution to the advancement of his students.
CAST YOUR VOTE NOW FOR YOUR CHOICE
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Athletics Called 'Big Business'
By Terry Murphy
(Editor's note: This is the first of a three-part series concerning large-scale intercollegiate athletics.)
Collegiate athletics at the University of Kansas took in more than half a million dollars during the year ending June 30, 1961.
To be exact, the amount was $554,604. The corporation which administers this money, the Physical Education Corporation, owns property and equipment estimated by the University to be worth more than $559,000.
THIS PROPERTY evaluation does not include a state-built fieldhouse which cost $2,700,000 or four tennis courts equipped with lights valued at $50,000.
KU spent over $165,000 on grants-in-aid for 168 athletes during the 1961-62 school year. The school ranks fifth both in the number of scholarships given and the amount of money spent on scholarships. D law is a table compiled at the University of Nebraska.
Below is a table compiled at the University of Nebraska.
BIG EIGHT GRANTS-IN-AID & STANDINGS 1961-62
| TEAM | Ft - B | Bk - B | T | B - B | W | T | G | S | Totals |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Colorado | 110 (1) | 30 (1) | 25 (6) | 11 | 7 (5) | 3 | 4 | 7 (5) | 197 |
| Iowa State | 75 (5) | 22 (3) | 12 (8) | 5 | 10 (3) | 1 | 1 | 5 (3) | 131 |
| Kansas | 94 (2) | 19 (7) | 31 (1) | 7 | * | 3 | 5 | 9 (2) | 168 |
| Kansas State | 84 (8) | 21 (2) | 19 (7) | 16 | 25 (6) | 2 | 1 | 2 (6) | 170 |
| Missouri | 100 (2) | 24 (7) | 24 (4) | 10 | * | 0 | * | * | 158 |
| Nebraska | 85 (6) | 20 (5) | 24 (2) | 12 | 12 (4) | 0 | 0 11 (4) | 164 |
| Oklahoma | 85 (4) | 25 (5) | 30 (5) | 15 | 30 (2) | 0 | 6 12 (1) | 209 |
| Okla. State | 100 (6) | 22 (4) | 20 (3) | 17 | 19 (1) | 4 | 4 * | * | 186 |
| Totals | 733 | 183 | 185 | 93 | 103 | 19 | 21 46 | | 1,396 |
- Does not compete
BIG EIGHT MONEY SPENT ON GRANTS-IN-AID 1961-62
Figures obtained individually from athletic directors of each school.
| TEAM | Ft - B | Bk - B | Track | Ath | Bw | Wres. | Tac | Slim. | Mf | Totals |
|---|
| Colorado | 146,064 | 30,005 | 14,348 | 5,446 | 2,652 | 464 | 965 | 1,184 | 201,128 | |
| Iowa S. | 107,025 | 30,844 | 11,684 | 4,865 | 9,770 | 957 | 957 | 4,905 | 171,007 | |
| Kansas | 100,019 | 25,948 | 28,176 | 5,709 | $\cdot$ | 1,439 | 1,052 | 2,934 | 165,277 | |
| K-State | 79,307 | 23,016 | 13,185 | 6,862 | 5,149 | 500 | 231 | 668 | 129,688 | |
| Missouri | 108,600 | 23,989 | 21,400 | 9,000 | $\cdot$ | none | none | 2,131 | 162,989 | |
| Nebraska | 95,862 | 18,092 | 20,142 | 5,330 | 1,035 | none | none | 2,131 | 142,595 | |
| Oklahoma | 82,314 | 21,409 | 26,385 | 12,914 | 21,109 | 6,608 | 3,316 | 13,317 | 187,372 | |
| O-State | 107,758 | 25,234 | 16,439 | 17,070 | 18,909 | 4,833 | 3,965 | 194,208 | | |
Totals 826,949 198,537 151,759 67,196 59,394 14,801 10,486 25,139 1,354,264
* Does not compete
THESE FIGURES CLEARLY place KU athletics in the category of big business. Why does KU, an educational institution with an excellent national reputation for academic excellence, place so much emphasis on intercollegiate athletics?
If the reason can be found by talking with persons close to the KU athletic program, the reason seems to be based on the idea that anything worth doing is worth doing well.
In short, if KU is going to have a sports program, every reasonable effort should be made to attain excellence.
AND THE PRICE of this excellence comes high in collegiate athletics. During the present school year, Big Eight schools alone spent $1,354,264 on grants-in-aid to 1,396 athletes.
Last spring, Jack Mitchell, KU's highly-successful young football ball coach, was given a lifetime contract. His annual salary is $17,500.
A recent study showed that with one exception, wrestling, the Big Eight champions in each sport gave more scholarships in that sport than the other conference members. From this it can be judged that to win, a school must spend money.
EDUCATORS EVERYWHERE are concerned with improving the academic standards and providing adequate facilities for the flood of future students. Under these circumstances, why do these same educators take the time and effort needed to build and maintain a large-scale athletic program?
To arrive at the point, is there a justification for big time athletics?
IN SEARCH OF AN ANSWER to this half-million dollar question, persons close to the KU athletic scene were interviewed.
In a series of three articles, these person's views and other pertinent information will be presented. No attempt will be made to arrive at any all-conclusive answer to the question of justification.
What will be attempted is a clear look at the benefits, drawbacks, and future of large-scale intercollegiate athletics. Particularly as these views apply to the University of Kansas.
A. C. LONBORG, KU Athletic Director, believes that everyone connected with a good athletic program receives benefits.
"A good athletic program produces a good school spirit. It provides an element for everyone to rally around; it ties everyone together. Collegiate athletics brings people to the KU campus that otherwise wouldn't come," Lonborg said.
"High school students, alumni and friends, all come to the campus for athletic events. It focuses attention on the University in a way that nothing else can."
Speaking of the need for a well-rounded athletic program and efforts for excellence, Lonborg said:
"SOME PEOPLE LOOK at us and think we're rich. They don't realize that football and basketball are the only sports which pay their own way."
Despite the operating deficits of the five so-called minor sports (track, baseball, tennis, golf and swimming) Lonborg considers them to be as important as the money-makers. KU does not have fully
(Continued on page 8)
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS Tuesday, April 17, 1962
Spring Elections Underway With209VotesCastbyNoon
At noon today, 209 votes had been cast in the primary elections for All Student Council seats and student body president and vice president. This count is four more than the number cast by noon in last fall's elections.
University Party card bearers were leading voters with Vox Populi cards, 131 to 78. UP is running more than one candidate in four districts—College women, School of Education, School of Engineering, and vice president of the student body. Vox is running only one candidate in each district so this might have an influence on the party turnout, according to election officials.
He added, "The elections are running very smoothly. No one has even come over here (to the elections committee table) to ask any questions."
Mel Saferstein, ASC elections committee chairman, said that he thought that the vote was low, but thought it would pick up.
UP candidates are not running directly against Vox candidates in this primary. Since only one candidate from each party in each school district can run in the general election, UP is eliminating candidates in those schools where they have more than one candidate. Vox officials explained that they are running candidates in the primaries to estimate their strength in the different schools.
HE STRESSED THAT all students
wanting to vote in the primaries must have either a Vox or a UP card. He said that since there are no class officer elections in the primaries a student cannot vote without a party card.
Saferstein asked those students who decide not to vote not to pick up the dean's cards that are necessary for balloting. If a student takes a card and does not vote, the card
should be turned in at the elections committee table. Saferstein said.
Students desiring to vote should first go to the basement of Strong Hall and pick up their dean's card at the table labeled with the initial of their last name. They then go upstairs to the checking desks to pick up their ballots. There they will be instructed where to vote and what procedure they should use.
The new face of the media
GET OUT THE VOTE—Fran O'Brien, San Francisco, Calif., junior, casts her ballot during the first day of the spring semester primary elections.
Crowds May Find Changes In Bigger Stadium This Fall
By Walt Blackledge
When KU fans flock to Memorial Stadium next fall, they may find the place changed.
Plans for adding 7,200 seats, repairing the present structure and moving the track to a new location have won conditional approval by the Physical Education Corporation.
Arthur C. Lonborg, director of athletics, said present plans are to excavate about 10 feet from the present field and put 10 rows of seats in front of the present stadium.
THE MAJOR REPAIRS planned will be to "dress up" the press box Prof. Lonborg said.
The Honors for Outstanding Progressive Educators is an annual award presented by the senior class to the faculty member who has succeeded in insuring the welfare of his students and increasing the prestige of the university.
The corporation's Athletic Board also voted to turn over one-fourth of its net surplus to the KU Endowment Association in the future.
A final decision on whether to go ahead on the construction project will be made in May, subject to the approval of the Board of Regents and the chancellor. The construction will cost the state nothing. Funds are now being raised by a private group gathering contributions.
Calvin VanderWerf, professor of chemistry and chairman of the Athletic Board, said the decision to go ahead will depend on whether enough money is raised. He said:
The deadline for nominations for the HOPE Award has been extended to 4 p.m. Thursday.
HOPE Nominees Due Thursday
Students should turn in or mail their nominations to the Alumni Association, 127 Strong. The winner will be announced at the Senior
"IF THE FUNDS are available, we hope to begin construction as soon after commencement as possible, perhaps as early as June 5. By excavating ten feet from the present field we can provide space to add 7,200 seats before the first home game on Sept. 22."
The expansion of the stadium will eliminate the present track. A new track located west and south of Allen Field House has been approved by the Athletic Board. Permanent seating will be built at the new rubberized, all-weather track. Construction costs will come from the Athletic Board's own reserves.
The stadium expansion, new track and some repairs to the present stadium will cost an estimated $335-000. A fund for a new track was started several years ago by the Physical Education Corporation. Other reserve funds and private contributions will furnish the rest of the money.
The Athletic Board's related decision to turn over 25 per cent of its surplus to the Endowment Association is to take effect beginning July 1. The amount that will be given to the University will be computed every two years.
Weather
THE CHANCELLOR will decide what use will be made of these funds. A swimming pool or a gymnasium are among the suggestions made so far.
Prof. VanderWerf said, "The EA board indicated its belief that inter-collegiate athletics should return tangible benefits to the students and the faculty. As the corporation's success grows, its contributions to the University's welfare will become increasingly significant."
Partly cloudy and mild today through Wednesday. Highs today 60s. Lows tonight around 40. Highs Wednesday 65 to 70.
The Athletic Board approved a statement expressing its reasons for the action:
Plans are being completed to match the winning College Bowl contest teams from the University of Kansas and the University of Missouri.
"Recognizing that intercollegiate athletics at the University of Kansas is an integral part of a larger and more significant educational activity, the Board wishes to make a substantial and continuing contribution to the welfare of the students, the faculty, and the University."
KU-MU Contest Is in the Offing
Charles Anderson, Osage City senior and College Intermediary Board chairman, said today that the plans have been submitted to the chairmen of the College Bowl contest currently being held at MU, and they are very much in favor of the idea.
Anderson said that the MU Bowl officials are currently checking with the administration so that the proposed match would not interfere with final examinations on either campus. The match would be held at the Kansas Union on May 20, and questions and moderators would be selected from each university.
Dates have also been set for the final three rounds of competition in the KU College Bowl contest. The third round will be held April 29, and fourth and fifth round competition will be held consecutively on May 6.
In conjunction with the semifinal and final rounds on May 6, the Woodrow Wilson Fellows will be recognized and other scholastic awards will be presented.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 17, 1962
The Dormitory Probe
The Civil Rights Council has moved again, and this time it has decided to attack by legal procedure what it considers to be a discriminatory policy by the university.
The university policy it is concerned with, according to informed sources, is the requirement that freshman women send their pictures to the Dean of Women prior to their acceptance.
The CRC maintains that these pictures are used in assigning Negro women to separate rooms in the freshman dormitories. Dean of Women Emily Taylor substantiated this when she said that although Negro and white freshman women are roomed separately, they may live together if they wish. She explained that the room assignments were made in this manner because of the initial difficulty freshman women have in adjusting to college life. (It probably should be explained at this point that dormitory residents will choose their own roommates after their freshman years.)
THE POSSIBILITY of legal action comes from a Kansas statute which reads in part:
"Denying civil rights on account of race, color, religion, national origin or ancestry; penalty. If any of the regents or trustees of any state university, college, or other school of public instruction, or the state superintendent . . . shall make any distinction on account of race, color, religion, national origin or ancestry, the person so offending shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof in any court of competent jurisdiction shall be fined in any sum not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000)."
The NAACP has indicated that it may sponsor legal action, but not unless a thorough investigation shows that no other solution can be reached at KU. The CRC has indicated that it
What is basically in conflict is a university policy that attempts to avoid incidents and difficulties that might arise as a result of discriminatory feelings among freshman women and a demand by the CRC that an ideal procedure be established in which any discriminatory feelings among freshman women would be ignored because they are morally indefensible.
NOW IT IS obvious that the CRC has social justice on its side. The university, however, is necessarily concerned with practical matters (such as those that would result from inflamed discriminatory feelings in case a white freshman woman with feelings of racial prejudice was assigned to a room with a Negro freshman woman) and has made the mistake of compromising itself from a moral standpoint.
wishes to work with Chancellor Wescoe on the solution of the issue.
Obviously the university will have to continue to deal with any problems resulting from discrimination that might arise in university dormitories, although these problems seem to be few and minor at present. But it should do so without following a practice that is open to charges of discrimination.
Dormitory residents have the privilege of changing rooms. This privilege can be used to accommodate any freshman woman assigned a Negro roommate whose feelings of discrimination are such that she could not tolerate living with a Negro.
The university should therefore end the practice of deliberately placing Negro and white freshman women in different rooms. It is a practice which—however innocent or worthwhile its purpose might seem to be—only serves to perpetuate discrimination. William H. Mullins
the took world
By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism
THE MASTERS, by C. P. Snow (Doubleday Anchor, $1.45);
THE CONSCIENCE OF THE RICH, by C. P. Snow (Scribner Library, $1.45).
The saga of Lewis Eliot someday may take its place as one of the great literary sagas. It is a curious saga, too, one almost unrivaled for understatement, the slowly building drama, and the essential uninvolvement of the hero.
These are two brilliant novels. "The Masters" has a theme—a fight for power—which is becoming common to us, but the novel is far superior to others of the genre. "The Conscience of the Rich" is the warm story of a Jewish family in England—slow, deftly revealing, affectingly looking into the motivations of a lovable old tyrant and his children.
"THE MASTERS" IS SET in Cambridge, and it describes two factions, each trying to place a master of a college when it becomes known that the incumbent is dying of cancer. It is to the credit of Snow that nothing is over-simplified here. This reader, for example, unwillingly found himself pulling for what surely must have represented—to Snow—the opposition.
This is a compassionate and exciting story. It starts out with high drama. "The Conscience of the Rich" does not. One does not realize for some time that it is the story of the Marches and not the story of Lewis Eliot.
What does one want in a leader? Eliot resents the conservatism of the man for whom he is pulling, but he prefers his warmth and human dignity to those of the opponent, a liberal whose politics he shares.
The elder March finds it difficult to accept what some regard as progress. He resents his daughter's marriage to a Gentile, but ultimately it becomes obvious to all that the daughter chose better than did March's son, who married a wealthy Jewish girl who eventually—through her fiercely ideological communism (this was the idealistic 1930s)—helps to harm the family into which she has married.
Juggernaut: The Warfare State
(Editor's note: This is the second in a series of five excerpts from a special edition of The Nation by Fred J. Cook "Juggernaut: The Warfare State.")
The U.S. position, rigidly maintained for several years, was that there must be agreement on atomic control before there could be any discussion of other steps to limit or control armaments. But in 1949 Russia signaled her entrance into the nuclear club; she had the bomb and there was nothing we could do about it. This was followed by the outbreak of limited war in Korea.
Under the pressure of these twin developments, the American position finally was modified. In a speech in October, 1950, President Truman called upon the United Nations to form a new, unified Disarmament Commission to consider all types of arms limitations. This was done, and British, French and American delegates began to draft proposals for a strict numerical limitation of armed forces.
IN MAY, 1952, the three Allies proposed a formula that would restrict the U.S., China and the USSR to ground armies of 1 million to 1.5 million men each; Great Britain to 700,000; France to 800,000; and other countries to 1 per cent of their total populations. Two years later, in June, 1954, the British and French refined this proposal and set up a detailed schedule for arms control in four stages—creation of a control body, freezing of military manpower and expenditures at 1953 levels, reduction of conventional armaments and armed forces halfway to the eventual quotas; and, finally, the cessation of the manufacture of nuclear weapons and conversion of all nuclear materials to peaceful uses.
The initial Soviet reaction to all this was negative—the "nyet" the West had come to expect. But then, abruptly, without any previous indication of a possible change of attitude, the Russians on May 10, 1955, did a complete about-face. Jacob Malik, speaking for the Russian disarmament delegation in London, announced that the Soviet was prepared to accept virtually all of the West's proposals. Russia was willing to accept the West's suggested manpower ceilings, the reduction of conventional armaments and, most significantly, the West's proposals to abolish the use of nuclear weapons.
IN THIS LAST and vital category, the Soviet offer was far-reaching. Russia agreed to "the complete prohibition of the use and production both of nuclear and all other weapons of mass destruction, and the conversion of existing stocks of nuclear weapons for peaceful purposes"; and to "the establishment of a control organ with rights and powers and functions adequate to guarantee in the case of all states alike the effective observance of the agreed prohibitions and reductions."
Just what were "adequate" guarantees? This, of course, would be the crux of the case. Russia made specific suggestions. She proposed that the U.N. establish a permanent staff of inspectors in countries joining the disarmament pact, with access to all "objects of control"; control posts along reciprocal lines in big ports, railway junctions, motor roads and airdromes, to watch for any dangerous concentration of ground forces or air and naval forces; the right to demand necessary information from every nation on the carrying out of the agreed reduction of armaments and forces; unlimited access to national budgets showing appropriations and to legislative and executive decisions. Periodic reports would be submitted on the steps taken in implementation of the agreement.
With the Russians ready to bargain, with the Russians committed to what was essentially our position, it would seem that this should have been the moment to call all-
THE RUSSIANS, so long intrensigent, had made a truly astounding proposal—one that, it seemed at first glance, should go a long way toward making continued international disagreement impossible. Phillip Noel-Baker, a member of the British Parliament and winner of the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1959, considers this Russian offer the crucial point in the long disarmament struggle. In his book, "The Arms Race and the Case for Disarmement," he discusses the proposal at length under the heading: "The Moment of Hope: May 10, 1955." He reports that the British delegate on the scene was elated at the Russian switch and exclaimed that the proposals of the West "have now been largely, and in some cases entirely, adopted by the Soviet Union."
night sessions, if necessary, to hammer out a pact for future security of the world. But what happened? The American delegation, instead of leaping to embrace opportunity, acted as if the Russians had just detonated a tactical atomic bomb in its midst. Instead of going ahead, we drew back. Bespeaching and obtaining a three-months adjournment of the disarmament conference, we went home.
THE DEVELOPMENTS of the next few months, studied in the cold light of reality instead of the glow of the moment's propaganda, do not make pleasant reading for Americans who like to be proud of their government, who like to believe it means the peace it professes. For in the summer of 1955 our actions can only, and charitably, be described as less than candid.
With the Summit conference at Geneva scheduled for July, Eisenhower named Harold E. Stassen as his special Secretary for Peace, with Cabinet rank, to handle all disarmament negotiations. Stassen had hardly begun his labors when,
at Geneva, Eisenhower made his dramatic "open skies" proposal, suggesting that each of the nuclear powers let the other's spy planes roam at will above its territories to guard against the possibility of surprise attack. This plan reportedly was urged on Eisenhower by Nelson Rockefeller and was looked upon with considerable skepticism by Stassen and by virtually all foreign diplomats.
NO ONE EVER questioned President Eisenhower's sincerity, which was completely moving and convincing; what was questioned was his logic. For the hard fact behind the headline hoopla with which the "open skies" proposal was greeted in America was that it was essentially a one-way street: we had everything to gain; Russia, everything to lose. In our more open society, nearly everyone, including the Russians, knew where our atomic plants and installations were located; but in the vast, walled-off interior of Russia, there existed huge areas of which we were in
Daily Hansan
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Managing Editor
NEWS DEPARTMENT
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.
either partial or total ignorance. The "open skies" proposal, if only the Russians obligingly would agree to it, could almost be guaranteed to fill in these gaps in our knowledge.
This consideration, if both we and the Russians had been completely sincere, should have made no difference; but — and this was the point that seems never to have been adequately appreciated in America — there was an obvious flaw in Eisenhower's "open skies" proposal, one that called instantly into question our intentions and our good will. The clear fact was that the plan did not go nearly so far as the Russian proposals of May 10; indeed, once all the propaganda elements were washed out of it, the plan represented little more than a well-concealed drawback on our part.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Bill Mullins ... Editorial Editor
Karl Koch, Assistant Editorial Editor.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Charles Martinache Business Manager
Hal Smith, Advertising Manager; Dick Kline, Classified Advertising Manager; Susanne Ellermeier, Circulation Manager; Bonnie McCullough, National Advertising Manager; Harley Carpenter, Promotion Manager.
KU
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THE HARD nubbin of truth lay in the sudden limitation that we now, for the first time, put upon our proposals. The "open skies" plan provided only for nuclear control, not for the nuclear "disarmament" we had for years been advocating. As Jules Moch, the French representative on the U.N. Disarmament Commission, later wrote in The Reporter: ". . . My American friends will remember my skepticism at the time. The months that followed only strengthened it. Never have I believed that a formula for "control without disarmament" would receive the unanimous support of governments—any more than a formula for "disarmment without control."
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It is virtually certain that this basic shift in our policy was pressured by the Pentagon. The Pentagon's attitude toward the Russian disarmament proposals was described as one that ranged from skepticism to outright alarm. Disarmament is a word that can hardly be expected to exist in the Pentagon's lexicon of hope, and as the summer months of 1955 drifted past, American policy hardened into what was to become a rigidly military posture. The Russian proposals of May 10 lay neglected on the international bargaining table, and it is obvious now that we never had any intention of taking them up. The result was that the Russians were never put to the test, and left unanswered for all time was the question so important for all mankind: Did they really mean it?
A bank gave contin talked
Page 3
Tuesday, April 17. 1962 University Daily Kansan
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KU Catholics Present Unique Forum Series
A group of KU Catholic students are attempting to apply traditional Catholic doctrine to the problems of college life in a unique and free-wheeling discussion series this semester.
The series, unique because only students are allowed to participate and freewheeling because the range of subjects covered is limited only by the students' imagination, is called "The Dynamics of Catholic Living."
THE IDEA for the series was originated by several students last semester. One of these students, Robert W. Scott, Fremont, Neb. graduate student, recently outlined the purposes of the series.
"Through the weekly discussions," he said, "we try to achieve a deeper appreciation and understanding of Catholicism. We also try to learn more about Catholic doctrine so we, as KU students, can present explanations—notice I didn't say answers—to questions usually asked us by Protestants.
"We allow a lot of leeway in the discussions," Scott said, "but we try to discuss the topics with an open mind, not just for the sake of argument."
"Most importantly, we try to come out of the discussions with some applications of the topic to our life here on the campus."
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — There is a legend that the first Presidential news conference was held by John Quincy Adams while he was standing up to his neck in the Potomac River clad in his epidermis.
But to make the discussions more interesting, he said, members of the
Adams Held First Conference
A lady journalist, sitting on the bank beside the President's clothing, gave him the option of talking or continuing his swim indefinitely. He talked.
discussion group sometimes adopt and try to defend positions contrary to Catholic doctrine.
"We know what the teachings of the Church are," Scott explained. "In the discussions we try to examine the logic behind these teachings."
Discussion topics, he explained, may range from the problem of cheating in class to the question: "Who is man?" A recent discussion, he said began with the question "Is it good that the Church spends money for beautiful cathedrals while people in some parts of the world are starving", but ended on a discussion of birth control and the role of science in modern society.
The group meets at 9:30 p.m. every Wednesday at the St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1918 Stratford Rd.
It is open to all KU Catholic students.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 17. 1962
P-T-P Drive Nets 1,300 Books
The People-to-People book drive to establish a lending library for KU international students has netted a total of 1,300 books.
Frank Thompson, Iola sophomore and chairman of the P-t-P book program, said that the books have all been cataloged and plans are being made to move them into a permanent library.
James H. Stoner, manager of the Kansas Union Book Store, helped P-t-P members catalogue the books. The bookstore will also trade books in surplus in one area for ones needed to balance out the library. Books which are no longer used at KU will be sold to a private book buyer and the money will be used to buy new books for the library.
A goal of 5,000 books has been set for the library, and another drive will be held during final week in an effort to bring the present total up to that figure.
Unfamiliarity Cited As Cause Of Student Auto Accident
Damage totaled $250 in an accident Friday when a student drove a borrowed car into a tree at Gower Place.
Robert D. Blaker, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman, told KU police that the accident occurred because he was not familiar with his fraternity brother's car.
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT
Kleinberg Scheduled to Speak At Oregon Chemistry Program
Jacob Kleinberg, professor of chemistry, will be one of the featured speakers at a National Science Foundation summer chemistry program at Reed College in Portland, Oregon.
Kleinberg will speak on "Energy Levels and a Modern Periodic Classification of the Elements; and Unusual Valence States" during the July 2-6 meeting. He will speak on "Inorganic Chemistry in Nonaqueous Systems" during the July 9-13 meeting.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
DARRYL HALL
IKE SAYS GOP CAN WIN IN '64
A lot of politicians think JFK will be a shoo-in in '64. Not so, says Eisenhower. But he admits there's plenty of room for improvement in his party. In this week's Post, Ike analyzes the soft spots in the GOP organization. Comments on the prospects of Nixon, Rockefeller and George Romney. And tells why there's no room for right-wing extremists within the GOP.
POST
APRIL 21
ISSUE/NOW
07/13
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Prof. Crafton to Speak at 'Accountants' Day' Here April 23
Fifty KU accounting students, 20 junior college students, and 30 professional accountants are expected to attend "Accountants' Day" activities on campus April 23.
Chapter of the National Association of Accountants.
The day long series of panel discussions and speeches is sponsored by the KU Accounting Society in cooperation with the Kansas City
Don F. Gresser, Topeka, president of the Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants, will speak on "The Responsibility of a Professional Man to Society."
dinner address entitled "The Rise and Fall of the Jayhawker."
Now You Know
Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama, will give a
NEW HAVEN, Conn. — (UPI) Yale was the first American college to adopt rowing as a sport, back in 1843.
Have Your Spring Wardrobe Sanitone Cleaned Now!!
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SPU to Discuss Nuclear Testing
The political effects of resumption of nuclear testing by the U.S. will be discussed tomorrow night at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union by members of the recently-organized local chapter of the Student Peace Union.
Arnold A. Strassenburg, associate professor of physics, will lead the discussion. A proposed plan to send surplus food to Red China will also be discussed.
SPU members have been circulating petitions to gain supporters for the food plan that is actively backed by John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, and Mrs. Karl Meningger, wife of the prominent Topeka psychiatrist. A meeting of Kansas civic leaders interested in the food plan was held recently in Topeka.
The University of Kansas chapter of SPU, the first in Kansas, was organized two weeks ago. The organization hopes to bring attention to issues which it feels are a threat to the existence of the human race. One of the principal areas of concern is the consequences of the international arms race.
THE SPU ENCOURAGES its members to study books and periodicals on subjects revelant to disarmament, civil defense, nuclear war, conscientious objection to military service and other issues. The SPU has established a small collection of books and periodicals which may be borrowed by any SPU member from the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union basement.
The KU chapter is planning to send delegates to the national SPU convention April 28 and 29 at Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio. More than 500 delegates from most of the major universities are expected to attend the convention where SPU plans will be outlined for the next 12 months.
Larry Laudan, Lawrence graduate student and local SPU chairman, said that the total cost of attending the convention, including registration, transportation, food, and lodging for the four-day trip, should not exceed $30 per person.
Anyone interested in making the trip should contact Laudan at VI 2-2327 no later than Saturday. All persons interested in the SPU program are invited to attend tomorrow night's meeting.
Tune Up for Spring at Leonard's Standard Service
9th and Indiana Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
MIRIAM MICHAEL KIDDEN
CASE HISTORIES FROM A MENTAL HOSPITAL
Fifteen years ago, Topeka State Hospital was a snake pit. Today, it's one of the world's finest hospitals. In this week's Post, you'll read case histories from their files. You'll meet a football star who wouldn't speak for twenty years. A "model" child who shouted obscenities. And an old man whose family insisted he was dead.
The Saturday Evening
POST
APRIL 21
ISSUE/NOW
ON SALE'
Official Bulletin
Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1810 Stratford Road
Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11-45:12 noon; Saturday, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Teacher Interviews:
April 18 — Raymond Bozer, Personnel Director, Grand Rapids, Mich.
April 18 — Dean D. W. Tieszen, Center Missouri State College, Warrenensburg Mo.
German Ph.D. Reading Examinations:
May 5, 9 a.m., 411 Summerfield. Deadline for signing up in 306 Fraser, Friday
April 27.
TODAY
People-to-People Forum: 7 p.m. Troop-
parties in the U.S. Union: Political Parties
in the U.S.
Page 9
Young Democrats: 7:30 p.m., Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union.
Mid Club Meeting: 7:30 p.m., Pan American Room, Kansas Union, Prof. Paul McCarthy, "Solutions of Linear Congruence."
Quill Club 8 p.m. Kansas Union. Room
board. Bring manuscripts.
board. Bring manuscripts.
Young Americans for Freedom: 7:30.
Union.
TOMORROW
KUOK: 3—News & Weather, 3—Top Topo:
fighting; 6—News & Weather, 6-15—Sports;
6.20:-Whitaker's Wax Works; 6.25-
Spotlight on Science; 6.30:-Bonjour
Mesdames!; 6.45-Public Service
Program; 7-Countdown; 8-Night Flight.
Aircraft, News & Weather; 10.15-Night Flight, Stage II;
12-Portals of Praver.
Le Certeur Francais se réunira mercredi
après la cérémonie de grammage : Deux pieces en un acte, rep-
resentées par les membres d'une classe
(3b), dirieues par M. Carman
dirieues par M. Carman
World Crisis Discussion Groups: 8 p.m.
"The American-Russian Conflict"
Meadowlark Room; Soviet-Chinese
Carlson A. Psychology and Politics
of Dissection Preserve Partler
B; "International Law in Solving World
Crises". Cottonwood Room.
People-to-People Forum: Orientation meeting for students planning to visit Scandinavia 4 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union, Jannik Lindeba in charge.
Ham Club Meeting; 201 E.E. Lab
Munich, Germany. Mention of
Everyone is invited, to join.
Episcopal Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Kansan Advertisers
University Daily Kansan
Patronize Your
Tuesday, April 17, 1962
Professor Studies Cancer
Mathias P. Mertes, assistant professor of pharmacy, will continue research for a second year on possible anti-cancer agents under a renewal grant of $8,107 from the United States Public Health Service.
The grant supports Prof. Mertes' efforts to synthesize medicinal agents for use in the treatment of cancer. He is working with a series of flourine compounds.
The study is part of an over-all program in which Prof. Mertz is synthesizing several agents which might be used in cancer treatment. He is conducting another study financed by the American Cancer Society, as well as unsupported projects.
His assistant is Souheil Saabeb, graduate student from Cairo, Egvpt.
The agents he is investigating are certain antagonists of basic building blocks of the cell. "It is difficult to
synthsize agents that are selective for cancer cells," Prof. Mertes said, explaining these agents are poisonous both to cancerous and to healthy cells.
Test Train Trips Up
MANCHESTER, England—(UPI) An electric test train sent out yesterday to check a stretch of track near here ripped down a 25,000 volt overhead cable and temporarily halted services. The test train is now being tested.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 17, 1962 Baseball
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By Steve Clark
The Kansas Relays landed its drawing card yesterday morning when it was announced that John Uelses, the world record holder in the pole vault (both indoors and outdoors) would enter.
To add icing to the cake, it was also announced that Henry Wadsworth, former Florida vaulter and now in the service, would also compete.
WADSWORTH DEFEATED Uelses at the Chicago Daily News indoor so a rematch between these two vaulters should draw a larger crowd to the Relays. There is a possibility that Uelses and Wadsworth could attract an extra 5,000 to the relays.
Uelses broke the coveted 16-foot pole vault barrier in New York on Feb. 2 by a quarter of an inch to set the world record. The next night at Boston he erased his own standard with a 16-0 3/4 vault.
He predicted a 16-6 vault this year. He still has five and one-quarter inches to go. Uelses' prediction may come true, because a photograph of his winning vault showed him clearing the bar by his own estimate of six inches.
IT WAS NOT enough that Uelses broke the world record, but he told reporters that he was "cold" and very tired and had not warmed up properly before the meet.
Previous to that 16-feet had been deemed impossible just as the four-minute mile, the 60-foot shot put and the seven-foot high jump.
When most records are broken there is some controversy and Uelsen's situation is not uncommon. The first attack on his record performance was by Harold Abrahams, chairman of the International Amateur Athletic Federation's technical committee, who tried to ban his fiber glass pole.
ABRAHAMS SAID that the IAAF could classify the fiber glass pole in a special category as they had the "built up" high jump shoe the Russians tried to introduce several years ago.
Don Bragg, the former record holder with a 15-9½ vault, attacked his colleague by calling the fiber glass pole a "gimmick."
NOW 7&9 p.m.
Cornelius Warmerdam, the world's first 15-foot pole vaulter, took a neutral stand. He said that "the best coordinated individuals still will be the best vaulters.
HE SAID with a fiber glass pole one does not have time to think what's happening. It's "one, two, three and you're over," he said.
Several months ago Uelses said that when he is discharged from the Marines in May that he would attend Southern Illinois. Following collegiate competition he plans to start his own businesses making pole vaulting poles.
Uelses countered criticism by saving he could clear 16-feet with either a fiber glass or a steel pole. Uelses said that the difference between the two poles is "you need more muscle in the arms and shoulders with a steel pole and with fiber-glass you need more coordination."
"IF THEY OUTLAW fiber glass," Warmerdam said, "better steel and wood probably would be developed and jumpers still will go higher, up to 17-18 feet. We are going to have to change our thinking on what's a good jump because of technical improvement in the poles.
Davis said he favored the dictionary definition of pole vaulting, "Getting over a cross bar with the aid of a pole."
There may be some attempted recruiting this weekend. There are probably many college coaches (including Bill Easton) who are not convinced that Uelses should attend Southern Illinois.
George Davies, former Oklahoma State vaulter who set a world outdoor record at the Big Eight meet last year, hit at the crux of the matter. "These glass poles have been around since 1952 and many vaulters have used them since. No comment was made until the record was broken."
this is an adult picture!
Parents should exercise discretion in permitting the immature to see it.
WALK ON THE WILD SIDE
GRANADA
DEVATE... Intermountain Wildlife Area
KU loses Jack Stevens this year because of graduation. The next vaulter in line will be Roger Schmanke, a junior, whose peak is 14-2.
It matters not which college Uelses chooses to attend, but mainly that he is appearing at the Kansas Relays and may help put its sagging financial situation back on its feet.
Hawks Retain League Lead
Baseball
Rebounding from a last place finish last year, the KU baseball team beat Missouri yesterday and became the sole possessor of the Big Eight first place.
The Jayhawkers, going into the contest tied with the Tigers with a 5-1 record, downed Missouri, 9-3, at Columbia.
KU pitcher Steve Lunsford held the Tigers to seven hits in the 8 1/3 innings he pitched. Jerry Waldschmidt relieved Lunsford in the eighth inning.
MISSOURI ADDED another counter in the fourth before KU, aided by Fanning's circuit blast, scored five runs in the fifth inning.
KU scored two runs in the second inning and Missouri, in their half of the frame, countered with two runs.
KU's final runs came in the sixth and eighth innings. The Hawks scored once in the sixth and twice in the eighth.
Jim Marshall saved a would-be home run in the sixth inning. With two on base, and Missouri trailing 6-3, Marshall raced back to the wall and hauled in the blow.
FIRST BASEMAN Dick Fanning led the Jayhawk attack with
The scheduled tennis meet here tomorrow between Washburn and KU has been postponed. The next Jayhawker tennis action will be April 24 when the Jayhawks host Kansas State.
KU collected 12 hits off Missouri's Rich Peterson, the losing pitcher. The Tigers also used two other pitchers in their losing cause.
Tennis Match Postponed
Operation on Gibson Believed Successful
Kansas basketball forward Harry Gibson, who limped through most of the season on a lame knee, has undergone a cartilage operation which is believed to be successful.
Former KU Guard to Coach
The new head basketball coach of the Clay Center High School is former Kansas University basketball guard Dee Ketchum. Ketchum replaces Lyle Rutter, who has not announced future plans.
WALK ON THE WILD SIDE
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Mark Twain's romantic rogues come to thrilling life on a big Drive-In screen!
HIGH ADVENTURE ON THE MIGHTY MISSISSIPPI!
KU Golfers Defeat Washburn $ 1 2^{1 / 2}-2^{1 / 2} $
starring TONY RANDALL
presenting ARCHIE MOORE as "JIM"
and also starring EDDIE HODGES "HUNDERBERRY FIND"
PLUS
M-G-M presents a George Pat Production
TOM THUMB
RUSS TAMBLY - ALAN YOUNG
TERRY-THOMAS - PETER SELLER
The KU golf team, defeated $ 11 \frac{1}{2} $ to $ 3 \frac{1}{2} $ Saturday at Missouri, responded yesterday with a strong $ 12 \frac{1}{2} $ to $ 2 \frac{1}{2} $ victory over the Washburn Ichabads at Topeka.
Jim Chatios of Washburn won medalist honors carding a 38-35-73. He was the only Washburn player to win points for his team. He defeated Paul Carlson $2\frac{1}{2}$ to $1\frac{1}{2}$. Carlson shot a 38-38-76.
SUNSET
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1950
IS QUEEN ELIZABETH
WORTH HER KEEP?
The Queen costs British taxpayers more than $1,000,000 a year. A few critics gripe. Yet most of her subjects are happy to foot the bill. In this week's Post, an English writer tells why the British date on the royal family. How the throne nearly totered 8 years ago. And why the public did not want Princess Margaret's husband raised to the peerage.
POST
APRIL 21 ISSUE/NOW ON SALE
SUMMER JOBS in EUROPE THE 'new' WAY TO SEE & 'live' EUROPE
For Summer Jobs or Tours Write: American Student Information Service 22 Avenue de la Liberte, Luxembourg-City, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg
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Tuesday, April 17, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms账:All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 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
Gold class ring, 1959, blue stone $5.00
reward. VI 3-6314. 4-2"
FOUND
FOUND IN FRASER HALL: 1. purse of cosmetics, 8 head scarves, 1 Parker foun-
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WANT TO BUY used Classic Guitar. Wide
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BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks.
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
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plant, 6th & Vermon; phone VI 3-
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FOR SALE
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Handy cross index for quick reference.
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WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised. 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery.
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University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 17, 1962
Page 8
Athletics-
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
competing teams in wrestling and gymnastics. The fencing team and the recently organized rugby and cricket teams operate independently of the Athletic Department.
THE EXCELLENCE OF KU'S all-sports program is attested to by its record since 1950 when Lonborg took over as Athletic Director.
In 1956-57 and again in 1959-60, KU won the Big Eight conference all-sports championship. Seven years KU has finished second in the competition.
As is the rule nearly everywhere, KU's fine athletic teams draw large crowds. Last fall, more than 160,000 fans attended the five home football games. A traditionally strong basketball team had an off-year, but still drew 75,000 fans to ten home games. These figures added to the average of 10,000 at the KU Relays, bring the attendance figure to approximately 250,000 for three sports.
FOOTBALL PROVIDED nearly $460,000 of the $554,604 gross income from KU athletics. Basketball took in more than $95,000 and after all expenses for all sports were deducted $61,267 remained as net income.
Athletics at the University of Kansas is a large-scale operation. The facilities are elaborate and the tradition of winning is established. Tomorrow the arguments for and against big time athletics at KU will be presented.
Scholarships, Jobs Discussed Tomorrow
Around the Campus
A seminar for junior women will be held at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Scholarships and how to apply for them and opportunities for women in specific fields will be discussed. Speakers will be Mrs. Ann Davis, job placement assistant for the College of Liberal Arts; J. A. Burzle, professor of German; W. J. Arger-singer, associate dean of the Graduate School, and E. R. Titus, personnel director for Hallmark Cards.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
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Apply Now for SUA Summer Board Positions!
Pick up your application blank at the SUA Office in the Union this week. Interviews will be held April 26 at 6:30 in the Union.
If interested, you must plan to attend summer school the summer board will promote Student Union Activities during the summer session.
Positions available:
Chairman Recreation Chairman
Secretary Entertainment Chairman
Cultural Chairman
The local chapter of Kappa Alpha Mu, professional photo-journalism fraternity, was named the most active chapter at the recent national Kappa Alpha Mu convention held at Peoria, Ill.
Local Group Wins National Award
Eric Jacobsen, a student last semester, took first place in a photo contest with a picture of a fire that destroyed a Lawrence furniture store last fall.
Tony Reed, Hutchinson senior received honorable mention in the photo contest.
100
A NIGHT WITH THE CRIME SQUAD
Under cover of the San Francisco fog, anything can happen: rape, robbery, murder. And it's the job of the S Squad to stop these crimes before they start. This week, a Post writer tells how a squad of undercover cops cracks down on hoods. Says how they keep their activities hushed up. And gives an hour-by-hour report of a typical night's police work.
The Saturday Evening
POST APRIL 21 NEW YORK ON SALE
Ticket Sales Start For "Twelfth Night"
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Tickets for "Twelvth Night" by William Shakespeare, the fifth and final production of the Major Theatre Series, will go on sale at 1 p.m. tomorrow at the University Theatre.
Performances are scheduled for 8 o'clock each night Wednesday. April 25 through Saturday, April 28. Tickets are also available at Bell's Music Co. downtown.
Students with I.D. cards are allowed one ticket free of extra charge. All other seats cost $1.50.
YAF Meets Tonight at Union Plans for a KU Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) rally will be discussed at the YAF meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
Applications for Owl Society may be picked up in the Dean of Students Office, 228 Strong this week.
They are to be returned April 24 to the same office.
Paid Advertisement
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7
Y To
No Ill Will Felt Towards Steel
WASHINGTON—(UPI)President Kennedy held out an olive branch to the steel industry today. He declared his administration harbors no ill-will or hostility to the companies which unsuccessfully tried to hike prices last week.
Kennedy told his news conference that now that "Big Steel" had rescinded the proposed $6-a-ton increase under heavy government pressure, there was no room for feeling of "vindictiveness" or public recriminations. He said a "mistake" had been corrected.
The President told a questioner, however, that a federal grand jury investigation of the steel industry—ordered during the price boost—will continue.
On the other hand, he expressed belief that the industry's withdrawal of the price increase probably has enhanced chances of Congressional approval of a proposed 8 per cent tax credit on some business investment activities.
YAF Calls Rally To Boost Morale
A member of the Young Americans for Freedom last night criticized the University Daily Kansan and called for a special rally to "boost the morale" of YAF members.
Jay Deane, Kansas City junior and YAF vice chairman, said at last night's meeting that editorials criticizing the organization and conservative national leaders had resulted in a lack of attendance and interest at YAF meetings this semester.
"BECAUSE OF THE SMEAR campaign of the Daily Kansan and two other departments of the University, many members are scared to attend the meetings because it might impair their standing on the campus." Deane said.
To encourage stronger attendance and interest, Deane said that tentative arrangements have been made to invite State Rep. John D. Bower, R-McLouth, chairman of the Kansas House Education Committee, to speak at the rally, April 26.
Deane said Rep. Bower "is in complete agreement with the YAF here at KU and is in a position to do something about it. It is his opinion that we need such a boost," he said.
Commenting on his criticism of the University Daily Kansan following the meeting, Deane referred to the Feb. 12 Kansan editorial that stated:
"THE YAF REPRESENTS A POLITICAL fringe element, just as Sen (Barry) Goldwater does."
Deane said:
"We (the YAF) certainly don't consider that everyone will agree with Goldwater's conservative viewpoint, but since he is one of the prime candidates for the Presidency, he is not representative of a mere 'fringe element.' There are groups to be found farther to the right than Goldwater and the YAF which might be referred to as members of 'fringe areas."
IN ANSWER TO a question, he rejected a charge that his use of government power in last week's struggle meant that he had assumed price-fixing powers. The President said a combination of the public interest and competitive forces within the industry caused the companies to back down.
Another questioner asked if he might have set precedent by his tactics. Kennedy replied that everyone was quite aware of the government's powers and limitations.
He added, "We are going to attempt to bring before the parties in the most effective way possible the public interest involved in these negotiations."
The President also discussed:
- Disarmament — The new U.S. proposals at Geneva represent a "major effort" to achieve a disarmament breakthrough. They are "the most comprehensive and specific series of proposals the United States or any other country has ever made on disarmment."
- He said he hoped it would have a "constructive influence" on the 17-nation negotiations now in progress at Geneva. The proposal calls for a cut in the world's arms by almost two-thirds in six years and the replacement of national armies by a United Nations peace force in about a decade.
- Nuclear — Chances of getting Soviet agreement to a workable nuclear test ban before Kennedy gives the go-ahead for U.S. atmospheric testing are "very negative." He gave no specific date for the resumption of U.S. testing but said an announcement "will be made appropriately at the time." Speculation has been the test series may get underway next week.
- Berlin — The divided city is still a very dangerous area. Even though the temperature there has been lowered, the situation could "blow up at any time." The United States will continue to "probe" Soviet intentions for chances of achieving a tension-easing settlement on Berlin.
Daily Hansan
59th Year, No. 120
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Wednesday, April 18, 1962
Vox, UP Leaders Deny Rumors, Action Charges
By Mike Miller
A charge by Action and rumors that members of Vox Populi had interfered in the University Party direct primary election yesterday were denied today by members of both parties.
Action last night passed a resolution asking for an investigation into charges that Vox Populi members have been voting in the UP primary.
Harold Johnson, Leavenworth senior and vice president of Action, said he saw Vox members voting and had substantial proof from UP members that members of Vox voted in the UP primary yesterday.
Department and organization exhibits will be displayed under the permanent bleachers on the second floor of the field house.
The exhibits of engineering students will be shown in displays which range from precision measuring devices to model homes, drilling rigs, motion and time studies. Kaw Valley flood control projects and wind tunnels.
After an hour of controversial discussion, Action drew up a resolution asking for some kind of investigation to determine if Vox's action was legal and conformed with University policy.
Two Shows Offered At the KU Relays
Persons attending the 1962 Kansas Relays April 20-21 can get two shows for the price of one thanks to the work of some 150 engineering students who are preparing exhibits for the 42nd annual Engineering Exposition.
This year it will be possible to see, free of charge, all the exhibits in one building, Allen Field House. Visitors will enter under an arch 30 feet high and 100 feet long that will span a three-dimensional standard bearing the exposition theme, "Engineers Today." Past exposition themes have centered on the future.
THE ARMED FORCES displays will be inside the field house excepting the featured Nike Hercules missile, which is too large to be shown inside.
Generally fair eastern Kansas and partly cloudy west this afternoon, tonight and Thursday with a few thundershowers extreme west tonight or Thursday. A little warmer this afternoon. Low tonight in the 40s. High Thursday in the 70s.
Weather
THERE WILL BE a continuous showing of a 23-minute film during the two-day exposition showing the variety of work open to a modern-day engineer. It will be shown on the third floor of the field house.
The highlight and climax of the exposition will be a Saturday night banquet when awards will be presented for the best displays.
Police Hunt Brown Dog
KU police are searching for a medium-sized, red-brown dog which bit a KU student on the left leg Friday night in front of Fraser Hall.
PERSONNEL AT Watkins Hospital said the dog must be found on or before Thursday evening, when the student will have to begin a series of shots for rabies.
The student, who asked that his name not be revealed, said the dog was about two feet high, long-haired, had a long tail, short nose, and pointed ears. He said the dog wore at least two tags which he heard rattling.
ANYONE HAVING knowledge of a dog resembling the description is asked to call VIking 3-0849 or KU extension 567.
The student stressed that he is not interested in taking measures against the dog, but is interested only in finding the dog so the rabies shots will not be necessary.
At the same time, rumors were heard on campus that Vox members were seen passing out UP cards. It was implied that Vox might be voting for some UP candidates running in the primary election in order to eliminate the stronger UP candidate.
PAT WILSON, UP candidate for student body vice president, said today she thinks there is a possibility that Vox could be trying to underline the UP primaries by promoting certain UP candidates.
Tom Hardy, her opponent in the UP vice presidential primary, said, "I don't see how this could be used by the other party to put certain candidates of ours in the generals."
He explained that there are two ways of selling UP cards. Members may either sell the cards for 20 cents or a candidate may buy more than one and give them to his friends.
REFERRING TO THE charge by Harold Johnson, Action vice president, that members of Vox were voting in the UP primaries, Hardy said, "I would like to have Johnson show me a rule that says this is illegal."
Saferstein said, "To my knowledge, there have been no Vox members passing out UP cards to defeat a UP candidate."
He said that there were some Vox members who voted for UP candidates but that he did not consider this a problem. He said this was not done with malicious motives, but that they were voting for a particular friend who was running on the UP ticket.
Blaine King, UP candidate for College men's representative, said the voting by members of Vox houses for UP candidates could be explained.
"UP candidates have friends in Vox houses who naturally want to vote for them."
Relays Queen Chosen
Lois Rhodus, Shawnee Mission sophomore, was announced at noon today as the Kansas Relays queen for 1962. She represents P Beta Phi. Attendants are Anne Peterson, Clifton junior, a resident of Lewis Hall, and Anne Leavitt, La Grange, Ily, sophomore, who represents Chi Omega.
Values of Athletic Program Are Discussed
Bv Terry Murphy
(Editor's note: This is the second of large-scale intercollegiate athletics).
Large-scale collegiate athletics have been criticized from nearly every quarter. The emphasis on winning is blamed by many people for the loss of amateurism.
TWICE IN THE LAST TEN years gambling scandals have rocked collegiate basketball. Players have taken money to fix the outcome of games. Recent evidence would indicate that basketball officials may have profited by betting on games they officiated.
Critics say a hypocritical form of subsidization that borders on professionalism has been substituted under the guise of amateurism.
Aside from the specific indictments, many opponents of big time athletics in college feel that this is not a proper function of academic institutions. They would have the university devote its efforts exclusively to improving the institution's academic standards and facilities.
A central theme among those favoring big time collegiate athletics is the idea that excellence in collegiate athletics performs worthwhile services which cannot be rendered as satisfactorily in any other manner
Jack Mitchell, KU football coach.
PETER BALDWIN
Charles Leone
said he feels that collegiate athletics is the showcase from which many persons form their opinion of the school.
"COLLEGE SPORTS are like the show window of a store," he said. "They advertise and publicize the institution.
"Of course, as with a store window, athletics don't always tell what is inside. Many times you will find a store with great window displays but nothing inside. And it works the other way too.
"As long as we can have both, as we have here at KU, why not have an excellent display to advertise an excellent school?
"If we were left with only having a choice between academic excellence and athletic excellence, the choice would be obvious," he concluded.
Ted Owens, assistant basketball coach, agreed with Mitchell.
"ATHLETIC TEAMS are often times the only contact a person has with the school," he said. "For that reason the teams should be made up of the best boys we can possibly get. Get, that is, within reasonable means."
Charles Oldfather, professor of law and secretary of the KU Athletic Board, has an ambivalent attitude towards big time athletics.
A. C. Lonborg
I
"I think that there is a justification for a reasonably successful athletic program, particularly at a large state institution," he said.
But, he said, too often collegiate athletics get out of their proper perspective.
"I can see the basic problem as being one of distorted emphasis on athletic skills," Prof. Oldfather said. "Athletic skill is something to be proud of, but it should not place a boy on a bargain counter where he becomes a commodity.
"UNDER THE existing quasi-professional situation, the athlete is the person who suffers the most. I don't want to be too dreamy or trite, but the real values to be gained from athletics haven't changed."
Prof. Oldfather continued;
"Playing the game to the best of your ability and the old adage of not whether you win or lose but how you played the game, are the important things. And this doesn't mean that you have to like to lose."
Whether called subsidization.
(Continued on page 8)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 18, 1962
The U.N.'s Court
Pakistan's permanent representative to the United Nations, Zafrulla Khan, called attention to a often overlooked part of the U.N. machinery in a speech to the International Club Friday night. His topic was the International Court of Justice at The Hague.
The court is the principal judicial organ of the United Nations. It judges only disputes between sovereign powers and only with the consent of the powers involved.
Mr. Khan pointed out that "sovereign states usually prefer to seek solutions through political rather than judicial means." This is because political means offer more chances for arbitration, bargaining and pressure movements.
Mr. Khan's comments concerning the International Court of Justice provide clarification of a little-known and potentially very valuable part of the United Nations. But that potential is not likely to be realized in the foreseeable future.
matters. The U.N. forces in the Congo have long had difficulty in obtaining cooperation from both Congolese and Katangan forces. The refusal of the Soviet Union to admit U.N. observers to Hungary during the 1956 revolution is another example. There are many more.
THE COURT operates under the same difficulties that the whole United Nations faces. It is not only in the court that nations refuse to accept U.N. jurisdiction. There have been many examples of nations refusing to accept the legitimate requests of the United Nations on other
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
Of course, all the members of the United Nations have cooperated with it in cases where they are receiving aid from one of the various U.N. organizations such as UNESCO. Naturally none of the sovereign states of the United Nations would think of refusing to cooperate when it is to their advantage.
THERE ARE many underlying factors in this situation. Among them are such things as the intense nationalism of the newly independent nations and the distrust existing between the Communist bloc and the West. These things will continue to be obstacles for many years.
Yet the potential the International Court of Justice has for the peaceful settlement of international disputes remains. If it were used more in the resolving of disputes between antagonistic nations, the continuous danger of war in some part of the world would be lowered.
William H. Mullins
R-14
"SOME GUYS NEVER HAVE ANY TROUBLE GETTIN' A GIRL."
Juggernaut: The Warfare State
(Editor's note: This is the third in a series of five excerpts from a special edition of the fiction by Fred J. Cook entitled "Jugnautron: The Warfare State.")
The issue that assumed supreme importance, that hovered over all mankind like a black pall of eventual and inescapable doom, was of course the menace of the bomb, now bloated to hideous hydrogen proportions. In discussing this problem, a basic Russian attitude must be understood. The comprehensive Russian proposal of 1955 had been linked directly to disarmament; the Russians traditionally have insisted, with irrefutable logic, that mere control of arms is a tricky business, far more difficult of enforcement than disarmament itself.
Their publicly professed attitude has been that only full-scale disarmament can relieve world tensions, inspire mutual confidence and bring peace. To achieve this end, they repeatedly expressed their willingness to go the limit in inspections and enforcement because under conditions of disarmament no nation would retain the power to wage "a major war."
THE RUSSIANS, however, have not been willing to open up their country to inspection for the mere purpose of control, with potential enemies insisting on the right to retain war-making arsenals. It is not an illogical attitude, and it represents, furthermore, a Russian policy that dates back to the days of the Czars. In the 1890s Russia was advancing the same arguments, urging total disarmament on the great powers of Europe and meeting then with the same lack of success she has had with us now.
From the time our policy took its radical military shift in the "open skies" and Quarles's big-bomb statements of 1955, our attitude has been that we must have nuclear control first; only then will we discuss disarmament. In advocating this policy, we have also advocated its impossibility, for we have made it clear that, in our view, any adequate control of the bomb simply is not feasible.
Apparently, we have been perfectly content with this dead-end vision, though we have, of course, protested with our usual piousness that, any time controls should become really possible, it would be a different matter and we should be the happiest people on earth. In an effort, then, to make us happy, some of the most eminent scientists of the world were summoned to Geneva to investigate the possibilities in our impossible—the problem of adequate control.
THE SCIENTISTS met on July 1, 1958; they numbered fifteen, and they came from five nations of the West. including the United States, and five nations of the East, including the USSR. For fifty-one
days, they wrestled with the technical problems involved in establishing a detection system for nuclear-weapons testing. If such a system could be established, the testing that was raining radioactive fallout on the world could be halted—an important first step in lowering world tensions. On August 21, 1958, the East-West scientists announced a unanimous conclusion: a nuclear-test ban could be policed effectively.
"This agreement makes an effective dent in a problem which so far has proved rather intractable—the problem of disarmament," the U.N. Secretary General commented.
TO FIRM UP a permanent test-ban treaty, of course, required much bargaining, and the fall months of 1958 were filled with complicated negotiations. But progress, it seemed, was being made. By December 19, four articles of a proposed test-ban treaty had been hammered out, and the prospects for eventual agreement seemed bright when the conferences adjourned for the Christmas holidays.
Throughout the world there was general agreement and relief. Russia, capitalizing on this mood and seizing a propaganda advantage, announced she would suspend nuclear-weapons testing if we would. This, as was doubtless intended, put us on the spot. In the 1956 Presidential campaign, Adalai Stevenson had first called world attention to the invisible death seeping down from the skies and had urged a halt to nuclear testing and nuclear explosions in the atmosphere. Eisenhower had flown into one of his towering rages and denounced the proposal as irresponsible, downright idiotic. Now, less than two years later, it didn't seem quite so idiotic, and the White House, put in the position of having to catch the tail of the Russian kite, announced that it would go along—it would suspend tests for one year, beginning October 31, 1958.
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 rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday days and examination periods. Second class lecture paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
trikweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 5176
Extension 3176, business office
They were scheduled to reassemble on January 5,1959.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher Managing Editor
On that day, in a development timed to coincide exactly with the resumption of the conference, the White House startled the world with a new announcement. Fresh data, it said, showed that underground test explosions were much more difficult to detect than the Geneva experts had thought; the unanimous conclusions of the fifteen eminent East-West scientists who had agreed a control system was possible no longer were accepted as valid by the United States. Again we were drawing back—this time in a gesture that flouted a unanimous finding of the world's best scientific minds. Our action provoked an international uproar. The USSR flatly accused the United States of "looking for an excuse to torpedo the current Geneva talks."
Kim Eckerner Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Bill Mullins
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Charles Martinez
Business Manager
OF COURSE, we denied any such intention; we were, as always, pure boys wanting peace and disarmament in the world, our patience sorely tried by such intemperate Russian charges. Our self-righteousness, which has been one of our most offensive characteristics in the field of world opinion, this time served us even worse than usual; for the Humphrey Disarmament Subcommittee quickly exposed it as a tawdry tissue compounded of outright lies and subtle deceit, its one purpose the scutting of any possibility of agreement at Geneva. . . .
Against this background, the Humphrey Disarmament Subcommittee began to pry into the validity of the AEC's "new data" that had erected such a roadblock in the path of any possible nuclear-test agreement. Involved were infinite technical complexities; simply stated, the basic issues came down to this: nuclear tests above a certain range of power will register on seismographs, and the vibrations they cause will be distinctly different from those caused by earthquakes. Blasts of lesser power will also register on seismographs, but it will not be clear what caused them—earthquakes or nuclear bombs. To determine this, inspectors would have to go to the scene of each registered disturbance.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Bill Mullins Editorial Editor
The delicacy and precision of the scientific instruments of detection thus became all-important; for if instruments could not record, sift out and identify the nature of the vast majority of earth tremors, so many on-site inspections would have to be made that the whole detection system would be overwhelmed by physical impossibilities.
THE SOVIETS contended that we were deliberately falsifying scientific data to prove the impossibility. They argued that some of
our data, taken from temporary our stations set up to monitor our tests in the past, were by no means as reliable as data obtainable from up-to-date stations—and even this last data would not be as good as could be obtained from the still more efficient system the fifteen East-West scientists at Geneva had perfected.
Before the Humphrey Subcommittee, Dr. Hans Bethe, a leading world scientist who had represented the United States at Geneva, upheld in essence the Soviet contention. He testified that the controls devised at Geneva were better than those used to monitor U.S. tests in 1958 and "much better than almost any now existent station."
Another key contention, based on the AEC's "new data," received rough handling by America's own experts before the Humphrey group. The point involved was the size of the explosions whose nature could be determined by scientific instruments. The new calculations showed that there was a much greater margin of error here than the Geneva experts had supposed; and if this were true, of course, the number of necessary on-the-spot inspections would be multiplied to unmanageable proportions.
THE RUSSIANS had charged that our "new data" were not accurate, adding significantly "as the U.S. authors themselves admit."
Such admission, indeed, was wrung from U.S. experts by the Humphrey Subcommittee. It became clear that the AEC's "new data" simply could not be supported scientifically; our own experts were compelled to admit that, under the controls devised at Geneva, no significant cheating would be possible. Philip J. Farley, special assistant to the Secretary of State for Disarmament, put it this way: "It is very unlikely that anyone could achieve a significant new nuclear capability or a significant improvement in his existing capability without being clearly and publicly in the position of having violated or otherwise evaded the agreement."
When one's own officials cannot support one's own publicly announced policy, the whole affair becomes embarrassing; and even if powerful fortes behind the scenes remain disenchanted, there really isn't any way, if one is to save any face at all, to call the whole business off. So once more the talks progressed at Geneva, with scientists devoting their attention to surmounting the Americans' "new data" roadblock. In the meantime, international tensions showed signs of easing. Russian Deputy Premier Mikoyan visited the United States; Prime Minister Macmillan of Great Britain had a series of talks with Premier Khrushchev; and the fateful Khrushchev-Eisenhower exchange of visits was arranged.
THE PEOPLE
letters to the editor
Note From World Crisis Day Committee
Editor:
The World Crisis Committee wishes to thank the students and faculty for their participation in World Crisis Day, 1961. We particularly wish to thank Chancellor Wescoe for his consistent support and encouragement of World Crisis Day, even in the face of determined criticism and opposition. We hope for continued support for all World Crisis Day participants of a series of forthcoming public affairs activities.
Robert Searcy,
co-ordinator
World cricket Committee
Lewrence junior
More on Senior Pictures Editor:
As a final rejoinder to the balderdash being cast about over senior pictures (re: Daily Kansan, April 13). I have several comments. Item: The tetrician exaltation of deeds like that of Miss Wise "called all the presidents of all organized houses . . . ") doesn't in
any way denote effectiveness. What about the hundreds who don't live in organized houses. Miss Wise?
ITEM: THE "two-column advertisements in the Jan. 8 and Jan. 11 issues of the Daily Kansan urging seniors to have their pictures taken . . ." (Kansan, April 13) specified no deadline, as I previously stated (Kansan, April 11). Also, Jan. 11 was last semester. Where are the notices from this semester?
Instead of grandiose panegyrics on the sedulous care with which the senior picture set-up was handled (bungled) this year, I would suggest an honest effort to straighten things out. No amount of unrealistic back-slapping will erase the fact that less than half of the senior class will be in the yearbook, as it now stands. Again, I would urge all seniors who still want a picture to call Mr. Estes, write a letter, sign a petition, or in some way convey your sentiments on the subject to him as soon as possible.
John F. Ryland Caldwell senior
Wednesday, April 18, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Same Old Issues In 'Great Debate'
The opposing candidates for student body president rehashed old campus political issues last night in their second "Great Debate."
t e?
n. s)
) . , s
s h S I t o -
s l w l e r, y e.
Jerry Dickson, Vox Populi candidate, and Gerald (Kep) Kepner, the University Party aspirant, discussed such campus issues as the ASC committee system, direct primaries, and which party best represents the interests of the KU students.
After Kepper had said in the first debate last week that he thought the ASC committees should be put under more ASC control, Dickson said that the plank in the UP platform which called for a bi-partisan qualifications board to be used to select members of the ASC committees was "an attempt to undermine the executive branch of the student government (the student body president).
THE DEBATE, THE SECOND IN a series of four to be held in large dormitories on campus, was held in the lobby of Lewis Hall in front of approximately 75 students.
The student body president now appoints these committees with the recommendation of an ASC board. Dickson asked UP why students should elect a student body president if they cannot trust him to carry out his duties.
KEPNER COUNTERED that Dickson has twisted his words. He said he did not propose direct control of the ASC, but that past student body presidents had violated an ASC Constitution calling for the appointment of secretaries of the public relations, student welfare and student activity branches of the ASC by not making these appointments.
He said if these committees had been formed, the Vox platform planks calling for a Big Eight College Bowl and an increased statewide activities program would be unnecessary. He explained that these two things would be taken care of in the ASC public relations committee.
He proposed that all ASC committee chairmen submit reports to the
student body president by Dec. 1 as to how many times the committee has met and what they have accomplished.
In discussing the direct primary system which UP uses and Vox does not, Dickson said that they detract from the general election's importance because the voter has to vote twice instead of once as would be the case if just general elections were held.
Kepner said he felt the direct primary provides for the best qualified students running for the different offices.
HE CONTINUED THAT CAMPUS parties are a way to get things done and that a strong party, such as the closed primary builds, practiced by Vox, is the best way to accomplish this.
He said UF is more representative than Vox is because they have more living district seats in the ASC. He said that even though Vox had a majority of the school district seats, these school seats were not as important as the living district seats. He explained each school has a council to handle the problems of that individual school so it did not require as much as the living districts do. He added that most ASC legislation is directed toward the living district.
When asked by a member of the audience their ideas on civil rights, Kepner and Dickson agreed that discrimination is morally wrong and that the discriminatory clauses of some KU fraternities should be removed from their constitutions, but this removal should not be made by force.
IN DISCUSSING THE PLATFORMS of the respective parties, Dickson said that the UP platform does not call for any extension or expansion of student government like the Vox platform does. He said that UP calls for only slight changes and does not make these changes concrete.
'Blue Curtain' Set on Satellite
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. - (UPI) — A secrecy-cloaked satellite was launched yesterday toward polar orbit but the Air Force kept all details of the shot classified.
THE AIR FORCE DECLINED to say whether the satellite was a Discoverer or a "sky spoy" vehicle.
Under its new policy of restricting information on military space shots, the Air Force would not even give the time of the shot.
ment said only, "A satellite employing a Thor Agena B booster combination was launched today by the Air Force from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif."
A BRIEF PREPARED STATE-
Last week, the Air Force issued a directive that all information concerning military satellites was to be classified. The same directive eliminated names for satellite programs, such as the Discoverer or the Samos or Midas Sky Spy vehicle launched from here previously. The decision came after speculation that a shot on April 9 involved a sky spy vehicle.
Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330
摄影
HOPE:
HONORS FOR OUTSTANDING PROGRESSIVE
EDUCATORS is an award given
the university faculty member who has made the greatest contribution to the advancement of his students.
CAST YOUR VOTE NOW FOR YOUR CHOICE
CLIP THIS BALLOT
1962 HOPE Award Nominee
Name
Dept.
KU
Please send or bring to Alumni Office, 127 Strong
---
AMCE
BELLES, TULSA, F.L.
This really doesn't have anything to do with the exposition but we figured we'd get your attention better this way! !
DIANE UPTON, MISS SLIDE RULE, 1962
Come Have Fun!
This year's engineering exposition this Friday and Saturday is filled with excitement. . ..
- See the scooter that rides on a cushion of air!
- See the Kaw River Valley flooded right before your eyes!
- See crude oil made into plastics and gasoline!
- ● See a real Nike-Hercules missile!
- (See all the engineers in white shirts and ties!)
42nd Annual Engineering Exposition
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Democrat Praises JFK Steel Action
A probable Democratic candidate for Congress from Kansas' new 5th Congressional district last night praised President Kennedy's action in the recent steel price increase controversy.
Wednesday, April 18, 1962
The finalists and their topics are Paul Adelgren, Mission freshman,
"The Psychological Aspects of Pain";
Sondra Chance, Frankfort freshman,
"Agunga"; John Herbert, Topeka freshman,
"Cancer"; Nancy Marcy, Scott City freshman, "Music in Therapy"; Phil Mohler, Prairie Village sophomore, "The Scholarship System at KU"; Rosemary Schenck, Dayton, Ohio, freshman, "Man and the Virus"; John Seever, Wichita sophomore, "Making Your Own Recording," and Winnie Yeo, Manhattan freshman, "Bathing Through the Ages."
Dale A. Spiegel, Emporia attorney, was speaking before about 20 KU Young Democrats in the Kansas Union.
Finalists for the potpourri speech contest to be held at 8 p.m. today and tomorrow in Fraser Hall have been chosen. Three winners will be named each night.
"THE PRESIDENT'S marshalling of public opinion in this matter was an act of courage and wisdom calculated to the preservation of the American way of life," he said. "It reminded the steel industry of its responsibility to the public where the public interest overrode private interest."
Judging the contests will be Will Linkugel, assistant professor of speech and drama; James N. Neelley, assistant professor of speech and drama, and Margaret Anderson, associate professor of speech and drama. John Hackworth, assistant instructor in speech and drama, will be the master of ceremonies.
Speech Finals Set for Tonight
Chem Students Rank High in Tests
It appears that KU chemistry students have done their part to set high standards for selecting Peace Corps members.
Six KU seniors made high scores in a national chemistry examination designed to establish criteria for choosing future Peace Corps members. The KU students made scores with percentile ranks of 98, 96, 93, 86, 72 and 61.
A percentile rank of 98 means that 98 per cent of the other persons taking the test got lower scores than the person in that rank.
The six students winning the high scores were Daniel L. Fischer of Osborne, Gary D. Hindman of Neodesha, James Little of Prairie Village, Keith E. Sickafoose of Phoenix, Ariz., John S. Swenton of Bonner Springs and Gerald Weatherby of Neodesha.
After the meeting, he was asked whether he believes United States Steel controls too large a portion of the American market and should be broken up by anti-trust action.
He said U.S. Steel should not be broken up but should be controlled in much the same way that utilities such as American Telephone and Telegraph is controlled. Such utilities may not raise their prices without government consent.
SPIEGEL SAID the burden of proof that a price increase is needed should lie with the company.
He said the $6 a ton price increase proposed by U.S. Steel might damage the steel industry's position in the world steel market. He said the U.S. steel industry must contend with the European Common Market if it is not to be pushed out of the world market.
Spiegel also discussed the Democratic party's chances in the coming Congressional elections.
"Our people come so near to abdicating their suffrage that it scares you," he said.
"There is a distinct possibility that the party may enjoy success at the state level this time," he said. He added that chances are good in the first and fifth Congressional districts.
CALLING FOR MORE interest in politics, Spiegel said. "It is probably less than one-tenth of one per cent (of the people) that run our government.
He urged Young Democrats to work hard for the party because they can be "one of those people that actually do shape those things that are to come."
HOPE Deadline Is Extended
The deadline for nominations for the HOPE Award has been extended to 4 p.m. Thursday.
The Honors for Outstanding Progressive Educators is an annual award presented by the senior class to the faculty member who has succeeded in insuring the welfare of his students and increasing the prestige of the university.
THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION acts as an advisory group to the award committee, but the winner is entirely student nominated and elected.
Persons making HOPE nominations are asked to consider the faculty member's willingness to help students, success in stimulating students or challenging the students toward thinking, devotion to profession, and contribution to the general cultural life of the university.
KU students make the original Award nominations. The award committee later interviews students who have made nominations and members of the department of which the nominee is a member. The award committee selects the winner.
Publications and creative work will be considered but not to the same extent as the instructor's contribution to students.
FACULTY NOMINEES MUST be full-time members of the faculty and must be in at least their second year of teaching at KU. Nominees also should be persons who plan to stay at KU. No professor may be given the award more than once.
Seniors are asked to turn in or mail nominations to the Alumni Association, 127 Strong. The winner of the HOPE Award will be announced at the Senior Coffee.
Modernity in Decor Enhances Beauty of Ancient Artwork
The "Sabouroff Painter" who was responsible for the Greek art work blended the colors to reveal the luster of each one.
Using these colors as a background, the Museum has arranged into it the ancient art collection together with pieces borrowed from the Nelson Gallery Study Collection.
By Janice Pauls
The color scheme illustrated in pedestals, wall display cases, and picture frames was chosen from the black, white, and terracotta paintings on 550 B.C. Greek vases and oil jars.
Interior decoration, a familiar method of rejuvenation, now has been incorporated by the KU Museum of Art to liven and vitalize one portion of its display space.
ANCIENT ART OF GREEK, Roman, Egyptian, and Etruscan origin benefits from the reinstallation as direct and indirect lighting emphasizes the beauty of this exquisite sculpture.
THESE ARTISTIC achievements
are segments of Western culture revealing relationships between them and epitomizing the heights to which the ancient world could rise.
Since the Roman demand for original Greek works was far greater than the supply, small bronze figures were cast as inexpensive, diminutive adaptations of the more famous and colossal works.
PATRONIZE YOUR
One of the unique features of the display is a Hellenistic bronze statuette of Zeus. This adaptation of the famous Zeus Olympus by Phidias is an example of the previously mentioned sculptural class.
- ADVERTISERS -
Now that the rush of wading through other people's tax returns is over, accountants in the KU area are ready to take a day off.
The annual KU Accountants Day April 23 will be something of a busman's holiday, however. Accountants and accounting students will see films and hear speeches and panel discussions on various aspects of accounting.
Accountants to Hold Annual Meet at KU
Education Association Will Hold Conference
The program is sponsored by the KU Accounting Society in cooperation with the Kansas City chapter of the National Association of Accountants.
Six KU staff members will participate in the program of the Missouri Valley Adult Education Association conference April 26 and 27 in Topeka.
The conference is to study motivation and change in adult education.
Mudroch to Address Club
Vaclav Mudroch, assistant professor of history, will speak on his personal memories of the 1948 Communist coup in Czechoslovakia at the History Club meeting at 8 p.m. today in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. Refreshments will be served after Prof. Mudroch's talk.
Frank Dance, assistant professor of speech and drama, will speak on communications at the April 26 dinner. About 200 adult educators from seven Midwest states are expected to hear the program.
Around the Campus
Five floats have entered in the Kansas Relays parade to be held at 10 a.m. Saturday in downtown Lawrence.
Five Floats Entered In Relays Parade
Four of the floats are being sponsored by pairs of organized houses. They are Templin and Lewis, Phi Gamma Delta and Phi Delta Theta, Alpha Phi and Triangle and Sigma Chi and Gertrude Sellars Pearson. The fifth float will be entered by the local chapter of Veterans of Foreign Wars.
The parade will start at 11th and Massachusetts Streets and end at 7th and Massachusetts Streets. All floats will then be parked in Zone X.
The theme of the parade will be "Sports Through the Ages." Other participants in the parade will include the KU band, three high school bands, the Kansas Relays queen candidates and a motorcade group.
Sachem Applications Available in Strong
Junior men interested in joining Sachem, senior men's honorary organization, should pick up applications at the Dean of Students office in Strong Hall.
The applications must be returned to the Dean's office no later than Friday. Selection is based on scholarship, activities, leadership and other contributions to the University. Applicants are required to have at least a 1.5 grade point average to receive consideration for membership.
Col. Sanders Recipe KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN "it's finger lickin' good"
Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11:45-12 noon; Saturdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Applications for Sachem are available in the Dean of Students office, 228 Strong Hall. Completed applications are due in the Dean of Students office on April 20.
Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05
p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford
German Ph.D. Reading Examination:
May 5, 9 a.m., 411 Summerfield. Deadline for signing up in 306 Fraser, Friday,
April 27.
International Students: The April
International Students: The April
this Saturday, April 21. A bus will
走 at 1 p.m. and will take interested
students to a Kansas City television and radio station for a tour and to view a "live" TV
station for a tour and to view a "live" TV
at the PaOffice. Sign in to Kansas Inputs.
Dinner – plus cole slaw $1.25
Tub – 15 pieces, 5 hot rolls $3.50
Barrel – 25 pieces, 10 hot rolls $5.00
Official Bulletin
TODAY
People-to-People Forum: Orientation meeting for students planning to visit
Le Certeur Francais se réunirau mercredi 14 juillet à la grammaire : Deux pièces en un acte, représentées par les membres d'une classe (3b), dirigees par M. Carman
BIG BUY
KUOK: 3—News & Weather; 3:05—Top
Fear; 4:10—Sports; 6:15—Sports; 6:20—Whittaker's
Wax Works; 6:25—Spotlight on Science;
Service Program; 7—Countdown; 8—
Night Flight; Stage I; 10—News & Weather;
Stage II; 11—Flight, Stage II; 12
Portals of Prayer
Ham Club Meeting; 201, E.E. Lab.
Society of Engineers; 201, E.E. Lab.
"Laboration." Everyone is invited to attend.
Scandinavia. 4 p.m., Forum Room, Kansas Union. Jannik Lindebaek in charge. SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m. 306 Kansas Union. Instructor, Larry Bodle
World Crisis Discussion Groups: 8 p.m.
"Promoting International Understanding in
American Room, Kansas Union;"
"Communism in the U.S." Room 306 A, Kansas
Room 306 B & C;
"Catalian American Problems." Cataferia
Alcoves A & B.
Baptist Student Union Devotional: 5
pm. 1231 Oread
Episcopal Holy Communion & Lunch:
12 noon, Canterbury House.
Der Deutsche Vorein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 19. April, um ufen Uhr in 502 Fraser. Frauein Hamburg Kehlenbeck wird ueber Hamburg serechn.
DANCE TO THE MUSIC YOU LIKE:
GEORGE WINN
15-piece Band
SAT. NIGHT, APRIL 21ST, UNION BALLROOM, SEMI-FORMAL
T
tive
out
tigh
NS
RELAYS DANCE
BIGGER AND BETTER THAN EVER
TICKETS: $1.50 couple at the Information Booth, Apr. 16-20
n-ss
sab.
u-
h:
op s
o'r
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Page 9
Wednesday, April 18, 1962 University Daily Kansan
New P-T-P Executives See Hard Work Ahead
Two new People-to-People executives, at a staff meeting last night, outlined proposed measures for tightening up the organization.
"It is no longer smooth sailing."
William Schaefer, Shawnee Mission sophomore and one of P-t-P's new co-chairmen, said. "We have been subjected to some criticism and not all of it is unjustified. By next fall we want to put the things we have learned this year into effect.
"The potential of P-t-P is as great as any organization on campus, but it's going to take work and discipline to put P-t-P ideas into something other than a nebulous form." he said.
Instead of a single chairmanship, two men will fill the vacancy left by Lovell (Tu) Jarvis, Winfield junior and former P-t-P chairman.
Schafeer and Reuben McCornack, Abilene sophomore, are the new cochairman. Robert (Mike) Bush, Webster Groves, Mo., sophomore, is P-t'P's new chairman, replacing Robert Thomas. Marvsville senior.
Jarvis and Thomas plan to leave tonight to begin a co-ordination project for the P-t-P student ambassador program. They will establish a headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, and work from there to co-ordinate the travels of American P-t-P members in Europe next summer.
SPEAKING OF THE CHANGE IN administration, Schaefer said, "The turnover will be gradual, but there will be changes, and some things will be done differently."
He said that P-t-P is "at a low ebb" now, but he is "exhalted" about what P-t-P can do.
The co-chairmen have made appointments to meet with executive staff members.
"Reuben and I want to know everything that goes on." Schaefer said. "That doesn't mean that we are going to plan everything—we can't do that—but we must know exactly
what each committee is doing so we can answer any questions which come up about the program."
TO PUT THIS IDEA INTO effect, a master calendar will be posted in the P-t-P office, Room 113 of the Kansas Union, giving a day by day accounting of all P-t-P activities.
Individual committee chairmen will fill out small calendars and post the activities on the master calendar so each member will know what is going on in the other committees.
Schaefer stressed the need for more individual contact with International students. Schaefer and McCornack plan to push the summer job placement program for International students and to put "new life" into the brother-sister program
McCornack said that P-t-P is in a slump at the present time but that he is optimistic about the future of P-t-P.
"THE NOVELTY HAS worn off," he said. "The future of P-t-P is in our hands. We have no new programs to present—we have to develop what we have to its fullest. We have to show foreign students we are sincerely interested in them and an exchange of ideas."
Others on next fall's executive staff are Arlo Schurle, Green freshman, treasurer; Sharon Foster, Birmingham, Mich. sophomore, hospitality committee chairman; Mary Ziegelmeyer, Shawnee Mission sophomore, office manager; Ruth Moyer, Shawnee Mission junior, brother-sister committee chairman; Sarah and Anne Graber, Hutchinson juniors, American Students Abroad chairmen; Jerry Harper, Wichita sophomore, publicity chairman; Frank Thompson, Iola sophomore, special projects chairman; Patricia Price, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, membership chairman; Bruce Hall, Coffeyville sophomore, job placement chairman.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 18, 1962
Leads League
Kansas Splits With Missouri
At the start of the 1962 Big Eight conference baseball campaign the Kansas Jayhawkers were conceded to be improved but were still slated to finish in second division.
The Jayhawkers surprised many of the prognosticators by sweeping a three-game set from the Nebraska Cornhuskers to surge into a first-place tie with Missouri and Oklahoma State.
THE JAYHAWKERS won two of three games with Kansas State while the Tigers and the Cowboys each dropped a game to remain in first place going into a three-game $ ^{ \circ} $ series with always strong Missouri five hits in 11 games
The Tigers perennially are the Big Eight conference's team to beat. Although Oklahoma State is the defending league champion the Tigers have won more championships in baseball than any other school.
The Jayhawkers proved that they were no fluke by lambasting the Tigers 9-3 in the first game Monday. With the Tigers fighting mad, the Jayhawkers nevertheless humiliated them 8-0 in the first game of yesterday's doubleheader, but dropped the second game despite a late rally, 7-5.
THE JAYHAWKERS now stand atop the Big Eight with a 7-2 record. Oklahoma State and Missouri are close behind with 3-1 and 6-3 records.
In the first game Missouri pitcher Larry Bohannon's record of having pitched a no-hitter and two one-hitters this year meant nothing to Coach Floyd Temple's crew. The Jayhawkers tagged Bohannon for 10 hits and eight runs.
Roger Brock held the Tigers to but six hits. He also helped his own cause by collecting two hits in four times at bat. In the second innings his single along with third baseman Dick Radar's drove in a pair of runs to put KU ahead.
BROCK HELPED his cause again in the fourth inning with a single that drove one run across. The Jaw-hawks built their margin to 5-0 in the fifth on a bad pitch and a passed ball.
Kansas assured their victory in the sixth inning with a three-run outburst in which Dick Fanning hit a bases-loaded single.
The Tigers drove the Jayhawker's top hurler Jerry Waldschmidt from the mound in the first inning with three hits and five runs to gain their lone victory in the series.
THE TIGERS picked up one run in both the third and fourth innings to make the score 7-0. The Jawhaws struck back in the fifth with a five-run rally. Ken Hensley doubled with the bases full to send home the first two runs. The third came across on a groundout, then Keith Abercrombie tripled home another run and came across himself on a single by Fanning before Missouri hurler Bob Jenkins finally put out the fire.
KU reliefer Monte Stewart gave the Tigers only two runs on two hits in five innings after coming in to relieve Waldschmidt.
***
KU Players Atop League Statistics
Through Big Eight league baseball games of April 14, the Kansas Javhawkers placed two hitters and three pitchers among the conference's leading hitters and pitches according to statistics released by the conference.
Dick Radar is the league's fourth leading hitter with a 454 average.
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five hits in 11 times at bat. Dick Fanning is eighth with a .400 average on six hits in 15 times at bat.
Roger Brock and Monte Stewart are among five conference hurlers with perfect 2-0 league records. Jerry Waldschmidt is among 10 pitchers with 1-1 records.
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Leading the conference in hitting is Brunkhardt of Colorado with a .529 average. Behind him are Oklahoma State's Calmus and Karns who both have .500 marks.
T-Southern Sweeps At Pelican Relays
Sharing the league pitching lead with Brock and Stewart are Oklahoma State's Ferguson and Missouri's Jenkins and Bohannon. All have 2-0 marks. Yesterday Bohannon was shelled for eight runs by the Jayhawkers in pinning him his first loss of the year.
Texas Southern, the top entry in the college division in the Kansas Relays Friday and Saturday, swept all six relay events Saturday at the Pelican Relays held at Baton Rouge, La.
The all-Negro school used the same 11 men that set five records in as many events at the Texas Relays the week before.
In the Pelican Relays, though, Southern was disqualified in the 440 because of an illegal baton exchange.
Buckeyes Lost First One Too
EUGENE, Ore. — (UPI) — The University of Oregon defeated Ohio State, 46-33, to win the first NCAA basketball tournament played in 1939.
VARSITY
NOW SHOWING
Defending Champs To Return to Relays
Defending champions will return in five of the six special AAU events at the Kansas Relays here Friday and Saturday.
Tony Curtis in
"The Outsider"
Starts Tomorrow
"The Magic Sword"
— Plus —
"The Mighty Ursus"
They are Bob Lindrud, Kansas University, 10,000 meters; Cliff Cushman, ex-Kansas University, 400-meter hurdles; Bob Mellgreen, Baylor, 3,000-meter steeplechase; John Kelly, ex-Stanford, hop-step-jump, and Phil Mulkey, decathlon.
Student tickets for the Kansas Relays Friday and Saturday can be purchased in advance at the Allen Field House ticket office, reports Monte Johnson, KU Sports Public Relations director.
Starring Laurence Harvey, Jane Fonda, Anne Baxter. Based on the novel by Nelson Algren.
KU Relays Tickets Are on Sale Now
"There will be a big rush for tickets on Saturday morning so many of the students will probably want to purchase their tickets before hand," Johnson said. "We expect a big line."
"Walk on the Wild Side"
GRANADA
NOW SHOWING
Student tickets are 50 cents and tickets are needed for both the performances. The tickets are good all day and those who wish to leave may return on the same day without paying extra admission.
7 & 9 p.m.
Cousy Holds Assist Record
SUNSET
NOW SHOWING!
"The Trapp Family"
Starts Tomorrow
"The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn"
— Plus —
"Tom Thumb"
BOSTON — (UPI) — Bob Cousy of the Boston Celtics set a National Basketball Association record of 28 assists in a 173-139 victory over the Minneapolis Lakers in 1959.
Kansas City Defeats Angels
LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — The Kansas City Athletics last night capitalized on the excellent pitching of rookie John Wyatt and Los Angeles errors to score a 5-3 victory that spoiled the Angel's home debut.
Wyatt, a 27-year-old rookie who came up from the Sally League, gave up only four hits and three runs in the $6\frac{3}{4}$ innings he worked, but put himself in trouble with six walks and was lifted in the seventh.
Four of the Kansas City runs were unearned as the Angels committed three errors, two of them by veteran infielder Eddie Yost, who had difficulty judging the bounce of the ball on the hard, new Chavez Ravine playing field.
Angel starter Ken McBride was charged with the loss, although none of the four runs he gave up in the five innings he worked was earned. McBride was touched for four hits
and gave way to a pinch hitter in the fifth.
For Kansas City, Jerry Lumpe drove in two runs on a sacrifice and single, and third baseman Wayne Causey drove in another pair on a single and sacrifice.
Joe Koppe accounted for two of the Angel runs with a single and sacrifice also.
Both clubs showed their unfamiliarity with the new stadium as a crowd of 18,416 turned out for the Angel's first appearance at Chavez Ravine.
The Athletics scored twice in the third and twice in the fourth with the Angels picking up solo runs that got them up to within a run of the Athletics but Kansas City picked up their insurance run in the ninth on Causey's sacrifice fly that scored Norm Siebern.
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Wednesday. April 18, 1962 University Daily Kansap
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.
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MISCELLANEOUS
FOUND
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks, ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent closed paper bags. Plastic, party supplies. 0350. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI 0350. 6140.
FOUND IN FRASER HALL; 1 purse of cosmetics, 8 head scarves, 1 Parker fountain pen, 1 pair men's glasses — brown pen, Stendhal book — "The Red and the Black", 2 neck scarves, 2 brown men's glove, 3 black leather gloves & 4 brown men's gloves, 2 black leather gloves, 1 white ladies' glove, ladies' black suede gloves, 1 blue ladies' glove, 3 men's black gloves, 1 brown glove, 1 white ear muff, 1 brown ear muff, 3 umbrellas. Claim at 111 Flint.
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MARKETING Jr. wanted for part time work for one desired actual experience in discount merchandising operation. Pre-entry required school or reside in Lawrence during summer. Apply in person. Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 4-20
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Call VI 3-1664 - 4-23
Good HQ-100; Call Mike Metzler; VI 3-
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Hi-Fi 3-speed automatic changer — 10 watt amplifier, 8 & 3 inch speakers in enclosure. Must sell. $75. Call VI 3-1353. 4-19
TUDY AIDS for Chemistry 2 and 2A
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4-18
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Owing - $200 down. Underwood
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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.
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.
1953 Super 88 Oldsmobile. Extra clean.
$300.00. Call VI 2-1769. tt
OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lawrence Typewriter, 733 Mass. VI 3-8644.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet store. Phot by Pet shop 2921 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days.
ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Thirty
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immediate care immediately.
Call 9-3877 or come to 807 Ark. for
more information.
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.
WANTED: a ride from Topeka to Lawrence on Tues. and Thurs. Call CE 2-4200
TRANSPORTATION
TYPING
rapping done by former private secretary.
Cally Engles at VI 2-1620. 4-23
Call VI 2-0267, VI 3-5019 evenings for neat and preise typing. Phyllis Spineto.
Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, manuscripts, etc., on electric power with signs & signs on rade rate. Call VI 2-1448. Mrs Suzanne Gilbert.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt
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FORMER SECRETARY with electric writerish wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, letters, diaries, resumes and résumés. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. Ph. VI 3-8586.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, rates. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VIII 3-8379.
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Requires rates. Barlow, 408 W. 13th. VI-21648. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th. VI-21648.
THESES. reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter. Reasonable rate. Marrian Graham, 1619 Delaware. CIP 3-04833.
Typing by experienced typist, electric
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TYPEWRITERS for rent, cheap — call VI 3-0031 between 5 and 7 p.m.
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BABYSTTTTING WANTED — nice home,
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an hour or $10 a week, 8-5. References, VI 3-
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DON ROSE BANDS Open Dates are
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INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf
Complete TRAVEL SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass. - VI 3-0152
Will baby sit in my home. $2 a day.
will not come from campus. References:
3- 2-2634. 4-23
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1287. **tf**
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
more information, Glenn Smaith
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ALTERATIONS — Call Gall Reed. VI 3-
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GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752. Free delivery. tt
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals,
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3-
644.
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birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles,
guinea pigs, etc., plus complete lines of
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Engine spit and sputter? Get a complete tune-up or overhaul—at a reasonable price.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 18.1962
Athletic Program-
(Continued from page 1) scholarships, or the current favorite, grants-in-aid, schools are paying athletes for services rendered on the athletic field. Under any name, the importance, effect, and need of such aid has been widely discussed in barnyards and living rooms alike.
MITCHELL FEELS that putting an end to scholarships would not spell the finish to collegiate athletics as they now exist.
"The financial help is the least important thing to a good athlete." Mitchell said "The good boys would find some way to compete in athletics. They would find some way to get into competition where they could gain pride and recognition.
"The good athletes would work at outside jobs or whatever they had to, to go to school and compete," he said.
Ending subsidization would not drop the level of competition throughout the nation, in Mitchell's opinion.
"EVER WITHOUT scholarships, 70 per cent of the schools would still have the same caliber of teams that they have under the present set up," he said. "Scholarships aren't the main reason athletes go to school."
Prof. Oldfather said athletic scholarships put schools in an unfortunate position of subsidizing athletes.
"Scholarships were begun as the only means available of controlling subsidization," he said. "A move to end scholarships would amount to a reversion to slush funds and they are uncontrollable."
Such a slush fund at Colorado resulted in the firing of football coach Sonny Grandelius. Since Colorado acknowledged guilt, a heavy penalty from the NCAA is expected.
"I KNOW OF NO RESPECTable substitute for keeping subsidization in bounds," Prof. Oldfather said. "But we need to work towards some method which will return us to a healthy, moral climate as far as athletics are concerned."
Prof. Oldfather said he feels that grants-in-aid are not the method to bring about this return.
Another member of the KU Athletic Board is opposed to giving any athletic scholarships at all. He is
Charles Leone, professor of zoology.
Discussing the spiraling tendency to offer an ever-increasing number of athletic scholarships each year, he said:
"IT IS TIME WE ASKED ourselves, 'What are we running here?'" There is even some talk of giving more money to athletes who are married or who have other dependents. The whole idea of giving scholarships is based on the premise that it is necessary in order to be competitive.
"Last year at my request, Dean Woodruff (KU's Big Eight faculty representative) brought a proposal up at the Big Eight meeting which would limit the total number of scholarships to 50 for all sports." Prof. Leone said. He added that the proposal was not met with enthusiasm.
"Whether we spend a million dollars or nothing at all the competitive spirit would remain the same between conference schools," Prof. Leone said.
The national championships and regional playoffs should be ended, Prof. Leone said. He believes that they have no place in a good, sound athletic program.
"THAT'S WHERE IT GETS out of whack," he said. "These play-offs keep growing until they are the total image of the school."
Prof. Leone said the idea that a good athletic program is indicative of a good academic program does not hold water.
"If this were true, then why wouldn't it follow that a good academic rating would indicate an excellent athletic program?"
He said that if the athletic program is to be a positive part of the university it should contribute something in a realistic way. He said that an athletic program being self-supporting is not enough justification for its existence.
"LET IT CONTRIBUTE SOMEthing for the good of the entire university—like a new swimming pool, for example." Prof. Leone said. "This talk of increasing the number of scholarships is foolishness.
"It is time to turn in the other direction. All these preseason and postseason games cause the athletes to suffer as students. Things are out of proportion."
Cheerleaders Chosen for 62-63
Eight cheerleaders and six alternates for the 1962-1963 school year were chosen last night at Robinson Gymnasium.
The new cheerleaders are Timothy J. Hamill, Colby junior, head cheerleader; Jerry A. Wiens, Hutchinson junior; Victor H. Voth, Wichita freshman; Ronald Ray Tucker, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Barbara A. Schmidt, Kansas City junior; Mary Louise St. Clair, Independence freshman; Mary Lynn Cooper, Prairie Village sophomore; and Mary Kathleen Riedel, WaKeeneer junior.
Miss Schmidt and Wiens are the only cheerleaders who were on this year's squad. Miss Riedel and Hamill were alternates this year.
Thirty-five women and fifteen men were at the trouts.
Alternates are: Sherry L. Wickliff,
Mission junior; Suzanne Fisher,
Prairie Village sophomore; Judith D.
Kulowski, St. Joseph, Mo., junior;
Robert Lightstone, Coffeyville sophomore;
Gerald R. Booth, Winfield freshman; and Gary C. Bond, Kalmazoo, Mich., sophomore.
The student-faculty judging committee included Robert M. Ash, traditions committee chairman; Bruce Bee, ex-head cheerleader; A.C. Lonborg, athletic director; Francis Prosser, physics department; Marilyn S. Cromb, Jay Jan, and Michael S. McCabe, KuKu's.
Art Film Series to Begin Tomorrow With 2 Showings
The Museum of Art will present its eighth annual series of Films on Art tomorrow.
"The Glory of Goya" and "Rembrandt Van Rijn" will each be featured in two showings at 7:30 and 9 p.m. in the museum lecture hall.
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LAWRENCE. KANSAS
59th Year, No. 121
Thursday, April 19, 1962
Court Injunction May Halt ASC Election
By Dennis Bowers
A law student here may file a petition in the student court for an injunction to halt next week's general ASC elections.
Robert Serra, Frontenac first year law student and independent ASC candidate in that school, may seek the injunction because the ASC elections committee has decided to exclude his name from the elections ballot.
Serra received a call about 8 last night from a woman on the elections committee. She told him the committee had decided to omit his name from the ballot in the general election because he had not turned in his petition on time.
She said Melvin Saferstein, St. Joseph graduate student and head of the election committee, would take the ballots to Topeka at 7:30 (this morning) to get them printed.
The results of the committee action prompted members of the Student Court to make arrangements for an injunction to halt the printing of the ballots. But the court never ordered the injunction because Student Body President Max Eberhart told a justice of the court that he would have the elections committee replace Serra's name on the ballot.
SERRA SAID that Saferstein had told him on several occasions that, even though he had turned his petition in a day late (due to his being hospitalized the day the petitions
Big Debate Is Grand Fizzle
They were questioned by 10 people at their debate in Templin Hall.
Jerry Dickson, Newton junior and one of the All Student Body presidential candidates leaned back in chair last night as his opponent, Gerald (Kep) Kepner, Wichita junior, gestured with his right index finger.
The two candidates had planned to give speeches and then debate, but decided to answer questions from the audience because of the small turnout.
