Meredith Enrolls Amid Riots Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 60th Year, No.12 Europe Focuses On Mississippi LONDON — (UPI) — Newspapers in Europe and Asia gave big headlines to the Mississippi crisis today and called it one of the gravest conflicts in American history since the Civil War. From London to Moscow and from Tokyo to Singapore and beyond, the dramatic developments at the University of Mississippi were front page news edition after edition. In most places they pushed local news from the limelight. The Soviet Tass news agency informed Russian readers that President Kennedy had called for a peaceful settlement of the Mississippi violence. It said he was forced to act "under pressure of public opinion." THE TIMES OF LONDON said the Oxford, Miss., showdown proved a "much greater test" than the Little Rock desegregation battle in 1957. In Singapore, the newspaper Straits Times said "there have been few graver crisis in American domestic history." The Paris afternoon newspaper Le Monde praised Attorney General Robert Kennedy's direction of the federal forces in Mississippi. It supported President Kennedy's stand and said Mississippi is a battle he must win "no matter at what cost." Monday, Oct. 1, 1962 "The inflammatory suggestions of Barnett and resigned Major General (Edwin) Walker have borne their fruits: blood ran Sunday evening in Oxford and tension seemed to be growing Monday morning." Le Monde said. THE VIENNA NEWSPAPER Arbeiter-Zeitung, called the Mississippi governor a man "who wants to provoke another Little Rock." The newspaper said Barnett cannot expect Washington to get down on its knees and cannot assume that federal government troops will let themselves be chased away by local police. But, the Vienna paper added, Barnett can take it for granted that he has become one of the best known Americans as well as a hero of the white majority in the Southern states. Weather This morning's light rain and northerly winds are expected to disappear this afternoon and be replaced by clearing and cooler temperatures. Tonight and Tuesday it will be partly cloudy. The high today will be between 55 and 60. The low tonight is expected to be between 40 and 45. Kansan Condemns Anti-Catholic Writing More anti-Roman Catholic literature was inserted into copies of the Daily Kansan Thursday and Friday, it was learned this morning. The Daily Kansan staff emphasizes that this literature was inserted without the knowledge or consent of the Daily Kansan, after the copies were placed in the campus distribution boxes. The matter first came to the Daily Kansan's attention last Wednesday, after the literature was inserted in several copies of Tuesday's issue. Anyone having information which may be helpful in stopping the circulation of this literature is requested to telephone the Daily Kansan, extension 711 or 376, or the KU Police Department. extension 701. The Editors 1 TOMMY BROWN AND KENNEDY 1963 ENFORCING INTEGRATION Shown above are President Kennedy (left) and his brother, U.S. Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy (right). They are taking stern measures to quell rioting and enroll Meredith at the University of Mississippi campus. Foreign Students Against Barnett KU foreign students have turned thumbs down on Mississippi Governor Ross Barnett's action in the Meredith case. In interviews Friday at the International Club, opinions ranged from astonishment at Barnett's defiance to condemnation of the southern official. HE WAS TERMED a brave man and a fool, but no one said he was right or just. Some called him fool. Some called him brave. None called him just. "I DON't LIKE their views," said Eberhard Gerlach, Berlin Germany, graduate student. "But the people of Mississippi are so thoroughly convinced they're right they think they can use any means at their disposal to enforce their views." Fritz Gysin, Basel, Switzerland, graduate student, pointed out that wherever there was difference there is prejudice. "I can understand his emotional feelings. We have the same problem with Italian workers in Switzerland." Hsing Wu, Burma graduate student, commented. "Negro students are accepted in other universities. James Meredith also should be admitted at the University of Mississippi. It is silly for Gov. Barnett to interfere in such a matter." Gysin felt that education would solve the problem in time. ABDUL BAREK, Kabul, Afghanistan, junior, said, "I would be happy if Meredith were accepted. I do not blame Gov. Barnett for his behavior. He has to carry out what is expected of him. People in the South are very prejudiced. Gov. Barnett may be one of them. Without people's support it will be difficult for him to run in the coming election." Asked why a Negro should have to prove his capabilities, he said it was a matter of earning the confidence of white citizens. He said that the individual makes his own opportunities. He said he thought Meredith should enter an integrated university and help the Negro cause by serving as an example of what the Negro can do. Pramon Sutivong, Thailand senior, favored Meredith's admittance. He believes that Gov. Barnett should be punished for contempt of court. GOV. FAUBUS FACED the use of federal enforcement of desegregation at Central High School in 1957. "The South will one day probably be about as integrated as the North," he predicted. (Continued on page 8) Faubus Says Meredith Misquided in His Acts (Editor's note: This article was written to the riot at Mississippi University.) By Bernard Henrie Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus said Saturday that James Meredith could better serve the Negro cause by enrolling elsewhere than "Ole Miss" and then leading an exemplary life. Gov. Faubus made the statement in a telephone interview. The Arkansas governor was in Topeka for the reunion of the 35th National Guard, his World War II outfit. Faubus said this would be proof by example of what the Negro is capable of doing. The 59-year-old governor, campaigning for an unprecedented fifth term, arrived in Topeka Friday afternoon by private plane. He told reporters before leaving Arkansas that he alerted state police and national guard to be watching for possible trouble erupting across the border from Mississippi. He said his action was only precautionary. "What people call prejudice is sometimes based on facts," he said. "The Negro, and all of us, should work at self-improvement. That is the key. Self-improvement is the most important thing." HE SAID HIS sympathies were with the "underprivileged." "I was underprivileged myself," he said. "When I became governor I saw to it that Negro teachers were paid as much as white teachers." Gov. Faubus said there is need for moderation. He cited the brewing violence in Mississippi as proof of an old maxim — force begets force. "No question in the history of social events has been solved by (Continued on page 8) By Al Kuettner United Press International OXFORD, Miss. — (UPI) — Negro James Meredith registered today at the University of Mississippi and began attending classes on a campus littered with the debris of a major riot that took two lives and injured at least 75 persons. "It is not a happy occasion." he said. About 400 U.S. deputy marshals and 1,000 federal troops guarded the campus as the 29-year-old Negro cracked the segregation barriers of the 114-year-old school. The campus was brought under military control early today but the rioting spread to downtown Oxford and at least one soldier was hurt in a barrage of rocks, timbers and pop bottles before the crowd was dispersed with tear gas and reinforcements were brought in. Witnesses said several shots were fired at the troops at one point downtown. The troops immediately rushed forward and fired rifle shots over the heads of the crowd. In Jackson, Gov. Ross Barnett was in seclusion but his office issued a statement saying "there has been an invasion of our state resulting in bloodshed of our citizens and threatened bloodshed of others." The capitol building's Mississippi state flag flew at half-mast. MEREDITH, whose determination to desegregate "Ole Miss" brought about a conflict that threatened to rock the federal union, walked solemnly to an American colonial history class at 9 a.m. to shouts of "Nigger, nigger" and "Was it worth two deaths?" He was accompanied to the classes by three deputy marshals and U.S. Department of Justice representative Ed Gudman. The Negro was met at the registrar's office by university registrar Robert B. Ellis who handed him a stack of forms. The historic occasion was concluded quietly. Meredith, who caught a whiff of the tear gas that clouded the campus early today, rubbed his eyes occasionally. President Kennedy, who caught only four hours sleep during the troubled night, was in close touch with the situation. His radiotelevision appeal to the students last night failed to quell rioting that broke out when the campus and town learned that Meredith, turned away three times, had been brought onto the campus. THE CAMPUS, littered today with burned out automobiles, spent tear gas grenades, broken glass and other assorted rubble, was under virtual martial law. An estimated 400 U.S. marshals and 1,000 federal troops kept a firm grip on the order. The normally sleepy college town of Oxford was in the same condition by noon today. Truckloads of troops roared toward courthouse square to put down a fresh outbreak of rioting that threatened to continue throughout the day. At least one soldier was reported injured in the downtown rioting when a pop bottle hit him about the head and shoulders. The Walker Arrested WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Former Army Maj. Gen. Edwin Walker was arrested today on charges of "rebellion, insurrection and seditious conspiracy." Atty. Gen. Robert F. Keenedy announced. The Attorney General told newsmen that Walker had been arrested and would be arraigned later today at Oxford, Miss. No other details were immediately available. Walker's headquarters in Dallas said it had no immediate comment on his arrest. Walker had left Dallas during the weekend to go to Oxford, after issuing a call for Americans to pick up their "flag, tent and skillets" and follow him on a crusade against use of federal troops in the Mississippi crisis. crowd of several hundred, apparently mostly young people, was made even furious by the fact that the troops trying to keep order included a number of Negroes. At least 75 persons were arrested last night and early today, including a Decatur, Ga., man, Melvin Bruce, 24, identified as a frequent companion of members of the American Nazi Party. He was accused by military authorities of sniping at the marshals last night with a powerful rifle. THE DEAD were identified as Paul Guihard, correspondent for the French News Agency, who was found dead of a bullet wound in the back, and Ray Gunter, 23, an Oxford resident. Maj. Gen. Edwin Walker, who resigned his army commission under fire for his rightist viewpoints, was seen during the rioting congratulating the students. He reappeared downtown this morning in a big, white Texas hat and began shaking hands but was ushered out of courthouse square at bavonet point. "Ole Miss" and the normally sleepy town of Oxford no longer bore much of a resemblance to a center of education. Eight bloody hours had turned it into a battleground where southerners and the federal government clashed openly for the first time since the Civil War. Thirty prisoners—their hands raised over their heads—were marched down University Avenue. THE ONCE-BEAUTIFUL CAMPUS, NOW littered with tear gas cannisters, burned-out automobiles and broken glass, echoed with the cadence of marching troops. Stubborn rioters—who under the cover of pre-dawn darkness rained rocks, Molotov cocktails and gunfire on federal forces—formed in pockets all over the campus and had to be routed out by soldiers. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 1, 1 The Battle Wages The dark rooms around the campus are beginning to fill with smoke again. The campus politicos have returned to their traditional haunts and the initial wedge into the serenity of the year has been driven home. All had been generally peaceful until the middle of last week when the heads of Vox and UP beat the bushes and finally came up with a major point of disagreement, in part at least. Each party is stumbling over its out-sized feet attempting to out-scamper the other in the effort to decentralize voting for campus elections. First one had the idea. Then the other presented it to the All Student Council. Then the party of the first part had a criticism. Then the party of the second part cross-examined with mild invective against the criticism of the party of the first part. Now a neuter, the "typical" student, has been weedled into issuing an opinion. This includes everyone but the administration and it will win in the end so no effort from that corner is required. THIS NOW TRAMPLED thought of creating more polling places to make the arduous task of student voting as simple as possible represents the first instance of political in-fighting for the year. It is the first ply into the student mind, the first test of the line-up of votes on the ASC, the first head-butting of party big wigs. The above sareasim may not be necessary but it does help to clear the smoke from the topic. Granted there is a lot more involved in this issue than just the volleyball being played with polling spots. Aside from the peripheral nonsense involved, this is an issue which demands a close scrutiny by the student body. A week from tomorrow when the ASC acts on this amendment There is little doubt about the outcome of the present amendment. It will be defeated in its present form. Vox Populi has control of the council and unless there is a drastic link missing in its machinery, the action against the present amendment is but a formality. But Vox will then arrange the polling places to best suit its situation and the amendment will then, probably, be passed. to the Elections Bill it will be dealing with a problem which has a direct bearing on each student and is something which is being considered to benefit the student position. THE PRINCIPLE DISAGREEMENT between the parties is the possible location of a polling place in one or two of the major dormitories. UP wants such a situation because it would thus make it easier for the independent voter to cast his ballot. This is against the favor of Vox because it always polls a heavy vote in the fraternity and sorority districts and hopes for a meager turnout by the dorm dwellers. The basic idea involved is an excellent one. Strong Hall as the sole ballot box location is frequently inconvenient. Branching out to the Kansas Union and possibly Murphy Hall would result in a much greater participation come election time. The obvious problems are the necessity of increased policing and the added cost. Neither of these are said to be obstacles, according to the politicos. Therefore, after the smoke clears and the first round of public harangues is over, the student body will again benefit by an action of a progressive and interested student government. -Bill Sheldon Will NFO Help? The National Farmers Organization (NFO) holding action on livestock was perhaps destined to be largely ineffectual before it began. The farmers wanted a contract for livestock prices, but even had the meat buyers been willing to draw up a contract, a strong central authority to hold the farmers to their part of the bargain would have been lacking. But this strong central authority may be in the making—parts of the recent NFO holding action had the aura of professional organizers about it. The president of the Kansans for the Right to Work, L. E. Weiss, has charged that the NFO is under the direction of top union bosses and that at least a part of the NFO funds are being provided by the United Auto Workers. Oren Lee Staley, president of NFO, said "that's an idiotic statement. We cannot legally be organized and have any connection with any group outside agriculture." Livestock is one of the few facets of agriculture still outside government control. One cannot blame farmers for fighting to maintain one last bit of independence, but there is some question as to whether a strong special interest organization can provide a better economic situation than the federal government. One thing is certain. An organization strong enough to be effective will not come into being without violence of some sort. If farmers delegate their marketing power to a central organization they will have to stand pretty much on their own. It's unlikely that the NFO could provide subsidies when and if they are needed, unless the NFO has designs to gain subsidies for itself from Uncle Sam. Bob Hoyt the took world THE AGE OF INNOCENCE, by Edith Wharton( Signet Classies, 75 cents). THE HOUSE OF MIRTH, by Edith Wharton (Scribner Library, $1.45). Like her great teacher, Henry James, Edith Wharton was an expert chronicler of Society. New York was her setting for these novels, the first being her Pulitzer prize-winner of 1920, the second being the novel (1905) which helped to make her famous. "The Age of Innocence" is the story of a great love that can never be—to put it simply and quickly. Newland Archer is overwhelmed by the Countess Ellen Olenska, but he is committed to the altar, so he, and Ellen, suffer out their lives, but not like an Anna Karenina and a Vronsky. Here is a rich portrait of upper New York society in the seventies. She obviously knew the world she depicted. Each characterization is as finally detailed as the needle-point her ladies may have worked on. We may laugh today at her unhappy people who are unable to realize themselves because of the folkways of the herd, but this was quite real at the time. "The House of Mirth" is about Lily Bart, trained by her socially aspiring (but poor) mother to capture a rich husband, unequipped to do anything but just that. Lily has the unique ability to have a man almost snared and then lose him through sheer stupidity. There is no happy ending here. The book is a merciless story in the naturalistic tradition, and compares favorably with the most savage works of Dreiser.-CMP Founded 1889, became bireweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. UNIVERSITY Daily Hansan Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office University of Kansas student newspaper Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Services and University Press. 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. Received amination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT NEWS DEPARTMENT Scott Payne ... Managing Editor Richard Bonett, Dennis Farney, Zeke Wigglesworth, and Bill Mullins, Assistant Managing Editors; Mike Miller, City Editor; Steve Clark, Sports Editor; Margaret Catcart, Society Editor. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Clayton Keller and Bill Sheldon Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache Business Manager Dan Meek, Advertising Manager; Doug Farmer, Circulation Manager; Gene Spalding, National Advertising Manager; Bill Woodburn, Classified Advertising Manager; Jack Cannon, Promotion Manager. WANTED GET LOST FLOOD "Sir . . . my traffic control station has disappeared." Letters to the Editor Right below your article "Sorry, Mr. Lincoln," there was a section entitled "Worth Repeating" (Sept. 25). Its first item ("The important thing is that those who see an injustice do not remain silent—Edwin Wilson") stung, shamed and caused me into writing this letter. Comment On Comment Dear Mr. Wigglesworth: IN YOUR ARTICLE you challenged Governor Ross Barnett on his citizenship. But you probably know his motives and yours better than I do to say what you do. First to throw up a couple of shields to give me a chance to speak, and to give you a chance to think: I believe that segregation because of race, color, or creed is morally wrong. Secondly, I am a member of a minority group. My knowledge of the Meredith case consists only of gleanings from newspaper articles which stress the obvious and very probable issue: a Negro is not permitted admission to the University of Mississippi because of race. I believe this is wrong but I also believe it is wrong to judge Gov. Barnett's actions and condemn him, ridicule him, and squeeze him into the bogey-man throne just recently vacated by Gov. Orville Faubus. If he, Gov. Barnett, is fighting for a principle in which he honestly believes, one must admire his courage to stand up against an overwhelming, powerful and fashionable majority. That includes not only the sincere believers in integration, but also the very self-conscious goldfish in Washington prodded by self-righteous, sadistic and selfish world "neighbors"; it includes political hypocrites who support popular issues to get good election results; and finally the crowd: the ones who have never given the issue much thought, the status seeker who recognizes and assimilates the latest fashion in dress, car and thought because everyone is doing it. If Gov. Barnett is using this case to defend states' rights one must either again admire his courage in supporting an increasingly unpopular issue; or one must call him a fool for not recognizing progress; or one might even whisper surreptitiously about a flush of pink between the lines of his speeches. Perhaps, contrary to much journalistic opinion, he knows exactly what he is doing. If he is defending states' rights, in my opinion, he has chosen an unlikely point; it is certain to be defeated. But I again repeat my admiration — for that motive. Who is to say a nation does or does not need a strong central government? Where is there conclusive proof that that item makes for a great nation? There have been outstanding leaders with the conscious and proud support of their people: that is what makes an age or a nation great; that is what creates a good memory. Unfortunately, it can also cause a "sit back and twiddle your thumbs" reaction. Perhaps this has happened? We have sat back and willingly accepted a crutch. We, the people of a strong nation; we the people with a proud history; we, the people whose younger generation is taller and stronger and healthier than that of any other nation; we have accepted — willingly — a crutch. It might be a price support of wheat, or it might be a government arbitrator in a labor-management dispute. But they are crutches. Why are they there? They are an admission of our inadequacy growing out of mistrust, greediness, and especially disuse of imagination, initiative, ingenuity, willpower and courage. Have some of these "crutch" powers ever been given to a central government? Or did the people just let it fill in the gaps? If we allow more gaps, will we also lazily allow more government occupancy? I WONDER how much right I have to say this, for I prefer the comfortable easychair in front of the television, rather than the soapbox, raised and exposed for the convenience of the "rotten egg" association target practice. But just as Gov. Barnett, I also have the privilege and the responsibility of an American to stand up and defend to the best of my ability in what I sincerely believe. Who would dare deny me that right! Finally, Mr. Wigglesworth, please forgive my presumptuousness for writing upon a subject about which I have so little knowledge, for limitations and lack of detail in content, for lack of coverage of other possibilities, but especially for that old-fashioned note of passion. I admired it so much in your article. Brigitte Smorodsky Vineland, N. J. Graduate student Monday, Oct. 1, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Exhibit