Questioning was interrupted several times by switchboard operators who were paging people over the loud speaker in the dining room.
Dickson continually clicked his retractable ball-pointer pen. Kepner periodically tried to loosen his collar with his right index finger.
were due) his name would be on the ballot. Serra said that the notification came as a complete surprise to him.
Serra said Saferstein told him the committee's action was spurred by objections from Vox officials because of Serra's technical disqualification.
Saferstein said this morning that the only reason for the committee deciding to scratch Serra's name from the ballot was because he did not meet the deadline. (The time set by Saferstein was 5 p.m. March 28. Serra, because he was in the hospital, did not turn in his ballot until the morning of March 29.)
After last night's call, Serra talked to a justice of the student court and it was decided that the court could hold an emergency session of three justices to issue an injunction to halt the printing of the ballots today.
Serra agreed that if his name would be added to the ballot by the election committee, he would drop his complaint.
THE JUSTICE, after trying unsuccessfully to reach the elections committee head, decided to call Max Eberhart, Great Bend senior and student president, in hopes that Eberhart would call Saferstein and somehow talk him into replacing Serra's name on the ballot.
Eberhart said that he would check with Saferstein and call back. Later he called the justice and said that he had been unable to reach Saferstein. But he said he might be able to restore Serra's name to the ballot so as not to "make a big thing out of this."
WHEN REACHED by this reporter later, Saferstein said that the elections committee "made a decision on what I think are valid grounds and I will go to court if necessary to defend the committee's decision."
Asked if anything except a revote of the committee could change the decision to remove Serra's name
Fair east, partly cloudy west this afternoon through tomorrow. Widely scattered thunderstorms southwest this afternoon in west portion tonight and again Friday afternoon. Little cooler extreme northeast this afternoon otherwise not much change in temperature. Low tonight 40s east, 50s west. High tomorrow middle 70s to middle 80s.
from the ballot, Saferstein said, "No,
I don't think they can go over my
head. I don't care what Max thinks."
This morning, Eberhart said in a telephone interview, "Serra is not going to be put on the ballot" and that if Serra wishes to try for a court injunction to stop election proceedings that he can go ahead.
Weather
"I have talked to Saferstein," Eberhart said this morning, "and he told me that the election committee had received no decisive pressure from Vox members to omit Serra's name and that he was certain he had a concrete case against Serra.
Prof. Hits U.S. Nuclear Policy
By Dennis Branstiter
Arnold A. Strassenburg, associate professor of physics, last night made a scathing attack on United States attitudes and policies on nuclear testing and war.
He spoke at the meeting of the KU chapter of the Student Peace Union.
DISCUSSING THE resumption of nuclear testing by the United States, he said, "This is going to create incredibly bad foreign relations for us. The U.S. press shows all our moves as good and all Russian moves as bad, but foreigners do not read our newspapers."
He said resumption of nuclear testing by the United States would prove to the world "that we are every bit as bestial as they (the Russians) are.
"How can we expect people to believe that we have concern for human values if we ignore them (their pleas against resumption of tests)?" he asked.
He said testing may be used not to catch the Russians but to show them that we would not be afraid to use
1129 Vote As Vox UP Hold Primary
Students with University Party cards cast 725 votes while Vox Populi Party card bearers cast 404 votes.
UP used the primaries to make the final decision on the candidate it is going to run for vice president of the student body, and ASC representatives from College women and the Schools of Education, and Engineering.
The primary elections for All Student Council seats and president and vice president of the Student Body saw 1129 KU students casting ballots Tuesday and Wednesday.
Vox Populi leaders explained that they selected their candidates in a closed primary of party leaders and were running candidates in this week's primaries simply to judge their voting strength in some of the schools.
The final results of all the primaries are:
**STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT**
Gerald (Kep) Kepner (UP) ... 694
Jerry Dickson (Vox) ... 404
**STUDENT BODY VICE PRES.**
George Hahm (Vox) ... 404
Tom Hardy (UP) ... 390
*Pat Wilson (UP) ... 325
**COLLEGE MEN**
Blaine King (UP) ... 149
Greg Turner (Vox) ... 114
**COLLEGE WOMEN**
Kay Cash (UP) ... 197
Jan Huffman (Vox) ... 138
*Sandy Bornholdt (UP) ... 126
*Phyllis Brown (UP) ... 67
**EDUCATION**
Judy Fitts (Vox) ... 55
Constance Fry (UP) ... 55
*John Jones (UP) ... 35
**ENGINEERING**
Mike Swink (UP) ... 51
Dick Jones (Vox) ... 27
*Gerald Memming (UP) ... 21
FINE ARTS
Connie Hines (UP) ... 37
Anne Peddie (Vox) ... 40
BUSINESS
Larry Borchering (Vox) ... 16
Mel Bloomfield (UP) ... 15
JOURNALISM
Ben Marshall (UP) ... 7
Dennis Branstiter (Vox) ... 6
GRADUATE
Larry Jones (UP) ... 5
Rab Malik (Vox) ... 2
LAW
Leo Kelly (Vox) ... 2
Write In ... 2
INACY
Pennyis Wertzberger (UP) ... 3
Larry Milne (Vox) ... 2
eliving
all our military might in a showdown.
"I ABHOR THIS CONCEPT or trying to prove to other people that we are just as insensitive to human values as the Russians," he said.
He said professional military men in
the US may want to fight another world.
"The fact that they are military people suggests that war is not reugnant to them," he said. "We have been in the cold war so long that professional military men have grown too powerful."
Prof. Strassenburg said the U.S. public may be nearing agreement with the military men on the idea of nuclear war. They are encouraged by many current estimates of the human survival rate in case of a nuclear attack on the United States that have ranged above 90 per cent, he said.
"I suggest that these figures are very optimistic," he said. "Even if they were true, it still isn't worth it."
After a nuclear war the first government to emerge, "until it got back on its feet, would be the worst kind of military government," he said.
PROF. STRASSENBURG also attacked the determent philosophy of military might. He described "credibility" as an extremely important aspect of this philosophy.
"It doesn't matter so much what you've got and what you will do" as what the enemy thinks you have and will do. Russia must be convinced that we are "just big—and just as bad—as they are . . . that we are willing to engage in any kind of atrocity they are."
Prof. Strassenbung said attempts at bilateral disarmament are closer to a solution of the world's nuclear war than is Civil Defense.
HE SAID THE UNITED STATES is close to agreement in bilateral disarmament negotiations now. The only remaining stumbling block is the inspection system.
"It's just very difficult for me to conceive why we let ourselves get hung up over this point," he said. "Their proposals do not say they won't accept inspection."
He said the only difference is that the United States wants continuous unlimited inspection during the disarmament procedure and Russia wants inspection to follow each step of disarmament.
Following Prof. Strassenburg's speech, the group decided to circulate a petition against the resumption of nuclear tests by the United States. The petition will be mailed to President Kennedy Saturday.
At its next meeting the SPU will discuss the possibility of a campus demonstration against the resumption of nuclear tests by the United States. The meeting will be held April 25, the date now set for the resumption of tests, unless tests are resumed before then. If tests are resumed at an earlier date the SPU will meet the night of the first day of testing.
Personalities in Today's News-
10
BOB SERRA—Law student who has been forbidden to run for a seat on the ASC.
1963
MEL SAFERSTEIN—Upholds the election committee decision not to let Serra run.
10
LOIS RHODUS—Pi Beta Phi who will reign over the 1962 Kansas Relays tomorrow and Saturday.
ARNOLD STRASSENBURG — Attacks U.S. policies concerning nuclear testing and war.
---
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 19, 1962
Equal Opportunity
After a good deal of theoretical speaking about rights and discrimination, the Kennedy administration has taken a tough step forward in eliminating discrimination.
The president's committee on equal employment opportunity banned two firms from being awarded further government business until they correct questionable racial policies. Similar action is reportedly being considered against other companies.
Very early in the present administration, Kennedy set in motion an executive order requiring no job bias by government contractors. The recent action by the committee stemming from this order is the most concrete step taken so far.
THE COMPLAINTS against the two companies indicated reasonable doubt of compliance with Kennedy's equal opportunity order. The complaint against one of the companies was that it discriminated against Negroes in promotions, paid Negroes systematically less than white employees, and maintained segregated washrooms and other employee facilities.
The action against the two companies should have a far reaching effect. Kennedy's executive order appeared to be one of those theoretical things that politicians are prone to use, but hesitate to put in force.
It's probable that many companies using discriminatory practices shrugged the order off as one of these things. They realized it represented a threat to their established methods of management, but continued with their system, not quite believing the axe would really fall.
BUT IT HAS. The banning of these two firms from government business will conceivably start other companies with questionable racial policies toward complying with the executive order.
Government contracts are often the difference between life and death for a business. They represent a powerful lever the government can use toward preventing unfair racial practices. It's only just that the government should use this lever toward promoting equal opportunity in employment.
Juggernaut:
—Karl Koch
The Warfare State
(Editor's note: This is the fourth in a series of excerpts from a special edition. The剧本 by Fred J. Cook entitled "Juggernaut." The Warfare State.)
These outside political pressures seemed, for a time, in danger of forcing agreement at Geneva. By September, 1959, seventeen treaty articles had been accepted by both sides. Khrushchev, at the urging of Macmillan, made what seemed like an all-important concession. For the first time, in negotiations for a control proposal not linked to disarmament, he agreed to veto-free, on-site inspections by mixed national-foreign teams on a quota basis. In view of the long-held Russian conviction of the danger inherent in such inspections without disarmament, this overture by Khrushchev seemed again highly indicative of a real desire to put an end to the nuclear race that menaces all mankind.
There remained, of course, areas of disagreement still to be settled. One of the most important of these dealt with the number of inspections that would be permitted each year. Russia wanted to limit these inspections to ten; the U.S. wanted 100. But a compromise on such an issue seemed highly feasible; with Khrushchev's abandonment of the veto, eventual agreement seemed for the first time positively likely.
THE AMERICANS, however, were still putting up a stiff fight. On November 25, 1959, scientists from Great Britain, the United States and the USSR reconvened at Geneva. The Americans were still arguing that the originally proposed Geneva test system wasn't sufficiently fool-proof scientifically; the Russians contended that it was and that, anyway, it could be made better. The British took a stance half-way between the two major antagonists, agreeing with the Americans that the controls originally proposed were not perhaps as good as the scientists had thought, but agreeing with the Russians that the system could certainly be made better, eliminating any real chance of cheating.
This action of the British in almost throwing their weight on the Russian side made things rough. It began to look, indeed, as if we might have to accept an agreement; but this was a tragedy that we had foreseen and against which we had guarded. We had a hole card, and now we played it. It was a real blockbuster—Dr. Edward Teller's so-called "big hole" theory.
At Teller's suggestion, the RAND Corporation (a government-subsidized "think" agency) had concluded, after a special study, that nuclear explosions could be concealed if they were conducted underground in a hole large enough to "contain" the blast. The AEC released these findings to the press on December 21, 1959, and The New York Times promptly concluded that this method of muffling nuclear explosions would "make the international test-detection program virtually useless."
A LITTLE sober-minded analysis soon revealed, however, that the Teller "big hole" idea, though theoretically valid, was in all practical aspects little more than an imposing fraud. Its absurdity was thrown into high relief by experts like Professor Jay Orear of Cornell. He estimated that a hole large enough to muffle a relatively small 100-kiloton explosion would require a cavity 800 feet in diameter—big enough to contain a dozen Rockefeller Center skyscrapers. Such an excavation would require the removal of some "25 million tons" of rock, and one can appreciate the enormity of this task when one realizes that the entire anthracite production of the nation in 1959 was only 20 million tons—and that this required the labors of some 21,000 persons.
The RAND brain-trusters apparently had realized this difficulty and had endeavored to get around it by suggesting that the hole could be made by flushing out a salt dome. But even this system would require the removal of some "20 million tons" of salt—and the entire salt production in the United States in 1959 was a mere 5 million. Even RAND admitted that its salt-hole flushing process would require from two to four years of labor and cost $40 million—all for just one hole in the ground to hide one small-scale atomic explosion. In the light of such realities, the fantasy of the "big hole" theory, which had become our new roadblock to a nuclear-test agreement, becomes obvious.
AT LEAST, it was obvious to both the British and the Russian scientists at Geneva. The Russians, though they at first denounced the whole idea, finally conceded the validity of Dr. Teller's "big hole"
theory, as theory, but they argued that the whole attempt, from any practical standpoint, was ridiculous. The British agreed. The Soviets bluntly accused the Americans of bad faith, and the U.S. delegation, in self-righteous indignation at such an unjust imputation, announced abruptly that it was winding up its part in the conference on December 19 and going home.
Both the British and the Russians protested, Sir William Penney, of the British delegation, pleaded with the Americans not to leave just when "the technical matters show signs of coming together." But the Americans wouldn't listen; they were walking out. Also, they said, they wouldn't have any part of issuing a joint report on the conference with the British and the Russians; they were going to prepare their own separate report.
This infuriated the members of the other two delegations, especially the Russians. Dr. Federov, head of the Soviet contingent, declared: "I consider the action of the U.S. unprecedented. . . I think such action is aimed at undermining our deliberations because, just as soon as some partial agreement came into sight, just as soon as we got to that agreement, immediately the U.S. delegation took steps to ruin it."
During the heated argument, one U.S. delegate affronted the judgment of the other scientists by making the fantastic assertion that it would be perfectly possible to muffle and conceal an explosion of the awesome magnitude of "1.8 million tons" of TNT. Since this would be eighteen times the size of the 100-kilton blast requiring a hole that would swallow a dozen Rockefeller Center skyscrapers. Federov would seem to have had sanity on his side when he snapped that the Americans were "on the brink of absurdity." On this acrimonious note, the conference broke up and the Americans went home.
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LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
X-1
РОССИЯ, СЛУМАТ, СЛИМАК
"I UNDERSTAND THE FOOTBALL TEAM VOTED HER THE BEST
"FASS RECEIVER' OF THE SEASON."
LETTERS to the editor
A Reply to Costich
Editor:
Being one of the "noise-making moralists" commonly known as a CRC member, may I comment on the letter written by Ken Costich in Monday's UDK.
In the past year or so, we have seen Lawrence barber shops and boarding houses being integrated. The Civil Rights Council was given credit for a "holy" doing. People are watching this group. Some are laughing. Why Ken? Is it because you were not directly affected? We are funny, strange, queer and unusual. We are trying to perform another glorious deed!
So you want to examine that old "bugaboo," the minority. You claim to be a part of it. You are a member of the Caucasian race. Your religion is Christian Scientist. Now let me ask you two questions? Is the Caucasian race a minority race at KU? Are you a Christian Scientist by choice, or because this is the Caucasian Church?
KEN YOUVE been a little misinformed. KU's Civil Rights Council is not working with the whole world population. We are dealing merely with a small segment of it. In this segment, your race isn't in the minority. And if your religion is, it is only by choice.
Let us not stop with race and religion in examining the minority. Why don't you take a real survey in examining the human being in order to determine majority and minority. Here are a few questions to start the survey:
1. How many people on KU's campus have black, brown, blond, red, gray, or blue hair?
2. How many students ride the bus, drive cars, or walk to school?
3. What color shoes do the majority of the people wear?
4. What color eyes do the majority of the people have?
5. What cigarette is most commonly smoked?
When you have finished these questions I have some more to add to the survey list, before we decide to make all the brown-eyed coeds Alphas, the redheads Eetas and Kent smokers Gammas, etc.
You mentioned Orwell and Marx. In my Western Civilization class we also discussed Alexis de Tocqueville. Are you familiar with this great man? I forgot to mention it, but you can entitle your survey "Tyranny of the Majority."
THEN THERE'S equality. Mr. Costich everyone is aware of the fact that there are physical, economic and mental differences among individuals. Not only do these exist in different races, they appear within intimate social
groups. So what? Differences exist at birth. Nothing can be done about that. But, why should we invent more inequalities?
Do you think it is funny for human beings to run around in the cold looking for a place to stay, but rejected because of the color of their skin? Have you ever been hungry and refused a place to eat? Has your hair grown for weeks, because no one would cut it?
So what if the CRC and the NAACP resemble one another. The Methodist, Baptist and Protestant Church resemble each other also.
You left me with the impression that you have a better chance getting membership in the "Japanese war brides of the Daughters of the American Revolution," than Phi Beta Kappa!
Barbara Rice Kansas City senior
Action's P-T-P Stand Criticized Editor;
In Friday's Kansan, members of Action were quoted as saying the People-to-People organization had strayed from its first objective, which they felt was good. The changes were grounds for comments by various persons who attacked People-to-People.
If any individual or group was genuinely concerned about changes in an organization which had good aims, what would be the best way to correct the situation? By attempting to destroy the organization, along with its admitted good aims? I prefer to think that working from the inside would be better. Thus one could attempt to get his ideas made a part of the organization's program and in this way improve it.
ACTION decries disaffiliation with the NSA, even though the NSA is liberal and KU is more conservative, because according to Action leaders, conservatives could still express their views within the organization.
In summary, they say we should work within the NSA if we feel it is wrong, but we should attack People-to-People if weaknesses are seen in it. This suggests to me an inconsistent outlook.
instead of attending a meeting for the purpose of explaining the People-to-People application sheet and other materials to the flight members. Action leaders spent Thursday night holding their own meeting to attack the program before it was explained. Does this indicate a sincere desire to strengthen weaknesses, correct wrongs, and avoid misunderstanding? In my opinion it does not.
Allan W. Wicker Independence junior
Expansion to Continue In KU Athletic Program
(Editor's note: This is the final article
largest scale intercollegiate athletes.)
KU plans to expand its athletic program. Athletic Director A. C. Lonborg said that present plans call for an addition of 7,200 seats to the football stadium by 1967. Its capacity is now a little under 40,000.
By Terry Murphy
Long range plans, with no target date yet set, call for expanding the stadium capacity to 60.000. Lonborg said that this added seating will be needed to accommodate the increasing student enrollment and the growing local area population.
Another reason given by Lonborg for increasing the stadium capacity is to bring in more revenue needed to finance other sports. Lonborg hopes to see KU have competitive teams in both wrestling and gymnastics.
A MEMBER OF the athletic board, Charles Leone, professor of zoology, predicts that Allen Field House, with its 17,000 plus seats, will become just as crowded as Hoch Auditorium was in years past.
"What I think is needed is an independent faculty committee to regulate scholarships and recruiting at each school. The committee members should have no direct interest in the athletic program."
Charles Oldfather, secretary of the athletic board, sees a need for effective control of college athletics based on trust and confidence among the schools.
"THE WAY IT IS now, everyone is working on a basis of mutual distrust. Schools tend to overlook abuses on the grounds that other members of the conference are doing the same thing."
"As it stands now a school committee rules in good faith on a player's eligibility and quite likely its decisions will be second-guessed and over-ruled by a conference governing body.
"WE NEED TO return to a healthy, moral climate in athletics," Prof. Oldfather said. "An independent committee at each school would act in good faith and their judgments could be accepted as having been made in good faith."
Several schools have de-emphasized athletics. Prof. Oldfather said that these schools are in unique positions that distinguish them from state-supported schools. One of these schools, Chicago University, is a municipal school and another, Marquette, is a Catholic-supported school.
e o l e d t k e n g e t t t t n - - - - -
"The Ivy League tried to de-emphasize sports without success," he said. "These schools have fine academic traditions and attract outstanding students who also are good athletes. As a result, the de-emphasis did not work.
“WHEN I WAS in school at Harvard I got to wait tables at the athletic dining room because I was a miller. This was a form of subsidi-
zation. Since then it has grown to the present situation where athletic skill is a commodity to be bartered," Prof Oldfather said.
Prof. Leone said that the "foolishness at Colorado" is nothing more than an extension of abuses which are prevalent at all schools with large athletic programs.
He said that complete medical care for needs not connected with athletic activities is an abuse. Prof. Leone said that in the past, the athletic board has considered paying bills for eye glasses and dental bills in no way connected with athletics. He also said that giving athletes year-round training table privileges amounts to excessive subsidization.
ON THE IDEA of increasing the number of athletic scholarships Prof. Leone said that the saturation point has been reached.
"The addition of any more scholarships would endanger the athletic program.
"Intercollegiate athletics are a wonderful thing, there is no doubt of that. But the size of the program is not important. It is still the students' team and the spirit would be the same if the program were not so large."
AFTER AN ATHLETE has been recruited and shows promise in his sport there is still another barrier he must clear before he can compete Grades.
The athletic department started a scholastic program with the purpose of keeping athletes eligible. Monte Johnson, former KU basketball player, was hired last June to fill the job of Public Relations Director for the Athletic Department.
One of Johnson's jobs is to keep tabs on the athletes' grades, class attendance and attitude in class.
"WE TRY TO do something about an athlete's grades before it is too late." He sends out academic progress
reports to instructors twice a year in addition to the regular mid-semester and final grade report.
"By working closely with a person and providing tutoring and counseling when it is needed, we often make it possible for a below average student to get a degree in four years."
"THIS YEAR'S BASKETBALL team was an exceptionally fine group of students. The starting five had an overall grade average of 1.99." The grade point system is based on a 3.0 for a straight A average. None of the five are physical education majors.
Johnson pointed out that there were many athletes which did not need tutoring and counseling.
Prof. Leone said that extra tutelage is another excessive subsidization.
A full scholarship for an athlete includes room, board, books, tuition and fees, and $15 a month for incidentals.
"It has become almost a reflex action to provide tutors for certain courses." Prof. Leone said that it borders on maintaining a supplemental faculty.
"ANOTHER THING TO consider is that the tutoring fees are rather high. It is a needless expense."
Prof. Leone estimated that with the expense of maintaining the training table, tutoring service and other extras like medical care, the cost of a full scholarship runs somewhere around $2,000 a year for each man.
"THAT MEANS FOR each full scholarship we add, we must sell 200 more season football tickets. When you look at this closely it appears foolish."
The University of Kansas is not unique among college athletic powers in the country in that they plan to expand their program and facilities.
Thursday, April 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Here and there a school drops from the fast-moving competition. But these are the exceptions.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 19, 196
CRC Plans Investigation Of Local Barbershops
The Civil Rights Council decided last night to launch a new investigation of Lawrence barber shops in order to "have information on which ones still discriminate."
It was thought by some CRC members that, based on figures given the CRC by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, there were only three or four shops left in town that discriminated against minority racial groups.
"HOWEVER" TOM MOORE, executive secretary of the KU-Y, said, "it seems to me that if I were George (Buford, Kansas City junior and co-chairman of CRC) with a darker skin, that until all of the barber shops are open (to minority group members) there is still a threat. Our objective in this case is 100 per cent.
Moore said, "It would be a useful service if another survey (a similar survey was made last year) were made to see if the number of shops which discriminate is greater or lesser than last fall and if the announcement of some barbers that they would not discriminate had resulted in increased business.
Moore said that in view of the lateness in the semester, the information gained from the survey of the barber shops would not result in immediate action but that at a later date it could be used.
Moore suggested that three or four teams of about five persons visit the barber shops personally and talk to the owners. These groups, he said, should be "biracial" so as not to give the opinion that "we are a bunch of white radicals or just Negroes but representative of the community."
MOORE, IN ANSWER to a question by Scott Payne, Bethel junior, of where the CRC should "go from there," suggested that CRC representatives should go and see the owners of those barber shops which discriminate.
One of the big things which Moore said could be accomplished by this survey would be that the CRC can find out "how many Negroes really patronize these places that do not discriminate. My guess is that it is about zero." Moore said. "The opinion of some of these barbers is that if they change their policies of discrimination a whole group of Negroes will come in and camp in their shops."
Chuck Menghini, Pittsburg senior and the other co-chairman of the CRC4, said that the survey should also investigate discrimination of foreign students. He said that one of the foreign students was denied service at one of the barber shops in town and went to see Chancellor Wescoe about it. Menghini said that the Chancellor escorted the foreign student to the barber shop on Fourteenth Street (which was previously cited by the CRC as being totally open to all students).
Official Bulletin
Typewriters
sales - service - rentals
Western Civilization Examination Reg-
istration between April 30 and May 4
in 180 strong.
Olympia - Olivetti Smith-Corona - Royal
Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05
p.m., St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Straford
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.
Applications for Sachem are available in the Dean of Students office, 228 Strong Hall. Completed applications are due in the Dean of Students office on April 20.
Carefree and Comfortable in a Wrap Around MADRAS SKIRT
TODAY
COACH HOUSE
Glides For Town & Country
K.C. Lawrence K.C.
Blue Ridge KU Campus Plaza
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donperstig, den 19. April, um fuenf Uhr in 502 Fraser. Fraueulin Maria Kehlenbeck wird ueber Hamburg sprechen.
Baptist Student Union Devotional:
p.m. 1221 Oread.
Lawrence Typewriter
735 Mass., VI 3-3644
Free Pick-up & Delivery
Radio Production Center: 7:30 p.m.
220 Flint.
Pasover Sedar: 6:30 p.m. Eldridge Ho-
ber, Jewish students are invited. Dinner:
$12.95
DIANNE TURNER Kappa Alpha Theta
*World Crisis Discussion Groups:* 8 p.m. "Promoting International Understanding of American Room, Kansas Union; "Communism in the U.S." Room 306 A, Kansas Union; "Socialism," Room 306 B & C, Communism; "Problems," Cafeteria Alcoves A & B.
A
TOMORROW
Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel.
Episcopal Holy Communion and Breakfast: 7 a.m. Canterbury House.
KUOK: 3—News & Weather; 3:05—Top Forty Turts: 4—Hilltopping; 5—Hilltopping: 6—News & Weather; 6:15—Sports; 6:20—Society News; 6:25—Spotlight on Science; 6:30—"Bonjour Mesdames"; 6:45—Habitats; 6:55—Night Flight; 8—Night Flight, Stage I; 10—News, Night Flight, Stage II; 12—Portals of Praver.
International Club: 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas University, Mayor Ted Kennedy and of Kansas, followed by games, refreshments and dancing.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship;
winter visit on Danielon.
Don Thompson will speak on Danielon;
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Pianist Claudette Sorel Has Recital in Swarthout
Page 9
Bv Tom Winston
Claudette Sorel, guest lecturer in piano, presented a display of romantic fireworks for more than 300 people at her faculty recital last night in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Her program ranged from Chopin at the earliest to Rachmaninoff at the latest. She showed in her playing what New York critics have been enthusiastic about: a big sound, the flair for dazzle, and heart.
She opened with Chopin's B Flat Minor Sonata, Op. 35, a four movement work otherwise known as the "Funeral March" Sonata.
MISS SOREL caught the Swarthout audience's attention from the beginning when she walked onto the stage in a plush red velvet gown trimmed with mink at the hem and at each arm at the bodice.
FAVORITE works of the evening were four Rachmaninoff preludes, the B Minor (No. 10) and the A Minor (No. 8) from Opus 32 and the E-Flat Major (No. 6) and the D Minor (No. 3) from Opus 23. Miss Sorel
THE SECOND HALF of the program was devoted to "Sonata Tragica in G Minor, Op. 45," a rarely heard work by the American Edward Mac-Dowell.
did both her most delicate and some of her most brilliant playing of the evening here.
Miss Sorel showed clearly that she could make a piano roar, but only seldom did she show us she could make it whisper or purr.
Miss Sorel offered the "Nocturne for the Left Hand Alone, Op. 9, No. 2" by Scriabin (1872-1915), a piece which sounds as if it could have been written by Chopin. The Russian, born 23 years after Chopin's death, much admired Chopin's style. Miss Sorel played it well.
The "Caprice in A Minor" by Paganin the Liszt piano transcription closed the first half of the program. This is the famous melody upon which Brahms based his "Variations of a Theme by Paganini" and Rachmaninoff his "Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini."
Unusual Topics Highlight Potpourri Speech Contest
A South American man with childbirth pains, a KU trio's own recording, and 100 different cold viruses were the winning subjects at last night's Speech potpourri in Fraser.
Paul Adelgren, Mission freshman; John Seevers, Wichita sophomore, and Rosemary Schenck, Dayton, Ohio, senior, were the top three contestants. Their respective topics were "The Psychological Aspects of Pain," "Making Your Own Recording," and "Man and Virus."
In his speech on pain, Adelgren told an audience of about 300 that pain is modified and enlarged by culture, past experience and expectations.
Seevers told about the efforts
that go into making a record. Promotion, he said, is the most difficult task. He spoke from "personal experience," as he and two other KU students made the official Kansas Centennial folk song album.
Mrs. Schenck explained the nature of viruses and said that immunity is difficult considering there are 100 different cold viruses, 3 different measles viruses, and 4 different flu viruses. In order to confer immunity, she said, each vaccination would have to include every kind of virus.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 19. 1962
Liggett, McFarland, Sayers Excel At Sixth Spring Football Session
By Roy Miller
Tony Liggett, Rodger McFarland and Gale Sayers made the biggest gains at the sixth KU spring football session yesterday.
Liggett, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, broke through the Green team defense three times for sizable gains from his Blue队 fullback spot. Following the scrimmage, Coach Jack Mitchell praised Liggett for his "good speed" and said Liggett would provide help next fall.
McFARLAND, the top quarterback prospect, sneaked through his Blue team left guard slot and ran the length of the practice field untouched.
Sayers, Omaha, Neb., freshman, caught a pass in the right flat and side-stepped five or six would-be tacklers for a Red team gain of about 20 yards before the ball slipped out of his arm.
After the scrimmage Coach Mitchell said the main concern of spring practice would be basic fundamentals. "We need them so bad," he said.
MITCHELL SAID several freshmen would be in next year's lineup. "We have to depend on freshmen quite a bit," he added.
One of the top freshman prospects.
Dave Crandall, Topeka, is one of the first spring drill casualties. Crandall, a halfback candidate, sprained his left knee in Saturday's scrimmage and will be inactive indefinitely, according to Mitchell.
drills. Mitchell praised Roccaseca for his "good speed" and "strong" defensive play.
There will be no practice session Friday and eight seniors-to-be will report at Monday's session. Three seniors, quarterbacks McFarland, Lee Flachsbarth and Con Keating, reported at last Monday's drill.
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STARTS SATURDAY!
Sat. & Sun. Cont. 2:30 - 4:45 - 7:00 & 9:10 Adults 85c Kiddies 50c
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'Walk on the Wild Side'
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NREATLTE---Telephone VI 3-5201
NOW THRU SAT.!
METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER Presents
SAMBEL GOLDWYN, JR.'S.
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starring TONY RANDALL
presenting ARCHIE MOORE as JIM
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"QUESTION 7"
A LOUIS de ROCHEMONT ASSOCIATES RELEASE
"QUESTION 7"
A LOUIS de ROCHEMONT ASSOCIATES RELEASE
STARTS
SUNDAY
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
BEV ice close Ice 1 0350.
BAF
936
cake
Spo
strat
Have
wort
for $ rope
Adults $1.00
Sun. Cont. From 2.30
Thursday, April 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms账:All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional 15c 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
Women's dark-trimmed glasses. Lost be-
tween the dress and the floor.
Call Nancy Hoyes. VI 3-7070. 4-23
Gold class ring, 1959, blue stone. $5.00
reward. VI 3-6314. 4-23
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
paper bags. Plicnic, party supply.
Ice Plant. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI
Q350.
Have one new electric sewing machine worth $110 in competition. Want to sell for $75 as I cannot take it home to Europe. (Foreign student) Call VI 2-0248
FOR SALE
BAKE SALE at Jack Harris Furniture,
1936 Mass. 9-12 noon Sat. Delicious pies.
Sponsored by at prices you can buy.
Sponsored by Lone Star Home Demonstration Unit. 4-19
'53 Ford, 6 cyl. stick shock, 4 door, good,
$18; $18 VI C 3-552 after a
4-25
1954 Mercury. Very good opportunity—student leaving town. Good running condition, long range, brakes, automatic transmission. Skyline. Call Sally Daniels. IV 3-5606. 4-23
1958 — 45 x 10 2 bedrm. Buddy Mobil home. Front kitchen, new rugs & drapes, air conditioning. Reasonable. VI 3-8162 after 5 p.m.
4-23
1959 Opel station wagon. New tires &
carry on car key. See car owner
mail. Call VI 3-1664. 4-23
Hi-Fi 3-speed automatic changer — 10 watt amplifier, 8 & 3 inch speakers in enclosure. Must sell. $75. Call VI 2-1353. A.95
STUDY AIDS for Chemistry 2 and 2A
$4 package, and complete $2A
per copy. VI 3-7583.
Nice 52 foot 1960 CATALINA TRAILER
HOUSE. 10" wide, 2 bedrooms, automatic
locking doors. Balance owing = $200 down. Underw-
d Inv. Co. V 3-3875, 1117 Mass. St.
tt
GUITAR - Mahogany finish. Gibson flat top with case. $60. Call VI 3-164. 4-25
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.
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: Al
monograph. Call for reference.
graphed and bound. Extremely
comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call
along after 4:30 p.m. for free de-
livery.
SCHISM
0
in the right wing? For an inside analysis read the new STANDARD available 11-2 Friday outside the Hawk's Nest
1953 Super 88 Oldsmobile. Extra clean.
3000. Call V 2-2679.
¥
OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright typewriter sales, service, rentals. Lance Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3t-364.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet store. PHOTO: Pet Phone 2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. tt
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60
printing prehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition: formerly known as the Theta Tetra II 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery. $4.50
ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch Medical device immediately. Call 91-8377 or come to 907 Ark. for more information.
Baby sitter 2 to 3 days a week, 2 to 5
weeks in junior high. VI 3-9202 W.
W. 19th St. Terr.
HELP WANTED
MARKETING Jr. wanted for part time work for one desiring actual experience in discount merchandising operation. Pre-employment will who will attend summer school or resident Lawrence Lawrencesmer. Apply in person. Ray Stonehuck's. 929 Mass. 4-20
FOUND
FOUND IN FRASER HALL: 1 purse of cosmetics, 8 head scarves, 1 Parker foun-
cases, 6 face coverings, 1 case, Stendhal book — "The Red and the
Black," 2 neck scarves, 1 brown men's
gloves, 2 black glove, 2 black glove, 1 white ladies' glove, lades' black suede gloves, 1
white glove, 3 blue glove, 1 brown glove, 1 white ear muff, 1 brow-
ear muff, 3 umbrellas. Claim at 111 Filt
WANTED
WANT TO BUY used Classic Guitar. Wide
round hole - nylon strings. 4-19
I 2-05447
WANTED: a ride from Topeka to Lawrence on Tues. and Thurs. Call CE 2-1850-3697.
TRANSPORTATION
TYPING
Typing done by former private secretary.
Tina Hale, last Call, Callantyn lyn Engens at VI 1-1620. 4-23
Call VI 2-0687, VI 3-5019 evenings for neat and precise typing. Phyllis Spinoet,
Douglas Hewlett.
Experienced typist will type theses, term papers, manuscripts, etc., on electric paper with signs and symbols and rate. Call V1 2-1846, Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss.
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impres-
sion for the actors. For excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Loui-
Pope, VI 3-1087.
Experienced typist would like typing in a reasonable amount of time rates. Call VI 3-2681 any time.
FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter wishes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cam at VI 3-0524.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, Electric typewriter, Rareble monitor. Electric typewriter. Mts. Mr. Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379.
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 19th. VI 2-1648.
THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter Reasonable rate. Marian Graham, 1619 Delaware. CI 3-0483.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do do typing
HOME - call VI 3-9136. Mrs. Lo-
Gehnb.
Typing by experienced typist, electric
machine. Makes Mrs. Doris
Patterson, VI 3-5883.
BUSINESS SERVICES
DON ROSE BANDS Open Dates are April 20-21. May — every weekend — CE 4-7251, Topeka, Kansas. 4-26
BABYSITTING WANTED — nice home, no fence, no traffic problem. $40 an hour or $10 a week, 8-5. References, VI 3-7828.
tt
Complete
TRAVEL SERVICE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
746 Mass. — VI 3-0152
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
mentation. Mass. Cali V 3-5263. Ola Snuff.
1925$^2$ Mass. Cali V 3-5263.
INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven no damage cannot be seen; clips and pins term of repair. Call VI 212363. U Will baby sit in my bed. As a day block from campus. References. Call VI 3-2263.
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267, tl
ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 8-
7551, or NI 921. Miss. tt
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now comprehensive. Note these notes are revised and comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 2-78272 free delivery.
TYPEEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3-
3644.
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
Unfurnished 2nd floor 4 rm. apt. Private
New Hamp, Call I3 3-8785. 4-24
New Hamp, Call I3 3-8785. 4-24
FOK RENT
Unfurnished 2 bedroom duplex. Nice yard and patio. Available now. $30 mo. Walking distance from university. Call VI 3-5701. 4-23
Don't fight the heat this summer! Study in centrally air conditioned apts.
$75 and Up
Furnished & unfurnished
Call or come out to see other outstanding features.
Park Plaza Apartments VI 2-3416 1912 W. 25th
3 bedroom furnished house, 2021. Verver
plies, air-conditioned, very nice, $85 mo.
1822 Missouri. 2 bedroom apartment.
Tenant: Tenn. Hemphill, 704 Massachusetts.
4-19
MAGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 3 students. Available now. 520 La. VI p731.
TYPEWRITERS for rent, cheap — call VI 3-0813 between 5 and 7 p.m. tf
IF YOU Don't Come to the ENGINEERING EXPOSITION
you'll miss a heck of a good show
---
STARTING TOMORROW
At Your Friendly Neighborhood Field House
The arch is a large, curved metal structure that spans over a vast area. It is supported by two tall pillars and has a flat top. The ground below the arch is a grid of rectangles made up of smaller squares. There are several people walking on the grid. Two flags are visible at the top of the arch.
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 19, 1962
Page 8
Interest in Peace Corps Has Increased at KU
Interest in the Peace Corps has picked up, according to Clark Coan, secretary to the university committee on international affairs, and assistant dean of students.
Dean Coan said that he has averaged five people per day since March 1 coming into his office to inquire about the Peace Corps, and to pick up literature about the program.
Last October 17, only eight KU students inquired about the Peace Corps program while field representative Frank Kiehne was on the campus holding interviews.
That figure, Mr. Kielhne said, was "disappointing." He said that 400 students at St. Louis University, and 90 per cent of the graduating class at the University of Kansas City had attended speeches he made at those schools.
Thomas Gale, assistant professor of history, who will direct the training program for Costa Rican Peace Corps volunteers here next fall, also expressed optimism about increasing interest in the program.
PROF. GALE SAID that he feels "the Peace Corps has gained considerable prestige in the last month," and that he believes "any-one will benefit by being associated with the program."
At least three KU students have been notified of their acceptance by the Corps. Ron Gallagher, Fort Scott senior, and David Livingston, Independence, Mo., junior, are scheduled for the Liberian project. Terrance Brungardt, Hays graduate
student, will go on a special project to Borneo.
The next acceptance examination will be given at 8:30 Saturday in the Lawrence Post Office building at 645 New Hampshire. The examination requires no prior registration William H. Bamber, local civil service examiner, said. The tests are given on a "first come, first served" basis. He said that he has received about 20 test packets from Washington, and that he expects 8 or 10 people from this area to take the tests.
BAMBER EMPHASIZED that this is only an estimation. Since there is no registration requirement he has no way of knowing for certain how many will show up. The complete test, including the teacher qualification test, takes about $6\frac{1}{2}$ hours.
Applicants who pass the entrance test are assigned to an eight-week training course at a U.S. college or university. From there they get further training in the host country, if necessary, before their permanent assignments.
The KU training program, directed by Fro, Gale, will begin next October 26. The eight-week session will emphasize training teachers for secondary education. The program will cover English and basic sciences, counseling and guidance, and five members will be trained to assist in university education at the University of Costa Rica in San Jose. Peace Corps members will assist in the instruction in chemistry, English, library science, and will work with the University press.
IN ADDITION to subsistence allowances, Peace Corps members will have $75 a month held for them by the U.S. government which will be paid to them in a lump sum of $1800 at the end of their two-year terms of service.
Prof. Gale, speaking specifically of the Costa Rican program, said that Peace Corps members will have almost no expenses of their own. They will receive free medical care and a clothing allowance, and will receive the minimum pay of a secondary school teacher in Costa Rica.
"The standard of living for Peace Corps members in Costa Rica should be good," Prof. Gale said.
THE KU PROGRAM will be set up to train 45 persons from Kansas and other areas.
Peace Corps members on the Costa Rican program will spend the month of January in Puerto Rico on the way to Costa Rica. Prof. Gale said that this month will probably be devoted chiefly to physical training.
Kansan Classifieds Get Results
Twelfth Night' Next In Theater Series
Tickets for Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" or "What You Will," the fifth and final production in the Major Theater Series, are now on sale at the University Theatre box office.
Four performances are scheduled for 8 p.m. April 25 through April 28 in the University Theatre.
"Twelfth Night" is one of Shakespeare's late comedies, written after his talents as a dramatist had fully matured. The plot turns on an improbable set of coincidences and mistaken identities.
A synopsis of the play:
Duke Orsino loves Olivia, but she does not return his love. He is served by Viola, a girl posing as a young page by the name of Cesario, whom he sends to court Olivia for
Chemistry Student Gets Brewster Award
Mical Conroy Renz, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, has been named the Ray Q. Brewster Scholar of 1961-62 for past excellence and future promise in his major study of chemistry.
The $500 scholarship, first given in 1958, honors Ray Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry at KU for 43 years and chairman of the chemistry department for 16 years.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters.
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CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. VI 3-6133
WEST SIDE STORY
Records & Music
BELL MUSIC CO.
925 Mass. St.
VI 3-2644
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.
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
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him. Olivia falls in love with Viola-
Cesario and the plot thickens.
ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence 746 Mass.
To complicate matters, Viola-
Cesario falls in love with the Duke.
All the threads are unravelled when
Viola's twin brother Sebastian, presumed dead in a shipwreck, appears.
In the subplot, there is Olivia's steward, the pompous Malvolio, who thinks there should be no more cakes and ale because he is virtuous. Sir Toby Belch, Olivia's uncle, is a lovable ne'er-do-well who drinks too much, but loves life for life's sake.
Toby's friend and supposed suitor to Olivia is Sir Andrew Augecheek. A devilish minx named Maria and a sane clown named Feste makes the picture complete.
The University Theatre box office is open 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to noon Saturdays, and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on performance nights. Tickets are also available at Bell's Music Co. downtown. Students are admitted with identification cards.
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Daily francsan
Kansas Union Book Store
Paperback Edition
Friday, April 20, 1962
POWER BOOKS POPULAR
Judi Scroggin looks through one of the 7,000 titles in the paperback section of the book store.
- * *
\* \* \*
***
Bibs, Beer Mugs, Books All These in Union Book Store
KU baby bibs to gallon-size beer mugs, books of nursery rhymes to texts for a course in quantum mechanics (whatever that is), penny paper fasteners to $205 electric typewriters—the Book Store in the Kansas Union is the mart of myriad marvels.
A few flights down from the main floor, a right turn past the Hawk's Nest, through the turntable to your left, and you enter that fascinating and unique part of a university world known as The Book Store.
Just ahead are paints and palettes and pastels for the brush and beret set. A giant slide rule hangs on the wall to the left. But all around are the unmistakable signs that this store caters to a wonderful and wacky clientele, the college crowd.
THE NOBLE JAYHAWK AND the seal of the University are everywhere—on sweatshirts, steins, bookends, cigarette boxes and stationery. Perhaps, more than anything else the atmosphere of the Book Store comes from the images of the store's customers studying and relaxing. The merchandise, somehow, seems to mirror the life of the student.
There are the trinkets for the desk or a shelf in the student's room, decorated with some mark of the University. One day, the graduate will perhaps run across a little metal jayhawk tucked in a corner of a trunk in the attic, and fondly recall the wild discussions the cocky little bird witnessed in the fraternity house.
There are typewriters for rent—$1.35 a week or $5 a month—for the student to hammer out his term papers, working far into the night with the keys pounding an insane
The Book Store actually seems to be two stores. On the upper level the student can buy supplies and souvenirs. Here is where he will find the store's cheapest items (you can still buy some things for a penny) and the most expensive items (until recently, microscopes—now, electric portable typewriters).
chant in his ears and the gravel cutting furrows in his eyes.
The Book Store moved into the upper level in 1952, when the new addition to the Kansas Union was finished. For eight years, this level housed the entire stock of the store.
THEERE ARE THE BLUE sweatshirts with "Kansas" lettered on, to be worn with jeans and pincurls as you iron a skirt for a Friday night movie date.
ALL THIS, AND MUCH MORE,
gives the Book Store a special place
in the student's life. It furnishes
him a share of nearly every activity.
Its shelves and counters echo
his lighthearted moments, his inti-
tellectual struggles and his varied
emotions.
All this is packed in less than 8,000 square feet of floor space.
There are the pencils and erasers and notebooks to fill with scribbles and doodles in the long hours of English class. There are the packets of Blue Books, somehow sinister and frightening, for all their empty innocence.
There are textbooks and reference books to gather up in heavy stacks in the frantic crush of registration time. And there are the paperbacks—novels, poems, psychology, history—to fit the mood of any leisure hour.
In August of 1960, the lower level was opened. This is where you will find books covering every subject from aardvarks to zymurgy. The lower level is where the student scrambles for the textbooks required for his courses. It is also where he finds books for pleasure and relaxation—or even to guide him on his summer travels.
THE LOWER LEVEL ALSO contains an amazing array of paperback books, printed by 35-40 different publishing houses. When the Book Store moved into the new section of the Kansas Union in 1952, about six feet of shelf space were devoted to paperbacks. There is now about 700 feet of shelf space, crammed with 7-10,000 titles in paperbacks.
In addition, plans are being made for a small paperback bookstore in the new addition to Watson Library, where students will be able to buy books recommended for their classes.
WHATEVER THE STUDENT buys or rents from the bookstore he becomes, in a sense, a member of a student cooperative. What would, in an ordinary store, be profits is returned to the student in two ways.
First, the student can bring in cash register receipts for a cash refund—currently, eight per cent of his total purchases. Second, a small amount of the "profits"—now two per cent of the gross—is used to help pay for the operation of the entire Kansas Union.
Any way you look at it, the Book Store "pays dividends" to the student as an important part of his life at KU.
1962 Paperbacks Change From 1937
It was about a quarter of a century ago that the 25-cent paperback began to appear in drugstore racks and on bookstore shelves. Few paperbacks can be bought for a quarter in 1962, but that is not the lone difference between books of today and books of yesteryear. It is really a plattitude to say to-
It is really a platitude to say today that there has been a paperback revolution. The New York Herald Tribune predicts a $200 million increase in paperback sales in the next five years. And all one must do is wander through the paperback section in the Kansas Union Book Store to see the revolution in operation.
MAX LERNER'S "AMERICA IS a Civilization"—which was a 1,000-page-or-so blockbuster costing $10—is out in a two-volume paperback. It is likely to become a standard for many students in American universities. William L.Shirer's "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich," which also was a costly hardback item, is due this spring in paperback form.
Adventures in reading and seeing are being provided that once were restricted to those who could afford expensive hardback volumes. Take the many books on art. These are frequently well bound; almost all are beautifully illustrated, with sections of color plates.
The books no longer are merely reprints of "Topper," "Lost Horizon," the Jeeves novels of P. G. Wodehouse, and the courtroom adventures of Perry Mason. There isn't much now that not available in paperback. Paperback quality has changed, too. Those who enjoy history can read Bernard De Voto's "The Year of Decision: 1846" and "The Course of Empire" in a "clothback" that has qualities of both paperback and clothbound books.
One can build a lifetime library—as the ads put it—from such volumes. There is an enduring look to many of the new paperbacks. Some of the covers have style and flair. Instead of screaming by way of blurb and near-nude girl, the books are tasteful representations of the contents one will find inside.
SUCH A VOLUME IS THE paperback of Henry James "The Tragic Muse," a well bound book that looks as enduring as a hard-back. There is the Scribner Library line—restrained, attractive volumes that give us the writings of such one-time Scribner people as Thomas Wolfe, Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald, and such contemporary Scribner people as C. P. Snow and Alan Paton.
American Century books likewise have an enduring quality, and they offer such titles as Mahan's "The Influence of Sea Power upon History" and Steffens' "The Shame of the Cities." Such firms seem to be making a conscious effort to provide, in paperback form, books that had been shunted aside.
It is difficult these days to find titles of classics that have not appeared in paperback, except for such giants as "Les Miserables," available only in an abridgment. One of the early revelations in the "paperback revolution" was the fact that Shakespeare and Homer would sell—and it wasn't necessary to undress Juliet or Helen on the cover.
NOW SHAKESPEARE AND Homer are found in many editions—expensive and otherwise. Some provide textual notations. Some have introductions by distinguished academic names. The other great writers are available, too.
"Tom Jones." comes with an attractive cover, good binding, good
paper. So does “Vanity Fair.” At least three of Scott's Waverley novels are available in several guises. There is much of Dickens, and more is sure to come. Henry James has been given a workout, and even William Dean Howells. For a small expense one can read the novels of Cooper, Hawthorne, Mark Twain, Jane Austen, Hardy.
Dell has a Laurel series on several authors—Austin, James, Doostevsky, Drieser. The comprehensive Doubleday Dolphin line brings many of the great writers of the past. Bantam and Signet have been in the classic business for several years; these firms now have reached the point where such forgotten tales as "Elsei Venner" are being revived for the public.
STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas are well acquainted by now with the fact that paperbacks have changed textbook patterns. A student studying American literature now can buy his own, inexpensive volumes of Hemingway and Willa Cather. Western Civilization is almost based on the concept of paperback volumes of the philosophers.
A class that once required only one expensive hardback text now may require several paperbacks. Histories are available in paperback; a bright-looking reprint of Matthew Josephson's "The Robber Barons" recently made it to book-store shelves.
Bruce Catton's Civil War histories, Henry Nash Smith's excellent "Virgin Land" Cashs "The Mind of the South," Whyte's "The Organization Man," Lubell's "The Future of American Politics," Rovere's "Senator Joe McCarthy," Sandburg's Lincoln (in a boxed set)—these are titles now available.
A few years ago one could only wish, wistfully, that he could afford Henry Adams’ “Mont-St. Michel and Chartres.” Now there are paperbacks of the book available. Plato’s “The Republic” comes in a volume worth keeping. So does Milton’s “Paradise Lost.” One may find Marquis James’ biography of Andrew Jackson, Walter Prescott Webb’s “The Great Plains,” Darwin’s “The Voyage of the Beagle,” and the natural history writings of Theodore Roosevelt.
THAT GRAND OLD PAPERback name, Penguin, still keeps producing -drama, poetry, philosophy, science and medicine, art and architecture. Pocketbooks, the pioneer of them all in America, produces on a more popular level, but also provides excellent guides and attractive, inexpensive classics.
Bestseller to paperback has become a familiar pattern, to the frustration of many who purchase the hardback volumes. The recent Pulitzer Prize-winner, "To Kill a Mockingbird," is available. Strong recent sellers have been "Hawaii," "Advise and Consent," "Profiles in Courage," the Vance Packard books.
In these pages, elsewhere in this Relays issue, and as a continuing policy in the University Daily Kansan, reviews of paperbacks may be found. Such paperbacks are proving irresistible to lovers of good books, who find it hard to walk through a bookstore these days without purchasing a few new volumes before leaving.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday. April 20.1962
U.S. Novels: Garland, James and Fitzgerald
By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism
MAIN-TRAVELLED ROADS, by Hamlin Garland. Premier (Fawcett). 50 cents.
Hamlin Garland was a pioneer writer of the naturalistic school who championed what he called "veritism"—the truth in portrayals of life. His truthful portrayals in these six stories of life on the American prairies in the late 19th century are grim and subduing.
He was not an expert writer. "Main-Travelled Roads" is full of cumbersome writing, but it is honest and expressive. His people, for the most part, live "lives of quiet desperation," from which it is difficult to escape. And if you do escape, what have you got?
Only those who get out—or those who are tough and hard—survive. Will Hannan, in "A Branch-Road," leaves the farm in insane anger at his sweetheart, and goes west. He returns and finds that his sweetheart, Agnes, has married the wrong man and is being screamed at all day long by a shrewish old woman and a miserable old man. He persuades Agnes to flee with him, but it is obvious that neither can be truly happy.
HOWARD McLANE, IN "UP THE COULE." comes back to his Wisconsin home after a life of success as a Broadway actor and playwright. His brother Grant has become embittered by the hardships of life, and when Howard tries to offer him a chance for comfort and relative happiness, he refuses. "I'm a dead failure," he says.
Rob Rodemaker, in "Among the Corn-Rows," goes east to find himself a wife to take back to Dakota territory. The girl he selects is Julia Peterson, who is consigned to a life of hardship and dullness with her Norwegian parents who refuse to accept the ways of life in Wisconsin. She leaves with Rob, even though she knows she does not love him. But love isn't that important to her.
Edward Smith comes home from the Civil War in "The Return of a Private." He comes home weakened in body and spirit. He comes home to a life that he knows will be full of drudgery, and his friends and neighbors know their lives are the same, even as they sing and dance and make jokes and eat and talk. Life is a grim matter, so let's face it, they say.
HASKINS WORKS AND SLAVES, in "Under the Lion's Paw," improves a farm by some $3,000 worth, and then, when he tries to buy it from its owner, finds that he has improved it so much that it now will cost him that much more. He's "under the lion's paw," and, as the owner Butler says, "Why, man, don't look at me like that. Don't take me for a thief. It's the law. The reg'lar thing. Everybody does it."
INDIAN SUMMER, by William Dean Howells. Everyman (Dutton).
SUMMER, by William Dean Howells. Everyman (Dutton). If any American novelist is due a reevaluation it is William Dean Howells, and this fine novel, which Howells himself regarded as his best, should be the cornerstone of such a movement. Howells tells here a story that is simple and refined and non-sociological, in contrast to some of his later works. It belongs quite properly among novels that we consider to have an "international theme."
Whether Howells was trying to emulate Henry James we don't know. James, by the time "Indian Summer" had appeared in 1896, had written such internationally pegged novels as "The American" and "The Portrait of a Lady." Certain it is that "Indian Summer" is in the mood of James' novels, though perhaps not as good.
COLVILLE, HIS HERO, IS A MIDDLE-AGED AMERICAN IN search of culture in Europe, like James' Christopher Newman. In perceptiveness he is closer to Lambert Strether of James" "The Ambassadors." In the course of his culture search he falls in love with a young girl, Imogene Graham. But a serious accident awakens him to his folly, and he comes to his senses and ends up by marrying an older woman.
RODERICK HUDSON, by Henry James. Harper Torchbooks, $160.
I am about ready to draw attention to myself in my literary circle of five or six by proclaiming that Henry James has been praised for the wrong books. Or, perhaps, for too few books. "The Princess Casamassima" and "The Bostonians," which even James himself wasn't sure about, got me started on this kick, and now there is "Roderick Hudson."
For this is an amazingly good first novel. I would guess that even the unpolished version would be a good first novel (James took this one and several others and gave them finesse in a special edition published, I believe, around 1906). In view of the fact that this is a touched-up novel, it was refreshing to find a splendid dangling modifier and a number of unclear antecedents. It's nice to know that our greatest novelist was human, after all.
"RODERICK HUDSON" was the first of the "international novels." Rodderick is a New England sculptor of considerable ability and considerable instability, who goes to Rome under the financial auspices of the central intelligence of the novel, Rowland Mallet. In Rome, chiefly through a misguided love affair with an American woman who later becomes James' "Princess Casamassima," Hudson disintegrates and finally hurls himself to his death.
** **
THE LAND OF LITTLE RAIN, by Mary Austin (Doubleday Anchor, 95 cents)—a picture of the border country of southern California and Arizona, a natural history of desert land. The book was first published in 1903 and endures as a study of a region becoming more and more important in our modern life.
MOLIERE, a new criticism by W. G. Moore (Doubleday Anchor, 95 cents)—an Oxford professor examines plays such as "Le Tartuffe" and "Le Misanthrope" as comic art. Moore contends the plays are best approached as theater.
* *
THEODORE PARKER, YANKEE CRUSADER, by Henry Steele Commager (Beacon, $1.75) — a paperback reprint of the 1936 biography of the famed Unitarian minister, abolitionist and Transcendentalist. Parker served as the dynamic conscience of abolitionism for many Americans, and his story is of particular interest to Kansans for his impassioned defense of John Brown. Here is a good biography deserving of special attention.
BABYLON REVISITED, AND OTHER STORIES, by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Scribner Library, $1.25.
For a good part of his writing life, F. Scott Fitzgerald was a kind of Peter Pan of letters. He refused to grow up, and his writings reflect this.
"THE ICE PALACE" IS, A CRITIC MIGHT SAY, a story of a conflict in cultures, what happens to a slow-moving, languid Georgia girl when she is transplanted to the cold of what probably is Fitzgerald's home town of St. Paul.
"May Day" is a wild and disturbing story of the generation about to embark on the twenties, about a night of gaiety and tragedy as a mob of soldiers invades a Communist newspaper office. "The Diamond as Big as the Ritz" is a fantasy about any Ayn Rand kind of family that is holed up on a Montana mountaintop, living in luxury and fighting off all invaders.
Then there is "Babylon Revisited," which seems to sum up all that Fitzgerald had to say about desperate and unthinking living in Paris in the twenties—and the consequences of such life.
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Friday. April 20,1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Gogol, Dickens, Hawthorne in New Paperbacks
DEAD SOULS, by Nikolai Gogol (Signet Classics, 60 cents); THE POSSESSED, by Fyodor Dostoyevsky (Dell Laurel, 95 cents); RESURRECTION, by Leo Toiloty (Doubleday Dolphin, $1.45); TENDAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD, by John Reed (Vintage, $1.45).
Russia. The word conjures up numerous pictures, usually pictures today that relate to communism and the Red leaders of recent years. The reader of Russian literature recalls other pictures, but these are by no means dissociated from that of communism.
One might say that a common theme is that of repression. This even marks Gogol's delightful "Dead Souls," that wild satire that sends an opportunist named Chichikov across the Russian countryside buying up dead serfs so he can become a man of property before the next census is taken.
IT IS MORE MARKEDLY a theme of the other books. In "The Possessed" we see the ugly young men in revolt against their time, and we see the fruits of their revolt. In "Resurrection" we see a peasant girl unjustly condemned to Siberia. In "Ten Days That Shook the World" we see the 20th century culmination of 19th century Russia, and the Russia of the centuries that went before.
"Dead Souls" has moments of wild hilarity, and one doesn't have to believe it could happen to believe in the portraits of avaricious villagers and selfish land-owners and people anxious to impress a person of seeming importance—like the "inspector general" of Gogol's equally funny play.
"The Possessed" is like a nightmare. It deals with the Nihilists of late 19th century and is Dostoyevsky's cry of protest against them, for he sees them as the possessed swine that are described in St. Luke.
Seldom in literature can a reader find a darker and uglier character than Pyotr Stepanovitch, leader of a revolutionary group that spreads terror and hatred throughout a Russian community. It is a grim tale, seldom lightened by humor, frequently confusing, almost always shocking.
"RESURECTION" APPEARED late in Tolstoy's life, when he was burning with Christian principles. His story is that of Nekludoff, who serves on a jury that convicts a peasant girl she had loved and seduced years before. Because he feels himself responsible for her plight, he follows her to Siberia vowing that he will marry her. His attempt to obtain absolution for his sins leads him to become a reformer, a man busily doing good for the convicted, an outspoken critic of the prison system.
"Ten Days That Shook the World" is recognized as the best first-hand account of the Russian Revolution, John Reed was an Oregonian, a Harvard graduate, classmate of T. S. Eliot and Walter Lippmann. Burning with liberalism, converted to socialism, he participated in the revolution and when he died was buried in the Kremlin. The Bolshevik Revolution to Reed was adventure, "one of the most marvelous mankind ever embarked upon, sweeping into history at the head of the toiling masses, and staking everything on their vast and simple desires."—CMP
* *
THE MYSTERY OF ERWIN DROOD. by Charles Dickens, Signet Classics, 50 cents. OLIVER TWIST. by Charles Dickens, Doubleday Dolphin, 95 cents. HARD TIMES. by Charles Dickens. Doubleday Dolphin, 95 cents.
If one reads Dickens today (unless one is required to read Dickens), there probably has been some motivating reason. As one who is no Dickens scholar, but who does enjoy Dickens, I step forth to say there are two good reasons: (1) the character portrayals and (2) the portraits of life in the England of 100 years ago.
Here are three books that have little relation to each other. "Edwin Drood" is best known as a great unfinished work, and people
are still speculating about what happened to Edwin and who was responsible for whatever it was having happened. "Oliver Twist" is a sociological tale of the sweetest little chap this side of Gene Stratton Porter and all his troubles with the thieves and robbers of old England. "Hard Times" is a satire of misunderstood Utilitarianism, but it also is sentimental, like "Oilver Twist."
A TRIP THROUGH three Dickens novels shows us, most of the time, the worst of people. Edwin Drood himself is an arrogant young man who represents no great loss to society. John Jasper, the choirmaster who probably did the evil deed, is a dark and ugly character who spends much of his time in opium dens.
Everybody knows about the evil "my dearing" Fagin, who trains boys to be pickpockets, and Bill Sikes, who so brutally murders his mistress, Nancy. "Oliver Twist is full of knaves, all contrasted with the kindly Oliver and his many benefactors.
And "Hard Times" has its knaves, too. Old Gradgrind, who teaches only "facts" to his pupils, finally turns out all right, but there is his worthless son, who is tagged by Dickens as the "whelp." Bounderby, the self-made banker, is a bad guy all the way. Poor
old Steven Blackpool, the man of the working classes, is placed in contrast to Bounderby.
* *
THE BLITHEDALE ROMANCE,
by Nathaniel Hawthorne. THE MARBLE FAUN, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Both Doubleday Dolphin, 95 cents each.
Hawthorne wrote but four novels. "The Scarlet Letter" and "The House of the Seven Gables" have classical stature. "The Bilthedale Romance" and "The Marble Faun" are not so well known, but they deserve readings, and not just by students in American literature.
The first is a tale not so obsessed with matters of sin and guilt as are most Hawthorne stories. It is best known as the only novel to come out of Brook Farm, where Hawthorne labored briefly and unrewardingly. It also is known as the novel that gives us a picture of Margaret Fuller-Zenobia in the novel—though Hawthorne is careful to introduce the name of Miss Fuller in another context.
HAWTHORNE IS THE HERO,
Miles Coverdale, who becomes swept up in the affairs and fortunes of the beautiful and exciting Zenobia, a frail girl of mystery named Priscila, and a fanatical ex-
blacksmith who has a reformer's dream of rehabilitating convicts. He also is swept up in the workday problems of Blithedale, working in the fields, discussing matters of the day, contemplating Fourierism and Transcendentalism and all these imply.
Though "The Blithedale Romance" comes to a conclusion startling in view of its normally placid form, it is essentially a quiet and un-dramatic tale. "The Marble Faun" has more violence, considerable incident, and is as ambitious per se as anything Hawthorne attempted.
This is Hawthornian allegory, transferred to the complex form of the novel. There are four central characters—Kenyon, an idealistic American sculptor; Hilda, a frail and ethereal American girl who must have inspired the later heroines of Henry James; Miriam, a beautiful lady of mystery, and Donatello, a spirited and ingenuous young Italian who has formed an attachment for Miriam.
These fanciful folk believe they see in Donatello a virtual reincarnation of Praxiteles' statue of the marble faun, even to conjecturing on his possibly furry, pointed ears. But Donatello does not remain a woodland sprite for long, for violence enters the tale, Donatello murders a mysterious man who
has been haunting Miriam, and
Hilda witnesses the crime.
SO COMES THE QUESTION OF sin, guilt, and corruption. Through knowledge of his sin, Donatello is allowed to become a penitent and to achieve real stature, Miriam finally vanishes, and Hilda obtains absorption through the offices of the Catholic confessional—though she is a good New England "heretic."
Hawthorne has used "The Marble Faun" to give us a beautiful guided tour of the Italy of 100 years ago. He betrays that curious 19th century paradox of accepting nudity in art as long as it is labeled "Greek Slave" or "Venus," but considering it vile if it represents a naked woman of the 19th century. He tells an absorbing story, and even though he tells it with the flowery language that already was departing from American literature, it remains a novel well worth reading—CMP.
* *
A DISTANT TRUMPET, by Paul Horgan (Crest-Fawcett, 95 cents)—a long and vivid novel about Apache warfare in the Southwest. The time is the 1880s; the characterizations go beyond standard two-dimensional interpretations of the American West.
THE PELICAN SHAKESPEARE
'Pelican seems to me the best of all editions: the notes are where they belong, the texts are excellent and the format is attractive.'
-COLLEGE ENGLISH
Tragedies
Edited by Maynard Mack ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA
Harry Levin CORIOLANUS
Willard Farnham HAMLET
S. F. Johnson JULIUS CAESAR
Alfred Harbage KING LEAR
Alfred Harbage MACBETH
Gerald E. Bentley OTHELLO
John E. Hankins ROMEO AND JULIET
Charlton Hinman TIMON OF ATHENS*
Jonas Barish ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL$^{\textcircled{1}}$
Ralph Sargent AS YOU LIKE IT
Robert B. Heilman CYMBELINE$^{\textcircled{2}}$
Alfred Harbage LOVE'S LABOR'S LOST$^{\textcircled{3}}$
R. C. Bald MEASURE FOR MEASURE
Brents Stirling THE MERCHANT OF VENICE
Fredson T. Bowers THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR$^{\textcircled{4}}$
Madeleine Doran A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM
Josephine Waters Bennett MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING
Richard Hosley THE TAMING OF THE SHREW$^{\textcircled{5}}$
Northrop Frye THE TEMPEST
Virgil Whitaker TROILUS AND GRESSIDA
Charles Prouty TWELFTH NIGHT
Baldwin Maxwell THE WINTER'S TALE
Histories and Poems
M. A. Shaaber HENRY IV, PART I
Allan Chester HENRY IV, PART II
Louis B. Wright and V. Freund HENRY V
Irving Ribner KING JOHN*
Matthew Black RICHARD II
G. Blakemore Evans RICHARD III
Douglas Bush THE SONNETS
*In preparation
50c and 65c per volume
Penguin Books, 3300 Clipper Mill Road, Baltimore 11, Maryland
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 20, 1962
Readers' Paradise —
CENTRAL LIBRARY
"America's Coming-of-Age" is pretty dated stuff. Van Wyck Brooks wrote it in his less benign days; he is such a kindly elder statesman of literary criticism today that it is difficult to conceive of him as an angry young man.
He looks at American life and literature in the teen years of this century and is not overwhelmed. He seems relatively unaware, then, of Henry James, but the days of James' rediscovery lay ahead. So did the rediscovery of Melville. Brooks says that Poe and Hawthorne were the only writers of note who were not swept up in Transcendentalism; Melville certainly belongs in such a grouping.
HE CALLS, additionally, for a recognition of America as an entity before there ever can become an American literature. Many have answered that call, but as Brooks himself well knows, they were answering it long before he sounded it.
AMERICA'S COMING-OF-AGE,
by Van Wyck Brooks. Doubleday
Anchor, 95 cents. THE LIBERAL
IMAGINATION, by Lionel Trilling.
Doubleday Anchor, 95 cents.
These essays are most noted for Brooks' definitions of highbrows and lowbrows. He also notes perceptively the way we fumble for ways to define ourselves and our issues: New Nationalism, New Freedom, New Patriotism. And today he could add New Frontier and New Conservatism.
Many readers are acquainted with the excellent essays in Lionel
Two Books of Criticism
Trilling's "The Liberal Imagination." By "liberal" he is speaking of awareness of complexities and difficulties, and he suggests nothing doctrinaire.
He starts off, in fact, by taking off after Parrington for being so doctrinaire that he could apologize for the worst of Dreiser and put Greeley among the great writers and scorn James because he did not deal with the American scene. It is a stunning essay.
Trilling also gives us his views of the rise and fall of Sherwood Anderson, and he contributes a brilliant essay on that underrated novel of social protest by, of all people, Henry James: "The Princess Casamassima." His essay on "Huckleberry Finn" is well known, and he is one critic who does not believe that the novel falls to pieces when Tom Sawyer arrives on the scene.
* *
THE SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON,
by Johann Wyss. Dell. 35 cents.
Most adults probably don't read this one anymore, but it does provide a welcome relief from much that is being thrown at us these days. It is wholesome and clean, and the success of the Walt Disney film version has persuaded a paperback publisher to give it a go.
The magic of the book, of course,
lies in the fact that all of us have
a kind of utopian desert island in
our minds, and some of us, busily
equipping our fallout shelters,
might get some valuable tips from
the Robinsons on how to survive
in adverse circumstances.
Balzac in New Books
PERE GORIOT, by Honore de Balzac. Doubleday Dolphin, 95 cents.
EUGENIE GRANDET, by Honore de Balzac. Doubleday Dolphin,
95 cents.
In several respects these celebrated novels by Balzac, which often find themselves in the same volume, are greatly different pieces of writing. Each book is marked by the tremendous sense of realism that always characterized Balzac, but the settings and the points of view have little in common.
"Pere Goriot" is a story of Paris, and essentially it falls into the pattern of the "young man from the provinces" that was attracting both Stendhal and Dumas. Though it is a story of an old man and his ungrateful daughters, it is even more a story of a young man. For the central character really is Eugene Rastignac, the boy from the sticks who comes to the big city and slowly acquires sophistication and disillusionment.
PERE GORIOT IS ONE MENTOR; Vautrin, an escaped convict, is another. But Eugene learns even more from the women, especially the daughters of Goriot. These two are wretches who would fit well into "King Lear" or even "Cinderella."
Eugene in his ingenuousness is a delightful character, and his instincts prove to be as decent as those of Goriot, whom he befriends when everyone else in the Parisian boarding-house uses the old man as a convenient target for sarcasm and tongue-lashing.
"Eugenie Grandet" is a story of the provinces. Charles Grandet is a Parisian with whom the sweet and innocent country girl, Eugenie, falls in love. He is a Eugene Rastignac in reverse. He possesses all the sophistication and guile that Eugene painstakingly had to acquire. He is a man of the city, but he meets his match—as who doesn't?—in Eugenie Grandet's terrible old father.
THE ELDER GRANDET IS ONE of the wealthiest men in his part of the country. He is a grape-grower and a grasper and the worst miser on record. He also is an old crook. Balzac easily could have fallen into caricature with Grandet, but he never makes that blunder. Grandet remains believable.
It is a sad tale—the daughter of the miser, the fop from Paris who goes to the Indies and becomes a wealthy and unprincipled adventurer, the mean old father, the long-sacrificing mother. Eugenie, of course, is well rid of Charles, but this is a hard thing to tell a young woman in love.
Both books have detail and insights that set them apart from the romantic tales that were so popular even as Balzac was writing. They deserve their reputations and continued popularity.
* *
THE KREUTZER SONATA, by Leo Tolstoy. Premier (Fawcett), 50 cents.
If I were 20 years younger and in full possession of all knowledge, as many University students apparently are, I would put this book aside and say "Nonsense!" Tolstoy was well into his mood of religious fanaticism when "The Kreutzer Sonata" appeared, and he offers observations that would be utter balderdash to our sex-centered society.
Or to his sex-centered society, for "The Kreutzer Sonata" deals with the tragedy overtaking a couple who offered each nothing more in their marriage than the satisfactions of sexual intercourse. But Tolstoy goes beyond merely condemning a marriage—or any relationship—based on lust.
Sexual intercourse is not God's will, says Tolstoy. Nor is it mere animal behavior, for animals "abandon themselves to sexual intercourse only when the progeny can be born," he writes.
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2 Views by Steinbeck
IN DUBIOUS BATTLE, by John Steinbeck. Bantam, 60 cents.
SWEET THURSDAY, by John Steinbeck, Bantam Classics, 50 cents.
The mood of these novels by John Steinbeck, the first written in 1936, the second in 1954, couldn't be much different. "In Dubious Battle" is a harsh, brutal story of a strike in a California apple orchard in depression days. "Sweet Thursday" is a fanciful tale of the people of Cannery Row and their efforts to marry off Doc, the marine biologist, to Suzy, a prostitute.
But underneath lies the basic love for the little people that has made Steinbeck such a popular novelist. "Sweet Thursday" is almost Saroyanish, and "In Dubious Battle" is almost as naturalistically objective as "U.S.A." But there still are similarities.
"IN DUBIOUS BATTLE" DEALS CHIEFLY WITH MAC and Jim, two idealistic young Communists who go into the fruit-growing country to exploit trouble and discontent. Their task is a difficult one, for the valley is over-organized and many of the strikers are not ready for the sacrifices a strike will entail.
Running through the novel is a kind of dialectic between Mac, the Communist, and Doc Burton, the idealist who takes care of wounded and sick strikers. Doc believes not in the cause, but in men. "I just believe they're men, and not animals. Maybe if I went into a kennel and the dogs were hungry and sick and dirty, and maybe if I could help those dogs, I would. Wouldn't be their fault if they were that way... I have some skill in helping men, and when I see some who need help, I just do it. I don't think about it much."
But Jim has dreams. He loves the earth and the soil, and he'd like to be able to spend a day and do nothing but watch insects. He has not yet been brutalized by circumstances.
WHERE "IN DUBIOUS BATTLE" WAS A STERN PROLETarian novel, "Sweet Thursday" is an amusing glorification of flophouse bums, prostitutes, con men and morons. Though one may grow tired of Steinbeck's Monterey area low types, he can be amused by some of the incidents in this novel.
This does not trouble Mac. He will settle for men stirred up enough so that they will be ready to fight when the next battle comes along. Despite his toughness, he is not as direct nor as dedicated as Jim, his disciple.
Take Hazel, for instance. Hazel is an ex-GI, a four-year veteran of grammar school and a four-year veteran of reform school. When Fauna, the madame of the Bear Flag, reads Hazel's horoscope, she finds that Hazel is going to become president of the United States. This is a job Hazel doesn't want; he doesn't know anybody in Washington.
There's also a lovable racketeer type named Joseph and Mary Rivas who is quite annoyed and puzzled by Doc's view that you can't cheat at chess. Joseph and Mary thinks you can cheat at anything.
"Sweet Thursday," by the way, became the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical comedy "Pipe Dream."
MODERN AMERICAN PAINTING AND SCULPTURE, by Sam Hunter. Dell, 95 cents.
U.S. Painting In New Book
Friday, April 20, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Why, that is, does Mr. Hunter, so distinguished a gentleman that he now is the acting director of the Minneapolis Institute of Art (which he presumably is filling with modern paintings, which he happens to like—or says he likes), give us a chapter on Mr. Pollock in which he glowingly describes theserarish linoleum patterns?
One hesitates to get into such a book review. For there is a gnawing question, one that persists after a long indoctrination in art history and a sincere effort to learn:
"Have we been bad by the art critics? Does anyone really believe that the works of Clifford Still, Mark Rothko, Robert Motherwell, and their Grand High Panjandrum, Jackson Pollock, are here to stay, or that they really are art?"
**THIS IS GETTING too complicated, and someone is sure to start choking in wrath (as an art professor did oh so many years ago when I a student editor, informed the world that I preferred George Petty to Cezanne; I have since made a slight shift, by the way). But here we have a striking paperback—an original, too—which asks us to pay serious attention to these palette-splattering geniuses.**
Are the critics repeating formulas? Is the earnest young man with the long hair and the black sweater, explaining to a guard that so-and-so paints the world as he sees it, merely saying what someone else said to him?
Is it just a matter of favoring either Norman Rockwell or Jackson Pollock? I don't think so. A good friend of mine, Miss Marilyn Stokstad, has promised to give me the message, and I'll sure appreciate getting it. Till then I'll admire my bookstore prints of Renoir and a seascape of Homer that we got by sending a coupon and 50 cents in the mail.-CMP.
Look at Soviet Work
By Safynaz Kazem
Cairo, Egypt, graduate student
THE YEAR OF PROTEST 1956, by Hugh McLean and Walter N. Vickery. Vintage Books, $1.45.
This anthology of Soviet literary materials is one of the most interesting books I happened to read the last six months. In the rather long Introduction, (about 34 pages, the whole book is 269 pages) the editors say: "Until the appearance of "Doctor Zhivago" and the international drama that followed, it had been a long time since the Western World paid much attention to Russian literary developments. By a curious paradox, the more immediate and pressing our concern with Russia as a political phenomenon, the more our interest in Russian literature has declined... Our object in this anthology has been to let the English speaking reader see for himself what this Soviet "literary protest" of 1956 amounted to."
TO FULFILL that object of giving the reader some notion of the "feel" of Soviet art, and of Soviet life as well, the editors have presented translations of some of the works which evoked the angiest buzzing in official quarters, partly from Novy Mir magazine, partly from the second volume of Literaturnaya Moskva.
All the major literary genres are represented except full length novels. In the first part you will find the Drama Section, a four act play with eight scenes and fourteen characters. The title of this play is "Alone," by S. Olyoshin. It was the sensation of the theatrical season of 1956. According to reports, Soviet audiences—predominantly female—came away profoundly moved by the action and passionately partisan in their judgments of the play's moral dilemma.
THE STORY GOES like this: a successful middle-aged, upright, vigorous, likable, and idealistic communist engineer, after seventeen years of happy married life, falls in love with a younger woman. She too is a "good" Soviet figure, intelligent, etc., and also an engineer. She too is married! Her husband, though something of a weakling, is certainly not a villain. Finally, the lonely heroine, the engineer's wife, is also "good," a devoted, beloved school teacher and a loving wife and mother. The engineer and his wife have an affectionate teen-age daughter, and there is a good, kind old grandmother around too. Everybody is "good" but still there is this troublesome love affair. It exists. What should be done about it? The author does not answer the question. The problem is left open.
The second section is thirty-five pages of verses by different poets mostly born after 1930. I tried to quote three or four lines to give you short examples of how these verses sound, but I found it hard. Every piece is built in the one unit form and one cannot pick some lines and leave the other parts.
The third section is criticism and speeches. The fourth is the last part of this important book and it represents some fiction and short stories. The most interesting one is a short story by D. Granin. It is called "One's Own Opinion."
"Knowledge is proud that he has learned so much; Wisdom is humble that he knows no more." WILLIAM COWPER. Book IV. Line 96. Winter Walk at Noon
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
American History, Politics Popular
LINCOLN'S WAR CABINET, by
Burton J. Hendrick, Doubleday
Dolphin, $1.45. REUNION AND
REACTION, by C. Vann Wood-
ward, Doubleday Anchor, 95 cents.
THE FUTURE OF AMERICAN
POLITICS, by Samuel Lubell.
Doubleday Anchor, 95 cents.
American politics has been politics of accommodation. Within each major party we have found, almost from the beginning, men who recognized that some kind of compromise must be made with people of differing views both within their party and without.
Thus the grouping of these three books, which at first glance seem greatly dissimilar, for purposes of review. In Burton Hendrick's "Lincoln's War Cabinet" we see men essentially unharmonious brought together in a coalition government for the purpose of prosecuting a war. In C. Vann Woodward's "Reunion and Reaction" we see how a political deal was made between North and South in 1876 to prevent a second war between the states. In Samuel Lubell's "The Future of American Politics" we see the 20th century culmination of these efforts to achieve harmony.
"LINCOLN'S WAR CABINET" is an absorbing story, a truly specialized story of the Civil War. The great battles are important here only in the ways they reveal struggles within the cabinet, as, for example, after Fredericksburg and after Chancellorsville when the radicals became enamored first of Burnside and second of Hooker. The battles are important, too, as we see how a general like McClellan (and this is no brief in his behalf) became the pawn in a feud between the radicals and the moderates.
There are incisive portraits here—the scheming Seward, determined to be an American prime minister but gradually growing in stature; the ambitious Chase, creating presidential booms for himself almost from the time he entered the cabinet; the scurrilous Cameron, compromise secretary only; the faithful Welles, an early-day Ickes in his meticulous reporting of bickering within the official family; the fanatical Stanton.
"Reunion and Reaction" is most significant in its showing how the South of the postwar period was scarcely a solid South and how some leaders were willing to make any deals to secure industrial growth. Lest one conclude that the South was outside the dominant American movements of the seventies and eighties, let Woodward speak:
"ALL OF THESE GENTLEMEN
ALL OF THESE GENTLEMEN — Republicans and Democrats, Northerners and Southerners — found it necessary to come to terms with the dominant forces of the age in which they lived if they hoped to carry out their purposes . . . In public they spoke of the reconciliation of estranged sections, the solution of a national crisis, or the avoidance of violence and civil war. But if the votes necessary for the attainment of those purposes...happened to lie in the control of a Gould, a Huntington, or a Scott, then some sort of accommodation had to be reached."
Thus amity between the sections. Thus Hayes in the White House instead of Tilden.
What is particularly amazing about "The Future of American Politics" is that a book that seemed so topical in 1952 should have held up so well. It was a book of current events then; today it is a document in history. Here we have one of the most astute students of the American scene, one willing to cast aside preconceptions and make his own independent study of what is happening to the American voter.
LUBELL RINGS DOORBELLS.
He charts districts. He talks to people before and after elections.
And he is able to tell us why Truman won in 1948, to forecast why Eisenhower would win in
1522 and 1556. He saw, in 1552,
no chance of a Catholic in the
White House for some time, how-
ever.
* *
He describes the city, the South, the conservative revolt, the importance of hyphenated groups, the suburbs, and what he calls the myth of isolationism. He shows us how moderation and compromise have become important facets of American politics, as they were in the era of Lincoln and Tilden.
THE DRY AND LAWLESS YEARS, by Judge John H. Lyle. Dell. 50 cents.
Ignoring the fact that Judge Lyle injects himself into this book a bit too much, one may report that here is a vivid story of gangland days in Chicago. Judge Lyle was the gentleman responsible for arrest and conviction of some celebrated hoods, and the amazing thing is that the name of Eliot Ness never once figures in the story.
But other people made famous through the press, movies and television are prominently on view. Italian-Americans and Irish-Americans may protest, as they protested about "The Untouchables," but Dion O'Banion and Al Capone are here in full force.
But so are thugs of other nationality groups. This is a sordid tale that Lyle tells, yet one is caught up in it, as many Americans still are caught up in what has come to be almost a national legend—the gang era. We read again about Scarface Al's reign of terror in Cicero, about Roger Tuohy and his death years after the heyday of Chicago gangs, about the florist O'Banion and the now famous St. Valentine's Day massacre.
Lyle has one view of particular interest. He thinks Giuseppe Zangara was a tool of the Mafia and that when he assassinated Mayor Cermak he meant to get Cermak and not President Roosevelt. And if some authorities, such as a Chigago Tribune editorial writer, are to be believed, Judge Lyle himself played a key role in ridding Chicago of many gangsters and rallying public sentiment against them—CMP.
***
PROFILES IN COURAGE, by John F. Kennedy (Cardinal, 35 cents)—a reprint of the already classic book written when the President was a senator fighting a critical back ailment. The book won the Pulitzer Prize in biography, and is notable for its series of statements concerning men who went against public opinion to do what they believed right — John Quincy Adams, Sam Houston, Webster, Benton, George Norris, Robert Taft. Possibly the best of these biographies is that of Edmund Ross of Kansas, whose vote against impeachment of Johnson led to the political downfall of the Kansan.
**
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT AND THE AGE OF ACTION, edited and with text by Alfred B. Rollins Jr. Dell, 50 cents.
Of most value as a desk reference, for the many excerpts from speeches, histories and reminiscences, is this paperback original. One may question what particular contribution it can make in its own right, however. It is a volume that has all the earmarks of having been hastily done. Rollins writes well, but his transitions from text to excerpts seem as cumbersome as, those in senior term papers—too much of the "As Frances Perkins has to say." kind of thing.
Rollins is even more sold on Roosevelt than Arthur Schlesinger Jr., whom he frequently quotes. A more balanced picture might be of help, and this comment comes from an admirer of Roosevelt. The story is essentially the same one Schlesinger is telling in "The Age of Roosevelt" and that James Burns told in "The Lion and the Fox."
The Greeks Search for Life
Probing the spirit behind the rise of an ancient civilization is a task to be undertaken by an expert. Miss Hamilton, who spent a lifetime studying the classic cultures, has so identified herself with them that she was able to write of them with a warmth that exceeds historical documentation and breathes new life into the characters who created the Golden Age of Pericles.
By Robert B. Simpson Lawrence senior
THE GREEK WAY, by Edith Hamilton. The Modern Library, $1.95.
THE ROCKY, wind-swept islands situated on the periphery of civilization became the spawning grounds of a passion for life unequalled before or since ancient Greece. The remarkable Greeks found life harsh. The struggle for survival on sparsely vegetated mountain slopes cut by severe winters demanded strong bodies and keen minds; yet it did not pre-empt time for play and reflective thinking. The same rugged individualist who tended flocks and tilled the soil trained his body for athletic competition, marveled at the beauty of a wild flower, and reflected on the morality of slavery. To the Greek the world was beautiful and full of minute and magnificent delights. His passionate pursuit of truth became the prolific parent of nearly all that we hold sacred to our own way of life.
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OUR KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
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$ \circ $ A Meridian Original
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Friday. April 20, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Parkman, Haggard, Shaw, Zola: All Available
RE
of the
pure.
$1.45
ments
Jr. In
erican
$1.95
by an $1.65
THE OREGON TRAIL, by Francis Parkman. Signet Classics, 50 cents.
of a
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finitive
entribu-
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T OF
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mance
s $1.35
IERS O
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great
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Some regard Parkman as a literary-historical curiosity today, and read his history of the Anglo-French conflict purely for its style. This may be his true place, but there is always "The Oregon Trail," which has fascinations for the adult reader as strong as for the boy of 10 or 12.
It is the endlessly magical tale of a young man seeing America when America, too, was young, when the country in which we Kansans now live was frightening prairie to a boy from Boston. Before the Oregon trail really took its place in history, Francis Parkman ventured forth on it, as far as Wyoming of today, then cutting south and returning through the Colorado and western Kansas country.
THERE WAS MUCH emigration then, for Parkman was making his trip in what DeVoto calls "the year of decision: 1846." The rough westerners, the trappers, easterners headed for an El dorado, Mormons heading for the Great Basin, and always Indians—this is what Parkman describes for us. He describes it with prejudices, particularly for the Mormons, of whom he saw little, and the Indians, of whom he saw much. His prejudice for the Indians was a raw one. Here is Parkman on the Arapahoes:
"I looked in vain among this throng of faces to discover one manly or generous expression; all were wolfish, sinister, and malignant, and their complexions, as well as their features, unlike those of the Dahcotah, were exceedingly bad."
HE SPENDS CONSIDERABLE time among the Indians of the plains, and he helps to fulfill his own prediction that "the buffalo will dwindle away, and the large wandering communities who depend on them for support must be broken and scattered." For to Parkman an animal is there to be killed. He also sees the prairie degs, whose mounds might cover the plains for miles.
Nature provides some magnificent backdrops, and one description, chosen purely at random, is Parkman's writing of Pike's Peak: "Before sunrise in the morning the snow-covered mountains were beautifully tinged with a delicate rose color. A noble spectacle awaited us as we moved forward ...Pike's Peak and his giant brethren rose out of the level prairie, as if springing from the bed of the ocean."
* *
CARRINGTON, by Michael Straight. Dell. 50 cents.
This is a psychological western by an author well known to readers of the New Republic, but not for his fiction. His hero is not a conventional hero at all, being an army colonel who is most concerned with achieving peace with the Indians and not wiping them out.
One reads the novel, in fact, with first of all a contempt for what seems the intrinsic cowardice of Carrington and a growing admiration for him. He is the essence of stubbornness, and we can applaud him for this, especially when disobedient junior officers go out and get themselves wiped out by the Sioux under Red Cloud.
the reduction of potentially noble human beings to the level of animals. These are animals, in a perpetual rutting season, driven to sexual intercourse as the only thing that comes free, taking love where they can get it, and be damned if anyone is looking on.
This is a vivid story, exciting and well-written, far superior to most novels of the West.
* *
GERMINAL, by Emile Zola.
Doubleday Dolphin, $1.45.
Our naturalistic writers were as vigorous as Gene Stratton Porter or Harold Bell Wright alongside Emile Zola. This is the grimmest, ugliest, most humorless, most impressive book about class warfare I have read. There is none of the symbolic appreciation of the land that one finds in Norris" "The Octopus," none of the derring-do of Jack London
"GERMINAL" HAS A horrifying climax, as coal miners, men, women, children alike, are trapped in the mines which have been flooded by a Socialist agitator. It has a particularly chilling sequence in which a storekeeper's body is mutilated by a maddened mob. It has the contrast Zola is providing for us—of fat, cheerful, indolent members of the upper classes who own or control or run the mines.
This is savage and brutal. The horror builds up as one reads about the long coal strike, the starving, the greed, the avarice,
Read this, you roaring young liberals, solving all the world's problems, and you, too, you dashing young folks of the right who are busily carrying the banner of Life, Liberty and Senator Goldwater.
* *
WALDEN TWO, by B. F. Skinner (Maemillan, $1.80)—a modern tract in the utopian tradition which first appeared in 1948. This utopia is not the utopia of More or Fourier but is one which has all the scientific appurtenances of Bellamy's "Looking Backward," though it is set in the modern era.
* *
THE VILLAGEVOICE READER;A MIXED BAG FROM THE GREENWICH VILLAGE NEWSPAPER (Doubleday,$2.50)—a paperback being published simultaneously with a hardback version. It is a potpourri that includes Feiffer cartoons and writings by such persons as Steve Allen, Norman Mailer, Gilbert Seldes and dozens of lesser names.
SHE, by H. Rider Haggard. KING SOLOMON'S MINES, by H. Rider Haggard. Doubleday Dolphin Books, 95 cents each.
Every once in awhile one must cast aside the cares of the present and take off into the romantic past—the past of one's boyhood, if possible. And what better way than through the pure nonsense of H. Rider Haggard?
"She" and "King Solomon's Mines" are sheer fantasy. Neither can pretend to literary significance, but it's likely that they will continue to be read for a long time. In the first, Haggard takes us on a wild foray into a hidden valley in Africa (back in the days when Africa was really Darkest Africa) where lives a native tribe ruled by a woman who is about 3,000 years old. "She" bathes herself in an eternal flame, and awaits the man who will be the reincarnation of the Egyptian she stabbed to death back in the good old days.
WELL, OUR HERO, a monumentally ugly man, and his ward, who just happen to be the reincarnation old "She" is waiting for, go to the hidden valley. And some wild times result. Enjoyable times, too, and completely uncomplex.
"King Solomon's Mines," as almost everyone should know, also takes place in Africa. The movie producers were able to utilize the fabled giant Watusi, who portrayed the amazingly tall African warriors who live in the valley where King Solomon had his diamond mines.
Allan Quatermain is Haggard's hero, a short, not especially attractive, aging white hunter (scarcely the Stewart Granger type), who is persuaded by two Englishmen to go into Africa and search for a missing brother and, incidentally, King Solomon's mines. It's a wild adventure, and that old kidder Haggard uses the eclipse trick (what a literary standard this has been!) to impress the savage natives. Oh yes, the explorers find the diamonds. -CMP.
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By Donald Shoemake Kansas City sophomore
SELECTED SHORT STORIES, by Irwin Shaw. Modern Library,
$1.95.
Shaw has written radio serials, plays, and Hollywood scripts, but he is primarily a short-story writer. His short stories have appeared in "The New Yorker," "Esquire," "Collier's," "Story" and other magazines. This book is a collection of those stories published between 1935 and 1960.
Shaw's short stories are written in the third person. There is little action or violence, but some conversation about it. The stories involve Americans, whether the setting is in America, Europe or the Middle East, and the stories are not hard to read since they follow a chronological pattern and usually take place within a short period of time.
THE CHARACTERS are believable. Although they are the soldiers, World War II fighter pilots and college professors whom we are accustomed to see and hear about, a facet of their personality to which we are not accustomed is sometimes exposed.
In some of Shaw's stories people such as Christian Darling are unable to comprehend the changing world they are living in. Darling, the forgotten football hero, goes back to his alma mater and runs down the football field pretending he is making the eighty-yard run he made fifteen years before.
In other stories Shaw's characters can never quite accomplish what they would really like to. They are in situations which would make heroes of greater men, but through lack of courage they fail miserably. In "Hamlets of the World," Lieutenant Dumestre is afraid to act according to his own judgment because it is contrary to his orders. For this weakness he is murdered by his own men.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 20, 1962
On Hemisphere Policy—
By Robert D. Tomasek Assistant Professor of Political Science
THE MAKING OF THE GOOD NEIGHBOR POLICY, by Bryce Wood, Columbia University Press, 1961. $7.50.
This is one of the outstanding books to be published on Latin America in recent years. The author, largely through a diplomatic history approach, traces the origins, evolution, and policy making of the United States' Good Neighbor Policy toward Latin America from 1927 to 1943. The focus is on a detailed reconstruction of separate United States policy moves involving intervention in Nicaragua in the late 1920s, interference in Cuba in the early 1930s, negotiations with Bolivia and Mexico in 1937 and 1938 over the expropriation of American oil holdings, and collaborative discussions with Venezuela in the late 1930s and early 1940s to prevent a possible oil expropriation.
THE PURPOSE OF the author is to demonstrate how major policy makers such as Henry Stimson, Sumner Welles and Cordell Hull learned through painful experiences the consequences of interference in Latin American domestic matters. The lesson was learned in Nicaragua and Cuba. Thus in 1937 and 1938 the administration refused to intervene in Bolivia and Mexico to protect private oil interests. Negotiations over the extent and date of compensations to the oil companies were considered a more suitable approach for a good neighbor.
The book is diplomatic history at its best. The author has gone beyond the usual secondary source materials to examine in great detail the unpublished diplomatic correspondence of that period. He painstakingly sifted through memorandums, telegrams, instructions, etc. — a job that must have taken years.
THE BOOK IS beautifully written. The author calls his work an essay and that it is. Each experience of the foreign policy makers is analyzed and connected to the past experiences. By 1943 the author concludes that the State Department men interested in Latin America had worked out a realistic policy toward the hemisphere that involved reciprocal interests.
This book should be required reading for every governmental official connected with our Latin American policy today. The "new frontiersmen" dabbling with Latin American affairs today have neither the stature, respect, nor experience of men such as Welles, and Hull. However, they can learn. And when considering possible intervention in Cuba or the Dominican Republic, regardless of the motive, they might learn by reading a book of this type rather than learning by hard experience.
3 PLAYS BY IBSN, intro. by Seymour L. Flaxman, Dell. 50 cents; LAST PLAYS OF HENRIK IBSN, intro. by John Gassner. Bantam Classics, 60 cents; 4 PLAYS BY SHAW, Dell. 75 cents; SIX GREAT MODERN PLAYS. Dell. 75 cents; GREAT RUSSIAN PLAYS, intro. by Norris Houghton. Dell. 75 cents; SOPHOCLES, Vol. II. Modern Library, $1.95.
Many Plays in Paperback
A student of mine several years ago (a bright one, too) asked why I kept reviewing plays. They're theater, he said, and all you have to say is that they are available in paperback. I question this point of view. There is great literature in the drama, and how else can most drama get to the people, except for movies and television, both doubtful sources when it comes to bringing us the true spirit of great world drama.
These six volumes, with the usual repetitions one finds in anthologies (I must have "A Doll's House" in five or six different collections), are great riches of world drama. There is wide range here. The Ibsen plays are "Hedda Gabler." "A Doll's House." "The Wild Duck." "Rosmersholm." "The Master Builder." John Gabriel Borkman" and "When We Dead Awaken." Several of these are very familiar. Here was one of the most penetrating thinkers of his time, and his works range from the powerfully realistic "Hedda Gabler," that bitter and miserable modern woman, to the symbolic and poetic "When We Dead Awaken," a strange fantasy set in the mountain country of Norway.
IBSEN ALSO SHOWS up in "Six Great Modern Plays," the repetition being "The Master Builder," with its shattering climax of a great builder—he refused the term architect — falling to his death from a tower he had designed. Chekhov is here with his mood piece of the frustrated "Three Sisters." Shaw's 'Mrs. Warren's Profession,' which dared to deal with a lady of easy virtue, is here, as are O'Casey's "Red Roses for Me," with its ringing
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Now the Shaw volume. This brings a pleasant surprise, the relatively unfamiliar "Captain Brassbound's Conversion," about a very British lady's conquest of an evil pirate in Morocco, occupying the pages with the better known "Caesar and Cleopatra," "Candida" and "The Devil's Disciple." This is all witty and wise Shaw, with a special nod for "Caesar and Cleopatra."
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THE RUSSIAN PLAYS reveal that all has not been dark and dismal in Russian literature—though it does seem that way at times. Gogol's "The Inspector General" is a roaringly wonderful farce, and much better than the Danny Kaye version that keeps showing up on the late show. Here is an expert attack on officialdom and bureaucracy. Andreyev's "He Who Gets Slapped" also has its light moments, though this symbolic tale of circus life is scarecely a comedy.
The Modern Library is assembling a seven-volume set of complete Greek tragedies, of which this is one volume. This Sophocles is an important addition to the library of anyone interested in the theater.
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But then we descend into the jealousy and hatred of Turgenev's "A Month in the Country," the frustrations of a crumbling society in Chekhov's "The Cherry Orchard," and most of all, the black despair of Tolstoy's "The Power of Darkness" and Gorky's "The Lower Depths." There are no happy people here, just people re-
That brings us to the Modern Library volume of Sophocles. The best known of these plays is "Electra," but the other plays are "Aiax," with its tragedy enacted in the setting of the Trojan wars; "The Women of Trachis" whose Deianira is as unhappy a figure as one can find in our literature, and "Philoctetes," the mighty warrior abandoned by Odysseus on an island but taken from there to become a hero of the Trojan wars.
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KANSAS RELAYS OPEN—Dennis Moore of Abilene Christian College won the opening event of the KU Relays, the 10,000 meter run, in Memorial Stadium yesterday. Here Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe congratulates Moore on his win.
KU Relays Opens With Distance Run
The Kansas Relays weekend opened yesterday in Memorial Stadium with the 10,000 meter run, equivalent to six and one-fourth miles.
Dennis Moore, an Australian attending Abilene Christian College, came from behind to defeat Oklahoma State's Danny Metcalf in the final five yards to win in 30:46.5, four minutes faster than last year's record time.
ABOUT 1.000 HIGH SCHOOL junior college and college athletes are expected to compete in the 37th annual running of the Reiays.
Held annually in conjunction with the Relays is the Engineering Exposition. A formal opening ceremony was held at 9 a.m. today at Allen Field House with Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe and the Kansas Relays queen and her attendants.
Mrs. Wesco cut the ribbon signifying the opening of the exposition. Following this the chancellor's wife and the queen and her attendants were given a guided tour through the exposition.
Tomorrow at 10 a.m. Chancellor W. Clarke Wesooe will serve as Grand Marshal for a 27-unit Kansas Relays parade that will be held along Massachusetts Street from 7th to 11th Streets.
Four floats sponsored by KU organized living groups are entered in float competition. They are Templin and Lewis, Phi Gamma Delta and Phi Delta Theta, Alpha Phi and Triangle and Sigma Chi and Gertrude Sellards Pearson.
A fifth float is entered by the local chapter of Veterans of Foreign Wars
Joe Skillman, KU police chief, said that all parade entries must be at North Park Street by 9:15 a.m. tomorrow. The parade will start at 10 a.m.
Chief Skillman added that all bands will march on the east side of the street and all floats will drive on the west side of the street.
Numerous ROTC units will march including an Air Force drill team from Forbes Air Force Base.
Special features will include about a dozen antique cars such as a 1908 Buick and a 1928 31A Model.
Saturday afternoon's track program will start at 1:15 p.m. with the presentation of the queen, Miss Lois Rhodus, Shawnee Mission sophomore, and her attendants Anne Peterson, Clifton junior, and Anne Leavitt, LaGrange, Ill., sophomore.
Saturday evening the Kansas Relays dance will be held in the Kansas Union Ballroom starting at 8:30.
French Arrest Number One OAS Leader
ALGIERS — (UPI) — French forces in Algeria today captured ex-Gen. Raoul Salan, chief of the outlawed Secret Army Organization (OAS) and immediately flew him to France for trial that could result in a death sentence.
SALAN WENT underground after the four day revolt collapsed and since then has led the OAS in its terror fight against De Gaulle's policy of giving Algeria its independence under Moslem role.
Government officials said Salan, already under sentence of death, was arrested in a big roundup in central Algiers this afternoon, on the eve of the first anniversary of the abortive Algiers generals revolt.
The arrest followed decisions by Algerian Affairs Minister Louis Joe, French High Commissioner Christian Fouchet and the provisional executive headed by Abderrahmane Fares to get tough with the OAS and smash its strength in this violence-torn territory.
Fouchet and Joxe also announced that the new 40.000-man Moslem "local force" will be used in heavily-European cities to fight the OAS terrorists who are seeking to upset the cease-fire.
A communique said that as of next Monday, French Army troops and security forces will fire without warning on armed, uniformed OAS commandos in the western port city of Oran.
Daily hansan
SALAN, ONE OF THE four retired generals who led the unsuccessful Algiers revolt a year ago, had moved almost unmolested through Algeria since his escape last April 25 when the uprising collapsed.
SECTION A
59th Year, No.122
Friday, April 20, 1962
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Court Orders Serra Restored to Ballot
Justice Smith, in his dissention, said that as far as he could see. Section 10's provision for a three-day time limit on a complaint before a petition becomes valid, does not pertain to a violation of the time limit for petitions to be filed which was set by the elections committee.
The Student Court last night ordered the All Student Council elections committee to restore the name of a candidate which the committee had omitted from the ASC election ballot.
After more than an hour of deliberation, the four-man judicial body decided that Bob Serra, Frontenac first year law student, had been unjustly omitted from the ballot for the ASC election next week
THE COURT ACTION followed a series of events Wednesday night in which Serra sought a court injunction to postpone the printing of the ballots after he had been notified that his name was no longer on the ballot.
The 3-1 decision was made with only Justice Dick Smith dissenting.
The decision to restore Serra's name to the ballot was based on a violation of Section 10 of the ASC constitution by the elections committee, the court said.
THIS SECTION SAYS that complaints on a petition must be given in written form to the elections committee within three days of the petition's filing.
Thus, because the elections committee did not decide to omit Serra's name from the ballot until 22 days after his petition was filed, the committee violated an ASC law.
The court interpreted this to mean that a complaint by any one, including a member of the elections committee, must be submitted to the elections committee within three days after the petition was filed.
THE COURT ALSO CONSIDERED two other points in its decision, but these two points were in favor of the elections committee.
The court said Serra did break an ASC rule when he failed to file his petition before the deadline set by the elections committee.
Serra's attorney had said during the hearing that Serra had been unable to file his petition because he was hospitalized the day it was due. A doctor's statement was submitted which said that Serra was in Watkins Hospital from 10 a.m. the day the petitions were due until 8 a.m. the next morning.
IT WAS SERRA'S FAILURE to file his petition on time that prompted the elections committee to omit his name from the ballot.
Serra had testified that he went to the hospital immediately after his 8 am. class, talked with a doctor, went to Green Hall to explain to an instructor why he would be absent that day, and then returned to the hospital where he remained until the next morning.
U.S. AMBASADOR Arthur H.
Dean said even if Russia accepted
(At the same time the Soviet Union rejected a plea that it accept a test ban. In a note delivered in Moscow today, Japanese Premier Hayato Ikeda appealed to Premier Nikita Khrushchev to agree to a nuclear test ban with international controls. But Moscow reports said Soviet officials threw cold water on the appeal immediately).
Serra also testified that his petition was completed and ready for filing the day before the deadline.
The elections committee's counsel said that since Serra had time to leave the hospital to talk with an instructor and since his petition was already completed, he had sufficient opportunity to file in time to meet the deadline.
But Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian Zorin still refused to accept the western point of view that compulsory on-site inspection of a suspected violator by an international organization must be part of a nuclear test ban treaty.
THE SECOND POINT favoring the elections committee involved the deadline for the filing of petitions.
U.S. Refuses Test Delay at Geneva
AT THE END of more than three hours of wrangling, the conference adjourned until Tuesday morning, with East and West apparently agreed to accept a neutral proposal for breaking the nuclear test stalemate as one, but not as the exclusive, basis for further negotiations.
Since the ASC constitution says that a petition must be filed "at least 10 days" before the election, it was the unanimous decision of the court that the elections committee was within its right to set a date, as long as it is reasonable, before the 10 days prior to the elections.
Serra's counsel had argued that
GENEVA — (UPI) The United States refused today to postpone nuclear testing for the duration of the 17-nation disarmament conference here, and Russia warned that this may mean the end of the talks.
The American statement and Soviet threat came in an unusual Good Friday meeting of the conference forced by the Soviet Union, which kept filibustering in a last-ditch effort to block renewed American nuclear testing in the atmosphere scheduled to start next week.
that principle again, as it once did for three years, the United States will continue to test weapons until an effective treaty is signed.
Replying to a Soviet question whether the United States would undertake not to conduct nuclear explosions during negotiations here, Dean declared:
"The answer is no — the United States will not undertake such an obligation.
"The United States has learned its lesson with regard to a voluntary, unpoliced moratorium which can be broken at will by the Soviet Union on any pretext it wishes to dream up."
“Renewed nuclear testing,” Russia's Zorin replied, “will create an extremely tense international atmosphere fraught with dangers for a test ban, for disarmament and for relations between governments.
"TESTING WILL put negotiation on a test ban and on disarmament under a threat and nobody would forgive the United States and the United Kingdom for cessation and failure of these negotiations.
"We would not like to have these negotiations come to a failure, but they may come to that."
In a second intervention, Zorin added, "Fruitful negotiations cannot take place with the thunder of nuclear explosions in the background. We hope that reason will prevail. But the United States and the United Kingdom will bear the full responsibility for whatever ensues."
Serra's petition was required to be filed not less than 10 days before the general election instead of 10 days before the primary election. He said that since Serra is trying to run independent of party support and would therefore not participate in the primary elections, his deadline should have been 10 days before the general elections.
The elections committee's counsel had argued that the 10-day stipulation was a minimum and that the deadline set by the elections committee was valid if it was 10 days or more before the election. He contended that the deadline was not restricted to exactly 10 days before the election but only to a minimum of 10 days.
UP Man Pulls Out,Slams Bias
The UP candidate for the seat in the Law School withdrew from the ASC race today in favor of Bob Serra, independent candidate who the Student Court ushered back into the race last night.
In doing so, he charged Vox Populi with pressuring the elections committee into its decision to omit Serra's name from the ballot.
In a prepared statement, Young said:
JOHN YOUNG, the UP candidate, resigned from the race this morning after finding that Serra's name, by court order, would be restored to the ballot. His resignation leaves only Serra and Leo Kelly, Vox candidate, in contention for the Law School seat.
"SINCE THE STUDENT court found that Bob Serra's name had been wrongfully omitted from the ballot for the ASC seat from the law school and ordered that his name be placed on the ballot, it is my desire to withdraw from the race in favor of his candidacy. Bob has demonstrated both enthusiasm and good judgment in his campaign. These same qualities would be exercised by him as a member of the ASC.
"I REGGET THAT political pressures were allowed to influence the elections committee's decision. The decision as to who will represent the law school should be made by the members of the law school themselves. The elections committee should not pre-empt that choice by eliminating candidates for political reasons."
Young said this morning his charge that the elections committee had been influenced by political forces, namely Vox Populi, was his "own personal allegation."
HE SAID THAT last night, in the Student Court hearing which ordered Serra's name to be restored to the ballot, it seemed to him that the committee "was using one set of standards to judge the legality of the candidates of political parties and another set to judge Serra's candidacy.
He said that he thought this double set of standards resulted from "political reasons which would benefit Vox" because it would limit the persons in contention for the law school seat.
Mel Saferstein, elections committee head, had stated earlier that his committee was not unduly pressured by members of Vox and that the committee did not decide to omit Serra's name from the ballot because of pressure from Vox.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 20,1962
1
KU and the Peace Corps
Interest among KU students in the Peace Corps seems to be increasing. This is an encouraging development, and a definite change from the initial reaction among KU students. Last October only eight KU students attended a talk by a Peace Corps field representative.
But since March 1, about five people a day have visited the office of Clark Coan, assistant dean of students, for information about the Peace Corps.
THE POOR initial reaction to the Peace Corps among KU students may be corrected by the current increase in interest. Two KU students have been accepted for the Liberian project of the Peace Corps and another KU student is being sent to a special project in Borneo. Perhaps the Peace Corps examination in the Lawrence Post Office tomorrow will draw more KU students than past ones have.
KU in October of this year, and it should aid in attracting KU students to the Peace Corps. The KU training center will prepare volunteers for the Costa Rican project of the Peace Corps.
A Peace Corps training center will open at
THE PEACE Corps has become a successful and admired organization. Its members have already contributed much to the development of their host countries, and all the nations which have received Peace Corps members have expressed satisfaction with their work.
But the Peace Corps does more than aid in the improvement of underdeveloped nations. It helps Americans to understand the people of these nations and their problems.
The Peace Corps will undoubtedly continue to grow and contribute its efforts to the development of the many nations it operates in. Its success reflects credit on both the United States and its often criticized younger generation.
—William H. Mullins
Juggernaut:
The Warfare State
(Editor's note: This is the turn and last in a series of excerpts from a specimen of the Nation by Fred J. Cook entitled "Juggernaut: The Warfare State.")
This has been a study of power—of the kind of power that has come to dominate the nation and rob the nation's people both of understanding and of choice in the fashioning of their destiny. When President Eisenhower declared in his farewell address that "the military-industrial complex" had developed an influence "felt in every city, every state house, every office of the Federal Government," he did not exaggerate; he understated the case. This complex has come, in fact, to determine all our policy; to orient the entire nation, not toward peace, but toward war. If we are ever to avoid that war, the overwhelming and insidious power of the military-industrial complex must be smashed...
The nation today has come to a plain fork in the road. The Military juggernaut, hand-in-glove with industry, whooped on by all the arts of propaganda, is high-balling along the highway that leads to ever more authoritarian government—and that holy war, by which we all can prove our manhood, which lies in the offing.
THE OTHER fork of the road turns aside from this catastrophic brink. It leads to reimposition of strong civilian control over the Military; it takes formation of policy out of the hands of the Military and puts it where it belongs, in the hands of elected representatives responsible to the people; it tries to seek out the truth and find solutions to world affairs, not just to adopt the primitive attitude of holding everywhere a rigid line until the right time comes to knock over the other fellow. This second fork in the road offers at least a hope, a prayer; the Military thruway, with its phony blathering of peace through strength, can lead only to mass graves.
If we are to take this second fork and try for peace, we must recognize the demands this choice will make upon us. It will ask more of us in intelligence, in self-restraint, in courage than the deceptively "easy" way of the Military. On this road will be found no sudden, miraculous solutions. We must recognize that we must live with our critical problems and try, by the slow process of negotiation and agreement, to achieve a better world To do this, we must be prepared to go back to the lost moment of hope in 1955; we must be prepared to scuttle the philosophy of Quarles and the Military that safety is to be found in ever more awesome detonations. We must be prepared to make a genuine and all-out effort to ban the bomb and achieve disarmament.
IF WE EVER succeed in this, we must be prepared to face a world of new and harsh problems — a domestic world of economic disruption. Military bases would shut down, war plants would fall idle; millions of workers would lose their
jobs, thousands of businesses would suffer. No one who has any conception, no one who has any faith in the tremendous potential of the American economy believes for a moment that such a crisis need be more than temporary.
We have at home enormous problems clamoring to be met and solved — the elimination of slums, the increasingly critical poverty of our educational plant from grade school to college levels, better care for our aged, better medical and hospital protection for all of us, to name just a few.
We will never solve these problems in a "guns and butter" society, for that society is a propaganda myth and experience says that it becomes, as intended by its sponsors, all guns and no butter. If and when we succeed in turning aside from the road to war, we must be prepared to accept the facts of life—and the cardinal fact will be the need for a federally stimulated economy, for the siphoning of war-industry billions into the pursuits of peace and the rebuilding and refurbishing of the domestic world we live in.
SUCH A solution to the inevitable economic crisis we would face raises, of course, the horrible specter of the Welfare State, against which the propaganda barrages of the military-industrial complex so persistently are aimed. Experience indicates that the leaders of this complex would prefer to run the risk of dying in the ruins of their Warfare State. But would the rest of us?
If the answer to that question is a resounding "No," we have left in our hands, even at this late date, a few important remedies. We can back the Kennedy Administration's effort, as personified by Secretary McNamara, to recapture for democracy civilian control over the Military. We can insist that the Pentagon be stripped of its propaganda apparatus, that it be compelled to stop brainwashing us in radical-Right seminars; we can demand that all military public relations staffs be skeletonized, civilian-staffed and civilian-controlled, limited to their proper function of giving out necessary information. Such steps would deprive our cold-war profiteers of the uniformed front men whom they have used so effectively to promote a national war economy.
The second part of the combine—war corporations like Boeing and Lockheed that gobble up a billion dollars a year apiece, as much as was used to finance the entire federal government in the days of Benjamin Harrison — would still have to be brought under control. Stiff tax laws, paring off the fat of excess profits, might help to dim the enthusiasm of some of these mighty patriots for a war economy. Rigid policing of expense accounts and publicity budgets by federal tax sleuths might keep the industrial half of the complex from so freely using millions of dollars of taxpayers' money, received via war contracts, to brainwash the public
into acceptance of the idea that ever more colossal contracts are essential to our continued existence.
IT TAKES no imagination to envision the howls of anguished protest the mere suggestion of such measures will elicit; but we must have the sense to understand the yammering for the selfish bleat it is — and to understand, too, that the issue at stake is whether we, as a people, really control our government or whether powerful pressure groups control that government. And us.
Only if we can accomplish such reforms, only if we can achieve such a complete change of the national posture, can we really look forward with any hope to achieving the goal of world peace, the only alternative to world extinction. Much will depend, of course, on Khrushchev and the Russians, on whether Khrushchev can control his own "military-industrial complex." In the past, he has shown signs of wishing to do so, and in the past, we have played into the hands of the most militaristic, hard-line Stalinist forces in Russia by running away from every chance of agreement.
WHETHER the tragic deterioration of world affairs that has resulted can now be halted, whether the trend can be reversed, no man can tell; but we, at least, must do our part, as we have not done it in the past. We, at least, must make the effort.
As former President Eisenhower so clearly pointed out, we must find ways to control "the military-industrial complex" with its "insidious penetration" of our minds. As General MacArthur told the Philippine Congress so eloquently, the impractical ideal of yesterday—the goal of world disarmament and world peace—has become the practical imperative of today. We recognize that imperative and work to achieve it, or we perish.
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East St. St. 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 University year except Saturday and Sunday examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
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Letters to the Editor
Synonyms For Apathy
Editor
Roget's Pocket Thesaurus cites many synonyms for the word apathy, a few of which are: phlegmatic, inert, supine, languid, comatose or just plain indifferent. If this list of six words does not fulfill the needs of those who wish to expound on the torpidity (that makes seven) of the student body at KU, I suggest that they purchase a copy of this handy little "treasury of synonyms and antonyms" and turn to page 243. The use of these synonyms will probably not cause any confusion in the frequent tirades against impassivity, for the masses are undoubtedly much too apathetic to read them.
Carolyn Callaway
Shawnee Mission sophomore
A Reply to Costich
I admire you for having the courage to print the April 16 "letter to the editor" from Mr. Ken Costich. I think it showed that you have a sense of humor.
Mr. Costich expressed his opinion that to remove the "discriminatory clauses" from those fraternities or sororities who have them would be like taking group A's rights away and giving them to group B. This expression indicates that Mr. Costich is confused. I am sure that no one has suggested that Mr. Costich's group A, those fraternities who discriminate because of race, creed, and color, give up their right to discriminate so that group B, the Negro, may then have the right to discriminate.
Let us assume that Mr. Costich was not confused, but that he only expressed his opinion poorly. Let us also assume that Mr. Costich thinks that to remove the "discriminatory clauses" would be like taking one right from group A and then giving group B another right. Of course we must also assume that group A has the RIGHT to discriminate. If this is what Mr. Costich really meant then I agree with him. Removing the "discriminatory clauses" would take away group A's right to discriminate because of race, creed, and color, and it would give group B the right to be CONSIDERED on the basis of individual merits and personality only.
MR. COSTICH SAID "Then there's equality. That's a good one." I must agree with Mr. Costich. Equality is a good one. In fact, it is such a good one that it ranks at the top of our country's list of priceless values right along with liberty. Liberty can be carried to an extreme where other values, including equality, are injured as in the situation of the "discriminatory clauses." There are limits to how much liberty
society can and should bear. It should be clear that liberty sometimes has to be restricted to protect public order, safety, and equality.
7 F
We have found from experience that in order to promote equality it is sometimes necessary to place limits on liberty. The liberty to create wealth and pass it on to your children is an example. We have a system of inheritance taxes in the United States. One of the purposes of these laws is to break up larger fortunes on the ground that such fortunes passing from parents to children tend to reduce the equality of opportunity among men. It is not always easy to solve the problem when two of the ideas of the Declaration of Independence, liberty and equality, either seem to be in conflict or actually are in conflict. It takes wisdom and usually laws to settle this conflict and to discover where the greater good lies.
MR. COSTICH GOES ON to say "The whole country is caught up in this civil rights insanity, equal to little else in American history." Justly, he should have said, "The whole country should have CAUGHT UP TO CIVIL RIGHTS MANY YEARS AGO, AND IT SHOULD NOW BE NO MORE THAN AMERICAN HISTORY."
Mr. Costich is really selling America short when he considers objecting to fellow Americans being denied their unquestionable rights to work, live, sleep, eat, and walk, merely because of the color of their skins as "uncalled for dogfighting."
Mr. Costich, evidently, does not know that my being a Negro prevents me from being offered certain positions that I qualify for, from being able to purchase certain homes that I may have money to buy, from being able to sleep at certain public hotels and motels that I may be able to pay for, from being able to walk unmolested on sidewalks of certain "upper class" areas of some cities, and from enjoying thousands of other rights including the restrictions that accompany the "discriminatory clauses" here at KU.
About a month ago Chancellor Wescow told me that he did not know how it felt to be a Negro and I told him that it is sheer hell. I did not think about it then, but it must also be sheer hell to be white—to realize that none of your good friends and brothers would have even considered you for membership if it had not been for your "lily white" complexion, and even more "hillish" to bear is the thought that you would not consider your good brothers either if they did not have their "lily white" skins.
George Ragsdale Kansas City, Ks., junior
Two College Bowl Protests Upheld
Two College Bowl teams were granted a rematch by the College Intermediary Board yesterday after presenting a joint protest charging inconsistency in interpretation of the contest rules.
Sigma Nu and Stephenson Hall, who competed against each other in the second-round College Bowl matches Sunday, both stated that playing time had expired when Sigma Nu was permitted to answer a bonus question that decided the match in its favor.
THE TWO TEAMS argued that
Astronaut Grissom Aiming for Moon
NEW ORLEANS — (UPI) — Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson said yesterday the United States is "not shooting for the moon merely to satisfy idle curiosity."
But whatever the reason for the project, Capt. Virgil Grissom said he wanted to be the first astronaut to make the trip.
Johnson and Grissom were featured speakers at the American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE) convention here yesterday. The convention closes today with talks by comedian Bob Hope and newsman James Reston of the New York Times.
Johnson said the U.S. space program will give the average citizen a whole new set of products, including pocket television sets and better hearing aids.
By landing a man on the moon, he said, "We will solve many of the problems here on earth and will open new possibilities of peace and prosperity for mankind as well."
Grissom said that the United States was recruiting new astronauts, and added that the new recruits would "have a lot of competition because I want to go to the moon, too."
this situation was not well defined in the original contest rules.
A third protest, issued by Foster Hall, objected to the conditions under which its match with Templin Hall was played.
FOSTER HALL maintained that its team members could not hear the moderator because he was sitting in front of the Templin team, enabling Templin to jump into a substantial lead during the first 15 minutes of the match. The Board ruled against a Templin-Foster rematch, however, because Foster did not tell the moderator its team members could not hear the questions until they trailed by 125 points.
COMMENTING ON the appeals for rematches, Charles Anderson, Osage City senior and chairman of the Intermediary Board, said, "We tried to look at each case as judicially as we possibly could, because we felt the teams would not be protesting unless they had a valid point."
Anderson said the Stephenson-Sigma Nu rematch would be held at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. He added that a revised copy of the rules would be sent to teams remaining in the competition next week.
Cuban Debate Date Arrangements Stalled
A special committee of the All Student Council has been unable to arrange a debate on Cuba.
The ASC appropriated money for the debate, but agreement on a date for the debate could not be reached. The schedules of the opposing organizations did not coincide.
The "Truth About Cuba Committee" (anti-Castro) may send a speaker to the KU campus, but no "Fair Play for Cuba Committee" (pro-Castro) speaker will be able to speak for the other side.
Ten more people saw the great debate last night.
Few See Great Debate Again
Wednesday, the candidates for All Student Body president, Gerald (Kep) Kepner, Wichita junior and member of University Party, and Jerry Dickson, Newton junior and member of Vox Populi, were questioned by 10 people in Templin Hall.
THE DEBATE WAS held in the Joseph R. Pearson Hall cafeteria last night.
Again debate formalities were abandoned, and the two candidates answered questions from the floor. Following the question-and-answer session, both candidates criticized recent results of their series of debates.
Kepner said:
"The success of the debates in the girl's dorms (the first two debates of the series) was great, but their effectiveness has been decreasing."
DICKSON ADDED that the "results of the debates in the men's dorms have been quite poor."
Dickson said that attendance at the debates was essential to make the current campaigns and election a success.
"There is no other way for students to become aware of the candidates' attitudes and ideas under a situation of pressure except by attending one of these debates. The debates make the elections more than a popularity contest," Dickson said.
Page 3
Kepner agreed with Dickson, but he said the debates had one fallacy. "The people who have come to the debates so far were people who had already made up their minds." Kepner said. "It was not the uninformed person—who had yet to make up his mind on the candidates and issues—who came."
Bus Stop Buzz—Boss a Beast LONDON — (UPI) — A London secretary was reported recently to have remarked to her companion at a bus stop: "My boss was a perfect beast today. Ever since lunch hour I've been working."
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Friday. April 20, 1962
Space Test Today, Skybolt Shot Good
University Daily Kansan
CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) — A forecast of good weather gave U.S. scientists a tentative "go" for another attempt today to fire their powerful new Centaur space rocket on its oft-postponed maiden flight.
Pithecanthropus Found
The Centaur, an upper stage powered by a revolutionary combination of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen, will be launched into space aboard a modified Atlas intercontinental ballistic missile.
IN OTHER SPACE developments America's new marriage of a high-speed jet bomber and a ballistic missile is expected to produce the most mobile nuclear weapon punch
THE SHOT WAS the first of a series of four planned American space launchings designed to test new rockets, orbit still another satellite and send a complex probe to the moon during the next week.
Scientists hoped to send the Centaur rocket about 300 miles into space to ignite its pair of 15,000-pound-thrust engines for the first time in flight.
The maiden flight of the Skybolt did not go off without a hitch,however.A problem developed in the second stage of the rocket and dropped it short of its planned 900-mile range.
The key to the Centaur's importance was its use of liquid hydrogen, a super-cooled fluid, as a fuel. Hydrogen offers nearly half again as much power per pound as conventional kerosene-oxygen
But the launching proved the main point—that a ballistic missile could be launched from a fast-moving airplane and ignited in flight.
The discovery of Pithecanthropus Erectus, an important event in the study of evolution, was made in Java in 1891-92 by Prof. Eugene Dubois—(UPI)—
THE FLASH WAS the Air Force's new Skybolt ballistic missle as it left its perch beneath the right wing of the BS2. The smoke was the characteristic white vapor trail of a solid-fueled rocket, marking the missile's climb through the sky.
Yesterday afternoon, a B52 bomber roared over the Cape at a speed of more than 400 miles per hour. One minute later, a small flash could be seen beneath the plane. Then, a sparkling path of white smoke was etched in the sky, soaring steeply toward space, well ahead of the bomber.
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20, 1962
Come to Church EASTER
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST (RLDS)
1900 University Drive
10:45 a.m. "The Resurrection-For Man and Me"
Branch President: R. Edwin Browne Speaker: Elder T.Ed.Barlow,District President
CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
20th & Massachusetts
10:50 a.m. Morning Worship
"If Christ Had Not Risen"
7:00 p.m. Easter Cantata
Rev. Kenneth Meredith
EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
1501 Massachusetts
6:00 a.m. Sunrise Service Play:"What Say the Scrolls"
7:00 a.m. Breakfast; Open to the Public (Slight Charge)
8:45 and 10:50 Worship Services "The Gardener, I Presume?"
Rev. Paul Hett
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
801 Kentucky
11:00 a.m. "Eternal Youth or Eternal Life?"
Rev. M. C. Allen
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
8:30 and 10:45 Worship Services "The Print of the Nails and Man's Hope"
Rev. Benton Roy Hanan
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
8:30 and11:00 a.m. "The Living Presence"
9:30 Church School at Wesley Center
Dr. A. F. Bramble
10th & Vermont
Relays Visitors Invited to Attend The Church of Your Choice Easter Sunday
Students on the Campus this Sunday Are Invited to Attend the Lawrence Church of Their Choice This Easter
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 9th & Vermont 9:05 and 11:00 "A New Day Dawns"
FREE METHODIST CHURCH
12th & Kentucky
6:30 a.m. Breakfast and Sunrise Devotional Service
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship Service "Living by Dying"
Rev. Claude Griffith
Rev. Claude Griffith
IMMANUEL LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod)
17th & Vermont
Friday, April 20
7:30 p.m. Good Friday Service
"The Cross"
Sunday, April 22
6:00 Easter Sunrise Service
(At Sunset Drive-in, West
6th St.)
"What Is Easter?"
8:30 and 11:00 a.m. "O Death Where Is Thy Sting?" (At the Church)
Rev. D. DeBlock
WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH
West 9th & Madeline Lane
10:50 a.m. Easter Worship Service With Special Choral Music— "Anthem of the Ages"
Rev. Lorin P. Miller
Masses Easter Morning at 6:00,8:00,9:30,11:00 a.m.
ST. JOHN'S CATHOLIC CHURCH
Rt. Rev. Msgr. George Towle
PLYMOUTH CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
1229 Vermont
METHODIST CHURCH, CENTENARY
4th & Elm
6:00 a.m. Early Easter Morning Service
7:00 a.m. Breakfast—35c—Open to the Public
7:40 and 10:55 a.m. Worship Services "Break Through" (Continued Sermon)
925 Vermont
Rev. W. H. DeLaughder
9:00 and 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship Traditional Easter Service Pastors Paul Davis and Max Thomas
LUTHERAN CHURCH, ULCA TRINITY
1245 New Hampshire
8:00 a.m. Holy Communion
9:15 and 11:00 a.m. Worship Service for Adults
Rev. Harold Hamilton
ST. LUKE AME CHURCH
900 New York
6:00 a.m. Early Sunrise Service
11:00 a.m. Baptismal Service and Confirmation
"Watchmen in the Garden"
7:00 p.m. Choir Festival and Candle-light Service
Rev. H. C. McMillan
TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH
10th & Vermont
Celebrations of The Holy Eucharist
7:30 a.m.
9:00 a.m. (With the Choir)
10:45 a.m. (With the Choir)
Easter Service by Father Turner
LAWRENCE CATHOLIC STUDENT CENTER
1915 Stratford Road
9:00 and 11:00 a.m.Masses at Fraser Hall
Father Brendan Downey, OSB
WEST SIDE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
8:30 and 11:00 a.m. Easter Worship Service "Thine is the Kingdom"
Rev. Robert Freitag
Take Visiting Parents and Friends to Church Easter Sunday
1.
Castro Predicts Overthrow Of 2 Anti-Red Governments
MIAMI — (UPI) Premier Fidel Castro predicted early today that the anti-Communist governments of Guatemala and Venezuela already the targets of Red-led disorders will be overthrown within a year.
In a 2-hour-and-24-minute speech on the first anniversary of the failure of the Giron Beach Invasion, broadcast by Radio Havana, Castro said neither Guatemalan President Miguel Ydigoras Fuentes nor Venezuelan President Romulo Bencourt
The observance of All Women's Day will begin Sunday, April 29 with an exchange dinner for all organized women's living groups. "Musicale," a music presentation by KU faculty women, will be held at 2 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Following "Musicale" from 3-5 p.m. at the Art Museum there will be a special opening featuring an exhibit from England displaying illustrations taken from the pages of an English publication of the 1890s, the "Yellow Book."
The "Wonderful Worlds of Women" will be the theme for the observance of the annual All Women's Day which will be held Monday, April 30. The event is sponsored by the Associated Women Students.
Theme Selected For AWS Day
Both the "Musicale" and the Art Museum showing are new features of the All Women's Day.
MONDAY'S ALL WOMEN'S DAY events will begin with the traditional junior-senior breakfast from 7-9 a.m. in the Kansas Union. Breakfast tickets are $1.00. AWS organized women's living group representatives are taking ticket orders. Tickets are also available in the Dean of Women's Office. 220 Strong.
The theme for the All Women's Day breakfast is "I Enjoy Being A Girl." A special program honoring senior women has been planned. The Alpha Phi small ensemble, Greek Week Sing winner, will sing "I Enjoy Being a Girl" and "Everything is Coming Up Roses." The "Made-meiselle Board" will also present a program during the breakfast.
THE "HONORS NIGHT" at 8 p.m. Monday will climax All Women's Day. Honors Night features will include the installation of the 1961-1962 AWS Senate officers, the announcement of the AWS Memorial Scholarship winners, freshman residence hall counselors, Lewis residence hall assistants, members of the honorary sophomore organization, Cwens.
Mortar Board will sponsor a symposium for senior women at 4 p.m. Monday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The symposium will feature speakers and discussion groups discussing the role of the educated women after college graduation. The Mortar Board symposium is another new feature in the annual All Women's Day program.
Page 5
New "Little Sisters" for People-to-People, Mortar Board members, the outstanding women from each organized women's living group chosen by their individual houses as the most outstanding person in that house, and the American University Women's award to an outstanding senior woman from Kansas.
Members of Angel Flight will usher at the Honors Night.
SHARON SAYLOR. Morrill senior, is chairman of this year's All Women's Day steering committee. She will also be the mistress of ceremonies at the Honors Night Monday night.
Other members of the All Women's Day committee are: Diane Mullane, Oklahoma City, Okla, junior; Catherine Kibler, Topeka junior; Mary K. Estes, Lubbock, Texas, freshman; Cynthia Childers, Merriam sophomore; Sandra Smith, Wichita junior.
would be in office by the time the next anniversary rolls around.
The bearded Cuban said the "pseudo-democratic government of Argentina" did not survive even to see the first anniversary of the attack. He added that the Argentine people "are nearing the hour of revolution."
Sonja Halverson, St. Joseph, Mo.
junior; Geraldine Thorp, St. Louis.
Mo., sophomore; Judith Thompson,
Arkansas City sophomore, and Susan
White, Arkansas City sophomore.
He boasted of the equipment the Communist world has poured into Cuba, saying that any new attack on his country would not be opposed only by a few old, ill-equipped planes.
"If there is a new attack on our country, no matter what form it may take, the aggressors had better make their wills before they start out," he said.
KuKus Elect Officers
Newly elected officers of KuKus are Michael S. McCabe, Topeka sophomore, president; Charles Warren Ivy, Wichita sophomore, vice president; Stanley J. Copeland, St. John freshman, secretary; Richard N. Higgins, Overland Park sophomore, treasurer; and Paul Eugene Ruhter, Burlington junior, pledge trainer.
George Winn's Band To Play Relays Dance
University Daily Kansan
George Winn's dance band, which was co-featured with the Ralph Marterie Band last fall at the KU Homecoming Dance, will play for the Kansas Relays Dance, tomorrow night, in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The dance will begin at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are $1.50 a couple. Tickets are on sale at the Union Information Booth and at the Information Booth on Jayhawk Boulevard. Tickets will also be sold at the door tomorrow night.
The dress for the dance is informal.
Pritchard Elected Econ Society Head
A KU professor has been elected president of the Midwest Economic Society.
Leland Pritchard, professor and chairman of the department of economics, is now serving as president elect of the society and will assume office in April of 1963 for a term of a year.
Prof. Pritchard said that he will serve as president elect for a year to learn about the executive functions of the office.
Friday. April 20. 1962
Catholic Schools Show Enrollment to Increase
NEW ORLEANS — (UPI) — The Archdiocese of New Orleans released figures today indicating there will be no major drop in enrollment at Roman Catholic schools in spite of desegregation next fall.
The Archdiocese said 73,514 students had already enrolled at the 152 schools for next term and with later enrollment the figure could easily top the current total of 74.-306.
THE CATHOLIC schools last week held advance registration for the fall term. Figures released by the Archdiocese showed an increase in high school enrollment from 14,-682 to 15,583.
No breakdown of white and Negro registrations was released by the Archdiocese. It has made few comments on developments that followed its school desegregation order last month.
Spot checks at individual Catholic schools last week indicated that few Negroes would attend white schools next fall.
Archbishop Joseph Francis Rummel last month ordered desegregation of all Catholic schools in his 10-parish (county) Southeast Louisiana diocese.
Two Catholics excommicated by Rummel as a result of opposition said they would attend Holy Week services as usual and a third, Mrs. B. J. Gaillot Jr., said she would miss Easter mass for the first time in her life.
THE THREE segregationists were given toleratus excommunication, which means they would be tolerated at mass, but have lost the "right" to attend.
Mrs. Gaillot, a 42-year-old mother who insists that the Bible demands segregation, said the excommunication order amounted to "forked-tongue talk."
Leander H. Perez Sr., president of Plaquemines parish, and Jackson Ricaud, director of the South Louisiana Citizens Council, said they would attend services in spite of the excommunication. Perez said, "I'd like to see them keep me out."
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20, 1962
DINE OUT AT THESE F BEFORE OR AFTER THE R
Enjoy the many varieties of food . . . everything from
Meet Your Friends
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MADRID, Spain - Two men in suits sit at a table, engaged in conversation. One has a hand on his chin and looks contemplative. The other is leaning forward with an open mouth as if speaking. In the background, a patio area with tables and chairs can be seen under a shaded roof.
Allen's Drive-In
Home of Allen's Royal Hamburger
"The place where particular people eat"
1404 W. 23rd. VI 3-5000
The Tee-Pee Open Friday and Saturday Night Featuring the top Rock & Roll bands in the Lawrence area
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Friday, April 20, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
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Page 8
Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday. April 20.1962
'Silent Generation Obsolete to SPU
The Student Peace Union is trying to make the term "silent generation" obsolete as a description of today's college students.
The SPU believes modern college students are aware of the spectre of nuclear holocaust and have the potential to be a highly effective voice for peace. The voice of these students can be used as a catalyst for a reawakening in our society.
The organization is young on the national level also. Only the glimmer of an idea in the minds of a few University of Chicago students three years ago, the SPU now has members on 200 campuses and affiliated groups on 75 others.
The SPU is one of the newest organizations at KU. It was organized March 27 with a nucleus of 17 members.
The supporters of the SPU cover a broad range, from Bertrand Russell, British philosopher, to Jules Feiffer, cartoonist for Playboy magazine, to Linus Pauling, Nobel prize winning chemist, to Norman Thomas, head of the Socialist party in the United States.
As stated in the SPU constitution,
"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."
The constitution says the purpose of the SPU is to draw together young people to study alternatives to war and engage "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..."
Anyone agreeing with the purposes of the SPU may become a member simply by notifying the national office that he wishes to join Faculty members and other non-student members are listed as advisory members. Advisory members cannot serve on the organization's governing councils but have all other privileges and responsibilities of regular members.
The SPU is based on autonomous local groups. To qualify for membership in the SPU, a chapter must have at least five members, adhere to the principles and purposes of the SPU and be fully democratic internally.
Affiliated organizations are not composed entirely of SPU members. However, these groups must also adhere to the principles and purposes of the SPU. The local groups are recognized by the national council of the SPU through its steering committee.
When several groups are established in one area, an SPU regional council is set up to co-ordinate local activity. The regional council initiates, directs and co-ordinates speaking tours, publications and other activities at the regional level. The regional councils are composed of representatives from each chapter and affiliate in the region. All regional council members must be SPU members.
Each year the SPU holds a national convention open to all members. This convention is the highest body in the organization. It reviews the organization's actions and policies for the preceding year and suggests those for the next year. The national convention also elects members to the national council.
The national council meets at least twice a year in open sessions. All members must be 26 years old or younger and full-time students.
The principal function of the national council is to determine the general direction of the organization. It makes general policy statements in the name of the organization. The national council also elects a steering committee to direct the national organization when the council is not in session.
The steering committee handles the day-to-day work of the national organization, but the national council can reverse any decision of the steering committee.
KU Relays Preferred To Bigger Grid Crowd
KU students replied with varied answers last night when they were asked to express their feelings on the proposal to enlarge Memorial Stadium.
It was announced Tuesday that plans have been made for 7,200 additional seats to be built in the area that the track now occupies.
Although the plans are still in the tentative stages, a final decision is expected next month by the Board of Regents.
COST OF THE STADIUM expansion and construction of a new track facility is estimated at $335,000. Included in these plans are major repairs to "dress up" the press box.
- What are your feelings on the proposed enlargement of the stadium that will allow 7,200 additional fans to be seated?
Students were asked the following two questions:
- Do you feel that the enlargement is justified since it will prevent the Kansas Relays from being held in the stadium?
JIM THARP, Wichita sophomore—"I hate to see the track go. Possibly there is a need for more seats for football crowds, but I hardly think it justifies taking out the track."
Carol Drever, Waterville senior—"I feel that there is a need to enlarge the stadium. However, I do not feel that the Relays should be moved out of the stadium because of the need for more seats for football fans."
Nita Cushman, Grand Forks, N. D., senior and younger sister of Cliff Cushman, former KU and Olympic track star—"This would mean the elimination of the Kansas Relays. I don't think it is justifiable just to get a few more seats for football fans."
ARNOLD GRUNDEMAN, Lawrence junior—"This would be the end of Relays. I think that it would be justifiable only if a decent stadium could be big enough for the Relays."
John Hadl, Lawrence senior—"I think with the improved football program that KU is going to have in the next couple of years, there is going to be a need for extra seating capacity for the spectators."
Fat Maloney, Hutchinson junior—"I don't think its worth it. The stadium isn't filled half the time anyway. If it is filled they have bleachers to accommodate the overflow crowd. Doing away with the track would definitely hurt the increasing popularity of the KU Relays."
FLINT HALL
PARKING
ROCK CHALK JAYHAWK — The football season should get off to a rugged start next fall with a lusty yell from the new cheerleaders. Front row, from left to right, they are Kathleen Riedel, WaKeeney junior; Mary Louise St. Clair, Independence freshman; Barbara Schmidt, Kansas City junior; Mary Lynn Cooper, Prairie Village sophomore. Back row, from left to right, they are Tim Hamill, Colby sophomore and head cheerleader; Jerry Wiens, Hutchinson junior; Ron Tucker, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; and Vic Voth, Wichita freshman. Hamill will be the head cheerleader.
Alumni Association Keeps Contact With Ex-Students
By Ron Wilcox
The University of Kansas Alumni Association is more than an organization which keeps records on former students. It also promotes social understanding between the former students and the University and it keeps students and graduates in close contact with the University.
The Alumni Association has far-reaching contacts. Such areas as the Philippine Islands, Panama, New York, California, Wisconsin and Washington. D.C. have KU alumni clubs. There are 109 alumni clubs in all, of which 61 are in Kansas.
FRED ELLSWORTH, EXECUTIVE SECRETARY of the Alumni Association, said these clubs are set up so former students can hear about the University and get acquainted with fellow students.
KU has long been represented by such an organization, Mr. Ellsworth said. In 1883, 17 years after the University opened its doors, the alumni met and formed the KU Alumni Association.
They elected as their first president William Herbert Carruth, KU teacher and poet, and author of the poem, "Each in His Own Tongue."
DURING THE FIRST 19 years the members confined their activities to annual meetings, speeches, resolutions and banquets. Today, the Alumni Association still follows these standards but to a much larger degree, Mr. Ellsworth said.
In the late 1890s the Alumni Association began to pass resolutions favoring suitable living quarters for women students. By 1912 they had raised more than $7,000 for this cause. Later the association provided more than $1,000 of its own funds for housing for women who needed financial help.
In 1902, the leaders of the association started a monthly magazine named the Graduate Magazine. Today the magazine is known as the University of Kansas Alumni Magazine, and is recognized by many as one of the top publications of its kind.
ONE MEANS USED to keep the alumni unified has been the publication of alumni catalogs or directories. In the late 1930s, the association had addresses and occupations of 12,300 graduates. Today the association has files on 120,000 former students and graduates and addresses of 60,000.
The greatest revival in the University's history began after World War I, Mr. Ellsworth said. Committees of alumni had surveyed the University's situation and had started agitation for a building up of the institution both in faculty salaries and in new buildings and equipment.
The 1921 legislature voted $3,594,000 for the University, providing among other things a new library, the last section of Strong Hall, the power plant, electrical engineering laboratory, a temporary cafeteria, Corbin Hall, and a medical school plant at Kansas City.
MR. ELLSWORTH CITED FOUR devices the association uses to keep in touch with alumni. They are:
- Regular meetings of local alumni clubs.
- Class reunions.
- Personal contact with former students.
- Close relationship with graduating students.
"We do a tremendous amount of personal letter writing." Mr. Ellsworth said. "This is one way the association can find out where former students are and what kind of occupations they hold."
He said the association may send as many as 30 or 40 letters a day to members and prospective members.
THE ASSOCIATION RECENTLY sent a letter to the parents of a new baby, along with a small cotton stuffed Jayhawk, he said.
In a few days the association received a letter from the mother, saying she still had the stuffed Jayhawk the association sent her when she was born.
"From this type of personal contact." Mr. Ellsworth said, "we are able to keep our goodwill status at a high level."
Mr. Ellsworth said the KU Alumni Association has 15,000 members, the largest Alumni Association membership in the Big Eight and larger than in three Big Ten schools.
"IT ISN'T WHAT WE DO for the people, but what they do for the University, that makes the Alumni Association enjoy its tremendous success," he said.
Mr. Ellsworth said the Alumni Association's job is to get the people acquainted with the University. It is left up to them what kind of response they wish to make, he said.
Friday, April 20, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Celebrate This Easter at the
Prairie Room
SMORGASBORD
BAKED ALASKAN SALMON
CHICKEN TETRIZZINI
BAKED HAM
HOT VEGETABLES
YOUR FAVORITE SALADS
ASSORTED HOT ROLLS
TASTY DESSERTS
CHOICE OF BEVERAGE
Only $150
Sunday, April 22
12 to 4 p.m.
KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20, 1962
Milton's Ideas on Education Next Humanities Subject
If John Milton were a college dean or president today, would his 300-year-old ideas on education seem archaic or surprisingly modern. Would space era students agree with him that "far too much time is wasted in education?" Would 1962 university faculty members agree with his attitude toward foreign languages and mathematics?
Such questions relate to the next Humanities Series lecture at the University of Kansas to be given Tuesday, April 24, by William R Parker, renowned Milton scholar and distinguished service professor of English at Indiana University. He will speak on "Milton's Ideas on Education — and Ours" at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater. An informal reception by the Faculty Club will follow.
Prof. Parker will explain why the 17th century English poet was unorthodox in his views on education. He points out that Milton studied at Cambridge for seven years . . . "and hated the whole experience." Had he had the power, Milton would have abolished both Oxford and Cambridge.
The Indiana scholar, who has published four books and dozens of learned articles about Milton, will spend three days on the KU campus, speaking to classes in English and sociology, meeting with the administrative committee of the College, and speaking to special meetings of faculty members and graduate students in English and in foreign languages.
At 4 p.m. on Monday, April 23, he will speak on "Government and Public Education" at a coffee arranged by Student Union Activities. The open lecture will be in the Cottonwood and Meadowlark Rooms of the
Kansas Union instead of the Forum Room — as previously announced.
He is the first Milton scholar to give a Humanities lecture since the series was started 15 years ago. He is a senator of Phi Beta Kappa, and he has been a leader in the Modern Language Association and editor of its publication, PMLA. He was MLA executive secretary, 1947-56, president in 1959, and director of MLA foreign language program, 1952-56. He was secretary of the board of directors of the American Council of Learned Societies, 1950-56, a member of the U.S. National Commission for UNESCO, 1953-58, and chief of the language development section of the U.S. Office of Education, 1958-59.
He was born in 1906 in Roanoke, Va., received the B.A. at Roanoke College, the M.A. at Princeton, and the B. Litt. at Oxford. He was awarded honorary doctorates at Middlebury College and University of Michigan, and will receive an honorary L.H.D. at Roanoke College in June. Before he joined the Indiana faculty in 1956, he had taught at Northwestern, Ohio State, and New York University.
He has been visiting professor at Johns Hopkins, Duke, and Southern California, has done research in Europe, and has given graduate school anniversary lectures at Indiana and Ohio State.
Besides producing more than 150 articles, essays, poems, and criticisms, he has published these books: "Milton's Debt to Greek Tragedy in 'Samson Agonistes,'" "Milton's Contemporary Reputation," "The National Interest and Foreign Languages," and "The MLA Style Sheet." About to be published are his "Milton: A Biography" (2 vols.), "Annals of Milton and His Age," and "Variorum Notes and Commentary on Milton's 'Samson Agonistes.'"
Male Rats Run True to Form
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — (UPI) Researchers at the University of Michigan have found in their studies of alcoholism that male rats drink more than female rats.
Library Books Up By 45,000 Yearly
Watson Library adds 45,000 to 50,000 volumes of books to its shelves every year.
According to L. E. James Helyar, head of the acquisitions department, these books are purchased from an allotted fund of $232.000.
The material is selected according to scholarly value by faculty members working through the library faculty committee. The acquisitions department makes additional purchases of books not related to any specific division.
The library is attempting to build up the area studies divisions. Materials on the Far East, Latin America and especially books on Costa Rica, are being increased.
Current publications on the language and literature of France, Germany, Spain, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden are being obtained constantly.
In many of the countries, a professional bookseller purchases these books locally and transfers them to the KU library.
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Friday, April 20,1962 University Daily Kansar
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.
LOST
Women's dark-trimmed glasses. Lost be-
tween the back of her hair. Hewlett-Packard Call Nancy Hayes, VI 3-707-4
Gold class ring, 1959, blue stone. $5.00
reward. VI 3-6314. 4-23
LOST Chapter four of the thesis in red fold-
back. 1-2-3892 or 7- Stouffer 2. Reward: 4-20
or 5- Stouffer 2.
FOUND
Copy of Taylor's calculus book in or
Wilton 1200. Reward for its return.
H-42 1200.
FOUND IN FRASER HALL: 1 purse of cosmetics, 8 head scarves, 1 Parker found in the case. Stendhal book — "The Red and the Black." 2 neck scarves, 1 brown men's glove, 1 black leather glove, 2 black leather gloves, 1 white ladies' glove, ladies' black suede gloves, 1 brown glove, 1 white ear muff, 1 brown ear muff, 3 umbrellas. Claim at 111 Flint.
MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
closed paper bags. Picnic, party supply
0350. 6th & Vermont. Phone VI
0350.
FOR SALE
Have one new electric sewing machin worth $110 in competition. Want to sel. for $75 or I cannot take it home to Europe. (Foreign student) Call VI 2-0249.
4-25
'53 Ford, 6 cyl. stick shift 4 door, good,
downdown. $180. CVI 3-5525 after 6 p.m.
(233) 714-8919.
4-23
1954 Mercury. Very good opportunity—student leaving town. Good running condition, brakes, automatic transmission. Skyline. Call Sally Daniels, VI 3-5660. 4-23
1958 — 45 × 10 2 bedram. Buddy Mobil
home. Front kitchen, new rugs & drapes,
air conditioning. Reasonable. VI 3-8162
after 5 p.m. 4-23
1959 Opel station wagon. New tires &
car mounts. New car cam. See
Built PcL VI 3-1660. 4-23
Hi-Fi 3-speed automatic changer — 10 watt amplifier, 8 & 3 inch speakers in enclosure. Must sell, $75. Call VI 2-1353.
4.98
STUDY AIDS for Chemistry 2 and 2A
and complete. $2 each.
per copy, VI 3-7555.
Nice 52 foot 1960 CATALINA TRAILER
HOUSE. 10' wide, 2 bedrooms, automatic
climate control.
Balance owing = $200 down. Underwood
Inv. Co. V 3-3875, 1117 Mass. St.
tt
GUTAR — Mahogany finish. Gibson flat top with case. $60. Call V 3-1647. 4-25
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES; All new and revised. 100 pages, mimeographed and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI 2-1961 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery.
OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriter, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. Enrence Typewriter, 733 Mass. VI 3-1864
Peppermint Club
TALENT CONTEST
Friday & Saturday Band starts at 9
No Stags; 75c per person
Tonganoxie, 15-min. drive No Stags; 75c per person
GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES.
Handy cross index for quick reference,
definitions, and time saving charts.
Handy cross index for quick reference.
de delivery. Phone VI 3-7551
VI 3-7578
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet store. Pet phone 2921. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days.
ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch and lens scope immediately. Call VI 3-8871 come to 907 Ark. for more information.
PRINTED BIOLOGY STUDY NOTES: 60
printed biologics data
prehensive diagrams and definitions; new edition: formerly known as the Theta Tetrahedron I 2-0742 anytime. Free delivery $4.50.
TIREI! TIREI! TIREI! 1,000 fresh new tires. All sizes from 5.10 to 9.50 in stock! Installation. Ray Stonebake Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. St. 5-3 up to 50%.
Triumph motorcycle — 16 H.P. — only
2,000 miles, bored, race cam large carb.
4 speed, trial tires. Contact Harris Flora.
VI 3-9635. 4-26
FOK RENT
Ufnir furnished 2 bedroom duplex. Nice yard and patio. Available now. $90 mo. Walking distance from university. Call VI 3-5701. 4-23
Jinfurnished 2nd floor 4 rm. apt. Private
Jinfurnished 3rd floor 4 rm. apt. Private
new Hamm, Call V 3-1875 4-24
Don't fight the heat this summer!
HELP WANTED
Study in centrally air conditioned apts.
Clerk Steno I for Secretary, School of Journalism. Must be capable, reliable, responsible, better than average, assumes sponsibility. Better than average. pay Phone VI 3-2700, Ext. 3700
BUSINESS SERVICES
MARKETING Jr. wanted for part time work for one desiring actual experience in discount merchandising operation. Prefer male student who will attend summer camp in Lawrence during summer. Apply in person. Ray Stonehay 4-209 929 Mass.
TRANSPORTATION
Call or come out
$75 and Up
urnished & unfurnished
WANTED: a ride from Topeka to Lawrence on Tues. and Thurs. Call CE 2-1839
DON ROSE BANDS Open Dates are
weekdays only.
C4-7E 251. Topeka, Kansas. 4-26
BABYSITTING WANTED — nice home,
fenced yard, no traffic problem. $40 an hour or $10 a week. 8-5. References, VI 3-
1828.
to see other outstanding features.
INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tf
Park Plaza Apartments
TYPEWRITERS for rent, cheap — call VI 3-0031 between 5 and 7 p.m. tf
LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2
rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or
3 students. Available now. 520 La. VI 2-
1731.
Vl 2r3416 1912 W. 25th
Leonard's Standard Service
1 rm. apartment to sublet — June, July.
August — $45 per month. VI 2-3784队
9th and Indiana Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Tune Up for Spring at
Will baby sit in my home. $2 a day.
Will buy him campus. References. 4-23
VI 3-2263.
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tjtt
ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-
7551, or 921 Miss. tf
Use
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DRESS MAKING and alterations For-
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TYPING
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752. 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 Conn. Personal service — sectionalized — one stop — save time & money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, etc., plus complete lines of pet supplies. tf
Txping done by former private secretary,
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4-23
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
home — call VI 3-9136.Mrs. Lo-
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"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impress- ting instructor." To excellent typing at standard rates, call Miss Louise Pope, PE 3-1097.
Call VI 2-0267, VI 3-5019 evenings for neat and precise typing. Phyllis Spineta.
FORMER SECRETARY with electric
writer wishes to do typing. Reason-
able rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-
0524.
Experienced typist would like typing in
reasonable rates. Call VT 3-2651 any time.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers,
journals, reports. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mc-
Eldowney. Ph. VI 3-8568.
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 will type theses, term papers, manuscripts, etc., on electric drive, digital recorders and rate. Call VI 2-1546, Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert.
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THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. Electric typewriter. Reasonable rate. Graham, 1619 Delaware. Cul. 3: 0483-8.
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Renshona instructor. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 2-1648.
Typing by experienced typist, electric
Doris Patterson, VI 3-3883. Mrs. Dorel
Patterson.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type
theses, term papers, and themes neatly
on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs.
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typed
typist.
rate.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 20, 1962
Forty Seniors Elected For Phi Beta Kappa
Forty seniors have been elected to membership in Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary society in the liberal arts and sciences.
The election of the 40, along with 10 students who were elected last spring during their junior year, brings the proportion of 1962 seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences chosen to Phi Beta Kappa to 7.8 per cent.
The 40 seniors elected to Phi Beta Kappa are;
Judith E. Baker, Salina; Allen F. Brauninger, Raytown, Mo.; Carol Susan Cross, Topeka; John M. Falletta, Arma; John Robert Finger, Topeka.
Jerry D. Gardner, Wichita; William J. Gissendanner, Kirkwood. Mo.; David R. Gray; Lawrence; Charles W. Hargrove, Lawrence; Boyd Kent Hartman, Highland. Ind.
Karlene R. Howell, Kansas City; Karen Jennison, Healy; Frederic H. Jones, Merriam; Gary M. Jones, Parsons; Mary Scott Killgore, Parkville, Mo.
Richard Lee Lewis, Dodge City Mary Ellen McCalla, Lawrence Neal Stewart McCoy, Cedarvalle Mary Hughes McCue, Liberal; Arthur O. McGowan, Kansas City.
Charles B. M McLure, Jr., Van Horn, Texas; Carol Sue McMullen, Coldwater; Dell Roseanne Odell, Shawnee Mission; Constant Poirier, Topeka; Marilyn Ann Rockwell, Wichita.
Chairmanships Open On P-T-P Committee
Interviews for committee chairmen within the People-to-People hospitality committee will be held 6:30 p.m. April 26 in the Kansas Union.
Chairmanships are open for the following committees: home placement, vacation placement, weekend dinner placement, farm tours and industrial tours.
Anyone interested in applying for one of these positions should contact Sharon Foster at VI 3-3120.
Weather
Partly cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms this afternoon and tonight. Saturday clearing West partly cloudy with scattered showers or thunderstorms East. Increasing southerly winds this afternoon, warmer extreme Northeast portion. Cooler tonight West Portion. Lows generally in 50s. Cooler tomorrow. Highs 60s West to 70s East.
Freshman Chosen Yearbook Queen
Carol Stotts, Leawood freshman,
was named the 1962 Jayhawker
queen last night by the 1962 Jay-
hawker staff.
The Jayhawker princesses are Janet Benson, Kansas City freshman; Jane Harber Lawrence, Leawood sophomore; Margaret McNulty, Coffeyville senior, and Patricia Wilson, Kansas City junior.
The queen and princesses were selected by Warren Beatty, star of "Splendor in the Grass" and the "Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone."
Car Theft Reported
A KU student reported to KU police that his 1959 model car was stolen early this morning.
The student, David Allen Cooley. Mission senior, told police that the stolen car is a light blue Volkswagen.
Circus Lion Escapes, Kills Dog, Then Naps
CAGLIARI, Sardinia—(UPI)—A circus lion escaped yesterday and terrorized the village of Castelsardo for about an hour, killing a dog but injuring no one.
The lion romped around the village and finally slinked into a courtyard where he fell asleep. Police and circus employees threw a net over the lion and returned the beast to its cage.
Jon R. Rutherford, Garden City; Sheila M. Ryan, Aurora, Mo.; Harold L. Sanders, Kansas City; Carol Sue Schmucker, Hutchinson; David Clark Scott, Jackson Heights, N.Y.
Mrs. Donna Rankin Stuber, Leawood; Carl M. Sutherland, Prescott; John Robert Swanson, McAllen, Tex.; John S. Swenton, Bonner Springs; Clyde O. Thogmartin, Emporia.
Robert M. Thomas, Jr., Marysville; Arthur R. Traugott, Ellinwood; Julia Ann Walker, Lawrence; Sarah Jane Walker, New Smyrna Beach, Fla.; Janet Wright, Prairie Village.
The 40 seniors, along with six juniors elected earlier this spring, will be initiated before the annual banquet May 10. Stewart Hughes, of Harvard University and 1961-62 Phi Beta Kappa national lecturer, will speak.
KU Easter Bunny To Give Puppets
The Easter bunny will be sure to visit the youngsters at the Children's Rehabilitation Center at the Kansas University Medical Center in Kansas City, this year.
His Easter present will be about 20 puppets made by members of the Home Economics Club at KU.
About 20 members of the club worked one evening and made the puppets out of scraps of material—old socks, yarn and buttons—Laurie Van De Mark, Lawrence senior and chairman of the project, said.
THE PUPPETS are all different and range in personality from dragons to clowns to princesses.
They are hand puppets and will be useful in the children's rehabilitation program as well as fun to play with, Mrs. Van De Mark said.
The project was so successful that club members plan to make puppets for the KU Nursery School next year.
ONE CLUB MEETING each year is devoted to a community service project. Last year the girls made slippers for the children at the Medical Center and gave them as Christmas presents.
Several girls will take the puppets to the Rehabilitation Center and give them to the children. Bean bags donated by one member will be given at this time also.
The Home Economics Club is composed of about 30 members. They meet once a month for the purpose of developing professional attitudes in their field.
'Twelfth Night' Roles Assigned
The casting for the University Theatre's production of William Shakespeare's comedy, "Twelfth Night," scheduled for performances at 8 p.m. each night April 25-28, will be as follows:
Duke Orsino, Paul Ackerman,
Colby sophomore; Olivia, Diana
Abruzcino, Huntington, W. Va.
graduate student; Viola and Cesario,
a double role, Peggy Connors,
Wichita sophomore, and Sebastian,
Viola's brother, Tom Woodard, Des
Moines, Iowa, sophomore.
Principal roles:
Supporting roles:
Malvolio, Keith Jochim, Birmingham, Mich., junior; Sir Toby Belch, Phil Harris, Lawrence graduate student; Sir Andrew Aguecheek, Mike Jackson, Prairie Village senior; Maria, a minx, Marilyn Miller, Olathe junior, and Feste, a clown, Dan Kocher, Toepea junior.
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The chug chug of Japanese fishing boats in Alaska's Shelikof strait this week reverberated through Washington and meant one thing — a dilemma.
Japanese Boats Cause Dilemma
Agreement yesterday by Alaskan officials to let two boats charged with poaching in "state waters" depart in peace while the issues are resolved in court removed much of the urgency but not the ultimate problem.
Tickets are now available at the University Theatre, Murphy Hall, and at Bell's Music Co. downtown. The University Theatre box office hours are 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Saturday, and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on performance nights.
This involves more than Alaska and more than Japan. It blends U.S.-Asian relations, federal versus state authority and election politics.
If the U.S. State Department agrees with Alaskan Gov. William Egan that the Shelikof Strait between Kodiak Island and the Alaskan peninsula is an inland or territorial sea, it would slap the wrist of Japan at a time when much of Asia is already sensitive over forthcoming U.S. nuclear tests in the Pacific.
More than this, it would encourage territorial sea claims of other nations which the U.S. has always opposed.
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Indonesia, an island archipelago,
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could affect Pacific shipping routes.
El Salvador and other Latin American countries have claimed territorial seas reaching out 200 miles. The Soviet Union has claimed 12 miles, while the U.S. only recognizes a three-mile limit.
If the State Department says the Shelikof is international, it evokes a federal-state battle which would fall in the midst of Alaska's primary elections.
As a result, the department has been officially speechless. Though territorial sea limits usually are considered a federal rather than state question, it has hinted it will simply let the courts decide.
Peace Corps Exam Given Tomorrow
Peace Corps examinations will be given at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Lawrence Post Office, 645 New Hampshire. Persons wanting to take the test do not have to register beforehand.
The complete examination, including the teacher qualification test, takes about 6½ hours.
ROME—(UPI)—Professional boxing it not sport but a "useless and ferocious massacre," a leading Catholic magazine said today.
Catholic Magazine Says Boxing Is 'Useless Massacre'
In an article provoked by the recent death of Cuban fighter Benny (Kid) Paret, the Jesuit bi-monthly review "Civilita Cattolica" said boxing, with as many as 1,500 blows being traded in a match, involves the risks of death or "psychophysical deterioration."
"Our protest will be opposed not only by those who live and speculate, with huge profits, on the boxing profession, but also by lovers of violence and force, the number of whom is not small in today's world," the magazine said.
"We therefore must raise a voice in defense of human life which is threatened by a civilization which . . . condones the assassin in diverse ways and under all kinds of pretexts.
"To produce serious brain damage (resulting sometimes in death) . this is the price for the title of champion."
The magazine said the crowds that attend the fights ask only that their favorite "KO his opponent, or finish him off when he is already on the ropes."
"Whoever saw Paret's face, horribly disfigured and swollen, certainly cannot speak of the sporting nobility of boxing," the review said.
"If this form of legal assassination . . . cannot easily be abolished, the blame will fall not only on those who defend it, safeguarding their own interests, but also—and mainly—on the public that favors this useless and ferocious massacre."
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Applications for Sachem are available in the Dean of Students office, 228 Strong Hall. Completed applications are due in the office on April 20.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship:
7:30 p.m. Cottonwood Room, Kansas Union.
Don Thompson will speak on Daniel: 2.
International Club: 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. Mayor Ted Kennedy, speak on the history of Law and justice, and answered by games, refreshments and dancing.
Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m., 1221
Oread Devotional studies and fellowship.
SATURDAY
Peace Corps: Interested students should plan to take the Peace Corps examination Saturday morning at 8:30 a.m. at the Lawrence post office downtown.
International Students: The Industrial Tour to the Kansas City radio and television station will leave from the Kansas Union at 1 p.m.
SUNDAY
Lutheran Services: 8:30 & 11 a.m. Immanuel Lutheran Church, 17th and Vermont, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Danfortn Chapel.
Catholic Mass; 9 & 11 a.m. Fraser Hall.
Church Meeting: 10:33 a.m.
Danforth Church
**KUOK:** 3—News & Weather; 3:05—W
Vancouver; 4—News & Weather;
Concert; 6—News & Weather; 6:15—
Horizons; 8—Hagen's Hothouse; 10—News
& Weather; 10—Hoy's Room; 12
Portals of Prayer.
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Stars Here for KU Relays
Section B
Friday, April 20, 1962
53th Year, No 122
University Daily Kansan
SPORTS
John Outland's Dream Results In KU Relays
Morely a "dream" some 40 years ago, the Kansas Relays has grown until today only the Drake and Texas Relays equal the annual University of Kansas outdoor track carnival.
Dr. John Outland, the "dreamer" and a former KU student, graduated from the University of Pennsylvania where he became an avid fan of the Penn Relays held annually at Pennsylvania before the 20s.
Bill Easton
The only track at KU in 1920 circled McCook Field, located north of the present Memorial Stadium, site of the 37th annual Kansas Relays.
Dr. Outland dreamed of a comparable carnival at KU and persuaded the then director of athletics, Dr. Foirstest C. (Phog) Allen, to allow his dream to come true.
Plans for a replacement for the inadequate McCook Field were underway in 1920 and Dr. Allen made sure the replacement, Memorial Stadium, had a track suitable for the staging of a gigantic track carnival.
Oklahoma won one of the most exciting sprint medley relay races in track history in the 1958 Kansas Relays. The three teams that finished behind the Sooners in that race all finished faster than the listed inter-collegiate record.
Only one Relays record fell in
(Continued on page 2)
When finished in 1923, the Memorial Stadium track boasted one of the four longest straightaways in the country, exceeded only by Harvard. Yale, and Princeton.
Kansas dominated action in the inaugural of the Kansas Relays in 1933. Competing in a 20-school field, KU won the 440- and 880-relay events, placed second in the mile relay and nabbed third place in the two-mile relay. Participants in the first Relays represented schools from the Missouri Valley, Big 10, Southwest Conference and Dr. John Outland's University of Pennsylvania.
KU's 440 and Illinois' 880-relay crews set world records during the 1925 Relays. Knute Rockne, the famed Notre Dame football coach, officiated the third annual Relays which were insured for $5,000 from rain—no rain fell.
Six Relays records toppled in 1921 and KU's Jim Bausch equalled the American record in the decathlon. A 490-yard shuttle relay team from Kansas State shattered the world's best in that event in 1934.
Glenn Morris, of the Denver Athletic Club, established an American record in the decathlon before 10,000 spectators in 1935. Emporia State's distance medley relay foursome set a new world record at the same Relays.
KU
A Texas quarter-mile relay team clipped the existing world mark in the 1954 Relays. Another Texas quarter bettered the world mark in the 440-yard relay in 1956 and set a record which was lowered by two-tenths of a second by still another Texas crew in the Relays the following year.
In 1948, 10,000 fans watched the establishment of world records in the shotput and 120-yard high hurdles.
A national collegiate mark posted in the 1515 Relies lasted only two hours. Nebraska's Don Cooper went 15-1/8 in the Relays pole vault event for a new collegiate record. Then, two hours later, Illinois' Don Laz leaped 15-1/3/4 in a triangular meet at Los Angeles after he learned of Cooper's record performance.
Coach Bill Easton Molds Champions
By Don Pierce
KU Sports Publicity Director
Few, if any, collegiate track coaches, have been more successful than Bill Easton, now in his 15th year at the helm of Kansas fortunes.
For one thing, Easton is only the second coach in history to fashion NCAA championship clubs in both cross-country and track and field. His 1953 squad, led by Wes Santee, captured the harrier title . . . he previously guided three Drake units to this flag . . . and his 1959 and 60 ensembles won the track and field crown. Bill's college coach, the late Billy Hayes at Indiana, is the only other tutor to put together this double.
FURTHERMORE, only two schools, USC (several times), and Illinois (1946 and 47) ever have put together two NCAA track and field titles consecutively.
No Big Eight team ever has risen so high for so long on the national scene. Nor has one dominated the conference so thoroughly. The Jayhawkers' triumph in the 1962 Big Eight Indoor championships gave them a streak of 11 in the last 13 years. They lost the Outdoor crown to Oklahoma last May in Boulder for the first time in 10 years. Easton's cross-country forces have won 14 crowns in 15 years, regaining the title from Oklahoma State last November, after the Cowpokes halted a 13-year reign in 1960.
Easton's Kansas squads also show NCAA finishes of third, second, fourth and second, ahead of their two title years, before dropping to 13th last June.
HERE IS THE log on further
Easton accomplishments:
1. None of his Indoor or Outdoor brigades ever has finished lower than fourth in conference competition, dipping to that station only once.
2. Easton - coached performers
have broken, two world records
2. Easton - coached performers have broken two world records . . . both by Bill Nieder in the Shot Put . . . 14 American records and tied three; 14 Intercollegiate records; seven NCAA meet records and tied one; three Olympic records . . . two by Discus thrower Al Oerter and one by Nieder . . . and two national freshman marks.
3. His Kansas clubs have harvested 69 baton championships and 61 individual crowns on the Midlands Grand Circuit of Texas, Kansas and Drake Relays, while breaking 14 (and tying one), 11 and 11 records at those respective meets.
4. HIS 1957 Four-Mile Relay team was the first collegiate unit to break 17.00 with a 16.57.8 center at the Kansas Games. Nieder was the first collegian to crack 60-feet with the Shot in 1956.
5. He has developed 29 All Americans and six Olympians, two of which, Oerter and Nieder, were two-time selections, the former a double champion, the latter 1960 king.
On the Inside—
6. His cross-country teams finished the 1961 season with a streak of 38 consecutive dual wins over conference opposition and a 15-year dual record of 59-3
THE FORMER Hoosier quarter-miler began his winning ways at Hammond, Ind. high school before moving up to Drake, where he served an eight-year stint. He served a four-year term as secretary-treasurer of the National Track Coaches association and is past president of the CCC and NCAA cross-country associations.
He is married to the former Adamarie Scharbach of Hammond They have a son, Dick, 22, a March graduate from the University of Kansas medical school and a daughter, Lindsey, 18, a junior in music education at Kansas.
Hayward Overcomes Early Discouragements p. 5
Newcomer Adds to Record-Breaking Unit p.11
Riesinger Breaks the Mind Barrier p. 13
Southern Heads College Division
By Roy Miller
A small Texas school has switched the center of attention in the Kansas Relays from the university division action to the usually unfeatured college division.
The 37th annual Kansas Relays opened today in Memorial Stadium and will continue through tomorrow afternoon.
THE FEATURE in the college class and the expected highlight of the carnival is Texas Southern, an all-Negro school of 3,435 students, boasting only a 14-year existence. Relays from Emporia State and Texas Southern outfit.
Texas Southern captured all five college division relay titles—setting new meet records in each instance—in this year's Texas Relays.
Based on Southern's record-breaking performances at the Texas meet, present Relays' records in the same baton events, the quarter-mile, half-mile, mile, two-mile and sprint medley, may be shattered.
ALL FIVE clockings posted by the Southern quartet are below the listed KU Relays college division bests.
In the quarter-mile event, Southern established a 40.5 clocking in the Texas Relays. In last year's Relays here, a Texas Southern relay team set the existing record of 41.0.
Another KU Relays Southern-owned record, 1:24.2 in the 880, was topped in the Texas competition by five-tenths of a second.
TEXAS SOUTHERN chalked up a 3:09 time in the Texas mile baton event. The present KU Relays best, set last year by Emporia State, is 3:12.2.
Southern finished the two-mile event in the Texas Relays in 4:30.6, bettering the existing KU Relays record of 4:32.0 set last year by Howard Payne College.
Southern's sweep at the Texas Relays was completed with a 3:21.5 effort, topping the Emporia State record of 1957 of 3:22.6, in the sprint medley.
AN EXPECTED BATTLE for the Relays decathlon crown between Phil Mulkey and J. D. Martin highlights special event action.
Mulkey, unattached and formerly of Wyoming, won the event last year and set the Relays decathlon record of 7,238 points.
Mulkey now holds five consecutive Relays titles in the event and is tied with Glenn Cunningham for the most titles won by an individual in the Relays history.
MULKEY SET a world record in the decathlon with 8,700 points.
Martin, formerly Oklahoma's ace pole valuter, enters KU Relays decathlon action for the first time. Martin, in previous competition, has compiled a 7,005-point total and may have a chance to dethrone Mulkey.
A seven-foot high jumper will be vying for the Relays crown and record in that event.
COLIN RIDGWAY, from Lamar Tech, reached the 7-0 level in the Border Olympics in his first outdoor test this spring.
Baylor's Eddie Curtis and Oklahoma's Mark Brady are also prime high jump contenders. Both Curtis and Brady have leaped 6-8 this season.
The existing Relays record in the event is 6-8 3/16, set by Robert Walters from Texas in 1949.
TOM OTHARA, a 5-10, 130-pounder from Chicago Loyola, may head the Glenn Cunningham mile entrants. He finished in 4:01.6 in the Chicago Daily News Relays and posted a 4:02.9 clocking at the New York Athletic Club meet in indoor action this year.
O'Hara is also a member of Loyola's defending champion sprint medley relay team in the college division. O'Hara anchored the quartet's winning effort, five-tenths of a second off the listed record, last year.
O'Hara and the remaining members of the sprint medley crew will battle stiff competition at this year's
TRIPLE-THREAT Jerry Dyes, a sophomore from Abilene Christian, may become the first weight-jump combination blue ribbon winner in the Relays history.
Relays from Emporia State and Texas Southern entries.
Dyes hurled the javelin 241-4 $ _{1/2} $
this season, the longest heave to date.
Dyes has a chance at first places in the hop-step, javelin and broad jump events, and also competes in the shot put.
OKLAHOMA STATE is aiming at Texas' 1958 mile relay record of 3:09.1. Even though Colorado and Abilene Christian poses as threats, Cowpoke Coach Ralph Higgins says, "I still think we can run 3:08."
KU's record-breaking indoor two-mile baton crew is the top contender in the university division event, despite a recent Missouri outdoor showing.
The Jayhawker crew of Kirk Hagan, Tonnie Coane, Bill Thornton, and Bill Dotson established an American record of 7:30.8 in the Chicago Daily News Relays and bettered this effort a week later at the Kansas State Invitational with a 7:29.2 effort.
Another record assault in the college division is expected in the distance medley relay.
MISSOURI. WINNING the two-mile event at the Arkansas Relays, knocked 35 seconds off the previous Tiger best and may challenge the Jayhawkers.
KEARNEY'S EFFORT in the Arkansas carnival is seven-tenths of a second below the current Relays best, the oldest baton record listed in either the college or university division.
The Kearney (Neb.) State crew, led by Socrates Bagiackus and Hylke Van der Wal, former East Texas State performers, finished ahead of Oklahoma, Wichita, Missouri and Air Force in the Arkansas Relays.
One of the most active individuals during the KU Relays will be Houston's Pat Clohessy. Clohessy will compete in the four-mile relay, open three-mile run and the distance medley relay for a total of five miles.
Baylor Paced 1961 Relays
Baylor's Southwest conference champions unwind their greatest onslaught in Kansas Relays history last year, capturing six clear-cut championships and tying for a seventh to dominate the 36th Mt. Oread Games.
John Fry opened this assault Friday by bagging the Bear's first individual title in meet annals with a 170- $ \frac{1}{2} $ discus cast. He dethroned Oklahoma's Mike Lindsay in the shot at 57-3 Saturday to become the meet's only double winner.
Bill Kemp and Bob Mellgren added wins in the 100 and Steepe-chase while Eddie Curtis was sharing the high jump crown. Kemp also anchored winning Bear combines in the 440 and 880 relays.
Lone Star state teams dominated elsewhere too. Texas Southern flashed to record bursts of :41.0 and 1:24.2 in the College 440 and 880 rails. Houston spun the nation's fast-
(Continued on page 3)
---
Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20. 1962
Kansas Relays Has Exciting History
(Continued from page 1)
1960. East Texas State's Jim Baird went 25-5 1/4 in the broad jump to break the oldest Relays record, 25-4 1/4; set 29 years earlier. Also in the 1960 Relays, the now KU senior Bill Dotson nudged his high school rival, Archie San Romani, in the 1500-meter race with a 4:00.4 clocking in one of the Relay's most exciting races.
Baylor dominated action in last year's KU Relays by cleanly winning six titles and tying for the seventh before a crowd of 13,500.
National interest in the Kansas Relays over the years has remained high largely because of KU's own track standouts.
Glenn Cunningham was the first in the long line of great KU Relays performers. Cunningham captured the Relays' first 1500-meter title in 1932, repeated in the same event in 1933 and won the mile in 1934 with a 4:12.7 effort. In 1935, 1937 and 1938, Cunningham was beaten in the mile but came back to win in 1939 before 12,000 persons.
Another crowd of 12,000 looked on in 1940 as the by then famous Cunningham ran his last Relays mile race — Cunningham lost the race.
Cunningham placed fourth in the 1932 Olympic 1500-meter run and second in the 1935 Olympics in the same event.
Wes Santee's attempt at the four-minute mile barrier places him as one of the all-time Kansas greats.
Santee posted the second fastest clocking in the mile event up to that time in the 1954 Relays mile. Santee raced to a 4:03.1 effort before a record crowd of 16,000. Santee turned in a 4:11.4 clocking in the 1955 weather-hammered Relays.
In 1956, Bill Nieder tossed the shot put 59-7 7/8 for a new Relays mark. Just a week before, the Jayhawker had become the first college athlete to break the 60-foot barrier.
After earning a bronze medal in the 1956 Olympics, Nieder entered
the KU Relays and made the best shot put effort during 1957 with a 62-2 heave.
Competing as a Marine in the 1960 Relays, Nieder warmed up with a tremendous 66-1 1/4 heave and set a new Memorial Stadium mark of 63-1 1/4 in actual competition.
Nieder gained a gold medal for the United States track team in the 1960 Olympics.
KU's Al Oerter, gold medal winner in the 1956 and 1960 Olympics, won three straight Relays crowns in the discus event. Oerter captured the 1956, 1957 and 1958 titles.
Three other Kansas greats, Bill Alley, javelin, Ernie Shelby, broad jump, and Charlie Tidwell, 100-yard dash, were at their best in the 1959 Relays.
Tidwell earned the "most outstanding athlete" title and turned in a .09.9 posting in the 100. Alley hurled the javelin in 254-9, shattering the previous Relays best by 22 feet. And, Shelby came within seven-eighths of an inch of the oldest Relays mark with a 25-3 3/4 lean.
All three of the KU 1959 Relays stars became NCAA champions two months later.
Recent KU Relays have been held with some financial problems. Currently there is some speculation that KU will enlarge the seating capacity of Memorial Stadium by extending the seating area onto the track. A new track stadium in then reportedly planned for the area east of the Stadium and the KU Relays, the "dream" of a former KU student 40 years ago, would be dropped from the KU athletic program.
Whether or not the Relays are considered a financial success, much of the overall Relays success can be attributed to Bill Easton, Kansas Relays director and KU trak coach for the past 15 years. Coach Easton has not only led team after team to loop titles and national championships, but has also skillfully engineered the Kansas Relays.
O'Hara to Be Next 4:00 Miler?
"The first time I saw Tom O'Hara was at a high school meet," says a veteran track railbird. "His little sister came up to me and said she was here to watch her brother run. She pointed him out to me, and all I could think of when I saw this slight, pale kid was—little girl, you should have stayed home. You're only going to be disappointed. Then he ran, and he became a giant."
This represents a typical first impression of the 5-10, 130-pound Chicago Loyola sophomore who may be the next collegiate miler under four minutes.
He came close to the magic figure March 9 when he trailed Jim Beatty (3:59.7) home in 4:01.6 in the Chicago Daily News Bankers Mile. In the New York A.C. Games he ran 4:02.9 behind Beatty's 4:00.9, and he won the New York Knights of Columbus in 4:05.6. In his most recent outing the slender redhead anchored the Rambler sprint medley quartet to a new meet and field house record of 3:30.4 at the Wetsern Michigan Relays.
As a freshman last year, O'Hara anchored the same unit to the College division Kansas Relays crown in 3:23.1, just five-tenths off the meet record. With the little guy starting so fast this year the Chicagoans are certain to make a stout defense of their title here when the 37th Mt. Oread extravaganza unfolds tomorrow. The existing record of 3:22.6 was established by a Bill Tidwell-anchored Emporia State foursome in 1957.
O'Hara's avowed cinder ambition is two-fold—"To make the 1964 Olympic team and run a sub-4 minute mile."
His coach, Jerry Weiland, is confident his lithe running machine will break 4:00 before the season is over. "If he eventually gets as strong as we anticipate and can duplicate Beatty's four hours a day training, no one will touch him," says Weiland. "He can be an Olympic miler.
(Continued on page 13)
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Houston's Pat Clohessy Faces Triple Duty in Kansas Relays
No athlete in the 37th Kansas Relays this week will run more steps than a reformed tennis player from Australia, Pat Clohessy.
The 27-year-old from Tamworth, New South Wales, now a member of Johnny Morris' famed distance crew at Houston, is down for triple duty in the four-mile relay and open three mile in today's opening session; the distance medley relay tomorrow.
This adds to five miles of footracing under severe competition. Ordinary runners would be panting over the mere thought of such a marathon. But, for Clohessy, it may be a relief from his regular practice grind. This includes pre-breakfast canter at 7 a.m., then the usual afternoon drill with the squad. His weekly running log adds to 50 miles.
**AS A JUNIOR** last year Clohesy won the NCAA three-mile. Last autumn he was third in NCAA cross-country over four miles. As a sophomore, he finished 11th in the latter race to help the Cougars win the intercollegiate title, then ran second to teammate Al Lawrence in the NCAA 5000 meters.
In the shorter hauls his career bests are 1:55.0 for the 880; 4:04.8 in the mile, and 8:47.8 over two miles. He won the latter at Drake last year in 8:58.0.
This is fine distance running for anybody. For a lad who didn't begin competitive racing until age 19, it is something more. As a high schooler in Tamworth, he was a prep tennis champion, captain of the cricket team and a member of the football club.
ON THE ADVICE of a friend with track background, Cliff Johnson, Clohessy shucked all these to become a runner. He began as a sprinter, cutting the 100 in :10.3. He couldn't break five minutes in the mile. A year later he was down to 4:18.9.
"I follow no strict diet nor special diet." Clohessy admits, "I train hard on the track. I like the emphasis on relay running here in the U.S., but I still prefer to run the individual events. There's more competitiveness.
"Now that I've been around the world (he toured Europe with countrymen Peter Snell and Murray Halberg last summer) I think the U.S. certainly has the highest standard of living and the most friendly people. The only thing I don't care for is the fast pace of living.
"I THINK U.S. basketball is a great spectator sport. It is a tremendously interesting game, my favorite among American sports."
Clohessy came to Houston with Al Lawrence, two-time NCAA cross-country champion who is missing the outdoor season because of a pulled Achilles tendon which has hampered him for a year.
"I had been corresponding with Fred Wilt in connection with his book, 'How They Train.'" explains Clohesy. "I told him I would like to come to the U.S. to study and asked him about the chances of getting a scholarship. He suggested that I write Coach Morris. The Houston climate also seemed ideal."
HE PROBABLY could have secured a scholastic scholarship somewhere too. He'll graduate in June with a B.A. in history, a Phi Beta Kappa key and something close to an A average. He logged a 3.5 classroom mean (4.0 is straight-A) last semester and is carrying a 3.4 overall.
Clohesy and Houston will have scores to settle here with two Big Eight teams plus Southern Illinois. Touching off even with Nebraska's Mike Fleming in the anchor carry of the four-mile at Texas last Saturday, he lost a seven-yard verdict even though he clocked 4:06.8. Fleming ran 4:05.5, as NU added insult to injury by lifting the Cougars meet record with 17:01.8, second-best time in history by a Big Eight combine.
After three carries, Houston was 33 vards out of first against Kansas and SI in the distance medley, so Clobessy trotted a 4:22.9 to hold third as Bill Dotson fired the Jay-hawkers home with a new record of 9:46.4 on a 4:03.9 cleanup mile.
Clohessy anchored Houston close to the Kansas Relays record in the former race last year in 17:02.3. The return battle with Nebraska is certain to threaten the 16:57.8 standard set by the host Jay-hawkers in 1957.
Baylor Paced-
(Continued from page 1)
est four-mile of the young season, 17:02.3.
And North Texas State blazed a record 9:49.3, fastest time of the year to date, to win the University Distance Medley. Dick Menchac swept the Eagles from fourth place into a 12-year lead with a 2:59.9 three-quarters carry and John Cooper wired-in a 4:07.1 cleanup mile to whip Missouri, Kansas and Houston.
A. Saturday, crowd of 13,500
A Saturday crowd of 13,500
Hadley, Martin Score KU Firsts
Herald Hatley, Shallow Water distance hand, and Glen Martin, Orlando, Fla., broadjumper, brought Kansas Freshman track forces three individual championships as the Jayhawkers finished second in the annual Eig Eight Indoor postal.
Hadley set a new league record of 9:17.8 in the two-mile, and annexed the 1000 in 2:16.7. Martin, a transfer from Coffeyville Junior college, sailed $2-7_{12}$ to win his speciality.
The Jayhawkers scored 45-13/21 points to trail Colorado's 63-29/42. Missouri was third at 32-1/3; Oklahoma, fourth on 28-3/7, to complete the first division. Behind this foursome were Oklahoma State, 20-1/2; Kansas State 10; Iowa State, 7, and Nebraska 2-3/7.
watched Drake win its first baton title since 1947, sweeping from far back to edge Kansas in the twomile by three yards on 7:30.0, equalling the nation's best mark to this date.
Emporia State fled to a new College Mile record of 3:12.2. Howard Payne bagged its sixth successive College two-mile championship on a record 7:32.0.
John Kelly, ex-Stanford, pushed the Hop-Step-Jump record out to 50-3 as ex-Kansas ack Kent Floerke fouled a 50-9 on his final leap. Phil Mulkey won its fifth Decathlon crown on a record 7268. Jim Grelle, former Oregon great, whipped Ernie Cunliffe, ex-Stanford, 20 yards to win the Glenn Cunningham Mile in 4:07.4.
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Kansas State's Rex Stucker successfully defended his 120-yard high Hurdles title at :14.2 with a last-ditch lunge over Texas' Ray Cunningham. The heralded Pole Vault dual between Oklahoma's J. D. Martin, and Oklahoma State's sophomore sensation, George Davies, failed to reach the predicted 15-0, as they split the blue ribbon at 14-10.
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Friday, April 20, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Hayward Is Second On Indoor 2-Mile List
Charles Hayward's 9:05 flight to win the Kansas State Invitational two-mile last month brought the Lenexa junior a new Kansas varsity Indoor record. This had been held at 9:61.1 since 1957 by Jerry McNeal, in winning a dual against Michigan State at East Lansing.
Only swifter Indoor clockings in league history belong to Oklahoma State's Miles Eiseman, who skated 9:03.1 (the current Big Eight record), and 9:04.8 in 1959.
Phil Mulkey May Be Winningest Athlete
By successfully defending his Kansas Relays Decathlon championship here this weekend in the 37th Mt. Oread Olympics, Phil Mulkey can become the most prolific gold-medalist in meet history.
The former Wyoming athlete now shares that distinction with former Kansas Mile great Glenn Cunningham at five crowns apiece. Mulkey set a Relays record of 7238 points last year and a world record of 8709 later in the season.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20, 1962
WELCOME to the KANSAS RELAYS
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RELAYS SPECIAL
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Dinner – plus cole slaw $1.25
Tub – 15 pieces, 5 hot rolls $3.50
Barrel – 25 pieces, 10 hot rolls $5.00
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Dreams Do Not Come True for KU's Hayward
Kansas two-miler and steeple-chaser Charlie Hayward planned a career in basketball while in grade school, but turned to track after having his hopes shattered before reaching the high school level.
The Lenexa junior would listen to radio play-by-play accounts of Clyde Lovellette and B. H. Born and dream, as youngsters will, of someday filling their shoes.
HAYWARD'S DREAM came to a screeching halt while a sophomore at Shawnee Mission North. "I played for two weeks and didn't make a single basket," Hayward said, "so I gave the sport up."
Hayward also took a shot at football, before settling down to a career in track. He played end during his junior year, but couldn't break into the starting lineup. Fraternity brothers Bill Dotson, Tonnie Coane and Ted Reisinger kid him that he was on the end of the bench, but Hayward claims it was not quite that bad.
Summing up his brief football career, Hayward said, "I played football until I got my teeth knocked out.
"I WAS DISCOURAGED with that and just about had decided to hang my spikes up," Hayward admitted. "But my coach talked me into one last try in the Missouri Valley AAU. I surprised myself with a 4:26. Then my coach told me I should come back in the two-mile since there would be some college coaches looking over the young runners and I might earn a scholarship if I did well.
Sitting in the stands that day was Kansas coach Bill Easton, who made a note "that boy has guts."
WHEN HAYWARD enrolled at Kansas he joined a track program that has consistently produced outstanding distance runners. His coach, Easten, has tutored eight two-milers
"I had never run two miles on the track, but I got a 9:36, finishing seventh."
who are on the Big Eight honor roll for that event. Among these are Wes Santee, Jerry McNeal, Herb Semper, Al Frame, Bill Mills, Dal Rastor and the two most recent additions Bill Dotson and Hayward himself.
This is a distinction since the only non-Jayhawkers on the all-time list are Miles Eisenman of Oklahoma, Gail Hodgson of Oklahoma and Bob Hannecken of Missouri.
Maryland
TRIES DECATHLON — J. D. Martin, whose career best in the pole vault was 15-934 for Oklahoma, will compete in the decathlon at the Kansas Relays. In his first try at the 10-event marathon he scored 5,007 points. The Relays record is 7,167, held by Phil Mulkey of the Memphis Athletic Club.
Jayhawks Need Line and Passer
Jack Mitchell is vulcanizing the remnants of his Kansas Bluebonnet Bowl champions these days during KU spring football practice.
Mitchell lists the Jayhawkers major problems for 1962 this way: 1) replacement of the entire starting line, which was lifted by graduation; 2) development of a passer.
Mitchell and his spring staff of George Bernhardt, Tom Triplett, Don Fambrough, Bernie Taylor, and newcomer Bill Jennings, are working with the greeneren squad in Mitchell's five-year tenure. Not only was the varsity lifted, but two great backs, John Hadl, two-time All America quarter, and Curtis McClinton, three-time all-conference right half, will walk the graduation plank in June.
Hayward's first experiences with track were far from pleasant. He was a resounding flop in his first organized junior high relay race.
"We can work at these two," comments the General, "but there is another factor which may be our biggest problem of all and we can't do much about it until we play games. That's inexperience. We'll have a very young team next fall, and right now, I don't see how we can be in a contending position for the first division."
Replacing this pair would be a frightful task in itself, even if the club was set elsewhere. Starters for three campaigns, both Hadl and McClinton finished their careers at
There is no passer in camp who can be expected to match this total. Quarterback Rodger McFarland, one of two returning regulars—fullback Ken Coleman is the other—and his veteran companion, Con Keating, will work overtime on the air game this spring. The staff also plans to give Brian Palmer, lightly-used coming junior, a long look. He shot the Varsity full of holes in the final dress rehearsal last September and frequently unwound accurate demonstrations in scrimmages.
The Jayhawkers hope they have a halfback who can soften McClinton's departure in freshman Gale Sayers, 190-pound Omahan. Like Curtis he is lefthanded. There is further similarity in that he netted 321 yards in two freshman games last autumn. But, like all touted rookies, he still must pass the test of steel and fire in varsity combat.
Houston with more than 1,000 yards net rushing. In addition Hadl fired 1,341 passing yards, fifth highest in Kansas annals. He amassed 729 of this aggregate last season in pacing a 7-3-1 level.
Fambrough analyzes the line situation with this: "We have several good holdover and new prospects in our line. But the big thing is we are losing a bunch of boys who have
(Continued on page 14)
"I FOUND OUT my first day of running I was too slow for the dashes or hurdles," Hayward said. "But I did earn a place on our 880-yard relay team for the junior high meet in Mission. I was given a lead in the third carry, but was last in the field when I handed the stick to our anchor man. I knew then I needed something further to run."
With Hayward being too slow for basketball and taking too much of a beating in football, his high school coach Guy Barnes moved him to the mile and as Hayward reports, "I started doing better."
Friday. April 20,1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5
As a high school sophomore Haward placed third in the Sunflower League meet with a 4:42 clocking. He cut his time to 4:29 his junior year, but could place no better than second in the state meet behind Wichita East's Archie San Romani, now running for Oregon University.
HIS SENIOR YEAR he ran 4:27 early in the season, but could only muster a 4:32 in the state meet in again placing second behind San Romani.
Hayward, as a freshman, cut his mile and two-mile times to 4:23 and 9:23 while competing in freshman postal competition.
During his sophomore year Haward made headlines at the Texas Relays in Austin. Entered in the 3,000 meter steeplechase, he ran the fastest time ever run by a Big Eight performer, 9:14.2, in winning the event.
AN ATTACK of influenza hampered Hayward in his next outing, the Kansas Relays. He entered the steeplechase despite not being fully recovered and had to drop out after the sixth lap.
The illness bothered him through the remainder of the outdoor season. He ran the two-mile at the Big Eight meet, but again was hit with misfortune. During the second lap of the race another runner ripped off one of Hayward's shoes with his spikes and the Jayhawker finished third despite having to run without one shoe
The third place tied his effort in the Big Eight indoor even though the time was much slower. His outdoor Big Eight time of 9:43.7 was hampered by the thin Boulder, Colo., air. His indoor time was 9:25.6.
DURING THE PAST cross-country season Hayward was always a bridesmaid and never a bride. Running behind teammate and conference champion Bill Dotson, Hayward placed second in every meet previous to the Big Eight championship
An untested Danny Metcalf of Oklahoma State after trailing Hayward most of the way defeated him in the last mile to place second.
Hayward unwound a fine string of two-miles during the past indoor season with 9:18.7, 9:16.7, a career low of 9:15.2 and 9:19.3, the latter for second in the Big Eight.
HAYWARD OPENED the 1962 outdoor season with his fastest time in the two-mile run, 9:02.5, during a triangular meet with San Jose and Stanford. Nevertheless he finished second behind teammate Dotson who ran 9:01.1.