Features Local Painter A PART TIME PAINTER—Mrs. M. N. Penny, 639 Tennessee, is a KU graduate who loves to paint. Some of her work is presently on display in the Kansas Union. beber Vienna, Rome, Paris or the wheat fields and dust storms of western Kansas. Each has been captured on canvas by the paint brush of Mrs. M. N. Penny of 639 Tenn. These scenes and many more are in her exhibit on display in the Browsing and Music Room of the Kansas Union building. As a child, she was captivated by the "story in picture." Encouraged by her art supervisor in grade school, she followed her love of art through high school courses and on into college. She graduated from KU's School of Fine Arts and taught school before her marriage to M. N. Penny. AFTER STUDYING painting with a class in Colorado and painting in Edinburgh, Scotland, while at a church convention, Mrs. Penny, next went on an art tour of twelve European countries. She painted under the instruction of Henry Gasser while on the tour. The paintings done on the tour captured some highlights of the countries and in this way she brought home many "memory pictures." Painting fast, but concentrating and working hard, gives her a feeling of satisfaction. Part of this is the feeling of seeing things one never noticed before. Quill Club Will Elect Officers ment to care for next door and twenty-one grandchildren keeps me busy" And on the 25th of last month, she started on her way to a church convention in California! Mrs. Penny says she didn't touch a paint brush while raising her family until her youngest child was in kindergarten, but laughingly recalls her husband accusing her of putting crayons in her children's hands as soon as each could hold one. Gradually crowding painting in between household chores, she once again began her painting interest. The Quill Club, a creative writing society sponsored by the English department, will elect officers at 8 p.m. today in room 306 at Memorial Union. All students interested in creative writing are invited to the meeting. One wonders if perhaps now she has the time to spend her days at her easel. Smiling and shaking her head, she says, "Only when I can work it in. My church work, having my home to care for, a 12 unit apart- SHE KEEPS a sketch book while on trips, making notes of the scenes she passes, and uses them later in painting. Mrs. Penny sells many of her paintings. They are in grade schools and junior high schools in Lawrence. Her paintings have also been sold to individuals over the United States. She has donated paintings sold in a youth project for use in a fund to help furnish the new educational building of the First Christian Church. See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales — Rental Service LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER LARRY CRUM - Suggests - All Kinds of Pancakes 6 different flavors of syrup 'K' PANCAKE GRILL & SUNDRIES 14th&Mass. Open 24 Hours a day M. B. MORRIS STOP HERE for expert WATCH REPAIR - Finest Quality Work - Reasonable Prices - Watches and Jewelry - FINE SELECTION OF CHARMS (Prompt Engrving) (Prompt Engraving) Daniels Jewelry 914 Mass. (Across From Woolworths) Ph. VI 3-2572 Bill Haynes $ ^{*} $ says... 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ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING ASSURES YOU: ★ Odorless Cleaning ★ Sanitary Clothes ★ Garments Stay Fresh Longer ★ Cleaner, Brighter Garments ★ Gentle, Individual Treatment for Your Fine Fabrics SHIRT SERVICE SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE 25c each 4 for 88¢ 1407 MASS. — FREE PARKING — ★ ★ SHIRT SERVICE SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c One Hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING 1407 MASS. — FREE PARKING — One Hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c 1407 MASS. FREE PARKING ONE HOUR MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 1, 1962 Around the Campus Briefing Will Explain AWS A briefing session for freshman women interested in running for the Associated Women Students (AWS) House of Representatives or Senate will be held Thursday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The two explanatory meetings will be held at 4:30 and 6:30 p.m. Petitions will be distributed. Two places on Senate and two in the House are open. Any freshman woman may run for Senate. Seats in the House are reserved for one resident of Corbin Hall and one from GSP. Women in the scholarship halls are already represented in the House by AWS members elected last spring. PETITIONS will be returned to the AWS Elections at 6:30 p.m., Oct. 9 in the Pan American Room of the Union. An AWS quiz will be given then. It will cover the AWS constitution and "Wise Words for Women," AWS handbook. Interviews will be conducted Oct 11 in the Dean of Women's office The slate of candidates will be announced Oct.12. Voting will be from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Oct. 18 in Corbin, GSP, and Watkins Halls. Any freshman girl may vote for representative to Senate; voting for House members is limited to residents of Corbin and GSP. Jewish Students To Hold Services Jewish students at the University of Kansas will participate as singers and readers in Yom Kippur services Oct. 7 and 8. Members of the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, Jewish student organization, will use the Lawrence Jewish Community Center for their services. There are 120 Jewish students on campus. Yom Kippur, Day of Atonement, will be observed on Oct. 8 with a 9 a.m. morning service, including a sermon and memorial service. A concluding service will be held at 4 p.m. A breakfast will follow the latter, since most Jewish observe a strict fast on Yom Kippur, eating nothing from sundown Oct. 7 to sun-down the following day. Erev Yom Kippur (the eve of Yom Kippur) will be celebrated at 7 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 7. BROWSERS . . . ... WELCOME The BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Radio Executives Conference Set The Kansas Association of Radio Account Executives (KARAE) will hold their first annual conference Friday and Saturday. Merle Blair, KTOP, Topeka, president of KARAE, will conduct the meeting. The order of business includes organization and the holding of district meetings and election of directors. Professional sessions will be led by Paul Dixson, WREN, Topeka; Bob Kearns, WIBW, Topeka; Blair, Mel Adams, assistant professor of journalism, and James E. Dykes, professor of journalism. Following the meeting, members will attend the Kansas-Colorado football game. Discussion of 'J.B.' To Be Held Friday The age-old problem of evil, as exemplified by the sufferings of the Biblical figure Job will be the central topic at 10:50 p.m. Friday at Westminster Center. The Westminster Seminars Theatre will open its second season of drama and colloquy at that time with an after-theatre coffee and discussion of the University Theatre's production of "J. B." William Reardon, associate professor of speech and drama and director of "J. B." Walter J. Meserve, associate professor of English and Maynard H. Strothmann, Director of Westminster Center, will lead the discussion. Students and faculty are invited to attend. English Proficiency Registration is Open Students who did not register for the English proficiency examination during enrollment may register this week at 130 Strong Hall. The examination is required for graduation of all students in liberal arts, business, education, fine arts, journalism, nursing, architecture and architectural engineering. Students who have completed ten hours of freshman-sophomore English are eligible to register for the examination which is given once a semester. The new University of Kansas NROTC battalion commander is Richard Hartman, Kansas City, Mo. senior, Capt. R. D. Gruber, unit commander announced recently. Navy Leader Here Is Picked Members of Hartman's staff are executive officer, Frank Breen, Cincinnati, O., senior; operations officer, Roland Carroll, Topeka, senior; adjutant, Tom Palmerlea, Lawrence senior; supply officer, John Lavery, Topeka senior; battalion chief petty officer, Richard Griffin, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, and public information officer, Doug Pickersgill, Kansas City, Mo., junior. Company commanders are Larry Mahaffey, Coffeyville senior; James Sramik, Cicero, Ill., senior; and Michael Swink, Prairie Village senior. Company executive officers are Gary Kirk, Salina senior; Bruce Whisler, Topeka senior; and James Young, Kansas City, Mo., senior. Platoon leaders are Tom Black, Independence, Mo., senior; John Byers, Oklahoma City, Okla., senior; Paul Erickson, St. Ann, Mo., senior; Ronald Lindsay, Muncie senior; Tom Pugh, Kansas City, Mo., senior; John Riley, Neodesha senior; Al Hardtarley, Lawrence senior; Kenneth Lyle, Coffeville senior; Bruce Robb, Mission senior; and David Norris, Bartlesville, OKla., senior. Rock Chalk Emcee To Perform Again Hoite Caston, Independence, Mo., senior and Rock Chalk Revue emcee, will play the same part tomorrow morning at the senior coffee. The coffee will be held from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m., in the Kansas Union ballroom. Senior class members are excused from 9:30 and 10:30 classes. Michael Mead, Kansas City, Mo. senior and the class president, said senior sweatshirts and buttons will be distributed at the meeting. Senior fees will be collected and the senior yells will be practiced. KU SPORTS on DIAL KLWN 1320 7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts 5:15 Today In the Enemy Camp 5:35 Tom Hedrick Sports 5:35 ___ Tom Hedrick Sports Hamburgers SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN 15c Across from Hillcrest Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th ft. Vt. VI3-0350 French Fries 10c Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 美术生 Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 燕 BIRD TV-RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. STEREO - Guaranteed - Expert Service - Quality Parts KU-BOSTON U. GAME MOVIES Film of game narrated by coach and player — UNION FORUM ROOM TUESDAY --- 7:00 p.m. FREE ADMISSION SUA QUARTERBACK CLUB Read and Use Kansan Classifieds Ship'n Shore* pin-striped neckbander: shirt news in oxford! 3.98 8 effo bug fro flo P P Trim and tapered . . from fine-line placket to extra-long tails. Easy-care all cotton. Your favorite shirting colors. Sizes 28 to 38. KT terriill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS Program Set Up To Prevent Possible Asian Flu Outbreak Watkins Memorial Hospital, in an effort to stagnate the "Asian flu bug," will set up a vaccine station from 2-4 p.m. tomorrow on the first floor of Strong Hall. The University hospital staff is urging students to receive the vaccine as soon as possible. Henry Messenheimer, hospital business manager, said there is a "strong" possibility of an Asian flu epidemic this year. Messenheimer described the student turnout for the shots as favorable. He said students will soon be returning for a "follow-up" shot, administered five weeks after the first shot. Messenheimer said that students with colds cannot receive the vaccine. KU Peace Corps To Hold Orientation Robert Swan, Topeka junior and chairman of the University of Kansas Peace Corps, expects 250 students at the Corps' orientation meeting which will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union. Progress reports of the KU Corps committees will be given, and a film shot about the Corps program will be shown. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers There is no charge for the flu shots for University students. Faculty members, other University employees and their families pay $1 a shot. Messenheimer said that all organized houses with 20 or more students may request a nurse to administer the shots at the houses. Nurses will administer flu shots Nurses will administer flu shots at the following locations: Tuesday — Alpha Kappa Lambda and Alpha Micron II. 11:45 a.m. -12:45 p.m.; Chi Omega, 5-5:30 p.m.; Alpha Chi Omega, 5-5:45 p.m.; Pearson Hall, 6-6:30 p.m.; Wednesday — Phi Delta Theta and Pi Kappa Alpha, 12:00-1:00 p.m.; Kappa Alpha Theta, 5:00-5:30 p.m., and Tau Kappa Epsilon, 5:30-6:00 p.m. Struts made of nickel-chromiumiron alloy are used to separate pottery while it is being enamel fired at about 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. This alloy was found to resist scaling and distortion which could mar the finish on fine china. Pottery Design FAST FINISHED Laundry Service RISK'S 613 Vermont Read and Use Kansan Classifieds Now is the time For Your Child's Christmas Portrait Children are our speciality Call now for an appointment Burch Higgins Photographer Page 5 RANCH HOUSE STUDIO 780 Lincoln VI-3-4575 Wren Shirts, Ltd A Distinguished New Name in Shirts 1940s This is the classic look as it has always been and as it always will be. It is masterfully perpetuated in our timeless collection of shirts designed by Douglas MacDaid, Princeton and New Haven, exclusively for Wren Shirts, Ltd. MAYBELLINE Select your Wren shirts today in your favorite traditional collar styles in a wide assortment of fabrics, patterns and colors. From $5.95 University Daily Kansan TUXEDO diebolt's MICROFIBER TIE TIMES OF AMERICA Monday, Oct. 1, 1962 YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hour Service Owner Radio Controlled Ward Thompson FREE DELIVERY Call before 4, Delivered after 5 $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 COOPER DRUG BULLY On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf," "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis," etc.) WHAT TO WEAR TILL THE DOCTOR COMES What does Dame Fashion decree for the coming school year? (Incidentally, Dame Fashion is not, as many people believe, a fictitious character. She was a real Englishwoman who lived in Elizabethan times and, indeed, England is forever in her debt. During the invasion of the Spanish Armada, Dame Fashion—not yet a Dame but a mere, unlettered country lass named Moll Flanders—during the invasion, I say, of the Spanish Armada, this dauntless girl stood on the white cliffs of Dover and turned the tide of battle by rallying the drooping morale of the British fleet with this stirring poem of her own composition: Now that you have enrolled and paid your fees and bought your books and found your way around campus and learned to hate your roommate, it is time to turn to the most important aspect of college life. I refer, of course, to clothes. Don't be guiless, Men of Britain. Swing your culless, We ain't quittin'. Smash the Spanish, Sink their boats, Make 'em vanish, Like a horse makes oats. For Good Queen Bess, Dear sir, you gotta Make a mess Of that Armada. You won't fail! Knock 'em flat! Then we'll drink ale And stuff like that. In 1589 she invented the laying hen As a reward for these inspirational verses Queen Elizabeth dubbed her a Dame, made her Poet Laureate, and gave her the Western Hemisphere except Duluth. But this was not the extent of Dame Fashion's service to Queen and country. In 1589 she invented the laying hen, and she was awarded a lifetime pass to Chavez Ravine. But she was not to end her days in glory. In 1591, alas, she was arrested for overtime jousting and imprisoned for thirty years in a butt of malmsey. This later became known as Guy Fawkes Day.) But I digress. Let us get back to campus fashions. Certain to be the rage again this year is the cardigan (which, curiously enough, was named after Lord Cardigan, who commanded the English fleet against the Spanish Armada. The sweater is only one product of this remarkable Briton's imagination. He also invented the glottal stop, the gerund, and the eyelid, without which winking, as we know it today, would not be possible). But I digress. The cardigan, I say, will be back, which is, I believe, cause for rejoicing. Why? Because the cardigan has nice big pockets in which to carry your Marlboro Cigarettes—and that, good friends, is ample reason for celebration as all of you will agree who have enjoyed Marlboro's fine, comfortable, mellow flavor and Marlboro's filter. So why don't you slip into your cardigan and hie yourself to your tobaccoist for some good Marlboros? They come in soft pack or flip-top box. Cardigans come in pink for girls and blue for boys. © 1962 Max Shulman * * * Cardigans or pullovers—it's a matter of taste . . . And so is Marlboro a matter of taste—the best taste that can possibly be achieved by experienced growers and blenders—by science, diligence, and tender loving care. Try a pack. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 1, 1962 Kansas Defeats Boston in Fog Terriers No Pushover, Game Not Decided Until 4th Quarter By Steve Clark "Sun!" This is the plaintive cry of the Kansas Jayhawkers as they prepare for their conference opener against Colorado here Saturday. THUS FAR, the Jayhawkers have met two non-conference opponents, and on both occasions, the frontal conditions have been nothing short of lousy. At Boston Saturday night, neither the Jayhawkers nor the Terriers could see the other's goal line if they were within their 40-yard line. A dense fog cut visibility to 60-yards. Nevertheless, the Jayhawkers won their first game of the year, by a humble 14-0 score. HOWEVER, Boston University who lost to Buffalo the previous weekend 27-23, was not the push-over that some had expected. The Terriers gave the Jayhawkers a fight all the way, and were in contention until Kansas scored its second touchdown with three and one half minutes remaining in the game. The Jayhawkers indicated that they were going to handle the Terriers with ease in the first quarter. After an exchange of punts KU marched from the Boston 42-yard line in seven plays to score its first touchdown with 9:44 remaining in the quarter. A FINE DEFENSIVE play by sophomore tackle Brian Schweda started the Jayhawkers on their initial touchdown march. Aided by a high snap from the BU center, Schweda downed quarterback Tom Dauney before he was able to punt giving KU possession on the 42. Sayers skirted his right end and moved upfield 17 yards. McFarland picked up four yards and Armand Baughman three. Sayers moved the ball to the six yard line giving KU a first down. The Jayhawkers ran three more plays before McFarland dived over from the two-yard line to score. Gary Duff kicked the extra point. The Terriers rebounded quickly as they took the kick-off and moved the ball to the KU three-yard line before being stopped by a stout, KU goal-line defense. AIDED BY a roughing the kicker penalty against KU, and passes of 11 and 12 yards by Dauhney, the Terriers had a first and ten on the KU eight yard line. A fumbled handoff lost three yards for the Terriers. Daubney connected with Meadows who was forced out of bounds on the KU three by Pete Quatrochi. Another pass was incomplete and the Jay-hawkers took over. With the exception of the Jayhawker scoring march in the first quarter, Boston dominated the opening half. The Terriers controlled the ball for 45 plays compared to KU's 18 and led statistically at halftime. RUS SECOND SCORE was also the result of a defensive gem, Quatrochi recovered a Boston fumble on the Terrier 16-yard line. Fullback Ken Coleman led the touchdown drive carrying six of the seven plays and accounting for all of the yardage. It took the Jayhawkers three plays to score from the one and one-half yard line, but Coleman scored diving over from the one. Duff again converted making the final score 14-0. Sayers led in individual rushing carrying the ball 11 times for 73 yards. Coleman, who carried the ball only five times against Texas Christian, accounted for 60 yards in 17 carries. Charlie (Choo Cho) Meadows led the Terriers with 46 yards on nine carries. Giants, LA Into Playoff The National League pennant race is going down to the final wire. As-a-matter-of fact it is taking an extra two to three games to decide the champion. Yesterday a eighth inning home run by Gene Oliver gave the St. Louis Cardinals a 1-0 victory over Los Angeles sending the Dodgers into a playoff series with the San Francisco Giants who defeated Houston. 2-1. The last National League playoff series was in 1951 between the same two clubs. However, their respective locations were New York and Brooklyn. The first game of the playoff will be at San Francisco and will be televised by WDAF in Kansas City starting at 2 p.m. Probable pitchers are Sandy Koufax (14-6) for the Dodgers and Bill Pierce (15-6) for the Giants. The second and third games will be played in Los Angeles. State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off, Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd, Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan. JACKSON. The Big Eight football conference after giving a good account of itself over the weekend—geared today for a pair of loop games Saturday, plus contests with three more non-conference opponents. LAST SATURDAY'S BIGGEST surprise was Nebraska's 25-13 upset over Michigan of the Big Ten. The Cornhuskers, behind the bull-like rushes of All-America hopeful Bill (Thunder) Thornton, emerged from the Ann Arbor victory as a real contender for the Big Eight title. This weekend's schedule has Colorado at Kansas and Iowa State at Nebraska in two Big Eight games, and Missouri hosts Arizona, Kansas State goes to Washington University, and Oklahoma State is on the road against Tulsa. Oklahoma has an open date. The week before, Nebraska trounced South Dakota 53-0. In another Big Eight-Big Ten encounter, Missouri and Minnesota battled to a 0-1 tie. Missouri, preseason favorite to cop the conference crown, was a slight underdog going into the game with the Rose Bowl champs. - * * IN TELEVISION'S GAME of the week Saturday, Oklahoma lost to Notre Dame 13-7 in an exciting, hard-fought clash at Norman. The Sooners, rated in the first division of the Big Eight, made two serious scoring threats late in the game. Kansas made up for a sputtering offense Saturday with good defense when it counted to shutout a stubborn Boston University team 14-0 at Boston. -nite Big Eight Results -nite Every Monday 75c JAYHAWK CAFE 1340 Ohio By United Press International Colorado's defending Big Eight ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass. GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Oklahoma State and Iowa State were idle over the weekend. champions, an underdog Saturday at Boulder against perennial cellar-dweller Kansas State, edged the Wildcats 6-0. The Buffaloes turned back Kansas State four times inside the 10-yard line. WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Saturday's opposition for winless Kansas State, easily defeated Illinois of the Big Ten 28-7. The Huskies are picked to represent the West Coast in the Rose Bowl. K-State is picked to lose its third game of the season. GRANADA NOW SHOWING! 7:00 & 9:15 See "The Wildest Party Ever Filmed" in "THE INTERNS" Arizona, Missouri's foe for this weekend, lost a wild game to New Mexico, 35-25. The Tigers are expected to have a relatively easy afternoon against the visiting Arizona's Wildcats. 838 Mass. TONIGHT & TUES. MARLON BRANDO IN "ONE EYED JACKS" Oklahoma State, which lost its opener to Arkansas 34-7 two weekends ago, should break into the win column against Tulsa Saturday. The Missouri Valley conference team lost to Arkansas 42-14 over the weekend. JIM'S CAFE STARTS WED. PRESENTS PRESENTS DANNY DANA KAYE WYNTER ON THE DOUBLE TECHNICOLOR' PANAVISION" AND STARTS WED. DANNY DANA KAYE WYNTER ON THE DOUBLE TECHNICOLOR' PANAVISION' AND THE COUCH Presented by WARNER BROS. Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 49 THE COUCH OPEN 24 hrs. a day Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS How Does Chicken Come? Baskets-Tubs-Barrels BIG BUY 23rd & Iowa ASK US ABOUT ThriftiCheck LOW-COS1 PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT SERVICE DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK - NO charge for deposits - Your name printed FREE on all your checks - NO fixed balance required - 9th & Kentucky, VI 3-7474 - ANY amount will open your account LAST TWO DAYSTONIGHT AND TUESDAY Some of the comments were ... ★ WRITER HAD GREAT IMAGINATION ★ MARVELOUS CAMERA WORK ★ VERY WELL DONE ★ FRESH-EXCITING Herk Harvey's "Carnival of Souls" PLUS PATTERSON vs LISTON FIGHT PICTURES See in Slow Motion How Liston Did it So Fast! STARTS WEDNESDAY Double Trouble and Funny One THE MAGIC WORD FOR FUN! ZOTZ! TOM JULIA POSTON·MEADE starring JIM FRED CECIL BACKUS·CLARK·KELLAWAY Adults 90c Kids 50c Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 Tuto 2A. Phot LAR Pano oper and NEWEST! NUTTIEST! THE THREE STOOGES IN ORBIT A NORMANOV PRODUCTION A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE - Coming - "Damn The Defiant" --- Monday, Oct. 1, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not returned. Second issuance. LOST Pi Phi sorority pin — arrow shaped. Lost on the walk between the Pi Phi house. Sailey at 8:30 a.m. Thursday. Reward offered. Phone Mary Clark. V.14-3910. BUSINESS SERVICES Tutor for Math courses numbered A.B.2. Phone Neil Wood, VI 3-6866. Radio控训设备 RD-120. LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tt DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith. 939% Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tf BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard, BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard, $8 per week. Phone VI-3-t528. FOR SALE UNICYCLES provide prestige campus transportation. See September 17 News- sheets and reports. Send $1.00 for illustrated plans to Unicycle, Box 252, Worthington, Ohio. 10-5 1954 Buick with automatic transmission, power steering and brakes, 59,000 miles. 219 Park Ave. or phone Wever Hutton at VI 3-4964 or VI 3-4220. $495. 10-2 Have some personal photographic equi- pilates. Have a DVD of 12"x14" f2. 2*14*24" Auto Reflex. 35 mm slide projector, professional semi automatic, price. Phone Extension 367. 10-2 Marlott. Beautiful Stromberg-Carilson console HiFl with FM-AM radio 12 inch 8-inch monitor, contemporary cabinet. New warranty, just $95 at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. 10-3 1961 Ford Victoria hardtop, beautiful white finish. V-8. Power steering, automatic windshield washer, radio and heater. Deluxe interior. Excellent condition. Will sell near wholesale price. Phone VI 2-3489. 10-1 For lowest prices on new and used speed cars, call 800-3655 or visit Miss. after 5 p.m., VI 2-0655. 10-3 TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental, New and used portables, standards and electrics. Royal, Olympia. Smith Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. tf Tires! Tires! 1000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes—most foreign sizes—extra low prices on Snow Tires until Oct. lst! 100-13 new style new ubellexus $28; 150-14 2 for $29 plus tax Free installation at rear, Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Massachusetts, VI3-4170 10-11 GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Study Notes. Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. Phone VI 3-8246 for free delivery. 10-8 Need transportation? 1 owner car, runs Nightly. VI 3-6975. VI 3-1032- 10-28 Nightly. VI 3-6975. VI 3-1032- 10-28 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in midwest—Pet phone V1.3-289 Modern soild-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. Complete novice radio station. Hall-crafters SX-99, Heath DX-20, T-switch, 24-hour clock, and eat $125 or will sell individually. Larry Miller, 616 JRP. 10-2 HAIR DRYER! HAIR DRYER! Largest stock in Lawrence all famous brands. All at discount prices. Red and Universals. All at discount prices. Red and Universals. 929 Mass. or phone VI3-4170. 10-1 Printed Biology Study Notes; 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tf TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: White, green or blue bond, $1.25 amm. Pink newsprint, only 85c ream. Scratch pads galore, all sizes, 35c lb. The Lawrence Outlook, 1005 Massachusetts. VI 3-3668. Open all day Saturday. tff Bikes! Bikes! Bikes! 30 models to choose from 26 inch as low as $29.97. Ray Stonebacks—929 Mass.—VI 3-4170. 10-1 FM Radios! FM Stereos! Stereos! Largest stock in Lawrence all at discount prices. Rock Stonebacks, 929 Mass., VI 3-4170 10-1 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service sectionalized guinea pigs, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, etc., plus complete pet supplies. tf Wanted to buy-A used baby bed, which will fit infant to 3-year-old. Phone VI 3-5919. 10-5 WANTED BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard, 8 $ per week. Call VI.1-7828, if desire. Spacious newly decorated 1-bedroom apartment with stove and a refrigerator. Enclosed kitchen and conditioning. Close to town and KU. A garage is available. 800 Indiana. 10-5 FOR RENT For Rent: A large room furnished for either single or double. Only three blocks from Massachusetts and only four blocks from Massachusetts and 11th Street. PHONE VI 3-1909. 10-4 PARK PLAZA SO. INC. APARTMENTS - Couples - Singles - Furnished - Unfurnished - 20 Days Free Rent With 1-year Lease - Wall to Wall Closet Space - Garbage Disposal - Carpeting - Individual Controlled Heating - Lighted Off Street Parking - Ph. VI 2-3416 or VI 2-1537 Office — 1912 W. 25th - Water Paid One large room available for three boys. See at 1005 Indiana. 10-2 Comfortable two-room suite; bedroom: Kitchen, study, or call. or Wm. O. Scott, VI 3-4752. 10-2 Rent furnished — new 1 and 2 bedroom T. A. Humphle, PhiPhone V 3-2002 10-4 3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block away from the bus. Payment due. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. tf Lovely room for one or two graduate or upperclassman. Telephone, private parking, $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from campus. Call VI 3-6969. 10-1 3 room furnished modern apartment. Utilities paid. Couple or two men. $60 per month. No children or pets. 516 Louisiana, VI 3-2402. 10-2 Woman graduate student wanted to share lovely, large 3 room apartment. Private bath, entrance, parking, furnished. See at 1215 Oread, Apt. No. 1, after 5 p.m. 10-12 Small house completely furnished for 1 or 2 responsible students. Excellent location. Parking. $45 per month. Available October 1. For appointment call VI 3-6969. Beautiful apartments. Large living rooms, two bedrooms. kitchen comes equipped with stainless steel appliances. Phone VI 3-7819 after 5 p.m. on Mon-Wed-Fri, or anytime on Tues. or Thurs. 10-1 Married student to live in a 5 room furnished house with bath on the first floor and two rooms with another room upstairs furnished apartment with bath, and large window fan for a sizable room. For this purpose we campus cated at 128 W. 13th. Available now. For showing call V 3-9868. 10-3 Jack Nichols, KU student. 2417 Ohio. is looking for 1 or 2 roommates to share furnished apartment. Stove, refrigerator, private bath, linens furnished. 10-2 Wanted; Male student to share apartment. Phone VI 3-2346. 10-3 3 furnished apartments. Private entrances. Man in charge men. 1720-29. Phone VI 3-1729. JO-1 NEW APARTMENT FOR TWO. Men, women, or couple. Handsomely furnished. Utilities paid, rough dry laundry. Private drive. $65, phone VI 3-2430. 10-1 ROOMS FOR MEN; Doubles only, private entrance, private bath, telephone and utilities paid. One block from Union. Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tf Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. !½ block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice and clean. see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. We Rent Most Anything Anderson Rental 812 N. H. HELP WANTED Wanted; Two men, part time. Must have car. Drive paper route morning 2 a.m. Drive to airport by midnoon 3 p.m. to p.m. Salary plus car allowance. KC. Star, 801 Mass. 10-4 Delivery boy 2 nights a week. Waiters- part time. Also wanted, female cashier for delivery or in-person person at the Campus Hideaway or call VI 3-911. Ask for Gene Durham. 10-3 TYPING Typing done in my home. 3 years ex- cellence. Conductive work. guard机. Phone VI 3-5630 10-4 Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tf Ttyping reasonable rates, neat and ac- cidently. Mrs Bidon, 825 Greever Terr. Ttt Mrs. Bidon, 825 Grever Terr. Typing - 6 years experience, theses, term papers, documents, manuscripts. All work and correctly completed on time. Electronic typewriter Call VI 2-1457. amo time. 10-3 Experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Responsible. Mrs Barlow, 408 W. 13th, VI 21-1648. Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651. tt Experienced typist wants typing—thesis —term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Phone VI 3-7211 after 5:30 p.m. tf TRANSPORTATION Want to join car pool, K.C., K. 6:30 a.m. return K.C., K. 11:30 a.m. Monday thru east, AVE. Ave. Ave. Ave. city, G. L. Zalewski, School of Business or phone MA(1)-26455. 10-5 STUDENTS Grease Jobs . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd S.U.A. CLASSICAL FILM SERIES 1962-1963 FORUM ROOM - 7 P.M. - WEDNESDAYS Date Movie Oct. 3 . . . The Story of Gosta Berling (Garbo) Oct. 17 . . . Philadelphia Story (Hepburn) Oct. 31 . . The Wild One (Brando) Nov. 14 . . Blood and Sand (Valentino) Nov. 28 . . . She Done Him Wrong (Mae West) Dec.12.Three Musketeers (Douglas Fairbanks) Jan. 9 . . . The Maltese Falcon (Humphrey Bogart) Season Tickets Are NOW on Sale at the Kansas Union. Buy Yours Today! Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, Sept. 28, 1962 Faubus— (Continued from page 1) the use of force," Gov. Faubus said. "One extreme begets another." GOV. FAUBUS declined comment when asked his opinion of Gov. Ross Barnett's handling of the Mississippi crisis. He drew a distinction between the Ole Miss crisis and the one in Little Rock. The difference, he said, is that the Mississippi school is state supported. Gov. Faubus said he tells segregationists the same thing. "I tell them if they think integration won't work to just wait and see what happens where it has taken place," he said. "People will correct their own errors if they are left alone." According to the governor, racial strife throughout the South could have been avoided if the "evolution of education" had not been tampered with. He said people solve their problems to whatever degree they can be solved if they are given enough time. He said he believed conditions in Mississippi would worsen but that James Meredith would be enrolled. "There is no question about it," he said. "The federal government has the might to enroll him. I don't know whether there will be blood-shed, but it is an example of what happens when force is used." GOV. FAUBUS SAID he does not oppose integration for those desiring it nor does he oppose segregation if it is by consensus. "It's like prohibition," he said. "Some states have it and some don't. It is a matter of choice. When people don't have a choice or think that they are going to be compelled to do something, they start being afraid. Troops don't prove anything." Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Foreign— (Continued from page 1) Annamarie Hoffmann, Hanover, Germany, junior, looked at the political angle: "SINCE HE IS a politician, I'm sure he had his reasons. America claims democracy based on the Constitution, but little incidents like that are blown up in the newspapers of foreign countries until Americans have a hard time proving the constitution is interpreted." Nirandan Vora, Calcutta, India, sophomore, said, "Governor Burnett should be arrested and put in jail. The whole situation is sickening." Augustine G. Kyei, Ashanti, Ghana, senior, said. "I think that integration in the United States at all levels of human endeavor is important. It is very touching to Africans to hear of American Negroes' sufferings." Dave Griffith, Plymouth, England, graduate student, seemed to sum up the majority of the foreign students' impression of the situation. "It makes me think that liberty is not for all in the United States." Official Bulletin French Pnh D. reading exam; 9:10-31:10 Books to Miss Craig, 120 Fraser, by Oct. 5. KU Soccer Team, 4 p.m. Practice, Soccer Field. WEDNESDAY Le Corée Française se reunitra mercredi le 3 octobre à 16 h. 30 dans laaille onez de Fraser Hall. Tous ceux qui s'intéressent français sont cordialement invites. D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell WAKE UP! General Electric CLOCK OUR LOW DISCOUNT PRICE $2.88 Plus Fed. Tax 11 12 1 10 2 9 3 8 4 7 6 5 WAKE UP! There is a Store in Lawrence That Beats the DISCOUNT Houses — On Appliances, Radios TV, Stereo, FM, Tires, Bicycles, Seat Covers . . . etc. RAY STONEBACK'S 929 Mass. VI 3-4170 Now You Can Have Your Shirts Hand-Finished and Delivered on Hangers We carefully wash and hand finish your dress shirts and your colored sport shirts. Each shirt is then returned to you wrinkle-free and ready to wear on an individual hanger. For this personal service, simply write "On Hanger" on your laundry ticket, or inform us when we pick-up. Check these services and you will see why we provide the finest in shirt care and individual attention. - Smooth collars and cuffs - Perfect collars—rounded to fit right, feel right - Clean collars, cuffs, and pockets - Starched as you wish—or finished "soft" if you desire - Whites are Pure White - Colors are Bright - Buttons are intact - Spots and stains removed - 1-Day service when you need it © 1964 Remember! Your Shirts Can Be Laundered and Wrinkle-Free Too! CALL US FOR COMPLETE SHIRT CARE "Quality Guaranteed" LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. VI3-3711 "Specialists in Fabric Care" Daily hansan 60th Year, No. 13 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Tuesday, Oct. 2, 1962 Barnett Blames Violence On Federal Government By United Press International The Federal government and the state of Mississippi bitterly blamed each other today for the bloody battle at Oxford. Gov. Ross Barnett told the nation last night that the Federal government had deliberately inflamed Mississippiians to justify the use of troops to enroll Negro James Meredith at the University of Mississippi. Kennedy and Barnett appeared separately on the same television program. Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy intimated that Barnett himself must ultimately bear the responsibility for the campus riot. MEREDITH went to classes under guard by U.S. marshals again today. The federal government was taking no chances on renewal of the rioting that swept the college town Sunday and Monday. Oxford itself resembled an armed camp. The army stationed 15,000 troops there. Soldiers slept overnight on the courthouse lawn in ponchos. Foxholes were dug on a hill overlooking the airport highway. Cars were stopped in a search for arms. THERE HAVE been persistent rumors that the White Citizen's Council and other segregationist groups might attempt to send convoys to Oxford from Alabama or other neighboring states. The 29-year-old Meredith himself was under heavy guard in a room on the second floor of Baxter Hall. Most of the other students in the dormitory, all white, had moved out. In Springfield, Mo., meanwhile, former Army Gen. Edwin A. Walker occupied a cell at the U.S. hospital for federal prisoners today charged with "rebellion, insurrection and seditious conspiracy." WALKER WAS picked up by federal troops yesterday as he paced the streets of Oxford, congratulating demonstrators for their courage in resisting the forceful integration of Meredith. He was arraigned in the federal building in Oxford and flown by a border patrol plane to the federal hospital when he was unable to raise $100,000 bail. Walker faces up to 39 years in prison and fines totaling $40,000 if convicted of the charges. Hospital warden, Dr. Russell O. Settle, said Walker was being held at the institution awaiting trial. He Bulletin NEW ORLEANS — (UPI) — The U.S. Justice Department told a federal court today it did not advocate immediate action against Gov. Ross Barnett of Mississippi but only wanted assurance he would comply with court orders regarding integration of the University of Mississippi. Barnett's attorneys told the court the Governor had complied with court orders. The court then recessed for two hours. added, "Our job is simply to take care of him while he is under arrest." EARLY REPORTS on the transfer of Walker to the hospital suggested possible medical treatment for him. But Settle denied the reports, saying Walker was being held only for the purpose of awaiting trial. The Mississippi crisis brought out propagandists, cartoonists and big black headlines around the world today. Practically the only support for Gov. Barnett and other Mississippi state officials came from Colin Jordan, leader of the British Nazi movement, who cabled congratulations "on your stand for the racial survival of the white man." There was little comment from Moscow. The Soviet government called the fatal shooting of a French newsman "the crime of racists." MOST EUROPEAN and Asian newspapers appeared to recognize the scope and depth of the American racial problem and said the Ole Amid Cries of "Orgy, Orgy," Seniors Hold Morning Coffee By Trudy Meserve The senior class of 1963 practiced their new yell at a senior coffee this morning: "63—63—ORGY ORGY." Approximately 700 seniors attended the senior coffee in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Students who are approaching the long-awaited commencement seem placid about sweatshirts, buttons, caps, gowns, picnics and breakfasts. "No, I don't want a sweatshirt. I want coffee," growled one senior to his neighbor. "Haven't you gotten out of this place yet?" asked one senior of his neighbor, who then moved to another chair. "Let's just get our sweatshirts and leave," whispered one senior woman to another. Hoite Caston, Independence, Mo., senior and emcee of the program, told the latecomers to pick up sweatshirts at 127 Strong Hall. Caston introduced Michael Mead, Kansas City, Mo., senior and president of the class. Mead introduced the senior class officers and three committee chairmen. The other officers are: Philip McKnight, Wichita, vice president; LaWalta Heyde, Shawnee Mission, treasurer, and Judith Geisendorf, Salina, secretary. The three committee chairmen are: Jay Dean, Kansas City, ring chairman; Michael Cogswell, Kansas City, acting calendar chairman, and Ronald Kessler, Hutchinson, picnic and Senior Day chairman. Kessler said the senior party will be Saturday, Oct. 6, at the Big Barn. The party which begins at 10 p.m. features a band. Caston termed the party-to-be "a swinging blast." Students paid class dues at the meeting, and ordered class rings. The $10 class fee covers four parties, senior calendar, sweatshirt, class button, picnic, cap and gown and the class gift to the University. Miss battle was only one phase of what will be a long fight for integration in the United States. The NAACP urged President Kennedy yesterday to provide federal protection for Negro leaders in Mississippi. The NAACP indicated it felt there may be reprisals against the Negro leaders because of the federally enforced enrollment of Meredith. The segregation question was nowhere on the agenda of the Southern Governor's Conference, but the Mississippi crisis was getting the major share of private attention. Picture Frame To Washington For Inspection The frame which the Manet painting thief left behind has been sent to a Washington laboratory for detailed examination. The picture — with an approximate value of $40,000 and owned by the KU art museum — was removed from its frame August 31 and police were left without clues. THE FBI IS INVESTIGATING the possibility of an interstate violation so that it might enter the case. A $2,000 reward for pertinent information has been offered. Marilyn Stokstad, professor of art and acting director of the museum, said that she believes the picture will be recovered eventually. "It might be next year," she said, "or it might take 20. The important thing is that the picture be returned to the public." PROF. STOKSTAD said thieves sometimes hold works of art for ransom or simply hide them for a number of years until they may be sold on the open market. "People hear that a picture is worth a great deal of money and so they decide to take it but they often don't realize that a well known picture is almost impossible to sell," she said. INFORMATION HAS been sent to dealers all over the world and Prof. Stokstad said that it would be at least five to ten years before there would be any chance of the thief selling the picture to a reputable dealer — or even to one not so reputable. This is so because gallery owners and art dealers cooperate fully in alerting each other concerning thefts and remaining on watch for stolen pictures. The painting, which is a trial painting for the finished product in the Kansas City, Mo., Nelson Art Gallery, portrays a young girl. She was the daughter of a physician who treated Manet for an uncurable disease that slowly paralyzed his body. Manet finished the portrait six years before his death in 1883. forties. "I just hope we are dealing with a smart thief," she said. "I hope he doesn't panic and destroy the picture." Weather Little change in the cloudy skies, cool temperatures and damp weather which have prevailed over much of Kansas today is forecast during the next twenty-four hours. Intermittent rains are predicted through today and possibly into tonight. Temperature highs today are expected to range generally in the sixties and lows tonight are expected to range in the forties. FREDERICK A. BALDWIN FROM HEAVEN TO HELL—Standing on the platform which represents Heaven in "J.B. is Jerry Davis, a Kansas City teacher who plays Mr. Zuss in the production. Virgil Godfrey, assistant professor of speech and drama, who plays Nickles, the devil, stands below the platform, the place designated as Hell. Four-Performance Run for Play 'J.B.' Archibald McLeish's "J. B.," will open for a four-performance run at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the University Theatre. The cast is as follows: J B., Miles Coiner, Lawrence graduate student; Sarah, his wife, Carol Strickland, Kansas City junior; Nickles, the Devil, Virgil Godfrey, assistant professor of speech and drama and set designer for the University Theatre; Mr. Zuss, Jerry Davis, a Kansas City teacher. ZOPHAR, A COMFORTER, Larry Ketchum, Twin Falls, Idaho, freshman; Eliphaz, a comforter, Dan Kocher, Topeka senior; Bildad, a comforter, Byrne Blackwood, Chanute graduate student; first messenger, Bob Strack, Lawrence senior; second messenger, Bill Evans, Clarksdale, Miss., graduate student, distant voice (God), Tony Bengel, Independence junior; a girl, Judy Southard, Springfield. Mo., junior. J. B.'s children: David, Christopher Godfrey; Jonathan, Brian Davis; Mary, Caril Olson; Ruth, Mary Reed, and Rebecca, Nancy Reed. Miss Mabel, Alice Marthaler, Sae- thea senior; Mrs. Botticelli, Kaye Stevenson, Cape Girardeau, Mo, senior; Mrs. Murphy, Karin Gold, Overland Park junior; Mrs. Adams, Frances Gagahan, Walnut freshman; Mrs. Lesure, Hildreth Hoecker, Law- rence sophomore. Jolly, Mary Lynn Speer, Merriam sophomore; first maid, Linda Phillips, Red Cloud, Neb., sophomore, and second maid, Glenda