There are only five men in the Big Eight who have run the two-miles faster than Hayward. They include former KU great Wes Santee (8:58), Eisenman, OSU (8:58.7), Hodgson, OU, (8:59.6), McNeal, KU, (9:01.7) and Dotson.
Hayward's outdoor duty will be divided between the two-mile and the steeplechase. He will run the two-mile at the conference meet and in dual and triangular meets. He will compete in the steeplechase on the mid-western swing of Texas, Kansas and Drake Relays.
KING STREET
STEEPLECHASER — KU's Charlie Hayward will be entered in the 3,000 meter steeplechase in the Kansas Relays tomorrow. The Lenexa junior placed third in the Big Eight cross country run and second in the league indoor two-mile.
With the exception of the 3000-meter Steeplechase, there isn't a more rugged race in track than the 400-meter hurdles. It means running a quarter as hard as you can over 10 three-foot barriers spaced every 40 yards.
Swafford Runs On Strong Pin
Picture, if you can, a runner scissoring this gruelling test with a foot-long pin holding his left leg together. That's what Texas Tech's Don Swafford does.
Last year he posted the nation's sixth-best collegiate clocking. :51.6.In his first start at this distance,he won the Texas Relays in :52.6
He'll shoot for the second jewel of a Texas-Kansas-Drake Triple crown here this week when he goes to the post against a much tougher field in the 37th Kansas Relays. In it will be former great Cliff Cushman, 1960 Olympic silver- $ ^{ \textcircled{8}} $
medalist, now stationed at Craig AFB, Selma, Ala.; and Occidental's Dixon Farmer, 1961 NCAA champion to name two.
Farmer won his title in 50.8 over the slightly longer 440-yard distance last June in Philadelphia. Cushman owns the nine best times in Big Eight history, climaxing with a 49.6 in the Rome Olympiad.
ALL THIS isn't likely to bother Swafford, who has been limping on a broken femur (thigh bone) since he was run down by an auto at age five. His left leg still is an inch shorter than his right.
Even under such a handicap he has just about crowded in with Eddie Southern (Texas), Roy Thompson (Rice) and Jack Patterson (Rice) and now Baylor track coach) on the all-time list of Lone Star triple hurdle greats.
He has clocked as low as :14.2 over the 120 highs and :23.5 in the 220 lows.
SWAFFORD, A 6-2, 170-pound senior from Abilene, isn't a hurdling specialist either. He was entered in seven races at the Longhorn Games, stretched over prelims and finals, and was prodding his coach, Don Sparks, for duty in an eight, the 880 relay, before Friday night's opening session was
rained out.
Nothing much bothers the guy. With nobody eager to run in an early-season triangular against Texas Western and New Mexico, which was lashed by a minor snow blizzard, Swaford volunteered for the open 440 and won it in :503, despite the snow-ridden gale.
Don's home town of Abilene is, of course, the site of one of the nation's most powerful track schools, Abilene Christian. Furthermore, his father, Hollis Swafford, is a minister in the Church of Christ. But Swafford followed his older brother, Hollis, to Lubbock.
AFTER GRADUATION he plans to team up with Hollis again in the restaurant business (he's an industrial management major) eventually. Hollis now is studying law at SMU. Don plans to coach awhile "just because I want to do it, but not all my life."
Swafford's major concern isn't the weather, the competition, nor the dents in his physique. More likely, it's preservation of a supply of left legs for the family. His Dad's south limb still carries a cast from a month-ago accident. It was broken when he was run down by an auto the night before the South-west Recreational meet at Fort Worth.
Page 6
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University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20,1962
Kansas Relays Records
Special Events
120-yd. High Hurdles, 13:6, Harrison Dillard, Baldwin-Wallace 1948
100-yd. Dash, 9:9, Cy Leland, Texas Christian 1930
and Bobby Whilden, Texas 1956
Mile Run, 4:03.1, Wes Santee, Kansas 1954
Two Mile Run, 8:59.2, John Macy, Houston 1959
1500 Meter Run, 3:53.3, Glenn Cunningham, Kansas 1933
3000-Meter Steeplechase, 9:12.5, John Macy, Unattached 1958
400-Meter Hurdles, 50.4, Dick Howard, New Mexico 1959
High Jump, 6' 8 3/16", Robert Walters, Texas 1949
Broad Jump, 25' 5/4", Jim Baird, East Texas State 1960
Pole Vault, 15' 1/8", Don Cooper, Neb. 1951
Shot Put, 59' 7 7/8", Bill Nieder, Kansas 1956
Discus Throw, 178'1", Al Oerter, Kansas 1957
Javelin Throw, 254'9", Bill Alley, Kansas 1959
Hop-Step-Jump, 50'3", John Kelly, Unattached 1961
Decathlon, 7167, Phil Mulkey, Memphis A.C. 1960
Relays—University Class
Quarter-mile Relay, 39.9, Texas 1957
Wally Wilson, Eddie Southern, Hollis Gainey, Bobby Whiden
Half mile Relay, 1:23.5, Oklahoma State 1958
Orlando Hazley, Ken Covert, Vernon Haddox, Bob McFarling
Mile Relay, 3:09.1, Texas 1958
Wally Wilson, Drew Dunlap, Jim Holt, Eddie Southern
Two-mile Relay, 7:24.8, Michigan State 1958
Brian Castle, Bob Lake, Dave Lean, Willie Atterberry
Four-mile Relay, 16:57.8, Kansas 1957
Hal Long, Tom Skutka, Jan Howell, Jerry McNeal
Sprint Medley Relay, 3:19.5, Oklahoma 1958
Gary Parr, John Pellow, Dee Givens, Gail Hodgson
Distance Medley Relay, 9:49.3, North Texas State 1961
Richard Bothmer, John Spencer, Richard Menchaca, John Cooper
Relays—College Class
Quarter-mile Relay, 4:1.0, Texas Southern ...1961
Homer Jones, Barney Allen, Charles Frazier, Lester Milburn ...1961
Half-Mile Relay, 1:24.2, Texas Southern ...1961
Homer Jones, Barney Allen, Charles Frazier, Lester Milburn ...1961
Mile Relay, 3:12.2, Emporia State ...1961
Melvin Mayo, Landis Franklin, Noel Certain, Eddie Washington
Two-mile Relay, 7:32.0, Howard Payne ...1961
David Noble, Frank Santiago, Lowell Bishop, Glenn Petty
Sprint Medley Relay, 3:22.6, Emporia State ...1957
Duane McIntiire, George Gibbs, Bob Heaney, Bill Tidwell
Distance Medley Relay, 10:06.9, North Texas State ...1939
Alvin Chrisman, Harvey Bryant, Wayne Rideout, Blaine Rideout
Relays-Junior College Class
Sprint Medley Relay, 3:32.4, Coffeyville ...1958
Wendell Goodwin, Mike Nichols, Dave Ford, Larry Wagner
Mile Relay, 3:22.5, Coffeyville ...1958
Wendell Goodwin, Eddie Black, Mike Nichols, Larry Wagner
Relays—Kansas City, Missouri.
High School Class
Half-mile Rclay, 1:28.8, Southwest H.S. . . . .
Kansas Relays Interscholastic Records
120-yd. High Hurdles, :14.6, Henry Wiebe, Newton 1955
100-yd. Dash, :09.8, Dick McGillin, Immaculata of Leavenport 1950
220-yd. Dash, :21.3, Henry Wiebe, Newton 1955
440-yd. Dash, :49.6, Bernie Perrine, Derby 1956
880-yd. Run, 1:58.2, Bob Tague, Rosedae 1956
Mile Run, 4:17.4, Archie San Romani, Wichita East 1959
180-yd. Low Hurdles, :19.9, Rex Stucker, Effingham 1956
Quarter-mile Relay, 43.8, Wichita North 1958
Steve Summerville, Gene Westphal, Jerry Harper, Jack Dean 1958
Half-mile Relay, 1:30.0, Shawnee Mission
Mission 1958
Jim Knight, Doug Gillespie, Phil Muntzel, Dave Butts 1957
Mile Relay, 3:23.3, Wichita East 1957
Gordon Davis, Jerry Gardner, Paul Rearick, Bill Noble
Two-mile Relay, 7.57.0, Wichita East ... 1958
1938 Lowell Charlton, Bob Holgerson, Bill Stone, Archie San Romani Sprint Medley Relay, 3:34.0, Lawrence 1931
Bob Kimball, Charles Lanning, Jim Smith, Bill Cottle 1960
Pole Vault, 12'10"4", Tom Heineke, Wichita West 1939
High Jump, 6'5"8", Winston Rogers, Independence 1940
Broad Jump, 23'10", Albert Woods, Coffeyville 1940
Shot Put, 58'10", Elwyn Dees, Lorraine 1958
Discus Throw, 164'9", Bob Vernon, Oberlin 1958
Javelin Tirrow, 209'2½", Pete Talbott, McPherson 1959
Baylor's Bill Kemp Returns To Defend Relays' Title
The nation's top sprinters will be in the Kansas Relays 100-yard dash lineup tomorrow.
Contesting Baylor's Bill Kemp, who returns to defend his title, will be:
Steve Haas, Occidental. :09.5 two weeks ago; Leroy Jackson, Western Illinois, third in the 1961 NCAA; Ray Knaub, Nebraska, who won the Texas Relays this year; his stable-mate, Don Degman, Big Eight Indoor 60 champion; Larry McCue, Kansas, 1961 conference Indoor king; Dale Alexander, Kansas State; Homer Jones and Overton Williams, Texas Southern; Dennis Richardson.
Abilene Christian, 1961 Texas Relays champ, and Roger Sayers, Omaha. :09.5 last year as a freshman.
In addition to the 100-yard dash Kemp will be anchoring Bear 440 and 880 teams here in defense of titles they won last year. Furthermore, he'll be running with the same mates, Roy Smallley, Dave Bennett, and Glynn Fields on the quarter; Smallley, Fields, and Dave Alexander in the Half.
The Bears followed ACC home in the 880 at the Texas Relays and tied Nebraska for second in the 440. With ACC not scheduled to run a single baton exchange here those two numbers are wide open.
O-State Coach Is Optimistic
Late in the basketball season two sportswriters cornered Ralph Higgins, who doubles as Oklahoma State cage timer and track coach. "How fast you think you can run that mile relay this spring?" they asked.
They expected an optimistic answer from a coach famed for optimistic statements and just as noted for piloting his athletes close to or beyond extravagant goals of performance. Higgins didn't disappoint his interviewers. "I think we can hit 3:08.0" he answered matter-of-factly without the trace of a smile.
If you don't know, that clocking would be :01.7 faster than any Big Eight team ever has run. It also would be :02.5 under the current conference record, which the Aggies hold, and just four-tenths off the Intercollegiate figure Abilene Christian established a year ago at Compton, Calif.
As usual Higgins wasn't making empty claims. The Cowpokes have broken meet records throughout the winter and spring, including a new American mark of 3:13.8 at the Kansas State Indoor Invitational in Manhattan.
This feat can be more clearly focused when it is noted that the former American indoor mark of 3:14.4 was set in 1953 by an all-star aggregation of four Olympic gold medalists, representing the Grand Street Boys club of New York. Their names are Mal Whitfield, George Rhoden, Herb McKenley, and Andy Stanfield.
The Waddies were running on a 220 layout, which means they had to negotiate twice as many turns as will be necessary on the outdoor saucers. Many coaches feel a quartermiler can cut this time by one to two seconds when he moves outdoors, providing rain or wind doesn't interfere.
The Pokes should be favored here Saturday in the Kansas Relays action. The competition they'll face
(Continued on page 10)
WELCOME VISITORS, TO THE 37th ANNUAL KANSAS RELAYS
Friday, Saturday - April 20-21, 1962 In Beautiful Memorial Stadium
★
Watch & Thrill to the performance of America's great track & field stars
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OPENING CEREMONIES Friday & Saturday, 1:25 p.m.
Friday — General Admission ... $1.50
High School & Grade ... .75
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University, College & High School Finals on both Friday and Saturday.
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MEMO:
Welcome Visitors,
The University of Kansas Athletic Department extends a hearty & cordial welcome to every High School, Jr. College, & College competitor who will visit our campus this weekend.
We hope that each & every visitor will return again soon.
A. C. 'Dutch' Lonborg
Cordially,
Director of Athletics
Catching Solid For Jayhawks
By Clare Casey
One man figuring largely in the early success of the Jayhawk baseball team has been catcher Keith Abercrombie. While doing an adequate job behind the plate, Keith also came through in the first seven games with a .500 batting average, including a home run and five runs batted in (R.B.Ts).
Keith, a '511', 155 pound junior, hails from Kansas City, Kan. It was here that he first started his baseball career, at the age of ten, in the Three and Two Little League. Keith advanced from the Little League to the Ban Johnson League where he was selected to the all-star team his last two years. Last summer he worked and played baseball for Feld's Chevrolet.
ABERCROMBIE is a chemistry major and plans to go into premedicine. He feels that the chance of getting into the big money would be out of his range, although he has been approached by such professional teams as Philadelphia, Detroit, and Baltimore.
Keith started playing for the Jayhawkers as a freshman. Last year he was able to make the big jump to the varsity's first team as a second baseman and shortstop. He finished the season with a lusty .345 batting average.
"Although I led the team in about four hitting categories," said Abercrombie, "they will never let me live down the fact that I also led in the error department. They rib me about it all the time."
WHEN EXPRESSING an outlook for this season, Abercrombie said that he would have to go along with the views of Coach Floyd Temple. "We've got a scrappy and hustling team. Last year we lost a couple of games to what we considered weak teams. This kind of got us down.
"This year we are off to a good start," Abercrombie said. "The lack of hustle and wrong attitude is gone, and we should come through with a successful campaign."
KU
Around the BIG 8
Another addition to the loop, coaching roster was made at Nebraska. Wyoming's Bob Devaney replaced Bill Jennings, now a KU aide.
Buffs Face Changes
Devaney, who plans to use a wide-open multiple offense, has the entire 1961 backfield returning. Another strength for the Cornhuskers is at the tackle and guard spots with plenty of experienced talent available.
The biggest problem facing Missouri Coach Dan Devine is the loss
Besides acquiring a new coach, defending conference football champion Colorado will operate next season with a new type of offense.
MU Lacks Line Strength
New Coach Bud Davis has initiated an offense in spring drills that he calls the "Swingin' T." The innovation uses a halfback and end as the swing men.
Coach Change at NU
The end alternates from one side of the line to the other and the halfback shifts to either side of the fullback in the formation.
Friday, April 20, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7
Fourteen returning lettermen reported for spring practice sessions at Boulder. The biggest CU problem is finding a replacement for the top three quarterbacks who will graduate.
Oklahoma State Coach Cliff Speegle has 22 returning lettermen to bolster next year's Cowboy squad. Speegle says of the Cowpoke spring drill performances, "We're getting some good effort but we aren't improving our techniques and fundamental play as we should."
22 'Pokes Return
NU problems include a slow line and a shortage of linebackers.
of the interior line from tackle-to-tackle due to graduations.
Besides a potential of twenty-two returning lettermen, the Tigers hope quarterback Keith Weber will be ready for action in the fall.
Weber, who is not participating in the spring drills, injured his knee in the Tiger's opener last season with Washington State and was declared a hardship case by the conference.
I-State Experiments
Iowa State Coach Clay Stapleton may change his sole use of the pure single wing of past seasons and install his version of the "Single Wing-T" next fall.
The change of offense, now in the experimental stage, involves All America Dave Hoppmann. Hoppmann may be moved from quarterback to a tailback spot if the variation is used.
BRIEFs—Wilbur "Sparky" Stalcup is back in the coaching business—temporarily. Stalcup is coach of the U.S. Stars, a group of professional and collegiate stars, that toured the Midwest with exhibition games against the Harlem Globetrotters. Jerry Gardner and Bill Bridges, ex-KU teammates, were on the team.
Oklahoma hosts Syracuse and Notre Dame next fall and both games are already predicted as sell-outs. The Norman stadium seats 61,700 . . .
Kansan Advertisers
Bob Stevens, the new Oklahoma basketball coach, uses pre-game musical therapy. Stevens plays quiet dinner music at pre-game meals and then switches to Dixie-land music during warm-up periods . . .
Patronize Your
Jayhawker Golf Team Returns One Letterman
Among spring sports at KU there is one that has gained tremendously in popularity since it was first played at KU. That sport is golf, a game played the world over.
Markley said he requires his players to do a little running and weight-lifting. He said that the only way a player can build stamina and consistency is to practice regularly each day. He remarked that he is only interested in those boys who show a great deal of desire and really want to take golf seriously.
Golf competition in the Big Eight started in 1934. It continued until 1941 when it was dropped for four years. During the first seven years KU shared first place with Iowa State in 1939.
KU has been represented by a golf team since 1934. The sport has caught on fast in colleges throughout the nation and the Big Eight is recognized as one of the strongest in the country.
UNDER THE GUIDANCE of golf coach Jay Markley, who is in his second year as head mentor, the golf program has changed completely. Markley informed his players that the free-lance system that was used by players previously would no longer exist. Players would follow a schedule that required a certain amount of practice hours each day.
AFTER WORLD WAR II, KU tied for first in the conference with Iowa State and Oklahoma in 1947. KU won its first and only outright Big Eight championship in 1950.
Since 1956, Oklahoma teams have dominated the league. Oklahoma State is the perennial champion holding the crown since 1958.
"They have a tremendous golf program at O.S.U." Markley said. He said the reason for this is the amount of recruiting they do. "They look at golf as a major sport."
DISAGREEABLE weather so far
this year has hampered the players gaining practice time. During the winter the linksmens worked out in Allen Field House, hitting into nets. As the temperatures began to rise the players moved out of doors to the 18-hole Lawrence Country Club.
Last year the Hawks won fourth place in the conference meet at Boulder, Colorado. Markley said the boys will have to work hard to do as well this year. The conference meet will be held at Missouri U. this year.
The team has only one returning letterman—Dick Haitbrink, a Salina junior.
The five boys who Markley feels will battle it out for the top position on the team are Paul Carlson, Lawrence sophomore, David Gray, Lawrence senior, John Hanna, Lawrence sophomore, Reid Holbrook, Kansas City sophomore and Haitrink.
COACH MARKLEY feels that it takes time to build a strong team. He said that a strong freshman team this year could bolster the hopes of a fine team in future years.
Other players vieing for positions are Jerry Cohlmia, Wichita freshman; Daniel Foss, Great Bend freshman; Fred Gollier, Ottawa sophomore; David Gough, Chanute junior; Joe Hambright, Plainville sophomore; Larry Henrie, Wichita freshman; Scott Linscott, Topea freshman; Gary Thomann, Salina sophomore; Douglas Vogel, Kansas City sophomore; Ray Dorsett, Wichita freshman and Doug Kieswetter, Topea sophomore.
Ellison Ranks High
Kansas basketball guard Nolen Ellison finished 25th on final NCAA free throw percentage tables with a mark of .811. His teammate, Jerry Gardner, was 60th in scoring on a 20.7 average.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Fridav. April 20,1962
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Friday, April 20, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 20,1962
ACC Jumper Poses Threat In Strange Relays Double
If he holds together, the most versatile performer in the 37th Kansas Relays this weekend outside the decathlon field, will be Abilene Christian's Jerry Dyes.
On the basis of his early spring efforts, Dyes will be a blue-ribbon threat in three events—an odd combination of the javelin throw, broad jump, and hop-step-jump.
DYES, A sophomore transfer from Northeast Louisiana, unwound a cast of 241 $ 4 \frac{1}{2} $ , as the annual gold medal harvest opened at the Fort Worth Recreational last month.
He proved it was no fluke by flinging 222-4½ to win the Border Olympics and 232-8 to annex the West Texas Relays. Even that leadoff heave isn't a career best. While sitting out a year of residence, in 1961, he won the Houston Meet of Champions on $243-6½$, a distance which would have placed him third in the NCAA had he been eligible.
His winning broad jump marks have spiraled upward, beginning with 23-7/4, then following with 23-8 3/4, and a wind-blown 24-6/1. He hasn't multiple jumps yet but
he won the Gulf Coast AAU last year on 48-0, and shows a career peak of 50-2 3/4, just a quarter-inch under the existing Relays record.
He hasn't multiple-jumped yet,but
Right here, it should be noted that there never has been a jump-weight double in a single year in Kansas Relays history. Paul Faulkner, another Abilene product, came close by winning the javelin in 1951 on 201-3/4, then annexing the pole vault in 1952 at 13-6, a title he shared with Colorado A & M's Gordon Riddell.
Blue-ribbon ability in two unrelated events, however, isn't Dvess' full story. At Fort Worth he also scored second in the shot put on $47-5\frac{1}{4}$. At Laredo, he was sixth in the 16-pound ball in 49-1, and led off the winning mile relay combine in :49.5. At Odessa he was second in the shot at $50-8\frac{1}{2}$ and fifth in the discus on $131-2\frac{1}{2}$. Coach Oliver Jackson then gave him a respite from the field grind by placing him in one of the 220 carries on his sprint medley team
Little wonder he has won trophies at all three stops. He was voted "Most Outstanding Athlete" at the Southwest Rec, and picked off high point awards at the following two meets on $1\frac{1}{4}$ and 15.
OSU Tough in Mile Relay—
(Continued from page 6) also should write one of the burning chapters of Relays history.
"I still think we can run 3:08," says Higgins (the Kansas Relays record is 3:09.1, which was an Intercollegiate mark at the time Texas established it in 1958). "But I don't know if that will be good enough to win."
Higgins' team lines up this way:
Higgins' team lines up this way:
No. 1, Gary Krause, junior
Pierce, Calif. Junior college grad
who led off with :49.3 at Manhattan.
Best open time is :50.3 last year for
Pierce. Son of Fred Krause, 118-
pound center on Higgins' first football team at Frederick, Okla., high school, which swept undefeated through nine games in 1926.
No. 2, Jack Miller, sophomore — ran :48.5 at Manhattan. Clocked :50.9 in open quarter as freshman.
No. 3, Billy Stone, senior — 1961
Big Eight Indoor 880 champion. Won
California Relays 880, 1960, with
carrier low of 149.6. Clocked :48.8 at
Manhattan. Also anchored strenu-
medley team to new American In-
door season at 3:24.0 with 141.4
He's managed all this on a lame foot, which pains every time he hits the broad jump pit.
Anchor, Charles Strong, junior — Clocked cleanup : 47.2 at Manhattan. Tied Big Eight Indoor record at : 48.6 in early March. Ran : 46.6 at Texas two weeks ago.
"He's the greatest competitor we've had since I've been here," admires Wildcat publicist Charlie Marler. "I asked him about jumping on that sore foot the other day and all he said was I'm gonna go on it as long as I can stand it."
"AT THE BORDER Olympics we needed to place third in the mile relay if Texas won it, which everyone thought they would," relates Marler. "Two of our regulars, Bud White and Earl Young (1960 Olympian) were hurt and couldn't run. Coach called the boys together and told them the situation. Finally Dyes said, 'Shucks yes, my foot is hurtin', coach, but I'll run.'
It was Dyes' first carry on a Wildcat relay team. Furthermore, he drew the outside lane, usually fatal for inexperienced runners, since they must fly blind, not knowing where they are in the race until the pack hits the home stretch. Dyes just gunned as hard as he could all the way. It must have been the best:49.5 Jackson ever saw since Dyes touched-off the second runner with a slight lead. ACC went on to win the race by 10 yards over Texas in 3:15.8, and with it the meet, 58-50½.
EXAMINING HIS history, perhaps it is logical that Dves would consider a sore foot a minor irritation. He is throwing the javelin with a oncebroken elbow which was operated on just two years ago. And he's jumping on a foot that he fractured last year in the NAAU hop-step-jump.
One of the worst breaks of all was shattered glasses at the Dallas Indoor Invitational last month. Dyes barely could see the takeoff board, but he fired down the runway for every one of his preliminary leaps. It would make a good story to say he won the event blind. The truth is he fouled every jump.
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Page 11
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POST-GAME SHOW — KU Sports Network director Tom Hedrick (left) interviews KU football coach Jack Mitchell (right) in the Jayhawker locker room after each football game. The post-game show is a new trend in sports broadcasting.
Tom Hedrick Is Top Sportscaster
By Steve Clark
A brash, young kid still wet behind his ears walked into radio station KLWN, Lawrence, and told Arden Booth, now manager, "I am going to be the best sports announcer in the country someday and I would like to start here."
Booth, taken by surprise, could only chuckle. "Do you have an audition tape?"
"I JUST HAPPENED to have one," laughed Tom Hedrick, director of the KU Sports Network, in describing how he got his first job in radio.
"Ive always wanted to be a sports announcer." Hedrick said. "People back in Baldwin used to think I was crazy. I would walk around town doing play-by-play, and people would just look at me kind of funny and say 'I wonder what's wrong with that Hedrick kid?'
Recently Hedrick, in his second year as KU Sports Network director, won the Kansas' top sportscaster award for the second consecutive year. He was selected for the honor by his fellow Kansas sportscasters.
HEDRICK'S FIRST play-by-play was the Kansas Relays and this year he will air the Relays again over KLWN. In addition he broadcast Lawrence High School's football games, the KU alumni game and the Big Eight annual track and field meet, the last two which he will also do for KLWN this spring.
Hedrick, in his present position, announces all Jayhawker football and basketball games. Last year he initiated a new trend in sportscasting. In addition to his pre-game football show, he did a post-game show with Jack Mitchell in the locker room.
Hedrick is also in constant demand to broadcast special games and appear as a guest or substitute on area sports programs.
EVEN THOUGH sportscoasting is fun to Hedrick, he takes a serious attitude toward it. He takes great pride in his broadcasts and spends hours doing research so that he can fill in during a broadcast with statistics and other tidbits of information.
When Hedrick enters a field house
Gardner Wins Award
Jerry Gardner, highest-scoring guard in Kansas basketball history, has been selected to the Helms Foundation third All America team. Only other Big Eight player placed on the 30-man roster is Kansas State center Mike Wroblewski.
or football stadium, one might think he was a famous trial lawyer going to the "Scopes trial" with his briefcase in hand.
Within the briefcase are the fruits of Hedrick's many hours of research.
HEDRICK'S INFORMATION is close at hand during his broadcast. He keeps a card on each player which lists his height, weight, hometown, scoring average, how he has done in previous games against KU and any other information that Hedrick can find.
Hedrick is well prepared. He also has a statistician to compile vital facts and scoring that occurs during a game, so that he can keep his listeners informed.
Hedrick is a competitor, too. He believes in the old show business adage, "the show must go on." When Kansas played Nebraska in basketball at Lincoln this year, Hedrick did the broadcast despite the fact that he had been sick for several days and had a temperature.
KANSAS BROKE its seven-game losing streak that night and Hedrick got so excited in doing the broadcast that he was hoarse for several days. As a matter of fact, Monte Johnson, color man for home basketball games, had to do the play-by-play for a freshman game the next night and part of the Oklahoma game the following Saturday night.
Hedrick is quick to credit those about him for making possible his success. His first reaction to winning the sportscasting award was, "It would not have been possible for me to win unless I worked for the University of Kansas and without the cooperation of the players and coaches."
A man that Hedrick is quick to heap praise upon is his engineer, R. P. Stringham. "He is an electronic genius," says Hedrick. Stringham developed a special microphone for Hedrick that is "perfect for playby-play."
HEDRICK FIRST JOINED the KU Sports Network in 1957-58 when he was working toward his master's degree here. He assisted Monte Moore, now announcing for the Kansas City Athletics, as color man.
In 1958 he was sports director at KOCA in Kilgore, Tex. That year was a busy year for Hedrick as he did 140 broadcasts of football and basketball games during a six month period.
Coane Keeps KU Tradition
Tonnie Coane may be far from his home in West Islip, N. Y., but his track exploits are right at home in keeping with the rich track tradition at the University of Kansas.
He moved to KWBW in Hutchinson in 1959 as sports director. In addition to his duties there he did play-by-play for the national junior college basketball tournament network.
The 5-111, 150-pound junior is a bright newcomer on Coach Bill Easton's varsity squad, breaking into a veteran two-mile relay unit that set a new American record at the Chicago Daily News meet and then broke their own record at the Kansas State Indoor relays.
ALTHOUGH A JUNIOR, this is Coane's first shot at varsity intercollegiate competition. From Stoney Brook Prep School at Stoney Brook, Long Island, he enrolled at Duke University in Durham, N. C.
COANE ARRIVED at Mt. Oread in the fall of 1960, eligible to compete only in freshman postal competition. He worked hard in practice sessions and finished third in the freshman cross-country postal competition, and was the league's top individual scorer in indoor postal competition.
After a semester and a half at the Atlantic Coast school, he was not as happy as he thought he might be, and decided to seek his track fortunes elsewhere.
He scored $205^{3 / 4}$ points during the indoor season for a new school record for individual competition. Coane averaged about $18^{1 / 2}$ points per meet for 11 meets scoring points in the 440, 880, 1000, mile and two-mile runs.
A running mate at Duke was Norman Fordyee Jr. of Kansas City who had attended Coach Easton's summer camp at Ely, Minnesota. Fordyee, having more than a bare knowledge of Easton and Kansas track tradition, convinced Coane that if he was not going to remain at Duke he should transfer to Kansas.
This fall. Coane was on hand to bolster Easton's cross-country squad that regained its Big Eight championship after a year's stay at Oklahoma State. He finished seventh in the conference cross-country meet held here in November.
DURING THE INDOOR season which saw the Jayhawkers go undefeated in five meets including an 11/12 of a point squeaker over Nebraska at the conference meet, Coane doubled in the 600 and 880 yard runs in addition to serving duty on the Jayhawk mile relay team.
He pushed teammate Bill Thornton to a new Allen Field House record in the 880-yard run during an Oklahoma-Missouri-Kansas triangular before Thornton inched ahead of him at the finish line to win in 1:11.8.
Coane waived the half-mile at the conference meet to concentrate on the 600-yard run and finished fifth among a strong field that saw Greg Pelster set a new record of 1:11.1.
COANE CAME back to help the Jayhawkers score a badly needed two points (fourth place) in the mile relay.
With relay season near, Coach Bill Easton sought a replacement for graduated Gordon Davis on the Kansas two-mile relay team which last
year set a new Drake Relays record and posted the nation's second fastest time in that event.
Coane was his man.
WITH COANE running a 1:54.8 number two position, the relay team posted a 7:30.8 clocking at Chicago to better Manhattan college's year-old record by two seconds.
A week later, Coane turned in a 1:52.1 half mile as the Jayhawker crew lowered their own record to 7.29.2 at Kansas State.
How fast can the two-mile relay team go? Coane was slow to commit himself, but conceded that "given the right day and the right competition, we have the potential to run 7:20."
A 7:20 TWO-MILE relay time would entail an average of four 1.50 half-miles. Coane again not committing himself as to how fast he will run, said, "I do not set any goals for myself, but instead try to improve my time each race."
He believes that a performer who sets goals for himself can become discouraged if he does not reach his goals.
WHILE IN high school Coane was barred from state meets because he attended a private prep school. Nevertheless he was able to post a 1:56 time in the half-mile. He was eligible to run in the Eastern State Championships, open for state and conference winners from New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and other Eastern states, and finished second.
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University Daily Kansan Friday. April 20, 1962
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Breaking Mental Block Is Riesinger's Big Task
Breaking a mental block is the biggest task facing a young runner on any good track team. That is the opinion of a sophomore who ought to know, Kansas' Ted Riesinger.
On successive weekends he's ripped 10 seconds off his previous best mile time and :06.5 off his former 880 low. It isn't often anybody cuts their personal bests in such big hunks in such a short span.
FOR THE RECORD. Riesinger's lows now rest at 4:07.7 and 1:49.7, although you can't write the latter in the book yet since it was unofficially clocked in the two-mile relay at Texas.
"Everybody can get in pretty good shape," Riesinger ponders. "But when you get in a race you've got to cross a mental barrier to really get your times down. Some people say 90 per cent of running is mental. Your body can be ready, but your mind won't let you punish yourself enough to run well.
The reedy Tulsan "stayed with 'em" pretty well in a race that saw Spartan sophomore Ben Tucker upset KU captain Bill Dotson, 4:03.6 to 4:04.3. Riesinger never had run better than 4:17.7.
"I crossed my barrier at Stanford (running third against the Indians and San Jose State). I didn't know I could run that fast, but I made up my mind to stay with 'em."
Running against Jim Dupree, Southern Illinois' NAAU 880 champion, at Austin. Riesinger cut four yards off a nine-length handicap to keep Dotson within range for the anchor carry. The latter out-chested Saluki Bill Cornell at the twine for
a new meet record of 7:27.7, and the swiftest time ever by a Big Eight two-mile combine. Earlier in the day, Riesinger had fired 3:01.3 in the threequarters to help the Jayhawkers to a new 9:46.4 Distance Medley record.
"Before a race," continues Riesinger, "you think of 4:05 maybe. And you might be dreaming. But if you don't think you can do it you never will. It's going to hurt when the pace gets tough. That's when you've got to push the hardest if you're going to run well.
"When you finally do this you get a lot more confidence and you try to improve from there."
This outlook, terrific workout logs with Dotson, and "being hungry to run after missing last year" because of scholastic griefs, have combined to rocket Riesinger from comparative obscurity.
He gave an inkling of what was to come during the Big Eight Indoor. He opened with a 4:17.7 Mile for third place behind Dotson and Nebraska's Ray Stevens, then came back for fifth in the 1,000. This is a wicked double for a veteran, let alone a rookie running on boards for the first time.
Riesinger was an outstanding prep at Tulsa Will Rogers. Running for Coach Bill Eubanks, he set state records in the mile (4:19.0), and half (1:55.8). As a freshman here he clocked Indoor races of 4:22 and 9:29. He was sidelined by an appendectomy during the outdoor season. Then the scholastic scythe the fell.
Now Riesinger is the crown prince of another great Mt. Oread distance crew, which is running faster relay times than even those Wes Santee-hubbed units dared dream about.
O'HaraLeadsLoyola'sDistanceCorps
(Continued from page 2)
Even the world's best at two miles or 5000 meters."
Says assistant Don Amidei, who developed Villanova fresh great Tom Sullivan at Chicago's St. George high school . . . "O'Hara's the outstanding middle distance runner now in college. I agree that he can break four minutes this year. Brought along properly, he'll be a record holder. I won't predict how fast he will go, though I feel he may have the potential someday to get under
the 3:54.4 record. It's a matter of building endurance. With classwork, he doesn't get to run as much as he should."
pus, and outdoor track, is nine miles from the commerce college site.
Classroom work isn't O'Hara's only time consumer. Since Loyola doesn't have an indoor track, O'Hara was obliged to travel about seven miles from the downtown commerce college—he's a business accounting major—to the University of Chicago field house to work out each day, points out Rambler publicist Denis Quinlan. It's worse now that he has moved outdoors. Loyola's main cam-
Loyola will need all its guns here since it will face Texas Southern and Emporia State in what should be one of the weekend's most furious baton hauls. The former returns anchorman Major Adams, a near 1:50 Half-Miler, plus spinner Homer Jones from a team that ran second here last year, then reversed the decision at Drake a week later in 3:22.4. Later in the season the Tigers scorched 3:19.0, second-best collegiate clocking in the land for 1961.
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Friday, April 20, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 14
Kearney (Neb.) Excells In Distance Medley
The two most difficult names to write and pronounce on the Midlands' relays circuit last spring were Socrates Bagiackas, obviously a Greek, and Hylke Van der Wal, a Dutchman from Canada. Both ran for East Texas State.
Neither is carrying Lion colors this year. Bagiackas (pronounced Bo-jeck-us) has graduated. But the ink-stained ragnamuffins of the press box won't escape Van der Wal, who's name was misspelled last season as many different ways as Shakespeare, either the old Notre Dame halfback or the older English poet-playwrite. He's now anchoring one of the finest Distance Medley teams that ever came out of the small college ranks at Kearney (Neb.) State.
The Antelopes raised some eyebrows by winning the Kansas State Invitational in 10:07.7, 14 seconds under the college division record. In with the big boys at the Arkansas Relays three weeks ago, they whipped Oklahoma, Wichita, Missouri and Air Force, in that order,
clocking 10:06.2.
This is seven-tenths under the current Kansas Relays college class record at which Kearney will be shooting here this weekend in the 37th running of the Mt. Oread Olympics. That mark is the oldest baton standard on the books so far. It was established in 1939 by a North Texas State unit which featured the famed Rideout twins, Wayne and Blaine, in the final two carries.
Nobody has approached it up to the last two years when Emporia State, then East Texas State, with Van der Wal anchoring, clocked successive 10:09.3's. Now Hylke (pronounced Hike) has opportunity to run on two successive title units for two widely separated schools.
Van der Wal clocked a 4:11 anchoring Mile at Manhattan; a 4:12.8 cleanup carry at Fayetteville.
"He's about ready for 4:05," enthuses his coach, Charlie Foster,
(Continued on page 15)
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Page 14
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 20,1962
Assistant Coach Lawson Is a Former Track Star
Bob Lawson, assistant track coach, was an all-around athlete before turning to a coaching career.
As a high school athlete at Aberdeen, Wash., he earned all-state in football at end, second team all-state honors in basketball at forward and center and was three times state champion in the high jump.
Lawson also had to choose which sports he was to participate in, since the days of the college three-sport athlete has long been gone.
Lawson liked basketball the best, but thought he was better in football. He ended up accepting a track scholarship.
LAWSON DECIDED against playing football during a two-week practice session in preparation for a Shrine all-star high school football game between the three largest cities in Washington and all-stars from the remainder of the state.
After two weeks of two practices a day Lawson decided football was not for him because "there was too much business and too much stress on winning rather than enjoyment."
He decided against basketball because he believed he was not tall enough to play college basketball. When he graduated from high school he was 6-134 and weighed but 170 pounds.
HE CHOSE TRACK because he liked the individuality of the sport. "In a team sport too much judgment rests on the coach," Lawson said. "In track there is no doubt. You succeed on your own hard work. Watches not die."
Since the University of Southern California is the major track powers on the west coast, Lawson accepted their track scholarship.
Despite his unpleasant experience in preparation for the Shrine game, he would have liked to combine football and track, but the USC coaches vetoed the idea.
"Football is the easiest sport I ever played," Lawson said. "It takes less ability than any other sport. All there is to it is just running and hitting. I did like the contact in football."
LAWSON'S DECISION was a wise one. Even though he believed track to be his worst sport of the three, his rigid training payed off with success.
His major event in college was
the hurdles. He won the Pacific Coast Conference high hurdles crown in 1957 and 1958, and won the lows in 1957. He placed fourth in NCAA and the NAAU high hurdles in 1958 and was sixth in the NAAU hop-step-and-jump in 1958.
The decathlon was another event in which Lawson excelled. He barely missed the 1956 Olympic team placing fourth in the 10-event grind.
HE WAS SECOND in 1955 in NAAU competition, third in 1957 and fifth in 1958. His personal high score in the event is 7067 points. He also finished second in the 1957 NAAU pentathlon and fourth in 1958.
Much controversy resulted from Lawson's absence from the 1956 Olympic squad. Lawson injured his back previous to the Olympic trials and could not get back into top condition for the trials. Nevertheless he placed fourth.
The third place finisher was the Rev. Bob Richards. Richards had already won a position on the team in the pole vault and told Lawson that he would relinquish his decathlon position on the team.
LAWSON TRAINED all summer in preparation for the Olympics to be held in Melbourne, Australia Lawson was to receive a bitter disappointment.
Despite an injured leg, Richards decided to enter the decathlon and Lawson was left at home.
Richards later admitted to Lawson that entering the decathlon was the biggest mistake in his life. He reinjured his leg and was unable to finish the event.
RICHARDS APOLOGIZED to Lawson. He said that he knew Lawson would have another chance in 1960, and since the 1953 Olympics were to be his last, he wanted to enter the decathlon.
The Olympic coach even had Lawson apply for a passport. Richards though, was determined to go. He said that he earned the spot and intended to go.
But the 1960 Olympics did not materialize for Lawson. He reinjured a groin injury while broad jumping in the Olympic trials and had to drop out of the event after two jumps.
"I COULDN't even run down the runway." Lawson said.
Lawson was involved in another controversy previous to the 1960 Olympic trials. He was accused by the University of Oregon as being a professional. He was then attending
Oregon State University on a graduate assistantship while working toward a master's degree in health education. At the same time he served as an assistant coach for the track team.
Oregon accused him of receiving money for coaching, thus making him a professional. After much squabbling the situation was straightened out with Lawson retaining his amateur status.
WHEN LAWSON came to Kansas as an assistant coach he became a professional. Lawson said he decided to turn professional because doctors said he could not compete again because of his leg.
The decathlon is considered by many as the most gruelling of athletic events. Lawson disagrees, "I think its overrated," he said. "Sure it's tough, it's as tough as any athletic event, but not as tough as everyone thinks.
"Like any athletic event one has to be in shape and no one enters the decathlon unless he is. The secret to the decathlon is not so much endurance as it is how fast you can recuperate."
LAWSON SAID that he could many times recuperate from an event in just a few minutes. "You are able to do this after building up your strength over a long period of time."
Lawson trained year-round for the decathlon. He said that during one stretch of a year-and-a-half his longest layoff was three days. He competed from March to August.
Kansas' acrobatic basketball guards, Jerry Gardner and Nolen Ellison, earned spots on Arizona State's 10-man all-opponent team for 1962. Gardner was fourth in Sun Devil squad voting. Ellison ranked sixth.
Gardner-Ellison Win
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(Continued from page 5) been starters for two and three years and who played well together during all that time. They were real veterans by the time they were seniors. There is no way we can replace that experience."
VI 2-0444
ternate ends, Pack St. Clair, Jay Roberts, and Andy Graham; tackle Fred Eisman; the No. 2 guards, Ken Tiger and Duke Collins, and the second and third-string centers. Kent Converse and Pete Quatrochi. Sophomores must come through at each position if there is to be the necessary competition for starting jots, and adequate depth.
Moving up will be last year's al-
In this package were ends Larry Allen and Benny Bovdston; four of the top five tackles, Stan Kirshman. Larry Lousch, Mike Fisher and Dick Davis; Guards Elvin Basham, twice all-league, and Jim Mills, and Center Kent Staab, who, with Kirshman, was a second-line all-conference choice.
Mitchell excused seniors-to-be for two weeks while the staff concentrated on the newcomers. Overall, a squad of 70 is expected. Drills will be climaxed with the annual Varsity-Alumni tussle the night of May 12 at Haskell Stadium.
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Friday. April 20,1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 15
KU Swimmers Have Top Year Under Markley
By Mike Miller
KU's 1962 swimming team climaxed its most successful season in the 32-year history of conference competition by taking eight of a possible 14 first places in the Big Eight conference meet.
LACK OF DEPTH hampered the KU swimmers more than anything else. The Kansas squad had only eight swimmers compared to 18 for Oklahoma and 17 for Iowa State, which finished third in the meet. This lack of manpower hurt the team because it was not able to pick up badly-needed fifth and sixth place points.
Although the team finished second to Oklahoma, which won the conference championship for the 11th straight year, the KU swimmers made the meet closer than it has been since 1950.
Both relay teams, the 400-yard medley and the 400-yard freestyle, set new Big Eight records. The medley team broke its own record which it had set two weeks before against Oklahoma. Their time against Oklahoma bettered the American record for the event in a 20-yard pool.
This year Kansas swimmers broke two conference relay team records and two individual marks while taking eight first places in the conference meet.
THE MEDLEY RELAY team is made up of Bill Mills, Topeka (freestyle), Bill Murdock, Webster Groves, Mo. (breaststroke), George Winter, Chicago, Ill. (backstroke), and John Kemp from Springfield, Ill. (butterfly). All are sophomores except Murdock who is a junior.
The freestyle team, consisting of Ludy Harman, Ponca City, Okla; junior; Stew Anderson, La Grange, Ill.; sophomore; Mills, and captain Eldon Ward, Wichita senior and KU's only swimming All America, had never swum the event as a team before their winning performance.
Winter set a new league mark as he won the 100-yard backstroke, as did Kemp in the 200-yard butterfly. Kemp was a double winner as he also took first place honors in the 100-yard butterfly. Murdock took both the 100- and 200-yard breaststroke and Ward retained his 50-yard freestyle championship.
Head coach Jay Markley took four swimmers (Ward, Murdock, Kemp and Winter) to the National Collegeate meet in Columbus, Ohio, last month. This was the largest group of KU swimmers ever to swim in the meet. Although none of them was able to quality for the finals, three broke existing varsity records.
AS AN INDICATION of how Kansas has improved over previous years, Ward's 50-yard freestyle championship was the first time that a KU swimmer had coped a conference first place. KU swimmers now own nine conference first places.
THIS YEAR'S TEAM has been the climax of a five-year upswing in swimming at KU. The 1957 team tied for last place in the conference after occupying the cellar uncontended for the previous two years. Markley became coach in 1958 and since that time, the team has raised its point output in the conference meet from $47\frac{1}{2}$ to 50 to 58 to 71 and finally to 110 this year. This 110-point total put KU only nine points behind winner Oklahoma which won the meet handily by 70 points last year. In the five years that Markley has coached the team, they have never finished lower than third in the Big Eight.
Ward's 22.5 in the 50-yard freestyle was singled out by Coach Markley as the outstanding performance by a KU swimmer in the meet.
Next year's team promises to be even better than the 1962 squad. The team will lose Ward and Dick Reamon through graduation, but with the added experience of the four sophomores who were swimming in their first Big Eight competition this year plus standout juniors Ludy Harman and Bill Murdock, the team should be able again to contend with perennial champion Oklahoma for the Big Eight title crown.
Van der Wal—
(Continued from page 13)
now in his 17th season at Kearney and his 35th overall. "I think he can get under 150 in the half too."
Hylke transferred from East Texas last winter. His parents were displaced persons from Holland, where settled in Wartford, Ontario, where his father farms. Young Van Daler Wal is studying for the ministry. He'll enter the seminary at Ottawa, Quebec, next autumn.
During the indoor campaign Van der Wal won the Winnipeg International Meet of Champions 1000 in 2:10.7, a figure nine-tenths under the Big Eight record. He trailed Jim Beatty in 2:11.1 in the Milwaukee Journal Games, and won the Chicago U. Holiday 880 in 1:53.3.
Running ahead of him for the Antelopees are Ed Kester, 440; Daryl Broberg, 880, and Tuck Mason, 1320.
Kester, a Cambridge, Neb., senior,
clocked 50.5 and 51.7 in Kearney's
two latest bolts. Broberg, a Loomis,
Neb., senior, hit 2:00.5 and 1:57.4.
Mason, Ord, Neb., senior, wheeled
2:05.5 and 3:03.8.
The latter is Nebraska College Conference 880 record-holder at 1:51.8. He was runner-up for the NAIA title in 1960 and finished third last year.
Foster is a story in himself, having piloted eight consecutive NCC title teams in a streak that also shows 13 championships in the last 16 years.
This is the gang that hopes to bring Kearney its first Kansas baton title in history.
Javhawks Switch Veterans
Most significant experiment involving a veteran on Kansas' spring practice blueprint will be a trial for Marvin Clothier, 207-pound coming senior guard from Stafford, at end. A second veteran, Mickie Walker, coming Groves, Texas, junior, is ticketed to a return to guard after finishing the 1961 season at tackle.
Temple Sees Improved Showing For Jayhawker Baseball Team
The addition of Junior College All America Hubert Bumgardner at second base gives the team a big boost in the infield. Not only is Bumgardner a good player, but his spirit helps the whole ball club.
Head baseball coach Floyd Temple has predicted a fourth or fifth place conference finish for his 1962 Jayhawker team. The team started off the season giving indication that it can finish at least this well by winning its first three conference games.
"We are sure Bumgardner is a Big Eight caliber fielder, and he should be able to hit Big Eight pitching," Temple says. "He should also add the hustle to the team which was so badly lacking last year."
"We have to have runs to win games; we can't beat them on defense alone," Temple said.
Coach Temple says that this year's team should be a vast improvement over last year's cellar dwellers if the pitching holds up and if the many sophomores on the squad are able to adjust to Big Eight playing conditions.
THE BIG QUESTION mark in the team's chances, however, is whether the hitting of the team can produce enough runs to support the improved defense.
He says that he has noted a vast improvement in the mental attitude of this team over last year's squad, adding that the defense has also improved over last year's.
The rest of the infield is made up of Dick Fanning at first, Don Miller at shortstop, and Jim Evilsizer and Leroy Rader sharing the third base job.
Veterans Jim Marshall and Ken Hensley along with sophomores Tony Leiker, and David Robinson
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I am not sure who wrote this. It looks like a newspaper article.
Floyd Temple
will be handling most of the outfield assignments for the Jayhawks this season.
Pete Quatrochi and Dave Culp,
Abercrombie hit .345 last year
when pressed into duty at second
base.
CATCHING IS ONE of the teams more stable departments with last year's leading hitter Keith Abercrombie backed up by footballer
TEMPLE'S PITCHING staff is centered around a pair of fireballing righthanders, Jerry Waldschmidt and Carl Nelson. They are backed up by lefthanders Sam Tryon, Roger Brock, Monte Stewart and Steve Lunsford.
Nelson and Waldschmidt are seniors, Tryon and Brock are juniors and Stewart and Lunsford sophomores.
Philly Signs Fisher
Tackle Mike Fisher has signed a contract with the Philadelphia Eagles, which brings to eight the number of 1961 Kansas footballers secured by the pros. That checklist includes tackle Stan Kirkman, Houston Oilers; guard Elvin Basham, Oakland Raiders; halfback Curtis McClinton, Dallas Texans; end Larry Allen, Toronto Argonauts; quarterback John Hadl, San Diego Chargers; tickle Dick Davis, Green Bay Packers, and halfback Bert Cono, San Diego Chargers.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
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We hope that all contestants and spectators will enjoy their stay while in Lawrence.
We welcome all of you to visit any of our fine Lawrence Theatres.
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Page 16
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20, 1922
KANSAS RELAYS ORDER OF EVENTS
19
KU
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62
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9:00 110 Meter Hurdles — Decathlon
9:30 Quarter Mile Relay — High School — Preliminaries
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10:30 One Mile Relay - Junior College Preliminaries
FIELD EVENTS
ku
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9:15 Discus Throw — Decathlon
10:00 Pole Vault — Decathlon
10:00 Discus Throw — High School —
Preliminaries — Finals
10:00 Broad Jump — High School —
Preliminaries — Finals
10:45 Javelin — Decathlon
11:30 1500 Meter Run — Decathlon
SATURDAY AFTERNOON
TRACK EVENTS
1:10 University of Kansas Band—Flag Raising Ceremony — R.O.T.C.
1:20 Presentation of Kansas Relays Queen
1:30 120 Yard High Hurdles—Univ. and College — Finals
1:35 Distance Medley Relay — College — Finish
1:50 Distance Medley Relay — Uni-
2:05 100 Yard Dash University and College Finals Girls 100 Yard Dash
2:10 Sprint Medley Relay — High School — Finals
2:20 Glenn Cunningham Mile Run A.A.U. Invitational five to six Final
2:20 Glenn Cunningham Mile Run — A.A.U. — Invitational five to six men — Finals
2:30 Quarter Mile Relay — High School — Finals
2:40 Special — Girls Matched 440 Relay
2:50 Quarter Mile Relay — College Finals
2:55 Quarter Mile Relay — University Finals
3:00 Two Mile Relay — High School — Invitational — Finals
3:15 Two Mile Relay — University — Finals
3:25 Half Mile Relay — Kansas City, Mo. H.S. — Finals
3:35 Half Mile Relay — High School — Finals
3:45 Half Mile Relay — College — Finals
3:55 Half Mile Relay — University — Finals
4:00 3000 Meter Steeplechase — A.A.U. — Finals
4:15 One Mile Relay — High School — Finals
4:25 One Mile Relay — Junior College — Finals
4:30 One Mile Relay — College — Finals
4:40 One Mile Relay — University — Finals
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1:30 Shot Put — University and Col- llege Prelimination Finals
1:30 High Jump — University and College — Prolimate — Finals
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2:30 Javelin Throw — University and College — Prelims — Finals
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Campus Population Rises; KU Plans Expansion
Page 17
The KU student of 1962 who returns to visit the campus in 1975 will see a vastly changed panorama.
By Jim Alsbrook
Ten new buildings, four large additions to present structures, two renovated buildings, two tunnels and five traffic control stations will have been constructed. To make way for them about a dozen outdated buildings will be razed.
This development will occur in addition to the scheduled dormitory building program.
This multi-million dollar plan has been devised and recommended by the eight-member KU Planning Council. Its purpose is to provide facilities for the education of an expected 1975 enrollment of 21,000 students.
ACCORDING TO estimates, the yearly growth in KU student population in the next 13 years will be:
1962----10,800
1962—10,500
1963—11,500
1964-12,900
1964-12,500
1965-14,600
1965-14,000
1966 16.100
1966—16,100
1935 15.500
1975—21.000
The plan, which must be approved by the Kansas State Board of Regents, includes the following items:
- A new Fraser Hall located just
- A large classroom building where Robinson and Haworth halls now stand.
- An addition to Watkins Hospital.
- A permanent building behind Strong Hall (where temporary units now stand) for classrooms and offices.
- Two biological classroom and laboratory buildings where Robinson Annex now stands.
- A one-story addition for physics on top of the west wing of Malott Hall.
- A new gymnasium east across Naismith Road from Allen Field House.
- A classroom and laboratory addition to Lindley Hall.
- A building for art and architecture on the site of the new engineering building at 15th and Naismith.
- A final addition to Watson Library (in addition to the 1.8 million extension beginning this spring
- A building to house University Extension services west across Mississippi Street from the Kansas Union.
- An engineering library and administrative building on the site of the new engineering structure.
- A building for physical plant services, west of Iowa Street and south of 15th, on property owned by the Endowment Association.
- Renovation of Green Hall, home of the Law School.
- Renovation of Marvin Hall, present home of the Engineering and Architecture School.
- Two under-the-street tunnels one connecting Lindley Hall with the new engineering complex and
Friday, April 20.1962 University Daily Kansan
the other connecting the Kansas Union with the proposed Extension building.
The construction of five traffic-control stations, a separately planned project, will be financed with $30 thousand in parking fee money. The razing and replacement of Blake Hall has been provided for separately.
Buildings scheduled for demolition under the project are Fraser Hall, Robinson Gymnasium, Haworth Hall, structures supplementary to these buildings, and other temporary or barracks annexe throughout the campus.
FRASER, ROBINSON, and Haworth halls will be torn down, the Planning Council said, because they cannot be economically renovated and maintained and because they occupy prime campus sites which could be more advantageously used by modern structures.
The temporary annexes were erected in the late 1940s to provide classroom and office space demanded by the sudden swell of war veterans on the campus. They were expected to be abandoned after about five years, but the pressure of increased
The plan, 11 years in the making, is intended to solve a variety of present and anticipated problems.
enrollment each year has required their continual use.
The trend toward centrifugal expansion would be reversed. The presence of old and impractical buildings in choice campus sites has made necessary the building of new structures on the campus periphery. This requires long walking distances for many students, some of whom now hardly can get from one class to another in the ten minutes between classes.
Building key structures in the middle of the campus and leaving only special schools on the periphery would tend to cut down on time and distance for students. Basic courses all students take, such as English, mathematics, speech and social sciences, would be given in the middle of the campus, and other courses of high priority could be more tightly concentrated in the Jayhawk Boulevard area.
MULTI-PURPOSE rooms usable for teaching varieties of subjects are being planned. The idea is to provide for double the present number of
FURY HILL
WRECKER'S TARGET—Robinson Gymnasium, shown above, is scheduled to be razed to make room for a new building. A new gymnasium will be built.
students without increasing the size of the campus, meanwhile minimizing cross-campus travel.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said the Planning Council recognizes that the plan will determine the appearance of the campus for 50 years, and that therefore much time and effort have been invested in it. The plan is flexible, the chancellor said, because no one can determine what new courses or classes will be required within the next 13 years, and KU
must keep pace with new developments in science and other branches of learning.
Among the other points mentioned by the Chancellor are:
- The campus will be less cluttered and more beautiful, for the best architecture and the best landscaping will be combined with the optimum use of space in the new buildings.
(Continued on page 28)
Symposium to Present Original Plays
By Tom Winston
The third annual University of Kansas Drama Symposium will occur May 7-12. It will present three new plays by contemporary American playwrights.
Though less well known than KU's annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music, which is held each year in early April, the Drama Symposium was founded for the same purpose: to perform and to encourage the writing of new works by contemporary Americans, and thus to further the cause of the American arts. Each year the symposiums try to produce some irregular new works.
Fresh, new ideas frequently are "way out"—a few of them even in orbit—but likely as not they have deep roots in past tradition.
One example of these new dramas is "Olympus Farewell" by Jefferson Bayley, one of last year's plays. It had a sarcastic little character who descended from heaven in a basket.
While it is by no means a new idea—the Greeks used the deus ex machina liberally and the Romans also adopted the innovation some 2,000 years ago—it is not a common occurrence on the modern-day stage.
Another example of the unusual, though not new, was produced by the first Drama Symposium in 1960. It was called "The Rite of Spring" and was written by William Sollner, a former KU graduate. It had a crucifixion, but of a black Christ.
An example of an irregular new production was last year's "Thunder Over Scotland" by Father Ernest C. Ferlita, a Catholic priest from a nearby Kansas town.
The plot concerns the persecution and trial of a Catholic priest in Calvinist Scotland around 1600. Though the play probably did not deserve it, the production it received was very bad. But the director was ill all through the rehearsals. Both such occurrences, i.e., bad production and bad health, are not the general rule here. Most of the other five productions received a production much nearer their due.
ONE OF THE two plays which shared the prize at the first drama symposium in 1960 was called "While Penelope Spins." That work
staked its fragile life on one titilating thesis:
Was Penelope really a good girl all those 20 years her hus-
Ulysses was away at war, cavorting with sirens, or wander'
The other work which shared the prize also treated a speculation:
What must the local town's reaction have been over the virgin Mary's famous pregnancy? The title of the play was "Tiger Born."
The three plays for production each year are chosen by sponsors Gordon Beck and William L. Kuhlke, instructors of speech and drama, and a corps of KU graduate students. The plays are read and individually evaluated as they are received. A committee of faculty and students selects the three plays for performance. The selections for this year were made from a submitted total of 87 new scripts.
The main requirements for entry of a manuscript in the symposium are that the play be original and unpublished. Any American playwright, however well known or unknown, may submit his work.
SOME OF THE students who have read and evaluated scripts were asked their reactions to the scripts they read:
"The ones I've read are pretty bad," Phil Harris, Lawrence senior, said.
Ken Baker, Helmetta, N. J., graduate student, said: "That one in the back seat is a comedy. I haven't read it so far. Maybe I'll find a good one yet."
Diana Abruizzino, Huntington, W. Va., graduate student, said Mr.
Beck told her:
"Be honest. You may have to direct it."
"That did it." Diana laughed. "I was."
There is a winner every year, however. The number of scripts submitted this year is encouragingly large. Only about 20 were submitted to the first symposium. Last year's number was a little over 60. The scripts chosen for this year are:
The scripts chosen for this year are:
"The Acrobats," a comedy by Berry Fleming; "Double, Double," a comedy by Marston Tate, and "Here Comes Santa Claus," a drama by Joel Oliansky.
The plays will receive two performances each in the Experimental Theatre.
The Story of a Political Murder
By Alain Raymond and Paul Chwat United Press International
ALGIERS, ALGERIA — His name was Ahmed and we saw him die one sunny afternoon on a busy downtown Algiers street.
We heard the dry crack of the gunman's revolver. We watched as the bullet caught him in back of his neck. We saw him spin around three times with a look of pained surprise on his face, his hands still stuffed in his pockets, and a cigarette dangling from his lip. We saw him fall dead on the sidewalk as the blood oozed from the bullet hole.
That night the state-operated Aljiers radio announced: "The death toll from terrorist attacks today was 21."
There was no mention of Ahmed by name.
THE DEATH TOLL that day had been a little above the average even for bloodstained Algiers. Within the space of three hours and within a radius of 500 yards of the main post office in the city center the killers had chopped down their victims—nearly all of them Moslems—at the rate of one every 10 minutes.
Ahmed was just one of 21 victims and that night his body lay alongside a score of others in the overcrowded morgue of Algiers, Mustapha Hospital.
But Ahmed had been a man until death crept up on him that afternoon and left him just a number—a man with a home, a family, a job, hopes, fears and perhaps modest ambitions.
Ahmed was just a number.
We found Ahmed's home, where he lived with his father, his mother, two brothers and a sister. It was a modest, shabby little home in the Rue du Spinx—one of the hundreds of steep, winding, dark alleys that crisscross the labyrinth of the Casbah, the fabled slum quarter where 80,000 Moslems live in squalor.
The Casbah Moslemse do not invite strangers into their homes. So we stood on the doorstep chatting with Ahmed's brother, Amar. He was a slender, dark-faced man of 25 with black eyes, black close-cropped crinkly hair, dressed in blue jeans and a white woolen pullover.
"WHY DID THE secret army (OAS) gunman kill Ahmed?" we asked. "Was he involved in politics?"
"Politics? What does that mean?" Amar retorted. "They (he stressed the word contemptuously), they killed him the way they kill all the others, because he was a Moslem. Because they want to provoke us into hitting back so they can charge us later with breaking the cease-fire agreement."
By this time a crowd of Arabs
had gathered around us. They were not hostile and they nodded approval of Amar's words. It turned out that during the battle of Algiers, early in the Algerian War, Amar had acted as a "letter box" for a rebel National Liberation Front cell, had been arrested by "les paris"-the French paratroopers who "pacified" the Casbah- and had spent some time in a French camp.
IT WAS NOT SO easy to find out something about Ahmed, the man. Moslems do not talk readily about their dead and there was nothing in their dress or behavior to show they were in mourning.
Gradually we kept easing the
To find out these things you have to engage them in conversation, win their confidence, become almost accepted, as it were, into their circle of family and friends. You have to cease being, for them, a stranger.
Ahmed was 23 and a stevedore on the Algiers waterfront.
talk back to Ahmed and were able to form a picture of him as he lived.
For 10 years his world had been on the Algiers docks, with their cranes, warehouses, lines of trucks loaded with early fruit and vegetables for Europe, their stacks of timber, their rows of wine barrels, their lighters, tugboats and fishing vessels.
Down by the blue Mediterranean Ahmed felt happier than in the cramped quarters of the Casbah. He liked the sea air better than the stench of meat and vegetables that pervades the narrow "soukhs" of the Casbah.
AHMED WENT first to a French school in the Boulevard de Verdun which borders the Casbah on one side.
A few years older, Ahmed joined
(Continued on page 28)
Page 18
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20, 1962
The Campus Political Parties-
Action
An Analysis by
Action, KU's proposed third political party, has emerged this spring from many months in the planning stage and has introduced some new concepts of student government to the KU political scene.
The stated purpose of the group is "to promote the active interest of students in student government and in University affairs by presenting a liberal position on both a campus and a national basis."
Contrary to the primarily local emphasis of the existing KU political parties, Vox Populi and the University Party, Action proposes that KU's governing body, the All Student Council, broaden its vision to discuss important national and international issues and to formulate opinions on these issues.
The party has included in its platform such things as reaffiliation with the National Students Association (NSA), an investigation of the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) and financial support to the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), in an effort to give KU an orientation in national political affairs.
IN CAMPUS affairs, Action has proposed a decline in the influence which the University has on the individual student. The party platform calls for more student freedom in such things as the speakers to be brought to campus, social regulations, student newspaper, and the end of arbitrary expulsion of students.
The platform calls for more power
being given the Faculty Senate to set University policy in areas that directly concern the student. It says that since the faculty is closer to the individual students and more aware of the trends in student thought than either the Board of Regents or the Chancellor, the faculty senate should set policy directly concerned with the students.
Action's platform asks that an explanation be given of why the petition (signed last spring) demanding a referendum on the student seating plan was not considered.
THE PLATFORM asks why since the Kansas Union is operated for the benefit of the students—the Union's prices on meals are higher than privately operated restaurants near the campus, why the Union does not offer a 5 cent cup of coffee, and why the Union does not publish a complete financial statement annually.
Another plank in the Action platform proposes that the Associated Women's Students and the KU Pep Club should receive financial support from the University and not from the All Student Council as they now do.
Action says that the present system of these organizations in getting money from the All Student Council prevents the ASC from using its funds for more academic and intellectually stimulating pursuits.
The platform also calls for an ASC representative from each living district even if the minimum
number of votes required for ASC representation from a district is not met.
ALTHOUGH the platform criticizes the Human Rights Committee of the ASC, it does say that Action will support it as long as the HRC investigates racial and religious discrimination wherever it exists.
The basic organization of the party, individual membership, is a new idea at KU. In the past, political parties have been primarily made up of bloc memberships from the living groups on campus.
Action is made up entirely of individual memberships and outlaws any bloc membership. Leaders of the party explain that Action encourages this type of membership because it is more democratic.
THE PARTY SAYS that it feels that the present bloc type membership has lost contact with the sentiments of the student body and that the proposed individual membership will give the individual a more active voice in political affairs.
The party's governing body, the parliament, is made up of representatives from each of the living districts and 10 members at large. This contrasts with the living group representatives that make up the governing bodies of the two existing political parties.
In addition to the parliament, a general assembly to be composed of all card carrying Action members is to be called once a semester to discuss elections and at any other time that the parliament
deems a meeting of all members necessary.
The constitution of the party calls for a safety valve on the possibility of the parliament assuming too much power through a recall of any parliament member by a 30 per cent vote of the general assembly.
THE PARTY HAS introduced one controversial new issue in its platform. It calls for the withdrawal of University recognition from those student living groups which have discriminatory clauses in their constitutions if these clauses are not removed by September, 1965.
The other two party platforms call for a removal of discriminatory clauses by a slower rate, to be set by the individual living group.
Action stresses that it is not trying to force integration in individual living groups at KU. It is simply trying to remove the explicit discriminatory clauses from the individual constitutions.
THE PARTY HAS met a roadblock in receiving the All Student Council's recognition as a political party on campus. The group received the necessary 1000 signatures on a petition that called for the ASC to recognize Action, but since the petition did not make any stipulation that those students who signed the petition were prospective members of Action, the ASC ruled the petition invalid.
Because it is not a recognized campus political party, Action cannot officially support candidates in the coming Spring ASC elections, but the party has put up four candidates which it will support un-officially.
In this Spring's elections, Action will function as a pressure group on the existing political parties.
Although it will not be a functioning political party in this Spring's elections, the party is continuing to work to attain the necessary 1000 active members to become a contending political party in future campus elections.
Russian Literature Given at Exhibition
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Rep. Garner E. Shriver, R-Kan., says it is evident Russians can use ways other than the U.S. mail to deliver their views to Americans.
The Kansas congressman was discussing a House bill that would bar free delivery of Communist "literature" in the U.S. mail system.
SHRIVER said that at a recent display in a suburban Washington shopping center, "representatives of the Soviet government utilized an exhibition of art by Russian children to place in the hands of school children Communist propaganda.
"It is apparent that the Russian government can use such exhibits—or even parcel post which is not covered by the House legislation — to get its material into the hands of Americans."
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Friday, April 20.1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 19
Their Achievements and Failures
Mike Miller
UP
The University Party first entered the KU political picture in the fall 1960 All Student Council elections. Its candidates and platform opposed a Vox Populi which had been uncontested during the two previous elections.
IN DISCUSSING the growth of UP since its origin, it must be taken into consideration that the party has always been working as a minority in the ASC. This is a great hindrance in pursuing the planks of its platform. The numerous planks concerning ASC committees are almost impossible to pursue without a UP president and vice president of the student body, for these two are essential in the committee appointments.
The party platform said the party was forming because Vox had "been unfaithful in serving the students during its one-party reign and because there was a great deal which Vox had left undone."
Of the 14 points in the original UP platform in the fall of 1960, the party has successfully pursued four of them. Five of the planks in this platform had previously been acted upon by Vox. In some cases, when the planks of the two parties overlapped on an issue, Vox got credit for fulfilling its promises because it presented them to the ASC first. UP always supported these resolutions, however.
Another reason why UP has not been successful in fulfilling all of its original planks is that the ASC has no control over such areas as state support for higher faculty salaries and adequate faculty retirement program, which were planks in UP platforms. Some of the other planks concerned areas such as student discounts and cooperation with Lawrence officials on such things as snow removal and traffic problems.
THIS TYPE of plank shows that although the party had good intentions, it lacked the political experience needed to know the range in which the ASC has the power or influence to act.
On the credit side, the UP has supported the National Student Association (NSA), provided for better bicycle facilities at some of the University buildings and helped to make ASC committees more active as well as they could without control of the Student Body President and Vice President.
The party was more successful in fulfilling the platform promises of its second platform in the Spring of 1961. This platform was oriented around participation in national and international affairs.
This national and international orientation was exemplified by planks which called for support of the Peace Corps and various student exchange programs, support of the NSA and the peaceful abolishment of discrimination.
The party presented such bills as a request for a presidential veto on ASC legislation, the appointment of three executive secretaries provided for in the ASC Constitution and the investigation for a clarification of the disciplinary system (which had also been proposed by Vox either in its corresponding platform or in previous ones).
Their plan for the opening of more stadium gates and adequate personnel to patrol them at football games was taken in under the Student Seating Plan, which was included in the Vox platform.
IN ITS 14 point platform, the UP supported ASC bills presented by the party the previous year;
- A resolution to the civil rights problem.
- Creation of a Human Rights Committee.
- Legislation for Stop Day, 1961
- An outline for selecting and financing student delegations to off-campus student conferences.
The platform also contained :
plank which called for observer representation on the Faculty Senate (which is contradictory to the rules of the Faculty Senate).
The platform which UP used last Fall continued to show improvement as the party began to get a foothold in the ASC.
The party got more of its platform planks worked on, but again many of the planks were either initiated by Vox or supported after Vox presentation. The major fault of the platform was the plank which said the UP "will endeavor to see that the traffic plan which is adopted will best meet the needs of the student."
In this platform, the party changed its orientation from the previous platform (which supported increased student awareness and subsequent ASC interest in national and international problems) to one which was more interested in these problems directly concerning the campus.
The traffic plan which the Chancellor has proposed for next school year is very controversial among the student body, but the party did not fully investigate the possibilities of any alternative plans.
The platform did not take a positive stand on such controversial issues as civil rights or the National Student Association (NSA).
It proposed that a committee be established to promote peace at the Missouri-Kansas football game. A committee had already been established and was working with a similar committee from MU.
The platform stated that action should be taken to make pre-enrollment procedures more efficient, but UP did not make any suggestions about just what should be done to remedy the situation.
The platform has been effective in bringing about the distribution of ASC Constitutions, however. There is a committee currently working on the printing of these constitutions for distribution to students.
(Continued on page 20)
Vox
Experience and a majority on the All Student Council have helped Vox Populi show continued success in the fulfilling of its platform promises.
Vox has a two year head start on the University Party and in this time had the opportunity to get the experience needed in writing platforms which were both concise and for the most part possible to carry out.
There are things in the Vox platforms, however, which could be considered as unnecessary. These run mainly along the lines of party policy statements which have no place in a platform. These include such things as "not supporting candidates for ASC election for the promotion of their personal ambitions" and "Vox supports continued ASC cooperation with the town of Lawrence in order that our relationship may be further enhanced for the good of the student."
NEITHER HAVE generalities been absent from the Vox platforms. For example, the party came out for "support of continued active investigation of campus problems by ASC committees." This is one area where Vox has been very lax. Although leaders of the party admit that the committee system is not satisfactory, the Vox controlled executive branch of student government (which controls the committee system) has been in office for the last five years and has yet to support any proposal for the solution of the problem.
The nearest thing which the party has done in this line in the last two years is to propose the continued submission of committee reports to the ASC. This proposal appeared in the Fall 1960 platform.
THE IMPROVEMENT of telephone service to the women's residence halls is another plank which Vox will find hard to fulfill. Although the party has instituted instruction schools for the girls running the switchboards, they have not expanded the service. The plans for expanded telephone service to the halls are being carried out through the state and the University.
Another plank which Vox has not fulfilled is that of urging the administration to remedy low wages and incongruities in hiring students, as presented in last Spring's Vox platform.
The party has not continued work on its promise of working for free ID exchange at athletic events, but it has improved the previous system. Its attempts to establish a student employment information service which would publish information on student job opportunities and wage rates, to establish a Big Eight athletic board and to develop a method to obtain student opinion on issues were also futile.
The Fall, 1961 Vox platform contained civil rights and NSA planks that did not take positive stands on the controversial issues. It also proposed a Big Eight Student Government Association that has not yet been established.
There has been much disagreement as to which party was instrumental in the establishment of Stop Day. Both parties have campaigned for a permanent Stop Day between the final day of classes and final week, but neither have been successful. The proposal has to be brought up before the ASC each year, and since both parties have made these proposals they both take credit for Stop Day.
THE PRINCIPAL failing of Vox has been the length of time it has taken for the Vox representatives on the ASC to bring about action on the planks. The party is still working on some of its promises from
(Continued on page 20)
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University Daily Kansan
Page 20
Friday, April 20. 1962
C
Life Must Be Out There
By Joseph L. Myler United Press International
WASHINGTON — (UPI)— A couple of scientists were swapping answers for questions with some congressmen the other day. The gist of what they said was:
"Sure there's life on other worlds. Bound to be. Silly to think there isn't. Must be millions, if not billions, of such worlds in the universe. Some life somewhere out there may well be smarter than earth's."
The news in this, if any, is that nobody laughed. Nobody snorted. Nobody threatened to ride the two scientists out of town on a rail.
A few decades ago it would have been daring to voice in public the notion that the earth was not the sole abode of intelligent beings. Scientists as well as theologians might have taken issue with you.
Now neither is surprised or afronted. Well established modern theory of how stars are formed makes it impossible not to believe that habitable planets must be exceedingly common.
THE UNIVERSE is incomprehensibly vast. The Milky Way galaxy, the spiral assemblage of stars and star
dust of which the earth is an infinitesimal part, contains upward of 100 billion suns.
Outside the Milky Way are billions upon billions of other galaxies, each with its billions of individual stars.
As Dr. Su-Shu Huang of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) says, "intelligent life is probably not a rare phenomenon."
Astronomers and biophysicists feel the universe is populated with living creatures, many of them more advanced technologically than human beings.
THE LAWS of nature being what they are, there must be planets in other solar systems. And some of them, at least, must harbor life. But nobody on earth has yet seen a planet in the reaches of space beyond the sun.
The light of a star coming through the atmosphere is distracted and spread about. The far feebler reflected light of a planet would be swamped by the effulgence of its parent star.
So there is no hope of actually seeing the pinpoints of light from planets until observatories can be set
Vox
Vox has, however, acted upon all nine of the planks in last Fall's platform. The two things which have not been officially acted upon are the possibility of night bus service to the women's residence halls, which is being started on a trial system by Lawrence bus companies at the present time, and a student handbook to be used in orientation of freshmen which is still being compiled.
orientation, however, explaining that the far reaching goals had been put into the spring platform of 1961 to coincide with the feelings of the candidates which the party was running.
- Investigation of the merits of the reserve student seating plan at athletic events.
(Continued from page 19)
both last year and last fall.
VOX CAN LOOK back upon many accomplishments, including:
Easter Bunny Aided
UP
This is equivalent to focusing a telescope in Baltimore on one eye of a person in Washington. Theoretically, with the OAO, it would be possible to blot out the image of a star and see, in the region immediately surrounding it, the pinpoints of light coming from its family of planets.
- Increase in the ASC budget.
- Student Health Plan.
up outside the earth's atmosphere. NASA is working on such astronomical space platforms now. Two orbiting astronomical observatories (OAO) will be launched in 1964 and two more in 1965. They will be able to aim their telescopes with an accuracy of a tenth of a second of arc.
MARLDON, England — (UPI) — Farmer John Winsor reports that nine of his 40 hens are laying green eggs but he's not upset.
However, in this development of the party it must be noticed that rather than changing the principles of Vox, the UP platforms have been almost parallel with those of Vox, with the exception of the one last Spring which called for increased national and international interest. The party returned to its campus
- Increased Library hours.
up outside the earth's atmosphere.
(Continued from page 19)
- Better police protection to prevent stolen property.
- Better lighting to and from women's residence halls.
- A standardization and consolidation of women's rules.
- transportation control center for commuters and out of state students.
- Creation of a Student Bill of Rights.
THUS THE development of UP is evident in its growth from a group hoping to reform Vox into a group which last semester took the majority of the living district seats on the ASC.
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Friday, April 20. 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 21
A Special Kind of Southern Politician
By Arthur C. Miller
There are 100 senators in Washington, D.C., representing 50 states. And there are 100 senators in Washington representing 100 individuals.
Although some people like to set these men into neat stereotyped blocks—such as liberal Democrats conservative Republicans, or southern conservative Democrats—these classifications are not realistic.
EVIDENCE OF HOW unrealistic senatorial stereotyping can be is found by examining the record of a 67-year-old senator from Alabama. This senior senator has been a member of either the House of Representatives or the Senate since 1923, and he is presently eighth in Senate seniority. He has been described by one Washington newsman, William S. White, as "truly liberal a man as sits in our national councils, and for decades he has been performing liberally for the millions who need public help, while more frenetic 'liberals' have been parading purposes that never reached performance."
This Alabaman was elected to Congress in 1923 to fill the term of the Hon. John R. Tyson. In subsequent years between 1925 and 1939 he was renominated and re-elected to Congress without opposition. He was elected in 1938 to fill the unexpired term of Hugo Black in the Senate. He has been re-elected ever since. He is Joseph Lister Hill.
Coming from Alabama, Senator Hill is truly from the Deep South. But he is from the Deep South in geography alone. His work in promoting public welfare, especially public health, has earned him the title of "Medicine Man from Alabama." And his work in this area has earned him more recognition than any other single contribution.
IN 1959, for example, he was awarded the Albert Lasker Award. This award is given to individuals and groups for outstanding contributions in research related to diseases which are main causes of death and disability, and for distinguished service in the field of public health administration.
Yet it is not surprising that Sen. Hill has great concern for public health and welfare, for his father was a doctor and he is named after Senator Dr. Joseph Lister.
This spare, tall, gray-faced Alabaman is acclaimed as having done more for the public's health than any American in history.
He is credited with responsibility for the Hospital and Health Construction Act, hundreds of millions of dollars for research, funds for
training and education programs about health, and with helping to emphasize preventive medicine. Many other contributions too numerous to list have resulted from his efforts.
Sen. Hill is chairman of the Senate Labor and Public Welfare Committee, a fact which further demonstrates his concern for the nation's health. But he is not an agent of the American Medical Association.
AS MR. WHITE puts it, "He makes welfare innovations — even those which may look awfully like 'socialized medicine'—politically respectable and, far more important, politically viable."
When Sen. Hill received the Albert Lasker Award, the selection committee wrote, "The name of Lister Hill . . . will shine brightly on the pages of history because of his pre-eminence in and his tireless dedication to the fostering of medical, dental, and biological research and to the expansion of our nation's hospital and health research facilities."
Sen. Hill was born Dec. 29, 1894 in Montgomery, Ala. His father was Dr. Luther L. and his mother Lilly (Lyons). He married Henrietta Fontaine McCormick and has two children, Henrietta Fontaine and Luther
He studied at Starke University School and graduated in 1911. He received his B.A. in 1914 from the University of Alabama, and his LLB. from Columbia in 1916.
IT IS OF INTEREST that although Sen. Hill's voting record is rather liberal, he remains a part of the unofficial but very real Southern Caucus. In fact, when he is called on to do so, he will bear his share of Senate filibuster responsibilities.
To generalize by saying that Sen. Hill's voting record would indicate that he is liberal on nearly every issue except civil rights is not enough. Some examples help clarify this issue.
On 14 test votes concerning a larger role for the federal government, Sen. Hill voted affirmatively on 12 of them. This is 86 per cent in favor of a larger federal role, and is one of the highest votes with the exception of such men as John F. Kennedy and Hubert Humphrey who both had 100 per cent totals. This test vote was taken during the 86th Congress.
Examined on another basis, agreement and disagreement with the conservative coalition. Sen. Hill's voting would appear to be much more conservative. In the 86th Congress, for example, he voted with the coalition 50 per cent of the time and
Old Khyber Pass Still A Dangerous Area
AT THE KHYBER PASS. Pakistan — (UPI) — The road from ancient Peshawar makes its last hairpin turn between towering, jagged peaks and then descends to a gradually widening valley. A sign in English proclaims that this is the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.
This is the Khyber Pass of Kipling and of conquerors, Alexander the Great, Darius of Persia, the Aryans and the Huns. And it is the grave of hundreds of British soldiers who fought to defend an outpost of empire before Pakistan independence.
It is the home of fierce, copper-toned Pathan tribesmen who exacted tribute even from conquerors and who today pay scant heed to any law but the tribal.
It is the meeting place of caravans, of east and west and a link in silk route explored by Marco Polo.
To the north lies Russia and to the south Iran.
AT THE END of the tortuous road past ancient fortresses, through narrow gorges beneath lonely outposts perched atop the peaks lies the Pakistan border station.
Scarcely a quarter-mile away, across a line set off by white markers, are the soldiers of Afghanistan.
This is the Durand Line established by the British to mark the end of the Northwest Territory. It cuts directly through the tribal areas which lie both in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
To cross it without authorization is to invite an unfriendly bullet. The border is closed now and the caravans no longer pass.
AFGHANISTAN contests the Durand Line and demands the tribesmen be allowed to vote whether they would choose union with either country or have an independent nation of their own.
against it 40 per cent. (The other 10 per cent probably was not recorded because he did not vote on those issues.)
Pakistan accuses Afghanistan of sending agents across the line in an attempt to stir the tribesmen to revolt.
Occasionally tensions mount, and then shots are fired across the border.
THE SOVIET UNION supports the Afghan stand, and so these wild mountains become another arena of the cold war.
Guarding the pass are the Ghurka rifles recruited from among tribesmen in these very hills.
Here men carry weapons as naturally as they breathe and the Ghurkas carry on a tradition won in battles of the past.
Some units are entitled to wear the Stuart tartan as a memento of the days when the British were the last of the outside rulers.
But in these mountains it is not all reminders of the past nor of cold war tensions. Eighteen miles northwest of Peshawar a huge dam has arisen. It generates 240,000 kilowatts of electricity and ultimately will help irrigate a thirsty land.
STUDIED FROM STILL a third angle, Sen. Hill's voting record would appear to be liberal once again. On 10 major issues in the 86th Congress he voted exactly the same as Senators Kennedy and Humphrey on all
but three of them. Two of those issues involved civil rights. The third vote concerned medical care for the aged plan.
On the agreement side, he voted in favor of over-riding the President's veto (Eisenhower) on the proposed depressed area legislation. He favored a pav hike for federal emplovers. Sen. Kennedy's minimum wage bill, federal aid to education, and the repeal of dividend credits.
Perhaps it would be best, then, not to place Sen. Hill in this or that political camp. Perhaps it would be best to describe him in the words of a Washington columnist who said, "Hill is a rare, walking compendium of practical and intuitive skills of a special kind of politician."
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Friday. April 20, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 23
Von Braun Looks at U.S. Future in Space
By Dr. Wernher von Braun (Copyright, 1962, by United Press International)
HUNTSVILLE, ALA.—The United States, working in cooperation with and on behalf of the other nations of the Western world, has one of the most important and exciting challenges in history — the exploration of the universe.
Few accomplishments have had such profound effect on the future of humanity than will the results of this immense and fascinating endeavor.
Achievements in the exploration of space are directly linked to overall technological advancement, and in our age such advancement is indicative of the relative position of nations. We Americans have already felt the sting of being second in a race which we should, and could, have been first.
We have the capacity to be first to the moon; therefore, we must be first.
UNMANNED artificial satellites are being launched with increasing frequency to perform a wide variety of services for mankind. Our Tiros meteorological satellites have proven their worth by permitting meteorologists to predict more accurately the weather and detect disastrous storms. The military has developed warning and reconnaissance satellites to help us maintain our military posture.
Any remaining doubts that we are really in a space race with the Soviet Union were dispelled by the decision last spring of U.S. President John F. Kennedy to launch an ambitious program for manned lunar exploration.
Earth-circuling and navigational and geodetic satellites are proving themselves daily. We are also developing such scientific satellites as orbiting solar observatories and the orbiting geophysical observatories. The first solar observatory was successfully launched last month. It is now reporting back to earth how the sun affects the weather and any threats it may pose for space travelers. But perhaps of most immediate and practical interest is the communications satellite which will help put the man in the street in closer touch with his fellow humans around the world.
We at the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center are responsible to our parent organization—the U.S.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration — for the development of the space vehicles that will orbit satellites, send scientific payloads to distant planets and launch manned lunar expeditions.
The sub-orbital flights of astronauts Alan Shepard and Virgil Grissom, and the more recent orbital flight of John Glenn, were carried out under project Mercury, the first of three man-in-space programs being directed by NASA's manned spacecraft center at Houston, Tex.
PROJECT MERCURY will be succeeded by the Gemini Spacecraft Project, which calls for the orbiting of a two-man spacecraft. Gemini will be used to test the "orbital rendezvous" technique, by which an orbital launch vehicle and a manned spacecraft will be joined while in earth orbit and "relaunched" toward the moon.
One of KU's Oldest Statues Still Waits for Permanent Spot
It only the old Pioneer could talk, he could recall the gaps in his history that no other campus personality can remember.
The "Pioneer," a bronze figure with a shovel in hand, stands across the street from the east entrance of Fraser Hall. He faces west in a true pioneer spirit.
A "Daily Kansan" report in 1925 called the Pioneer a "long suffering and much moved statue." And now 37 years later, the Pioneer is still looking for a permanent resting place. The statue will have to be moved again in the next few years when Fraser Hall is torn down and a classroom is built on the site of the Pioneer's present resting place.
THE PIONEER statue was presented to the university about 1905 by the late Dr. Simeon B. Bell, whose bequest of land and money in 1905 made possible the inception of the KU Medical Center in Kansas City.
Dr. Bell was a pioneer settler who came to Kansas in 1856, five years prior to Kansas's admission as a state into the Union.
The statue has stood on at least two other sites since Dr. Bell gave it to the university. However, records and memories cannot recall where the Pioneer was housed from the time Dr. Bell gave the statue to the university and 1916 when it is remembered to have stood on a landing in Spooner Library. (Spooner Library became the KU Art Museum in 1926.)
The Pioneer stood in Spooner Library until the class of 1920 decided to donate as their senior gift, a base for the statue so that the "Iron Man" could stand out-of-doors. (The Pioneer was called the "Iron Man" in the 1921 Jayhawker.)
SO AFTER the presentation of the base the Pioneer was moved from Spooner Library to the site of the present Chi Omega fountain. Then about 1926 the Pioneer was moved to the present site east of Fraser Hall.
The bronze figure, standing almost 18 feet high, was done by Fredrick C. Hibbard, a native Missourian. The figure was cast at the American Bronze Foundry in Chicago.
The university has made no plans for the Pioneer while the new Fraser Hall is under construction.
Experience gained in this method of landing astronauts on the surface of the moon will be under project Apollo. A three-man spacecraft, Apollo, will follow Gemini. It will effect circumlunar and lunar landing missions scheduled before the end of this decade.
The two elements of this lunar rocket will be launched into orbit by 7.5 million-pound-thrust advanced Saturan vehicles currently being designed at the Marshall Center at Huntsville. We recently requested proposals from industry for a detailed systems definition and preliminary design of the Nova launch vehicle, which will be a logical follow-on to the advanced Saturn.
Nova, to be capable of placing more than 200 tons in earth orbit or sending more than 75 tons on an earth-escape trajectory, will be able to perform manned lunar landings with Apollo-type spacecraft in direct flights from earth.
FOLLOWING THE first tentative steps into space with project Apollo, man will pull on his seven league boots and take giant strides across space to the nearer planets of the solar systems. For Mars, and perhaps Venus, direct surface landings should be possible this century if the state of the art of astronautics continues to advance rapidly.
However, landings on frozen Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune may never be feasible, limiting man to landings on their natural moons. The problem of direct landings on the giant worlds are extremely complex and pose demands upon the design of manned spaceships that are far beyond our present capabilities. To illustrate the magnitude of the problem we need only consider the difficulty of trying to decelerate such a craft in the tremendous gravitational field of Jupiter and then attempting to take off again through an amazingly thick, turbulent atmosphere.
WHAT HAPPENS when we get in space? The environment will be hostile to man. He will be threatened by meteoroids, radiation, temperature extremes, lack of atmosphere and lack of pressure. But if he understands and obeys its laws, space will treat him well.
When we build our first outposts on the moon, or when we build our first orbiting space stations, our engineers will be called on for construction projects using strange materials in circumstances never before encountered.
Chemical Counters Drug Overdoses
RICHMOND, Va. — (UPI) — A chemical that counteracts overdoses of sleeping pills, alcohol, and morphine in animals has been used in experiments at the A. H. Robins Co. here.
Dr. Carl D. Lunsford, director of chemical research at the firm, reported that experiments with the new agent - AHR-619 - have demonstrated its usefulness in stimulating breathing in such conditions as lung disease, shock and depressed respiration following anesthesia.
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Page 24
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20, 1962
WELCOME and ENJOY YOUR VISIT to the 37th K.U. RELAYS
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Friday, April 20, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 25
The Church's Fight Against Segregation
THEY SAID the archbishop had made it very clear, both in warning letters to the three Catholics and in announcing the excommunication, that their real offense was taking overt action to "provoke obedience or rebellion" among Catholics against an order affecting the church's own schools and issued by duly constituted ecclesiastical authority.
Catholic authorities here emphasized today that this was not the case.
Excommunication does not deprive a Catholic of membership in the church, nor even of the right to attend mass as a silent spectator. It does mean that he is no longer "in communion" with the church, and may not actively participate in its
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — In 1958, the Roman Catholic bishops of the United States expressed in a joint pastoral letter their unanimous judgment that racial segregation "cannot be reconciled" with the Christian teaching that all men are brothers.
Council To Study Social Problems
NEW YORK — (UPI) — The National Conference of Christians and Jews has formed a nine-member Council on Public Affairs and Religious Freedom to advise on political and social problems involving religious differences.
Many U.S. Catholic laymen have publicly disputed the bishops' assertion that segregation is un-Christian. None has even been excommunicated for voicing a contrary view.
This week Archbishop Joseph Francis Rummel of New Orleans excommunicated three Catholics — Mrs. B. J. Gaillot Jr., Leander H. Perez, and Jackson G. Ricau — who have actively opposed his recent order for the desegregation of parochial schools in his archdiocese.
Inquiries to news media indicate there was a widespread public impression that the three New Orleans Catholics were excommunicated because they differed with the archbishop about segregation.
This was not a new stand for the Catholic Church. It simply made official, for American Catholics, a viewpoint that had often been voiced by modern popes and by individual bishops.
Dr. Lewis Webster Jones, president of the National Conference, said the group of theologians, sociologists and educators would identify key issues of immediate or long-range concern that tend to divide people. They will be asked to suggest remedies.
Fluoride Measured In Tiny Amounts
Welcome to the KU Relays Come to the Crestaurant
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The fluoride in teeth now can be measured in amounts less than one tenth billionth of an ounce, it was reported at the 141st meeting of the American Chemical Society.
The new method of analysis already is being applied to precise measurement of fluoride before and after treatment of teeth with antidecay agent.
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Since Catholics regard the sacraments as a chief means by which divine grace is imparted and mortal sins are purged, an excommunicated person is considered in grave spiritual jeopardy unless the penalty is lifted before he dies.
THE PENALTY may be lifted if the excommunicate displays sincere penitence for the "wilful act" which led to the sentence. It is up to the bishop who imposed the penalty to determine when the condition of sincere penitence has been met. Formal confession and public submission to the church's authority are usually minimum requirements.
Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of American Catholics are excommunicated annually. The vast majority incur the penalty automatically, without any public announcement, by getting married before a Protestant or Jewish clergyman. This is considered self-excommunication if the Catholic concerned is aware of the church's marital laws.
nally a Catholic, Fidel Castro of Cuba, automatically excommunicated himself long ago by persecution of the church.
Catholic authorities here saw no evidence that these minimum requirements were met by Mrs. Gaillot yesterday when she fell on her knees before the archbishop with pleas that he admit he was wrong about segregation.
excommunicated a group of white women who violently assaulted a Catholic teacher because they objected to integration of catechism classes.
The penalty has been invoked once before in Louisiana in a dispute related to segregation. In 1955, Bishop Jules B. Jeannard of Lafayette, La.
A modern dictator who is nomi-
The last emperor to be excommunicated was Napoleon, who incurred the wrath of Pius VII in 1809 by hauling down the papal flag from Castel San Angelo in Rome.
In 1947, a group of Catholic parents threatened to file a civil court suit to block an order by Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter for desegregation of parochial schools in St. Louis.
The archbishop (now a cardinal) warned that he would excommunicate any Catholic who took part in such a lawsuit. The parents group was soon disbanded.
Medieval popes often used excommunication as a political and diplomatic weapon in Europe's power struggles. History records that the Holy Roman Emperor, Henry IV, was forced to stand barefoot in the snow in the year 1080 to convince Pope Gregory VII of his penitence.
ONE OF THE most widely publicized excommunications of recent years was directed against a Boston Jesuit priest, Fr. Leonard J. Feeney. Despite repeated warnings from Archbishop (now cardinal) Richard J. Cushing, Fr. Feeney persisted in teaching that there is no salvation outside the Roman Catholic Church. He was excommunicated by the Vatican.
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Page 26
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 20.1962
Unexpected Experiences With an
(Editor's note: The staff member who wrote this article was in Teheran, the capital of Iran, on September 10th, 1958. He went to Iran with his father, who was an official in the Inner Mongolia government agency which gave technical aid to underdeveloped countries.)
By Zeke Wigglesworth
When we arrived in Teheran, people told us that servants were very inexpensive, so one of the first things my parents did after we moved into our new house was to hire a house-boy.
Hardly had they let the word get out that they wanted one, when Bashar Ahmed came to apply for the opening.
He showed up at the front gate one morning with his brother Ali. Ali spoke some English but, as we soon found out, Bashar's command of English was limited.
We let the two Iranians in, and after the initial barking of our dachshund, Swartz, had quieted to the point of permissible hearing, we all retired to the terrace to start the hiring session.
The first order of business was a letter of recommendation from the Army colonel who had employed Bashar before us. This was given to Dad with a great flourish and smiles from the two brothers.
Ali took the fatal plunge.
"My brother very exceptional fine houseboy. Clean, work hard,very nice,very honest." he said.
Dad nodded his head and read the Letter. Ali waited until he was finished and then spoke again.
"My brother very clean. Very good. Exceptional fine. Nice houseboy."
"Bali, bali," he said. "Yes, yes."
He turned and mumbled something to Bashar, who then turned to Dad and nodded his head vigorously.
BASHAR TURNED and smiled at Mom and me. We smiled back. The dog chose to snarl and bare his teeth.
Next on the agenda was a health permit from the American Embassy, This, too, was given to my father with great flourish and smiles.
"See," said Ali, "my brother very clean. Not like coolie. Work hard. Honest. Exceptional fine houseboy. Nice."
Next came a letter from a friend down the block. She wrote that she had seen Bashar in operation, and that he was a marvel at a cocktail party and a whiz at the dinner table. Again, there were huge smiles as the letter was handed by Ali to Dad. Ali took the offensive again.
"My brother like to work here," he said. "He very clean, smart. Exceptional fine houseboy. Work hard, clean, nice."
Dad nodded his head and read the letter. After he had finished, he.
Mom, and the still baying pooch retired to the corner of the terrace where they held a whispered conversation.
While they were deliberating, I stared at Bashar. After being raised on a diet of Hollywood films and detective thrillers, my conception of a houseboy was one of a little Oriental with buck teeth and a towel over one arm. Bashar was certainly not the type.
HE STOOD a good two inches taller than my five-eight, and was wearing a natty double-breasted tweed coat and black pants. He had a little black mustache, like many Iranian men favor. My illusions were shot.
Mom and Dad, plus the stillgrowling Swartz, returned to the conference area.
Ali and Bashar jumped up and helped Mom into her chair. Ali almost lost an ear for his efforts, compliments of the dog. Dad turned to Ali as the two men sat down.
"We'll take him," he said. "Have him here at noon tomorrow. We think he'll be okay."
At the word "okay" Bashar looked at his brother inquiringly. Ali nodded his head and smiled hugely.
Bashar lept up from his chair and shook Dad's hand violently. He started to shake Mom's hand, but took a look at the dog, smiled at her and stepped back a few feet.
"Merci, merci, merci." he said.
"Thank you, thank you."
AFTER THE two had left, we sat around and talked the whole thing over. Coming from a middle class environment, we were all naturally elated at having a real, live houseboy around.
I had visions of myself lying in a lawn chair as Bashar dropped ripe grapes into my mouth.
Dad was having the time of his life, mentally using up all the time he would save by having Bashar wash the car. Mom, of course, had completely done away with housework of any kind. Dismissed forever were dishes, beds, floors, mops and brooms. Dad shook his head in wonderment.
"All this," he said, "for 30 bucks a month!"
Dad, mumbling to himself, went to the gate. There stood Bashar, in a tie, coat, and freshly polished shoes. "I work," he said, apologizing.
The next day was Friday, the Moslem Sunday, and the whole family intended to sleep in. At 6 a.m. in the morning, however, we were awakened by a pounding at the front gate.
"I work," he said, smiling.
Dad took him to the kitchen, still grumbling, and pointed at the stack of dirty dishes in the sink. Bashar nodded, took off his coat, rolled up his sleeves, and started in on the mess.
I WAS JUST getting back to sleep again when the house was filled with a horrible din. I heard Swartz barking, pots and pans banging, and shouts in Iranian—all coming from the kitchen.
I ran downstairs to see what was going on. I found Bashar on top of the kitchen table, covered with suds, waving a pot at the howling dog.
Taking Bashar into the kitchen, she pointed at the last egg remaining, and told him to get some more.
"Bad siya," he said. "Bad black." I was inclined to agree, and proved it by generously swatting the black one's backside with a rolled-up newspaper.
Bashar thanked me and returned, muttering, to the dishes. Shortly after noon the same day, the dog started barking again. This time, Mom found the houseboy in the bathtub, shouting at the top of his voice and waving a mop at Swartz.
"I need one dozen. You understand?" she asked.
AFTER DELIVERING the prescribed treatment for small, noisy dogs. Mom decided Bashar needed a rest. She was baking a cake, and had run out of eggs.
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"Yes, mum," he said. "One duh-
zen. I get."
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He hopped on his bicycle and rode off toward town.
Bashar nodded his head.
Three hours later, after Mom had decided the pooch had frightened him away permanently, Bashar was at the gate. She let him in, and all we could hear for the next few minutes were her shrieks of laughter.
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I was curious, and went to see what was happening. There stood Bashar, his hands filled with eggs. His bicycle basket was filled with eggs, the saddlebags on the back of the bike were filled with eggs. His coat pockets were filled with eggs, and he held another bag of eggs between his teeth.
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Mom finally quieted enough to ask him what on earth he was doing.
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Dad came downstairs and headed for the kitchen. Bashar was standing in the doorway with a broom.
That finished Mom for the rest of the afternoon.
"Sorry, mum," he said. "Not get one duh-zen. Got only 100."
For years, Dad had a reputation for being an omelet-maker par excellence. Every morning, he went to the kitchen and prepared one of his masterpieces for breakfast. For about a week, Bashar stood on the back porch and watched Dad making omelets. Then, one morning, he attacked.
"Good morning, Mr. Jim. Want breakfast? Omelet? I fry?" he said
"Not nice man. Good dog. Dog and me fight, okay. Dog and gardener, khoob neest (not good)," he said.
He chased the gardener off with a rake and toweled off the wet dog. He looked up at me.
Dad smiled the smile of the conceited chef.
It was about this time that Bashar decided to invade the kitchen. He did it by way of the back door.
"Well, if you really think you're able..," he said.
One day, the pooch was sunning himself in the garden, when the gardener turned the hose on him. This angered Bashar.
DURING THE next few months, we found that instead of hiring a houseboy, we had added another member to our family. Actually, Bashar had adopted us. He felt that it was his duty to act as mediator in all matters between the family and the rest of Iran. He even adopted the dog.
was radiant. If his had risen, Bashar's was a mountain. He gently poked a fork tine into the omelet. It gasped and gently collapsed on the plate. Dad put on his coat and mumbled something about not having enough time to eat. Bashar looked hurt.
TEN MINUTES later, Bashar carried a tray into the dining room. He set it before Dad with great care and handed him a fork.
Dad paled as he took the fork. If his omellets had been golden. Bashar's
"Whatsa matter?," he asked, "Mr. Jim not like omelet. Very good omelet. Yummm."
Bashar gave Mom only a few hard moments, but the one I'm sure she will always remember was the day he cleaned the chandelier.
Mom had been out in the kitchen while Bashar was setting everything up. She came out and sat down right under the board, completely unaware of the circus act going on above her.
He couldn't find a ladder, so he got an old piece of board and laid it across one corner of the balcony railing. By standing on his toes, he could just reach the top of the chandelier.
Our house was typically Iranian. The ceilings were very high. In the living room, the ceiling was two stories up. The rest of the second floor was taken up by bedrooms and a bathroom. Around the rooms was a balcony with a metal railing.
HANGING FROM the center of the ceiling was a huge glass chandelier with 60 watt bulbs in it. It had not been cleaned in a long time, and some of the bulbs had burned out. Bashar felt that it was time to clean it.
Bashar finished cleaning the chandelier, and was screwing in a light bulb when the board began to crack. He lept for the railing as pieces of board, old light bulbs and debris rained down on Mom. She gave a shriek and jumped back under the balcony. The dog, who was sunning himself beside her chair, yelped and ran into the kitchen as a light bulb exploded beside his ear.
Mom cautiously stuck her head out and looked up. Bashar stood on the
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Friday. April 20. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 27
isen, ently it. It the num-ving looked
hard she day
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he got id it cony ones, hehan-
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Iranian Houseboy
balcony with a sheepish grin on his face.
"Sorry, mum. Old wood broke," he said.
THE PUP considered it a case of overt aggression. For weeks afterward, when the two met, he would snarl and crawl away with his tail between his legs.
Basher was sitting in a big overstuffed chair smoking a cigarette. All around him were bajis (maids). One was mopping the floor, one was shining the silverware, another was mending Dad's socks.
We let ourselves in through the gate, and walked into the house. We became aware of loud giggles, scrapings, and now and then Bashar's voice. We decided to sneak in and see what was going on.
We had been to the American Club, and had told Bashar we would be home around six. About three that afternoon, she suddenly remembered she was supposed to meet Dad down-town for dinner at 5:30. We rushed home so she could dress.
Mom and Dad were both delighted at how Bashar had turned out. Mom, for her part, was amazed at the amount of work he did. In one afternoon, he would mop all the floors, shine up all the silverware, make all the beds, except mine, clean all the crystal, sweep the house and even mend Dad's socks! Mom had trouble figuring out how he did it all. That is until one afternoon about six months after we hired him.
MOM PEEKED around the hall door into the living room, and almost fell down in amazement.
We walked into the living room and found Bashar on the floor, polishing the very devil out of the floor. He looked up and smiled as we walked in.
We made a great deal of noise going into the house, and spent a good five minutes cleaning off our shoes and hanging up our coats.
Now and then Bashar would point to a spot on the floor that one of the women had missed. He looked like a shiek in a harem. We quietly tiptoed back outside. Mom pounded on the gate and we came back inside.
"Back soon," he said. He mopped his brow and sat back on his heels.
"You like?" he asked, pointing around the room. We looked at the freshly mopped floor, the polished silverware, the darned socks.
"Woman's touch," asked Bashar. "What you mean?" He had stopped smiling.
"Why yes. Bashar." Mom said. "You really put a woman's touch into the house. However do you do it?"
"Oh nothing," said Mom, about to break out laughing. She went up-stairs and began dressing for her dinner date.
"You know?" he asked quietly,
"You saw baitis?"
"What happened to your gal friends," I asked him.
I nodded my head. Bashar lit a cigarette and explained the whole thing.
Mom became friendly with most of the Iranian women, and found jobs for several of them. They came back to see us occasionally, and helped around the house while they talked to Mom and Bashar. We really had no complaints with the set-up, and I'm sure Bashar loved the whole thing.
It seems that Bashar was operating an employment agency for out of work maids. In return for finding them jobs, they helped him with his housework. He found them jobs by listening in at parties and at the dinner table when my mother would say that so and so needed a baji, or that Mrs. Smith fired that worthless girl and was looking for another.
HE LOOKED ill, and sat down in the chair.
I knew that I was officially adopted by Bashar the day he protected my interests with a boulder.
Mom and Dad thought the whole thing was funny, but for the sake of employer-employee relations, limited Bashar to two maids a week. They called it the "Greater Northern Iran Bajji Employment Agency, Bashar Ahmed, Operator."
I had come home from a shopping tour downtown. I had taken an Iranian taxi, and as is sometimes the case, the driver had tried to overcharge me. I tried to reason with him in my limited Iranian, but got nowhere. I stormed into the house, just as Bashar stormed out.
BASHAR AND I were good friends.
I guess the reason for this was that
I didn't know just how to go about
handling a houseboy. As a result, he
could be more free with me than he
could with my parents.
I closed the gate, went inside, got a soft drink and sat down. I could
Foreign Students Feel Left Out
HAYS, Kan. — (UPI) — Foreign students apparently have a deep feeling that they don't want to be treated as if they were strangers.
This was shown recently in results of a Fort Hays State College poll of 24 international students attending here.
"I want to be a part of the institution where I study and the term 'foreign student' brings a barrier," said Amratal Patel of India. "I prefer the term 'international student' better."
Also, six of 20 students who responded to the poll said they disliked being referred to as foreign students. They said the term makes them feel like outsiders.
Nam Sok Choi of Korea added that "I do not care about the terminology. However, you do not have to emphasize the term 'foreign student.' Since I am taking the liberty of studying in the United States, I am trying to make good friends with American students. Don't make me a stranger."
Miss Lawrence Pageant
--hear Bashar talking outside, triving to get the driver to lower his price. His voice got louder and louder, as did the driver's. I went outside to see if I could help. Our Iranian neighbors, always interested in a good fight, were hanging out their windows watching Bashar in action.
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"Bad taxi driver. Want too much money. Khoob neest," he said.
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I LOOKED at Bashar. Over his head he was holding a huge stone, weighing easily 50 pounds. I asked him, amazed, what he was doing.
I opened the gate just in time to see the driver jump into his taxi and drive rapidly away.
"What's that for," I asked.
I pointed to the rock.
"Oh, nothing." he said. "I just going to hurt his taxi a little."
Bashar threw the stone away and turned to me.
Over the months he had been with us, I had become very attached to Bashar. When I had to return to the United States in 1958 to start college, I knew that I was going to miss him and all his shenanigans.
He came out to the airport to say good bye. He kissed me on both checks, Iranian style and said "Good-bye, little brother."
The last time I saw him was on the plane. As I looked out the window, I saw him holding the pup, who was licking his face. He raised his hand and waved as the plane rolled down the runway.
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CONGRATULATIONS on the fine Relays we know you will have
Page 28 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20.1962
Long Ignored Gland Now Considered Vital
By Delos Smith UPI Science Editor
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. — (UPI) The scientific case for the once-despised thymus gland being one of the most important organs of the body has been all but cinched, the scientist who has led in building the case has revealed.
It wasn't so many years ago when physicians attacked the thymus glands of infants with X rays if they seemed enlarged. Much medical opinion considered it a useless and possibly troublesome organ like the appendix. Dr. Good has promoted it to a high spot among the organs essential for long life.
HE RECEIVED the annual Parke Davis Research Award of the American Society for Experimental Pathology at a banquet and had the honor of delivering the award lecture at the annual meeting of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.
He is Prof. Robert A. Good of the University of Minnesota. The case he presented was that in the first day or two of life the thymus gland establishes the body's chemical system of immunological defense which preserves it from "foreign" invaders throughout its life.
The clinching evidence for the indispensable importance of the thymus comes from experiments with just-born rabbits and mice. When their thymus glands are removed in toto they grow up into "immunological cripples," he said.
In short, their body chemistry produces relatively few antibodies against "foreign" invaders and they're readily overpowered by any sickening bacteria or viruses which happen along. Thymus gland deficiency in infancy could even be related to leukemia and rheumatoid arthritis in later life, he suggested.
The human thymus gland is comparatively large at birth because it
has immediate work to do, in his theoretic view. Its cells are rapidly dividing and disperse through the lymph system and especially to the spleen, where they become "stem" cells. From them stem the cells specialized in manufacturing antibodies against any "foreign" invader.
BONE MARROW also produces antibodies and so an animal deprived of thymus function at birth is not wholly without defense. But he's in bad shape defensively and Good said, (in a private conversation) that people who "pick up one infection after another" could have been born with inadequately functioning thymus glands.
However, he doubted that the X-ray treatments once given thymus glands of infants had harmed their immunological defenses. The X rays were usually given a few weeks after birth and by then the "stem" cells had been dispersed through the body. But the thymus has some function throughout life, he continued, even though it begins drying up around the age of 12 years. The thymus gland is at the base of the neck immediately behind the top of the breast bone, by the way.
Good believed the new and growing knowledge of the importance of the thymus gland would lead to successful transplants of organs from one person to another. That is presently impossible (except of kidneys between identical twins) because immunological chemistry considers a transplanted organ a "foreign" invader and immediately manufactures antibodies against it.
To forestall this defensive reaction, you'd have to remove the recipient's thymus gland at birth, to be sure. But Good's view was that the thoroughly scientific understanding of how the chemistry works, which is coming, will provide techniques for overcoming the defense on a selective basis when there is a need to do so.
Story of a Political Murder-
(Continued from page 17)
the army of Arab shoeshine boys or "yaouled." Then he had a score of jobs—messenger, errand boy—until his muscles became strong enough for him to go to work on the waterfront.
THE DAY—WHICH turned out to be the last in his life—started out the way every other day did since he began to work on the waterfront.
He took his usual route to work, down a succession of steep staircases that lead from the top of the Casbah, where he lived. He walked down the broad Rue de la Lyre.
He skirted the barbed wire barricades which keep OAS terrorists out of the Casbah and arrived at the broad Place du Gouvernement near the waterfront.
As he did every day, he stopped to buy cigarettes. Like many Arabs, he could not afford to buy a pack but merely a few cigarettes at a time. He lit one on his way to work.
Ahmed left the docks a little afternoon. It was a warm, sunny spring day, the kind of day that made Ahmed feel good. But he did not dare to loiter. He had to pass through the European business section to return
home to the Casbah. Far too many Moslems had met their deaths from OAS gunmen in the past few days and Ahmed knew it was not a place to hang around.
- The need for "adding facilities according to the most desperate need" will be overcome and there would be no need to do piecemeal construction under strain and pressure.
BUT HE DID not hurry. He just went steadily on his way, minding his own business, talking to no one, enjoying the sunshine.
As he walked along the Rue D'isly, a main shopping and business street, Ahmed even stopped for a moment on the corner of the Rue Gueydon to light a cigarette.
A dry crack, a spurt of blood, Ahmed spun around three times and fell quietly to the ground without ever knowing what had hit him. The gunman was somewhere in the crowd. We never saw him.
No one told us the rest of the story.
We saw it happen.
Ahmed lit the cigarette, put the matches back in his pocket, and stood for a moment with both hands crammed into his jeans pockets. His head was bent slightly forwards.
- KU's average classroom use of 36 hours per week, 10 hours over the nationally recommended average of 26 hours, would be reduced to a more desirable level, thereby making better instruction possible, especially in laboratory classes.
Next morning they dug a grave and buried Ahmed in the El Kettar Moslem cemetery, high on the hills overlooking the sea. It was a spot Ahmed might have picked, if he'd had the chance.
- The Planning Council investigated how other institutions solved expansion problems and found that leaving old buildings on choice sites causes constant expansion of the campus grounds, the result being unnecessary duplication and expense brought on by problems of communication, transportation, utilities, logistics and increased overhead.
- No priority schedule has been developed for the new buildings. Fraser Hall will be the first constructed, and then a logical sequence will be followed.
- The third floor of Strong Hall, now used for art classes, will be used for multi-purpose classrooms for it is strategically located in the center of the campus.
VOTE
Mary Louise St. Clair Soph. Sec.
- Robinson Gymnasium, when originally built, was on the edge of the campus. Now in the center of the campus, it is "hopelessly inadequate" because of its obsolescence and distance from intramural fields in the Allen Field House area.
(Continued from page 17)
Neil Jouvenat Soph. Pres.
- Haworth Hall, also inadequate for modern purposes and methods, also will be removed for reasons that apply to Robinson Gymnasium: The cost of renovation for any purpose is excessive; the possibility of renovation for a specific purpose does not exist, and the limitations of the existing structures provide only a minimum of classroom space in contrast to the potential maximum use of the land.
Barry Duwe Soph. Vice Pres.
Nancy Patterson Soph. Treas.
Campus Population-
IF YOU REALLY WANT MORE WE ARE THE FOUR
PAID POLITICAL
THE OLD journalism school already has been torn down to make way for the Watson Library addition.
Considerable sentiment for the old buildings, particularly Fraser Hall. has been expressed by alumni and
KU fans. Built in 1872, this structure has been repaired many times. Its original cost was $146 thousand and it is named for a former Chancellor. Its red-roofed twin towers have been one of KU's most familiar landmarks for generations.
AVAILABLE NOW
AT YOUR
BOOKSTORE
the noble marriage of
The old building cannot be remade into a modern structure so the Planning Council decided that another Fraser would be necessary. The new one will house English, home economics and language classes.
TWO MAJOR construction projects are under way now;
- The construction of the new $1.9 million Engineering Building on the northwest corner of Naismith Road and 15th Street. It is expected to be ready by September, 1963.
The Noble Savage #4
Funds have been appropriated for the $720 thousand Blake Hall replacement. The new building is scheduled for completion by January, 1964.
- The $840 thousand addition to the north side of the Natural History Museum (Dyche Hall) for classroom and laboratories. Completion is scheduled for July, 1963.
To keep pace with the increased enrollment, KU has planned a separate dormitory expansion program. This is a $14.3 million proposal for six new scholarship halls and four to six new dormitories by 1970. The present formula for financing them calls for private support in addition to state money. Thirteen million dollars come from the state and $1.3 million from bond sales.
The addition of the new dormitories and residence halls will raise KU's housing accommodations to 5,978 students. More than double this number would have to find off-campus housing.
KU's nine present scholarship halls house 450 students of outstanding scholarship. These students share operating costs and are thereby able to continue in school. Limited financial need is a prerequisite to admission into the scholarship halls, and without these halls many of KU's best students could not remain in school.
Edited by SAU1 BELLOW and KEITH BOTS-FORD. The most exciting issue thus far. Featuring an ill-tempered blast at Seymour Krim, arises on fallout shelter geopolitics (by Stephen Spender) "Count Nulin," Pushkin's little-known parody of Shakespeare's "The Rape of Lucce"; 19 poems; and non-fiction by Dan Jacobson, A. Slomiski, M. Stroh, and G. Wren. Paperback periodical." — Herald Tribune News Service. M125 / 256 pages. $1.50
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THE MEMBERS of the KU Planning Council are Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University: George M. Beal, chairman of Architecture Department and special counsel to the group; Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the Education School; Keith Lawton, administrative assistant for physical plant operations; George Baxter Smith, dean of the University; Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the KU Endowment Association; Alton C. Thomas, assistant professor of architecture and special counsel to the planners; and James Hitt, registrar and director of admissions.
The five traffic control stations which will operate from 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Monday through Friday will be placed in the center of the streets as follows:
Traffic lights probably will be installed at 13th and Oread and Sunflower Road and Sunnyside Avenue.
- On Mississippi Street south of the Memorial Drive intersection.
- On Oread Avenue north of the Kansas Union but south of the 13th Street intersection.
- On Sunflower Road just north of its intersection with Sunnyside Avenue.
- On Jayhawk Boulevard just east of the Chi Omega fountain.
Only a few minor accidents and no traffic deaths have occurred at KU. But the steadily climbing number of students and cars on the campus make traffic controls necessary, officials say.
Acquitted, Admits Guilt
RENSSELAER, Ind. — (UPI) There were a dozen embarrassed jurors today in Tippacane county.
Richard D. Smith, 24, whom they acquitted of burglary charges last week, admitted yesterday he was guilty.
THE FALLS BROOK 1958
The Top Flips Automatically
(and so will you)
You'll keep out of the rain without strain in this handsome Rambler convertible. The top flips up or down automatically-yet the Rambler American "400" is the lowest priced U. S.convertible. Even lower priced than manual top jobs. Bucket seats, optional. Your Rambler is so stingy with gas you won't believe it's such a tiger for performance until you try it . . at your Rambler dealer's.
RAMBLER
World standard of compact car excellence
Daily Hansan
EDITORIAL-FEATURE SECTION
Plan-
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Friday, April 20, 1962
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
59th Year, No. 122 SECTION C
Beyond the Andes
Jungle People ...
DINGTARUAN
I am a child of the Philippines.
...Live in Misery
Text and photos by Fred Zimmerman
A few hundred miles across the Andes Mountains from the modern city of Lima, Peru, there live in ignorance and poverty thousands of primitive Indians, clustered in small, isolated tribes along the banks of the Amazon headwaters.
Members of the Shapra Tribe pictured here are of the Jivaro family, whose prowess as head-hunters is legendary. The Shapras live on the banks of the Pushaga River in Northern Peru, hidden from civilization by dense jungles.
TARIRI (LOWER LEFT), THE CHIEF of the Pushaga Shapras, is believed to have shrunk the heads of 17 of his enemies, and to have killed more than 40 men. But now, largely through the efforts of missionaries living in the tribe, he and his clan are peaceful.
Because of a vicious system of reprisal killings that is the law of the jungle, however, Tariri lives in fear today. One night two years ago, members of a family whose relatives Tariri had killed floated quietly down the Pushaga and wounded him in an attempt on his life.
THE SHAPRAS HAVE strange customs, the most striking of which seems to be characteristic of many Peruvian tribes.
The Indians regard lice as choice delicacies. They plant them in each other's hair, and in idle moments reap the harvest.
TARIRI'S SON. A rush pa (upper right), sits on the prow of a canoe as it drifts down the Pushaga toward his home. In his hand is a parakeet.
The woman in the center of the picture at right is picking lice from her child's hair. She will eat each one she finds. The girl behind the woman is looking for lice in the woman's hair.
Many of the jungle children have bright faces and alert minds. With a haircut, a bath, and a clean change of clothes, most of them would look like average children in this country.
Arushpa's playmates line up for the photographer at upper left.
But it is rare that an Indian leaves the jungle. Thirty years from now, if these children survive disease and war-like Indians, they will still be on the bank of the Pushaga—dirty and hungry, not yet knowing how to write their names.
I will take care of you.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 20, 1962
The Legislative Machinery...
The Capitol Building
Everett M. Dirksen:
He Leads Senate Republicans
By Zeke Wigglesworth
Senator Everett McKinley Dirksen of Illinois is known to his enemies as a man who "no matter what he says, sounds like a snake oil salesman."
To his friends and fellow Republicans in the Senate, he is "a master of parliamentary strategy" or "sugary, but palatable."
Dirksen has been in public eye and voice range for 30 years. He began his political career in his home town of Pekin, Ill. in 1933.
DIRKSEN IS ONE of the most outstanding orators of our time, for as one biographer puts it: "When he gets up to speak, he resembles the venerable solons of a bygone age. Like a mighty pipe organ, he has merely to regulate the wind volume to achieve awesome effects."
AGAINST THE recommendations of his political advisers, Dirksen ran for the U.S. House of Representatives. He had been advised to start first in the Illinois legislature, but he felt that he would only stagnate there. Thus he ran for the House in 1933, defeating the Democratic incumbent.
He served in the House until 1949, with a record of being very anti-New Deal and anti-Roosevelt. He was more or less opposed to Truman, following the lead of the Republican leadership in the House.
In 1949, he felt the calling of another order, and with typical Dirksen prose and poetry, launched a successful campaign to get himself elected to the U.S. Senate.
It was during the 1950s in the Senate that Dirksen became one of the chief spokesmen for the Eisenhower administration. He served in the Senate under the Majority Floor Leader, William Knowland of California, as the Majority Whip.
The story goes that every Tuesday morning during the Eisenhower years, a legislative meeting was held with the President. Eisenhower generally attended, but being a general at heart, and having only a rudimentary knowledge of politics, was usually bored or uninterested.
DIRKSEN AND ANOTHER Republican leader, Rep. Charles Halleck of Indiana, began to attend these meeting. They began telling the President what his veto would do to such and such a bill, or what chance he had for getting an ambassadorial appointment through the Senate.
As a result of these Tuesday meetings, Dirksen became popular with
Washington reporters. He answered their questions with clarity, speed and thoroughness. And of course he orated.
As one critic phrased it, "His every scene is overplayed and rich in rhetoric."
Throughout Eisenhower's term of office, Dirksen was the "President's Man." One reason for his popularity with Eisenhower has been shown above. Another one was his voting record. He had one of the highest voting records in the Senate for supporting Eisenhower policies and stands.
IN THE 88TH CONGRESS, Dirksen continued his role as Eisenhower man. He had 87 roll call votes for Eisenhower, 7 against him. Goldwater scored 52 for and 18 against.
To describe Dirksen's voting record in the Senate, one would have to use the phrase "moderate conservative." He believes in change, true, but change at a slow rate.
For example: Dirksen served on the Senate subcommittee which is investigating aging and the aged. When the medical bill for the aged was proposed, he and Barry Goldwater dissented. Dirksen said: "Such aid must be voluntary and must be at the state level. It must also involve no increase in the social security taxes."
Of the Civil Rights Act of 1960, Dirksen said: "It is a moderate bill, yet a significant step. The bill provided for, among other things, action against bombings by segregationists.
As William Furlong put it, in an article in the New Republic in December, 1558, "Everett McKinley Dirksen is an able, unctuous individual who has achieved influence by the use of finesse, not fight."
Dirksen has also created an image in the Senate, not only with his voting record, but his actions. He is regarded by many of his fellow senators as a political opportunist.
But, Furlong reluctantly admits, "He is probably the best technician the Senate Republicans could have advanced to leadership."
Which points another fact about the Illinois Senator. While being accused of being a "honey-marinated snake oil salesman" and a "political profiteer," he is respected by everyone in the Senate as being an able political leader. He showed his mettle during the Tuesday morning meetings with Eisenhower. He has shown it by the use of clever maniination as he delves into the political intracacies of the Senate.
J. William Fulbright
An Egghead Senator
By Clayton Keller
A fellow senator once said of J. William Fulbright: "He'd rather make a commencement address to young eggheads than a good, rousing Jackson-Jefferson Day dinner speech."
Sen. Fulbright of Arkansas, a former University of Arkansas president, remains interested in education after 20 years in Congress. This interest, with his obvious dislike for back-slapping, beating around the bush, and shifting with public opinion, would bear out his colleague's remark that Sen. Fulbright still is more an educator than a politician.
THE MANNER IN WHICH Sen. Fulbright entered politics shows his feelings on politicians and "public images." He ran for the House of Representatives in 1942 after he had been fired as president of the University of Arkansas. He was fired because he had refused to employ one of the governor's men as a public relations man for the University.
"I need another good professor more than I need a public relations man," he had told the governor.
Once in Congress, Sen. Fulbright wasted no time in making his presence known. During his term in the House, he introduced a resolution calling for "international machinery with power adequate to establish and maintain just and lasting peace." The resolution passed overwhelmingly, and the stage was set for the United Nations several years later.
While still a freshman senator in 1946, Fulbright pushed through the bill for which he is probably best known today. This, of course, was the act which set up the Fulbright exchange scholarships, under which American students go abroad to study and foreign students are brought to American colleges and universities.
SEN. FULBRIGHT MADE headlines the same year when he blandly suggested that President Harry S. Truman should resign because the Republicans had taken control of
Congress. This remark led President Truman to refer to Sen. Fulbright as an "overeducated Oxford S.O.B."
Relations also were cool between Sen. Fulbright and President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Sen. Fulbright was a constant critic of the Eisenhower administration's foreign policy. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, Fulbright maintained, was giving Congress and the public a falsely optimistic picture of the international situation.
A. A. H. B.
Sen. J. William Fulbright
"The truth is that our foreign policy is inadequate, outmoded, and misdirected," he once said. "It is based in part on a false conception of our real, long-term national interests and in part on an erroneous appraisal of the state of the world in which we live. Worse, it reflects a dangerous apathy and a quite incomprehensible unwillingness to look facts in the face."
Sen. Fulbright criticized the heavy spending on military assistance and
Wilber Mills
The Arkansas Non-Traveler
The conspicuous wooing of Wilbur Mills, a stocky, slightly jawed man of fifty-two, has extended to the general public the celebrity that he has long held among professional politicians. He is a phenomenon peculiar to the House of Representatives. He came there in 1939, still a very young man, to represent a rural Arkansas district that was the second least populous in the nation. A banker's son, he grew up in the tiny railroad junction of Kensett, Arkansas, attended a Methodist college fifty miles from home, married a childhood sweetheart, and served a brief spell as a county judge. He did, however, venture outside Arkansas long enough to attend Harvard Law School.
MILLS HAS MAINTAINED his provincial ways. In Washington, he and his family live in the same not-so-fashionable apartment building on Connecticut Avenue that they moved into twenty years ago, and socialize very little even at Arkansas state functions. The day Congress adjourns they drive home to their simple frame house in Kensett. Mills remained in Congress throughout the Second World War, and to this day he has not traveled abroad.
His devotion to his constituency is hardly a matter of strict political necessity, since Mills has faced opposition in the Democratic primaries only twice, both times prior to 1944, and has never had a Republican opponent. The recent redistricting more than doubled Mills' constituency and threw him up against Dale Alford, the segregationist congressman from Little Rock. But Alford has decided to try for governor.
QUITE EARLY, Speaker Rayburn, reportedly recognizing a first-class mind when he saw one, assigned Mills to the Ways and Means Committee. There, far removed from the more dramatic spectacles of Congress, he has labored at legislation that few of his colleagues pretend to understand. He has had time and inclination for little else. Four years ago, after the long ascent up the seniority ladder, Mills became chairman of the Ways and Means Committee.
—Excerpted from an article by Douglass Cater in The Reporter, March 29, 1962.
the lack of interest in economic and cultural aid to foreign countries
Sen. Fulbright has been called a pessimist. Actually, however, he appears to believe that there is some hope for the world through education.
"THE (FULBRIGHT) EXCHANGE program is the thing that reconciles me to all the difficulties of political life," he explained to an interviewer in 1358. "It's the one activity that gives me some hope that the human race won't commit suicide, although I still wouldn't count on it."
Whether or not he is "over-educated" is debatable; certainly, Sen. Fulbright is one of the most educated men in Congress. He entered the University of Arkansas at the age of 13, receiving his bachelor of arts degree in 1825. He applied for and received a Rhodes scholarship his senior year, and received his B.A. degree from Oxford University in England in 1928. Next, he attended George Washington University, where he received his law degree in 1934, finishing second in a class of 135.
After practicing law with the U.S. Department of Justice for a year, during which time he also taught at George Washington University, Fulbright returned home to Arkansas where he farmed and taught at the University of Arkansas until he was chosen president in 1939. He was fired two years later.
The touchest situation Sen. Fulbright has faced has been the school integration issue. While not a segregationist to the extent that many Southern politicians are, Fulbright nevertheless has disappointed many of his liberal supporters for his moderate stand on the issue.
Sen. Fulbright signed the so-called Southern Manifesto, but he was one of the men who succeeded in toning it down. When Gov. Orval Faubus used the national guard to keep Negroes out of Little Rock Central High School, Sen. Fulbright refused to endorse the governor's action. He has criticized the Supreme Court desegregation decision, maintaining that desegregation will come about if the states are allowed to solve it in their own way, but he has been a moderate in the integration situations.
HE HASNT LET the segregation issue enter into his votes for federal aid to education, despite the tieup, but he has consistently fought civil rights legislation. In 1960, he voted "yes" on motions to table two pieces of civil rights legislation, one which would have given the attorney general power to seek injunctions to protect civil rights, and the other which would have a court or the President appoint an officer to register Negroes who proved they were discriminated against.
Perhaps the vote which marked the high point in his career came in 1554. In that year, when Sen. Joseph McCarthy was at his peak in power and influence, Sen. Fulbright was the only member of the Senate to cast a vote against appropriating McCarthy's committee more money with which to carry on its investigation.
This could have marked the end of Sen. Fulbright's career, but public opinion soon changed and McCarthy fell into disfavor. Today, some people are predicting that Fulbright's moderate stand on integration will cause him to be rejected this year when he runs for another term in the Senate.
But if Sen. Fulbright is defeated for the Senate, he likely will have other opportunities to work for the betterment of education. He once was offered the presidency of Columbia University, which he turned down to remain in the Senate. In any case, Sen. Fulbright likely will continue to work toward improving education.
"We've done a poorer job educating our people than anything else we've done," he once said. It can safely be said that if this statement is true, it is no fault of Sen. William Fulbright.
Friday, April 20, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
And the Men Who Oil It
Wayne L. Morse Is He Courageous Or Arrogant?
By Richard Bonett
An intense national spotlight will focus this fall on Oregon, where Democratic U.S. Sen. Wayne Lyman Morse is expected to seek a fourth term.
Morse has not officially announced he will run, but such a decision by the fiercely independent and often controversial senator is almost a foregone conclusion.
The battle lines will be clearly drawn, for few persons are able to be neutral where Morse is concerned—a situation that accurately reflects a quality in the man himself.
THE ELECTION SHOULD provide answers to many questions. Most significantly, however, Oregon voters will give their judgment on whether Morse is the brilliant and courageous statesman his followers say he is, or an egocentric crackpot and hypocrite a favorite epithet of his detractors.
The intellectual capabilities of the former dean of the University of Oregon School of Law have been amply demonstrated since he first entered the Senate in 1944 under Republican sponsorship. But the 61-year-old senator, a master orator, shows little sign of having been touched by that spirit of compromise thought to be an essential ingredient of political wisdom.
Weighing heavily in the upcoming Oregon Senate race will be Morse's almost vitriolic denunciations of his late fellow senator, Richard L. Neuberger, who in his short tenure in Congress developed a strong popularity. Republicans also are bound to make what political hay they can out of Morse's now famous comic-operabattle of words with Clare Boothie Luce over her appointment by President Eisenhower in 1959 as ambassador to Brazil.
MORSE, WHO LOVES a political battle, usually can be found in the thick of most Capitol Hill campaigns. But the resulting smoke and fury generally serve to obscure the image of the man.
Wisconsin-born, Morse was nurtured on the progressive liberal philosophy of Robert LaFollette Sr.
in his early college days at the University of Wisconsin. The Morse family was poor and their 360-acre farm near Madison was in constant threat of foreclosure. At college, Morse was an honor student and a facile debater. As of 1961 he held seven academic degrees, including a Ph.D. from Wisconsin and a doctorate of law from Columbia University.
Morse taught argumentation at the Universities of Wisconsin and Minnesota until 1929, when he was appointed an assistant professor of law at the University of Oregon. Two years later he was dean of the school.
What some choose to call Morse's courage and others call his arrogance showed itself early when he led a faculty revolt at Oregon against autocratic old Chancellor W. Jasper Kerr. Kerr was ultimately forced to resign and the name of Wayne Morse received considerable play in the Oregon press.
MORSE SAW HIS FIRST government service as a member of the Railway Emergency Board in 1941. He went from there to the War Labor Board, where he forged a reputation as a meticulously fair arbitrator. When Morse decided to crash national politics by unseating crusty isolationist Rufus Hoiman from the Oregon Senate delegation, he allegedly considered the Democratic nomination first but rejected the idea because the Democrats were short of campaign funds.
In Washington, Morse, always self-confident, set the pattern of his later political career by ignoring the well-established tradition of freshman silence. Republican leaders soon had just cause to wonder about his party allegiance. From the 79th through the 82nd Congresses, Morse voted with his party on an average of only 35 per cent of the issues. He still wore reelection in 1950 as a Republican and was one of the earliest supporters of Dwight D. Eisenhower for President in 1952.
But the attraction Eisenhower had for Morse before the 1952 convention disappeared entirely after the general's nomination. In a dramatic tape-recorded interview, Morse renounced his Republican ties and charged that Eisenhower "was up to his neck in stinkholes of reaction." The trim (5-foot, 10-inches, 160-pounds) Oregon senator later called Eisenhower "the most dangerous man ever to have been in the White House."
Minority Leader: Charles A. Halleck
Charles A. Halleck gained the minority leadership in 1959 as a result of the Republican disaster in the Congressional elections of 1958. As leader he soon won a national reputation as a "gut fighter" and a ruthless party disciplinarian, and his colleagues still respect Halleck's talent at skirmishing. ("We gotcha licked," according to one administration official, is Halleck's favorite expression.) Halleck distinguished himself in the Eighty-sixth Congress by his ability to prod reluctant Republicans into support of President Eisenhower's program and to thwart the will of an ambitious Democratic majority. "One-third plus one," the number of votes needed to sustain a Presidential veto, became a Republican slogan. As a reward for his efforts Ike told him, "You are a political genius."
Now that Halleck is on his own, however, some of the members of the House are beginning to wonder to what end his combat skill is being employed. Halleck, by and large, speaks for the standpatters, who are accused by the "constructive" group of intellectual lethargy, endemic negativism, and a failure to oppose the Democrats in any meaningful way. Halleck himself denies the charges and is at pains to disown the "gut fighter" label, which has come to connote a sort of obstructionist without a cause.
It is true that Halleck has become something of an "aginner" by habit. Only twice since he came to the House in 1935 has there been a Republican majority, and only eight of his twenty-seven years in Congress have been served under a Republican President. Halleck and a great many of his colleagues have spent their adult lives fighting the New Deal, the Fair Deal, and now the New Frontier. They have come to relish the battle.
—Excerpted from an article by Meg Greenfield in The Reporter, March 29, 1962.
For a while Morse stayed aloft from both parties. But by 1956 he had officially declared himself a Democrat and heaped humiliation on the Republican party and the Eisenhower administration when Oregon voters sent him back to the Senate for a third term. Morse's opponent in the race was Douglas McKay, former Eisenhower secretary of the Interior, who had been hand-picked by the administration.
STILL MORSE MANAGED to cause bewilderment among his supporters for what at times seemed to be daring but pointless independence.
Sen. Wayne Lyman Morse
A. M. H.
Perhaps some of this can be traced to his intense dislike for Eisenhower. Whatever the cause, Morse in 1957, as a ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, opposed the administration's request for a long-range economic development program for under-developed nations of Africa and Asia, something many responsible government leaders favored as a means of bringing a semblance of order to a meandering foreign aid program.
The normally staunch internationalist, who served as a member of the U.S. delegation to the United Nations in 1960, charged the bill granted the Chief Executive too much unchecked authority in the allocation of funds. The bill eventually passed with overwhelming bipartisan support. Many, stunned by Morse's opposition, pointed out that the measure was actually stricter in its limitations than the old Marshall Plan.
50 Years in Congress一
Since the advent of the Kennedy administration, the senior Oregon senator has been noticeably less controversial. He has supported the new President's foreign and domestic legislation in 72 per cent of the issues, compared with only 39 per cent support he gave Eisenhower-backed bills in the 1959-60 legislative session.
But the big election crisis for Morse probably will appear in the form of the ghost of Richard Neuberger, whom More helped to boost to the U.S. Senate in 1954. The two were so closely allied at first that Time magazine referred to the Oregon senate delegation as the "Morse-berger." But Neuberger's more conciliatory attitudes soon placed him in a position of opposing his colleague's aggressive independence.
If Morse has enjoyed the martyr aspect of the unyielding individualist, he may find this November that the martyr's path leads inevitably to the stake. And Republicans would like nothing better than to sacrifice Wayne Lyman Morse to the political gods.
Carl Hayden: Senate Workhorse
By Chuck Morelock
On Feb. 19, 1912, a young Democrat from the brand new state of Arizona was sworn into the House of Representatives.
On Feb. 19, 1962, that man, still lively and going strong at 84, became the first political figure in American history to have served in Congress for 50 years.
AND CARL HAYDEN, senior senator from Arizona, isn't about to call it quits either—he's seeking reelection for another term. Well known in the nation's capital but relatively unknown elsewhere, Hayden, a tall, lean, balding cigar smoker, attributes most of his success to hard work and a willingness to do his homework. While his more eloquent colleagues in the Senate are busy issuing gems of oratorical brilliance, Hayden usually can be found in the Library of Congress, digging out the intimate details of a proposed bill.
This digging takes a lot of time, but Hayden, who works up to 12 hours a day 7 days a week, wouldn't have it any other way. He's worked hard ever since he got a bit of sage advice 50 years ago. At that time, wishing to make a good impression during his first days in office, Hayden made a flowery, cliche-filled speech in the best Senator Claghorn tradition.
Afterwards, a wise old representative suggested that the budding young Flato be a "workhorse," not a "show horse." Hayden has made few speeches since.
Today, as president pro tempore of the Senate and chairman of the powerful Senate Committee on Appropriations, Hayden is one of the most respected politicians of this century and whose wishes, it is said, have almost the effect of law. And every president from Wilson to Kennedy has sought his advice. But in spite of his lofty position, Hayden is considered a kind, friendly, almost humble man. Harry Truman will second that. HST was greeted by a cool reception when he first joined the Senate, thanks to his reputation as an alleged "tool of the Pendergasts." When the two men first met, Hayden stuck out his hand and said, "Welcome to Washington, senator. I'm Carl Hayden of Arizona, an old timer here. Call on me for any help I can give you."
Truman has never forgotten.
AS CHAIRMAN of the appropriations committee, Hayden has the power to touch every pocketbook in the land. But for a man who works with billions of dollars every day, Hayden in his personal life is a thriftmaster, the kind who will turn off unneeded lights and purchase cheap ballpoint pens to save a few pennies.
In committee sessions, Hayden may sit virtually forgotten for three or four hours, then in 25 words or less point out exactly what must be done and why. This ability to "sift out the chaff," as he puts it, has proved invaluable throughout the years.
Hayden was born Oct. 2, 1877, in Tempe, Arizona, and attended Stanford University and served as Maricopa County treasurer from 1904 to 1906 and as sheriff from 1907 to 1912. The only time he ever lost an election occurred while he was running for student body president in college. Hayden lost by two votes because he and his girl friend Nan Downing—later Mrs. Hayden—felt it would be fairer to give those votes to his opponent.
Elected to the 62nd Congress as a delegate-at-large in 1912, Hayden was reelected for seven consecutive terms until he moved over to the
Senate on March 4, 1927. And since then he has been reelected in 1932, 1938, 1944, 1950, and 1956. He is not only the dean of Congress but the dean of the Senate as well, out-serving Georgia's Richard Russell by six years.
A FEW YEARS after he went to Washington for the first time, Hawden made friends with a young Justice Department clerk, Ed Hoover. In 1924, Hayden helped push through a bill for $66,320 to start a finger-printing bureau, a move that paved the way for the creation of the FBI, which his friend—J. Edgar Hoover—would head.
Thirty-five years of experience with the appropriations committee have given him an insight into virtually every phase of Senate life, although essentially he is a specialist in irrigation and highway matters. Several years ago, deploring the lack of a definite plan for road and turnpike networks, Hayden told a conference of state highway commissioners to go home and work out plans for a national system.
"They did that and the result is the fine system we have today," says Hayden.
As far as irrigation is concerned, Hayden considers one of his biggest pieces of unfinished business is the authorization and construction of a billion dollar federal irrigation project for rapidly expanding central Arizona.
In good times and bad, he has consistently supported the Democratic Party. But like all congressmen, he sometimes strays from the fold. One good reason is his refusal to straddle the fence. In his words, "You must take a firm stand on every issue to avoid making a fool of yourself. If you inform yourself well, both sides will respect you."
AMONG OTHERS, he voted for or against the following bills or amendments in the First Session of the 87th Congress:
For: amendments to provide three-fourths federal contributions instead of two-thirds on urban renewal housing in small communities in distressed areas, to reduce until 1962 instead of 1963 the time for making agreements with states for regulating billboard advertisements on the Interstate Highway System, to reduce by $10 million funds for forest protection and utilization and to bar funds to any country unless the president has determined that that country is not dominated by communism.
He also voted for bills to amend the Mutual Defense Assistance Control Act of 1951 to provide additional economic assistance to non-Communist countries, to extend the Unemployment Compensation Act of 1951 and to establish a National Wilderness Preservation System.
He voted against a bill to reduce by $100 million funds for soil and water conserving practices and an amendment to reduce Peace Corps appropriations from $40 million to $25 million.
"MR. MONEYBAGS" and "The Desert Fox," as he is sometimes called, is third in line for the presidency, a fact many Americans would not realize. The Constitution specifies that in the death of the president, the job goes to the vice president, then to the speaker of the House. After that comes the president pro tempore of the Senate.
Havden was noncommittal when asked in a recent rare interview to name his greatest accomplishment.
"When you've been in Washington for 50 years, you just can't single out one particular accomplishment. After all, 50 years is a long, long time."
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 20, 1962
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Friday, April 20, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
North Africa Hindered by Arid Climate
By Richard Bonett
When man was less sophisticated than he is today concerning his physical environment, he imagined the universe to be molded out of only three elements: fire, water and air. Add to this trio blood and oil and you come pretty close to describing the elements comprising modern-day North Africa.
Arab North Africa (Al Maghrib al 'Arabi) includes the three states of Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia, all sharing a common historical experience, dialect, and colonial tradition. Also included, because of racial and Linguistic similarities, is Libya, although in many ways this nation is as distinct from North Africa, to the west, as it is from the Middle East, bordering Libya on the east.
THESE NORTH AFRICAN nations include most, if not all, of that vast wasteland called the Sahara desert, extending as far south as Senegal, the Niger River, and Timbuktu. Three of the states comprising the area—Libya, Morocco and Tunisia—are independent. Algerian independence means the end of almost eight years of bloody struggle between France and Algeria.
Since World War II a considerable amount of blood has been spilled as a result of fiery nationalist sentiments that have won independence for three of the North African states and is promising independence for the fourth. In time then, fire and blood may play less of a role in the area.
But water, or the lack of it, has been a determining factor in the area's history and development and will continue to play an important role. In future years, perhaps oil and gas, vast reserves of it in the Sahara, will be the predominant factors in the area.
NORTH AFRICA IS an immense quadrilateral of mountains and high table lands bounded on the south by the Sahara and on the other three sides by the Mediterranean Sea and Atlantic Ocean. The width is harder to fix, for neither the physical nor cultural boundaries have ever been made precise. The only fertile area in the region is a narrow coastal band of Mediterranean-styled countryside extending from the coast to from 100 to 300 miles inland. Following along the coastal region are the Atlas Mountains, cutting off the maritime strip from the desert.
The Atlas topography is uneven, particularly at nothern Morocco and Algeria. Peaks ranging up to 7,000 and 8,000 feet rise a few miles from the sea. Often the mountains abut the coast making the sea frontier as hostile as the desert area in some places. As a result of this terrain, short, swift rivers plunge down narrow gorges into the sea. There are no navigable rivers in the area.
From Tangier on the west to Tunisia on the east there are good harbors, but with the exception of Oran and Algiers, they lack easily accessible hinterlands of any size. Only in the eastern part of North Africa, from Tunis to Tripoli, is there a combination of good ports and flat, fertile back country.
RAINFALL IS a determining factor in the economic life of the area, which has a combined population of more than 30 million. But statistics do not present an accurate picture of the moisture problem. In general, North Africa is deficient in rainfall. But some parts have an unusable excess of precipitation. There is little rainfall regularly from year to year, and in some regions near the Sahara, one year's rainfall may be five to eight times that of the previous year. Most rain is disadvantageously concentrated in heavy bursts within a season of a few months, from October to March. Falling on semi-arid lands which have been baked during the rainless summers, much of the water runs off and is wasted. Only in the past decade have extensive water-retention techniques been used.
A 16-inch rain line, generally considered the minimum for agriculture without irrigation, covers most of the fertile North Morocco and the Atlas Mountains, reaching to the Mediterranean at the Algerian border because of a lowering in the mountain chain which allows the steppe to come almost to the sea. Rainfall, held down by the narrowness of the Mediterranean between Spain and Western Algeria, picks up again as
the sea widens to the east, and the 16-inch line dips down in Algeria to include the Aures Mountains, curving then to the northeast to reach the sea only 50 miles from Tunis. The Rif Mountain chain in Morocco along the Mediterranean and the northeastern part of Algeria near the Tunisian border have heavy rainfall or up to 60 inches a year. But these rugged and heavily forested areas are generally unsuited for agriculture.
AS WITH THE RAINFALL, the climate is not uniform. Summers are warm and winters are mild and rainy. But temperatures go up in the summer and down in the winter as one moves inland just a few miles. The valleys between the coast and the interior mountains often get the worst of both extremes. Occasionally, hot desert winds reign in the summer, bringing extremely high temperatures and a suffocating dust that means agricultural disaster.
Until the discovery of oil in the Algerian regions of the Sahara, all North African countries had an economy based primarily on agriculture of the Mediterranean type. Agricultural products made up most of the exports of the four countries, with cereals, wine, citrus, and olive oil heading the list. But the countries did have secondary mineral resources that helped balance adverse trade conditions. In Morocco and Algeria light and medium industries have been developed over the past decade and a half, including the canning of fish and vegetables, tanning, cellulose products, cement, glass, paper, and a growing textile industry. Thus, where water is concerned, all the countries of North Africa share a common problem. Irrigation of large areas in recent years had aided in the expansion of agriculture to feed ever-increasing populations with still something left over far export. But there is a definite limit to the amount of arable land. Each country carries a share of the burden of the Sahara. Thus far, however, only Algeria, and to a lesser extent Libya, have reaped any direct benefit from the Saharan riches.
SOME OF THE EARLY interpretations concerning the discovery of oil and gas in the Sahara in southern Algeria seem academic in the light of Algeria's successful struggle for independence. At one time it was believed that Tunisia and Morocco were lucky to win independence before the oil discoveries, and Algeria was correspondingly unlucky. The interpretation of the development was that oil would make the pacification of Algeria "worth the cost" to the French. Furthermore, many liberal-minded Frenchmen, who normally would be counted on to support an independence movement, responded to an enticing opportunity to purchase stock in Algerian oil ventures, thus making them "trustees of the nation's business."
While these particular theories did not seem to work out, the effect of Algerian oil on North Africa presents many problems. Once a fancy of French empire builders, the oil (and gas) has become a reality for the economic development of Algeria. Still, the blessing is not unmixed. The following includes a discussion of some advantages and special problems.
In the first place, enormous deposits of natural gas at Hassi Rmel, claimed as the world's third largest field, had provided Algeria with an opportunity to produce her own steel from iron ore in the Bone region. This ore was formerly exported to Britain and Germany. Ground was broken for a steel mill near Ouenza in 1960.
A 24-INCH PIPELINE has been constructed from the gas fields, in Southeast Algeria, to the coast near Relizane, where it divides with one section going to Arzew just east of Oran to serve a group of petrochemical industries, and the other line going eastward to Algiers and Bone. The pipelines and three pumping stations have a capacity of 400,000 cubic meters an hour.
These goals were retained, even after some of the others were allowed to whither away. As a matter of fact, the French government has put up more than one billion dollars in three years to keep the program going while private investment, responding to the uncertainty of the future, has failed to respond to the challenge. Still, tremendous progress appears to have been made.
These developments have occurred partly, at least, as a result of President Charles de Gaulle's "Constantine Plan" of 1958, which included among other social and economic reforms for Algeria, acceleration of the development of Saharan oil and gas and the establishment of metallurgical and chemical industries.
The quantity of gas at Hassi Rmel makes it apparent that even an industrialized Algeria cannot absorb it. So studies have been made with a view of extending the pipeline across the Mediterranean to Siely and Italy. If these plans are executed, as American Universities Field Staff expert Charles Gallagher points out, the interdependence of Algeria and Western Europe will be reinforced to a point where all the Common Market countries will have an abiding interest in seeing a peaceful and prosperous Algeria.
The counterpart of the Hassi Rmei gas is the oil of the Hassi Messaoud in Edjelé fields, already flowing at a considerable rate, and the Edjelé-Skhira (Tunisia) pipeline. These fields have a tested reserve of 600
million metric tons, or about 400 billion barrels. The flow from these fields is expected to reach 500,000 barrels per day this year. At least these were the plans in 1960. France made a profit of about $70 million in 1960 by consuming or selling off what it did not use of this oil. At that time, the field was producing about 35 millions barrels per year. That was also the first year that oil revenues were put back into local development as part of the Constantine Plan.
France is still committed to Middle Eastern oil, to which her industry is technically adapted, making it more profitable to market the Algerian production. The French goal of 500,000 barrels of Algerian oil per day this year is approximately the consumption rate in France. The 1965 target, in 1960, was 1 million barrels a day. Although revenues go back into Algeria from oil concessions at a much smaller rate than would be the case under an independent Algeria, these revenues are heavily overshadowed by French investment in the country. So France does have some justification for the contention that it is taking oil only
as part repayment for what it has given Algeria. Still the French will get no credit for anything they have done. The Algerians will always argue that without the revolution, nothing would have been done. The armed action that has taken place in Algeria has been more of a handicap to agriculture than to the oil exploitation.
Other lands are vitally interested in the Saharan riches, notably the black African territories of French West Africa, French Sudan (not independent Sudan), Niger, Chad, and Mauretania, all of which border on the Sahara from the south. The interest of these countries is mainly political.
The states more directly concerned are Morocco and Tunisia, both of which openly support Algeria's independence movement, and feel a decided pull toward the idea of a North African federation. It might be questionable, however, whether the shapers of a new Algeria will feel the need to share this wealth with their neighbors. Also to be considered is the fact that oil will make Algeria's role even more predominant in North Africa.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20, 1962
ATTEND THE 42nd ANNUAL ENGINEERING EXPOSITION
[Graphic illustration of a rocket launching into the sky, with smoke and clouds trailing behind it.]
KU Engineers Have Been at Work!
The 1962 University of Kansas Engineering Exposition is the best ever. We are proving that this Exposition is one that the University can be proud of for years to come. Come over and examine the many exciting exhibits in Allen Field House. See the large ROTC display with its missiles and guidance systems. Watch engineering processes at work. You'll be glad you stopped. We're part of the Relays!
General Co-chairman
Marvin Lindsey Robert Eaton
Publicity Chairman Jim Warner
Financial Chairman Randall Nollette
MEDICAL CENTER
Friday, April 20, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Reds Not Only Users of 'The Big Lie'
By Terry Murphy
The success of Communist propaganda has popularized the use of the Big Lie, the half-truth and methods employing guilt by association.
Use of these devices has not been restricted to Communist activities. It is used effectively here in the United States in speeches, magazine articles and other forms of news media.
Norbert Muhlen's Feb. 13, National Review article entitled, "Why the Hate-Germany Campaign" is an example of such tactics.
Muhlen tried to show that by opening old sores between the United States and Germany, Communism was preventing the rearmament of West Germany as a NATO deterrent. Apparently, Muhlen feels Russia is getting cooperation from the Free World.
MUHLEN EMPLOYED a classic example of the Big Lie. He claimed that no U.S. Government official publicly refuted a Russian allegation that NATO Gen. Adolf Heusinger, a former officer in Hitler's Wehrmacht, was guilty of war crimes.
Muhlen also said that the same papers who gave the Russian charges front page display, carried nothing in Heusinger's defense.
Those two statements are examples of the Big Lie.
Page one, column six, paragraph three of the December 13, 1951 edition of the New York Times reads as follows:
"U.S. officials branded it a 'crude and ludicrous' propaganda move—part of the campaign against West German participation in NATO."
The story was continued on page seven and carried the complete statement made by State Department Press Officer Lincoln White. As a spokesman for the U.S. Government, White did refute the Russian allegations.
Condemnation through guilt-by-association seemed to be Muhlen's prime objective in the article.
IF MUHLEN did not employ the Big Lie, he is guilty of irresponsible reporting which resulted in the same thing.
Statements made by Eleanor Roosevelt were taken out of context in an effort to align her with extremists who harbor beliefs that the Eonn Republic is in the hands of Nazis who are just waiting for the opportunity to replicate a new Third Reich.
Muhlen also tried to tie some significance to the 1945 statement of Henry Mongantheau, Jr., that "we have nothing to fear from the Russians." Times have changed. Morgantheau no longer influences the foreign policy of the U.S.
Mubhen tried to tie a 17-year-old statement made under different circumstances to the foreign policy of the present. They do not fit.
What was the point that Muhlen was trying to make? As an explanation for the question, "Why the Hate-Germany Campaign," he covered a rather large field.
LIKE THE PLATTE River, his explanation was a mile wide and an inch deep.
Muhlen took parts of several different puzzles and tried to put them together into one big picture. Close investigation of the facts proves his story to be as closely knit as a badly-stretched burlap
Engine of Future
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — (UPI) — Automobiles of the future may have engines that start immediately in 25-below-zero weather, need no antifreeze because they are air-cooled and use almost any inexpensive fuel.
Such an engine has been developed for the U.S. Army Ordnance Corps by Avco Corporation's Lycoming Division. Intended primarily for use in light tracked and wheeled military vehicles, it ignites by compression, has no valves and has only three moving parts for each of its four cylinders.
Weighing only 600 pounds, it is 30 inches long and wide and 28 inches high. The manufacturers say it operates underwater as efficiently as on land.
bag. And just as smooth in texture.
This type of reporting rubs roughly against the grain of truth and fact.
Muhlen was using elusive reasoning that was motivated more by emotion than by fact. He attempted to tie Stanley Kramer, commercialism, Eleanor Roosevelt and Communism into one neat bundle.
The public was given this bundle as a fog-shrouded panacea that would cure a national problem. Like most patent medicines which are supposed to work wonders, a close investigation of the ingredients proves it to be a rehash or at best a new combination of old cure-alls.
Regardless of the author's intention and purpose, he certainly did make a false statement. The facts of the Heusinger case could have been easily checked if the author had cared about reporting the truth.
THIS TYPE of writing presents a major problem and challenge to the reading public in a country that does not censor writing for being inaccurate.
To meet this challenge the reader must search out different views on important subjects. True, this is time consuming. But when the truth is at stake, it is time well invested, and if the subject is important, many other publications will carry articles on it. These views are readily available.
After sampling several different articles or news sources the reader can judge for himself which publications are the most dedicated to presenting the facts clearly and without bias.
It is a responsibility that is presented to every reader who enjoys and suffers the mixed blessings of a free press.
The problem would be greatly eased if the publishers of news media would assume the responsibility of being certain that at least the facts that they publish are accurate. Naturally different opinions will be expressed on the facts of a situation.
HOPING FOR TOTAL acceptance of this responsibility is just that—hoping. And any plan to insure or try to enforce a standard
of responsibility other than the already existing laws against libel, would be to infringe on freedom of the press and freedom of expression.
In speaking to the English Parliament for freedom of the press in 1644, John Milton counseled
that anyone who speaks his conscience should be heard with patience and humility. In Milton's view this should hold true "however they be miscalled."
But this toleration need not mean passive acceptance. Norbert Muhlen and others like him are
entitled to their say and it should not be different. A safeguard is provided when articles such as Muhlen's face close reading by an informed public. Under this condition the absence of truth is evident and distortions are seen for what they are.
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University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20, 1962
GO JAYHA KU Relays-April
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Friday, April 20, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
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University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20, 1962
Page 10
KU Speed Trap Will Be Used Again This Year
A speeder races down Jawhawk Boulevard at 45 miles per hour and passes over a cable. A second later, the speeder passes over a second cable. The speeder has just been caught in the KU police speed trap.
LT. EDWIN W. FENSTEMAKER of the KU police explained how the speed trap worked.
This speed tran will be used this spring on several campus streets for the fifth straight year.
"The device operates on an electric timing principle." Lt. Fenstemaker said. "When the speeder crosses the first cable, it starts a clock. When he crosses the second cable, the speeder stops the clock."
"The device gives the speed of the car in seconds and also in miles per hour," he said.
He said the cables are usually placed about one half block apart.
He said the electric speed trap has an advantage over the radar speed check device.
"THE RADAR SYSTEM reflects the speed back for only a moment," he said. "The electric system can stop the clock and hold the speeder's time."
Lt. Fenstemaker said that the speeder could see that he was breaking the speed limit by reading the clock.
Joe Skillman, KU police chief, said that speed violators will be given tickets ordering them to appear at Lawrence Police Court.
Sunyside Avenue in front of Summerfield Hall.
Naismith Road in front of Allen Field House and Murphy Hall.
CHIEF SKILLMAN LISTED the places the speed check may be set up this spring. They are:
Fifteenth Street in front of the Nuclear Reactor Center.
West Campus Road in front of Joseph R. Pearson and Carruth-C'Leary residence halls.
Jayhawk Boulevard in front of the Kangas Union and Strong Hall.
Memorial Drive
Sunnyside Drive.
Chief Skillman said that the speed check is effective not in terms of arrests but in keeping people aware that there is a speed check.
Physicists Say Time Affects Gravity's Pull
WASHINGTON — (UPI) A physicist said recently that space science may determine in the next five years whether gravitation is growing weaker with the passage of time
The physicist, Dr. Robert H. Dicke of Princeton University, believes that as the universe expands, "the strength of the gravitational interaction may decrease steadily."
DICKE DISCUSSED gravitation and space science in a lecture broadcast overseas on the Voice of America. Most scientists believe as Einstein did that gravitational strength is fixed.
But a few, including Dicke, believe gravitation may have been "substantially stronger when our galaxy was young." If gravitational interaction has been growing steadily weaker, the fact has had great influence. Dicke said, on the history of the solar system, the stars, and the galaxies.
DICKE ALSO SAID astronomical studies of the earth and moon also may show whether gravity is weakening. The moon's orbital speed has been going down. There are many possible explanations.
But, he said, it has been determined "that the moon has been slowing down in its revolution about the earth by an amount consistent with the assumption of a steadily decreasing gravitational interaction."
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University Daily Kansan
Page 11
More Engineers Needed in U.S.
Despite an increased demand for engineers, this year marks the fourth consecutive year that there has been a decrease in the number of undergraduates in engineering schools.
By Terry Murphy
The KU undergraduate enrollments in engineering have followed the national pattern. Present enrollments are about 30 per cent below the 1957 peak, according to John S. McNown, Dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture.
THIS NATIONAL DECLINE has caused great concern among educators and industrialists. Unless the tide is stemmed, industry will be hard pressed to maintain its present pace of development.
The decline defies the law of supply and demand. There will be twice as many industrial recruiters on the KU campus this year as there will be engineering seniors seeking employment.
A bright note in the declining enrollment picture is a steady increase in the quality of engineering graduates.
THE NUMBER OF ENGINEERS graduated each year does not fill the requirements for normal replacements. On top of this, expansion programs and the present growth of new industries have created additional demands for engineering talents.
Industry is faced with competition for engineering seniors from graduate schools. Last September, 185 students enrolled in KU graduate courses leading to the master of science degree in engineering. Those 185 graduate students represent an increase of more than a third from the fall term of 1958.
Because of the great demand, the initial starting salary offered to graduates of KU's School of Engineering and Architecture goes up each year by about $50 a month.
THE NUMBER OF PERSONS in KU doctoral programs in engineering has nearly doubled since 1958, with 38 post M.S. graduates working toward the Ph.D. degree in chemical and electrical engineering mechanics. This increase in doctoral candidates has not been as spectacular nationwide as it has at KU. From 1958 to 1961 there has been a nationwide increase of 23 per cent at the M.S. level and 44 per cent at the Ph.D. level.
KU's increase in graduate school engineers is greater than the national average. The number of students taking advanced courses increases the quality but also heightens the shortage to meet industry's needs.
Graduate programs are increasingly important because the engineer of the future must undergo an ever more rigorous education. The fifth year of study will soon supplant the senior year as the period of intensive specialization. The many challenges in new disciplines offer an exciting but more demanding period of development.
The very names of the new fields are intriguing: plastic design of thin concrete shells; solid state devices; micro-miniaturization of circuits; plasma jets; and ground effect machines.
THESE CHANGES in engineering fields are reflected on the KU campus. New laboratories like those for the nuclear reactor and environmental health engineering have been built. New courses such as the theory of communication and elastic stability have been established.
Another example of change are new professors who study circuits which react in a few billionths of a second and the metallurgy of fine metallic powders.
What with the new facilities and increasing emphasis on engineering education, the future for aspiring engineers is bright.
THE ENGINEERING SCHOOLS are not crowded, up to date facilities are available, salaries are high and the industrial field is undermanned and still expanding.
Economists talk of future trouble in finding work for everyone in an expanding population. From the looks of things they need not worry about finding work for engineers.
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The Senate Investigates
SEN. BARTLETT: I must say that I do not have one. I do not know much about Fabian Socialism.
SEN. BARTLETT (D. ALA):
General, I note that a mandatory change was made in a speech you delivered before the National Strategy Seminar on Jan. 21, 1961. You had undertaken to say: "We will be blocked not only by selfish interests who are unable to rise to the occasion, but by the Fabian Socialists and Communists who," and so forth. Would you equate the Fabian Socialists and Communists?
GEN. TRUDEAU: (CHIEF OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, U.S. ARMY): I do not know that my definition of Fabian Socialism agrees with yours. Senator, because I don't know what yours is—
And this represents some of those to the left who seem to appear at various times, usually anonymously, and not in the records of Mr. Hoover, as are the card-carrying Communists, who sometimes raise questions as to where we are going or where they would like us to go.
GEN. TRUDEAU: Perhaps I should not either, but it is a term that has come down, as I understand it, from a society of socialists that was organized in 1884 to spread socialist principles gradually...
I cannot name these individuals. I think there are some of them and where they are I don't know. But in this term of "Fellow travellers," I was associating it with people who are definitely left of the center, and I base the center in my interpretation as being an advocate of those principles on which our country is established, including the spiritual guidance and God and the respect for the dignity of man.
The Fabian Socialists, as such, using the tactics of (the famous Roman General) Fabius himself, are supposed to be those who lean toward Communism, perhaps a little more toward that intermediate step socialism, and in the belief that that can be attained and should be attained without revolution and by evolution...
And the belief in private enterprise within reasonable direction and not in the control of the state, so that man becomes a slave. This is where I stand with respect to the center position. The people I am talking about, whatever terminology I happened to use at the time, fall in the category that are substantially to the left of this position.
And to these people sometimes the individual who stands as solidly to the center of things we have long believed in, is attributed to be an extreme right wing radical, without evidence of this being the fact, but making good news as far as they are concerned. I hope this
answers your question. Senator Bartlett.
SEN. BARTLETT: In my opinion you have made a most helpful statement and you have been a splendid witness.
Practical politics consists in ignoring facts—Henry Brooks Adams
Short Ones
Many religious people are deeply suspicious. They seem—for purely religious purposes, of course—to know more about iniquity than the unregenerate—Rudyard Kipling
—Senate inquiry into "military muzzling" Jan. 24.
---
I have found some of the best reasons I ever had for remaining at the bottom simply by looking at the men at the top.—Frank Moore Colby
The only prize much cared for by the powerful is power. The prize of the general is not a bigger tent, but command—Former Justice of the Supreme Court Holmes
That we should practice what we preach is generally admitted; but anyone who preaches what he and his hearers practice must incur the gravest moral disapprobation.—Logan Pearls Smith.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansas Friday, April 20, 1962
BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE
"A Bigger and Better KU"
Harmon Construction Co., Inc.
MARCO POLITICO
KU's new 650-man dorm
Templin Hall Lewis Hall Carruth - O'Leary Hall
Gertrude Sellards Pearson Mammalian Genetics Laboratory Murphy Hall
Addition to Dyche Museum Remodeling of Bailey Hall
Harmon Construction Co., Inc.
D. A. (Al) Harmon, KU Alumnus, President
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Friday. April 20, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 13
1962
--building's completion in 1895 with the publication of the "University Review" for that year.
BLAKE HALL—This 67-year-old campus fixture will soon fall prey to the wrecking ball as the University expands by the addition of new educational buildings. Blake has been used for storage purposes for the past several years.
Blake Hall-Admired, Hated Yet Still a Part of the Campus
By Dennis Farney
Blake Hall must have shuddered too when the steel demolition ball smashed into the side of the old anatomy building.
Blake, never very popular with KU students and alumni, must have wondered if its many enemies were closing in for the kill at last.
Known by some as "the building with a Queen Anne front and a Mary Anne behind" and described by others as "a sorry looking structure with a chubby, freckled face and a monstrous hat," Blake was born in a storm of architectural controversy 67 years ago.
SINCE THEN, three generations of KU students have regarded Blake with almost unmitigated disgust, criticized it with unrelenting zeal and waited for the day when it would no longer glower down at them as they walked to and from classes.
With the announcement of a new "master plan" for KU expansion by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, their hopes may soon be realized. Blake's days, like those of Fraser Hall, are numbered.
BLAKE'S PUBLIC RELATIONS problem has always been something of a paradox. Even on the KU campus where no two buildings seem to match, Blake has never been able to fit in.
Its high peaked roof, its many narrow windows and its two chateau-like towers set it apart from the rest of the buildings, giving it an air of an aloof old duchess sourly surveying the mundane affairs around her.
Criticism of Blake's architectural lines began immediately after the
"THE SANDSTONE FRONT of the physics building looks like a speckled chicken," the Review noted acidily. "The iron in the stones shows more plainly than the stone itself. If there be no lotion that will remove these blemishes, let a screen be put before the building."
Supporters of the building argued, no doubt, that a screen would hide the clock installed over the building's entrance. But the description of the clock offered by the Daily Kansan as "a Rube Goldbergian set of wheels and levers that continually were not in working order," soon undermined that argument.
ON SOME UNRECORDED date in 1914, the clock stopped. For six years the hands of the clock remained fixed at 8:25, while students pondered the cause of its break-down.
The fault lay, they decided, with the pigeons. The pigeons of 1914, it seems, liked the clock even more than did the students. The pigeons' weight as they roosted on the hands of the clock, it was reasoned, was too much for the clock's intricate set of gears and levels.
So it was with some degree of satisfaction that students watched custodians grease the hands of a new clock purchased in 1925.
THE HAPLESS PIGEONS never had a chance. Many slid off the greased hands and fell to their death on the curb below.
Everyone was happy until later that year when the new clock began running slow. With no pigeons around to take the rap, students and maintenance men alike were puzzled about the cause of the clock's erratic behavior. They were more mystified a few weeks later when the clock regained its vitality and
began to run again. And the inner workings of the clock remain somewhat of a mystery to this day.
FOR THE PAST 10 years, Blake has been used by the University for storage, a big come-down for the former physics building.
Since the cost of renovating the old building has been estimated at more than $550,000, it is probable that Blake will remain a storage depot, haughtily surveying the passing scene through its dusty windows until the men with the demolition ball write the final chapter in its sad history.
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University Daily Kansan Friday, April 20, 196
Nigeria Is Testing Ground For Democracy in Africa
By Wilbur G. Landrey
LAGOS—(UPI)—Nigeria may be the key to the future of democracy in black Africa. Or so Western diplomats and observers believe.
If democracy and the freedoms nurtured in the West can grow and flourish here in the same soil with impatient nationalism, regionalism and under-development, then they have a chance elsewhere in black Africa as well.
"If Nigeria fails, it will be a setback to the evolution of constructive regimes in the whole area," one senior Western diplomat said recently.
He was referring not only to the fate of Western democratic ideals but to the evolution of regimes moderate and constructive in their approach to international affairs.
AFRICAN ISSUES naturally come first in Nigeria's foreign policy. In the East-West cold war, the country is "non-aligned." But in such important fields as education, economic policy and trade, the country is oriented towards the West.
An indication of the importance the United States places on Nigeria is the fact that Washington has promised to provide $225 million during the next five years to help with the country's economic development. It will be the largest American aid program south of the Sahara.
With an estimated 40 million people, Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa, and its problems are the problems of Africa—regionalism, tribalism, ignorance, disease, poverty and under-development.
ITS POLITICS are rough and tumble. But no one who has listened to the debates in the House of Assembly—its benches lined with legislators in red and white turbans and robes of yellow, purple, blue and green—can doubt that the opposition is real and that the cut and thrust of democratic debate is ever present.
Throughout the country there is an intense desire for education and an optimism that Nigeria will succeed.
Discovered by Portuguese mariners for the outside world in the 15th century, this was the part of Africa known for 300 years as the slave coast. The ancestors of the American Negroes came from West Africa.
The chipped and worn tombstones in Faji cemetery in the center of Lagos bear testimony that Africa's west coast was also the "white man's grave." The reason: The malaria- carrying mosquito.
PARLIAMENTARY democracy as evolved in Britain had its first chance in black Africa when Ghana, up the coast, gained its independence in 1957. Parliament still sits in Ghana but most of the leading opposition figures are in jail or exile. Despite a solid elected majority, President Kwame Nkrumah — known as Osayyefo (the messiah) to his followers — has steadily become more authoritarian and reduced the opposition on the grounds that it was plotting violent overthrow of his legally-elected government.
Parliamentary democracy has another chance in Nigeria, which gained its independence from Britain on Oct. 1, 1960.
Nigeria is not likely to go authoritarian in the same way that Ghana did, but other things may happen. The biggest danger is that it may come apart at the seams. It is often said that Nigeria "is not one country; it is three."
THEER ARE about 250 different tribes in Nigeria and as many languages and dialects. But in fact the country is divided into three distinct regions—the northern region, the western region and the eastern region. Lagos, the capital, is federal territory like Washington, D.C. Together the regions form the federation of Nigeria. And federation is probably the most difficult of all forms of government.
Nigeria survived her first year of independence in peace and stability. It was an achievement, and it was helped by the sense of unity fostered by the drive for independence. That
Farewell to Fraser' to Highlight June Commencement Program
A "Farewell to Fraser" ceremony will highlight the 50-year classmates' Golden Anniversary this year as they return to Mount Oreau, June 2, 3, and 4, for commencement activities.
The ceremony will be observed immediately after the Golden Anniversary luncheon. Other alumni interested in taking part are invited.
REUNIONS OF CLASSES, societies and organizations will also be a part of the activities.
The Mortar Board, senior women's honorary society which was founded 50 years ago as a local society known as Torch, will also celebrate its half century anniversary.
Another special reunion, that of the Class of 1927, will observe its 35th anniversary. This class will celebrate an all-time unique record of having every member of the class
a paid member of the K.U. Alumni Association.
OTHER CLASS REUNIONS include '52,' 37,' 22 and the Gold Medal Club which comprises all classes graduated 50 or more years ago.
unifying force may weaken as the country grows older.
THE ALL-UNIVERSITY Supper on Sunday, June 3, will again feature the Chancellor's report on the "State of the University." This year the supper will begin at 4:30 p.m. since the annual alumni meeting will not be held previous to it.
The customary Saturday evening Welcome Dinner will be held again this year.
The University will provide bus tours for sight-seeing trips over the campus during the days of commencement activities. Unlimited lodging will be available in a University dormitory for those parents and alumni needing housing.
It is likely that the struggle for power and the struggle to maintain unity is just beginning.
FEDERAL PRIME Minister Sir Abubakar has gained increasing stature with a quiet leadership which has made him one of Africa's most influential advocates of a gradual approach to African unity. With a unity problem of his own at home, he believes the best approach to continental unity is step by step cooperation in technical and other fields.
Welcome Alumni
Drop by and see us
That is the approach of what has become known as the "Monrovia" group of African powers. It is in sharp contrast to that of Nkrumah whose credo—carved on the base of his statue in front of Ghana's parliament—is "seek ye first the political kingdom and all else will be added unto it."
Round Corner Drug
Ghana belongs to the more radical "Casablanca" group of African powers.
Lawrence's Oldest Drug Store
Sir Abubakar does not like comparisons between Nigeria and Ghana. But referring to the quiet approach he prefers, he told me recently when I interviewed him:
"In Hausa, they say that a wellfilled drum doesn't make much noise."
VI 3-0200
801 Mass.
KU Bacteriologist Uses Electron Microscope
By Murrel Bland
The only light in a small room with no windows in Snow Hall comes from the glow of instrument lights on the recently obtained electron microscope. A bacteriologist studies bacteria that is magnified 1,000 times.
Prof. Sword said that the electron microscope can be used for analyzing slides of RNA and DNA.
used primarily by the bacteriology department, the microscope is available to all departments.
The bacteriologist is Christopher Sword, assistant professor of bacteriology.
"Studies can be made to determine some of the causes of cancer using the electron microscope if we look at part of an organism that has cancer." Prof. Sword said. "We could never determine as much about the cancerous organism with an ordinary microscope."
HE SAID the ordinary microscope, such as the one used in the Biology I course, magnified slides only about 100 times.
"RNA, ribosenucleic acid, is a building block for protein," he said. "DNA, dioxynucleic acid, is the active material that makes up the chromosomes, the structures that are concerned with heredity."
The electron microscope cost $90,000. Although it is now being
He said findings made with the electron microscope can be recorded with two cameras.
HE SAID it is possible to determine several things about genetics by observing slides of DNA.
"One 35 mm camera is built in the microscope," he said.
"The other camera, which uses photographic plates, can be attached to the microscope."
Worth Repeating
Unfortunately, other considerations come ahead of education in the minds of some college administrators today. They have come to regard students almost as a nuisance, who get in the way of the perfectly functioning administrative machine. They are not so much concerned that students shall have an opportunity to whet their critical faculties as that students shall not rock the boat at all.- John M. Harrison
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Page 16 University Daily Kenson Friday. April 20, 1962
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Daily hansan
Monday, April 23, 1962
ALEXANDER HENRY
PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES—One of these men will be chosen student body president in the election tomorrow and Wednesday. At left is Jerry Dickson, Newton junior and Vox Populi candidate, and on the right is Gerald (Kep) Kepner, Wichita junior and University Party candidate.
Politicos Predict Big Vote Turnout
Amid the confusion of last minute speeches, dinners, buttonholing uncommitted students and political pow-wows, those concerned with All Student elections optimistically predict a large voting turnout.
In the elections to be held tomorrow and Wednesday, students will elect the president and vice president of the student body, All Student Council school district representatives and class officers as well as voting on a referendum for the ASC constitution.
\* \* \*
The All Student Council elections tomorrow and Wednesday will include a referendum to determine whether the office of ASC chairman can be held by a person whose council membership has expired.
Students to Vote In Referendum
Under the present provisions, the chairman is selected each spring from the membership of the council and serves until the following spring. If the chairman was elected to the council in the fall elections, that person will not be a member of the council during the latter portion of his term as chairman unless he runs again in the following fall elections.
To clear up the question of whether the chairman can keep his office after his regular term expires, the ASC decided to call for the following referendum:
"THE ALL STUDENT Council shall elect from its membership one person to serve during an entire session (a session shall be defined to be from spring election to spring election) as chairman of the All Student Council. If his regular term should expire during a session he shall retain his position as chairman as a member at large. A vice chairman, secretary, and treasurer shall also be elected from the membership of the council. They shall serve only during their tenure as members of the council."
The referendum question will not appear in its entirety on the ballots.
A problem arose this year when Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior and acting chairman of the ASC, was supposed to be relieved of his membership on the ASC at semester break because he had served on the ASC for one year, all that is allowed in the Constitution.
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Palmer was elected to ASC membership in the fall of 1960 but not until the spring of 1961 was he elected the chairman. Therefore, for the last semester, he has been serving as chairman of the ASC but technically was not a member.
Max Eberhart, present Student body president, said he expects about 3,200 students to cast their ballots in the two-day election. He added that this is not a large voting turnout for a school with 10,000 students but it is large in comparison with past elections.
He said that he expected the student body president elections to be somewhat close.
"THE WINNER won't win by more than 350 votes," he said, "They've both campaigned hard."
Gerald (Kep) Kepner, the University Party candidate for student body president, said the election will probably be close; he predicted the total vote to be around 3.500.
His Vox Populi opponent, Jerry Dickson, was more optimistic about the voting turnout, predicting it to be approximately 4.000.
Mel Saferstein, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student and ASC elections committee chairman, set his prediction at 3.000.
Kepner stressed that both he and Dickson wanted to campaign on their individual merits, but added that he thought most Greek houses would vote by their party and that the large dormitory vote might make the difference.
SENIOR CLASS — president,
Chuck Patterson, Rockford, Ill., and
Mike Mead, Kansas City, Mo.; vice
president, Phil McKnight, Wichita,
and Chuck Burin, Imperial, Pa.; secretary, Judy Geisendorf, Salina, and Ruth Ann James, Kansas City, Mo.; treasurer, Cleve Howard, Wichita, and LaWalta Heyde, Shawnee Mission.
JUNIOR CLASS — president, David Brollier, Hugoton, and Carl Logan, Holliday; vice president, Robert Bush, Webster Groves, Mo. and John Linden, Salina; secretary, Betty Carpenter, Kirkwood, Mo. Joyce Manville, Wathena, and Suzanne Runnels, Greeley, Colo.; treasurer, Bruce Null, Grand Island, Neb. and Judy Southard, Springfield, Mo.
Candidates for the class offices are:
SOPHOMORE — president, Gary Bell, McNeil, Lejouvenat, Columbus, Neb., and Doyle White, Arkansas City; vice president, Charles Blaas, Lawrence, and Barry Duwe, Lucas; secretary, Carolyn Power, Kansas City, Mo. and Mary Louise St. Clair, Independence; treasurer, Nancy Patterson, Wichita, and Allan Clark, Wichita.
(Continued on page 8)
Candidates for Student body
59th Year, No.123
Power Balance Affects Geneva Test Ban Talks
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
In world armament such a balance exists that it is unlikely that any nation deliberately would touch off a war.
Yet that very balance is a negative force, the nature of which was described by United Nations Secretary General U Thant.
The United States and Russia, the world's two super-powers, he said, "may not be able to make the world behave as they wish, but they have the power to destroy it."
And with the prospect that this destructive power may be doubled by 1966, there has come the mounting fear of a war by accident and the pressing realization that a halt to the arms race no longer is a goal for the future but a necessity for the present.
AT THE 17-NATION disarmament conference in Geneva, the United States and the Soviet Union have presented their rival plans for world disarmament.
On the surface they bear many similarities.
Both call for a halt to production of fissionable materials for nuclear weapons.
Both call for arms and troop cuts under supervision.
Both would discard the means of delivery of such weapons.
And both call for an international peace-keeping force.
But there the similarity ends abruptly.
THE SOVIET UNION refused to permit verification of arms retained. It also refused to permit international inspection of suspected nuclear test sites and calls for an uncontrolled moratorium on underground nuclear tests.
At Geneva, the eight so-called uncommitted nations, generally have shown themselves more sympathetic to the Russian proposals than to those advanced by the United States and Britain.
U. S. ambassador Arthur H. Dean curtly told the Russians that the United States, having been deceived once, does "not have any confidence in a Soviet pledge."
One is that the Russians genuinely fear espionage.
SOVIET INSISTENCE on veto rights over inspection of suspected test sites and arms reduction has led to two lines of speculation.
The other is that Russia actually is not interested in calling off the arms race, and merely seeks propaganda advantage from renewed U.S. nuclear testing. If the Russians were sincere, it seems probable that a first step could be taken in troop reductions without great risk to either side.
For, as the United States already has told U Thant, "Nuclear weapons are a necessary deterrent to a potential aggressor who is armed with such weapons and openly threatens the free world."
Meanwhile, at Johnston and Christmas Islands in the Pacific, the air strips, the mess halls, the dugouts and the warehouses are ready for the next U.S. nuclear tests, now scheduled for this week.
Without inspection no nuclear agreement seems possible.
Fair this afternoon, tonight and
Tuesday. Warmer this afternoon
and Tuesday and over Northwest
portion tonight. Increasing southerly
winds Tuesday. Low tonight in
the 40s. High Tuesday near 80.
Weather
Northeast — Fair and warmer today, tonight and Tuesday. High around 70. Low tonight mid 40s. High Tuesdays 75 to 80.
Too Many Arrive For Corps Exam
Thirteen potential Peace Corps members were turned away from taking the Peace Corps examination, held at the Lawrence Post Office Saturday because of a shortage of test forms.
"We're doing everything in our power to get the test re-scheduled as soon as possible," Phillip Stiles, assistant civil service examiner, said.
HE SAID only ten tests had been sent from Washington instead of the expected 20. As it was, 23 students showed up to take the examination.
Stiles said a rise in interest in the Peace Corps in this area has tripled the number of applicants.
Asked how the tests are distributed to the various examination centers, Stiles said he did not know, but that the number of tests sent out probably was based on the number showing up for previous examinations.
At the last testing day in February, only seven persons appeared. At that session they had 20 tests mailed to them from the Peace Corps Department in Washington.
A PEACE CORPS official who was at KU last October was critical about the lack of interest displayed here for the Peace Corps. At the October meeting, only eight KU students inquired about the Peace Corps program while field representative Frank Kiehne was on campus holding interviews. That figure, Kiehne said, was "disappointing." He said 400 students at St. Louis University, and 90 percent of the graduating class at the University of Kansas City's dental school had attended speeches he made at those schools.
Since that time, interest in the Peace Corps has gradually increased at KU.
Clark Coan, secretary to the university committee on international affairs, and assistant dean of students, said recently that since March 1 he has had an average of five students a day inquire about the Peace Corps, and to pick up literature about the program.
Stiles said that based on the number showing up at the testing session Saturday, probably even more will show up next time. Part of the increase in interest he attributes to the establishment of a Peace Corps training center at KU.
THE KU TRAINING program will be an eight-week session directed by Thomas Gale, assistant professor of history. It will begin October 26.
and will emphasize training teachers for secondary education. The program will cover English and basic sciences, counseling and guidance, and five members will be trained to assist in university education at the University of Costa Rica in San Jose.
At least one of the Peace Corps applicants, fortunate enough to be able to take the test Saturday, plans to take part in the Costa Rican training program. Ruth Rogers, Kansas City, Mo., senior, hopes to go to Costa Rica if she is admitted to the Corps.
ASKED ABOUT THE test, she said. "It was more difficult than I had expected, but it wasn't too bad." Judith Woods, who is not currently enrolled at KU, said that she would like to go to South America,
"Ive had Spanish," she said, "and I would like to go to South America—but I'm not particular."
She is presently teaching elementary school, and plans to enroll at KU this summer to finish her degree in education.
In addition to monthly subsistance allowances, Peace Corps members will have $75 a month held for them by the U.S. government which will be paid to them in a lump sum of $1800 at the end of their two-year terms of service.
Crash Kills 4 West of Here
Four persons died—three of them College of Emporia students—as the result of a two-car head-on collision four miles west of Lawrence yesterday.
Dead were Elizabeth Crank, 20,
Topeka; William Wheatly, 45, Topeka;
Alfomila Awevilla, 20, San Francisco,
Calif., and Kenneth Thiele,
18, Wantaugh, N.Y.
Earnest Bruno, 22, of Forbes Air Force base near Topeka; his wife, Beverly Bruno, 21; Ruth Elizabeth Wheatly, 55, Topeka, and Bill Easterlin, 18, of Long Island, N.Y., were taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, apparently in serious condition.
The Kansas Highway Patrol said the two cars met at the top of a hill when one of them was on the wrong side of the road.
Miss Crank, Easterlin, Miss Avecilla and Thiele were Emporia students.
Alone or With Crowd, He Will Walk in Protest
Alone or with a crowd of sympathizers, Charles McReynolds is going to march tomorrow afternoon in protest to nuclear testing.
"This is for concerned individuals—it's not an organization thing. I'm doing it as an individual. I'll walk by myself if nobody else comes." McReynolds, a Coffeyville graduate student, said.
HE SAID he will carry a sign protesting the resumption of nuclear testing by the United States. He plans to walk down Massachusetts Street, up 14th and along Jayhawk Boulevard.
"It is not crackpot. Nuclear testing is crackpot, and nuclear war is insane," he said.
He invited others who feel the same way to join the protest march. "Anyone who cares to walk along can meet me at 1:30 Tuesday at 7th and Massachusetts Streets."
McREYNOLDS SUMMED up his reasons for the demonstration this wav:
"The resumption of testing serves no useful purpose. It will only bring more testing by the Russians.
"A defensive posture based on nuclear weapons is not adequate because it cannot be used... If we are willing to use them this contradicts our own fundamental values of respect for human life.
"Nuclear war is no longer capable of protecting human life or human freedom. We clearly have no choice but to seek alternatives to nuclear war."
University Daily Kansan Monday. April 23. 1962
Page 2
The All Student Council Elections
Tomorrow final elections for All Student Council representatives from the Schools of the University and for student body president and vice president will be held. In an effort to supply the student body with information and evaluation of the candidates, the Kansan is presenting material on the candidates in the special editorial focus on pages two and three.
Except where it is so indicated, all the candidates for each office were interviewed and filled out information forms provided by the Kansan. The forms were designed to obtain information concerning each candidate's past, present and future academic and student activities, the time available for the duties of ASC office, each candidate's knowledge of the structure of the ASC and its activities and each candidate's concept of the office he is running for.
IN THE INTERVIEWS, each candidate was questioned by seven Kansan executives. The recommendations of each executive were turned in to the editorial staff, which made the final decision in each case. Agreement on the endorsements was almost unanimous among the seven executives.
The interview questions concerned the discrimination problem at KU, the activities of the ASC committees, the football stadium seating plan, the candidate's own ideas on legislation and whether or not each candidate agreed with all the planks in his party's platform. The candidates for student body president and vice president were also asked if they felt the ASC was receiving sufficient funds to carry out its duties and programs and what factors they thought should be considered in alloting money to any campus organization.
BEFORE THE decision to endorse or refuse to endorse a candidate from a particular district was made, all the information available from the interviews and questionnaires was considered and discussed. Where a candidate had previously held office, his past performance was evaluated.
Background material on each candidate's activities is included in this Kansan focus. Space limitations make
it impossible to give all the information available on each candidate or to indicate each candidate's answers to the questions asked during his interview.
The Kansan has recommended what it considers the best candidates. However, the ability and background of many candidates was inadequate. In one case it resulted in a refusal by the Kansan to recommend either candidate.
THE KANSAN'S recommendation on the presidential and vice presidential candidates was made on the basis of Dickson's greater experience in student government and knowledge of campus affairs. Kepner was considered able, but lacks the experience necessary in such a position as student body president. Of the two vice presidential candidates, Tom Hardy was considered the better one. But since it is not possible to split the vote for president and vice president, the Kansan decided to recommend Dickson.
A total of eight specific candidates have been recommended by the Kansan. Of these, five are Vox candidates, one is a UP candidate and two are independent candidates running without party affiliation. In one case, the Kansan believes the opposing candidates to be about equally qualified and has made no recommendation. One set of candidates was not available for the Kansan interview and therefore no information can be offered on them.
The Kansan's recommendations are made to point out the candidates best qualified for the various ASC offices being filled by tomorrow's election.
—The Editors
Jerry Dickson
Venom Hero
Gerald Kepner
100
George Hahm
1920
Tom Hardy
PETER BARNARD
Larry Borcherding
Student Body President
JERRY DICKSON (Vox] — Delta Upsilon. Newton junior, Past and present activities: president of Interfraternity Pledge Council, ASC National Student Association committee, membership chairman of Young Republicans, president of Young Republicans, Homecoming Queen committee, State Young Republicans Collegiate Council, ASC representative from fraternity district, chairman of ASC Athletic Seating committee. Activities planned during tenure of office: None.
GERALD (KEP) KEPNER (UP) — Sigma Chi. Wichita junior. Past and present activities: Junior class president, Owl Society, KU Relays committee, Campus committee of University Party, Rock Chalk staff, Interfraternity Council, cheerleader. Activities planned during tenure of office: KU Relays Committee, Sigma Chi treasurer.
Student Body Vice President
GEORGE HAHM (Vox) — Battenfeld Hall. Scotch Plains, New Jersey, junior. Past and present activities: ASC representative from small men's dormitories, secretary of Battenfield Hall, Campus Chest. Activities planned during tenure of office. None.
TOM HARDY (UP) Pearson Hall. Hoisington junior. Past and present activities: Co-chairman of University Party, chairman of ASC Housing committee, Model United Nations, Men's Scholarship Hall Council, Sigma Pi Sigma (honorary physics fraternity), American Finance Association. Activities planned during tenure of office: Model U.N., American Finance Association.
THE KANSAN RECOMMENDS: Jerry Dickson, because of his superior experience in student activities and his service on the ASC. We cannot recommend Hahm, whose experience and Kansan interview indicate he is not as well qualified as Hardy.
Business
LARRY BORCHERDING (Vox) — Delta Chi. Kansas City, Mo., junior. Past and present activities: Young Republicans, fraternity president, fraternity rush chairman, student directory, Business School Council. Activities planned during tenure of office: Business School Council, fraternity president.
B. L. M. K. N. A. S. E. T. W. H. S. J. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M
Mel Bloomfield
PENN STATE UNIVERSITY
Don Warner
(1)
Blaine King
SILVER SMITH
Greg Turner
Kay Cash
MEL BLOOMFIELD (UP) - Phi Delta Theta. Fort Scott junior. Past and present activities: Alpha Kappa Psi (professional business fraternity). Business School Council. Activities planned during tenure of office: Business School Council, Alpha Kappa Psi.
THE KANSAN RECOMMENDS: Larry Borcherding, because of a clearer understanding of the All Student Council and what the duties of an ASC representative are.
College Men
BLAINE KING (UP)—Alpha Kappa Lambda Emporia junior. Past and present activities: Interfraternity Council, Rock Chalk, Jayhawker yearbook, Greek Week project committee. Activities planned during tenure of office: House officer, Jayhawker advisory board, College Intermediary Board (if elected).
DON WARNER (Independent) — Beta Theta Pi. Topeka junior, Past and present activities: Wesley Foundation, Civil Rights Council, Action parliament. Activities planned during tenure of office: Wesley Foundation, Action, CRC, Student Peace Union.
GREG TURNER (Vox) — Phi Kappa Psi, Seattle, Washington, sophomore. Past and present activities: chairman of Western Bloc of Model U.N., Interfraternity Council, Jayhawker yearbook, house treasurer. Activities planned during tenure of office: Steering Committee of Model U.N., house officer.
THE KANSAN RECOMMENDS: Don Warner, because of his experience in student activities and his willingness to deal with controversial issues.
College Women
KAY CASH (UP) — Pi Beta Phi. Cleveland, Ohio, sophomore. Past and present activities: CWEN's, Model U.N., secretary of Campus Chest, ASC representative, ASC elections committee, Student Union Activities, Freshman Leadership Day hostess. Activities planned during tenure of office: undecided.
JANICE HUFFMAN (Vox) — Delta Delta Delta. Junction City sophomore. Past and present activities: SUA, Associated Women Students, scholarship chairman at GSP, social chairman at Corbin. Activities planned during tenure of office: SUA, AWS.
THE KANSAN RECOMMENDS: Kay Cash, because of better responses to her interview questions and previous experience on the ASC.
Monday. April 23. 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
AUGUST 14, 1983
THE NEW YORKER
Janice Huffman
Nolen Ellison
A. S.
Dick Jones
---
Mike Swink
HA CHI
Connie Hines
Elections To Begin Tomorrow for ASC
Elections for the All Student Council seats for School representatives take place tomorrow and Wednesday. A referendum is included to determine whether or not the office of ASC chairman can be held by a person whose council membership has expired.
All students have the right to vote for the representative from their particular school. Class officers are also being elected.
NOLEN ELLISON (Independent) Alpha Phi Alpha. Kansas City junior. Past and present activities: fraternity president, Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship, Civil Rights Council. Activities planned during tenure of office: Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship.
Education
CONSTANCE FRY (UP) — Kappa Alpha Theta. Prairie Village junior. Past and present activities: KU-Y, sorority secretary and rush chairman assistant, Panhellenic Clearing committee, AWS, P-t-P. Activities planned during tenure of office: sorority secretary, National Education Association, P-t-P.
THE KANSAN RECOMMENDS: Nolen Ellison, because of the interest he indicated in his interview and because Miss Fry will be engaged in student teaching during the spring semester and may not be on the campus.
JUDY FITTS (Vox) — No information available.
DICK JONES (Vox) — Templin Hall. Lenexa freshman. Past and present activities: Templin Hall Senate. Activities planned during tenure of office: Templin Senate, American Society of Tool and Manufacturing Engineers.