Harwell, Springfield, Mo., sophomore. TICKETS FOR ALL FOUR PERFORMANCES — Wednesday through Saturday — are available at the University Theatre. Prices are $1.20 for upper balcony and back two rows downstairs, $1.80 for mezzanine and middle lower floor and $2.40 for front lower floor. Students may obtain one $1.20 ticket free with their ID cards, or they may pay the difference and get a better seat. The University Theatre is open from 10 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to noon on Saturday and 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. on performance nights. Pearson Hall Joins UP; Severs Vox Affiliation Pearson Hall, a men's scholarship hall, voted last night to switch its campus political affiliation from Vox Populi to the University Party. Two other scholarship halls recently voted to drop all political ties and vote independently. Douthart Hall, which previously had voted in a bloc for Vox, followed Miller Hall, previously a UP house in disaffiliating with campus political party membership. EARL J. TAGGART, Wellington junior and president of Pearson Hall, explained, "Two men in our hall favored UP because they want to become active in the party this year. Last night, at the house meeting, we decided to affiliate with UP." Patricia A. Koch, Haven junior and president of Douthart, said: "We decided not to affiliate with Vox for two or three reasons. No one is interested in running for office in Vox. The girls as a whole don't feel that either party is different from the other, or has much to offer." "The girls feel it has not been to their advantage to belong to either political party," Kathy Wohlford, Geneseo junior and Miller Hall president, said. "We will remain independent until we can see differently," Miss (Continued on page 8) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 2, 1962 The Lesson of Oxford "Demonstrators threw a 'Molotov cocktail' into a company of troops . . ." into a company of troops "Truckload after truckload of troops poured into courthouse square. Ten army helicopters circled overhead." "... troops with fixed bayonets moved out to break up the marauding demonstrators." The answer will depend largely on who the elected state and local officials are at the time. If people like Gov. Ross Barnett still are in power, more bloodshed can probably be expected. MANY AMERICANS, when they read these descriptions of the riots in Oxford, Miss., in their Monday newspaper, found it difficult to imagine that such events could occur in the United States. Many are now wondering if the same pattern will be repeated when desegregation is attempted in other towns in the Deep South. It is clear that a large part of the blame for the Oxford riots can be placed on Gov. Barnett. He took no steps to prepare the people of Mississippi for desegregation; in fact, even after the Oxford riots and the entrance of federal troops, he still is claiming that segregation can be maintained. EVEN WORSE, he indirectly approved of the violence by withdrawing state police when the riot was in progress, despite his promise to the federal government that Mississippi could and would maintain law and order. In contrast, the results of enlightened leadership can be seen in the Atlanta situation a year ago. In Atlanta, public school and city officials, when they could fight desegregation no longer in the courts, accepted this fact and began a campaign to prepare the citizens of Georgia for desegregation. When desegregation actually occurred, plenty of police were on hand to stop potential trouble. Oxford, it will be pointed out, is not the same as Atlanta. Atlanta is a fast-growing, industrialized city with considerable Northern influences, while Oxford is a small town in the heart of rural northern Mississippi. YET THE POTENTIAL violence was present in both cities, and the difference in results can be largely credited or blamed on the elected officials. One can only wonder what would have occurred had Marvin Griffin still been Georgia's governor when Atlanta desegregated. Gov Barnett may think he has a lifetime job as Governor if he wants it, and the success of Gov. Orval Faubus in Arkansas may bear this out. On the other hand, the defeat of ex-Gov. Griffin for the Democratic nomination this summer in Georgia may indicate that the most vocal racist does not always win, even in the Deep South. Whether or not he has a lifetime job, Gov. Barnett has accomplished several things. He has dirtied the already-tarnished image of his state throughout the world. He has done immeasurable harm to the University of Mississippi, which is now threatened with loss of accreditation because of political meddling in its affairs. He has hurt the United States in its struggle with Russian communism in the new nations of Africa and Asia. And he has probably set back the cause for which he claimed he was fighting-state's rights by showing that state officials either will not or cannot maintain law and order in their own state. GOV. BARNETT apparently didn't learn anything from Little Rock, and it seems he still hasn't learned anything from Oxford. Whether this holds true for other Southern officials remains to be seen. Alabama and South Carolina now are the only states which have made no move toward desegregation, and Gov. John Patterson of Alabama has been the most vocal defender of Gov. Barnett since the Oxford riots. Alabama, too, will be desegregating in the near future. It is to be hoped that Gov. Patterson's defenses of Barnett are mere campaign speeches rather than indications of what will occur in Alabama. —Clayton Keller LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Cloistered Sun Dial Editors I realize that in this advanced age of computers and highly complicated mechanisms man does not need the simple time calibration of a sun dial. However, this instrument was a gift to the University and should be treated with the respect due its donors, the class of 1899. At present the sun dial is inoperable because of its cloistered location. It is too bad the University is so busy removing the old to make way for the new that it forgets the small gifts miraculously intact. Namely—the sun dial of the University of Kansas. Surely, if one entire building can be removed from the campus, someone, somewhere, should care enough to move the sun dial out into the sun. Rebecca D. Hathaway Lawrence freshman * * * Unwanted Inserts Thursday evening, as is my habit, I picked up a copy of the Daily Kansas while walking along Jayhawk Boulevard. Nearly folded in the paper was a copy of the interesting and imposing document entitled "The Church Historically Traced." Being somewhat interested in the church, history, and tracing in general, I examined the Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, tristweek 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711. news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service and NCAA. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $3 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. ... Letters ... remaining copies in the dispensing shelf and found, to my intense delight, that each of the copies held a similar tract. This fact forced me to conclude that someone had put them there. Certainly these pompous pamphlets weren't included with the approval of a state and student supported editor in a state and student supported newspaper. I doubt that the dictum of the separation of sect and state has fallen into that much disrepute. Certainly it was not the author, Mr. Barber, or his apostolic following which inserted this yellow journalism in every copy of the Daily Kansan. Even the select of God are incapable of such a task. You see, Mr. Editor, I am stumped. Of cause, if this is simply the first in a series of tracts to be distributed in the Daily Kansan by representative religious blocs within the student body, I can scarcely request a screeching halt. If this is not the case, Mr. Editor, I trust that your readers will not be bludgeoned into religious submission by recurrent blitherings from scurrilous sects. Editor's note; The literature which several Daily Kansan readers found inserted in their papers was not put there by the Daily Kansan staff. The staff, too, is extremely interested in ending the insertion of this unwanted material in the Daily Kansan. Please clear up the arcane appearance of this insert in your newspaper. It has upset my life. Bon Dwells Ron Dwelle Any material readers found in their copies was inserted without the knowledge or consent of the staff, after the papers were delivered from the pressroom to the distribution boxes. This was pointed out in front-page articles last Wednesday and yesterday. Anyone who has information which may help the Daily Kansan staff learn who is inserting this material is requested to telephone the Daily Kansan, extension 711 or 376, or the KU Police Department, extension 701. "Choral Group" Slammed Editor; Often in the confusion of this rapidly expanding University, talent goes unnoticed and unpraised. This may be the first of many articles written to rectify such a damning situation. YESTERDAY EVENING the "Naughty Ninety" lustily (not to be confused with "lust," that is, to desire — there was nothing desirable about this performance) lifted their voices in song. Although this choral group was not identified, their center of activity was near the Kappa Alpha Theta house. They were accompanied by howling dogs, yelling boys, and firecrackers. Perhaps this was a form of a Greek "Chinese New Year." One of the more popular songs which they sang to the boys was about their "hairy chests." As the above sentence indicates, your reporter was confused concerning the ownership of these "hairy chests." Did they belong to the young ladies or did they belong to the young gentlemen? It may well be that my failure in discrimination was the result of the hour — 1:30 a.m. ALTHOUGH THE MUSIC was terrible, I am not criticizing the music, only the inappropriateness of the place and the hour. In this particular area of Lawrence live many married couples with young children. At least one small baby was awakened in tears as a result of this din. Also, in approximately the same block as the disturbance is a rest home. I feel confident that the noise did not contribute to a restful night by the occupants of this home. In order not to crush such budding musical talent, I would like to suggest a more appropriate place for the presentation of these musical fares: the "Singing Silo." Without disturbing too greatly those who peacefully repose, at the Silo these cats could howl to their hearts' content about their hairy chests. Name withheld upon request OFFICE PROF SNARF SIGN UP FOR OFFICE APPOINTMENT T-4 "WELL, I SEE YOU DIDN'T GET HIM TO RAISE YERGRADE." COMMENT Spotting Sub-Humans You there, in Mississippi—ever heard of Marcello Malpighi? I'll give you a hint: he wasn't a Freedom Rider or a civil rights agitator or a Civil War general. Marcello Malpighi was an anatomist who discovered, among other things, a layer of human skin we call the Malpighian Layer. According to Webster, the Layer is "composed of cells whose protoplasm has not yet changed to horny material." A thin layer of cells containing pigments—and it's raising more hell in the United States today than all the hydrogen bombs and war threats put together. ONE OTHER THING about our Layer: it contains the pigments that color human skin. This is why I'm rosy-pink and why Mao Tse-tung is a funny olive color and why James Meredith is black. A thin layer of skin so important that the President of the United States canceled a weekend at Newport to address the nation. A THIN LAYER so important that Mississippi Governor Ross Barnett has sworn to go to jail because of it. A layer so important that an amendment to the U.S. Constitution was passed to provide for it. A layer so important that it caused two deaths at Oxford, Miss. In the good old days of prejudice, discrimination was a little harder to establish. Take the Inquisition, for example. There was no way to tell, just by looking, who you were to put on the rack. You had to grovel around in garbage to be sure. TODAY, THANKS TO our Malpighian Layer, prejudice is a lot simpler. Just by looking, you can tell who is sub-human and who is not. I think we should establish new criteria for prejudice. It's too simple today—takes all the fun out of being a bigot. I'm brown-haired, so let's say that all people with red, black or white hair are not human. Let's call them "hairies." OR MAYBE ALL PEOPLE with protruding Achilles tendons should be put in their place. We don't want them marrying our daughters, do we? Let's call them "tendies." Or let's segregate everybody whose big toe isn't one-fourth of an inch longer than their index toe. We can't trust them with the vote, can we? Let's call them "toesies." It makes as much sense as segregation because of a thin piece of human flesh. —Zeke Wigglesworth BOOK REVIEWS MAN: HIS FIRST MILLION YEARS, by Ashley Montagu (Signet Science Library, 60 cents) an anthropological history of mankind, tracing the development of language, cultivation of food, marital customs, law, art, religion, and science. Montagu wrote the UNESCO statement on race.