Engineering
MIKE SWINK (UP) — Templin Hall. Prairie Village junior. Past and present activities: Templin social chairman, Templin Senate, Templin "Observer" staff, Templin judicial council, co-chairman Navy Ring Dance, Eta Kappa Nu (honorary engineering fraternity), Scabbard and Blade. Activities planned during tenure of office: Templin Senate.
THE KANSAN RECOMMENDS: Dick Jones, because of the clear understanding of the duties of the office he showed in his interview and the grasp of campus affairs he has acquired after only one year at KU.
Fine Arts
CONNIE HINES (UP) — Lewis Hall. Salina sophomore. Past and present activities: KU-Y, Lutheran Student Association, Activities planned during tenure of office: KU-Y, People-to-People.
ANNE PEDDIE (Vox) — Alpha Omicron Pi. Wichita junior, Past and present activities: Young Republicans, Canterbury Club, Jayhawker yearbook, pledge president. Activities planned during tenure of office: AWS, SUA.
THE KANSAN RECOMMENDS: neither since both seem to be poorly qualified.
Graduate
LARRY JONES (UP)—Independent. St. John graduate student. Past and present activities: Model U.N., SUA, treasurer and scholarship chairman Stephenson Hall, Model U.N., Homecoming Queen committee. Activities planned during tenure of office: History Club, teaching assistantship.
RAB MALIK (Vox) - Independent. Karachi, Pakistan, graduate student. Past and present activities: President of Muslim association at KU, Steering committee of Model U.N., counselor for foreign student orientation program. International Club. Activities planned during tenure of office: Data unavailable.
HANS KRAUSE (Independent) — Independent. Caracas, Venezuela, graduate student. Past and present activities: Latin America Club, Model U.N. Activities planned during tenure of office: Latin America Club, International Club.
THE KANSAN RECOMMENDS: Rab Malik, because of a wider range of experience in student activities, both at KU and abroad, and his readiness to consider controversial issues and take a definite position on them.
LARRY MILNE (Vox) Married. Hiawatha senior.Past and present activities: Model U.N.,
Pharmacy
New York
Anne Peddie
mohd abul rahman ahmed khan
Rab Malik
C
Larry Jones
TOMMY SCHNEIDER
Hans Krause
Larry Milne
C. A. BARRISON
A. E. M.
Phyllis Wertzberger
American Pharmaceutical Association, president of student chapter, delegate to national convention, National Science Foundation research fellow. Activities planned during tenure of office: American Pharmaceutical Association, National Science Foundation research.
PHYLLIIS WERTZBERGER (UP) — Pi Beta Phi. Lawrence senior. Past and present activities: president of Frosh Hawks, Quack Club, American Pharmaceutical Association, ASC (sorority representative, vice chairman ASC, chairman of committee on committees and legislation), executive council of Pi Beta Phi. Activities planned during tenure of office: American Pharmaceutical Association.
THE KANSAN RECOMMENDS: Larry Milne, because of slightly better responses to the interview questions and because his questionnaire indicates he will have more time to devote to the duties of the office.
Journalism
DENNIS BRANSTITER (Vox) — Kappa Sigma. Independence, Mo., junior. Past and present activities: fraternity rush and pledge training committees, Sigma Delta Chi (professional journalism fraternity). Activities planned during tenure of office: Sigma Delta Chi, fraternity pledge training committee.
ZEKE WIGGLESWORTH (Independent) Married, Lawrence junior. Past and present activities: Student Senate at Ft. Lewis A&M College, editor student newspaper at Ft. Lewis A&M College, International Club at Ft. Lewis A&M. Activities planned during tenure of office: Signa Delta Chi.
BEN MARSHALL (UP) — Beta Theta Pi. Lincoln junior. Past and present activities: Jayhawker sports editor, editor Alpha Nu (fraternity rush book), fraternity librarian and activities chairman. Activities planned during tenure of office: University Party, Jayhawker editor (if selected).
THE KANSAN RECOMMENDS: any of the three, since all are well qualified.
Law
No information available on candidates.
Executive Duties
Article V—Executive Division
SECTION 1: The executive and administrative powers of this association shall be delegated to a President and a Vice President of the University Student Body...
SECTION 3: In the event of the resignation of the President of the Student Body the Vice President shall assume the presidency. Should both the President and the Vice President resign their posts, the All Student Council shall elect a successor who shall meet the same qualifications as any candidate for the presidency.
SECTION 4: The President shall submit oral and written reports to the Council three times a year; which shall be the second meeting of the Council in the fall, the first meeting of the second semester, and the joint meeting of the old and new councils in the spring. ...
SECTION 5: The President of the Student Body shall make the following appointments with the approval of two-thirds of the members present of the All Student Council.
Subsection A: All Faculty Advisory and University Committees.
Subsection B: All members of the Student Court.
Subsection C: Secretary, Department of Student Welfare.
Subsection D: Any other committees found to be necessary in the course of his duties, or any requested of him by the Council, except those reserved to the Vice President and the Council.
SECTION 6: The Vice President of the Student Body shall make the following appointments with the approval of two-thirds of the members present of the Council.
Subsection A: Secretary, Department of Public Relations.
Subsection B: Secretary, Department of Student Activities.
Subsection C: Any other committees that may be delegated to him by either the President or the Council.
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 23. 1962
Spring!—and Down the Hall-
By Richard Bonett
"Ah, sweet spring — NUTS!"
"Sitting in this cell — just like some kind of medieval monk, the same page staring up at you for half an hour. If there's a message there, if just doesn't come through."
(Somewhere down the hall the happy sound of a bull session mingles with music from a record player or radio.)
"Brother, if I don't study for this chemistry exam I've had it — like shot down. But it's spring. Things are happening. . . . OK, forget it. Now concentrate. . . . "
(Feel that vague panicky feeling sending a shiver down your spine.) "That %$# g$"*d test!"
(LEAN BACK in your chair and stretch your arms. But all the squirming and shifting doesn't take the hardness out of the back, or seat.
(A whiff of spring air, half warm,
half cool, charges through a partially
opened window. That bird has been
chirping its head off all afternoon.)
"BOY. IF I don't pass this test..."
"What was it that put Mike Boucher (Overland Park sophomore) said? Oh, yeah. 'I always make my worst grades during the spring semester, but I'm glad to see it come anyway.'
"I guess it's the same with everybody. . . . Man, I'd sure like to be wrapping myself around a cool one somewhere.
"There are so many important things that need to be done. The old pitching arm has to be put in shape. The car hasn't been washed since last fall. And . . . oh, hell . . . I've got that chemistry test."
(Sharon Ray, a Joplin, Mo., freshman, and Cynthia Watts, a Mission freshman, were sunning themselves in front of Strong Hall. A couple of nice kids. They've got the same problem.)
"Til JUST have to stay up late to do all the studying I can't do when it's daylight." That's the way Cynthia thinks she's going to beat it. "Yeah, wish her luck."
(And Max Shellhaas, a Hays junior, just plunked down on one of those iron rail guards along Jayhawk Drive.) Remember what he said: "It just makes me feel lackadaisical."
(Alright now, come on. Down to work...)
Mayor Tells of People In Kansas' Early Days
"If only those guys down the hall would pipe down. . . If only this chair wasn't so hard. . . If only that stupid bird. . ."
"Statehood was difficult for us," he said. "And in the end, it is not railroads or money, but people, who finally make up a state."
Speaking at the International Club meeting Friday night, Ted Kennedy, mayor of Lawrence, gave some colorful anecdotes about people in Kansas history.
(WHAT YOU need is a soft drink.
"Free land and the railroads did as much to bring people to Kansas as anything else," the mayor said.
"The common price for land in Kansas was at one time as low as $1.25 an acre," Mayor Kennedy said. "And the government gave 20 million acres of Kansas land to the railroads as an incentive to get them to build a railroad across the state."
AT ONE TIME, Kansas land was open to homesteading. A man could settle on 160 acres, improve it, and live there for five years to acquire ownership. Land was also for sale by the government and by the railroads.
The mayor read examples from old Kansas newspapers during his talk. He said that he is "fascinated" by some of the news accounts.
But the old-timers were not without a sense of humor, as evidenced by an account of a divorce proceeding the mayor gave.
"SOME OF THEM will turn your hair gray," he said, "if it is not already gray. But in the early days some pretty wild things were reported as routine news events."
"One couple traveling to the West, decided they could not stand the blissful state of matrimony any longer. They got a few witnesses together, agreed to disagree, sawed their wagon in half, divided their goods, each took a horse, and they separated. One went to California, and the other to Oregon — each with a two-wheeled cart.
The mayor said that he thinks it is significant that the only time President Lincoln came west, he visited Kansas. But despite popular belief to the contrary, he said that Lincoln never visited Lawrence.
"THATS WHAT I call a complete separation," Mayor Kennedy said. "But like most newspapers," he added, "you can believe about half of what you read in them."
"One day when Lincoln was on the way from Atchison to Leavenworth," the mayor said, "he stopped and stepped out of his buggy and looked over the countryside and said, 'Kansas is truly beautiful — America is truly beautiful.'"
According to Mayor Kennedy, Lincoln spent most of his time in Leavenworth and personally helped Kansas gain statehood.
THAT SAME DAY, according to the mayor, another man said about the same words. His name was John Brown, and he was riding on his coffin on his way to be hanged.
"No matter how you may feel about John Brown," the mayor said, "you can't forget that less than ten years from the day he was hanged, freedom for all Americans was won, and the 100 years war to make America a democracy for all Americans began."
He told the international students that, "If you scratch the veneer of your Kansas classmates, you will find that all of them had a pioneer grandfather.
"There have been some wild times in Kansas, as there is now in some other parts of the world. But we shouldn't be too impatient — a little over a hundred years ago there was no law at all here."
Just run downstairs and grab a quick one. Maybe take a little walk just to get the stiffness out.
PHOENIX, Ariz. — (UPI) — House Minority Leader Charles A. Halleke, R-Ind., sharply criticized federal spending Saturday night and accused President Kennedy of not backing up words with action.
(Better put an ash tray or something on that book so you don't lose your place.)
Halleck Rips Spending
Speaking at a Republican dinner, Halleck said, "He (President Kennedy) is trying to fulfill campaign pledges with reckless Presidential rhetoric, knowing that not even a Democratic-controlled Congress will buy all the proposals he had been making."
"Yeah, that sounds like a good idea. . . . This ash tray will do . . . Besides, I won't be gone long . . just a few minutes, no more.
The Indiana legislator said Kennedy had sent 24 messages involving spending to Congress. Halleck said what was needed was a 25th message "calling on the Congress to slow down."
"I really believe," said Halleck, "that if the President thought Congress would approve all of these things he'd be scared to death and take to the hills."
"Man, it feels good to stretch. I wonder what those guys down the hall are gumming it about anyway..."
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press Reprinted by National Advertising Servi-
cary of New York Jr. 22 N.Y. News service: United Print International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the day; every except Saturday and Sundays. University periodical examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
Dailu Hansan
Founded 1889, became bweekly 1904
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VKling 3-2700
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Official Bulletin
Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05
St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 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 Stratford Road.
Alabama Solons LimD
World Crisis Discussion Groups: 8 p.m.
30 Kansas Union. *Russian Foreign*
Policy.
Western Civilization Examination Registration
April 30 and May 4 in
130 Strong
TOMORROW
Epicapso Holy Communion & Breakfast:
7 a.m. Canterbury House.
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chanel.
Stage I; 9—Night Flight; 10—News &
Flight; 11—Flight, Stage II;
12-Portals of Prauer.
KUOK: 3—News & Weather; 3:05—Top Forty Tunes; 4—Hilltopping; 5—Hilltopping; 6—News & Weather; 6:15—Sports; 7—Titaker's Wax; 8—Wax; 6:25 Spotlight on Science; 9—Workers Medasmes; 4:54—Public Service Program; 7—Countdown; 8—Night Flight.
MONTGOMERY, Ala. — (UPI) — Many reapportionment-minded state senators currently adopt a decided limp when approaching a newsman on Capitol Hill.
The limping fad emphasizes that the senator is a "lame duck" legislator and ineligible for reelection under Alabama's system of rotating state senate seats.
SENIORS '63 Vote for:
Chuck Patterson - President
Phil McKnight-Vice President
★ Judy Geisendorf - Secretary
★ Walley Heyde - Treasurer
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Around the Campus
Page 5
1962 Water Ballet Starts Wednesday
"Splash Hits," the 1962 Quack Club water ballet, will be presented at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday in Robinson Gymnasium. It consists of swimming and diving acts accompanied by Broadway musical tunes.
Forty costumed girls will be featured along with special diving exhibitions and solo, duet and trio acts. Clown divers will appear.
Tickets are 50 cents each and may be purchased from Quack Club members at the physical education office in Robinson gymnasium or at each performance.
Acting Law Dean W. A. Kelly
To Talk in K. C. Wednesday
The Acting Dean of the Law School, William A. Kelly, will give a speech at the "Bread and Butter Luncheon" of the Lawyers Association of Kansas City Wednesday. The subject of Dean Kelly's speech will concern the recent developments in medical malpractice.
Road Behind Union to Close
Bumgartner Drive behind the Kansas Union will be closed to traffic for at least the next 10 days because of excavation for a steam tunnel. The tunnel will join the other steam tunnels that are used for heating buildings.
Panel Set to Discuss Medical Care Plans
"Medicare — Pro and Con" will be the discussion topic at the Presidential Forum, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Vaclaw Mudroch, assistant professor of history, and Oswald Backus, professor of history, will lead the discussion. Guest panelists are Dr. C. Y. Thomas Jr., a physician from Prairie Village, and L. R. C. Agnew, professor of history and chairman of the department of the history of medicine at KU.
Gale R. Adkins, assistant professor of journalism, will be at the University of Nebraska on Wednesday and Thursday. He will be serving as consultant on a proposed project to establish a regional library of materials for use in televised instruction. Last year Professor Adkins visited universities and educational television stations in a nine-state area during the exploratory phase of the project.
In conjunction with the congressional debate technically labelled the King Anderson Bill, Dr. Thomas will take a position in opposition to the proposition. Dr. Agnew will take the stand for President Kennedy's medical aid to the aged plan.
KU Professor at TV School
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Richard Angletti, instructor of piano, will present a recital at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Angeletti to Play at 8 Tonight in Swarthout
Mr. Angeletti, faculty sponsor for Phi Mu Alpha Sinifonia, professional music fraternity, will play "Partita in D Major" by Bach, "Phantasie in C Major" by Schumann, and the two-movement "Sonata in F-Sharp Major" by Beethoven. Admission is free.
Thirty-two International students took part in the People-to-People industrial tour to Kansas City last Saturday.
Foreign Students Tour WDAF-TV
They left here in a KU bus at 1:15 p.m. to tour the WDAF television studios and saw the programming of a live show, "TV Teen Hop," and were shown how a movie is broadcast on a national network.
The industrial tours chairman, Barbara Cowen, Junction City sophomore, said that most of the tour members were impressed by the order and calm of the television studios.
Fined for Gun Shot
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — (UPI) — Albert Sterrett dislikes automobile horns so when a motorist sounded off he fired a shotgun at the car.
Municipal Judge Charles Daugherty fined Sterrett $310 yesterday for firing a gun in the city limits.
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT
Attention All SUA Members!
The SUA will hold interviews for the following positions during the next three weeks. If you have worked in SUA this year, either as a committee member or as a committee chairman, you are eligible to apply for chairmanships listed below.
Day of Interview
Position
April 25 Chairman of Men's and Women's Bowling Chairman of Quarterback Club Chairman of Traditions Dance
April 26 Chairman and members of the SUA Summer Board which will supervise SUA activities at summer school
May 1 Chairman and sub-chairman of the Union Opening
May 2 Chairman of Chancellor's Reception Chairman of Activities Carnival
May 3 Chairman and sub-chairman of SUA Carnival
May 9 Chairman of Displays in the Union Chairman of Exhibits in the Union Chairman of SUA film series
May 10 Chairman of Fall Concert Chairman of Feature Speaker series
Applications may be picked up in the Activities Director's office in the Union. Remember, these positions will be filled this spring. Interviews will not be held in the fall for these chairmanships.
NEED A RIDE? NEED RIDERS?
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Find That Group Under "Transportation" in Your
DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
VI 3-2700-Ext.376
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 23. 1962
Southern Sweeps KU Relays
By Roy Miller
Representing a small Texas school, a coach and 11 men entered the Kansas Relais Friday.
This same 11-man team and the same coach left Lawrence to return to their same small Texas school Saturday, but not until they had established two KU Relays records, became the first team in Relays history to win six relay titles and had one of their team members chosen the outdoor carnival's outstanding performer.
TEXAS SOUTHERN, the small Texas school, and its coach, Stanley Wright, also left Mt. Oread with a great deal of admiration from a Saturday crowd of about 15,000 persons.
In all, eight KU Relays records were broken before the 37th annual, and possibly the last to be held in Memorial Stadium, outdoor carnival ended late Saturday afternoon.
Texas Southern, competing in the college division, started its record assault Friday when Ray Sadler, Homer Jones, T. J. Bell and Major Adams finished the sprint medley in 3:19.8, two and eight-tenths seconds better than the previous record.
SOUTHERN'S OTHER record came in the mile relay Saturday when Melvin Houston, Wesley Blackmon, Saddler and Lester Milburn finished in 3:11, knocking six-tenths of a second off their own record set Friday in the preliminaries.
Southern's first place finish in the distance medley came with two and three-tenths seconds of the listed Relays record and their 440 effort was two-tenths of a second slower than the posted best.
Texas Southern's first in the half-mile baton event was six-tenths of a second off the record and the two-mile quartet finished 11 and one-tenth seconds off the Relays mark.
SOUTHERN'S SADDLER, who ran the first leg on the sprint medley crew, anchored the two-mile victory and ran the third leg in the mile race, was selected the carnival's most outstanding athlete by the sportswriters.
Saddler had 10 1/11 votes and Pat Clohessy, Houston, who won the three-mile run and the Glenn Cunningham mile, was second with four votes.
KU's own track team won only one first at the meet. The Javahawk- four-mile team of Mike Fulghum, Bill Thornton, Ted Riesinger and Bill Dotson set a new Relays record with a 16:53.1 clocking. Their effort was the fastest ever in the Big Eight and five-tenths of a second better than the listed collegiate record.
BILL MILLER. McMurry, set a new record in the broad jump with a 25-6 leap. The mark, according to the field judge, came when wind was below the 4.5 maximum, even though gusts between five and 10 m.p.h. were prevalent Friday.
The favored Jayhawks fell behind Missouri in the two-mile relay as the Tigers finished in 7:24.2, two-tenths of a second faster than KU and good enough for a new Relays record.
The Tigers effort is also the best this year in the country and is the all-time Big Eight best.
Fred Hansen, Rice, set a new Relays record of 15-6 $ \frac{1}{4} $ in the pole vault, outperforming John Uelses and Henry Wadsworth, who tied at 15-$ \frac{1}{4} $ in their exhibition.
gained a first leg lead with a 1:53.2 half, compared to Jerry McFadden's 1:53.7. The Tiger's Greg Pelster outran Ted Riesinger. 1:50.8-1:15.6, and Bill Thornton brought the Jayhawks even with the Tigers with his 1:49.2 half compared to Bill Rawson's 1:49.5.
MISSOURI'S ANCHOR man, Jim Baker, finished with a 1:50.2 half-mile, while KU's Bill Dotson ran 1:55.3. Baker crossed the finish with a 15-yard lead.
With 5,000 fans remaining, Hansen cleared the bar on his third try. Hansen also tried unsuccessfully for the collegiate record of 15-10% and it was 6:18 p.m. before the 37th Kansas Relays officially ended.
In that race KU's Kirk Hagan
Wichita East Sets 3 Relays Records
Wichita East led a field of 54 high schools in the KU Relays Saturday with firsts in three events and as many new Relays records.
East's third first place came in the discus event. Jim Waskiecki heaved the disc for 170-4, bettering a 1958 effort of 164-9.
Topeka established a new Relays record in the half-mile baton event. Joe Phillips, Tom McBride, Andy Williams and Bill Harris finished in 1958, three-tenths of a second better than the previous record set in 1958. The Trojans also capped the sprint medley title.
East's 440-vard relay crew bettered the existing Relays mark and the all-time state prep record with a 430-clocking. Members of the Blue Ace foursome were Jim Wintors, Tim Boyle, Ken Stephens and Bob Hanson. The previous Relays and state best was set at the Relays in 1958 when Wichita North finished in 43:8.
Phil Mulkey, competing unattached, successfully defended his decathlon title and became the winningest athlete in Relays history.
The Blue Aces also established new Relays and all-time state marks in the mile relay. Boyle, Keith Thompson, Joe Henderson and Hanson turned in a 3:21.8 performance, topping a record set by East in 1957 of 3:23.3.
In Friday field event action two new KU Relays prep records were set. Steve Straight, Shawnee Mission North, cracked the second oldest Relays prep record when he leaped 6-5/12 in the high jump. The old mark, an eighth of an inch lower, had been listed since 1939.
Mulkey now owns six firsts in the decathlon, placing him ahead of Glenn Cunningham who owns five firsts in one event.
Mukley piled up a total of 7,480 points after nine of ten events, breaking his own record of 7,268 set last year.
J. D. Martin, unattached, who placed second in the decathlon, bettered the listed world record in the decathlon pole vault event. Martin leaped 15-2/4.
---
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Monday, April 23. 1962 University Daily Kansan
S
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events,
7,268
who in, betin the Martin
Page 7
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE PRESENTS
APRIL 25,26,27,28
SHAKESPEARE'S
EVAN
8:00 1962.
TWELFTH
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WITH MOM & DAD HERE DON'T MISS THE TWELFTH NIGHT
---
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 23, 1962
PARKER
William R. Parker
Parker to Talk On Education
William R. Parker, professor of English at Indiana University, will give the sixth of the 1961-62 Humanities Lectures at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Fraser Theater.
The subject of his talk will be "Milton's Ideas on Education — and Ours."
Prof. Parker will also speak at 4 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union on "Government and Public Education" and at 7:30 tonight in the Forum Room on "Foreign Language Study Tomorrow."
Politicos -
(Continued from page 1)
president and vice president and the ASC seats are listed on the editorial page in the Focus article, pages 2 & 3 of today's Daily Kansan.
Students will also be voting on an amendment to the ASC constitution which would allow the chairman of the All Student Council to continue his term of office a semester longer than the constitution now allows.
SAFERSTEIN SAID the three voting desks on the first floor of Strong Hall will be open from 8 a.m. to 5.15 p.m. Students should pick up their IBM cards in the basement of Strong before voting. No student will be allowed to vote without presenting his student identification card at the tables.
Students will select class officers for the class in which they will be enrolled next fall. They will vote for ASC representatives of their schools.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
South Viet Nam Says Cambodia Attacks Village
SAIGON, South Viet Nam—(UPI)
SAIGON, South Viet Nam - (UPT)
The government Viet Nam press agency today claimed that a strong force of Cambodian soldiers and bandits massacred 48 South Vietnamese civilians in a raid on a border hamlet in An Giang province about 100 miles east of Saigon last Friday.
The news agency said the raiders included 200 Cambodian soldiers and a group of "bandits." Local press reports identified the bandits as Cambodian Communists, known as Issarak Khmers, and said they totaled about 100.
The news agency dispatch said the attack took place on Vinh Lack hamlet near the village of Vinh Gia, which lies near the South Viet Nam-Cambodia frontier. It said that the victims included 15 women and 14 children. About 20 other villagers were seriously wounded in the raid, it said.
According to the news agency, the raiders crossed the frontier and then split into two forces, attacking the hamlet and a nearby military post with machineguns, automatic rifles and other weapons.
The report said the raiders burned down 30 houses and stole about 100 oxen. Two Vietnamese women were kidnapped but were released early Saturday, it said.
The agency said the raiders, wearing red and white turbans, "conducted theraid with savage brutality."
"The Cambodians, using swords and rifles, killed everyone they could lay hands on," it added.
Observers said the raid may have been an attempt by the Communists to stir up trouble between citizens of Vietnamese stock and those of Cambodian origin. Large numbers of Vietnamese citizens of Cambodian stock live in the border areas.
South Vietnamese government officials said the incident is being investigated and a protest may be filed with the government of Cambodia if warranted.
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Teacher Training Is Big Problem Parker Says
A professor of English at Indiana University, said last night that the number one problem for the foreign language profession is teacher training.
"We are a little late in this as well as in rockets, but we can catch up." William R. Parker, former chairman of the foreign language division of the U.S. Department of Education, said.
Prof. Parker will give the Humanities Lecture at 8 p.m. tonight in Fraser Theater. He will speak on John Milton.
HE EMPHASIZED that language teachers in the future will have a new duty—a duty to teach people to teach themselves a foreign language.
Parker, who ten years ago convinced Americans that they would have to "talk" to people if they were going to lead the world, answered the five most difficult questions concerning the future of foreign language study.
Foreign language for how many? "My present answer is everybody," Parker said.
HOW MUCH FOREIGN language study should be offered? Parker's answer was, "two years for every high school student and more for those desiring it."
"Every high school should offer four to six years of language study and if possible two foreign languages. College-bound persons will need a minimum of four years as preparation for teaching, business administration abroad, and foreign service.
"Those students with interest and aptitude must be identified as soon as possible." Parker added, "so they can be counseled and encouraged to study a language for four to ten years."
WHEN SHOULD foreign language study begin? Since younger children learn a language quicker than older ones or adults, language study should begin as far back from the senior year as possible, Parker said.
"In my judgment," Parker said, "every major American university should now offer instruction in about 50 foreign languages and should be stockpiling materials for the instruction of 50 more, should they be needed."
What kind of instruction is needed? Parker said that although it is difficult to decide which of the present 3,000 languages will be most serviceable, the experience of learning a second language makes it easier to learn a third, fourth, and fifth. He said that the experience of learning the first foreign language should be made a rewarding experience so it would be an eye-opening introduction in the process of learning a foreign language.
HE ENCOURAGED teachers to stop thinking of themselves as instructors of a specific language and start thinking of themselves as foreign language teachers.
He also urged them to be open-minded about new methods and techniques and work steadily to improve their own language.
Nuclear Tests May Resume Tomorrow
WASHINGTON (UPI) Preparations for the resumption of U.S. atmospheric nuclear tests appeared to be moving into their final stages today.
Officials have said the series is tentatively scheduled to start tomorrow. Whether this happens may depend on the weather and technical developments at the Christmas Island Testing Range, 1,200 miles south of Hawaii.
The apparently imminent resumption of the U.S. tests came as the Russians threatened to fire "new types" of nuclear weapons if the United States does the same.
59th Year, No.124
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Noon Election Count at 700
The chairman of the elections committee describes the turnout at this morning's ASC elections as "very strong."
Mel Saferstein, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student and chairman of the committee, said, that 687 students had voted by 11:50 this morning. This is an increase of exactly 100 votes over the same time in last Spring's elections.
"If the current voting rate keeps up," Saferstein said. "There should be 1,400 votes by 5:15 this afternoon when the polls close for the day."
Chairman Clyde Doyle, D-Calif. and the other three sub-committee members entered a side entrance unseen by the demonstrators. Doyle, who said the closed sessions would involve "subversive activities" in this area, would not comment further about the inquiry.
Students Picket Security Hearing
ALMOST 100 STUDENTS from several colleges and universities in and around Los Angeles began picketing one half hour before the hearing started shortly after 11 a.m. They were joined through the morning by additional students and marchers representing two organizations whose members have been subpoenaed for this investigation.
Tuesday, April 24, 1962
LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — A House Subcommittee on Un-American Activities opened four days of hearings under tight security restrictions here today while several hundred students and others picketed outside against the group.
The fifth floor of the Federal Building where the hearings were being conducted was restricted by Deputy U.S. Marshals to committee personnel and witnesses.
Those organizations are the Citizens Committee to Preserve American Freedoms and the Fair Play for Cuba committee.
It was reported that some 60 subpoenas had been issued to persons from those groups as well as from a student organization and local 2058 of the United Steelworkers Union.
MONITORS ASSIGNED by the picket leaders wore armbands, distributed leaflets and issued regulations which they said were aimed at keeping the demonstrations peaceful. Police said they knew of no planned disorder and said they thought student groups which favor the House Committee would confine their demonstrations to campuses.
Police kept the marchers within a path about three yards wide which was roped off along the entire length of the sidewalk outside the building. An equal amount of space was reserved for pedestrians and the wide space of sidewalk outside the main entrance was kept clear for the normal flow of persons using the building. A number of spectators formed to watch the pickets, however.
About a half hour after the picketting began, a motorist in a yellow station wagon drove alongside, shouting, "You're a traitor to your country, traitors every one of you." He kept driving while the pickets simply stared.
The pickets carried signs with slogans which included "Give 'em Hell, Subpoenaes," "Stop the Gestapo," "The Committee is Immoral." "Freedom Yes! Doyle and HUAC No." "Salem Witchhunt 1681, Judge Thatcher, Boston 1921, and HUAC 1962."
The precautionary measures were taken to prevent crowd scenes from erupting into violence like that which occurred when another such subcommittee held hearings in San Francisco in May. 1960. That episode was highlighted by police use of fire hoses on demonstrating students.
HE PRAISED his poll workers saying, "With the large number of ballots being cast, the poll workers are doing a fine job." This is an improvement over last semester when a polling place had to be closed for a time because of a lack of poll workers.
The polls opened about 15 minutes late this morning because of a mix up in the ballots. When the ballots were returned from the State printer in Topeka last night, the name of one student body president candidate was in capital letters and the other in small letters.
Because of this, the elections committee had to get the ballots reprinted by a local printer early this morning and put the voting numbers on by hand.
SAFERSTEIN SAID THAT three of the voting districts will need a marked increase in voting in order to get the number of votes required to be represented on the ASC. The constitution says that a district must have either 50 or one-half of the students enrolled in the school whichever is less, to be represented.
At 11:50, the School of Law had 18 of a required 50, the School of Journalism had seven of a needed 41, and the School of Pharmacy had only three of the 43 votes they need to get ASC representation.
"The rest of the districts seem assured of getting a seat," Saferstein said.
The freshmen are leading the other classes in voting for their class candidates. The current freshman class is voting for sophomore officers, the sophomores for junior officers and the juniors, and those seniors who will be returning next fall, for senior class officers.
the sophomore officer candidates have 253 votes,the junior aspirants 192 and the senior candidates.128.
The results of the ASC elections will not be known until tomorrow night when all the ballots will be counted.
The polls have been very active between classes with the lines thinning down during the class periods.
- * *
Printer's 'Goof' Causes Reprint of 5,000 Ballots
The ASC elections were almost trapped in quicksands last night but wiggled out just in time to start the elections this morning — seventeen minutes late.
The problem which held up the election was the length of a name — Gerald (Kep) Kepner Jr.
Mel Saferstein, St. Joseph, Mo. graduate student and elections committee chairman, discovered last night that on the presidential ballots, Jerry Dickson's name appeared in large bold capital letters. His UP opponent's name, Kepner, was not in bold letters. The state printer had goofed.
Saferstein then arranged for new ballots to be printed . . . here in Lawrence. Some 5,000 ballots were printed, all night long, to take the place of the 5,000 ballots which had to be discarded.
Saferstein picked the ballots up this morning at 6:30. Then began the race of getting them punched
before the 8 a.m. deadline. (Each ballot has to be punched for counting and to prevent ballot reproduction.
Saferstein said the state printer made the mistake because the name Gerald (Kep) Kepner Jr. was too long to put on the ballot. The printer evidently reduced the name to small letters so it would fit on the ballot.
The new ballots have both presidential candidate's names in full and in capital letters . . . but in smaller type.
But it looks as though Saferstein's worries aren't over yet because the printer also left on the ballots the name of class officer candidates who have withdrawn from the election and merely crossed the name over with a grev line.
Saferstein said that if students vote for those candidates who have withdrawn from the race, the ballots will have to be counted by hand.
BETTER LATE THAN NEVER—Mel Saferstein, St. Joseph, Mo., graduate student and election committee chairman, arrives at the polls 17 minutes late—with some of the freshly-reprinted and corrected ballots.
Nuclear Tests To Be Discussed By Professors
Four KU faculty members will discuss nuclear testing at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
John Ise, professor emeritus of economics; Harry Shaffer, assistant professor of economics; Charles Landesman, assistant professor of philosophy; and Richard Burke, assistant professor of human relations, will participate in the panel discussion sponsored by the Student Peace Union.
THE PANEL MEMBERS will present their opinions, question each other, and answer questions from the audience.
The discussion coincides with the date set for the resumption of nuclear testing by the United States.
Larry Laudan, Lawrence graduate student and acting chairman of the SPU, said, "This week is the week when this thing goes or not. If we can't take advantage of the interest created by nuclear testing we won't get started."
Laudan said the primary goal of the SPU is education.
"IT DOESN'T DO US, any good to talk to each other," he said.
to talk to each other," he said. "We've got to reach other people." Laudan said the group collected 327 names in two days last week on a petition against the resumption of nuclear testing by the United States. Forty faculty members were among those who signed the petition. Telegrams have been sent to President Kennedy, his advisers on disarmament, and Kansas' Representatives and Senators.
Laudan said new U.S. tests may well contribute to the spiraling arms race.
P. L.
Laudan said some were afraid to sign the petition. He said he got such replies as, "I agree with what you are trying to do, but I don't think I can come to your meetings . . . My career might be jeopardized . . ."
"WHERE IS THIS going to take us?" he said. "The question is not where we are today but where we will be 10 years from now."
Laudan said the SPU will meet tomorrow night to plan activities or the next few weeks. They will decide whether to make a "peace walk" on campus to protest against J.S. testing after resumption.
HE SAID HE received a long distance telephone call from the national SPU office saying they expect 45,000 to 50,000 students to participate in such walks in the United States this week if testing is resumed.
(The SPU did not officially endorse this afternoon's protest march by Charles McReynolds, Coffeyville graduate student. However, Laudan said this morning that several SPU members were planning to take part in the march.)
He said the local chapter of the SPU will distribute pamphlets explaining their position on nuclear testing.
Graduate Gets Fulbright Aid
The grant which will enable Miss Wright to study French history at the University of Nancy, Faculty des Lettres, provides round-trip transportation, orientation, tuition, books and maintenance.
Janet Wright, Prairie Village graduate student, has received a Fulbright grant for study in France next year.
Miss Wright, a history and sociology major, graduated with distinction in February, 1962, and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa last week. She has been president of Mortar Board, senior women's honorary society; chairman of the Elizabeth M. Watkins scholars, highest all-University honor accorded undergraduate women, and president of Junior Panhellenic.
Earlier this month, Miss Wright was named an alternate Woodrow Wilson scholar for study at the University of Clermont-Ferrand in France.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 24, 1962
The Backward Label
The state of Kansas has often been labeled isolationist as far as politics is concerned. A recent occurrence in Bourbon county may also label Kansas as isolationist as far as sex is concerned.
A group of Bourbon county parents recently raised irate voices about the introduction of sex education booklets into the Bourbon county school system.
The booklets were prepared by the American Medical Association and the National Education Association, and approved by the State Board of Education. The assistant director of the maternal and child health division of the State Board of Health sent the booklets to county school superintendents.
"IT'S ONE of the best sets I have even seen written for specific age levels," she said. The books have reportedly been in use for 20 years. They are now in their fifth printing after revision in 1955. Sixty-four county superintendents requested additional copies for their districts from
Thus it appears that the entire state is not against sex, but only a portion of it. Nevertheless, it's this portion that attracts attention and brings on the labels.
the State Board of Health after the original mailing.
It's hard to see how books on sex prepared by the American Medical Association and the National Educational Association and approved by the State Board of Health could cause too much harm to the tender minds of Kansas' youth.
OF COURSE, there's always the possibility that the 1955 revision introduced some modern shocking material and no one but the Bourbon county parents have caught it. Or perhaps the Bourbon county parents have uncovered a massive enemy plot to infiltrate the minds of our youth through sex.
Instead of castigation, they may deserve a vote of thanks for protecting the minds of our youth. The state surely won't mind furthering the isolatist and backward labels, especially as far as sex is concerned. —Karl Koch
Model U.N. Criticized
If I may, I would like to make a few constructive remarks about the Model United Nations program which took place at KU April 13-14.
The representatives (the great majority of them) did not know what they were doing! That is the case simply and to the point. Several had an idea (others, not the merest notion) of where they were going and what they were about.
The opening address by Sir Muhammad Zafrulla Khan, the Ambassador to the United Nations from Pakistan, was most inspiring, and yet ideal enough to be constructive. There was no fault with this portion of the program. The trouble began when the so-called intellects of the KU campus began their discussions of the resolutions on the agenda.
As I was told, or at least led to believe, the Model U.N.'s purpose was—to offer an opportunity to interested students to meet in a body
... Letters . . .
IN MANY cases the meeting became a playground for the childish rentals and ravings of the delegate from the U.S.S.R. Under the guise of "acting as the actual representative (from the U.S.S.R.) does," he entertained the others present—but accomplished nothing,
similar to the actual United Nations (i.e., the group was to be broken down into as many actual member nation groups as possible and debate world issues from the different points of view of the U.N.'s members).
From the outside of Hoch, if one had been looking in, this may have appeared to be the case, but upon entering the building one was, to say the very least, rudely awakened to find such infantile banterings as:
"Our legation is not 'Red China,' we are the People's Republic of China."
"But, sir, your card" (note: cards were assigned to each representative group; they had the name of the particular country written upon them and were fastened upon a stick in order to facilitate the voting procedure) "says 'Red China' and so does the program."
The foolishness continued:
"The chair calls a five minute recess to find out what happens next." (In this case the question was whether or not it was legal to propose an amendment to an amendment to an amendment to a motion!)
(My quotes are not direct nor exact, but they are close enough to what was actually said.)
And on and on and on . . .
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THE GROUP was an interesting idea as proposed, but was impractical for the following reasons. If it was to function as closely as possible like the actual U.N., two things should have been done:
Second—a parliamentarian, familiar with the U.N. should have been Secretary General, not the poor fumbling Mr. Alan Reed, who indeed, was in earnest, but who was up against the insurmountable odds of:
First—classes in the U.N.'s form of parliamentary procedure should have been held and been mandatory for all those (or at least one from each leagion) who intended to participate.
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"Can I call for a question now, sir?"
"Point of order sir, you must recognize us first."
"I beg your pardon, sir, I had the floor."
"You're out of order."
"You're out of order," I am not.
I suggest that to improve this fine idea that these steps be taken: First—The group either follow the above suggestions (and kill the possibility of another parliamentary playpen) or—
Second—Modify the Model U.N's charter (I do trust there is one) to include not more rules and regulations, but rather simpler ones.
THE REVISED Model U.N. charter might read as follows:
"The Model United Nations is designed to afford discussion to interested student groups to discuss world issues as if they represented the points of view of those countries which do belong to the actual U.N. — without any question of solving these issues!" (How can any student body, even one made up of students from the actual countries that they are to represent in a mock U.N., know half as much about the issues as they should to be able to vote upon resolutions concerning them?)
Let the Model U.N. be a place to allow students to grasp the idea that the world's problems are not hard and fast, and that they involve more than witty saying, the well turned phrase, or "nearknowledge" of the U.N.'s form of parliamentary procedure. Let it aspire to teach that such things as historical background, type of government, religion of the majority, military and economic position of the country, etc. . . . are what cause debate in the United Nations!
If something is not done to revise the future Model U.N. meetings, I suggest that we say henceforth of the Model United Nations at KU:
"Where should it go?"
"Why?"
"It contributes nothing!"
Charles A. Corcoran
Huntington, N.Y.
sonhmore
letters to the editor
Action's P-T-P Stand Defended Editor:
Mr. Allan Wicker in his letter to the editor of last Thursday showed an unfortunate misunderstanding of Action's position on the People-to-People flight. Action is not attempting to destroy People-to-People, an organization that Action supports in its platform. Action did, however, urge People-to-People to return to its original flight plan because it felt that People-to-People had changed the plan in a way that weakened it.
ACTION'S stand on the NSA is not, as Mr. Wicker implies, contradictory to support or criticism of People-to-People. NSA is the only national organization that speaks for the student population as a whole, and is the only U.S. organization that deals with the student associations of other countries. Action, as it pointed out in its platform, feels that it is wrong that KU should be deprived of a voice in this forum. People-to-People does not perform this function, nor is it intended to do so.
No organization, including People-to-People, is perfect, and no organization is entitled to unqualified support. Action supports People-to-People in principal, and shall continue to do so, but this does not mean that Action will not criticize when it feels that People-to-People is wrong, as it was in changing the flight plan.
Michael W. Dunlop St. Louis, Mo., senior
Seeing that Mr. Ken Costich is more ignorant of certain things than just being a meso-moralist (I don't speak Latin). I want to endeavor to put down a few things which may urge him to learn more about the issue. I take it for granted that Mr. Costich is an American and I naturally expect him to know more about his country's system of government and the philosophy behind it.
Editor A Reply to Costich
Your first point as being a member of a minority group (the Caucasian — Christian Scientist group) would be very true if the whole issue was taken on the basis of the whole world. Even so, actually you soon would have to say which race is the major one because Mongoloids and Negroes are two different races. But, Mr. Costich, don't you think that you would be more accurate by saying that the Caucasian race forms the majority group in the U.S.A., leaving the other two races to form the minority group?
YES, TOM Jefferson realized ably when he said that all men are both equal and unequal and that the Caucasian Christian group is created with certain inalienable rights . . . while non-Caucasian and non-Christian Scientists are not created with these rights. . . " (at least that is what is implied in your CRC castigation). What is all the pomp and ceremony then that the United States hails for Jefferson if all he did was to give a lot of hot air (you still imply this).
this insanity that you are talking about. Mr. Costich, has not just come in with the CRC and NAACP. It came in when men (certain men) had this malicious and unfounded notion of "Caucasian superiority" over other races. I agree with you that this "bickering" is a blow to what you call the "Achilles heel" of the nation (whatever alone). But why in the world should people have such crazy notions as to cause all this bickering? By the way, this bickering does not affect the American Caucasians alone. It affects any citizen of the United States regardless of whether he is a Mongoloid, Caucasian, Negro or otherwise. The Mongoloids and Negroes in the United States have as much right to the Indian's land and bear any blame for the United States just as the Caucasian-Christian Scientist has. The loss of face internationally on the part of the United States therefore affects all citizens.
NOW BACK to the KU version of the NAACP (amen). Mr. Costi, since you know no more than that the NAACP and the CRC are about the same and that they seem to be enjoying themselves, why don't you go ask them what the hell they do besides just that (or maybe you think they will give you the Jefferson stuff)? I am not going to say much on your last paragraph because I guess you yourself hardly know what you want to put forward; if up to this late you cannot know why "Phi Beta Kappa" discriminates against you because of your scholarship inability (I don't suggest I know anything about the above sorority or fraternity) but I guess you have a point there — the right to know nothing if you so desire.
It is creditable Mr. Costich if the whole issue to you is a mere "Robin Hood" sort of thing because a few people, including Robert Kennedy, think every American should know it is a problem and a grave one too.
Walter S. Bgoya
Tanganyika freshman
At the Movies
By Bill Charles
"Question 7": produced by Louis de Rochemont Associates. At the Varsity.
"Question 7" is a semi-documentary film from the same organization which produced "Martin Luther." Based on factual incidents which occurred in East Germany, the film is religious in tone and emphasis without being a religious picture. "Question 7" does not preach. It is, of course, intended to examine Christian values which are struggling for continued existence under decidedly adverse conditions. But although the principal character is a Christian clergyman, the subject of "Question 7" is something with which all men must concern themselves.
THE FILM'S title refers to the
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Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service and The University of Kansas 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 holidays and examination periods Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
last item on a questionnaire handed out to school children in Osterstadt. East Germany. The questions are designed to measure "social growth," or how well the student has absorbed the Communist doctrine. Many students realize the importance their answers have upon their future lives. The story centers on one boy, an aspiring pianist, who happens to be the pastor's son.
The pastor and his family are new to Osterstadt and the boy soon feels the pressure on him due to his Christian faith. His dilemma is that if he answers the seven questions as a true Christian, his dreams of attending the music conservatory will be shattered; if he supplies the "correct" answers, he will be denying his father's teachings. For his solution, and his father's, go see the picture.
"QUESTION 7" has been well written by Allan Sloane, although it occasionally leans toward melodrama. The characters seem quite real, especially the pastor. Mr. Sloane avoided the easy solution of turning the pastor into a cold, patience-meothing "ideal Christian."
The pastor is ably played by Michael Gwynn; the supporting players are all capable. The director, Stuart Rosenberg, handles his cast intelligently, and knows how to use camera-angle and editing to good advantage. He has made an engaging and stimulating film which deserves the praise lavished upon it from all quarters.
Tuesday, April 24, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Endocrine Glands Bridge Emotional,Physical Gap
NEW YORK—(UPI)—Scientific fans of the endocrine glands are cheered by a clear-cut demonstration of a chemical bridge between human emotion and prime chemical regulators of the physical human body.
The whole future of psychosomatic science depends upon finding and understanding such bridges, and the endocrinologists have long maintained these glands are the golden gates.
BUT ONLY WHEN secreted in correct amounts which are extremely tiny. When larger amounts are put into the body chemistry on any regular basis, there are a host of physical disturbances.
The demonstration was of a direct reaction of emotion on the pituitary gland and an indirect reaction upon the adrenal glands. These glands all secrete substances into the body which keep it up to snuff.
The demonstration was made in medical students experiencing the emotion that goes with an examination. This is accepted scientifically as a standard emotion made up of anxiety to do well and of fear of doing poorly.
Blood was taken from them when they were finished. These samples contained the pituitary substance ACTH in amounts 30 to 100 times those which normally circulate in the blood. These measurements were made possible by relatively new chemical techniques.
Even this refined method was incapable of measuring the ACTH in
Speech Potpourri Winners Picked
The winners in the second finals of the Speech Potpourri are Mervyn Schwedt, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman, and L. Maurice Childers. Muncie sophomore.
Schweed spoke on "Life Beyond the Earth," Stewart spoke on "A Monument to Communism," and Childers spoke on "A Look into Motivation Research."
E. C. Buehler, professor of speech and drama and chairman of the department of speech, presented the men cups for high achievement. There were no numbered prizes.
the blood of the same number of medical students who had not been subjected to the examination emotion. That tiny is the normal amount of circulating ACTH. The measured adrenal substance was hydrocortisone. It was roughly twice as high in the emotion-hit students as in their "controls."
The scientists believed theirs was the first clear-cut demonstration of the stimulating effect of emotion on the human pituitary-adrenal "axis." It is well known scientifically that physical stress will have the effect—a surgical operation, for instance.
This is a disease caused by extreme over-activity of the adrenal glands and its symptoms are muscular wasting, obesity, salt and water retention, diabetes, high blood pressure and skin eruptions. Unless the over-activity is stopped, the outcome is death.
THE INVESTIGATING scientists, J. R. Hodges, M. T. Jones and M.A. Stockham of the University of London remarked that the blood levels of ACTH attained temporarily by the students approximated those which routinely circulate in the blood of victims of Cushing's Disease.
ACTH is the pituitary substance which stimulates the adrenal glands into releasing their own substances such as hydrocortisone. In Cushing's Disease the adrenal glands are over-active either because they themselves are diseased or because the pituitary is releasing too much ACTH.
Their results indicate that "emotional stress is a much more powerful stimulus than physical stress," they said in a report to the technical journal, "Nature."
KU Press Grows To Big Business
By Karl Koch
Sixty years ago a small printing plant was set up in the northeast corner of Fraser Hall. It was to print the student newspaper and part of the Alumni magazine. The plant had one printing press, one linotype machine, and a few accessories.
The Alumni magazine and the student newspaper are still the major items on the production schedule, but now the plant does the printing for all of the University and university organizations.
Today the plant occupies several thousand square feet of Flint Hall, and the latest in modern printing equipment fills the several rooms of the University of Kansas Press.
THE UNIVERSITY PRESS is owned by the University, but is self-supporting. Each department is charged for the work done, and payment is made through the business office of the University.
Although usually thought of as a printing plant, the University Press provides a variety of services to KU. It maintains and operates the campus addressing center, and operates a postage metering service.
A stenographic bureau consisting of several machines produces personalized letters for campus departments, and the Press furnishes printing instructions for two lab sections of occupational therapy students and for two sections of journalism students.
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University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 24, 1963
Koniev Is Tough Red Strategist, Shrewd Planner
By United Press International
Marshal Ivan S. Koniev, barrel-chested former lumberjack who became one of Russia's master military strategists, had been Soviet commander in East Germany for only three days when the Communists threw up their wall in Berlin last August 13.
"Decide what the enemy expects of you, then do the opposite."
Koniev, a World War II hero nicknamed "the tank" once gave this nutshell summary of his strategic thinking:
This maxim led the 64-year-old marshal to high posts in the Soviet Union and caused him to be used as a hatchet man by Kremlin leaders—notably in the purge of Marshal Georgi Zhukov as defense minister in 1957.
Ironically, Zhukov himself was quoted as saying of Koniev in World War II; "When Koniev can play his own game no Germans can get the better of him."
Koniev, a strikingly tough-looking man with dead pan face and close-cropped hair is a stocky 5 feet 6 inches tall. He was born of peasant stock in Kirov province. He was working as a lumberjack when the Czarists drafted him into their army in World War I.
But Koniev quickly switched to the Bolshevik side when the revolution broke out and wasted no time in joining the Communist party in 1918. He also joined the Soviet army the same year.
He won his first renown as a battlefield commander during the Russo-Finnish war in 1939-40. As commander on the Ukrainian front in 1942, he began the steady drive that pushed the Nazis' troops out of Russia. In 1944 he drove into Romania. The next year he captured Prague, and linked up his forces with the U.S. Army on the Elbe river in Germany.
In 1955, Koniev was named commander of the eight-nation Communist Warsaw Pact armed forces and served until July, 1960 when the Soviets announced, he was relieved at his own request. He also served as a deputy defense minister.
Koniev was head of the military tribunal that sentenced Lavrenti P. Beria to death. Some reports say he played a leading role in the events that led to Beria's arrest and downfall.
With the emergence of Nikita S. Khrushchev as premier and party chief, Koniev, said to be politically ambitious, hitched himself firmly to the Khrushchev bandwagon.
The Communist Party used him as a counterweight against the tremendous popularity of his old wartime colleague, Zhukov, and he became the leading spokesman for those who brought about Zhukov's disgrace.
THE BUNNY LOVE
BEHIND THE SCENES OF THE "PLAYBOY" EMPIRE
Hugh Hefner launched Playboy magazine on $10,000—and a nude photo of Marilyn Monroe. Today he’s a millionaire. In this week's Post, you'll learn how Hefner lives up to his Playboy image. Why he keeps close tabs on the private lives of his buxom "bunnies." And which Hollywood stars got their start as "Playmates."
POST
The Saturday Evening
19 Kappas Take Ride—All in One Car
By Dennis Bowers
Nineteen pledges of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority walked out the door in a study hall walkout last night, piled into a 1956 Ford convertible and rambled off up the street.
The girls were quick to agree to a UDK reporter's request for a chance to take a picture and he scrambled onto the trunk of the car to become the twentieth passenger, holding onto two girls arms to hold on. The girls began chanting sorority songs, including one intended for the Pi Beta Phi women.
In front of the library, they tried to sneak by a campus police jeep. But as the car neared Flint Hall, the jeep pulled out and began silently following them.
The Kappa driving became excited . . . it wasn't her car. Looking
back, the girls saw the patrol jeep with red light blaring on top. They stopped. Hearts fell.
Officials to Speak On City Managers
The views of the mayor and the city council concerning the office of city manager will be discussed at the fifteenth City Managers School now being held in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Elder Gunter, Des Moines, Iowa city manager, will speak at 7 p.m. tomorrow on "Ethics and Future of City Managership."
John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, will speak on "Why Do You Want Cities to Grow?" at noon Thursday.
The reporter hopped off to see if he could explain to the officer. The officer nodded and confronted the driver. Some girls giggled. Then by mass consent before the amazed officer, the girls got out and walked up to Flint so the reporter could take their picture in their original packed style.
The three shots taken with the polaroid were too dark to be reproduced.
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Moscow Threatens More Nuclear Tests
Page 5
MOSCOW — (UPI) — The Soviet Union threatened today to test "new types" of nuclear weapons if the United States goes through with its planned tests in the Pacific.
Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko made the threat in a report to the supreme Soviet on the results to date of the Geneva disarmament talks.
He spoke shortly after the two houses of the Soviet parliament — the Soviet of the Union and the Soviet of nationalities — had unanimously re-elected Nikita Khrushchev premier of the Soviet Union— to no one's surprise.
Gromykc did not describe the "new type" of weapons.
GROYKYO SAID THAT SHOULD the West resume testing, the Soviet Union "will be confronted with the need to reply to such actions . . . by holding tests on new types of its nuclear weapons."
But he spoke as preparations neared completion for resumption of American atmospheric tests in the Pacific which are expected this week since the Soviet Union has not agreed to a test ban treaty with inspection safeguards. President Kennedy has said the new U.S. tests would be carried out in the absence of such an agreement.
Gromyko said the threatened new Soviet tests would be undertaken for "security, the security of its (the Soviet Union's) allies and to preserve peace."
"THIS WILL BE OUR REPLY TO any nuclear tests in the West, be it in the atmosphere or underground. in outer space or under water," Gromyko said.
Gromyko told the afternoon joint session of the Supreme Soviet that the West at the 17-nation Geneva disarmament conference was placim-
"ever-new obstacles" in the path of any agreement.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
THIS IS A POSITION THE United States and Britain refuse to accept, maintaining that only international inspection with the right to make on-the-spot checks would be foolproof.
He said the eight-nation neutral proposal to the conference was not clear and precise on some matters, but said there was no doubt that the neutrals had proceeded from the premise that national detection systems would be adequate to insure compliance with any test ban arrangement.
Khrushchev listened intently to Gromyko's speech, and displayed a serious demeanor throughout the afternoon session. He was particularly serious during the brief 12-minute period it took to elect the members of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, which was climaxed by the re-election of Leonid Brezhnev as President of the Presidium.
Nine Students Get Awards
Nine students received awards at the Pi Sigma Alpha banquet Friday evening. Pi Sigma Alpha is the honorary political science fraternity.
Scott Higginbottom. Winfield senior, was named outstanding graduating senior. Charles Menghini, Pittsburg senior, received the Hilden Gibson award.
James Devall, Overland Park junior, received the Gustafson award and was named the outstanding junior man. Betty Reynolds, Wellington junior received the Girls State award and was named the outstanding junior woman.
Con Poierir, Topeka senior; John Swanson, Baldwin senior; Tonya Kurt, Pratt senior; Roger Doudna, Baldwin junior, and Sandra Lae, Topeka senior, received faculty awards.
Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05 p.m.
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Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11:45-12 noon; Saturdays, 4-5 & 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road.
Interview
April 25
Holden Brinley, Ast. Sunt,
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Teacher Interviews:
TODAY
World Crisis Discussion Groups: 8 p.m.
Kansas Union, "Russian Foreign
Policies."
TOMORROW
KUOK: 3-News & Weather; 3.05-Top Forty Tunes; 4-Hilltopping; 5-Hilltopping; 6-News & Weather; 6.15-Sports; 6-News & Weather; 6.20-Bonjour Spotlight on Science; 6.30-Bonjour Mesdames; 6.45-Public Service Program; 7-Countdown; 8-Night Flight, 9-Night Flight, 10-News & Weather; 10.15-Night Flight, Stage II; 12-Portals of Prauer.
People-to-People Forum: 4 p.m.
Forum Room, Kansas Union. Orientation meeting for students planning to visit France, Genevieve Delaisi, in charge
El Ateneo: Miercoles dia 25 de abrill a las 4 de la tarde teatro de Fras Hall. Representacion dramatica — "El retablo de las maravillas" de Cervantes.
Presidential Forum: 7:30 p.m. Forum Room: Kansas Union "Medicare - Pro- care" and Dr. Thomas, Jr. Prairie Village physician, and Dr. L. R. C. Agren, KU professor.
Templin-Lewis WinRelaysParade
The Templin-Lewis Hall float, "Birth of the Dash-B.C.", came through a 60 mile per hour wind Saturday to win first place in the Kansas Relays "Sports Through the Ages" parade.
The float featured a monstrous dinosaur chasing characters from the cartoon strip, "B.C.", with Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe standing at an imaginary finish line timing the race.
University Daily Kansan
The Triangle-Alpha Phi float won second place. Third place prize was awarded to Sigma Chi-Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall entry.
Savannah at Sea for Trials
YORKTOWN, Va. — (UPI) — The NS Savannah, world's first nuclear merchant ship, left here today for three days of final acceptance trials.
Tuesday, April 24, 1962
The Savannah edged away from the Coast Guard station dock at 8:07 a.m. and headed down the York river for the Atlantic where it will be put through the tests.
Official Condemns Education Policies
"The low salaries attract mostly mediocre employees," Prof. Parker said. "I offered several top experts jobs in my branch, but they refused because of the low pay."
HE SAID THAT governmental departments also were hampered because of low salary scales.
He said that he felt the government should be involved in educational matters only when the whole nation is affected.
PROF. PARKER RECENTLY resigned as chairman of the foreign language division of the U.S. Department of Education.
A former U.S. Education Department official yesterday condemned waste and red tape in American governmental policies concerning public education.
The official, William R. Parker, professor of English at Indiana University, spoke at the Student Union Activities Humanities Lecture in the Kansas Union.
"I DIDN'T BELIEVE ALL the tales about red tape before I went to Washington," he said. "But I soon found that I couldn't even write a letter without 12 or 13 people approving it."
He said that this "red tape" hindered his branch from releasing information.
"Many of the people in the language field needed to know about our program," he said. "However, by the time the various bureaucrats approved the releases, the information lost its essential value.
"Policies are responsible for colossal wastes," he continued. "For example, everyone was satisfied when we announced that we would maintain the summer institutes at cost. Then the government told us we had to charge a 15 per cent overhead."
"The association received a $4.2 million grant from the government," he said. "I had the responsibility of determining where this money was
to be spent and what type of program was to be set up.
"The grant came in a vaguely written law," he said. "The law states that the association is to set up summer sessions for elementary teachers, research, area study centers and fellowships.
"THE LAW DIDNT SPECIFICALLY define what a 'center' was to be, nor list the exact qualifications for a fellowship," he said. "As a result, I had to make several decisions on my own."
Prof. Parker said that he had to define these terms.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 24, 1962
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University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 24, 1962
Pianist Gives Poetic Recital
By Tom Winston
About 250 appreciative people last night heard Richard Angeletti, instructor of piano, present his annual faculty recital. As surely as the crowd heard a pianist, they heard a poet as well.
Mr. Angelletti came to KU the spring semester of 1960 as a temporary fill-in for Jan Chiappuso, professor emeritus of piano, who suffered a heart attack and was unable to finish out the year. Shortly after he came to KU Mr. Angelletti played his first recital here, and he attracted no small amount of attention. Good news travels fast.
FOR HIS PROGRAM, Mr. Angelletti played the "Partita in D Major" by Bach, the "Sonata in F-Sharp Major, Op. 78" by Beethoven, and the "Phantasie in C Major, Op. 17" by Schumann.
The Bach partita did not begin as auspiciously as did the remainder of the selections. Mr. Angelietti got off to an insecure start, and the opening movement sounded muddy. But the other six movements, five of them dances, went more according to plan—with brio. Mr. Angelietti's approach to Bach is more romantic than classic, however.
The special gem of the evening was the Beethoven F-Sharp Sonata. If pieces of music had personalities, this one would wear a healthy, sunny smile. Its eyes would sparkle with playful good humor. Of all of Beethoven's 32 piano sonatas this one, No. 24, is one of the shortest—about 7 minutes—and one of the most unabashedly happy.
F-SHARP MAJOR is one of the piano's brightest tonalities. It was unusual for Beethoven to write in six sharps for the piano. Within its two movements, the first singing and the second gay and full of contrast, Beethoven made one of his most cheerful statements.
Mr. Angleletti's control of loud and soft, of accent and of understatement, is excellent.
9
KANSAS' ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
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Tuesday, April 24, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
20,000 Spectators See Exposition
The 42nd annual Engineering Ex-position attracted more than 20,000 visitors to KU last weekend to see displays in Allen Field House.
The exposition is allied with the Kansas Relays held each year at KU.
Richard Lee Moore, Pleasanton senior, and chairman of the civil engineering exhibit was presented a trophy for the most original display. The award was presented at the Exposition banquet Saturday evening. Moore's display was a model of the Kaw River Valley with supplementary displays of methods of flood control.
Richard L. Knuckey, Lawrence junior, and chairman of the electrical engineering exhibit, received
the award for the best academic display. Knuckey's display concerned the use of quality control by electrical engineers.
Third place in the exposition went to the mechanical engineering display.
In past years, the displays were set up at various places on the campus. This year a change was made and all the various exposition displays were concentrated with Allen Field House.
PHILADELPHIA — (UPI) — The last sentence of the invocation before the annual dinner of the Knife and Fork Gourmet Club Monday night was, "Lord, grant us good digestion."
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. April 24,1962
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By Steve Clark
There will be some excellent placement done next year if the Kansas Relays is moved from Memorial Stadium.
People, 16,000 last Saturday, would have to be tightly compacted like sardines to fit into proposed 8,500-10,000 seating at the new track site.
THEN, ONCE AGAIN 1.000 athletes would have to be squeezed into the dressing room facilities at Allen Field House which are already being used by baseball, football and tennis.
We remember the congestion that two basketball teams (approximately 15 members each) caused using the facilities this winter. We cannot imagine, however, the KU football, baseball and tennis teams sharing facilities with 1.000 visiting athletes.
The facilities at Memorial Stadium are far from being excellent, but it is possible to handle approximately 600 athletes adequately.
THERE IS one thing that's evident and that is the Kansas Relays should remain. After Saturday's fine performances and a good crowd turnout we doubt that anyone there would have anything done to the Relays that would damage its prestige.
- * *
Some strange things are happening in the world of sports these days. For instance, the Kansas City Athletics swept a four game series from the White Sox.
We watched the A's which are affectionately dubbed "Pathetics" on opening day and they looked far from a first division club. The pitching should be steadier, the defense within the infield sharp, but there appears to be a big lack of scoring punch that somehow was not evident over the weekend.
ANOTHER STRANGE happening in the Big Eight baseball world is that of the Kansas Jayhawkers rapid climb from last place to first place in one year.
Coach Floyd Temple's crew are atop the conference with four three-game sets remaining. Three series are at home with the first one with Iowa State being Friday and Saturday.
Kansas has been real strong in both the hitting and fielding departments thus far. Jerry Waldschmidt, Carl Nelson, Steve Lunsford, Roger Brock and Monte Stewart formed a formidable mound corps. Ken Hensley, Keith Bumgardner, Dick Fanning and Dick Rader are carrying hot bats at present.
RADER HAS BEEN a pleasant surprise this year. The Wichita sophomore spent the early part of the season on the bench before being inserted into the lineup for defensive purposes. Not only did the defense pick up but Rader started hitting and a week ago was the fourth leading hitter in the Big Eight.
The Jayhawkers have built up quite a lot of momentum which will be hard to slow down. The players have become accustomed to winning and agree there's nothing like it. From last to first is a big undertaking, but it looks as if the Jayhawkers could very well do it.
Toronto Maple Leafs Win Stanley Cup Title
CHICAGO — (UPI) — The Stanley Cup, hockey's most prized trophy, belongs to the Toronto Maple Leafs, and Coach Punch Imlach says it was just according to script.
"I wouldn't swap my team for any in the league," he said. "We had a good playoff. We checked well and we skated well.
"I'm the eternal optimist," he added. "I told the boys they weren't going to win without scoring a goal. All they had to do after Chicago scored, was to get two more of them."
Bob Nevin and Dick Duff came through with two goals and it was 2-1 for the Leafs for their fourth win in six games. Toronto won the Stanley Cup for the eighth time in history and the first time since 1951.
From the Chicago Black Hawks there was no complaint. "They beat us," general manager Tommy Ivan said. "We've got no alibis."
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Hawk Coach Rudy Pilous was angry with the officiating and said, "We didn't play that rough to get the major share of penalties." Owner Jim Norris complained. "It looked like the referee wanted to get it over with in a hurry."
But none believed the Hawks deserved to win.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
Tennis Improves Over Five Years
Beginning with a 5-7 dual season mark and a fourth place finish in the Big Eight meet five years ago, Coach Denzel Gibbens has guided the University of Kansas tennis team to a level where it challenges defending champion Oklahoma State for this season's title.
Following the shaky start in his inaugural year, Gibbens' squad posted a 7-6 dual record and placed fifth in the league meet the following year.
In 1960 the Jayhawk netmen coated to a 12-1 mark for dual competition and placed second in the conference meet behind Oklahoma State.
LAST YEAR, finishing once again runnerup to the Cowpokes, the Hawkers compiled a 10-6 record in dual action.
Coach Gibbens credits much of the team's recent success to Mel Karrile
The KU tennis team plays host to Kansas State today at 2 p.m. on the courts west of Allen Field House.
Tennis Team Meets Kansas State Today
The Jayhawkers, sporting a 6-2 record, beat the Wildcats 9-0 in an earlier meet at Manhattan.
The Jayhawk baseball team will be in action this afternoon at Topeka meeting Washburn. The Hawks defeated Washburn 9-5 here last Friday.
and Pete Woodward, the number one and two KU players for the third straight season.
GIBBENS BELIEVES not only that Karrle and Woodward provide immediate help, but he also feels that the two seniors have given the KU tennis team an image that will attract the state's top prep talent in the years to come.
Karrle, St. Joseph, Mo., senior,
placed second in the league number
one singles division in 1960 and 1961.
According to Coach Gibbens, Karrle
is one of the top players in the Mid-
west.
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Karrie has a chance to win the loop singles crown this year since last year's champion, from Oklahoma State, graduated.
Woodward, Topeka senior, has "pushed" Karrle for the number one spot, according to Gibbens, for the three seasons the pair have held the top spots.
THE KARRLE-WOOD WARD doubles team has finished second in the Big Eight meet for the past two years with the league crown in sight this season.
Del Campbell, Lawrence junior, is the Hawker number three player. Campbell placed second in number four singles action at last year's league meet.
Jan Cobble, Winfield junior and number four player, captured the number five singles title in last year's meet.
The Campbell-Cobble combination nabbed the league runnerup spot in the number four doubles last spring.
KEN PETERSON, Topeka junior
Next year's prospects also appear bright because of four freshman contenders, who, in Gibbens' opinion, could right now "give the varsity a run for their money."
Gibbens says, "We'll win a big percentage of our dual matches." Coach Gibbens lists Cincinnati, the defending Missouri Valley champion, Northwestern, a Big Ten power, and Southern Illinois, a strong independent team, as the stiffest dual opponents.
Breon Mitchell, Salina sophomore and Terry Smith, Larned junior, are battling for the number five spot.
The four frosh prospects are Barry McGrath, Topeka, Jim Burns, St. Joseph, Mo., Lance Burr, Winfield, and John Guyot, Arkansas City.
Peterson is the current holder of that position with Mitchell in the number six position.
Teamed for the first time, the Peterson-Mitchell combination posted a 2-1 record in a quadrangular meet April 14.
Gibbens believes that Smith will give Peterson and Mitchell a good battle for the number five and six spots. Smith, a transfer from Pratt Junior College, placed first last year in the National Junior College Athletic Association's singles division and gained second place the year before.
Guyot was part of the champion doubles duo and Burns was the St. Joseph high school champ and part of a team that reached the semifinals in the Missouri prep doubles division.
BURR PLACED second in the singles in the Kansas high school meet last spring, beating McGrath in the semi-finals. McGrath finished in third place.
BUDDY VANCE. Seminole, Okla.
junior and a KU basketball center,
is also vying for a spot on the varsity
team.
GIBBENS IS proud of his team and its scholastic average. The team's cumulative grade point average is a respectable 2.1.
Although defending league champion O-State is as strong or stronger than last year, Gibbens believes the Jayhawks have a good chance at dethroning the Cowboys.
The remaining varsity schedule is April 27—louis State, there.
May 4-5—Southern Illinois, Cincinnati and Northwestern at SI.
May 11 Oklahoma, here.
May 11 Colorado, here.
May 18 Oklahoma, here.
Mossi Faces K.C.
DETROIT, Mich — (UPI) — Veteran Don Mossi, always at his best against Kansas City, will try to cool off the red-hot A's tonight when they invade Detroit for the first of a three-game series.
Mossi (1-1) is scheduled to be opposed by Art Ditmar (0-1).
Kansas City is fresh from a fourgame sweep at Chicago, knocking the White Sox out of first place. Detroit is 4-4 for the year, one game out of first place, while the Athletics are 7-6 and one-half game out of the lead.
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Bowlers to Boulder
The Jayhawker varsity bowling team travels to Boulder this weekend to compete in the Big Eight bowling tournament at the University of Colorado.
Coach Bascom Fearing's keeglers will play a total of 14 games in a two-game series against each Big Eight school.
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Pittsburgh's star slugger hit 35 homers last year. But he feels he could have gotten a lot more- if! In this week's Post, you'll meet the cocky young Pirate. Learn how he got his reputation for bonehead plays. And why he blames Forbes Field for spoiling his home-run record. (Look for the special baseball cover.)
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Tuesday, April 24, 1962 University Daily Kansan
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MATTHEW B. LEE
Rev. Billy James Hargis thinks the Reds are ready to take over the U.S. His suggested cure-all is a hefty contribution to his cause. In this week's Saturday Evening Post, you'll meet the fire-eating preacher. Learn why he was custed from his own church. And what happened to the nearly $1 million he took in last year.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 24, 1962
Around the Campus KU Geographers Thirteen Students At Miami Meet Receive Grants
Four members of the department of geography are representing KU at the annual meeting of the Association of American Geographers at Miami Bach, Fla.
They are Walter Kollmorgen, chairman of the department; John P. Augelli, Thomas R. Smith, and George F. Jenks. All are professors of geography.
Prof. Jenks will present a paper on "Interpored Screens for Improved Illustrations" before the cartography section. Prof. Augelli arranged and will chair a session on "Geographical Views on the Caribbean."
Prof. Smith will participate in deliberations of several AAG committees and also attend a two-day meeting of the Committee on Geography of the National Academy of Science —National Research Council, of which he is a member.
Malinowsky Gets $1,000 for Study
Harold Robert Malinowsky, Lawrence graduate student, has received a $1,000 Kansas Library Association Grant for study in librarianship. The award is to be used towards a degree in library science.
Mr. Malinowsky, who graduated from KU with a bachelor of science degree in geological engineering, is presently employed as a library assistant at Watson Library.
Library grants are awarded in an effort to attract more young people to the profession. Due to the serious shortage of personnel in the field, competition for librarians has resulted in higher salaries.
Today a librarian just out of school averages $5,800 to $6,000 a year. Those who rise to the top of the profession may earn as much as $20,000 annually in administrative posts with large library systems.
Thirteen pharmacy students have been appointed undergraduate National Science Foundation research scholars for 1962-63.
Each will receive a stipend of $750 for research lasting two semesters and ten weeks in the summer. The students will participate in projects under faculty members in pharmaceutical chemistry and pharmacology.
The appointments are made possible by a $15.640 grant awarded the School of Pharmacy. The grant is more than twice as large as the 1961-62 award.
NSF undergraduate research students in pharmaceutical chemistry are:
Clinton N. Corder, Oberlin junior; Harold H. Mullins, Oberlin junior; St. Hendricks, St. Francis junior; Larry D. Milne, Hiwatha senior; Donald A. McKenzie, Hiwatha senior; Larry H. Young, Topeka junior
Those in pharmacology:
Otto E. Beck, Wichita junior; Charles Berry, Chanute junior; Norman L. Bresel, Kansas City junior; Robert O. Gillespie, Bonne Anne (Eaton) Grundeman, Wichita junior; Marion J Strand, Lost Springs junior; Mary A Warburton, Coffeville junior.
No Clues Found Yet In Murphy Hall Theft
KU police said today that they still have no clues concerning the theft early Friday morning in Murphy Hall of cash, checks and equipment valued at over $1,000.
Legislator to Back Local YAF Chapter
Police said the items were taken from the University Theatre box office and the School of Fine Arts office.
Police reported that a key was apparently used to enter the office. They said they found no indications of a forced entry.
A cash register valued at $893.86.
checks valued at $92.90 and, $42 cash were taken from the theater office.
Cash stolen from the fine arts office totaled $33.40.
A state representative who says he is a proponent of an "adequate balanced budget" for Kansas will speak Thursday night at 8:00 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union in support of the KU Young Americans for Freedom.
John D. Bower, R-McLouth, is chairman of the state committee on education and is completing his fifth term in the Legislature. His three major fields of interest are education, fiscal responsibility, and conservation.
In the past Rep. Bowers has supported or sponsored bills for state aid to high schools, increased state aid to elementary schools, the textbook rental plan, special education for exceptional children, unified districts, and adequate appropriations for KU and the other state schools.
The meeting will begin with a brief address and a discussion period will follow. The public is invited.
Drugs Can Restore Sight
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—(UPI) More than half of the world's blindness is preventable, Dr. M. G. Candau, director-general of the World Health Organization noted recently.
"With proper treatment by drugs and surgery, sight could be restored to millions who are now losing it," he said. "Preventable measures can ensure that in the future the numbers of the blind will be a third or less of what they are today."
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LONDON — (UPI)— Shopkeeper Henry Hatt went to sleep in the first inviting doorway he could find. It turned out to be the doorway to a police station.
Charges against Hatt were dismissed, but magistrate Neil McElligot warned him: "Next time be more careful where you spend the night."
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VOTE UP
President . . . . . Gerald 'Kep' Kepner Vice President . . . . . Tom Hardy
Pharmacy ------------ Phyllis Wertzberger
Graduate School Larry Jones
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Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
59th Year, No.125
Wednesday, April 25, 1962
ASC Election Total to 2,194
The voting turnout in the ASC elections has slowed down considerably since yesterday.
As of 11:30 this morning, 538 students had voted as compared with 687 at the same time yesterday. This, coupled with westerdays turnout of 1656 votes, brings the total vote in the first day and a half of the two day elections to 2194.
MEL SAFERSTEIN, St. Joseph,
Mo., graduate student, and election
chairman, said that if the present
rate of voting continues, the total
vote for the two days should be
approximately 3100.
He said that three schools have not yet had the required number of voters to receive an ASC representative. He said that the School of Journalism needed 15 more votes, the School of Pharmacy needed 17 more and the School of Law still lacks two votes.
THE ASC CONSTITUTION states that in order for a school to be represented on the All School Council, it needs either 50 votes or one-half of the students enrolled in the school to vote, whichever is less. The rest of the schools have received their required number of votes.
The sophomore class officer candidates still lead the other classes in number of votes received. The sophomores have 828, the junior 675, and the seniors 495.
SPU Decides Against Walk
The Student Peace Union last night decided to distribute pamphlets explaining its position against nuclear testing as soon as the United States resumes testing.
They will not make a public demonstration or "peace walk" on the KU campus because, as one member said, "Right now we can't afford to alienate people." The SPU will not oppose demonstrations but will not participate in them as an organization.
SOME MEMBERS OF THE group wanted to picket the Military Science Building, but the idea was rejected.
Larry Laudan, Lawrence graduate student and acting chairman of the SPU, said the group must avoid the 'rabble-rouser' image.
"We are not trying to awaken people and convert them to a completely different view," he said. "We want to arouse their interest in the problems involved so they will not shut these problems out of their minds, which happens all too often.
Laudan stressed that SPU members must be well-informed themselves if they are to discuss testing and disarmament problems with others.
The group did not decide on a policy on disarmament. A wide variety of opinions were expressed and agreement could not be reached.
The group decided on a definite action for May 1 to 4, when the Navy recruiters will be in the lobby of the Kansas Union explaining their officer candidate program for college graduates.
The Navy recruiters will show films about the Navy program, and the SPU will show films on the destruction and loss of human life in a nuclear war.
U.S. Fires Noon Bomb Shot At Christmas Island in Pacific
Weather
Fair this afternoon and tonight,
becoming partly cloudy tomorrow.
Cooler Northwest Kansas and extreme West tomorrow with scattered thunderstorms likely Southwest portion by tomorrow afternoon or evening. Low tonight generally in the 50s. High tomorrow 70s Northwest to near 90 Southeast.
ISN'T RUSSIA
A NEIGHBOR?
UNDER WR.
HALT
TESTING-
STOP THE
ARMS RACE
PEACE MARCHERS—Ruth Epstein, assistant instructor of English; Philip Rhoads, Overland Park freshman; and Charles McReynolds, Coffeyville graduate student, led the march yesterday from 7th and Massachusetts Streets to the Chi Omega fountain. They carried signs that condemned nuclear war.
Marchers Protest Tests But Get Mild Reaction
By Walt Blackledge
Nineteen persons walked down Massachusetts Street, up 14th and across the campus yesterday in protest of the resumption of atmospheric nuclear tests by the United States
WHEN NATALIE Jarman, assistant instructor of Western Civilization, joined the marchers, they continued walking down Massachusetts Street. The police officers got into their car and followed the procession.
SOME OF THE marchers carried placards. McReynold's sign said, "Halt Testing — Stop the Arms Race." Bonnie Laudan, Lawrence senior, carried a sign reading, "The Arms Race or the Human Race? Turn Towards Peace!"
Charles McReynolds, Coffeyville graduate student, led the march. He announced Monday that he would walk in protest to nuclear testing and invited others who were interested to march with him.
Ruth Epstein, assistant instructor of English, carried a sign reading, "No Nuclear War." Philip Rhoads, Overland Park freshman, carried a two-sided sign. One sign read, "Love Your Neighbor." The other side read, "Isn't Russia a Neighbor?" Both sides of the sign also bore what appeared to be Russian writing.
A woman sitting with a man in a car said, "We couldn't tell what it was about."
MEMBERS OF THE group leaned against the corner of the Eldridge Hotel waiting to start the march. A few persons stood down the street, eyeing the group curiously. Two police officers in plain clothes stood near their unmarked patrol car.
The group started down the street at 1:30. The police officers got into their car and followed the procession.
A BARBER stepped out of his shop and asked, "What are they advertising? I didn't get to see it."
A shoe repairman said, "It's an interesting group."
A druggist asked, "What the hell is it?" When he was told, he said, "I think it's all right if they want to go to Russia to do it, too."
TWO WORKMEN were sitting in front of the city hall. One said, "I think they're like me — they don't know what the score is." The other said, "As long as the Russians test, I figure we've got to test."
The group stopped in South Park to rest. McReynolds collected dimes from members of the group to send a telegram to President Kennedy. The message read:
(Continued on Page 8)
Blast Comes 19 Hours After President's Order
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The United States fired an atmospheric nuclear shot in the Pacific shortly before noon EST today, informed sources reported. It was expected the atomic energy commission would formally announce the shot later in the day.
There was no immediate indication of the size of the shot or its power.
- * *
It was said the shot was fired at British-controlled Christmas
U.S. Decision Draws Anger
By United Press International
By United Press International Western Europe today generally defended the U.S. decision to resume nuclear testing but Japan expressed "deep disappointment" and the Russians put on a show of outrage.
Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian Zorin accused the United States and Britain of trying to "wash their hands" of responsibility for the tests.
In Japan a snake-dancing mob of about 100 leftist Zengakuran students staged a protest demonstration in front of the U.S. embassy, scuffling with 500 policemen.
India's delegation to the disarmament conference in Geneva made a final appeal for nuclear powers to refrain from testing "perhaps for a few weeks" during another attempt to write a test ban treaty. peal was futile.
AT THE SUPREME Soviet meeting in Moscow, a succession of delegates denounced the U.S. decision and expressed strong support for Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko's announcement yesterday that Russian tests will follow the American ones.
The London Times suggested that the Russians might privately be welcoming the U.S. decision "as an excuse for a further round of their own."
A U.S. Information Agency survey of world press reaction last month reported "strong support" for the U.S. position in most of Latin America, the Philippines and Thailand; "overall opposition to testing" from the Middle East, South Asia and Africa, and "reluctant acceptance" in much of Europe and the Far East.
at British-controlled Christmas Island 1,300 miles south of Honolulu.
The shot was reported a little more than 19 hours after President Kennedy authorized the AEC and the defense department to go ahead with the tests.
An AEC spokesman said only those tests which "might cause concern" would be announced in advance. He said this referred not to fallout danger but to tests which might be "visible" from nearby areas.
Kennedy's final go-ahead to the 12,000-man joint task force eight in the Pacific came at the end of a day of tension, not much lessened by the fact that the outcome had appeared inevitable for months.
AT 4 P.M. CST the AEC distributed a terse statement saying "President Kennedy has authorized the commission and the Department of Defense to proceed with a series of nuclear weapons tests in the atmosphere over the Pacific" to begin "as soon as is operationally feasible."
Later, an AEC spokesman said the series would start "shortly, perhaps in one or a few days."
The hours leading up to the announcement were a time of waiting for a sign, not really expected and which never came, from the Kremlin.
THE AMERICAN TESTS are expected to continue for two or three months. There are two test sites, Christmas Island which, with its surrounding seas, was declared closed to shipping beginning April 15, and U.S.-owned Johnston Island, 500 miles from Hawaii, declared a closed area effective April 30.
Plans call for detonating nuclear warheads for all types of intercontinental and submarine-launched ballistic missiles. Two to three dozen tests were expected.
(Continued on Page 8)
Milton's Ideas Valid - Parker
A professor of English at Indiana University said last night at the Humanities Lecture that John Milton's ideas on education still merit consideration today, 318 years later.
Rather than follow Milton's rigorously outlined education program, William R. Parker, former chairman of the foreign language division of the U.S. Department of Education, suggested that educators "borrow his (Milton's) refreshing boldness, along with his scorn of mere novelty ... and share his readiness to adjust education to the known needs of an age."
PROF. PARKER SAID, in summing up Milton's message for today's time and generation, "Freedom cannot be conferred upon a people, but must be forever earned, and it is through a liberal education that we learn how to preserve it by living to deserve it."
He said that Milton "wanted a national education system with a common curriculum and with minimum standards nationally accepted." However, Prof. Parker said, "In current American education this is impossible at any level, be it high school, college or even graduate school."
IF MILTON HAD BEEN ASKED "Is the guaranteeing of minimal standards of education a proper business of Federal Government." Milton's answer would have been "yes," he said.
Outlining Milton's plan for the education of boys he said, that even though Milton attended 17th century Cambridge, he "hated the whole experience," since he felt that he was "neither delighted nor instructed." In fact, Prof. Parker said, "Milton would simply abolish Oxford and Cambridge."
SO, PROF, PARKED SAID. Milton suggested his own reforms for education.
Milton began his educational outline with the consideration of 12-year-olds, disregarding the problem of "petty school," or elementary education, Prof. Parker said.
According to Milton's plan, Prof. Parker said, the first year of formal education students would be devoted to a foreign language, arithmetic and the elements of agriculture and conservation.
DURING THE SECOND YEAR, Prof. Parker said, Milton's students continued their work in arithmetic and agriculture, adding geometry and a natural science. The text books would be in a foreign language, Prof. Parker said, and astronomy, geography and a second (Continued on page 8)
(Continued on page 8)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 25, 1962
The Test Demonstrations
The march in Lawrence and on campus yesterday protesting the resumption of nuclear testing by the United States is evidence of the increasing concern of students with the nuclear arms race and disarmament. But it is doubtful if the march did anything more than provide such evidence.
Charles McReynolds, the Coffeyville graduate student who organized the march, explained the reasons for the march in this way:
"The resumption of testing serves no useful purpose. It will only bring more testing by the Russians.
"A defensive posture based on nuclear weapons is not adequate because it cannot be used . . . if we are willing to use them this contradicts our own fundamental values of respect for human life.
"Nuclear war is no longer capable of protecting human life or human freedom. We clearly have no choice but to seek alternatives to nuclear war."
THE LAST paragraph of his statement is the key to his actions and those of the other demonstrators across the nation who are protesting the resumption of nuclear testing and the nuclear arms race. It is a statement that no reasonable man would disagree with.
Yet the march will do no more than call attention to the problem, and the problem of nuclear disarmament is a complex one involving many factors. The difficulty the negotiators in Geneva have always experienced in their attempts to reach an agreement on any phase of disarmament or the control of nuclear weapons is clear evidence of this. And aside from the technical problems, there is the complicating
factor of bad faith on both sides at one time or another. Another problem that must be dealt with is the probability that Communist China will have nuclear weapons within a few years.Many other nations have the capacity to develop nuclear arms.
Thus, while demonstrations may call attention to the problem (if it can really be said that people are not aware of it), the real contribution that any group protesting nuclear testing and the arms race can make is to inform themselves and others on the details of the nuclear weapons mess and on the possible alternatives to the nuclear arms race. An informed and realistic pressure group is far more effective than a group of demonstrators.
THIS APPROACH makes it more difficult. It means that instead of demonstrations on moral grounds (which tend to be ignored by officials who have to deal with the concrete realities of the situation), the groups concerned with nuclear testing and disarmament would try to find programs that can be seriously considered by the men who are charged with national security.
The chances of any peace group suggesting a program for nuclear disarmament or a test ban that would be adopted as national policy are slight. But such ideas and informed pressure groups are the only things likely to have any effect on national policy. Moral arguments will not have any decisive effect. Only realistic arguments taking into consideration the concrete events and situations of the nuclear arms race and the uneasy relationship between the Soviet Union and the United States can or should be expected to have any effect.
—William H. Mullins
Costich Praised
It was gratifying to find in April 16's issue of the UDK an intelligent and realistic letter about "discrimination" at KU. I think it would be very beneficial for the members of CRC to consider carefully Mr. Costich's comments.
While the CRC raves on about discrimination, the solution they propose to the problem is one which tramples over another Constitutional guarantee. While they propose to legislate how each of us at KU shall live and with whom we shall live, they fail to mention that legislation of this sort makes freedom of choice an entirely untenable position.
WHILE THEY make a major issue of the fact that discriminatory clauses do exist in the constitution of three or so Greek houses they fail to consider the fact that this leaves approximately forty houses with no discriminatory clauses, but where in fact discrimination does exist. I know of no fraternity or sorority, with the exception of those which are entirely Negro at KU, which has a Negro member.
If the CRC should be able to force the elimination of discriminatory clauses from the charters of the groups that have such clauses. I believe that these would walk the path the forty other groups have laid out. I submit that this would be a very hollow victory for a group which is truly interested in eliminating discrimination, for discrimination would still in fact exist. I further submit that any "solution" brought about by force would be shallow and without meaning.
I AM against discrimination which is based on such meaningless grounds as race or religion. I would propose that the CRC consider carefully the fact that with understanding, fear becomes less and less real. The only way to fight discrimination is through education. I believe that any group really interested in improving racial relations should work in an educational capacity.
Being students, we all realize that the desire to learn is stimulated more by an instructor who is respected. I believe that the CRC, through its petty bickering and immature approach to discrimination, has completely eliminated itself
... Letters ...
from the position of respected educator. For that reason it has rendered itself completely useless in eliminating that discrimination which is of any consequence, that which exists in man not that which exists on a scrap of paper in a fraternity's records. I believe that the CRC has discredited a great truth, and that the time for self examination is past due.
Al Kremske
Chicago junior
* * *
Kansan Recommendations Criticized
Having read your recommendations for the ASC elections, I feel that it is very fortunate that most graduate students do not read the Daily Kansan to make up their minds.
To your summary of my "qualifications" I might add that I am being supported by Action. As you might know, Action is taking stands on controversial issues and I strongly endorse the majority of them.
YOU STATE in your introduction that "each candidate was questioned by seven Kansan executives." Unless communication was established by telepathic means, I would like to inform you that I have yet to meet with six of your executives. However, doubtless there is sufficient carbon paper in your office to take the place of your missing executives.
(Editor's note: Krause is entirely correct in saying that he was only interviewed by one Kansan executive (the editorial editor). This is true for the simple reason that he was in the hospital when he was interviewed and seven people cannot visit a patient at the same time; hospital regulations forbid it. He was either asked or he discussed in his interview the same questions that the other candidates were asked and he filled out the same questionnaires. Krause is the only candidate on whom the Kansan gave information who was not present at the interviews conducted by the seven Kansan executives mentioned in Monday's editorial.
Hans Krause Caracas, Venezuela graduate student
However, Krause was given the opportunity to complete an essay test on student government. He was the only candidate that the Kansas
interviewed who was unable to answer any of the questions. The questions asked were: Name as many ASC committees as you can think of. Who is the present student body vice president? List three things the ASC has considered this semester. What activity is the HRC presently engaged in?)
KU. Faculty Criticized
Editor:
A former teacher has mailed to me a copy of the Kansan in which the senate committee's recommendation on discrimination appears.
IT IS SURPRIISING that the faculty committee turns its back on sociological evidence that no majority group learns about minority groups unless the two are placed so that they see each other closely. Rather, the committee would take the step long-ago discarded in group relations—evolution, verbal persuasion.
It is interesting that the University of Kansas faculty in 1962 cannot do what the University of Colorado and several other universities did years ago, namely order every fraternity and sorority to throw out discriminatory clauses and abide by domestic processes in deed as well as in promise.
But it is not surprising on second thought. Kansas is Kansas, and the condition of mind even affects the faculty. What a pity.
Boulder, Colorado
Evelyn Whittaker
Daily Hansan
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NEWS DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher ... Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Bill Mullins Editorial Editor
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BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
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LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
The STUDENT LUNCH
AS SEEN BY:
... the COOK ..
THE STUDENT LUNCH
AS SEEN BY:
... the COOK ...
PASTE
The PURE FOOD INSPECTOR ...
PASSE
The PURE FOOD INSPECTOR ...
W-10
THE GOURMET...
THE BIOLOGY
MAJOR...
I WANNA
HAMBURGER
And WORTHAL
"Little Man on Campus"
the took world
By S. F. Rude
THE INFINITE MOMENT, by John Wyndham. Ballantine Books, 35 cents.
A grassy plain had taken its place, a plain that extended as far as I could see. I looked closer. The street light was gone, the alley was gone. There was nothing there. A sixth sense told me something had happened.
The door knob blinked a blue eye at us as we entered the hallway. We entered the room and saw the curtains whipping in the wind streaming in from the window we were sure we had closed before we left for the movies. I went to the window to close it and caught a glimpse of the backyard. The line of garages behind the apartment was gone; the seven garbage cans usually arranged in helter skelter fashion had disappeared. I looked closer.
Perhaps it was the genetic continuum. My grandmother, I have been told, was psychic. (Or was it psychotic?) Anyway, I felt something was amiss and I beckoned to my roommate who looked out and gave a knowing smile, a smile that said nothing but told all. At last I knew: He was playing with the dimensions again. Dissatisfied with calculus and the same old stuff about differentiating and integrating, he had linked his studies of math, philosophy and metaphysics and here we were. He motioned to me to sit down and he began slowly, as though talking to a child:
"S. F.," he began, "you see since you cannot determine the motions of the factors in the continuum, any pattern of motion must be illusory, and there cannot be determinable consequences..."
If you enjoy science fiction and this sort of continuum palaver, then it all might be comprehensible. Otherwise, uh uh.
From the Magazine Rack
Military Businessmen
At the request of Democratic Senator Paul Douglas of Illinois, the Defense Department has made public a list of 721 retired military officers employed by 88 of the 100 companies which hold 74 per cent of all defense contracts. Douglas inserted the list in the Congressional Record along with these comments:
"There is great danger of high officers leaving the armed services and going into the services of big contractors, thereafter dealing with their former comrades across table.
"UNDER THESE circumstances and with such a high proportion of negotiated contracts, there is a very real question as to the degree to which the public interest is furthered.
"I point out that these retired officers in many cases know the plans of the Defense Department and the general inside operation of the Defense Department, even when they do not actually negotiate the contracts."
The list inserted in the Congressional Record by Douglas and re-published by The (Madison,
Wis.) Capital Times of Nov. 13, 1961 (10c—The Capital Times, Madison, Wis.), names only those officers holding the rank of Navy captain or Army Air Force colonel and up. It is also incomplete in that when published, the following firms had not yet reported:
General Motors, Pan American World Airlines, Standard Oil Companies, and Motorola.
All of these have retired officers on their staffs.
IN ITS PRESENT form, the list shows that the companies employing the largest number of officers are:
Bendix Aviation Corp., Boeing Airplane Co., General Dynamics Corp., General Electric Co., General Tire and Rubber Co., International Telephone and Telegraph Corp., Lockheed Aircraft Corp., Philco Corp., Radio Corp. of America, Sperry Rand Corp., United Aircraft Corp., Westinghouse Air Brake Co., and Westinghouse Electric Co.
(An article in the January 1962 issue of The Californian)
Page 3
Moos Says Military Machine Outdated
A professor of anthropology said yesterday the U.S. military system needs a major overhauling to keep up with the times and to insure meaningful military operations for the United States.
Felix Moos, who spoke at the Faculty Forum, advocated four
P-T-P Sets Two Talks
People-to-People will hold two meetings this week to continue the campaign to prepare the P-t-P student ambassadors for their summer tour of Europe.
Restrictions recently placed on the program require that tour members have a definite purpose in mind and that they familiarize themselves with problems they may encounter during the tour.
Charles Sidman, assistant professor of history, will speak on "West Germany in NATO, and American Foreign Policy in the Eyes of the Rest of Europe" at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Cottonwood and Meadowlark Rooms of the Kansas Union. A discussion period will follow the talk.
At 4 p.m. today, another travel orientation program will be held in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Genevieve Delaisi, Paris, France, graduate student, will direct a forum on travel in France.
The Thursday program is the beginning of the second phase of the series of P-t-P orientation programs. The second phase, titled "The Ugly American," will include programs designed specifically for student ambassadors, although they are open to anyone planning to tour Europe.
1962
Egghead Replays Result in Reversal
Last week's loser became this week's winner in a special College Bowl rematch yesterday as Stephenson Hall whipped Sigma Nu, 220-135.
Sigma Nu won the original match, 150-140, in the second round of College Bowl competition April 15. However, the two teams registered a joint protest, stating that time had expired in the regularly-scheduled contest when Sigma Nu was permitted to answer a bonus question which decided the match in its favor. Both teams requested a rematch.
$ ^{b} $changes in the present setup of military operations. They are:
- The National Guard system should be scrapped.
- The reserve units of the various branches of the armed forces should be scrapped.
- Moos said the reserve units of the various branches of the armed forces should be dissolved because they are "too much on part time basis" to fight for their country.
- Young men with emotional devotion to their country should take over the leadership of military operations and perhaps take over the operation of the country.
- The armed forces should become more intellectualized, making them more competent to carry on their job.
"To keep them in practice with ancient World War II equipment is a great waste of money and time," he said. "Have you ever been to one of those two-hour meetings?"
He said the "National Guard is such a sacred cow it is not touched" by criticism.
PROF. MOOS SAID the mytl. about persons joining the army for service careers because they are too stupid for anything else is "an American idea" and should be abolished.
He stressed that it is important that the gap between intellectual professions and the armed services should be breached soon because the "nation cannot afford" such a gap.
HE SAID THAT troops of lower intelligence, which is the American stereotype of Army personnel, are a poor group to represent the U.S. abroad.
"You can't have millions of GI's going abroad without having them leave some things over there after they go," he said.
The military needs emotionallyinvolved, younger men, Moas said. He also stated that in many other countries, the military leaders and the leaders of their respective nations are younger men who are dynamic in their ways. He said that one often finds 35-year-old generals who are leading their countries.
Robert Grogan, Parsons graduate student, will present his Master's recital in organ at 8 p.m. today in Hoch Auditorium.
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He will play "Prelude and Fugue in G Minor" by Buxtehude, "Variations on 'Under the Green Linden Tree'" by Sweelinck, "Toccata and Fugue in C Major" by Bach, "Prelude on the Welsh Hymn Tune 'Bryn Calfaria'" by R. Vaughn Williams, "Chromatic Study on the Name of Bach" by Walter Piston, and "Toccata" by Leo Sowerby.
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Speaking Award To Be $400 Books
Master's Recital Set for Tonight
Grogan received his Bachelor of Music degree "with distinction" from KU last year. He studied with L E. Anderson, professor of organ and theory.
A $400 set of the Encyclopedia Americana will be awarded the winner of the Delta Sigma Rho public affairs speaking contest. Preliminaries will be held at 4 p.m. next Tuesday in Bailey Auditorium and finals will be at 8 p.m. next Wednesday in the same place.
Any student desiring to enter the contest may do so by registering at 116 Strong Hall through Monday. Speeches must concern an important public issue and must be approximately 10 minutes long.
"We're fairly certain now that the spacecraft will make a lunar impact," Cummings said. "It appears very likely the Ranger will be caught in the moon's gravitational pull and score a hit."
The spacecraft, launched aboard a 10-story Atlas-Agas rocket from Cape Canaveral, Fla., Monday, was expected to plunge into the dark side of the moon at 7:50 a.m. Thursday and be destroyed.
THIS, HOWEVER, WAS not considered likely by Clifford I. Cummings, lunar program director for Caltech's Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL), which now is tracking the Ranger-4.
beep-beeps from the Ranger were being monitored by a giant antenna, estimated the spacecraft would cover three-quarters of its journey by the end of today--about 7 p.m.
As it clung to its "impact" course, scientists grew more confident it would boomerang into the far side of the moon tomorrow morning for a "tremendous guidance success."
PASADENA, Calif. — (UPI) — The Ranger-4 spacecraft, approaching the last reaches of its lunar voyage, appeared "fairly certain" today to score America's first hit on the moon.
But the spacecraft still could make a near-miss, circle around the hidden backside of the moon and return to the earth's atmosphere Sunday night to disintegrate into a "flaming comet."
TONIGHT, IT WAS expected to complete nine-tenths of the distance where the pull of lunar gravity would increase its velocity toward an impact speed of 6,000 miles per hour.
If the spacecraft remains on its present trajectory, scientists said it would "graze" the leading edge of the moon by about 900 miles and curve in, under the pull of lunar gravity, for the collision.
"But we'll still be able to determine whether it crashes," a JPL spokesman said. "If it goes behind the moon and doesn't come out on the other side, we'll know it made impact."
Once it is behind the moon, the Ranger-4 will lose radio contact with the earth for lack of line-of-sight communications.
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The judges will be members of the faculty of the speech department.
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Japanese Students Protest U.S.A-Tests
TOKYO —(UPI)— A snake-dancing mob of about 100 leftist Zengakuren students marched on the U.S. embassy today to protest American atmospheric nuclear weapons tests but were driven off by waiting police riot squads.
The march was the first of an anticipated series of demonstrations against the resumption of U.S. nuclear testing in the air over the Pacific.
About 500 policemen, armed with pistols and clubs, ringed the U.S. embassy compound. The students moved to within about 50 yards of the embassy before they were blocked by a cordon of policemen, about six deep. government to reconsider its plan
The students tried to break through the police lines but were hurled back. A police loudspeaker warned the demonstrators to disperse but the students refused and attempted again to smash through to the embassy.
POLICE THEN began a series of football-like rushes, steadily forcing the students back. The demonstrators were driven across town more than a mile from the embassy.
There were no reports of serious injuries in the more than a dozen kicking, fist-swinging clashes that tied up traffic in downtown Tokyo during the evening rush hour. But numerous policemen and students were roughed up.
While the demonstrations were continuing, Foreign Minister Zentaro Kosaka summoned embassy Charge d'Affaires William Leenhart to deliver a formal protest note against the resumption of the U.S. nuclear tests.
"THE JAPANESE government cannot agree with the American plans to resume tests for whatever reason," a foreign office spokesman quoted Kosaka as saying.
"My government deeply regrets that the United States scheduled tests in the midst of the Geneva conference on disarmament. My government strongly urges the American
government to reconsider its plan from the standpoint of human welfare," Kosaka was quoted.
Leonhart said he would relay the protest to Washington.
The students from Hosei and Waseda universities snake-danced across the city to the embassy, carrying school banners and a few placards demanding the United States refrain from testing.
About 500 club-carrying policemen ringed the embassy compound. About 100 lined up in front of the iron gates at the main entrance while about 50 yards down the road another 200 policemen formed a solid phalanx.
Bunichiro Sano, director of the Ban-the-Bomb group, called an emergency news conference after the Washington announcement and told newsmen: "It cannot be allowed."
He said "our real action begins" when council chairman Kaoru Yasui returned from a visit to Moscow.
"That will be powerful and effective." Sano added.
Sano said that all 77 directors of the council — the nation's biggest ban-the-bomb organization — and 300 other persons, "including professors, religious representatives, students, actors and men of culture and knowledge" will go to the U.S. embassy tomorrow to protest to Ambassador Edwin O. Reischauer.
Reischauer is currently on a tour of Japanese provincial areas.
'Yellow Book' Illustrations In Major Exhibit of Season
"A Study in Yellow," the Museum of Art's major exhibition this year, will open Sunday.
The Victoria and Albert Museum is the national repository for prints and drawings in the British Isles. The Ashmolean Museum at Oxford has the finest collection of Beerbohm drawings.
The exhibition will feature illustrations from "The Yellow Book" of the 1890s. It will contain drawings borrowed from Oxford and Victoria and Albert Museums in England and from Princeton University.
'Twelfth Night'
To Open Tonight
The University Theatre's production of William Shakespeare's comedy "Twelfth Night, or What You Will" opens at 8 p.m. today in the University Theatre.
Performances are scheduled through Saturday. Gordon Beck, instructor of speech and drama, is director.
Before the curtain goes up, the "Lobby Singers," led by Ted Lawson, Medford, Ore., junior, will sing Elizabethan madrigals for the audience.
ID cards will admit students. All other tickets are $1.50.
Scabbard and Blade To Install Officers
Scabbard and Blade, national honorary military society, will install newly-elected officers for 1962-63 at the next meeting, early in May.
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The officers for the coming year are Richard Hartman, Kansas City, Mo., junior, president; William Textor, Leewardworth sophomore, vice president; Paul Stone, Lawrence junior, treasurer, and Frank Breen, Cincinnati, Ohio, junior, secretary.
"The Yellow Book" was founded by Henry Harland and Aubrey Beardsley and was published by John Lane of London from 1894-1897. It gave young writers and artists an opportunity to have their work published. The art, however, was completely disassociated from the text.
Yellow Book contributions from Princeton will include material from the Gallatin Collections of works by and about Aubrey Beardsley.
"The artist had only to choose his subject, produce his masterpiece, and if it passed the scrutiny of the editor and John Lane, the offering would be accepted and its creator amply recompensed."
Mrs. Katherine Mix of Baker University, who recently did a study of "The Yellow Book." writes:
The Art Museum will sponsor a public reception from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday. The exhibition will run until after commencement.
The Presidential Forum will hold its last meeting of the semester at 7:30 tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The topic of discussion will be "Medicare-Pro and Con." Vaclav Mudrohr, assistant professor of history, and Oswald Backus, professor of history, will lead the discussion.
Medical Care Plans To Be Discussed
Guest panelists are Dr. C. Y. Thomas Jr., a physician from Prairie Village and L.R.C. Agnew, professor of history and chairman of the department of the history of medicine at KU.
Last night's All Student Council meeting was the most lively one of the semester although only one piece of legislation was passed and one was defeated.
Student Council Meeting Lively
The council voted to have a council picnic early in May to "further jovial relations between the political parties after the election."
A RESOLUTION TO send a letter to all department heads requesting that no tests or papers be due the week preceding final week was defeated.
- The present night bus service will be discontinued...
- The following reports made were:
- Recommended that the budget for All Women Students be returned to the University thus eliminating it from the ASC budget and lowering the ASC appropriation from student activity fees 40 cents.
- Placing a stop sign at the top of the hill at the intersection of 14th Street and Jayhawk Boulevard will not be necessary after the new traffic plan is in effect next fall because there will be a check point on Fourteenth.
- The possibility of having a stop sign at the corner of Eleventh and Louisiana Streets has been passed to the Lawrence planning commission for investigation.
- The planned debate between representatives of the Truth About Cuba and Fair Play for Cuba committees will not be possible because the latter cannot come. A speaker from the Truth about Cuba committee will be here and will speak at the Minority Opinion Forum.
- A representative of the John Hancock Insurance Company will be on campus this week to discuss with student leaders the possibility of starting a group life insurance plan at KU similar to that now operating at West Point and several other Eastern schools.
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Specifications for the Watson Library additions were sent out yesterday to contractors for bidding.
Preliminary estimates place the cost of the additions at $1,800,000. The opening date for bids will be 2 p.m.
May 22.
Representatives of WDAF, Kansas City radio station, will be at the next People-to-People "Happy Hour" to interview students about the "Happy Hour" and the P-t-P program in general. The "Happy Hour" will be from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday in the Kappa Kappa Gamma house.
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BOSS
On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "Rally Round The Flag, Boys", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)
CRAM COURSE No. 3: ENGLISH POETRY
Final exams will soon be upon us. This is no time for fun and games. Let us instead study hard, cram fiercely, prepare assiduously.
In this column today let us make a quick survey of English poetry. When we speak of English poetry, we are, of course, speaking of Byron, Shelley, and Keats. Some say that of the three, Keats was the most talented. It is true that he displayed his gifts earlier than the others. While still a schoolboy at St. Swithin's he wrote his epic lines:
If I am good, I get an apple.
So I don't whistle in the chapel.
From this distinguished beginning, he went on to write another 40,000 poems in his lifetime—which is all the more remarkable when you consider that he was only five feet tall!
I mention this fact only to show that physical problems never keep the true artist from creating. Byron, for example, was lame. Shelley had an ingrown hair. Nonetheless, these three titans of literature turned out a veritable torrent of romantic poetry.
Nor did they neglect their personal lives. Byron, a devil with the ladies, was expelled from Oxford for dipping Elizabeth Barrett's pigtails in an inkwell. He thereupon left England to fight in the Greek war of independence. He fought bravely and well, but women were never far from his mind, as evidenced by this immortal poem:
But I don't enjoy it half as much as dancing cheek to cheek.
How splendid it is to fight for the Greek.
But I don't enjoy it half as much as dancing cheek to cheek. While Byron fought in Greece, Shelley remained in England, where he became court poet to the Duke of Marlborough. (It is interesting to note in passing that Marlborough was the original spelling of Marlboro Cigarettes, but the makers were unable to get the entire word on the package. With characteristic ingenuity they cleverly lopped off the final "gh". Of course, left them with a "gh" lying around the factory. They looked for some place to put it and finally decided to give it to the Director of Sales, Mr. Vincent Van Go. This had a rather curious result. As plain Van Go, he had been a crackerjack director of sales, but once he became Van Gogh, he felt a mysterious, irresistible urge to paint. He resigned from the Company and became an artist. It did not work out too well. When Van Gogh learned what a great success Marlboro Cigarettes quickly became—as, of course, they had to with such a flavorful flavor, such a filterful filter, such a flip-top box, such a soft pack—he was so upset about leaving the firm that he cut off his ear in a fit of chagrin.)
But I digress. Byron, I say, was in Italy and Shelley in
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England. Meanwhile Keats went to Rome to try to grow. Who does not remember his wistful lyric;
Although I am only five feet high.
Some day I will look in an elephant's eye.
But Keats did not grow. His friends, Shelley and Byron, touched to the heart, rushed to Rome to stretch him. This too failed. Then Byron, ever the ladies' man, took up with Lucrezia Borgia, Catherine of Aragon, and Annie Oakley. Shelley, a more domestic type, stayed home with his wife Mary, and wrote his famous poem:
I love to stay home with the missus and write,
And hug her and kiss her and give her a bite.
Mary Shelley finally got so tired of being bitten that she went into another room and wrote Frankenslein. Upon reading the manuscript, Shelley and Byron got so scared they immediately booked passage home to England. Keats tried to go too, but he was so small that the clerk at the steamship office couldn't see him over the top of the counter. So Keats remained in Rome and died of a broken heart.
Byron and Shelley cried a lot and then together composed this immortal epitaph:
Good old Keats, he might have been short.
But he was a great American and a heck of a good sport. © 1962 Max Shulman
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Washburn Defeats Jayhawkers 5-4
Page J
If the Kansas Jayhawker baseball team had to lose one, they picked the right time. Yesterday Coach Floyd Temple's crew dropped their last non-conference game to Washburn 5-4 at Topeka.
Kansas lead 4-1 going into the bottom of the eighth inning. Starter Carl Nelson lead off the inning by striking out Washburn second baseman John Keenan. Washburn pitcher Clif Cox drew a walk and was followed by pinch-hitter Elsbera Broadnax who singled to center. This was all for Nelson who was removed in favor of Roger Brock.
Cox held the Jayhawkers to only four hits, struck out nine and walked seven. Kansas left 10 men on bases compared to four for Washburn.
The Jayhawkers resume Big Eight conference action Friday at Quigley Field when they meet the Iowa State Cyclones in a doubleheader. Saturday the two clubs play a single game.
The Jayhawkers went down one two-three in the top of the ninth losing their fifth game compared to 10 wins.
For the first time in three years Mel Karrle and Pete Woodward did not occupy the number one doubles spot for the KU tennis team in a dual meet with Kansas State here yesterday.
BROCK HAD even more difficulty than Nelson. Third baseman Curt Miller singled to score Cox and send Broadax to third. Miller took second on the throw to third base. Gene Bailey grounded to second, but Broadax scored on the play to make the score 4-3.
Del Campbell and Jan Cobble took the best two of three sets from the Karrle-Woodward doubles combination Monday in a practice session, earning the top spot for the dual.
THIS CHANGE, though, made little difference in the meet as KU blanked the Wildcats. 7-0, and expanded their season record to 7-2.
Brock walked Dan Myers to put the winning run on first base. Dave Colbach then doubled to right field which scored Miller and Myers to give the Blues a 5-4 margin.
Campbell and Cobble won the first set, 6-0, from K-State's Pat Finney and Bob Ditloe, and then won the longest set of the meet, 9-7, in the second set.
KEN PETERSON gained both sets from Wildcat John Davis with a 6-1 score.
In singles action, Karrile downed Finney, 6-0, 6-1 and Woodward beat KSU's Roger Dalrymple 6-2, 6-2. Campbell defeated Don Fassnacht, 6-2, 7-5 and Cobble bested Ditloe, 6-2, 6-4.
The Woodward-Karrle pair, who up until this meet, had held the number one doubles spot since they've been sophomores, downed the Davis-Dalrvmple duo. 6-1, 6-2.
KU Tennis Team Beats Wildcats
Friday the Jayhawker tennis team travels to Ames, Iowa, to battle the Iowa State Cyclones.
TODAY'S PROBABLE PITCHERS
American League
Chicago at New York — Pizarro (2-1) vs. Ford (1-0)
Washington at Boston — Hannan (0-0), vs. Conley (1-1).
Kansas City at Detroit -- Walker (2-0) vs. Lary (1-1).
Wednesday, April 25, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Minnesota at Baltimore (night) — Lee (0-1) vs. Estrada (1-1).
Cleveland at Los Angeles (night)
— Lateman (0-2 vs. Grba (1-0).
Los Angeles at Chicago — Podres (1-1) vs. Hobbie (0-2).
San Francisco at Pittsburgh (night) — Perry (0-0) vs. Friend (3-0).
National League
Money - Winning Jockey
New York at Cincinnati (night)
- Jackson (-0-2) vs. Purkey (2-0)
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Eddie Arcaro's mounts won $1,303.844 at New York state race tracks in 1961.
Jockey Manuel Ycaza was second on the Aqueduct, Belmont, Saratoga circuit with $1,031.382.
Philadelphia at Milwaukee (night — Short (0-0) vs. Piche (0-0).
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St. Louis at Houston (night)
Washburn (1-0) vs. Stone (2-0).
Pirates Get Around
PITTSBURGH — (UPI) - The National league Pittsburgh Pirates have 27 former Buc players, managers or coaches now in uniform in the American league. Only the Cleveland Indians of the rival league have no former Pirates on the roster.
April 29, 1962 — 3:00 p.m. — Forum Room
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Taylor Says 'That's All'
WOODRUFF, S. C. — (UPI) — Catcher Sammy Taylor says he's "home to stay" unless the Chicago Cubs cough up more money.
"Ive got no plans," he said, "but I'm seeing if I can get into some athletic program as director, maybe in the Little League, around here."
"We couldn't get together on a lot of things, especially money-wise," said Taylor, who maintains a home here with his wife, Polly, and their four-year-old daughter, Patti Sue.
The only other way he'll return to baseball is if the Cubs trade him to another club — and he may get his wish.
THE CUBS suspended the 29-year-old catcher when he failed to appear in Chicago for yesterday's game with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Despite his batting average, several clubs are known to be interested in Taylor and there is some possibility the Cubs may trade him.
TAYLOR RECEIVED an estimated $9,000 last year. He batted .238 in 89 games last year, being sidelined part of the season with injuries. He appeared in seven of the Cubs games so far this year and was batting .133 when he left the club.
"I can't keep up my home and travel on the money they pay me," Taylor declared. "I signed this year's contract for the same money I received last year."
In Chicago, Cub Vice President John Holland said he had refused Taylor permission to visit his home and warned him he would be suspended without pay if he left the club.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Eddie Arcaro and James McLaughlin share the jockey record for the Belmont Stakes with six winners each. Arcaro is undisputed champ of the Kentucky Derby and Preakness.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 25, 1962
50-Nation Show to Be May 5
The 1962 International Festival May 5 at Hoch Auditorium will feature exhibits and music of 50 nations. Highlight of the afternoon and evening festivities will be a program starting at 7:45 p.m.
Margaret Cameron, Great Britain, and Esmeraldino de Oliveira, Brazil, will be the mistress and master of ceremonies of the program. It will feature song and dance performances from Israel, Latin America, Africa, the Philippine Islands, and India.
Jalal Razzak, Iraq, will serve as disc jockey in a music program representing the countries of KU international students. Prior to and following the evening program, exhibits from 50 nations will be on display.
Plywood Is Stolen
New Cuban Bank Building Burned
KU police reported today that more than 50 sheets of plywood valued at $240 were stolen from the construction site near Dyche Hall on Mississippi Street.
Construction company officials reported the theft yesterday. They said they last saw the plywood Thursday or Friday.
HAVANA — (UPI) — A fire apparently started by saboteurs transformed Premier Fidel Castro's unfinished national bank building into a giant torch that blazed over Havana last night and early today.
A crowd of about 10,000 persons gathered in Maceo Park and along the Malecon (waterfront) drive to watch the building burn. Every fire company in Havana turned out to fight the flames.
The half-completed building, covering a square block on the waterfront, was the particular pride of the Castro regime. Already 10 stories
tall, it was to have gone severa stories higher.
It was not certain immediately how much of the building it would be possible to salvage from the ashes.
The fire, which began about 8 p.m. yesterday and burned through the night, could be seen from all parts of Havana. An official spokesman said it "has the characteristics of an act of sabotage."
High government officials, including Interior Minister Ramiro Valdez and Industry Minister Ernesto (Che) Guevara, were on the scene directing fire-fighting efforts.
Because of a shortage of water in
the city's mains, fire engines dropped their intake hoses directly into the sea about 150 yards from the burning building.
Anti-Castroites have often used fire as a weapon in their fight against the regime. Tons of sugar cane have been burned in the fields or at the mill, and a number of buildings in Havana have been damaged or destroyed by fire.
The usual portrait in the foreign commentaries, picturing the American woman as idle, wasteful, and pampered, is not one she will herself recognize—Max Lerner
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Page 7
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NICELY FURNISHED 3 rm. apt. Air conditioned, $62.50 per month. Nicely furnished, bedroom, apt. nicely furnished 3 bedrm. apt. $85 per month. Nicely furnished large. 2 bedrm apt. ~$15 per month. 3 room apt. air conditioner, 2 bedrooms, 3 rooms, 4 rooms, 4 rooms within 2½ blocks from KU. Prices include utilities & phone pd Boys or couple. Available June 1. Call I. VII. 3-7830.
Don't fight the heat this summer! Study in centrally air conditioned apts.
$75 and Up
Furnished & unfurnished
Call or come out to see other outstanding features.
Park Plaza Apartments
VI 2-3416 1912 W. 25th
SLEEPING and study rms. for boys for summer & fall terms. Close to KU. Double & singles. Call VI 3-4890 after 4:30. Any time on Saturday & Sunday. 5-1
5 rooms and bath furnished apt. Outside entrance, 1 block from Union, $100 per month. Utilities paid. Room for 5 students. Phone VI 3-6723. 5-1
LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt. 2
rooms, kitchen, and bath, ideal for 2 or
3 students. Avail now. 520 Ls. VI 2-0731.
1 rm. apartment to sublet — June, July.
august — $45 per month VI 2-3784 by
TYPEWRITERS for rent cheap — can VI 3-0031 between 5 and 7 ppm. tf
3 room apartment, private bath and en-
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TRANSPORTATION
Two people would like a ride to either Columbia, Mo. or St Louis, Mo. leaving Albany for share expenses Call Phyllis at VI 3-6606. Phyllis School 1144 W. 11th.
DON ROSE BANDS Open Dates are
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BUSINESS SERVICES
FINE QUALITY PORTAULTS at reason-
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fenced yard, no traffic problem. $40 an hour or $10 a week. 8-5. References, VI 3-
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INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snaps repaired. Call VI 2-2533. tt
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V 3-1267.
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DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 9391' Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tt
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. Notes on revise and review comprehensive. Price: $4. Call VI 2-3752 Free delivery. ff
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3644.
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LOST IN THE VICINITY OF KU
STADIUM during relays: Pair of men's
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LOST
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FOUND
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Clerk Steno I for Secretary, School of Journalism. Must be capable, reliable, responsible for new work assume responsibility. Better than average pay Phone VI 3-2700, Ext. 370
HELP WANTED
FOR SALE
GE Electric 40" Range, 4 top burners,
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space, light, clean, good condition.
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FM Tuner $39; FM table radio $49. Both are Heathkits in perfect condition. See after 6:00 at 1417 E. 15th. 3rd trailer from south end. D. H. Lucas, VI 3-2975. 5-1
Have won new electric sewing machine worth $110 in competition. Want to sell for $55 as I cannot take it home to Europe. (Foreign student) Call VI 2-0249
Nice 52 foot 1960 CATALINA TRAILER
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tt
1956 MERCURY: black and white 2 door
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1961 after 6.
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OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright. typewriter sales, service, rentals. Laurence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI 3-1844
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Triumph motorcycle — 16 H.P. — only
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ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third- year medical student must sell his Bausch
money immediately. $200.
Call VL 3-8877 or come to 907 Ark. for more
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1956 Lincoln for sale. Perfect condition, all power equipment, radio, leather in clothing, Sacrifice price. Foreign student going home. Must see to appreciate. 74- E. 13th. 74- F. 27
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 25, 1962
Milton's Ideas Valid - Parker
(Continued from page 1) foreign language would also be introduced into the curriculum.
Prof. Parker said, in the third year Milton advocated using one of the mastered foreign languages to read elementary texts on meteorology, botany, biology and anatomy. While studying these natural sciences, his pupils would also learn trigonometry.
ACCORDING TO PROF. PARKER, Milton's curriculum, during the fourth year of study, the student would continue these studies along with the study of applied medicine or hygiene. During this year students also read poetry in foreign languages and took field trips, Prof. Parker said.
During the fifth year, Prof. Parker said, Milton advocated that the students master a third foreign language by reading a history of its
speakers. During this same year the pupils were also introduced to ethical and moral problems and the study of household management and family life.
During the sixth year Milton advocated that students master a fourth language and that the study of political science and citizenship, law, theology and church history begin.
MILTON TOUGHT THAT with this background, by the seventh year the students would be ready for a year devoted entirely to the study of great literature in the original languages. During the eighth year Milton introduced students to logic, rhetoric, and the theory of literature. Prof. Parker said.
Finally, during the final year of his educational program, Milton concentrated on composition. "They will write because, at long last, they
will have something to write about some basis for expression of opinions."
PROF PARKER SAID that Milton's curriculum was not just a theory, but a fact. He said, through the papers of his students "we are able to learn that Milton gave his pupils a working functional knowledge of a foreign language in a single year's time."
In other words, he said, "Visionary as this curriculum may have sounded to you, Milton was writing about what, for the most part, he had actually done." Edward Phillips, Milton's nephew and pupil, reported mastering five languages under his uncle's tutelage in not quite seven years. Prof. Parker said.
Other features of Milton's educational program included regular morning exercises, military training and the study of battle strategy.
Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12:05
St. Lawrence Chapel, 1810 Stratford
Road.
Official Bulletin
Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11-45.12 noon; Saturday, 4-5 and 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road.
Western Civilization Examination Regis-
ment between April 30 & May 4 in
130 Strong.
meeting for students planning to visit France, Genèveville, Delaijs in charge.
People-to-People Forum: 4 p.m.
Forum Room, Kansas Union. Orientation
TODAY
El Ateneo: Miercoles dia 25 de abril a las 4 de la tarde teatro de Fraser Hall. Representacion dramatica — "El retablo de las maravillas" de Cervantes.
SUA Bridge Lessons: 7 p.m. 306 Kansas Union, Instructor, Larry Bardy
Presidential Forum: 7:36 p.m. Forum Room, Kansas Union, Medicare Pro BioMedian and C, Dr. L. R. Caine Village physician, and Dr. L. R. Caine, KU professor.
U.S. Fires Bomb Shot -
(Continued from page 1)
The last U.S. atmospheric test was held Oct. 30, 1958, in Nevada. The last U.S. Pacific test was Oct. 12, 1958. After that, the United States, Britain and Russia called a moratorium and began three years of test ban negotiations in Geneva.
The testing task force is headed by Maj. Gn. A. D. Starbird.
RUSSIA BROKE the moratorium last Sept. 1, launching a series of
more than 40 explosions. The Geneva test ban talks eventually broke up entirely in January and were replaced by the 17-nation general disarmament talks in March.
In a March 2 speech announcing atmospheric tests would be heid barring the miracle of a Soviet treaty agreement, Kennedy pledged that the series would be conducted with "an absolute minimum" of radioactive fallout, far less than Russia created.
Marchers Protest
(Continued from page 1)
"PLEASE HALT testing. We must find alternatives to the nuclear arms race."
The group walked along Jayhawk Boulevard as students were going to 3 o'clock classes.
"THAT'S FUNNY. I read it in the paper, and I didn't think anyone else would go along with him."
"A lot of good they're going to do."
"I think they've got a good point, but I don't think I'd be doing what they are doing."
"I don't know — I'll write the President a letter tonight."
"Some people have so much nerve."
During a pause in the march, Ruth Hartzell, Lawrence senior, expressed her reasons for joining the marchers in the protest demonstration.
"It's a means of expression and its
also a way of showing other people not to be afraid. There are a lot of people who are afraid to express themselves," she said.
TWO OF THE women who marched with the group got into a small French car when the demonstration broke up.
"I'm glad I went along. I only wish more people would do it," one of the women, Mrs. Rhoda Staley, said. "In most towns there would be thousands marching. I think it's rather interesting how few there were here," she said.
FOOT LONG
HOT DOG
40c
BIG BUY
Ntucky Fried Chicken
--ship to the New World (in 1492)
Economics Major with Fine Arts Styling
FORD
RAMBLER
American Motors Means More for Americans
This one goes to the head of the class—with the lowest wagon price in the U. S., the highest honors for top gas mileage, and the longest years of high resale value among all compacts. That's the Rambler American Deluxe 2-Door Wagon for you.And when you consider its clean, crisp styling that lives so smartly with the years (we don't make drastic changes merely for the sake of change),you really have a good and handy thing going for you.Try it on all countsat your Rambler dealer's.
JM
Check your opinions against L'M's Campus Opinion Poll #21
1 Which would take more courage?
TLL
Yes No
2 Is it true that "clothes make the man?"
TUXEDO
WELCOME
LUNAR
C.O.F.C.
rocket to the moon (in 196?)
Sports
Sometimes
How did you choose your present brand?
"Smoked around" till I found it
Stuck with the one I started with
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!
THE MIRACLE TIP
L&M
FILTERS
LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.
L&M
FILTERS
LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.
HERE'S HOW MEN AND WOMEN AT 56 COLLEGES VOTED:
Smoked around .83% 84%
Stuck with it .17% 16%
3
Yes ... 14% ... 7%
No ... 31% ... 39%
Sometimes ... 55% ... 54%
2
MEN WOMEN
New World ... 73%... 78%
Moon ... 27%... 22%
1
L&M's the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke.
Vox Populi Sweeps Election
Jerry Dickson, Newton junior, led Vox Populi to an overwhelming victory in the student government elections yesterday as he won the student body presidency by a 350-vote margin.
Vox continued to control the All Student Council by winning eight of the 10 contested seats.
THE STOCKY, HARD-CAMPAigning Dickson polled 1810 votes to defeat University Party candidate Gerald (Kep) Kepner, who received 1460 votes.
Dickson's victory put Vox candidate George Hahm, Scotch Plains, N. J., junior, into the vice presidency. Tom Hardy, Hoisington junior, was defeated with Keppner.
A highlight in the vote-counting in Bailey Hall was the announcement of the winner of the senior class presidency in the closest race of the election.
IN THIS CONTEST. Mike Mead,
Kansas City, Mo., junior, defeated
Chuck Patterson, Rockford, Ill., juni-
ner, 359-358.
UP members of the ASC elections committee questioned the count of the senior class ballots, but a recount confirmed the slim margin in favor of Mead.
The only ASC seats captured by UP were those of the School of Pharmacy and College Women.
UP candidate Kay Cash, Fairview Park, Ohio, sophomore, won an easy
victory in the College women division, defeating Janice Huffman (Vox). Junction City sophomore, 529-349.
IN A TOUGHER CONTEST. Phyllis Wertzberger, Lawrence senior,
defeated Larry Milne (Vox), Lawrence senior, for the School of Pharmacy seat with a 37-23 vote.
See page 12 for tabulated results of yesterday's election.
The only serious opposition from Action-sponsored candidates were in the contests for the School of Education, School of Law, and Graduate School.
In the Graduate School, Hans Krause of Caracas Venezuela, received 43 votes to 63 for Vox candidate Rab Malik. Karachi, Pakistan Larry Jones of St. John (UP), received nine votes.
IN THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION race, Nolen Ellison, Kansas City junior, was a fairly close second to Vox candidate Judy Fitts, Topeka junior. The final count gave Miss Fitts a 156-128 victory.
In the Law School race, Leo Kelly (Vox). Lawrence law student, polled 35 votes to 24 votes for Bob Serra (independent), Frontenac law student.
The other two independent candidates posed no real challenge in their divisions. Don Warner, Topeka junior, was in third place in the balloting for College men with 234 votes. Zeke Wigglesworth, Lawrence junior, who was not an Action-supported candidate, took second place in School of Journalism voting.
GREG TURNER (VOX), Seattle. Wash., junior, won the College men seat, defeating Blaine King (UP). Emporia junior, 591-450.
Dennis Branstiter (Vox), Independence, Mo., junior, won the School of Journalism seat with 26 votes. Ben Marshall (UP), Lincoln junior, received 10 votes.
The winners of other ASC seats were Larry Borcherding, Kansas City, Mo., junior, Business; Anne Peddie, Wichita junior, Fine Arts; and Dick Jones, Lenexa freshman. Engineering.
THE RESULTS OF THE CLASS elections were:
Senior class officers, to serve with Mead — Phil McKnight, Wichita vice president; Judy Geisendorf, Salina, secretary, and Wallye Heyde, Shawnee Mission, treasurer.
Junior class — Dave Brollier, Hugoton, president; John Linden, Salina, vice president; Sue Runnells, Greeley, Colo., secretary and Bruce Null, Grand Island, Neb. treasurer.
Sophomore class — Gary Bell, McLouth, president; Charles Blaas.
Daily hansan
59th Year, No. 126
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Thursday, April 26, 1962
Shaffer Poses World State to Halt Conflict
Prof. Shaffer was one of five KU faculty members on a panel which discussed nuclear testing and disarmament. The discussion was sponsored by the Student Peace Union.
Harry Shaffer, assistant professor of economics, yesterday said a world state is the only permanent way to prevent a nuclear war, but he said formation of such an organization is very unlikely.
ALL FIVE ATTACKED THE resumption of nuclear testing by the United States.
The other panel members were Charles Landesman, assistant professor of philosophy; Richard Burke,
[Picture of a man in a suit with glasses.]
Harry Shaffer
assistant professor of human relations; John Ise, professor emeritus of economics; and Arnold Strassenburg, assistant professor of physics and moderator of the discussion.
Prof. Shaffer said, "Short of unconditional surrender, there is only one way in which war, and therefore nuclear war, could be forever banned from this earth—voluntary submission of all nations to a world government with exclusive power, both constitutional and physical, to
settle any dispute among the Federated States of the World.
"I HOPE THAT WE CAN accomplish it," he continued. "I doubt that we shall, because it is hardly necessary. I believe, to spell out the probability of . . . leaders of nations, east and west, sitting down together and agreeing to surrender voluntarily their country's sovereignty to a world government."
"And yet towards this goal, I firmly believe, we must work incessantly. For if we fail, we shall not have a second chance.
"I firmly believe," Prof. Shaffer added, "that neither President Kennedy nor Khrushchev would consciously and on purpose start a thermonuclear war but there are countless possibilities that could bring on such a war," he said. "First of all, accidents are possible and some have already occurred though no accidental nuclear explosion has yet taken place.
- The nuclear deterrent power of the United States is already sufficient.
- New tests will not provide significant new information.
"A NUCLEAR WAR MIGHT come in a step by step development, the spreading of a local war, one side using the first small, tactical, nuclear weapon, the other retaliating, and so on," he said.
"I have the feeling that the President believes the walls are beginning to tumble down. Perhaps he decided to test in order to prove to the Russians that we are not growing soft."
- The U.S. Department of Health says fallout presents a danger to genetics and health. At least a few will be adversely affected.
His six points against testing were:
Prof. Landesman gave six reasons why testing should not have been resumed.
- "Any series of tests . . . can only stimulate new tests . . . in order to maintain the balance of terror. We have provided Khrushchev with a
justification ahead of time for his series of tests."
- Testing is a "crime against humanity." Since the victims of fallout are selected at random, the false illusion that nothing is morally wrong with testing is created.
- The new series of tests will alienate world opinion, especially among the uncommitted nations. "On an issue the voice of innocent people ought to be heard."
"It SEEMS THE BETTER PART of cowardice to say that there is some fire where there is so much smoke and so much controversy," he said. "We can no longer afford to just hold hands while the world goes on around us."
Prof. Burke said there is much controversy among U.S. scientists about how much we have to fear from testing.
"If we and the Russians go on test-
(Continued on page 4)
Lawrence, vice president; Carolyn Power, Kansas City, Mo., secretary, and Nancy Patterson, Wichita, treasurer.
AN AMENDMENT CLARIFYING the term of office of the ASC chairman passed by a 1,521-vote margin, 2,180-659. The acceptance of the amendment guarantees that the ASC chairman can hold office even if his council membership expires.
The question leading to the referendum was raised this year when Jerry Palmer, El Dorado senior and acting chairman of ASC, was scheduled to lose his membership on the ASC at the end of the fall semester. He had, at that time, served on ASC for one year, the maximum allowed in the ASC constitution.
Palmer was elected to the ASC in tenure.
* * *
the fall of 1960 and was elected chairman in the spring of 1961. For the current semester, he has been serving as ASC chairman without technically being a member.
As the evening wore on, some of the girls were embracing the winners, other students sifted around shaking hands with new ASC members and congratulating each other, but some of the elder statesmen leaned back in their chairs, completely worn out and just watched the festivities.
Worries Sent to Winds As Vox Celebrates Wins
The students went into hysteresis as many Vox members looked expectantly down the steps and saw the smiling face of Holly Thompson, Ottawa freshman, as she rushed up to post the student body president results.
Outside the counting room in Bailey Hall earlier in the evening, some 100 students nervously gathered around the window which separates the elections officials from the on-lookers. As the results were brought up from the counting room and posted on the window the predominately Vox audience began yelling and grabbing the hands of the winning candidates.
Worries of hour examinations, term papers, and women's closing hours were thrown to the winds last night as members of Vox Populi celebrated at a local restaurant their near sweep of the All Student Council seats.
Politicians, candidates, and well-wishers gathered to recover from the long weeks of campaigning by dancing with the girls, who received extended closing hours.
THE AMENDMENT ACCEPTED in the referendum reads;
Jerry Dickson, newly elected president of the student body, arrived on the shoulders of a bevy of his fraternity brothers. After several toasts and chants, Dickson was lifted to a table where he said, "My speech is short and to the point. Thank you very much."
Both Vox and UP members were present early in the evening, but as the night wore on most of the UP members left and only came in to check the posted results.
The reactions of the candidates differed from quiet, but sincere handshakes for the new School of Engineering representative Dick Jones, to the frantic screams when Dickson's victory was posted.
"The All Student Council shall elect from its membership one person to serve during an entire session (a session shall be defined to be from spring election to spring election) as chairman of the All Student Council. If his regular term should expire during a session he shall retain his position as chairman as a member at large. A vice chairman, secretary, and treasurer shall also be elected from the membership of the council. They shall serve only during their tenure as members of the council."
One candidate for a class office came running into Bailey in bermuda shorts, her hair wet from swimming with the Quack Club. When she saw the star beside her name, signifying that she had won, she hugged her similarly clad girl friend.
\* \* \*
Gloom Marks UP Gathering
University Party candidates and supporters wandered from table to table sipping cans of beer, mumbling dejectedly, and shaking their heads in disbelief.
The Wagon Wheel was quiet, much more quiet than it usually is on Wednesday evenings.
Vox Populi had just won eight of the 10 vacant seats on the All Student Council.
Wisps of cigarette smoke curled lazily into a blue fog that dimmed the overhead lights.
Earlier in the evening, UP candidates had been happier. A rousing chorus of cheers greeted the announcement that Kay Cash, Cleveland, Ohio, sophomore and UP candidate for the college women's seat, had won.
But these announcements were few and far between.
Jim Anderson, UP co-chairman, scratched his head as he announced that the Vox candidate, Greg Turner, Seattle, Wash., sophomore, had won the college men's seat.
Anderson said, "I expected that Warner (Don Warner, Topeka junior and independent candidate for the college men's seat on the ASC) would split the vote."
Someone opened the back door of the "Wheel," and the smoke began to clear.
Anderson sat quietly in a large, semi-circular booth in the southwest corner of the room.
He could only say, "We'll be back next fall."
Ranger-4 Reaches Moon
By Douglas Diltz
GOLDSTONE TRACKING STATION, Calif. — (UPI) — America scored space triumph today when its Ranger-4 spacecraft boomeranged into the far side of the moon, marking the free world's first hit on the lunar surface.
The wayward spacecraft plunged to destruction on the moon's hidden side at 6:49 a.m. to achieve what scientists hailed as a "tremendous guidance success" toward future space exploration by man.
"It is the first step toward man eventually walking on the moon," exclaimed Cummings.
The historic space feat was the first hit on the moon in nearly four years and 11 tries for JPL scientists who built the moon probe vehicle.
BUT THEY CONCEDED it was a
It covered the 258,857 mile journey to the moon in the 63 hours 59 minutes 45 seconds. Because the spacecraft's electronic brain failed early in its voyage, JPL's Goldstone tracking station, secluded in the desert here, was forced to follow its path with the tiny, weak 50-millowatt radio in the space capsule. The tracking station did
"lucky accident" on the part of the Ranger which failed in its prime mission of taking lunar pictures and landing a 300-pound space capsule on the face of the moon.
The Ranger crashed in unknown lunar terrain after grazing past the outside edge of the illuminated half of the moon by some 900 miles and then looping back into the far side at 6,000 miles an hour under gravitation pull.
the job with its huge antenna, weighing 270,000 pounds and with 85-foot reflecting dishes.
HOWEVER, SCIENTISTS felt the errant Ranger-4 vindicated itself by hitting the moon.
The moon probe vehicle was launched from Cape Caneral Monday aboard an Atlas Agena B rocket in what was described as "a perfect liftoff." But the trouble in the Ranger's complex communication system developed only two hours later.
After being given a terrific boost to build up speed to 25,000 miles an hour in order to escape the earth's gravity field, the vehicle gradually decreased in speed. It traveled most of the distance between 3,000 and 4,000 miles an hour.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 26,1962
The Test Resumption
The United States resumed nuclear testing yesterday. It was the first atmospheric test since 1958.
There were many critics against the resumption. Students on this campus and others held protest marches. Other critics raised loud voices about the dangers inherent in the United States resuming nuclear testing. The Japanese government lodged a formal protest against test resumption. A group of Japanese students rioted against the resumption of tests.
The Russians have used the United States resumption of tests as a peg for a massive propaganda campaign. Their campaign could perhaps be expected to succeed in neutralist countries, or countries with communist leanings.
Undoubtedly, there will be more protests. More theories will be advanced against the tests. Some will even be as hopelessly illogical as the one advanced by one of the KU marchers. His sign read; "Isn't Russia a Neighbor."
But judging from events within the United States, such as the peace marchers proclaiming that we should love our neighbor, and that Russia is a neighbor, the propaganda campaign seems to have succeeded best in the United States.
THE RUSSIANS broke the test moratorium with their atmospheric tests last year. They have halted temporarily, but there is no valid reason to suppose that they would halt indefinitely even if the United States did not resume its own tests. Russian Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko announced Tuesday that Russian tests will follow the United States' tests.
In short, Russia launched their propaganda campaign on the fact that the United States had resumed testing (after the Russians had already broken the moratorium). This, they said, proved the United States did not want peace. Now Russia is doing the same thing for which they criticized the United States, and by using their logic, which is so often accepted as valid. Russia is also guilty by their own standards. But this is not the logic in point.
THE UNITED STATES has no guarantees that Russia would not resume testing. With the Geneva conference headed toward a dead end as far as the United States is concerned because of the disagreements on setting up international inspection teams, the United States had no choice but to start testing. It was necessary that the United States keep up her end of the power balance scale.
It is probably a good bet that these tests will involve perfecting an anti-missile missile. Both Russian and the United States are racing to develop this device. The winner will greatly shift the power scale to its advantage.
The United States test plan calls for detonating nuclear warheads for all types of intercontinental and submarine-launched ballistic missiles.
The United States resumption of testing does keep the arms race spiraling. But at present there appears no alternative.
—Karl Koch
CRC's Dormitory Probe Criticized Editor;
I am writing in regard to the article published in the April 17 Kansas entitled "The Dormitory Probe." As a fresh student living in Corbin Hall, I am aware that Negro women are roomed separately from the white women in the freshman dormitories. This letter is not meant as a rebuff to you but to the Civil Rights Council.
First of all, I do not believe that there have been any hard feelings among the white or the Negro women in our dormitory because we are in separate rooms. As a matter of fact, the Negro women are happy in their own groups. They have their friends just as the white women do. There are Negro women in Corbin who get along better with white women and they do so without incidents. Therefore I do not believe that separate rooms cause discriminatory feelings among the residents of this dormitory.
There is also the statement that "dormitory residents have the privilege of changing rooms." The CRC will take note: the present ruling allows room changes only at the beginnings of semesters. Those women assigned during the summer to room together the first freshman semester are required to do so. No changes can be made until the second semester. Roommates who found themselves incompatible at the beginning of this year found no relief until they were able to change rooms during semester break.
If freshman room assignments are to be made at random without regard to race, then one of two conditions should exist: (1) Room changes should be able to be made at the beginning of the first semester, say, for a period of two weeks, or (2) Applicants for rooms in freshman dormitories should be able to specify whether or not they would mind having a woman of another race for a roommate.
... Letters ...
THE STATEMENT that "a demand by the CRC that an ideal procedure be established in which any discriminatory feelings among freshman women should be ignored because they are morally indefensible" would undoubtedly create problems which we do not have now. The drunken orgies which take place on weekends here are as "morally indefensible" as the university's alleged discrimination, but to my knowledge they have yet to be attacked by the CRC.
I do not disapprove of women of
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
different races rooming together. I have known many women of other races that I would much rather have as roommates than many white women I know. However, I feel that each woman should have a personal say in the matter of her own roommate. This would alleviate unpleasant experiences, especially when freshman women come face to face with their roommates for the first time.
I hope that the CRC, in challenging the practices of the university, will take these things into account. Radical changes cannot and must not be made without consideration of the feelings of the individuals involved.
Carolyn Kunz
Carolyn Kunz
Greenville, S. C., freshman
** **
CRC's Methods Termed Harmful Editor:
Our civil rights enthusiasts have given the Constitution of the United States a fresh interpretation. According to their sermons, the dear old document contains only two items—a preamble and the 14th Amendment. But it contains much more than that. Think of these things in reference to Greek organizations at KU. Remember that all fraternities and sororites here are part of national organizations — each of them is incorporated.
The Constitution guarantees freedom of assembly, freedom of property and freedom of life. To me, the latter of these could just as easily be interpreted as the right to choose with whom you wish to live as "equal protection of the laws" can be interpreted to mean integration.
A word about interpretation of the Constitution — the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States Supreme Court. Contrary to popular belief, they are not infallible. In fact statistics show that a majority of Supreme Court decisions have been reversed at some time or another. Supreme Court Justices are, after all, human, and just as susceptible to the passions of the civil rights mania as anyone.
AND WHAT about the Negro? Through all this panic he is probably being treated even more cruelly than he was under the whips of slavemasters. He is something worse than a slave now. He is a political pawn — a stepping stone for all zealous young politicians. Very often the martyr of civil rights is not a martyr at all. It may not be common knowledge
but the much heralded Martin Luther King had to be escorted out of the city of Montgomery, Alabama, by police guards following the bus boycott of several years ago. His own people wanted to lynch him.
Naturally, the Negro is sincere in the drive. His passions have been built to such a pitch by NAACP "moralists" (many of whom are white, including 90 per cent of the national officers) that he cannot help sincerity. But, according to the words of the Negro's own revered Booker T. Washington, "Rights come only as they are earned."
FORCE accomplishes nothing — particularly force by hypocrites — the more force that is applied, the longer the average citizen will resist. Force only sets progress back — even force known as "moral suasion." Clauses or no clauses, Greeks still have the right to cling to the membership vote and the blackball — and that's all that's necessary.
No, my fine, free friends of the CRC, civil rights by force is neither morally nor religiously correct. It is never correct to make footballs out of people's natural emotions and weaknesses. Neither is it right to take the rights of one group, so that another may have more. The issue of rights is a two-sided coin. The Constitution guarantees rights to all people, and it is in violation of democracy that anyone's rights be involuntarily sacrificed.
Tom Turner
Kalamazoo, Mich., senior
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"IN CONTRAST—DURING 600 A.D. THE ...DURING 600...THE..."
the took world
By Bernard W. Eissenstat
Assistant Director of the Western Civilization Program
PETER THE GREAT, by Vasili Klyuchevsky, translated with an introduction and notes by Liliana Archibald (Vintage Russian Library, No. V-728) New York: Random House, 1961, $1.25.
PROFESSOR Klyuchevsky's major thesis is that Tsar Peter became a reformer by accident and quite unwillingly. In Russia, successful wars have usually served to secure the status quo, whereas unsuccessful wars have provoked such internal dissent that the government has been forced to institute some domestic reform. "Reforms at home were commonly achieved at the price of disaster abroad." During the Petrine period this relationship was reversed. In order to force the wars to successful conclusions, the Russian government had to institute reforms, the nature of which were dictated by the requirements of the military engagements. The concurrent attempts to pursue war and institute reforms proved to be impractical because war impeded reform and "reform prolonged war."
Vasili Klyuchevsky is considered by contemporary historians to be one of the great Russian historians. The son of a village priest, he was born in 1841 in Penza, located on the navigable Sura River, in East Central RSFSR, and now the capital of the Penza "oblast." In 1861, the year of the serf Emancipation Proclamation, Klyuchevsky enrolled in the University of Moscow, where he studied under another great native Russian historian, Sergei Soloviev. Eventually he was given the chair of History at the University of Moscow, when Soloviev became too ill to carry on his academic duties in 1879, and held it until his death.
Peter, in attempts to conclude Russia's war successfully, was forced to institute military and financial reforms, and these led inevitably into social and religious reforms. He wanted not only to catch up with Western Europe's economic and military might, but also to exceed it. The attempts to achieve this led to a struggle "between the despot and the people's inertia." Even so, however, Klyuchevsky concludes that the Tsar's attempts at reform contributed to the public good and had long range beneficial effect on the development of the Russian state.
THE TRANSLATOR has lost none of the author's beautiful and moving literary style and her footnotes are invaluable. To add to an already bountiful offering, Professor Archibald has added a glossary of important Russian terms, translated into English. If "Peter the Great" has a failing it is that Professor Klyuchevsky has emphasized the social and economic history of the period and has almost ignored other aspects, such as religious, political, etc. The book, however, is worthwhile for anyone who has an interest in people or history and a "must" for those who are interested in Russian history.
All who are interested in Russian history owe Kilyuchevsky a great debt for his "Kurs Russkoi Istorii" ("A Course of Russian History") and for his other historical works. "Peter the Great" is part of the fourth volume of the five volume "Kure Russkoi Istorii" and is based on the 1937 edition, published by the Soviet state publishing house. The book is primarily concerned with the social and economic history of the Russian people in the first quarter of the eighteenth century and gives perceptive and sympathetic portrait of the character and personality of Tsar Peter I.
Thursday, April 26, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Medicare Subject of Debate
Two men associated with the medical profession locked horns last night on the proposed bill that would give medical care to the aged.
Dr. C. Y. Thomas Jr., a physician from Prairie Village, and L. R. C. Agnew, professor of history and chairman of the department of the history of medicine, spoke on the King-Anderson bill in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
PROF. AGNEW took the position favoring the bill while Dr. Thomas argued against it.
Oswald Backus, professor of history, and Vaclav Mudroch, assistant professor of history, also served on the panel.
The King-Anderson bill is a 67-page master plan for health care for the aged. It has four provisions:
- Hospital care — in semi-private rooms. The patient would pay $10 a day for the first nine days. The program does not pay the patient's doctor bill.
- Outpatient diagnostic services, all done at the hospital. The bill requires the patient to pay the first $20 of each diagnosis.
- Skilled nursing-home care for up to 180 days after the patient has left the hospital.
- Payment for visiting or intermittent nursing in the home for up to 240 visits a year.
DR. THOMAS STARTED the discussion by saying that if the bill did
One is that segregation of Lawrence barber shops may take business away from the three shops primarily serving Gregoes.
pass it would be a giant step towear socialized medicine. He said that the American Medical Association (AMA) is opposed to this plan if carried out under the social security system. The AMA is also opposed to the bill because of the disruption of the traditional doctor-patient relationship by government officials.
Prof. Agnew said he does not think the bill would lead to socialized medicine. "Doctors are not on government payrolls," he said.
He explained that he is worried about certain aspects of the medical profession. He centered his discussion around the economic standards of the AMA. Prof. Agnew advocated cheaper medicine and cheaper health care.
The AMA says that medicare should not be enacted until the Kerr-Mills bill has had a chance.
CRC Survey Ends Soon
Two economic factors have entered the current Civil Rights Council survey of segregation in Lawrence barber shops.
The other is the contention (which first appeared in the CRC survey held last October) that it requires special equipment to cut Negro hair.
"Integration works two ways." Moore said. "We want to include the attitudes of the Negro barbers in our survey."
THE CURRENT CRC survey group is divided into three teams and Thomas Moore, executive secretary of the KU-Y, said at the CRC meeting last night—attended by 10 persons—that two of the teams have completed their surveys. He added that the findings of all three teams should be compiled by next week, including the attitudes of Negro barbers and the answer to the special equipment problem.
Moore said that there has been a "great change in the attitudes of barbers since the CRC survey last year." saying that receptions to survey members have ranged from "friendly, to mercy polite."
THE KERR-MILLS BILL provides medical care to "medically indigent" through state funds supplemented by Federal grants.
A. W. Smalley, Shreveport, La,
graduate student, discounted the idea
that it takes special equipment to cut
Negro hair, but suggested that Negro
barbers be checked on the point.
MOORF GAVE the credit for this change in attitude to the barbers themselves rather than to any organization or individual.
"It has been a community change," he said.
Dr. Thomas was in agreement with the AMA. "As far as I am concerned, the AMA position and my position is that when there is government regulation of anything, there is socialism. This is a definition and there is no way getting around it. To say the King-Anderson bill is not socialism is an ostrich approach."
"We just can't do it," the barber said at that time. "It takes someone who has done it before. We have tried to cut their hair before. You can even get a comb through their hair."
WHEN GEORGE BUFORD, Kansas City senior and co-chairman of CRC, was refused service at a local barbershop last October, a barber said that he did not have equipment to cut Negro hair.
PROF. MUDROCH favored the bill because he felt that people over 65 should depend on society to help them when they are sick.
Pretty Hard on the Silverware
Dr. Thomas said he tries to explain to his patients the impact of this bill and to inform them on both sides of the question. "There is not a person in the United States who if asked about the medical care plan could not give you explanation of it."
WAUKESHA. Wis. — (UPI) — Waukesha County recently completed construction of a new $5 million "escape-proof" jail and courthouse. Deputies reported yesterday prisoner Lawrence Warrick, 30, used a spoon to dig his way out through two cement walls.
Prof. Backus said he was caught in a dilemma of contrasting thoughts.
"I have a real horror of big business and big labor, yet I am eager to see something done to diminish the burden of old people."
Dr. Thomas cited the rising hospital rates as one of the reasons why he is against the bill. The average bill for a day in the hospital has more than tripled, from $9.39 in 1946 to $32.23 in 1960.
"I think this nation can support many people who cannot support themselves."
Prof. Mudroch agreed with Prof. Backus on the proposition that the state should take an integral part in the medical care program.
Prof. Backus said earlier that state
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care could avoid a hugh bureaucracy. Dr. Thomas, who referred to President Kennedy as "Senator," said that the representatives in Washington are not giving full thought and effort to this problem of medical care.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 26, 1962
Page 4
White House Pickets Multiply; So Do Headaches for Police
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The White House did not even exist in 1791 when the founding fathers guaranteed "the right of the people peacefully to assemble and to petition the government for a redress of grievances."
But over the years — and particularly in recent months — the executive mansion has become a national rallying ground for citizens exercising the Bill of Rights' provision for freedom of speech and assembly.
ACCORDING TO Maj. Ralph C
Shaffer Poses World State
(Continued from page 1)
ing . . . people all over the world
. . . will be able to live in both
perpetual fear and perpetual danger."
he added.
"DON'T FORGET, the Russians don't want peace. They gain by turmoil. And any time you have a crowd and you have just one man in it who is intent on having a fight—you're going to have a fight."
Prof. Ise said he held little hope for the human race.
Discussion and questions from the audience followed these opening remarks by the panel members.
He said he had read widely but could not decide which of the many varied opinions on the subject to believe.
On the topic of testing, Prof. Ise said, "I don't know anything about this subject, but of course being a professor I don't worry about that."
Asked if disarmament would not present insurmountable economic problems, Prof. Shaffer replied, "If we continue this armament race its going to solve all our economic problems—and all others as well."
Asked if it is not better for the United States to be ahead in the arms race than for Russia to be ahead, Prof. Strassenburg answered, "Two people can't have a gunfight if only one of them has a gun."
Prof. Shaffer added that if Russia really wanted to destroy the United States, the Soviets could agree to our disarmament proposals, hide 50 compact 25 megaton nuclear bombs and then wipe us out after we had completely disarmed.
Prof. Ise interjected, "The error in your (Prof. Shafer's) thinking is that we wouldn't hide 50 bombs too."
During the discussion on the growing activity of the military in the field of public relations and propaganda, Prof. Burke described a sign he had seen outside a Strategic Air Command 'base as "Orwellian doublethink." The sign said, "Peace is our profession."
Weather
TOPKEA — (UPI) — Clear skies and brisk southerly winds were reported over Kansas this morning, but the fine weather of the past week was rapidly coming to an end.
A well-established wind flow out of the south was bringing increasingly moist and unstable air northward into the central plains, and a low pressure cell over northeast Colorado, with accompanying cold front, will move eastward across the plain in the next 24-36 hours.
Tune Up for Spring at Leonard's Standard Service
Stover, chief of the White House police, groups of pickets paraded in front of the White House on 96 days in 1960, and on 229 days in 1961. In the first two months of this year, there were sign-carrying marchers on the Pennsylvania Avenue sidewalk on 31 days.
9th and Indiana Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
"It seems like its getting to be a national habit or something," one veteran White House police officer commented.
Ban-the-bomb demonstrations are a major factor behind this rise, but many additional issues have aroused recent picketers: disarmament, racial integration, Fidel Castro, the Congo and Katanga, jobs for unemployed Teamsters, and the imprisonment of espionage conspirator Morton Sobell.
President Kennedy has yet to meet a picketer, although he has acknowledged the presence of some in different ways. He once said he saw some ban-the-bomb women marchers from his window. He sent coffee out to some freezing college students. He had aides talk to the young leaders of several marching organizations.
VIOLENCE, OR ARRESTS, have been few and far between on the White House sidewalks. Police are stationed there to prevent incidents.
One of the most volatile picketing episodes occurred about 10 years ago when some 7,300 sign-carriers paraded outside the White House pleading for clemency for Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were subsequently executed as atomic spies.
The pickets must follow ground rules. No shouting, singing or chanting is allowed. Pickets must stay within the sidewalk space allotted by police. Persons carrying placards or banners must keep moving. And if a pedestrian drops a picket's handbill the picket must pick it up.
That day, there were anti-picket pickets who were kept on the opposite of broad Pennsylvania Avenue. Police, sensing possible trouble, deliberately diverted traffic to this street so that the constant flow of vehicles would prevent a mob from crossing.
The largest outpouring of pickets since the Rosenberg demonstration came only two months ago, when some 4,000 students from a number of colleges and universities combined in a "turn toward peace" movement against atmospheric nuclear tests and for disarmament.
It was to the vanguard of this two-day picketing movement that Kennedy sent coffee. It also was leaders of this group — as well as a previous "fast for peace" delegation from Grinnell College, Iowa—who had an audience with Kennedy aides, including McGeorge Bundy, special assistant for national security affairs.
Why don't pickets pick on Congress as well as the President? It has been tried on occasion, but there is a law dating back to 1882 which bans demonstrations or displays of signs and banners on the capitol grounds. The same applies to the Supreme Court. But it's open season, every season, for pickets at the White House.
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Catholic Daily Mass: 7 a.m. & 12.05 p.m.
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Confessions: Weekdays, 7 a.m. (during Mass) & 11:45-12 noon; Saturdays, 4-5 and 7-8 p.m. St. Lawrence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road
Baptist Student Union Devotional:
p.m. 1221 Oread.
Official Bulletin
April 30, 2018
Appleton Thrifty Grothy Gibson &
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TODAY
CITIES SERVICE
Teacher Interviews:
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 26. April, um fuhr Ufm in 11 Fraser. Martha Shirley and David Holloway werden fuer uns sinen.
Radio Production Center: 7:30 p.m.
220 Flint.
Christian Science Organization: 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel.
Representative John D. Bower, chairman of the Conservation Committee, will speak on conservatism and education at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kan-Ann Sponsored by KU-YAF All invited.
'J.B.' to Be Read
William R. Reardon, associate professor of speech and drama, will read selections from MacLeish's play "J.B." at the Poetry Hour today at 4 p.m. in the Music Room of the Kansas Union.
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Episcopal Holy Communion & Breakfast: 7 a.m. Canterbury House.
KUOK: 3—News & Weather; 3.05—Top Forty Tunes; 4—Hilltopping; 5—Hilltoping; 6—Society News; 6.20—Society News; 6.25—Spotlight on Science; 6.30—Bonjour Mesdames"; 6.45—Program downout; 8—Night Flight, Stage II; 10—Night Flight, Stage II; 12—Portals of Prazer:
IRA Spring Sing: 7 p.m. Swartwhout Recital Hall, Murphy, Men's & women's dorms competing for trophies, judged on musical performance & staging.
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m. 1221
Oread. Devotional studies and fellowship.
International Club: 7:30 p.m. Big 8
Room. Kansas Union. India light programs.
Hall of Music. Holli Festival tableau, songs, dances, and films. Lemonade and dancing following.
**Hilfill Services:** 7:30 p.m. Jewish Community Center and Drive One Gheb Shabat following services
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Thursday, April 26. 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Derby Day Set for Saturday
A new event this year, the hat grab, will be held on Friday. Sigma Chis will wear derbies to class on Friday and the organization able to collect the most derbies will score nine points. Second places are six points and third places, three points in all events.
Sigma Chi's have laid safety razors and electric shavers aside for a beard growing contest to publicize the event. The Sig with the densest bush receives a mystery prize.
President Kennedy's physical fitness program will be put to a rigid test by KU women when they participate in the ninth annual Sigma Chi Derby Day, Saturday at 1:30 p.m. on the Sigma Chi tennis courts.
By Steve Clark
In the aftermath of the Kansas Relays, athletes from sororities and women's dormitories will try their skills at such track and field events as the fishpole race, egg throw, low jump, musical buckets, pony express and the sack race.
Unfortunately, he did win a runner-up spot after a hotly-contested victorious battle with KU football guard Duke Collins.
Highlighting the program will be the selection of Miss Derby Day Rules have been revised to prevent such discrepancies as occurred at last year's contest when Jerry Gardner, the Big Eight's leading basketball scorer this year, entered the contest and tragically almost won.
Coaches from the Sigma Chi house have been assigned to each participating living group and will be practicing their teams for Saturday's showdown.
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Odd Vehicles Add Color to Election
By Mike Miller
Election time brings strange sights to the campus. Among the more unusual things this year were a hayrack, jeeps and a Continental Trailways bus.
These vehicles, along with the more conventional car pools, were employed by campus politics to
transport students to class and, they hope, to the election polls.
THE HAYRACK was put in use by Neil Jouvenat, Columbus, Neb. freshman and candidate for the presidency of the sophomore class. The rack, pulled by a small tractor, transported women from the freshman dormitories several minutes before each hour.
The jeeps were covered with "Jerry Dickson for Student Body President" signs.
The bus, donated by a friend of Dickson and driven by a real-life bus driver, carried the banners of Dickson and Vox Populi.
MIKE HARRIS, SHAWNEE Mission junior and executive vice president of Vox, walked slowly around the bus inspecting it and pondered, "there isn't anything in the elections rules about buses, is there?"
Harris then added, "maybe this is the Vox machine that we've been accused of having."
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 26, 1962
Opposite Opinions Given On Nuclear Test Resumption
By Margaret Cathcart and Terry Murphy
The resumption of atmospheric nuclear testing yesterday by the United States left KU students and faculty members with completely opposite opinions and reactions.
Most of the people who made statements during telephone interviews last night either clearly condemned the U.S.'s first atmospheric testing since 1958 or gave whole-hearted approval.
F. C. BATES, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR of aeronautical engineering, was one of the persons voicing approval.
"It's absolutely necessary," he said. "If we had a world where nations lived in mutual good will, it would be different. But we are living in a cage with mad dogs and we have to have our weapons ready."
Stephen Baratz, Brooklyn, N. Y., graduate student, condemned the U.S. action by saying:
"It SEEMS TO ME THAT the resumption is wholly unwarranted and can serve no purpose. It seems that we don't need the tests and that the resumption is only serving to make more difficult the reaching of an arms control agreement."
One person did not relate her reaction to the test in terms of political consequences. Peggy Shank, Hawatha senior, said:
"The world is too beautiful to be destroyed."
Sam Mlynar, Ansonia, Conn., senior, praised the U.S. action and had a word for opponents of such tests.
"I AM QUITE HAPPY to see that President Kennedy is going through
with the tests," he said. "It is better to risk the effects of the limited amount of radiation and the ire of a few so-called humanitarians than to risk annihilation by Russian weapons because we are unprepared.
"In an atomic war, 'humanitarianians' and 'neutrals' will also die with those who are not prepared to retaliate," he added.
Several persons viewed the resumption of testing as being both regrettable and necessary. Kenneth Armitage, assistant professor of zoology, said:
"I VIEW IT AS AN UNFORTUNATE necessity. Given the fact that the Russians prepared for testing
New French Premier To Report on OAS
PARIS — (UPT) — Premier Georges Pompidou faces the national assembly for the first time today to report on government plans to crush the Secret Army Organization (OAS) in Algeria.
The new premier, who was hand-picked by President Charles de Gaulle, was expected to tell the deputies the government is determined to stamp out OAS terrorism to pave the way for Algeria's full independence.
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during the recent moratorium and the fact that no progress is being made in disarmment negotiations, I feel we have no alternative.
"We have to be certain we are equal to the Russian capabilities," he continued.
"I ONLY WISH THAT THERE was some other alternative," Lux said.
Samuel Lux, Topeka senior, said it is tragic that nuclear testing has to be resumed but he said he feels it is necessary for the United States to stand behind President Kennedy and his decision.
Six of the 21 persons contacted for interviews refused to comment. They said they felt they were not well enough informed to be able to express a meaningful opinion.
Herbert E. White, Wakefield, Mass., freshman, said the United States should testing. "The Russians aren't going to stop so why should we?" he asked.
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Soviets Launch A New Satellite
Page 7
MOSCOW—(UPI) --Moscow radio said today Russia has launched a new satellite named Cosmos IV. It said further details would follow.
initially, Moscow radio broadcast in its home service a brief Tass News Agency dispatch that said today's launching was successful. It said Cosmos IV carried scientific apparatus "for continuation of the investigation of cosmic space in accordance with the program announced March 16."
The first satellite in the current series was launched March 16, the second April 6, and the third one last Tuesday. They were named consecutively Cosmos I, II and III.
The three previous satellites were unmanned, and the fourth one announced today presumably also was unmanned.
This was the fourth Soviet satellite in its current series of scientific exploration of space around the earth.
In launching the series of satellites over the past six weeks, the Soviet Union said they were being used to study weather, communications and radiation.
There was no indication in the previous announcements that the new satellites could perform "sky spy" duties that would be of value to Russia.
The Russians gave no time for the firing of the previous Cosmos satellites, and neither did it give any weights for them.
Cosmos III passed over the United States in its exploratory orbit while the American Ranger-4 spacecraft hurtled toward the moon, its mechanical brain crippled and incapable of relaying back to American scientists any of its data. Ranger-4 hit the moon today, in the first successful U.S. moon shot. In the previous announcements, the official Soviet Tass news agency said the purpose of the radiation research involved in the Cosmos series was to determine the effects on man of prolonged orbit around the earth.
Argentine's Guido To Form Cabinet
BUENOS AIRES —(UPI)—President Jose M. Guido announced last night he will form a cabinet within 48 hours to help steer Argentina back to normalcy.
In a 12-minute radio-television speech, Guido repudiated extremists of both left and right. He appealed to workers and employers to support his provisional regime.
Earlier yesterday, Guido nullified last month's federal elections, in effect vacating 94 of the 192 seats in the Argentine Chamber of Deputies.
He announced also that new elections, previously promised within 90 days, will not be held until Oct. 27, 1963.
Louisiana Catholics Favor Segregation
NEW ORLEANS — (UPI) — A group of Roman Catholics today risked banishment from the church for rallying behind segregation leaders with a battle cry of "better excommunicate than integrate."
Leander H. Perez Sr., South Louisiana political leader and foe of integration, was the major speaker at last night's mass protest to Archbishop Joseph Francis Rummel's orders to desegregate parochial schools in New Orleans this fall.
"Excommunication can't send you to hell, but integration will send your children to a hell on earth," Perez shouted, pounding the podium with his fist.
Prepared Specials
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Fish Casserole
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Reinhard Kuhn, associate professor of Romance languages, will speak at Wesley Foundation Sunday. The meeting begins at 5 p.m.
Prof. Kuhn will talk on contemporary drama. Several Wesley members will present the play, "End Game" by Samuel Beckett, a French plowwright.
John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, will speak to the Current Events Forum at 4 p.m. Friday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. He will discuss inflation.
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New Wesley officers are Fred Tiffany, Lyndon junior, president; Marsha Dutton, Colby sophomore, missions chairman; Karen Jo Emel, Colby sophomore, study chairman; Charles Marvin, Lawrence freshman, community chairman; and Douglas Hager, Hutchinson sophomore, worship chairman.
Kuhn to Address Wesley Meeting
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Thursday, April 26, 1962 University Daily Kansan
BOULDER, Colo. — (UPI) — A nationalist China official said yesterday it would be a grave mistake for the free world to believe that the Soviet Union and Red China disagree on fundamental issues.
"Russia and China never argue about objectives," Chang Chun-ming told a University of Colorado world affairs conference audience. "Rather, they argue about timing, tactics and priorities."
Chinese Official Says No Basic Red Split
Chang is adviser to Nationalist China's permanent mission to the United Nations.
Richard T. DeGeorge, assistant professor of philosophy, will present the fifth speech of the Newman Lecture Series, at 7 p.m. Sunday, in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
5th Newman Lecture By DeGeorge Sunday
Prof. DeGeorge will discuss "Ex-istentialism and Christianity—Their Similarities and Their Differences."
Peppermint Cluk TALENT CONTEST
Tonganoxie, 15-min. drive No Stags; 75c per person
Friday & Saturday Band starts at 9
KU
Jay Bowl
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Sun. -------------- 1 p.m. - 11:30 p.m.
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Women's Second Prize 6 BRUNSWICK BLACK BEAUTY BALLS AND 6 FIESTA BAGS
Prizes on Display in the Jay Bowl
CONTEST RULES
Contest is open to all University of Kansas student groups, fraternities, sororities, dormitories.
Prizes will be awarded to the group turning in the highest average number of empty PALL MALL, LUCKY STRIKE or DUAL FILTER TAREYTON packages, or reasonable hand drawn faecimiles.
Example: A fraternity with a membership of 50 students turns in a total of 2,000 empty wrappers, or an average of 40 per member. A second fraternity with a membership of 20 students turns in a total of 1,000 wrappers, or an average of 50 per member. On a per capita basis, therefore, the fraternity with the smaller membership, in this case, would be judged ahead of the larger fraternity.
Contest closes May 14, 1962 at 4:30 P.M. — Wrap empty packages in bundles of fifty (50) and deliver to Jay Bowl. Student Union that day. In the event of a tie, blindfold drawing will determine the winner.
Limit one prize per group.
Prizes will be awarded at Jay Bowl, on May 18, 1962 at 3:30 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 26, 1962
Theater Review
Twelfth Night' Attracts Nearly 900 Persons
By Tom Winston
The University Theatre began the last show of the semester last night with a production of William Shakespeare's romantic comedy, "Twelfth Night, or What You Will."
Though 350 years have passed since it was written, "Twelfth Night" stands as one of the greatest comedy plays ever written. It has both a comic and a melancholy side, and its powers to charm are undimmed today. It is amazing how easy it is to follow its text. Some 960 people attended.
The set for this production immediately arrests one's attention. Director Gordon Beck and designer Glenn Bickle have extended the stage apron 15 feet farther into the audience and have constructed a facade covering the entire procenium to resemble Shakespeare's Globe playhouse.
Also, Caroline Kriesel's costumes are alive with color. Keith Jochim's makeup is especially effective with Sir Toby and the clowns Feste and Fabian.
Phil Harris does outstanding work as the unceuth Sir Toby. He is raucous but lovable. And his shadow, the vacant-headed Sir Andrew Aguecheek, played by Mike Jackson, Prairie Village senior, is every inch a fool. Jackson is very funny, especially in the duel with Viola-Cesario.
The extra nearness of the actors further makes the play irresistible. Performances by Phil Harris, Lawrence graduate student, as Sir Toby Belch; Keith Jochim, Birmingham; Mich., junior, as the pompous Malvolio; Dan Kocher, Topea junior, as Feste the clown, among others, and the result is something not to miss.
Dan Kocher is good as Feste. It is to the fool that Shakespeare gives his philosophical lines. Kocher's acrobatic movement is very agile.
And at the end of the play, when Feste is left alone and sings "When That I Was a Little Tiny Boy," he creates a beautiful, melancholy mood. He is joined in this latter number by the four "Lobby Singers" who sing Elizabethan music at intermission.
Keith Jochim cuts a stuffy caper as Malvolio, an incorrigible, pious windbag. His regal black costume makes him seem almost bigger than life. He is especially funny when he allows himself to be made a fool of by a supposed love letter from Sir Toby's niece, Olivia.
Maria, Olivia's lady in waiting, and Sir Toby and company planted the note to get even with Malvolio for insulting Feste by calling him barren. In that letter are Shakespeare's famous lines, "Be not afraid of greatness. Some are born great, some achieve greatness and some have greatness thrust upon 'em."
However, the women were less satisfactory. Only Marilyn Miller, Olathe junior, who plays the mischievous Maria, is an even character.
With Peggy Connors, who plays the double character role of Viola-Cesario, the lack was depth. The plot turns on this double figure of Viola-Cesario.
Miss Connors, Wichita sophomore, plays the part of Viola-Cesario with ease. We might say that as Cesario she is very good, but as Viola she is not at all convincing. When we first meet her she talks of "dead" Sebastian. She might as well talk of the weather.
Viola has an identical twin brother whom she thinks has died in a shipwreck. She loves the Duke Orsino, so she dons men's clothing and becomes his page so she may get to know the royal gentleman. The duke sends Cesario to ooil Vioia, with whom he fancies he is in love. But Olivia falls in love with Cesario. When Sebastian does not appear dead, obvious complications arise.
She is only slightly better at the end of the play, when she sees Sebastian again. That recognition scene is the climax of the play, and it was not at all what it might have been. She ends up by marrying the
duke, whom as Cesario she must love at a distance.
Diana Abbruzzino, Huntington, W. Va., graduate student, plays Olivia. She has the dramatic qualities for the pensive Olivia, but her comic scene with Malvolio, in which the man proposes passionate love to her, is carried more by Jochim than by her. And her accent is quite American, whereas the other actors temper theirs to English. Her scenes with Sebastian are good.
Tom Woodard, Des Moines, Iowa,
junior, is fine as Sebastian. His encour-
ter with Sir Andrew is excellent.
Jim Hawes, Lawrence graduate
student, as Antonio, the sea
captain who saved Sebastian from
drowning, brings much depth to a
small part.
Paul Ackerman, Colby junior, who
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plays the duke, is statuesque and brooding. These qualities fit Orsino well, since he is really in love with love itself, and not Olivia. "If music be the food of love, play on," he tells his musicians. (The musicians play real ancient instruments.)
Rick Friesen, Lawrence freshman, also makes much of the small role of Fabian, Feste's apprentice clown.
"Twelfth Night" will play tonight through Saturday night.
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Thursday, April 26.1962 University Daily Kansar
Page 9
Reaction to U.S. Tests Is Mild
United Press International
The world outside the Communist bloc reacted today with a minimum of anger to United States resumption of atomic tests in the Pacific.
THERE WERE angry words from nations in the Communist sphere, firm approval from the Western allies, and mild disapproval from the neutral and so-called non-aligned nations.
The Russians accused the Americans of bringing mankind to "the abyss of nuclear war" with the new tests. And the official Communist New China News Agency said the tests "herald a new phase in U.S. nuclear arms expansion."
But much of the rest of the world took the new testing calmly, with little violence, few demonstrations and restrained comment.
There was an official protest from the government of Japan, the only nation which has suffered the devastation of an atomic bombing in war and which is opposed to testing by anyone.
But expected demonstrations by extreme leftwing Japanese students in Tokyo failed to materialize in the size that had been anticipated. There were a few desultory demonstrations there and in other Japanese cities directed at the U.S. embassy and consulates. But rain dampened the biggest planned rally.
STRONG POLICE forces guarded the U.S. embassy compound in Tokyo and American consulate offices in other Japanese cities against any possible trouble from ban-the-bomb demonstrators.
Soviet delegate Valerian Zorin told the 17-nation disarmament conference in Geneva that the United States is "challenging the whole world" with its explosion of a nuclear device over the Pacific yesterday.
"The United States has thrown away its mask," he said. "The United States is unleashing a fresh arms race, and is bringing the world nearer to the abyss of nuclear war."
But American chief delegate Arthur H. Dean said the United States was forced to resume testing "with the utmost regret and deepest reluctance" because of continued Russian resistance to a reasonable test ban treaty with international controls.
NEWSPAPER COMMENT in
Flemming Testifies About Stockpiles
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Senate stockpile investigators recalled former Defense Militarizer Arthur S. Flemming for more questioning today about windfall profits collected by government copper suppliers.
Flemming assumed full responsibility for policy permitting the profits. He appeared at day-long hearings yesterday of Sen. Stuart Symington's special Stockpile subcommittee.
Symington said it was noble of Flemming to take the ultimate blame. But the Missouri Democrat said the investigators were more interested in finding out who originated the policy.
Flemming said he did not know who first suggested directives signed by him in 1954 and 1955 under which mining companies were permitted to cancel or defer copper deliveries to two defense stockpiles.
Kennedy's Transit Program Opposed
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The U.S. Chamber of Commerce said today President Kennedy's proposed mass transit program would hinder rather than stimulate improvements to metropolitan rail and bus systems.
The chamber opposed the $500 million bill in a statement prepared for hearings before the Senate Housing Subcommittee.
Dr. John H. Frederick, professor of transportation at the University of Maryland and author of the statement, said increased federal support in this area would "discourage or even halt" present local plans to improve transit.
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Britain, West Germany, Denmark, Holland and Italy generally backed the U.S. resumption of testing, as did the press in South Korea, South Viet Nam and Formosa—all strongly pro-American lands.
The Philippine government supported resumption of the tests and said that as long as Russia continues to resist a fool-proof treaty, "the United States cannot expose itself and its allies to the hazards of unchallenged Soviet supremacy in nuclear weapons."
South Viet Nam foreign minister
Vu Van Mau said his government
supported the U.S. move, which he
said was "not an aggressive act but
an act to preserve the peace for the
free world."
lins, chairman of Britain's campaign for nuclear disarmament, sent President Kennedy a cable from Geneva protesting the new explosions. His message said in part:
The West German government said it had "complete understanding" of the need for new U.S. atomic tests. West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt said he found the American tests "logical."
HOWEVER, CANON JOHN COL-
Bad Temper? Not Me!
"Appalled by Russian nuclear tests last autumn which you condemned as crime against humanity now equally appalled by your decision to commit the same crime. By what right do U.S.S.R. and U.S.A. condemn unborn children to deformity and death? Implore you to stop all further tests"
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Host Mike Wallace, taping a segment of the "PM" television show last night, asked actor Burt Lancaster to comment on reports he has a quick temper. Lancaster got up and left the studio in a huff.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 26,1962
Chancellor Says Screening Blocks Worthy Students
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said last night that screening applicants for admission to KU would block opportunity for many worthy students.
"The facts we have discovered are these; there is a strong correlation between test scores and success in college; there is even a stronger correlation between rank in high school class and success in college; but neither of these can predict with such accuracy that we would want to bet our lives on it. How then can we bet the lives of young men and women?" Chancellor Wescoe said.
THE CHANCELLOR WAS speaking to the state convention of the Kansas Congress of Parents and Teachers in Topeka. In his address, given from a prepared text, he said:
"If we had eliminated students who ranked in the bottom half on our placement examination, 208 graduates of the class of 1955 would not have been admitted as freshmen.
"The loss to the state and the nation would have been 40 teachers, 22 engineers, 5 journalists, 7 lawyers, 7 doctors, 7 pharmacists, and 96 graduates from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the School of Business who majored in areas where the supply of trained manpower is equally short," he said.
THIS EXPERIENCE AT KU shows that entrance examinations are not accurate enough to rely upon to select students for admission, Chancellor Wescoe said.
"The hidden premise in the statements about selective admission is that there is some effective way of determining upon admission of those students who will succeed and those who will fail," he said. "Every study indicates that this is not true."
He continued:
"We must never forget that this nation was founded on opportunity. The moment we close a door in the face of the ambitious, the moment we say, 'You cannot make it; you cannot even try,' that moment this will cease to be the land of opportunity. It will become the land of the privileged."
THE CHANCELLOR SAID WE should not be afraid of the large numbers of youth who want to go to college but should recognize their ambition as a valuable resource.
"Their finest impulses toward self-fulfillment must not be frustrated," he said. "If they are, if we put a readblock across this nation's principal highway of social and economic mobility, what we cherish will not长 endure."
He said that in practice, the student bodies of most colleges and universities are "self-selected" and "quality institutions of higher education attract quality students."
CHANCELLOR WESCOE SAID the increase of students wanting to go to college can best be dealt with by a willingness on the part of the country's citizens to provide the facilities for them.
"The college doors will close, true—if the American people decide that they should close, if they get tired of making their annual down payments on civilization, progress, freedom, if they value present ease over the promise of the future," he said.
India Students to Sing
Students from India will present folk songs and a movie from their native land at the International Club meeting at 7:30 tomorrow night in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
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Thursday, April 26. 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
One day, $50; 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 store on the day before publication is desired.
BUSINESS SERVICES
DON ROSE BANDS Open Dates are
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FINE QUALITY PORTRAITA at reason-
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RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V 3-1267 tt
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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.
TYEPRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
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BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
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1956 MERCURY: black and white 2 door
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4-30
WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES: All new and revised. 100 pages, mine-grapped and bound. Extremely comprehensive and analytical. $4.00. Call VI-21901 after 4:30 p.m. for free delivery. tf
1952—35 x 8 Star TRAILER HOUSE Large study room. Danish modern chairs. Completely furnished. A REAL BUY. VI 3-4881, 7th & Arkansas. 4-30
Hi-Fi 3-speed automatic changer — 10 watt amplifier, 8 & 3 inch speakers in enclosure. Must sell. $75. Call VI 2-1533. -306
STUDY AIDS for Chemistry and 2 and 2A
and complete $2.
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1953 Super 88 Oldsmobile. Extra clean.
$300.00. Call VI 2-2769. tf
Triumph motorcycle — 16 H.P. — only 2,000 miles, bored, race cam large carb.
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VI 3-9635. 4-26
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TIRE! TIRE! TIRE! 1,000 fresh new tires. All sizes from 5.00 to 9.50 in stock! Installation. Ray Stoneback Discount Tire Center, 929 Masst. St. 5-3 up to 50%.
ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch cameraScope immediately. $200. Call Vl 3-8977 come to 807 Ark. for more info
1956 Lincoln for sale. Perfect condition, all power equipment, radio, leather interior. Sacrifice price. Foreign student gift one. Must see to appreciate. 13th. 4-27
LOST
LOST IN THE VICTINITY OF KU STADIUM during relays: Pair of men's golf balls delivered to goaltender, call water-scribed "Kansas Relays." Call Westview Motel, M1 3-6373. 5-1
GOLD CHARM Bracelet behind Strong
Reward Cain Am Monseth. VJ 3-6000, 5e1
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FOUND
FOUND IN FRASER HALL: 1, a purse of cosmetics, 8 head scarves, 1 Parker foun-
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HELP WANTED
Clerk Steno I for Secretary, School of Journalism. Must be capable, reliable, responsible. Better than assume responsibility. Better than average. pay Phone VI 3-2700, Ext. 3700
MILLIKEN'S "SOS" needs several qualified stenographers and secretaries for part time and full time work. Call VI 3-5920 for interview. tf
TRANSPORTATION
Two people would like a ride to either Columbia, Mo. or St Louis, Mo., leaving New York City in share expense. Call Phyllis at VI 3-6060. Phyllis School 144 W. 11th. 4-26
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---
Official Election Results Given
STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT
Jerry Dickson (Vox) 1810
Gerald Kepner (UP) 1460
Write Ins 38
Improperly marked 4
Blanks 48
SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM
Dennis Branstiter (Vox) 26
Zeke Wigglesworth 12
Ben Marshall (UP) 10
SCHOOL OF PHARMACY
Phyllis Wertzberger (UP) 37
Larry Milne (Vox) 23
LAW SCHOOL
Leo Kelly (Vox) 35
Bob Serra 24
John Young (UP) 3
Write Ins 2
BUSINESS SCHOOL
Larry Borcherding (Vox) 94
Mel Bloomfield (UP) 65
SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
Anne Peddie (Vox) 109
Connie Hines (UP) 82
Blank 9
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
Judy Fitts (Vox) 156
Nolen Ellison 128
Connie Fry (UP) 100
GRADUATE SCHOOL
Pab Malik (Vox) 63
Hans Krause 43
Larry Jones (UP) 9
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
Dick Jones (Vox) 197
Mike Swink (UP) 149
Write Ins 2
Blanks 1
Voids 1
COLLEGE WOMEN
Kay Cash (UP) 529
Jan Huffman (Vox) 349
Write Ins 4
Blanks 3
COLLEGE MEN
Greg Turner (Vox) 591
Blaine King (UP) 450
Don Warner 234
Write Ins 3
Blanks 8
SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENT
Mike Mead 359
Chuck Patterson 358
Improper vote 2
Void 2
Write Ins 1
VICE PRESIDENT
Phil McKnight 402
Chuck Burin 300
Write Ins 1
Blanks 31
SECRETARY
Judy Geisendorf 377
Ruth Ann James 330
Write Ins 1
Blanks 23
TREASURER
Wallye Heyde 416
Cleve Howard 287
Write Ins 2
Blanks 24
JUNIOR CLASS PRESIDENT
Dave Brollier 466
Max Logan 335
Write Ins 9
Blanks 56
VICE PRESIDENT
John Linden 432
Bob Bush 351
Write Ins 12
Blanks 67
SECRETARY
Sue Runnells 402
Marilyn Manville 397
Write Ins 6
Blanks 58
TREASURER
Bruce Null 421
Judy Southard 362
Write Ins 9
Blanks 69
SOPHOMORE CLASS PRESIDENT
Gerry Bell 551
Gary Jouvenaut 481
Gene White 181
Write Ins 2
Voids 1
Blanks 24
VICE PRESIDENT
Charles Blas 902
Write Ins 52
Voids 1
Blanks 186
SECRETARY
Carolyn Power 558
Mary St. Clair 497
Write Ins 2
Voids 1
Blanks 50
TREASURER
Nancy Patterson 587
Al Schuerman 428
Write Ins 1
Blanks 95
Medical Reports Say Okay to Move Joe
PALM BEACH, Fla. — (UPI)
President Kennedy today reviewed medical reports and plans for moving his ailing father to a New York rehabilitation clinic.
As the Chief Executive's Florida spring holiday neared a close, he was described as heartened by doctors who told him his father, former Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy, had made sufficient progress to be moved to New York within the next few days.
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Party Leaders Look at Action
By Mike Miller
The elections for this school year are over, but campus political leaders are already thinking of future elections and the effect that this spring's results will have.
The most popular topic of discussion among the leaders is the effect which Action, the proposed third political party, had on the outcome of the elections. The consensus was that the group hurt the University Party in the elections, but ideas on the degree of injury differed.
TED CHILDERS, WAMEGO SENIOR AND president of Vox Populi, said, "They picked up quite a few votes from UP in the college men's race, but they (Action) got a lot of their votes from people who do not normally vote. The vote would have been closer without Action."
PETER M. BERGER
Brian O'Heron
1962
Mike Harris
Jim Anderson, Lawrence senior and co-chairman of the University Party, said, "Action may have affected our vote in a couple of instances, College men specifically."
Brian O'Heron, Lawrence senior and president of Action, said, "we definitely took votes from UP. They would have won those districts in which we ran against them had it not been for us."
In commenting on the strength which the Action-backed candidates showed, Tom Hardy, Hoisington junior, and co-chairman of UP, said the group was a little stronger than he had expected.
JERRY PALMER, EL DOrado senior and chairman of the ASC, said that he had expected Action to be a little stronger.
O'Heron said in discussing the two ASC seats which UP won, College women and School of Pharmacy, "We feel if we had run candidates from these districts, they wouldn't have taken these seats. In the future we will make sure we have candidates in all the schools that UP does."
In discussing the possibility of Action and UP merging into one party, Anderson said. "Nothing like a merger has been mentioned."
Childers said, "Action would have to give up too much of the things that they are basing their pressure on."
MIKE HARRIS, SHAWNEE MISSION JUNIOR and executive vice president of Vox, said, "I doubt it very seriously considering the stand that UP took on Action earlier this year. Also their ideals and goals are different."
When asked their views on the possible UP-Action merger, three members of the Action parliament went into consultation and returned with this statement, "At this particular time, we have not discussed any such merger."
O'Heron added, "To me, it seems highly improbable because UP was definitely hurt by Action's participation."
Asked if UP would continue to function as a political party next fall, Anderson said, "There is no definite reason to believe we won't be around.
O'HERON SAID THAT HE THOUGHT that the same splitting of UP votes by Action would take place in next fall's elections. "If this does happen, I can see little hope for UP in the future," he added.
When asked if Action would participate in next fall's elections, O'Heron said that they definitely would.
Friday, April 27, 1962
Anderson said "Action might be around next fall, but I can't imagine them having much strength."
O'Heron said, "There is no room for three parties on this campus so we will have to work on UP first."
Returning to discussing the recent election, Palmer said that he thought Vox was stronger than ever.
"THE ELECTION WAS ONE IN WHICH very few people were in doubt about who to vote for. They decided before the elections."
Jim Anderson said UP's presidential vote total was up from last year's election, and that the College vote was about the same.
'OHERON SAID THAT HE SAW LITTLE possibility for change in the efficiency of campus politics in the next year as a result of the elections.
When asked his comments on the election, Hardy, who was defeated in the race for student body vice president, said, "Vox has a very effective machine."
Daily hansan
59th Year. No. 127
Topeka Man Asks $50,000 Damages From Regents
TOPEKA — (UPI) — Atty. Gen William Ferguson today reported that a Topeka man has filed a $50,-000 personal injury suit against the state Board of Regents and a doctor at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The Board of Regents and Dr. Samuel Kantor were named defendants in the action.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Ferguson said the suit was filed in Johnson County District Court by Edward O. Hahn.
Hahn seeks $50,000 to compensate for the loss of sight in one eye after an operation performed by Dr. Kantor at the Medical Center in Kansas City.
His petition alleges that after the operation while he was in the process of being transferred from the operating table to a portable cart he was mishandled by an unknown intern, causing loss of sight in the eve.
Hahn alleged that Dr. Kantor held one end of the blanket and the intern the other end. He charged that the intern lost his grip on the blanket and caused unnecessary movement that resulted in loss of the eye.
As attorney general, Ferguson will defend the Board of Regents.
No Mail, Phone Service as OAS Strikes Algiers
ALGIERS — (UPI) — Postal and telephone workers in Algiers went on strike today in protest against the shooting and arrest of a group of youths caught posting signs for the outlawed Secret Army Organization (OAS).
The youths were sons of employees of the post and tele-communications ministry.
THE WALKOUT CUT all phone service within the city and closed post office operations. A number of banking employees walked out in sympathy and several banks were forced to shut down.
An army patrol caught the youths last week while they were posting pro-OAS signs. The youths opened fire on the patrol and attempted to escape. But the soldiers fired back, killing one and wounding another. The others were captured and jailed.
French authorities banned all street demonstrations in Algiers yesterday and ordered troops and riot police to shoot if necessary to enforce the prohibition.
The ban was imposed following a call by the OAS for mass demonstrations in memory of the 50 Europeans killed by French security forces during a pro-OAS rally in Algerias on March 26.
A POLICE COMMUNIQUE said that troops had been told to use "any means" to enforce the ban. Observers said the authorities were concerned over the possibility of clashes between mosques and Europeans if street demonstrations were held.
Moslem tempers already were running high over the continued campaign of terrorism by the OAS.
Terrorist attacks across Algeria yesterday killed 24 persons and wounded another 33, raising the casualty toll since Jan. 1, to 3,968 dead and 8,307 injured.
French security forces in Algeria already have been ordered to shoot on sight OAS terrorists. Troops in Algiers and Oran—the two major OAS strongholds—also have been told to fire immediately at persons on balconies and roofs of buildings, favorite posts for OAS snipers.
Lawmaker Scores KU Professors
A Kansas legislator charged last night that certain members of the KU faculty are jeopardizing academic freedom by refusing to answer questions about conservative thought.
State Rep. John D. Bower, R-McLouth, chairman of the Kansas House Education Committee, told members of the Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) that academic freedom is based on the student's right to ask and receive answers to questions.
He referred specifically to the YAF poll conducted in the economics and political science departments earlier this semester to determine the validity of charges made by two former KU students that there are no conservatives in these departments.
The poll failed because the faculty in these two departments refused to answer the questions.
"THE ONES who are jeopardizing academic freedom," Rep. Bower said, "are the ones who are treating conservative thought with ridicule and abuse, rather than trying to refute the conservative ideas."
He said that those who refused to answer the questions are opposing the YAF by "under-the-table resistance."
Rep. Bower said:
"Why should they take an academic Fifth Amendment? They say it makes no difference what they personally believe because they don't teach their perosnal beliefs in class.
"Anyone who makes an excuse
like that is insulting cur intelligence," he added.
Rep. Bower said he thought that these members of the faculty would not deviate from majority opinion for fear of losing academic status in economic terms.
"IN ECONOMICS or sociology, teachers' views are important," he said, "but if they cannot stand on them, then they should find some new ones."
Roy D. Laird, assistant professor of political science, and Harry G. Shaffer, assistant professor of economics, refuted Rep. Bower's charges.
Prof. Laird said, "There is no one who is unwilling to discuss any of the issues that confront man in the proper forum."
However, he said the charge, which referred to the lack of asserted cooperation in the YAF poll, "was hardly a matter of refusing to discuss issues but rather a case of individuals not wanting to participate in a poorly-constructed poll that was obviously designed to come up with a pre-conceived answer."
Prof. Shaffer said that he could not think of anyone in the economics department that would refuse to answer a student's question.
"However," Prof. Shaffer added, "if a student asks a chemistry professor what he thinks about President Kennedy's action against the steel industry, he should not be required to answer because he is probably not well-qualified."
Second Nuclear Blast Fired in Mid-Pacific
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The United States fired a second nuclear shot in the atmosphere over the mid-Pacific today, apparently duplicating the first test earlier this week.
As in the Wednesday test, the device exploded today was dropped by an airplane and was of intermediate power. British-controlled Christmas island again was the test site.
A SPOKESMAN for the Atomic Energy Commission said the device had an explosive power of less than one million tons of TNT (one megan) but more than 20,000 tons (20 kilotons)). This was the same description given of Wednesday's blast.
The second test of the current U.S. series came as anti-bomb demonstrations were conducted by leftist Japanese students before the U.S. embassy in Tokyo. Communist and pacifist ban-the-bomb groups staged milder protests in other countries.
Reaction from most neutral nations was mild in tone and the free world allies in Europe strongly backed the U.S. decision to resume atmospheric testing.
The shot today was the 187th nuclear device exploded by the United States, with 64 of them detonated in the Pacific.
THE TEST SERIES, dubbed "Operation Dominic", is being carried
Weather
Partly cloudy this afternoon and generally fair tonight and tomorrow. Cooler in the west and central this afternoon and over the state tonight. Increasingly southerly winds tomorrow becoming 30 to 40 miles per hour tomorrow afternoon. The low tonight will be in the middle 50s and the highs toorrow in the upper 70s.
out by a huge Navy task force under the joint direction of the Defense Department and the Atomic Energy Commission.
The tests are expected to continue for two to three months with between 24 and 36 explosions anticipated either at Christmas island or Johnston island, the U.S. Pacific testing site.
President Kennedy's decision to resume above ground testing was defended today by Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield. The Montanan said Kennedy's hand had been forced by the previous unannounced tests of the Soviet Union and the need for national security.
AN AEC ANNOUNCEMENT said:
"A nuclear test detonation took place at about 11 a.m. EST today in the vicinity of Christmas Island. The detonation was in the intermediate yield range. The device was dropped from an airplane. The test was part of Operation Dominic now underway in the Pacific.
Kansas PTA OK's Govt. Aid
TOPEKA — (UPI) — Approval was given yesterday by the Kansas Parent-Teacher Association to federal aid to education.
The approved resolution states, "We favor federal support to public elementary and secondary schools with administrative control retained at the state and local levels."
The expected friction between the two camps in the group began in earnest yesterday morning at a presession meeting of delegates interested in the legislative program.
The opposition gathered early in a small section of the auditorium and only a few "yes" votes came from that direction during the proceedings.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday. April 27.196
The New ASC
The All Student Council elections which ended Wednesday placed a majority of the best qualified candidates on the Council. This is encouraging for the reason that one of the major failings of the ASC in the past has been the quality of many of the representatives on it.
But there were some candidates, apparently elected on the basis of popularity, who are poorly qualified and who will have to develop considerably if they are to meet the responsibilities of their offices. This is a challenge that some may meet if they make the effort to aid in the projects before the ASC.
THOSE PROJECTS are important and varied. The Current Events Committee has not been organized or begun to function yet. It can be an active and beneficial committee once its members are appointed and it begins carrying out it duties. The Human Rights Committee is only beginning its work. Some of the ASC committees need to be more active and some have yet to function.
THE EFFECTIVENESS of the New All Student Council will depend to a great extent on the number of active, interested representatives that Student Body President Jerry Dickson appoints to the various committees. His appointments will be one of the key factors and the prerequisite in making student government more active.
Charges that the ASC has been inactive and remote from the students have been made in the past. They are still made. And the fact that less than half of the students on campus vote in ASC elections is one indication that these charges are at least partially correct.
But if the ASC becomes more active and reaches the student with such groups as the Current Events Committee and by trying to deal with student problems and issues (including the controversial ones), students will undoubtedly take a greater interest in the ASC. This is clearly the path the ASC must take if it is to reach the students and have meaning for them.
William H. Mullins
Administration Stand Criticized Editor:
The historical position of the administration of the University of Kansas towards the issues involved in the rights of students in minority groups is, I think, one from which little pride can be derived. Such a position is, of course, a position on social values; that such a position is also a position concerning educational values as well is often overlooked. The oft-repeated unwillingness of the University to use its weight in breaking down the bars of discrimination against its non-white groups makes any claims to greatness by the University ring with a slight degree of hollowness.
For, it seems to me, a university can only claim greatness justly when there is first, a devotion to the persual of truth, and second, a devotion to the eradication of ignorance. The greatness of a university does not reside in the size of its enrollment nor in the number and height of its new dormitories. But the greatness of a university does reside in how effectively the traditions and ideas of the liberal arts and sciences are purveyed to the students, because these traditions and ideas define Man and all men in relation to each other — these traditions and ideas provide in their definitions no solace for the whining and simpier proffered by half-truths nor refuge for the suspicion and arrogance proffered by ignorance.
THE RELUCTANCE of the University to actively attempt to eliminate the discriminatory clauses only serves to perpetuate and to give comfort to the attitudes of prejudice that characterize much of the collegiate fraternal system — attitudes that are conceived in parochialism, that are nurtured by ignorance, and that flower in an intellectual restrictiveness that, with a maximum of generosity, can be labeled only gross stupidity. In the classroom little credence would be given, I believe to "truth" de
...Letters..
fined by these attitudes, and yet, is not this the substance of "truth" offered by the administration as testimony for the justification of its case?
The temerity that is exhibited by the administration in issues of this kind is slightly sad. With such constituting the tools of leadership, it might be well to remember that as long as the social philosophy of the Greek houses is allowed to provide for the student body the interpretation of the relationship between Man and all men, the almost canonized phrase "Hartwood on the Kaw," will remain humorous indeed.
Richard C. Fox
Hamilton College '55
Lawrence graduate student
CRC Sleiman
CRC Slammed
Editor:
Ive put up with the drivel that is dished out by the CRC as they play with their tinker toys long enough.
Now, by writing one simple letter (UDK, Apr.16) expressing my own opinion (and that of most sensible people) I've suddenly been changed from a Christian to an amoral child beater and litter bug by the "Menghine Clan."
It seems that these rabble rousing, self-annotated Thomas Paines, can't take it as well as they dish it out. Of course, if I ran about the campus muttering glittering generalities, I wouldn't like to be attacked either — as a matter of fact, I'd be afraid to be criticized.
When this group of "moralists" first started roping across the countryside hurling accusations, I thought it was at least composed of college students, but no, the first time they were told, "you can't have your own way," they went crying "mommy" to the personally distasteful (to me) NAACP.
IF THE CRC is so morally correct in their stand, why do they need so much help in proving it. If the Negro race wants to be an
equal, why don't they go out and earn the respect of other racial groups and therefore the right of equality.
It seems that almost every group fighting for the rights of the Negro is headed by and composed chiefly of whites. Why can't the Negro do his own drum-beating if integration is what he really wants? Or he being forced into "integration drives" by these super-enthusiasts called the CRC? Yes Miss Rice, when this is the case, I do think that you are "funny, strange, queer, and unusual." If you and your kind would stop your silly babbling, integration would come naturally — if and when the Negro is ready. By your actions, you are not getting people to "wake up," you are only causing greater friction and more resentment.
MY PREVIOUS letter dealt with both local and world-wide situations. If you would've read it more carefully I'm sure you would've seen this. Therefore, in reference to your letter, you spent your entire time bickering about the technicalities of a minority and completely avoided the issue at hand — what makes it "democratically" or "morally" right to force group A to give up their rights so that group B can have more? May I suggest the Campus Reading Clinic?
In conclusion, I'll tell you what's wrong with the resemblance between the CRC and the NAACP. The NAACP has a history of stirring up trouble whenever they want something. I am ashamed of having a group of troublemakers like this on campus. Are you proud of belonging to one?
Incidentally Miss Rice — if you want to discuss local issues, I have never heard of you or one of your race starving or freezing to death at KU. Nor have I seen any of you running around with exceptionally long hair.
Ken Costich Chicago junior
A Bircher's Warning
A. Well, I don't care for any of those Harvard people Kennedy has got in his group.
Q. What do you think of John Keyne's theory of economics?
O But Keynes is dead—he's an English economist.
A. Oh—I was thinking of Galbraith. I read his Status Seekers and thought it poor. (Ed. Note: Vance Packard wrote The Status Seekers.)
Q. I notice your book-store here. What books do you recommend for Americans to read?
A. Well, Hoover's—J. Edgar Hoover's—"Masters of Deceit." Welch's stuff (Robert Welch is founder and president of the John Birch Society)—some reprints of Goldwater speeches. National Review and Human Events are good too...
Q. DO YOU FOLLOW Welch's claim that Eisenhower was a "conscious Communist agent?"
A. Look at the record of Eisenhower, or any President since Roosevelt and tell me they weren't helping the Communist cause. Roosevelt gave them Europe. Truman gave them China. Eisenhower gave them Cuba. And just watch Kennedy because he'll give them what they want too...
Q. Did you prefer working in the Society when it wasn't so publi-cized?
A. Well, once you become effective they get after you. You know the press of the country is controlled by Communists.
Q. If the press and government of the country are controlled by "conscious communist agents" why isn't the U.S. in Russian hands now? It seems if they have all this working for them we wouldn't be any threat to them?
A. Well, it's part of a plan. They've got to get the F.B.I. and the Army now and then the people.
Q. You believe there's a plot to destroy the F.B.I.?
A. Definitely.
Q. Welch says the U.S. is 70% Communist now—if that's the case do you have any chance of succeeding?
A. Well, he didn't say it was 70% Communist. But it's 50-70% Communist and if the people start to think straight we'll beat them...
Q. THEY WOULDN't let Tshombe into the country to address that rally in New York. Do you have any opinion on that?
A. The State Department is against Tshombe. Look at their U.N. policy—they're out to unify the Congo under the Reds.
Q. What does the John Birch Society plan to do to stop this?
A. Well, we can't do much except tell the American people what's going on. How they're being stabbed behind their backs.
(Excerpted from an interview by Art Harger with the president of the Oregon Chapter of the John Birch Society that appeared in the April 15 Oregon Emerald)
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Charles Martinache Business Manager
Hal Smith, Advertising Manager; Dick Kline, Classified Advertising Manager; Susanne Ellermeier, Circulation Manager; Bonnie McCulough, National Advertising Manager; Harley Carpenter, Promotion Manager.
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Friday, April 27, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Thoughts on Censorship and Censors
ONE OF THE landmarks in the legal annals of censorship is the 1933 case of James Joyce's Ulysses, a storm center on both sides of the Atlantic for a number of years. Judge John M. Woolsey delivered the opinion of the federal court. Such a book, he stated, "must be tested by the court's opinion as to its effect on a person with average sex instincts . . . who plays in this branch of legal inquiry, the same role of hypothetical reagent as does the 'reasonable man' in the law of torts. . . It is only with the normal person that the law is concerned."...
Would be censor virtuously without exception rest their case on the protection of children and young people. The testimony of medical, psychiatric, and sociological authorities rebels their contentions. Two research criminologists, Eleanor and Sheldon Glueck, intensively examined a thousand delinquent boys from the Boston area. The most significant factors contributing to delinquency, they found, were culture conflict, unwholesome family environment, educational deficiencies, socially undesirable use of leisure time (for example, gambling, drinking, drug addiction, and sex misbehavior), and psychological defects.
THERE WAS no evidence that erotic or other types of reading matter were contributing elements in delinquency. In the same vein, George W. Smyt, one of the nation's outstanding children's court judges, listed for a New York state legislative commission 878 factors that had troubled children brought before him. Reading was not on the list, but "difficulty" in reading was. This point has been confirmed by other workers in the field of antisocial juvenile behavior. Far from discovering that delinquency grows out of reading, the clinicians report that it is more likely to grow out of inability to read. It is the consensus, in short, that delinquent children read much less than do the law-abiding.
But granting that it is highly undesirable to expose immature minds to hard-core obsessivity and pornography, normal adult readers hardly require such tender coddling. The definitive word on the subject was stated by a U.S. Supreme Court decision in 1957. Invalidating a Michigan statute designed mainly to protect young people, the court ruled: "The State of Michigan insists that, by thus quarantining the general reading public against books not too rugged for grown men and women in order to shield juvenile innocence, it is exercising its power to protect the general welfare. Surely this is to burn the house to roast the pig. The incidence of this enactment is to reduce the adult population of Michigan to reading only what is fit for children"...
PRIVATE pressure groups probably are more numerous, more vocal, and more active in the censorship field than in any other area. Inumerable organizations are working incessantly to place restrictions and limitations on what the American people may read, or see, or hear. They are voices calling for conformity, for unanimity of opinion, and for eliminating all ideas with which they happen to disagree. Operating extra-legally, such groups use, as their chief method, pressure on news dealers, drugstore, and booksellers, to force them to remove from their stocks every item on blacklists prepared by headquarters organizations. The books so listed have not been banned from the mails, and in an overwhelming majority of cases no legal charges have ever been brought against them...
Also full of common sense and
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broad toleration is a series of rules proposed by Father John Courtney Murray, for the guidance of minority groups, including the statement that "in a pluralist society no minority group has the right to impose its own religious or moral views on other groups, through the use of the methods of force, coercion, or violence"...
THERE would doubtless be universal agreement on the principle that our school textbooks should be American and should never be permitted to become vehicles for the propagation of obnoxious doctrines. The task of selection, however, is not one to be delegated to self-appointed experts, with obvious axes to grind. Instead, trust ought to be placed in the integrity, good faith, and plain common sense of
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the school boards and teachers of the country. As an investigating committee of the U.S. House of Representatives commented in its report: "If these educators are so utterly naive and untrained as to need help from a lobbying organization in selecting proper classroom materials, then our educational system has decayed beyond all help, a proposition we cannot accept."
There are two basic facts about censorship that banners and burners of books apparently will never learn.
- First, banning a book, given the contrary streak characteristic
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of human nature, automatically creates a universal desire to read it and, frequently, has been responsible for making best sellers out of what would otherwise remain mediocre failures.
- Second, ideas cannot be killed by suppression. There is scarcely any record of a book's total disappearance being caused by the censor's fires. Somewhere, almost invariably, a copy has survived, which can be multiplied and passed
on to succeeding generations. Only when the ideas expressed in books have lost their interest and meaning do the books vanish.
The most certain way to breathe life into a book and to ensure its longevity is to prohibit its being read.
(Excerpted from an article in the March 1962 Kansas Business Review by Robert B. Downs, dean of library administration at the University of Illinois)
THE PLEDGE CLASS OF KAPPA ALPHA PSI Presents a
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For Information or Tickets Phone VI 3-9778
"An estimate of repair costs? Sure-I'd say ... about $1.50 a pound!"
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UNIVERSITY FORD SALES
714 Vermont
VI 3-3500
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 27, 1962
Ise Says City Must Improve Physically
John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, said yesterday that cities should concentrate on improving physically instead of striving for greater populations.
He spoke at the Midwest City Managers School in the Kansas Union.
"Citics have suffered because they have gone all out to attract people," he said. "As a result, many different areas build up that are not really planned."
He said that increased city population called for new parks, new parking lots and new streets.
HE SAID CITIES ARE attracting more people so they can take in more money.
"When the population in a city increases, the real estate value naturally goes up," he said. "Problems also come up with a rise in population."
"Once the cities have a population increase, they do not know adequately how to take care of the new inhabitants," Prof. Ise said. "They should plan ahead and determine how they are going to take care of the population increase before they advertise for people to live in their cities."
BE ALSO SAID CITIES should be concerned more about taking care of
their present industry instead of continually trying to attract more new industry.
"Cities do not realize all the problems that an industry can cause. That's why we have so many polluted rivers and clogged sewers in cities."
He said cities many times stretch the truth when they try to attract people.
"I was reading Bob Ellsworth's (Representative, R-Kan.) column recently in the Lawrence Journal-World," he said. "Mr. Ellsworth said things about people in Lawrence and the city itself in an attempt to attract more people. I wonder if some of his claims are really valid."
PROF. ISE SAID REP. Ellsworth commented on the high educational level of Lawrence citizens and abundant water resources in Lawrence.
"Possibly some of the people of Lawrence are more educated than most people in the average city," he said. "But most educated people move away from Lawrence.
Festival to Carry 'Nuptials' Theme
"Nuptials Around the World" will be the theme of the annual International Festival next Saturday in Hoch Auditorium.
"The only time that there is an abundant water supply in Lawrence is when there is a flood. In a dry spell, Lawrence is very hard up for water."
The festival is sponsored by a group of international students under the direction of Clark Coan, assistant dean of men and international student adviser.
The Nuptial exhibits will open at 4:30 p.m. The evening program will begin at 7:45 p.m. The exhibits and the program will center around marriage, love, wedding and bridal customs around the world.
Examples of the wedding themes include "An Indian Marriage," "Greek Wedding Party" and "A Scale of Happiness (German)."
Members of the festival steering committee include Vinodchandra A. Patel, Bardoa, India, special student; Pedro Bonet, Huesca, Spain, graduate student; Yamuna Narayan, Madan, India, junior; Sinan M. Kurarer, Istanbul, Turkey, graduate student.
Mead Urges New Education Program
Mosbalaje Lobode, Abeokuta,
Nigeria, freshman; Jose Alvarez,
Mexico D.F., Mexico, graduate
student, and A. A. Abdul-Rahim,
Damasac, Syria, graduate student.
COLUMBUS, Ohio — (UPI) A program of selective, rather than mass, federal aid to education for the country's local schools was urged yesterday by Margaret Mead, noted anthropologist, author and lecturer.
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"We're not spending enough on education." she said. "We're not building enough. The federal government should help deal with inequities in communities."
Hasn't Got the Knack Yet
LONDON — Expert polo player,
Prince Philip, comforting his son,
Heir Apparent Prince Charles after
the latter almost took a header in a
polo match;
"It takes quite a time to get the knack."
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Centron Contest Casts Chosen
Casts have been chosen for three original plays to be produced in competition for the Centron Motion Picture Corporation playwriting award and presented May 7-12 in the University Experimental Theatre.
The plays are "Here Comes Santa Claus." "Double, Double . . ." and "The Acrobats." They were chosen from 87 entries judged by drama department faculty members and graduate students. Prizes of $100, $60 and $40 will be awarded following the final performance. Curtain time is 8 p.m..
These in "Here Comes Santa Claus" are Kenneth Baker, Helmetta, N.J., graduate student, directer; Ronald Black, Valley Center sophomore; Allan Hazlett, Topeka freshman; Stephen Booser, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Horst Muller, Tirschenseouth, Germany, graduate student; Robert Strack, Lawrence junior, and Alice Marthaler, Sabetha junior.
In "Double, Double . . ." are Tandy Craig, Joplin, Mo, graduate student, director; Diane Elliott, Sublett sophomore, assistant director; Paul Ackerman, Colby sophomore; Karin Gold, Overland Park sophomore; Thomas Winston, Dallas, Texas, junior; Roxan Beihl, assistant instructor in speech and drama, and Hoite Caston, Independence iunior.
The cast for "The Acrobats" includes Steve Callahan, Lawrence graduate student, director; David Berey, Topeka junior; Katherine Barker, Oswego freshman; Kay Carroll, El Dorado freshman; Lois Criss, Eudora freshman; Miles Coiner Jr., Lawrence graduate student; Clayton Crenshaw, Lawrence junior.
Lanny Fellers, Lawrence freshman; Enos Ferguson, Manhattan Beach, Calif; freshman; John Lewis, Kansas City city senior; Patti O'Berg, Lawcow junior; Larry Siefkes, Great Bend freshman; Patrick Prosser, Leavenworth junior, and Carl Bentz. Academy juniper.
"Here Comes Santa Claus" was written by Julian Oliansky, a student at Yale University, "Double, Double . . ." is by Marston Tate of the University of California and "The Acrobats" is by Barry Fleming, a novelist.
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Career Cues
"Cure for job boredom: I made my favorite pastime my career!"
Richard Bertram, President
Bertram Yacht Co., Division of Nautec Corp.
"When you stop to think what percent of our total waking hours is spent bread-winning, you realize how tragic it is for any man to work at an occupation he doesn't enjoy. Besides frittering away life, it reduces chances of success to just about zero.I know... because it almost happened to me!
After college, I did what I thought was expected of me and joined a solid, Manhattan-based insurance firm. I soon found office routine wasn't for me. I lived only for
lunch hour when I could walk to the Battery and mentally sail with the ships that stood out in the Narrows . . . and for the summer weekends when I could go sailing. Fortunately, the company I worked for is one of the leading insurers of yachts and after two years I was transferred to their Yacht Underwriting Department. Enjoyment and interest in my work improved immediately 100%.
After World War II, I started my own yacht brokerage firm and yacht insurance agency in Miami, combining my marine insurance background with an even closer relationship with boats.
My only problem ever since has been a feeling of guilt that my work was too easy. I love boats and boating people. That affection has paid me rewards way beyond the financial security it has also provided.
The moral's obvious. You have an odds-on chance for success and happiness working at what you enjoy most—what comes naturally! And if it's not just frivolous, your life's work could well be what you now consider just a pastime. It's certainly worth thinking about, anyway!"
I'll try to be more faithful with the text. Here is the image content:
---
Richard Bertram, while still in his early thirties, became one of the country's leading yacht brokers. Today he heads up eight companies covering yacht manufacturing, insurance, repair, storage, finance and brokerage. A resident of Coconut Grove, Florida, Dick became a Camel fan while still in college.
And to make any time pass more enjoyably...
Have a real cigarette-Camel
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Friday, April 27, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
League Leading Jayhawks Meet Iowa State Here
"That probably did us more good than harm," comments Temple, "because I felt some of the boys were getting overconfident. This proves to them they'll have to go all out against everyone.
Game time for today's double-header is 1:30 p.m., for tomorrow's single game 1:00 p.m. Skipper "George Stallings" Temple will throw two lefties at the Cyclones today, veteran Roger Brock and rookie Monte Stewart. Brock is the staff leader with a 1.82 ERA, winning four of six decisions. Stewart is 3.50 and 2-1. Tomorrow's mound choice lies between veteran Jerry Waldschmidt and Carl Nelson, both righthanders, and another southpaw, Steve Lunsford, the 160-pound bantam who muffled Missouri's mighty bats with an eight-hitter to win the opener of that series a week ago.
Since carding the 2-1 edge in Tigertown, Kansas has split a home-and-home set with Washburn, losing Tuesday's second encounter. 4-5.
Kansas' Miracle Braves, dead last in the Big Eight baseball race a year ago, but now leading the league, host Iowa State's seventh-place Cyclones today and tomorrow as the conference flag chase reaches the halfway point.
"I feel we have a chance to win this thing, but I really don't know how we can do with these other ball clubs because we know so little about them. I'll say this. The team that wins the championship will lose at least five games because of the balance of this league."
Kansas goes in against the Cyclones with a 7-2 conference reading; 10-5 overall. Iowa State is 2-5 in the league; 2-6 overall.
Kansas Baseball Statistics PITCHING
| | R | ER | W | L |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Lunsford | 6 | 6 | 1 | 0 |
| Brock | 13 | 6 | 4 | 2 |
| Stewart | 7 | 7 | 2 | 1 |
| Waldschmidt | 16 | 13 | 3 | 2 |
| Nelson | 16 | 11 | — | — |
| KU Totals | 59 | 43 | 10 | 5 |
| Opponents | 99 | 55 | 5 | 10 |
BATTING
Nelson AB R R HRBI PCT.
Brock 9 1 3 4 3 444
Bumgarner 11 1 0 4 364
Rader 57 10 20 11 351
Fanning 50 10 10 11 260
Hensley 50 13 16 11 260
Stewart 8 2 0 12 30
Leiker 47 14 11 11 234
Mills 48 14 8 11 529
Abercrombie 55 12 12 7 250
Lunsford 5 1 1 0 200
Marshall 50 9 7 1 5.140
Troye 8 0 1 1 1.125
Waldschmidt 8 0 1 1 1.063
Evilsser 16 1 1 3 0.163
Robinson 2 0 0 0 0.000
Qutchiob 1 0 0 0 0.000
Ward 1 0 0 0 0.000
Culp 0 0 0 0 0.000
KU Totals 478 99 114 73 238
KU Totals 478 99 114
Opponents Totals 434 59 93
Dotson Is Fourth Fastest Miler
First release of 1962 NCAA track and field statistics shows Kansas captain Bill Dotson ranked fourth in the Mile at 4:04.3; sixth in the Two-Mile at 9:01.1. He'll anchor Jawhawk Four-Mile and Two-Mile bids at the 53rd Drake Relays this weekend in Des Moines.
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KU, MU to Renew Rivalry at Drake
Compress the enduring heat of the Kansas-Missouri athletic rivalry into one race in the 53rd Drake Relays and only the weather man will be to blame if another record isn't melted this weekend in Des Moines.
The setting will be the two-milk relay Saturday afternoon, as the Jayhawkers go after a club that embarrassed them before the home folk at last weekend's Kansas Relays. No only did the Tigers clip Kansas or its home track, but it broke the mee record with a 7.24.2. This figure also is the nation's collegiate best at this writing and took rank as the swiftes in history by a Big Eight foursome.
NOT ONLY WILL Bill Easton's troupe be seeking a reverse of this verdict, but preservation of their own one-year-old Drake record of 7:28.0 and their skein of four consecutive
two-mile titles on this final stop of the Midland's Grand Circuit.
Until this season opened, KU's 7:28.6 was the best mark on the Big Eight books. Since then the Tigers and Jayhawkers have taken turns buffeting it between them. Kansas gave portent of what was to come at the end of the indoor season with two consecutive American record spins of 7:30.8 and 7:29.2.
NOW THE TIGERS are back on top after their tremendous spin at Kansas, which saw Bengal anchorman Jim Baker, a native quarter-
But MU was first to break under the old ceiling with a stunning 72.80 in winning the Arkansas Relays. Kansas re-captured this honor a week later in 7.27.7 to win at Texas, Missouri waiving competition because of injury to leadoffer Jerry McFadden.
miler, holding off Jayhawker ace Bill Dotson with a sparkling 1:50.8 clean-up. The Jayhawkers ran an all-time low themselves at 7:27.4, but they'll be obliged to step faster if they're going to draw even at Des Mines.
Here is a breakdown on the splits for that historic duel at Lawrence, which clipped Michigan State's four-year-old record by six-tenths:
MU — McFadden 1:53.7 — Pelster
1:50.8 — Rawson — 1:49.5 — Baker
1:50.2.
KU — Hagan 1:53.2 — Riesinger —
1:51.6 — Thorton — 1:49.2 — Dotson
— 1:53.3.
The Jayhawkers have a right to expect better from Dotson, who careened 1:49.6 at Texas and from Hagan, who was running his first outdoor meet following a long seige of flu. He owns a career low of 1:49.2.
ODDLY, the Tigers never have
bagged this race at Drake; Kansas has won it more times than any other team, seven. This includes a cluster of four straight over the last four years.
Hagan, Thornton and Dotson ran on the 1962 club, which saved the Jayhawkers from a baton shutout on last year's Grand Circuit as they reversed decisions on their Texas and Kansas Relays conquerors, SMU and Drake. Dotson also ran No. 2 on the '60 champions.
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Mikki Pellettieri, a Year Book Beauty, has her mind on Psychology and her eye on the all-new Fairlane 500 Sports Coupe. This Fairlane "a la king" combines trimmed-for-action outside dimensions with carriage trade interior appointments, between-seats console, and
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 27, 1962
---
STARTS
SATURDAY
PAUL NEWMAN
GERALDINE PAGE
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
Provocative Adult
Entertainment!
SWEET
BIRD
OF YOUTH
Based on the Play
by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS
ED BY STARRING
SHIRLEY KNIGHT
ED BEGLEY' RIP TORN
WRITTEN BY NORMAN LEE
AND ORIGINATED BY RICHARD BROOKS
PRODUCED BY PANRO D. BERMAN
BY CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR
Mat. 2 p.m.
Eve. 7 & 9:10
Sun. 2:30 - 4:45 -
7:10 - 9:30
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
HERE HE IS RIGHT UP ON TOP OF THE GAUDY WORLD HE SWORE HE'D CONQUER. HE'S GOT A MOVIE CONTRACT IN HIS POCKET, A FISH TAILED CONVERTIBLE IN THE HOTEL GARAGE AND A DAME IN HIS ROOM PAYIN' FOR THE DRINKS. HE'S CHANCE WAYNE WHO USES LOVE LIKE MOST MEN USE MONEY!
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer presents
PAUL NEWMAN
GERALDINE PAGE
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
STARTS SATURDAY
Mat. 2 p.m.
Eve. 7 & 9:10
Sun. 2:30 - 4:45 -
7:10 - 9:30
Provocative Adult Entertainment!
Based on the Play by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS
SHIRLEY KNIGHT
ED BEGLEY-RIP TORN
WRITTEN FOR THE SUNDAY AND DUE TO BY RICHARD BROOKS
PRODUCED BY PANDRO S. BERMAN
CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR
THESE ARE THE PEOPLE IN THE GREATEST DRAMATIC ENTERTAINMENT OF OUR TIME!
The American Judge
...who tore himself apart to convict the guilty—and became a new man when he saved the innocent!
The German Judge
...whose confession broke the case wide open... with his own reputation in the middle of it!
The Prosecutor
...he had to throw the book at them, no matter how many dirty pages fell out!
The Innocent Victim
...the damage to him was notorious ...and now the laughter in the court-room was worse!
The Defense Attorney
...he hated atrocities as much as any man, but he had his people, and his country to think of!
The Star Witness
...hiding from her shame for so long... helpless now from bringing it out in the open!
The General's Widow
her glamor, her good times, belonged to another day ...now she was just a woman!
STANLEY KRAMER presents
SPENCER TRACY/BURT LANCASTER/RICHARD WIDMARK
MARLENE DIETRICH/JUDY GARLAND/MAXIMILIAN SCHELL
MONTGOMERY CLIFT
AS IRENE HOFFMAN
JUDGMENT AT NUREMBERG
ADM.
ADULTS
$1.00
Winner of 6 Academy Awards
Starts
SUNDAY
Varsity
SWEET
HERE HE IS RIGHT UP ON TOP OF THE GAUDY WORLD HE SWORE HE’D CONQUER. HE’S GOT A MOVIE CONTRACT IN HIS POCKET, A FISH TAILED CONVERTIBLE IN THE HOTEL GARAGE AND A DAME IN HIS ROOM PAYIN’ FOR THE DRINKS. HE’S CHANCE WAYNE WHO USES LOVE LIKE MOST MEN USE MONEY!
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer presents PAUL NEWMAN GERALDINE PAGE Granada Theatre Telephone VI 3-578
STARTS SATURDAY
Mat. 2 p.m.
Eve. 7 & 9:10
Sun. 2:30 - 4:45 -
7:10 - 9:30
Based on the play by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS SHIRLEY KNIGHT ED BEGLEY RIP TORN WRITTEN BY THE OPERATOR AND DIRECTED BY PANDRO S. BERMAN PRODUCED BY CINEMASCOPE and METROCOLOR
THESE ARE THE PEOPLE IN THE GREATEST DRAMATIC ENTERTAINMENT OF OUR TIME!
The American Judge ...who tore himself apart to convict the guilty—and became a new man when he saved the innocent!
The German Judge ...whose confession broke the case wide open...with his own reputation in the middle of it!
The Innocent Victim ...the damage to him was notorious...and now the laughter in the courtroom was worse!
The Defense Attorney ...he hated atrocities as much as any man, but he had his people, and his country to think of!
The Star Witness ...hiding from her shame for so long...helpless now from bringing it out in the open!
The General's Widow her glamor, her good times, belonged to another day...now she was just a woman!
STANLEY KRAMER presents SPENCER TRACY/BURT LANCASTER/RICHARD WIDMARK MARLENE DIETRICH/JUDY GARLAND/MAXIMILIAN SCHELL MONTGOMERY CLIFT
JUDGMENT AT NUREMBERG
Winner of 6 Academy Awards
Starts SUNDAY 2:00 - 5:08 & 8:15
Varsity Theatre Telephone VI 3-1065
GRANADA NOW SHOWING!
Ends Tonight
Walt Disney’s “Moon Pilot”
Adults 85¢ — Kids 50¢
VARSITY NOW SHOWING!
Friday & Saturday
True & Authentic “Question 7”
Adults $1.00 — Kids 35¢
SUNSET NOW SHOWING!
Friday & Saturday
Adults 75¢ “Circus of Horrors” — AND — “House of Fright”
2 Bonus Features Sat.
“Boy who Caught a Crook”
“Secret of Deep Harbor”
NOTE — Sat. “Boy Who Caught A Crook” First!
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“THE BEST BLOCKBUSTER OF THE YEAR!”
— Crowther, N.Y. Times
"A terrific show! Director Preminger is at the top of his form. The script seems an amazing achievement: clear, intelligent, subtle, witty, swift, strong, eloquent. EXODUS turns out to be a serious, expert, frightening and inspiring thriller!" — Time Magazine
"★★★ A stirring film drama!" — Kate Cameron, Daily News
EXODUS
OTTO PREMINGER PRESENTS
PAUL NEWMAN • EVA MARIE SAINT
RALPH RICHARDSON • PETER LAWFORD
LEE J.COBB • SAL MINEO • JOHN DEREK
HUGH GRIFFITH • DAVID OPATOSHU
JILL HAWORTH IN "EXODUS"
SCREENPLAY BY DALTON TRUMBO •BASED ON THE BEST SELLING NOVEL BY LEON URIS •MUSIC BY EMINST GOLD •PHOTOGRAPHY IN SUPE RANAVISION 70, TECHNICALITY BY SAM LEAVITT •A UNITED ARTISTS RELEASE •PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY OTTO PREMINGER
SUNDAY One Show Nightly 7:15 Adults 90¢ — Kids Free
BIRD OF YOUTH
The American Judge ...who tore himself apart to convict the guilty—and became a new man when he saved the innocent!
The German Judge ...whose confession broke the case wide open... with his own reputation in the middle of it!
The Prosecutor ...he had to throw the book at them, no matter how many dirty pages fell out!
The Innocent Victim ...the damage to him was notorious ...and now the laughter in the
The Defense Attorney
... he hated atrocities as much as any man, but he had his people, and his country to think of!
The Star Witness
... hiding from her shame for so long ... helpless now from bringing it out in the open!
JUDGMENT AT NUREMBERG
SUNDAY
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VL3-1065
SUNSET
NOW SHOWING!
GIANT SCREEN Perfect SOUND INDIVIDUAL SPEAKERS FOR EVERY CAR
---
EXODUS
SUNDAY
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40
Friday. April 27. 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
One day, 50c; three days, $1.00; five days, $1.25. Terms账:All ads of less than $1.00 which are not paid for in cash will be charged an additional fee or oung.
All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office, in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
LOST IN THE VICINITY OF KU STADIUM during relays: Pair of men's wristbands for Kansas Relays, for whom scribed "Kansas Relays. Call Westview Motel, MV 3-6733.
GOLD CHARM Bracelet bead behind Strong
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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.
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FOUND
FOUND IN FRASER HALL: 1 purse of cosmetics, 8 head scarves, 1 Parker found in the case, 6 leather book — 'The Red and the Black,' 2 neck scarves, 1 brown men's glove, 2 black leather glove, 2 black leather glove, 1 white ladies' glove, ladies' blue suede glove, 1 white ear muff, 1 brown glove, 1 white ear muff, 1 brown ear muff, 3 umbrellas. Claim at 111 Flint.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 27, 1962
Official Bulletin
Western Civilization Examination Regis-
tion between April 30 & May 4 in
130 Strong.
Teacher Interviews;
TODAY
April 30 Dorothy Gibson & Marguerite Holcombe (K-8), Bakersfield. Cali.
IRA Spring Sing: 7 p.m. Recital Hall.
Murphy, Men's & Women's scholarship halls and dorms competing for trophies,
on musical performance and staring.
Baptist Student Union: 7:30 p.m., 1221
Oread. Devotional studies and fellowship.
International Club: 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. India Night: program by students from India, featuring films like "Harry Potter" and "Films, Lemonade and dancing figures."
SUNDAY
Oread. Devotional studies and fellowship
Hillel Services: 7:30 p.m., Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. Oneg Shabat following services.
Lutheran Services; 8:30 & 11 a.m., Immanuel Lutheran Church, 17th & Vermont, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Danforth Chanel
Catholic Mass: 9 & 11 a.m., Fraser Hall (Newman Club).
Oread Friends Worship Meeting: 10.30 a.m. Danforth Chapel.
KUOK: 3—News & Weather, 305—
Viking 12—News & Weather,
Concert: 6—News & Weather, 6:15—
Horizons; 8—Hagen's Hothouse; 10—New-
yorker; 11—Rockland; 12—Portals of Prayer and Sign Off.
Episcopal Holy Communion & Lunch:
12 noon, Canterbury House.
MONDAY
Henry Werner Lectures: 4 p.m. 233 Malott. Dr. Henry Taube, Stanford U.,
Mathematics Colloquium: 4:15 p.m., 200 Strong Hall, Mr. Gh建弗 Hebrun, Univ. of Calf, at Berkeley, on The Lowerheinheim, Theorem1, Coffee, 3:50 p.m., 119 Strong.
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Football Player Will Vocalize
Curtis McClinton, KU's all-conference halfback, will exercise a second talent as the featured base baritone at the Kappa Alpha Psi spring recital Sunday at 3 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
McClinton said since coming to college, he has experienced a conflict between his athletic and musical pursuits.
McClinton started his musical career as a pianist.
"I WASN'T ABLE TO SING in the University Choir because football practice was always at the same time," he said.
"I played the piano until I was old enough to play football." he said. "When I was in high school, I played on the football team and sang in the mixed chorus."
McCLINTON APPEARED LAST year as a vocalist throughout the state. He sang at the World Day of Prayer in Wichita and at the Kennedy-Johnson victory dinner in Topeka. He also sang at various churches and at several KU departmental banquets.
"If the money was right, I'd rather sing than play football," he said. "At one time, I seriously thought about pursuing a musical career when I was offered a Wichita University music scholarship, but I accepted a KU football scholarship instead."
McClinton has signed to play professional football with the Dallas Cowboys, and he also hopes to make a few recordings.
THE KAPPA ALPHA PSI QUARTet, second place winner in the small ensemble division of the Greek Week Sing, also will be featured at the recital.
Members of the quartet include Dingwall C. Fleary, Lawrence senior; Thomas Cox, St. Louis sophomore; Daniel Gomez, Hutchinson graduate student, and Dale Taylor. Topeka senior.
Tickets are on sale for $1 at the Kappa Alpha Psi house and will also be sold at the door the afternoon of the recital.
Fambrough Due for Release
Don Fambrough, Kansas football assistant who has been hospitalized the past week with a stomach disorder, is due for release this week. How soon he can resume his field chores will be up to the medicos.
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Wichita DU Chapter Draws Suspension
WICHITA — (UPI) — Suspension of the Delta Upsilon fraternity at Wichita University was announced today.
The fraternity was ordered to stop operations for the duration of the school year except for "business functions."
An incident at a beer party at a river cabin was blamed for the suspension. Three members of the fraternity resigned.
Billfold Burglar Strikes Theta Chi
KU police have reported that $107.50 was taken from men's bill-folds on the first and third floors of the Theta Chi fraternity house early yesterday morning.
Police said the theft occurred between 2 a.m. and 5 a.m.
A member of the fraternity told police that a car had been observed in the parking lot about 1:30 a.m.
The member said that the car, was seen about the same time several other nights.
KU Biochem Labs Set for Change
Major equipment used for research in biochemistry at KU will be replaced through two U.S. Public Health grants totaling $15,025.
Need for the new equipment results from the moving of the freshman medical class from Lawrence to the Medical Center at Kansas City, this fall.
The equipment had been bought under grants directed by Dr. Philip Newmark, associate professor of biochemistry, and Dr. Paul Kitos, assistant professor of biochemistry.
Final 'Splash Hits' Tonight
Fifteen diving and swimming acts are presented in "Splash Hits," the 1962 Quack Club water ballet. The last show will be held at 8 tonight in Robinson Gymnasium.
The acts are accompanied by recorded music from Broadway musicals. Tickets are 50 cents.
Tim Theis, Dodge City senior, and Tom Miller, Fort Scott junior, perform as clowns. Miller portrays Amol Flurge, the swimming coach who struggles to teach his student. Theis, how to swim and dive.
Features on the program include Pat Lane, Ronald Marsh and Nancy Jo Mullinix, Kansas City freshmen, as exhibition divers. Miss Lane is the National Junior Women's 3-meter AAU diving champion. Marsh is the Missouri Valley AAU winner and the Southwestern AAU champion diver.
Other novelty acts include a sister act, "Mountain Capers," starring Barbara and Andrea Gresser, junior and sophomore from Topeka, and "El Matador," features Clair McErloy, Wichita freshman, and Ruth Anne Walters, Lawrence senior, in a synchronized swimming act.
Twelfth Night' Stage Similar to Shakespeare's
For the current University Theatre production of William Shakespeare's romantic comedy "Twelfth Night," director Gordon Beck and set designer Glenn Bickle have constructed a facade to resemble Shakespeare's Globe playhouse.
By Tom Winston
It is fitting that they should do this, for the Elizabethan drama thrives best in the surroundings for which it was written. Scenes that seem to create directorial problems on a common proscenium stage become clear when placed in their original physical context and perspective.
THE DESIGN of the Shakespearean playhouse was organic to the structure of the Elizabethan drama. Shakespeare and his contemporaries, such as Ben Jonson and Christopher Marmlowe used elaborate costuming but they did not use scenery. Instead, their theater building itself served for its own scenery.
Shakespeare's Globe playhouse was either an octagonal structure or a round one (authorities do not agree) with a courtyard open to the sky in the middle. It could seat 3000 people in the three galleries
Opposite the main entrance was the attiring house, which served as the stage, as a storage building, and as a dressing room. The stage had seven and sometimes eight acting areas, on three levels.
On the first level was the downstage platform, where most of the action took place. In the middle of the platform was a trap door leading to the "hell" underneath—so called because it was used as the abode of evil spirits, as a dungeon, or as a madhouse.
FURTHER UPSTAGE were entrance doors on either side with an inner below stage called the "study" in the middle.
On the second level were window stages on either side, an inner above stage between them called the "chamber" where the bedroom scenes took place, and the tarras downstage of the chamber.
On the third level was the music gallery, usually occupied by musicians, but sometimes used by the actors for a tower, a dungeon, or a ship masthead. It also had storage rooms and dressing rooms.
Zalinski to Speak To Insurance Men
Dozens of insurance men from Kansas and western Missouri are expected to meet at KU today when the 1962 Insurance Lectureship will be held.
The principal speaker will be Dr. Edmund L. Zalinski, executive vice president of the Life Insurance Company of North America, Philadelphia. He will discuss "Health Insurance Progress and Problems" at 2 p.m. in Murphy Hall.
The lectureship is financed by the Insurance Education Development Fund created with the KU Endowment Association in 1957 by Kansas insurance executives, companies and associations.
Dr. Zalinski will be introduced by Frank T. Sullivan, Kansas state commissioner of insurance, who will talk on "Responsibility to the Insured."
Because the University Theatre proscenium is not high enough to allow a music gallery, Beck has placed the Duke Orsino's musicians in the audience-right window stage. Six students, directed by Howard Smither, assistant professor of music history, play the viole de gamba, the viola, the rebec and recorders.
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In this world, the poet-play-wright was shackled neither by time nor place. "What he demanded of a stage was space for the unimpeded flow of scene after scene, for the instantaneous creation of any place in this world or the next."
IN ALL, BECK'S SET is 15 feet longer than the regular stage, 35 feet wide. and 24 feet high.
"Instead," Beckerman says, "the unfolding of the drama took place in a world half of man, and therefore unpredictable, half of God, and therefore moral, and was composed half of history, half of legend; half remote fantasy, half immediate reality."
Shakespeare and his contemporaries did not use lighting. In Renaissance Italy some theaters had fantastically complicated stage machinery, including lighting effects which could be used at will. But the Shakespearean plays took place in the afternoon or in the morning, in the daylight hours. The playwrights used their poetic powers to set the scene and to establish the mood and the time of day.
Admission prices for seats were determined much as they are today; the higher the cheaper. One penny would admit one into the courtyard beneath the elevated stage, but there were no seats there. A second penny would admit one to the third gallery, and a third penny would admit one to the best seats in the house, the first and second galleries.
Beckerman calls the stories romantic because they were "centrifugal in impulse, ever threatening to veer from their paths." The ordinary narrative, as from Adam's sin to Christ's judgment, no longer existed.
BERNARD BECKERMAN, an authority on Shakespeare at Hofstra College in New York, has said that the phrase "two boards and a passion" perhaps sums up all that was essential to the Shakespearean theater.
FREEDOM in change of scenery is most necessary to the Elizabethan drama. It must keep moving to hang together properly, and the multiple-stage set allows this to happen.
ODAS
DRINK QUEEM
IT CO.
EN
DRINK QUEEM
Shakespeare knew what he was doing. It is good to be able to see his works in their proper perspective and on their own terms. Cuts are not necessary most of the time because of the speed of the play. Mr. Beck and Glenn Bickle, the set designer, deserve a vote of thanks.
BARRY BROWN
Frank Bonilla
Bonilla, who joined the AUFS in 1961, earned his M.A. degree from New York University and a Ph.D. degree from Harvard University, both in the field of sociology. He has studied in Latin America under a John Hay Whitney Opportunity Fellowship and a Doherty Foundation Fellowship.
Bonilla will speak to 30 classes, faculty and student organizations during his visit April 30-May 9.
Frank Bonilla, American Universities Field Staff associate and authority on Latin America. will be the fourth and final 1961-62 AUFS speaker on the University of Kansas campus.
Frank Bonilla to Be Final AUFS Speaker
The speaker. W. Charles Redding, will speak on "Speech Communication in the Industrial Organization: Some Perspectives from Recent Research."
A professor of speech at Purdue University will address the KU Speech Communication division at 4 p.m. May 2 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Prof. Redding, who is first vice president of the National Society for the Study of Communication, is a communication consultant to business and industrial organizations.
Speech Specialist To Address Group
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John Ise Looks At U.S. Problems
By Terry Murphy and Dennis Branstiter
John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, took a look at several issues important to the United States Friday afternoon during his talk at the Current Events Forum.
Prof. Ise's announced subject was "inflation." Following an established practice of his, the 74-year-old scion of independent thought enlarged the topic to include his views on:
- The Common Market and its effect on the U.S.—He called it "one of our great hopes."
- The qualifications of the Kennedy Administration to capably lead the United States—"We're going to find out whether education is worth anything or whether it is just decorative."
- The inflation—"Nations are just like people; they want more than they can afford."
- The support he gives a petition to send U.S. surplus food to Red China-"You know that embarrasses me a little. It's the first time I've got into anything that has more than 50 per cent public support."
SPEAKING ON the prospects for world peace, Prof. Ise said he held little hope for a return to total peace in the lifetime of any person attending the meeting.
"The Russians need turmilo to progress. I don't doubt but that the Russians intend to try to make good their promise of world domination.
"I don't expect you young people to see a time when there won't be difficulty internationally."
Prof. Ise was pessimistic about the future for the United States-backed Diem government prevailing in Viet Nam.
"WERE GOING TO lose over there," he said.
Talking on the prospects of the Common Market, Prof. Ise said, "It might be the start of a real league of nations. Economic cooperation might be the start of political cooperation."
In answer to a question, he said that U.S. entry into the Common Market need not lower the country's wages and standard of living.
"History has shown us that free trade between countries raises standards in both countries."
PROF. ISE has a wait-and-see attitude on the prospects for President Kennedy's free trade measures being passed by Congress. At that point he made a comparison of Presidents
Eisenhower and Kennedy on the issue of inflation.
"Kennedy has too much to do to talk about inflation." This remark brought laughter. Prof. Ise is an out-spoken critic of the Eisenhower Administration, especially in the field of economics.
"Ike didn't know about inflation. During his campaign he promised to balance the budget and I'm sure he meant to do it, but he didn't."
"Kennedy may have to wind up with inflation. Nations are like individuals—they want more than they can afford. People go to the bank and borrow all they can and then they turn to credit."
"THEY ARE a way of giving us more credit when we can't get it any other way. I don't get the theory of them at all. I haven't been in debt for 30 years.
Prof. Ise commented that credit cards are just another form of credit.
"I'm always getting some deal through the mail from some gas company asking me if I wouldn't like to have one of their credit cards.
"I always tell them. 'Hell, no.' I got green credit cards right here in my pocket and they have universal acceptability. Besides they're nice and light and they get the job done."
"Now I hate to be cheerful about anything. Everytime I get cheerful, I've a hangover for two weeks."
Prof. Ise was asked what future prospects he held for inflation.
He pointed out that increased quality and imports tend to act as brakes on inflation.
"Today we can get a car for $200 that is a lot better than one that cost $3,000 forty years ago."
Puffing on his straight-stemmed pipe and looking at his attentive audience over his steel-rimmed glasses, Prof. Ise said. "Those Japanese are making things pretty good now and the price is low."
Western Civ. Test Registrations Open
Registration for the Western Civilization examination started today. The four-hour exam will be given May 19.
Registration will last through Friday in 130 Strong Hall. All students planning to take the exam must register during this period.
Daily hansan
Monday, April 30, 1962
59th Year, No. 128
Weather
Partly cloudy and colder this afternoon with showers and thunderstorms extreme southeast portion. Clear or clearing and colder tonight with scattered frost likely extreme northeast and extreme north central portion. Tomorrow generally fair and warmer west and central portion. Low tonight 30s northwest to the low 40s south east. High tomorrow near 70 northwest to near 60 southwest.
Kansan Named In the Top Nine College Dailies
LAWRENC. KANSAS
He cited in particular, the paper's coverage of the World Crisis Day. The Kansan devoted much of its space on that occasion to the speeches of the participants and to criticism of the event.
The Associated Collegiate Press rated the Kansan "All American" for the first semester of the 1961-62 school year.
The University Daily Kansan has been named one of the top nine college student daily newspapers in the country.
The judge, a professional staff member of a Minneapolis newspaper, singled out the Kansan's news coverage for commendation. He rated Kansan news coverage as "excellent to superior."
Kansan readers, too, were commended. In commenting on the Kansan's letters to the editor and the Sound and Fury columns, the judge wrote;
"This is one of the most articulate readerships I have read."
The "All American" rating, according to the collegiate rating service, signifies "distinctly superior achievement." This is the third major honor students in the William Allen White School of Journalism have won through their laboratory newspaper.
They took first place in the first annual Hearst newswriting contest last year and recently were awarded the National Mass Media Brotherhood award for editors.
Southern Negroes Sent North by Bus
NEW ORLEANS — (UPI) — The greater New Orleans Citizens Council scheduled "freedom buses north" to New York, Chicago and Los Angeles today in a chips-down test against charges that its campaign is a hoax.
United Press International learned that the Council was also planning to send some Negroes to Hyannis Port, Mass., President Kennedy's summer home. George Singelmann, director of the campaign, which would send unhappy Southern Negroes North, said the Hyannis Port schedule was not ready for announcement.
SINGELMANN SAID 5 Negroes would be sent to Chicago today on Continental Trailways and that at least 100 would board a bus to New York. Another 25 Negroes, including 15 children from two families, would board a train to Los Angeles today, he added.
He said a train was being used in the California trip because it was too long a bus ride for children.
"I've got a long list of applications," he said. "If they want to go, all they have to do is show up at the station. We'll count them there."
UP TO TODAY the Citizen's Council claimed it had sent 116 Negroes to New York and Chicago. But only 13 had been identified and some Negro critics of the program accused the segregationist group of a hoax. Singelmann claims they would be arrested if named.
Clarence Laws, southwestern regional secretary of the NAACP, predicted the Citizens Council would "prey upon the destitute, the hopeless, debtors, prisoners, adventurers and others to obtain their quota of human cargo" for "freedom buses north."
The Rev. Martin Luther King said the Council's one-way ticket campaign is "inhuman, undemocratic and certainly unethical."
SEN. JACOB JAVITS, R-N-Y,
called the "freedom buses north"
program a "significant admission" by Southern extremists "that they cannot cope with the march of time."
Singelmann said the NAACP had sent agents here to "comb the city" to discourage Negroes from accepting the council's free tickets North.
5 Department Heads Chosen
Five professors have been named the new heads of five departments in the university.
They are: Charles K. Wartiner, associate professor of sociology; Cyrus C. DeCoster, professor of Romance languages; Herbert F. Wright, professor of psychology; Edward S. Robinson, professor of philosophy, and Donald R. Olsen, assistant professor of economics.
Prof. Warriner succeeds Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology and anthropology, as head of the departments of sociology and anthropology. Prof. Clark is retiring as chairman, but will remain on the faculty.
Prof. Wright succeeds Anthony J. Smith, professor of psychology, as chairman of the department of psychology. Prof. Smith will be on leave next year and does not wish to continue administrative duties when he returns.
Prof. Robinson succeeds Peter J. Caws, associate professor of philosophy, as chairman of the department of philosophy. Prof. Caws is resigning to accept a position with the Carnegie Corporation of New York.
Prof. Olsen, who became acting head of the department of economics this winter, will be made official head of that department.
Prof. DeCoster will replace J. Neale Carman, professor of Romance languages, who retires this year.
All five men will assume their new duties July 1.
550 at All Women's Day Breakfast
"I Enjoy Being a Girl," was the theme of the 7 a.m. breakfast this morning for 550 women in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Japanese cherry blossoms and butterfly fans accentuated the Oriental decor for the All Women's Day junior-senior breakfast sponsored by the Associated Women Students. The Mademoiselle College Board and the Alpha Phi Greek Week Sing ensemble presented a program honoring the senior women.
The observance of All Women's Day began yesterday with an exchange dinner for all organized women's living groups. Other highlights included a "musicale" presentation by faculty and student women, and a display in the Art Museum featuring illustrations taken from the "Yellow Book," an English publication of the 1890s.
Today's AWS Day events will include a Mortar Board symposium for senior women at 4 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The symposium will feature speakers and discussion groups on "The Role of the Educated Woman After College Graduation."
100
"Honors Night" at 8 p.m. tonight in Hoch Auditorium will climax this year's AWS Day.
The evening will feature the installation of the 1962-63 AWS Senate officers, the announcement of the AWS Memorial Scholarship winner, freshman residence hall counselors, Lewis residence hall counselors, and members of the honorary sophomore organization-Cwens.
Other highlights will include the announcement of new "Little Sisters" for People-to-People, Mortar Board members, the outstanding woman from each organized women's house, and the American University Women's award to an outstanding KU senior woman from Kansas.
Members of the Angel Flight will act as ushers at "Honors Night". Sharon Saylor, Morrill senior, is chairman of this year's AWS Day steering committee. She will be mistress of ceremonies tonight.
Other members of the All Women's Day steering committee are: Diane Mullane, Oklahoma City, Okla., junior; Mary Estes, Lubbock, Texas; freshman; Cynthia Childers, Merriam sophomore; Sandra Smith, Wichita junior.
Sonja Halverson, St. Joseph, Mo., junior; Geraldine Thorp, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore; Judith Thompson, Arkansas City sophomore, and Susan White, Arkansas City sophomore.
WATCHING NEW FASHIONS—Karen Jordening, Horton, Mary Beth McGuire, Hutchinson, juniors, and Mary Kay Manrose, Winchester, Ind., senior, are among the 550 women watching
the Mademoiselle Board fashion show at the All Women's Day junior-senior breakfast this morning in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. The day's festivities conclude tonight.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday. April 30, 1962
The YAF's Phobia
The KU chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom is still beating its dead horse. They have continued to complain because the faculties of the economics and political science departments would not submit to their interrogation. They recently invited a representative from the state legislature to speak before them and he also criticized the faculties of the two departments for refusing to submit to the YAF poll.
The background of the quickly shattered YAF poll attempt is a typical story of the actions of political pressure groups. The YAF decided the economics and political science departments were crawling with liberals and that the conservative viewpoint in these fields was not being adequately represented (the assumption being that a liberal professor cannot be expected to deal fairly with the conservative viewpoint). To establish their contention the YAF decided to conduct a poll of the two departments to determine the political and economic philosophies of their faculties.
THE FACULTIES of the two departments refused to cooperate with any poll, but several members said they would be glad to talk to any YAF member who wanted to come forward as an individual. The YAF screamed that all this was not fair and the faculty members had no business refusing to submit to their interrogation. They
have kept up this wailing ever since. Last Friday state representative John D. Bower joined the chorus.
The YAF seems incapable of realizing that it is not competent to investigate the political and economic philosophies of the faculties of two large college departments and pass judgment on whether or not those philosophies are adequate and allow the faculties to present all viewpoints fairly. The idea that such a project can be carried out with a poll is totally ridiculous.
THE STRANGE part of the whole affair is that there is at least one responsible and usually clear thinking member of YAF, but either the responsible members have been unable to prevail or their thought on this particular subject has become as clear as muddy water. It is unfortunate that a state representative would support such a project.
By focusing its attention and energy on such negative projects as the discredited poll plan, the YAF is effectively alienating any responsible conservatives who might be interested in it. And responsible conservatives who believe in the Goldwater brand of conservatism are few in number anyway. But if the YAF wants to continue its public foolishness, that is one of the privileges political groups in this country enjoy.
William H. Mullins
The All-American Award
The All American rating the Kansan received this weekend marks the third time the Kansan has achieved national recognition in the last year. The members of the Kansan staff feel that the journalistic freedom that has been accorded them is largely responsible for this remarkable record.
The fact that the Kansan is truly a student newspaper means that its staff members take an interest in its production which probably would not exist under conditions of faculty or university control that are found in many colleges and universities. Today a shocking number of colleges and universities have demonstrated a lack of faith in their students by monitoring many of the decisions made in the operation of their student newspaper. The Kansan finds this deplorable and offers its sympathy to those student bodies that do not enjoy the depth reporting that can only be offered by a free campus newspaper.
Although the Kansan is certainly proud of its record for the past year, it is determined to make an even better record in the next 12 months. In reviewing the Kansan news coverage in the last year we have tried to realize its weaknesses as well as its strengths. In doing this it has been noticed that there are several ways in which the Kansan can improve in its service to the reader. Thus the Kansan shall, in the future, attempt to eliminate its weaknesses in the hope that it can be of even greater service to the reader.
the took world
By Calder M. Pickett Professor of Journalism
KENNEDY IN POWER, by James Tracy Crown and George P. Penty. Ballantine, 50 cents.
The cover blurb suggests to us that we are about to read "a critical and skeptical analysis." Well, this might be that, but it's only gently critical and seldom skeptical and it casts many admiring glances at "our young President."
—The Editors
Don't misunderstand, please. I don't seek an anti-Kennedy diatribe. But I can't really say I learned much from this short volume.
In taking their critical look at Kennedy, the authors spend more time being critical of the previous Eisenhower administration. They are probably partly right. Blaming Kennedy for all the troubles of the world makes about as much sense as hanging the depression on Hoover.
When Crown and Penty deal with the problems Kennedy has to face—Russia, atomic fallout, space exploration, dealing with neutralists, Cuba, the military, and disarmament—they are on safe ground, though they tell us little that we couldn't glean from news magazines or the New Republic.
An interesting section deals with Civil Defense and what the authors call the "balance of terror." They agree with Gov. Meyner of New Jersey that "There is one and only one defense against nuclear war—and that is peace." They maintain that the American people have been urged to build fallout shelters but that such shelters really won't solve any problems.
Civil Defense is nonsense, they say. "Of all the shocks administered to the public in the post-World War II era, the most profound is the admission by governments that they cannot ultimately protect their people... The American and Soviet publics today must each be satisfied with their government's promise that if they are blown up they may rest in the posthumous assurance that their attackers will likewise be despatched into eternity—probably within the hour."
The Rough Edge
By Bill Mullins
The speeches of the campus politicians lead us to think they are becoming more professional—they can talk for an hour and say nothing.
A lot of people are saying that the programs advocated by Gold-water and cohorts will do nothing to settle international tensions, which shows you they are not thinking right. World War III would settle things rather thoroughly.
***
The freedom of expression in a university community is a wonderful thing — every teacher stands ready to deliver any of his opinions the administration has approved.
It seems that Action took votes away from UP during the last election. Well, it is just what you would have expected. Those Action people are acting like politicians.
- * *
UNIVERSITY Dailu Hansan
--context the words of someone who might be said to be a Negro leader.
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service 8 East University 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 Sunday afternoons. Examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Ron Gallagher Managing Editor
Founded 1889, became bweekly 1904
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
telephone 718-3-2700
Extension 10157 office
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EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
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letters to the editor
Mistake Pointed Out
Editor:
I read with interest your recent article about "The Pioneer." Since I walk past "The Pioneer" several times daily, I am well acquainted with him. Your statement "The bronze figure, standing almost 18 feet high . . ." is rather inaccurate, however.
Upon careful measurement, I find the bronze statue to be exactly 72 inches tall (six feet), or one-third your figure. The statue is mounted on a seven inch base, giving a total height of 79 inches.
David Byer Hamlin junior
--context the words of someone who might be said to be a Negro leader.
Hamlin junior
**A Reader Corrects Himself**
Editor:
My humblest apologies are in order. I made a serious error in fact in my letter to the Kansan April 26, and I feel I must acknowledge the said error before I am pounced upon.
I stated, rather flippantly, that 90 per cent of the leadership of the NAACP was white. This, of course, is untrue, but a look at the executive roles of the organization and a briefing of its history makes my point equally as well.
THERE IS not now, nor has there ever been a Negro at the head of the NAACP. Two multi-millionaires, Joel and Arthur Spingarn, founded the group. They are white. Joel Spingarn was president of the group until his death in 1939. Arthur Spingarn then took over and has been NAACP president ever since. Head of the NAACP life membership committee and chief fund raiser is Kivie Kaplan (also white). Jack Greenberg (also white) heads the organization's legal staff. Another white serves in public relations.
I wish to make one thing clear, however. No other parts of my letter were derived from such flippant facts as I wish to correct. My material comes from a summer of research on this very question in the deepest South (Alabama). I am not a Southerner. I think the material I found goes deeper than the material feeding the Kansas critics of the South.
RIGHTS DEPENDS on individual point of view exclusively. Nothing, but nothing makes one viewpoint more valid than the other. How the picture would change if each American could spend time living in different sections of the country.
Granted, these are rights under the law that Negroes are not afforded in all parts of the country—but I see none of those legal rights abrogated here. Therefore, I cannot help but condemn advocates without-justification as mere publicity seekers.
Once again, I apologize and stand corrected on my error in fact.
Tom Turner Kalamazoo, Mich., senior
- * *
I was flabbergasted Thursday afternoon when I read the editorial page of the Daily Kansan and saw the letters written by two Southern white students who evidently desire to contaminate KU with their Dixiecrat and segregationist ideas.
Reply to Turner
My astonishment was doubled when I learned that one of them, Tom Turner, is a journalism senior who has been taught that truthfulness and accuracy are hallmarks of his intended profession.
IN THESE letters I can see the same old methods of the Ku Klux Klan, the White Citizens' Council and the John Birch Society. They are:
1. Claim the Negro is HAFPY in a situation of discrimination and segregation.
3. Attempt to discredit Negro leaders by saying the masses of Negroes oppose these leaders.
2. Pretend friendship for the Negro in order to allay suspicion as to real motives.
4. Pretend to be impartial and objective in order to hide racial prejudice.
5. Misinterpret or quote out of
6. Perpetuate false reports and stereotypes.
Turner says: Ninety per cent of the national officers of the NAACP are white.
The truth: Of the 58 executive and administrative officials of the national office of the NAACP, seven are white. This is about 12 per cent. The list is available at the NAACP offices in many cities and can be obtained at regional headquarters in Kansas City.
The truth: On page 166 of the 1961-62 Student Directory his address is listed as 1432 Narrow Lane Court, Montgomery, Alabama. Since the beginning of this school year his parents moved to Michigan.
Turner says: His own home town is Kalamazoo, Michigan. (This leaves the impression that he is a Northerner.)
Turner says: Civil rights advocates claim the Constitution contains only two items — the Freemain and the 14th Amendment.
The truth: The statement that "All people are created equal" is not in the Preamble of the Constitution. It is in the Declaration of Independence and Negroes refer to this document and not to the Preamble of the Constitution. The NAACP bases lawsuits upon all Amendments that pertain to individual and group rights. Suits claiming violation of the 15th Amendment (voting rights) have been tried in court repeatedly.
TURNER SAYS: According to "their own decreed" Booker T. Washington, "Rights come only as they are earned."
The truth: Washington is not "revered" for his political ideas by Negrates. These ideas have been rejected repeatedly by responsible Negro leaders for 60 years. Washington has been dead almost 50 years. Citizenship rights are endowed by birth and naturalization, and are not revokable at the pleasure of the Ku Klux Klan or the White Citizens' Councils.
RR
Turner says: Rev. Martin L. King had to be protected by white police officers from a mob of Negroes who wanted to lynch him.
Turner says: Clauses or no clauses, the Greeks still have the right to cling to membership vote and blackball.
THE TRUTH: Rev. King had to be protected by his own church members and by the national guard when local police failed and refused to halt a mob of white Alabama hoodlums threatening to lynch him.
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THE TRUTH: This is one truthful statement Turner made. And since it is true, why not eliminate the discriminatory clauses? What these clauses accomplish is to place these fraternities in the category of confessed, on-the-record slanderers of a whole race by officially endorsing the notion that a person is necessarily objectionable simply because of his race.
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I AM SURE Turner's Dixiecrat ideas would be more compatible with those espoused at the University of Alabama. Perhaps he has become homesick. Incidentally, Mr. Turner now admits that the classic statement of bigotry signed by Mr. Ken Costich was written largely by Turner.
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If he were a freshman or an untrained man, his untruthful statements might be considered excusable and based upon mere ignorance.
But Turner is not an untrained man. He is in his fourth year of journalism. He has been schooled in investigative techniques and taught to find and tell the truth. The truth was and is available.
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For this reason I can conclude only that he deliberately attempted to mislead the readers of the Kansan.
James E. Alsbrook Lawrence junior
Monday, April 30, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
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Request for Bowl Rematch Denied
A moderator's decision during third-round competition in the College Bowl Contest was upheld by the College Intermediary Board last night, as the Board denied a request by Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity for a rematch.
The protest, lodged by Alpha Kapa Lambda following its 230-200 defeat yesterday by Phi Delta Theta fraternity, was based on these points:
$\bullet$ Phi Delta Theta gave "A Visit From Old Saint Nicholas" as the title of a poem beginning "Twas the night before Christmas." The correct title, as listed on the moderator's sheet, did not include the word "Old." Phi Delta Theta was given credit for the correct answer on the tossof question and was allowed to answer the bonus question.
- **IN THE CLOSING seconds** of the match, Phi Delta Theta completed a poem incorrectly on a tossup question: the answer was not literal. Alpha KappaLambda then correctly answered the question, but the moderator chose to turn back the
Hospital stays, by their very nature, generally are unpleasant occasions. But the KU Hostesses for Watkins Memorial Hospital—a group of University faculty wives — are currently making plans for the third year of a program designed to make the stay of a KU student in the hospital as trouble-free as possible.
The program was started two years ago at the suggestion of Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the student health service.
Wives Assist At Watkins
The hostesses will hold a luncheon meeting tomorrow with Mrs. Donna Steen, head nurse of Watkins, to review past procedures and to plan for the 1962-63 school year.
Each hostess visits the hospital two days each month. During the visit the hostess may deliver or mail letters, make arrangements for contacting roommates for books and study supplies, provide reading materials or carry messages.
clock and ask another tossup. Alpha Kappa Lambda felt it should be given credit for the correct answer according to contest rules, and should have had the opportunity to answer the bonus question which could have decided the match in its favor.
The KU Hostesses group this year includes Mrs. James Dykes, chairman; Mrs. L. E. Anderson, retiring chairman; Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe; Mrs. Richard Gruber; Mrs. Fred Moreau; Mrs. Leland Pritchard; Mrs. C. F. Nelson; Mrs. J. Allen Reese; Mrs. Henry Shenk; Mrs. Reginald Strait; Mrs. A. J. Boynton; and Mrs. William Hambleton. Alternates are Mrs. John Nelson, Mrs. George Baxter Smith and Mrs. Charles Weinaug.
Rule 4a concerning the intramural College Bowl states:
“If a team answers a tosup question correctly, it scores 10 points. If it answers incorrectly, the other team, without conferring and without hearing the question again, may be given a chance to answer, scoring 10 points if answering correctly.”
Following the College Intermediary Board's denial of the Alpha Kappa Lambda protest, Charles Anderson, Osage City senior and Board chairman, said:
"IT WAS ENTRELY the moderator's decision. He made it and we are upholding it because questions regarding the interpretation of the rules, or questions and answers, are frequently elusive and must be left up to the discretion of the moderator.
"We consider our moderator acting in a capacity not unlike that of a referee or an umpire in an athletic event. Therefore, his decision has been upheld by the Intermediary Board.
Results of other third-round College Bowl action were: Beta Theta Pi 270, Delta Tau Delta 90; Stephenson Hall 305, Gamma Phi Beta 115, and Joseph R. Pearson Hall 225, Templin Hall 185.
All entrants except Gamma Phi Beta were men.
Stanford Chemist Is Here Three Days
Three lectures on "Chemistry of Complex Ions" will be presented at 4 p.m. today, tomorrow, and Wednesday by Henry Taube, chairman of the department of chemistry at Stanford University.
Prof. Taube will be the fourth Henry Werner lecturer here. His addresses will be given in Room 233 Malott Hall.
The Werner lectureship was established in 1919 by the KU department of chemistry in honor of the former professor and teacher, Henry Werner, who died in 1955.
The three lectures by Prof. Taube will be "Recent Studies on Solvation of Cations," "Applications of Isotopic Effects in the Study of Substitution Reactions," and "Oxidation of Reduction of Co (III) Complexes."
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday. April 30,1962
Festival Saturday To Feature Skits Cultural Displays
The annual International Festival to be held Saturday in Hoch Auditorium, will feature an international disc jockey show and cultural displays from 15 foreign countries.
KU People-to-People will also have an exhibit at the festival.
The festival is sponsored by a group of international students under the direction of Clark Coan, assistant dean of students, and international student adviser.
The festival is open to the public without admission charge. The exhibits will open at 4:30 p.m. They will be closed during the evening program, but will be open again afterwards.
Margaret Cameron, Stirling, Scotland, graduate student, and Esmeraldino Oliverira, Pernambuco, Brazil, graduate student will act as M.C.'s for the evening program. "Nuptials Around the World."
The program will begin at 7:30 p.m., and will feature wedding skims depicting various international wedding customs.
Examples of the wedding themes include "An Indian Marriage," "Greek Wedding Party" and "A Scale of Happiness (German)."
Members of the festival steering committee include Vinodchandra A. Patel, Baroda, India, special student; Pedro Bonet, Huesca, Spain, graduate student; Yamuna Narayanan, Madras, India, junior; Sinan M. Kuraner, Istanbul, Turkey, graduate student.
Mesobalaje Labode, Abeokuta,
Nigeria, freshman; Jose Alvarez,
Mexico D. F., Mexico, graduate student,
and A. A. Abdul-Rahim,
Damascus, Svivia, graduate student.
Other entertainment during the evening will feature song and dance numbers from Israel, Latin America, Africa, the Philippines and India.
Before and after the floor show, Jalal Razzak, a special student from Baghdad, Iraq, will act as a disc jouney, playing music from Iran, Chile, India, Argentina, Germany, Chile, Iceland, Poland, Greece, Tanganyika, Indonesia, Burma and other foreign nations.
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World Crisis Question Is Dormant as Various Other Topics Are Discussed
A view that United States citizens have over-simplified their enemy was one of a myriad of subjects discussed at a meeting last night sponsored by the World Crisis Committee.
Roy Laird, assistant professor of political science, said that an example of this simplified view is seen in certain groups whose remedy for U.S. problems would be a simple matter of getting rid of "Reds" in the U.S.
Felix Moos, instructor of anthropology, said that this same thinking was shown in Nazi Germany where Hitler preached that ridding Germany of Jews would be a solution. Moos spent 20 years in Germany when it existed as a totalitarian state.
Tom Moore, director of the KU-Y. said that the United States is a large enough country that its citizens easily gain the false idea that the entire world is similar to the United States, especially as concerns our standard of living.
"You can tell a person that the average yearly wage in Nigeria is $40 and it doesn't make any impression. They fail to comprehend it as a fact." Moore said.
The informal discussion attended by 13 persons fluidly moved from the principal topic, "World in Crisis - Why?" to such questions as the degree of each individual responsibility for their actions and conversely their inactions.
No concrete attempt was made to reach an academic answer to the question of why the world is in crisis. Whether the world was indeed even in crisis was debated by Moos who viewed the present world tension as simple repetition of history.
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Often during the discussion the participants broke into the conversation with the point that they were digressing from the stated topic.
Moos said at one point in the two and a half hour meeting, "We're going around in circles."
"You sure are," said a lady in the
backrow as she closed her eyes and propped her head with a hand, in turn supported by an elbow resting on an adjoining chair.
The prior publicity for the discussion stated that no academic answer would come from the informal gathering. The meeting lived up to its advanced billing.
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Frock Recital Tonight at 8
George Frock, assistant instructor of wind and percussion, will present a percussion recital at 8 o'clock tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Mr. Frock joined the School of Fine Arts here after his graduation from the University of Illinois in 1960.
Assisting Mr. Frock will be six students; Jim Tamer, tom toms, triangle, and wood block; Judy Finlayson, bells and triangle; Richard Pratt, five tuned brake drums; Stefan Sylvander, cymbal; Michael Rogers, celesta, gong, and bass drum, and Robert Wolfersberger, tom toom and temple blocks.
Robert Baustian, director of the KU Symphony, will direct one ensemble number. The ensemble is composed of Raymond Cerf, violin; Don Scheid, clarinet; Austin Led-with, bassoon; Kenneth Bloomquist, trumpet; John Hill, trombone; Stanley Ricker, string bass, and Mr Frock, percussion.
Crab Trees Donated By Class of 1945
Admission is free.
About 1000 Oriental flowering crab-apple trees have begun to bloom this year on the campus. They vary from dark pink to white, and are widely scattered over KU's 700 acres.
Members of the class of 1945, who gave KU the trees, say the group on the campus is the largest in this section of the country. They are a "living memorial to KU students who made the supreme sacrifice in World War II," a spokesman for the class said.
There are 20 varieties of the tree on the campus, including the pink weeping type.
Members of the class of 1945 and other people knowing how rare it is to find so many trees of this type blooming in one location at the same time visit the campus to see them.
Officers Organize Advisory Councils
The newly elected class officers for the next year are planning to organize class councils to improve the spirit and unity of their respective classes.
David Brollier, Hugoton sophomore and next year's junior class president, explained that each class council would be composed of representatives from various living groups. They would act as an advisory council to the officers to improve the attitude and interest within the classes.
Gary Bell, McLouth freshman and president of next year's sophomore class, said, "This council would give us better support for all of our activities. It would create the personal
He explained that since the representatives would be from living groups, they would make the communication between the officers and the members of the classes more personal.
contact that is lacking between the officers and the class members now."
Mike Mead, Kansas City, Mo., junior and president of the senior class for next year, said that members of the class will get better representation for their ideas for the class throughout this system.
Monday, April 30, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Mead said that his other ideas for next year's seniors included a possible switch in the photographer for next year's senior pictures. He said that this year's senior picture system had been inadequate and that next year the seniors might either change photographers or split their business between two or more.
He added in a traditional jubilant tone, "Next year's senior class is going to be the best ever."
Brollier said that he hopes to improve next year's junior class day. He added that the class will try to get better publicity for their parties. Bell said that he would like to have a recognition banquet for members of his sophomore class next year. He added that he hoped that this type of banquet would become a tradition.
KU Man Injured in Auto Accident Friday
A KU student suffered a cut lip and minor facial bruises in a one-car accident Friday night 19 miles southwest of Lawrence.
The student, Clare Casey, Alexandria, Va., freshman, told Douglas County officials that he failed to see
a turn soon enough and skidded off the road. A passenger, Mary K. Kennedy, Lyons freshman, was not injured.
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MAY DAY 31st ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
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Peace Corps Men Killed in Colombia
A spokesman for the corps said a cable received last night reported that 20 men were at the crash scene and would begin removing the bodies tomorrow.
at the TEE PEE
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Peace Corps officials have been notified that there were no survivors in the crash of a plane on which two corps members were traveling to Colombia.
Among the 30 passengers aboard the Avispa airliner, which went down in Colombia last week, were corpsmen Lawrence M. Radley, 22, of Chicago, and David L. Crozier, of West Plains, Mo.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 30, 1962
Along the
JAY HAWKER
trail
Bv Steve Clark
Dr. Forrest C. (Phor) Allen, former KU basketball coach, lashed a verbal attack at the tentatively approved proposal to remove the track from Memorial Stadium and drop it in a cow pasture by Allen Field House, in an article by Dick Wade in the Sunday Kansas City Star.
Allen prides himself in being known as the founder of the relays and one partially responsible for building it to the stature it is today.
HERE'S A FEW of the better statements by Dr. Allen.
"This whole idea, from start to finish, is so ridiculous its amusing, but when you realize it's made seriously, a tragedy takes place.
"They want to dig a cold, deep grave for the relays, and kick Bill Easton's teeth out in the process.
"YOU CAN BE sure of this, when they tear out the stadium track, the relays are as dead as the cadavers in the formaldehyde tanks in the medical department's dissecting room.
"The nation's track coaches will not be a party to anything second rate, and they will show their resentment with withdrawing from an event held by a school that sold track down the river."
DR. ALLEN, who is also a former KU director of athletics, said that the stadium footings and foundation were constructed with an eventual seating capacity for 52,000 in mind.
Allen's suggestion is to build up instead of down. His reasoning, "Now who in his right mind wants to watch a football game from ground level."
HIS SUMMARY: "Let's not sacrifice the KU Relays and a balanced athletic program for the whims of a few. And let's not kill the great tradition of KU track that has grown through the efforts of our Olympic athletes and fine coaches and blossomed under Coach Bill Easton."
This appears to be just a sign of what's to come concerning the stadium proposal. There are two sides to the situation which are liable to be forgotten amidst verbal blasts.
It appears to me that the committee is trying to get more seats for next fall's outstanding home game schedule. They are interested primarily in next fall. To build above will put the athletic department in debt, which they wish to avoid.
Still, what Dr. Allen says appears true. Track is dead once it leaves Memorial Stadium unless a permanent track stadium is constructed that will hold 10,000 with room for non-permanent structures to be placed.
There needs to be no squabble between football, a paying sport, and track, a sport with rich heritage and a winning tradition but which does not make money for the athletic department.
There can be peaceful co-existence.
Kansas Wins Two Titles At Drake Track Carnival
The Kansas Jayhawkers captured their fifth straight Drake Relays two-mile relay title Saturday on the final leg of the Midlands Grand Circuit.
A billed duel between the Jayhawkers and the Missouri Tigers, who defeated KU before the home crowd at the Kansas Relays, did not materialize as the Tigers dropped out in favor of the mile relay Saturday.
THE JAYHAWKERS had little trouble in the two mile relay winning by a 60-yard margin over Southern Methodist.
Kirk Hagan ran an opening 1:54.2 half-mile to give the Jayhawkers a comfortable 18-yard advantage. Ted Riesinger increased the lead to 20 yards on his leg with a 1:55.4 Bill Thornton erased any doubt that KU would win as he ran a 1:53.3 half-mile boosting the lead to 50 yards.
Bill Dotson anchored with a 1:52.1 half-mile as Kansas breezed to victory.
Missouri's relay victories in the sprint medley and the mile were its
first at Drake since 1943 when it won the shuttle hurdles.
MISSOURI DID not win as easily as Kansas. Bill Kemp of Baylor gave the Eears a 10-yard lead over the Tigers at the end of the first lap. MU's Bill Rawson chopped six yards off Baylor's lead with a .48 quarter. Greg Pelster gave anchorman Jim Baker a lead of inches on his quarter of 47.1.
Baylor's Roy Smalley kept pace with Baker during the first 220 and was outsprinted the last 220 as the Tigers won by six yards.
Pete Talbott, Barry Hanratty and Jack Stevens were the only KU individual place winners. Talbott steved the javelin $207-2\frac{1}{4}$ to finish third behind Rice's Ed Red who won with a 226-5 and U.C.L.A.'s C.K. Yang with a $208-10\%$.
JACK STEVENS, appearing to be almost fully recovered from his shoulder injury suffered at the Big Eight indoor meet, went 14-6%4 to finish in fifth place.
Rice's Fred Hansen won with a 15-3½ vault and completed a grand slam of the Texas-Kansas-Drake Relays.
A CROWD of 18,000 sat through chilly 50-degree weather as the athletes battled soapy track conditions
Texas Southern which won four college relay titles at Texas and swept all six titles at the Kansas Relays, fizzled out at Drake. Southern won the sprint medley relay in 3:21.2, but dropped the 440 and 880 relays to a hot-running Florida A & M crew.
Missouri's Don Smith broke the Drake Relays shot put record and became the only Big Eight performer to sweep the Texas-Kansas-Drake Relays. Smith's put of 57-11 bettered OU Mike Lindsay's record of 57-714 set in 1959.
THE JAYHAWKERS' Friday win in the four-mile relay was ridiculously easy. Mike Fulghum led off with a 4:15.4 mile to give Kansas a 15-yard lead. Bill Thornton widened the gap to 50 yards with a 4:13.9 effort.
Ted Riesinger ran a 4:17.5 mile and anchorman Bill Dotson ran a 4:11.1 as the Jayhawkers won by over 100 yards.
Hanratty captured a third place in the discus with a heave of 154- $ 8 1 \frac {1}{2}. $
KU Retains Share of League Lead Bv Winning 2, Dropping 1 to I-State
The Kansas Jayhawker baseball team dropped one of its three game series with Iowa State but remained in a tie for first place with the Missouri Tigers.
The Jayhawkers' league mark now stands 9-3 going into their final road trip of the season to Colorado Friday and Saturday. Missouri swept a three game set with Nebraska and moved into the first place tie with the Jayhawkers' Saturday loss.
OKLAHOMA STATE is in close contention with a 5-2 record, their series with Kansas State being rained out. The Cowpokes meet Nebraska this weekend, a team which has dropped three game sets to both first place teams.
Colorado is in fifth place in the Big Eight with a 5-6 conference record and stand 8-8 for the year. The Buffaloes dropped two out of three to
Oklahoma the past weekend as the Sooners moved into fourth place.
Tennis Team Wins Again
Friday's double win had put the Hawks in undisputed possession of homa State as the two sophomore first place after being tied with Okla-southpaws, Roger Brock and Monte Stewart beat the Cyclones 5-4 and 4-0.
KU's tennis team boosted its season's mark to 9-2 over the weekend, blanking Nebraska, 7-0, and downing Iowa State, 5-2.
Pete Woodward lost in singles play and the Ken Peterson-Breon Mitchell doubles team was defeated, accounting for the lone KU defeats during the two road duals.
MEL KARRLE, KU's number one singles player, beat his Nebraska opponent, 6-4, 6-4 and won 6-3, 6-2 at Iowa State. Woodward triumphed 6-4, 6-4 at Lincoln before the Cyclone's Tom Line handed the Jayhawker number two player a 6-0, 6-1 setback.
The Karrle-Woodward doubles team won, 4-6, 6-0, 6-3 over the Cornhuskers Friday and downed I-State, 7-5, 6-3 Saturday.
STEWART WENT the distance in throwing his 4-0 shutout in the second game, but Brock needed ninth inning relief help from Waldsmidt to save the first. Waldsmidt needed only one pitch to make Iowa State pinch hitter Bob Goldsmith ground out and preserve the win for Brook
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In Saturday afternoon's single game loss, Iowa State moved off to a quick five-run lead off KU starter Jerry Waldschmidt before adding another four tallies off reliever Steve Lunsford. The Hawks battled back, but their ninth inning rally fell one run short of catching the Cyclones. The Jayhawks scored three times in a big third inning, and single runs in the fourth, fifth, seventh, and ninth.
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Del Campbell won at both meets by scores of 6-4, 6-4 and 3-7, 5-1.
Mitchell won 6-0, 6-1 and 6-2, 6-2 and Peterson won 6-2, 6-2 at Nebraska and 7-5, 6-3 at Iowa State. The Peterson-Mitchell duo won 6-3, 6-3 against I-State before losing to the Cornhuskers.
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Part of Friday's meet at Lincoln was held indoors because of cool weather.
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Coach Jay Markley's KU golf team ran into stiff competition over the weekend as the Jawhayks dropped a 13$^{1}$ to 11$^{2}$ match to Oklahoma State Friday and then lost to the University of Oklahoma 10 to 5 Saturday.
OSU, Big Eight defending champs, showed that they are strong favorites again this year to capture the title. Highest score among the five OSU players was a 75, carded by two players.
Medalist for Saturday's meet was OU's Bob Ryan with a one under par, 71, Reid Holbrook led the KU team with a 74.
KU also showed strength with five players all shooting 80 or below. John Hanna and Paul Carlson led the Hawks, each shooting a 75 on the par 72 course.
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Monday, April 30, 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 25e for billing.
All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hail by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired.
LOST
LOST IN THE VICINITY OF KU STADIUM during relays: Pair of men's black hooded jackets, go for it black "Kansas Relief" Call Westview VIII 3-6373. 5-1
BUSINESS SERVICES
GOLD CHARM Bracelet behind Strong
Handles. Reward, Call Ann Moseh, St. 3-6000- 6100
FINE QUALITY PORTAITRAL at reasonable rates. Vick Studio, 704 Indiana 517-7360
Application Photos — Fully retouched by Professional Photographer — prompt service. Vick Studio, 704 Indiana. VI 2-2789. 4-30
BABYSITTING WANTED — nice home,
fenced yard, no traffic problem. $40 an hour or $10 a week, 8-5. References, VI 3-
7828
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. tjc
INVISIBLE REWEAVING. Fabric re-
rewoven so damage cannot be seen. Cigarette burns, moth holes, tears or snags repaired. CVI 1 2-2533. tt
ALTERATIONS — Call Gail Reed, VI 3-
7551, or 921 Miss. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
9891; Mass. Call VI 5-5263. Ola Smith
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Lecture and Lab. Discussion STUDY NOTES are now available. These notes are revised and updated. Price: $4. Call VI 2-5782 for delivery.
TYFEWRITERS — Sales, service, rentals.
Office supplies, school supplies. Lawrence
Typewriter Exchange, 735 Mass., VI 3-
3644.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 North Park Blvd., one stop — save time & money. Fish, birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, pets etc., plus complete lists of pet supplies.
FOk RENT
Will rent or sell furnished or unfurnished a 3 bedroom house with full basement. L. R. carpeted. Garage. Southeast. Avail. July lst. Call VI. 3-4650 after 6. 5-23
To subtile — modern apartment for couple or 2 persons, close to university regularly $75 a month, available now thru August for $5 a month. Phone VI 2-0136 5:00 5:2
To Rent - Board and room for summer session & next fall - VI 3-4385. 5-4
One duplex — 622 W. 25th St. 2 bedrooms,
fully furnished, carpeted, upstairs, $250 per
carpet, range, refrig, air cond. — $85 a mo.
1 at 801 Mih. 2 bedrooms, $90 a mo.
1 at 801 Mih. 3 Bedrooms, St Terr.
a carpeted, refrig, air cond., $80 a mo.
Call MI 3-0179, air cond., 5-1
Don't fight the heat this summer! Study in centrally air conditioned apts.
$75 and Up
Furnished & unfurnished
Call or come out to see other outstanding features.
VI 2-3416 1912 W. 25th
Park Plaza Apartments
NICELY FURNISHED 3 rm apt. Air conditioned. $25.0 per month. Nicely furnished. rm apt. $55 per month. Nicely furnished. brm apt. $85 per month. Nicely furnished large. 2床 brm apt. - $79 per month. 3 room apt. air conditioned. $12.0 per month within 2½ blocks from KU. Price include utilities & phone pd. Boys or couple. Available June 1. Call I.3-7800.
LARGE NICELY FURNISHED apt.
kids! kiddies! 2 students!
3 students! Avail now. 20 La Vi. 1-2-0731
TYPEWRITERS for rent cheap - call VI 3-003 between 5 and 7 p.m. ff
SLEEPING and study rms, for boys for summer & fall terms. Close to KU: Double & singles. Call VI 3-4880 at 4:30 Any time on Saturday & Sunday. 5-1
5 rooms and bath furnished apt. Outside entrance, 1 block from Union. $100 per month. Utilities paid. Room for 5 students. Phone VI 3-6723. 5-1
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MISCELLANEOUS
BEVERAGES — All kinds of six-paks,
ice cold. Crushed ice in water repellent
closed paper bags. Picnic, party supplies.
lant, 6th & Vermont. Phone VI
0350
HELP WANTED
MILLIKEN'S "SOS" needs several qualified stenographers and secretaries for part time and full time work. Call VI 3-5920 for interview. tt
Clerk Steno I for Secretary, School of Journalism. Must be capable, reliable, responsible, accurate, theassume responsibility, better than average pay Phone VI 3-2700, Ext. 370 if
FOR SALE
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS FOR SALE! New machines & a few rewares for servicing & deliver. F. V. Cox, local manager, 1904 Barker. Phone VI 3-3277.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete pet store in the phone. Pet phone 2921 Modern self-service. Room 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. tf
1952--35 x 8 Star TRAILER HOUSE
Large study room. Danish modern chairs.
Completely furnished. A REAL BUY.
VI 3-4881, 7th & Arkansas. 4-30
STUDY+ AIDS for Chemistry 2 and 2A
and complete. $2 each.
per page. VI 7-9533.
1953 Super 88 Oldsmobile. Extra clean.
$300.00. Call VI 2-2769. tt
Nice 52 foot 1960 CATALINA TRAILER
Nice 10' 1960 Catalina, automatic
Balance owing -- $200 down. Underwood
Inv. Co. I 3-3875. 1117 Mass. St. 'i'
OLYMPIA PORTABLE typewriters, precision made to perform like an upright printer, sales, service, rentals at Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. VI at 8644.
GENERAL BILOGY STUDY NOTES.
complete with diagrams, comprehensive
information on the device. Handy cross index for quick reference.
delivery. Phone VI 3-7551
VI 3-5778.
ATTENTION PRE-MED students: Third year medical student must sell his Bausch and Gellman scope immediately. $200. Call Vi 3-88775 come to 307 Ark. for more information.
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
TIRES! TIRES! TIRES! 1,000 fresh new tires. All sizes from 5.00 to 9.50 in stock! Free installation. Ray Stoneback's Discount Center, 929 Mass. St., up to 50%. 5-3
GE Electric 40" Range, 4 top burners,
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space, light. Clean, good condition.
$50. CV II 3-5932. 5-1
1956 MERCURY: black and white 2 door
automobile equipped with hydraulic
and automobile transmission. New
tires and battery. Complete maintenance
submitted with call. Car: V4-30
1861 after.
WANTED
SUMMER TERM HOUSING for graduate student, wife, and two children, aged 4 and 10. Dept. of Education, Hyshe, Art. Dept. Curriculum Bldg., 640 North Emporia, Wichita, K14. Kansas; 5-3
WANTED: One English bicycle. Call VI 3-2700, Ext. 376. Ask for Betty.
FOUND
FOUND IN FRASER HALL: 1 purse of cosmetics, 8 head scarves, 1 Parker foun-
cased, 4 knee scarves, 2 case, Stendhal book — 'The Red and the Black,' 2 neck scarves, 1 brown men's glove, 1 black men's glove, 2 black men's glove, 1 white ladies' glove, ladies' black suede gloves, 1
ladies' glove, ladies' men's black gloves, 1 browny glove, men's black gloves,
ear muff, 3 umbrellas. Claim at all 111 Flint.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: theses, term papers, manuscripts. Contact either Joeta or Carolyn from - KU 7215: 5: Joeta VI 2-2305, Carolyn VI 3-379.
TYPING
MILLIKEN'S "SOS" now offers profes-
sional training.
preferred: VI 3-5920, 10212, Mass. tf
Experienced typist would like typing in a reasonable amount of seconds on reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2644 any time.
"GOOD TYPING ENHANCES A GOOD PAPER, and creates a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent student rates, call Miss Loudoun 902; Phi 3-1907.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do typing
name — call VI 3-8136, Mr. Loe
Glebach.
T typing by experienced typist, electric
driver. Attend Mrs. Dottie Fatterson,
VI 3-5833.
Reasonable rate, prompt and accurate service. Mrs. Bodin. VI 3-3186. tf
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, materials, and book reviews. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mc. Tc-Edlowney. Ph. VI 3-5688.
Experienced typetl will type theses, term papers, manuscripts, etc., on electric circuits with pen and paper. Mrs. Salmson rate. CV VI 2-1546, Suzanne Gilbert. **tf**
EXPERIENCIED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, neat. Attain, accurate service at reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattii, VI 3-8379.
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 2-1648. Mahren, 408 W. 13th, VI 2-1648.
THESES, reports, term papers typed neatly, accurately by experienced typist. typewriter. Reasonable rate. Marian Graham, 1613 Delaware. Carf. 13-0483.
FORMER SECRETARY with electric typewriter writes to do typing. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 30, 1962
Templin Hall And Douthart Win IRA Sing
Templin and Douthart Halls Friday night walked off with the men's and women's honors at the Inter-Residence Association Spring Sing in Swarthout Recital Hall.
TEMPLIN WON a third trophy in the men's large ensemble division, singing "Down by the Sally Gerdens" and "Viva L'amour."
Templin received ovational response with its small ensemble entry. "You've Gotta Have Heart" from "Damn Yankees." The group did the whole scene, set in a men's locker room, spoken lines and all, dressed in appropriate baseball attire. This number accounted for two awards: the men's small ensemble and superior staging.
Douthart shut out Miller Hall in both women's divisions, small and large ensemble. Miller won both divisions last year. The Douthart large ensemble sang "Velvet Shoes" and "Dear Aunt Phoebe." The small ensemble sang "Deo Gracias" from Benjamin Britten's Christmas work, "A Ceremony of Carols."
Pearson and Watkins Halls together won the trophy for the best mixed ensemble with "How Sad Flow the Streams" by Brahms and "All Pleasant Things Must End" by John Pozdro, chairman of the KU department of organ and theory.
WINNING HONORABLE MENTION in the five singing categories were:
- Joseph R. Pearson for men's large ensemble with "Drinking Song" from "The Student Prince" and "Gaudeamus Igitur."
- Pearson scholarship hall for men's small ensemble with "Elizabethan Love Song IV" by Evan Tonsing. Toneka senior, who directed.
- Miller Hall for women's large ensemble with "Madrigal for Spring" and for women's small ensemble with "Three Little Maids."
- Battenfeld and Sellars for large mixed ensemble with Stephen Foster's "Oh! Lemuel" and the spiritual, "Ride the Chariot."
SELLARDS HALL won honorable mention for staging with "Me and My Shadow" and "Hey, Look Me Over" from "Wildcat."
The judges were Emily Taylor, dean of women; Lewin Goff, director of the University Theatre; Robert Bausian, director of the KU Symphony; and Mrs. Ann Bloomquist, president of Mu Phi Epsilon, professional music sorority, almuni chapter.
Wescoe Talks At Dedication
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will be the principal speaker at the dedication of the $3 million Eisenhower Library at Abilene tomorrow morning. He will speak on "Resources for the Future."
Three KU groups totaling 240 students will participate. The Naval ROTC unit and the University Band will march in the parade, and the 120-member Concert Band will play on the lawn of the library following the dedication.
Dignitaries from all over the nation began arriving in Abilene today. Former President Eisenhower and two of his brothers are having a reunion in advance of the dedication.
Milton, president of John Hopkins University, and Earl of LaGrange, Ill., are expected to join the former chief executive for the occasion, but Edgar, who lives on the Pacific coast, is not expected to attend. The Eisenhawers, together with two deceased brothers grew up in a twostory frame house in Abilene.
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT
Official Bulletin
French Ph.D. Reading Examination:
Saturday, May 5, 9-11 a.m., Fraser 11.
Turn in books to Miss Craig, Fraser 120,
by Mav 2.
Western Civilization Examination Regi-
ment between April 30 and May 4 in
130 Strong.
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 Road.
TODAY
Mathematics Colloquium: 4:15 p.m. 200 Strong Hall, Mr. Gebhrad Führen, Univ. at Berkeley. *On the Lowenheim Skolem Theorem.* Coffee, 3:30 p.m., 119 Strong.
TOMORROW
Episcopal Holy Communion & Breakfast; 7 a.m. Canterbury House.
Henry Werner Lecture Series: 4 p.m.
233 Malott. "Applications of Isotopic Effects in the Study of Substitution Reactions."
KUOK: 3—News & Weather; 3:05—Top Forty Tunes; 4—Hilltopping; 6—News & Weather; 6:15—Sports; 6:20—Society News; 6:25—Spotlight on Science; 6:30—'Bonjour Mesdames'; 6:45—Public Serv. Flight, Stage I; 7—News & Weather, Flight, Stage I; 10—News & Weather; 10:15—Night Flight, Stage II; 12—Sign Off.
YAF Meeting: 7:30 p.m. Parlor A, Uni-
niversity Lawrence radio station KLWN, will speak.
Broken Arm Breaks Record
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
POTOSI, Mo. — (UPI) — Roger Lee Coleman's broken arm during a track event ended a family record of 31 years of perfect public school attendance.
The 14-year-old eighth grader required hospital treatment, so he missed school for one day.
AUFS Authority At KU This Week
Frank Bonilla, American University Field Staff authority on Latin America, spoke to two junior-senior groups today on "Social Development in Latin America," and "Recent Political Events in Brazil."
Bonilla, who is the fourth and final 1961-62 AUFS speaker, will speak to four groups tomorrow.
He will hold a two-hour graduate seminar at 8 a.m. in 18 Strong Hall on "Problems of Field Research in Latin America." At noon in the English Room of the Kansas Union he will speak at the Faculty Forum on "Recent Political Events in Brazil," and at 2 p.m. in 406 Summerfield he will hold a junior honors seminar on "Problems of Field Research in Brazil." At 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union he will speak to Alpha Kappa Delta on "A Sociologist in Latin America."
Kappa Alpha Theta Wins Derby Day
A lusty crew of athletes from Kappa Alpha Theta proved themselves to be top competitors as they came from behind to win the last event, the musical buckets, and win Sigma Chi Derby Day by one and one-half points.
Kappa Kappa Gamma won second place and Delta Delta Delta third. Nancy Borel, Falls Church, Va., junior, won the Miss Derby Day title.
Predicting Showers
on
Brides-to-Be
Showers of good wishes and thoughtful gifts are an American tradition. Vicker's Gift Shop is the traditional place in Lawrence to select shower gifts that are "just right"—pretty, practical and unique. Gift-wrapped with our compliments. Reflect your good taste with a gift from Vicker's Gift Shop.
Vicker's Gift Shop
(Across from the Granada)
VI 3-5585 1023 Mass.
--says veteran coach Romulus (Uncle) Remus. "We have a saying over at the Coliseum—'Tareyton separates the gladiators from the gladioli'. It's a real magnus smoke. Take it from me, Tareyton delivers de gustibus—and the Dual Filter does it!"
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
Tareyton delivers the flavor
DVAL FILTER DOES IT!
"Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!"
ACTIVATED CHARCOAL INNER FILTER
PURE WHITE OUTER FILTER
DUAL FILTER
Tareyton
Product of The American Kacco Company - Kacco is our middle name.