-CMP University Daily Kansan Page 2 Around the Campus Around the KU Senior Offers Rand Philosophy A University of Kansas Hutchinson senior has brought Ayn Rand's "objectivist" philosophy to the campus on tape. Larry Glaser is serving this year as a representative of the Nathaniel Branden Institute associated with Miss Rand. A Kansas editor will be elected to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame on Kansas Editor's Day, to be held Saturday at the University of Kansas. At a general session, Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism, will announce the 46th deceased editor elected to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame. Glaser became interested in Rand while studying economics at the Foundation for Economic Education last spring. Ayn Rand is the author of four widely read novels, the founder of a philosophical school called "Objectivism," the author of a nationally syndicated column and the co-editor of a monthly journal of ideas, "The Objectivist News Letter." Rand's philosophy is based on the premise that recognition of objective reality is necessary for the proper existence of man. From this she deduces a code of "objectivist ethics," which hold that every man has a right to lead his life free from coercion by others. Rand's two most widely read novels are "The Fountainhead" and "Atlas Shrugged." The editors of all daily and weekly Kansas newspapers have been sent invitations to this annual event sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism. State Editors' Day Here on Saturday Atter a buffet luncheon in the Kansas Union, hosted by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, the journalists will attend the Kansas-Colorado football game as guests of A. C. Lonborg, director of athletics. Three KU faculty members will participate in a conference for secondary and college teachers in the social sciences in Topeka. It will be held Saturday. Three Profs. to Attend Confab W. Stitt Robinson, professor of history, is co-chairman for the conference steering committee and will preside at the closing general session. Eldon Fields, professor of political science, will be a chairman of two of the six discussion groups. Alvin Schild, professor of education will be consultant to a third group. Savings Institute to be Held Five University officials will participate in the 14th Savings and Loan Institute for junior executives Oct. 18-20 to be held at KU. They are Frank E. X. Dance, assistant professor of speech; Wiley S. Mitchell, acting dean of the School of Business; Robert M. Nelson, University Extension coordinator; Harold Orel, associate professor of English, and James R. Surface, vice chancellor of the University. The program will offer two sequences of courses to acquaint executives with the savings and loan industry. The institute is sponsored by the Kansas Savings and Loan League and the University of Kansas Extension. KU Grad Named As AID Administrator Leona Baumgartner, 60, a 1923 graduate of the University of Kansas, has recently been named assistant administrator of the Agency for International Development (AID). In past years she has been commissioner of health in New York City, a job that pays $2,250 more per year than the newly appointed government position. As an assistant secretary of state, she will head the office of human resources and social development. In 1925 she received her M.A. in bacteriology from KU and in 1947 was presented the University of Kansas distinguished service award. Naval Seminar to be Held A seminar is to be held at the Naval Reserve Training Center in Kansas City, Mo. Its purpose is to provide information on appointments to the U.S. Naval Academy, the Reserve Officer Candidate Program, and other programs available through the Naval Reserve. All students and their parents are cordially invited to attend. The training center is located at 3100 E. 47th Street in Kansas City. The seminar will be held Oct. 21 at 2 p.m. KU Building Safety Reigns Over Study James R. Surface, vice chancellor of the University, said recently that although KU is willing to provide quiet study areas for students, security to the campus buildings is of primary consideration. In a telephone conversation, he said the All Student Council must consider the need for such extra space and the University's need to "police" the classrooms. The ASC made the suggestion to keep some classrooms open at night as study areas. "We wouldn't want a class to meet the next morning in a room littered by students studying there the night before," he said. "Nor would we want a lighted cigarette left behind or petty thievery. "We should first determine the need for extra space," he said "No one really seems to know yet just how pressing a need there is for extra classrooms." Streamlined Prospecting Nickel is used in some two and one-half billion coins minted each year throughout the world. Using airborne electronic equipment, International Nickel Company technicians are able to search for mineral deposits at a rate of 100 miles each hour exploring below water, snow, ice and surface soils. Nickel in Coinage CAMPUS CLASSIC CORDOVAN BY FREEMAN BOOTMAKER GUILD CLASSIC ... Cherry Cordovan with black Cordovan saddle. Double leather sole and luxury leather lined. Try your size today! A 9-12 & 13; B 8-12 & 13: C 7-12 & 13; D 6 1/2-12 & 13. $24.95 Royal College Shop 837 MASS. Royal College Shop 837 MASS. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds THERE'S STILL TIME- TO JOIN THE SPECIAL STUDENT BLUE CROSS - BLUE SHIELD THERE'S STILL TIME- BLUE CROSS-BLUE SHIELD PLAN... + ® ® If you missed joining this outstanding supplementary student Health Care Plan during regular school enrollment, you still have time to sign up. Special Blue Cross-Blue Shield representatives will be in the business office on the first floor of Strong Hall October 1, through October 5, to help you join. Remember, even if you were enrolled in Blue Cross-Blue Shield last semester, you must re-enroll this semester to be eligible for student Blue Cross-Blue Shield top-quality benefits. KANSAS HOSPITAL SERVICE ASSN., INC. KANSAS PHYSICIANS' SERVICE Page 4 University Daily Kansap Tuesday, Oct. 2, 1962 Jewelry Designer Wins Top Awards By Trudy Meserve Crumpled paper littered the floor. Chewed pencil stubs, stacks of paper, several near-empty bottles of paint, a compass and a ruler covered a small desk. Sitting amid the clutter was Cate student, Kuhl, who is working and silversmithing, did not expect to draw a "good" design that night. Sitting amid the clutter was Condon F. Kuhl, Lawrence graduate student. Kuhl, who is working on his master's degree in jewelry and silkworking, did not expect $ ^{\circ} $ However, all three designs were accepted by the national silversmithing guild. One design won first place. Kuhl beat out seven finalists in the Sterling Silversmiths Guild of America "Sterling Today Student Design" competition. He will receive $500 at the Guild's award dinner Oct. 23 in New York, N. Y. His winning entry is an eight-inch sterling silver pitcher with an ebony handle. He also submitted a sterling sugar and cream set and candleholders. Kuhl explained the Guild members picked seven top designs in preliminary competition. Then, Guild members, all representatives of leading silver manufacturing companies, did the judging. during the program. The KU graduate student has not decided if he will sell his design to a silver manufacturing company. The pitcher's design cannot be sold until after the awards dinner. Kuhl is no newcomer to contest competition. Last fall, he was awarded $100 in the Kansas Designer Craftsmen Show. His entries earned second place prizes twice in the Cleveland, Ohio. State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd. Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan. May Show, sponsored by the Cleveland Museum of Art. In 1959, Kuhl placed third in the biennial Young Americans Show, sponsored by the American Craftsmen Council, New York, N. Y. Kuhl, a 1956 KU graduate, returned with his wife and two children to the University this year after working six years in Cleveland, Ohio, as a jewelry designer. The India Club will celebrate the 93rd anniversary of the birth of Mahatma Gandi at 7:30 p.m. today at 1231 Louisiana, the residence of Lalit Kothari. Ghandi's Birthday Will Be Observed Students from India will speak on the life history of Gandi. Anyone is invited to attend. Executive officers of the club for this semester are Mandyam Srinath, president; Zafar Israeli, vice president; Mohammed Gaffar, secretary; and Girish Kothari, treasurer. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers FREE DELIVERY Call before 4. Delivered after 5 $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 COOPER DRUG COOPER DRUG Guaranteed Accuracy! ACCUTRON BY BULOVA Guaranteed Accuracy! ACCUTRON by BULOVA THE WORLD'S ONLY ELECTRONIC WRIST TIMEPIECE * Guaranteed not to gain or lose more than one minute a month on your wrist! Symbol of accuracy through electronics ACCUTRON "205" Finest quality stainless steel case. Applied hour markers. Split second minu- ate track for the timepiece that keeps split second time. Tapered lizard strap. Also with charcoal dial. $150.00 by L THE WOR ELECTRO TIME * Guaranteed n more than on on yo Ray Christian JEWELERS BASIC COMPUTER We will adjust your Accutron Timepiece to the required tolerance, if necessary, free of charge within one year from date of purchase. Prices plus tax BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Meetings for women interested in spring rush will be held tonight in Fraser Auditorium, according to the following schedule: 7. Corbin residents; 8. GSP residents, and 9. Lewis and Hashinger residents. Registration date for rush is Oct. 16. Women Will Discuss Spring Rush Today Jewish Fraternity To Build New House "It's OK to Owe Ray" The world's deepest oil well, in Pecos County, Texas, reaches 25.240 feet below the earth's surface. Nickel alloy steel drill pipe was used to reach that depth. Alpha Epsilon Pi, a fraternity primarily for students of the Jewish faith, will open a new house in time for the fall semester next year. Construction on the $80,000 house will begin this February. Deep in Texas The new house will be located near 11th and Mississippi on a lot purchased from Herman Cohen, adviser and a member of the fraternity. Thirty men will stay in the house. Although the fraternity was established at the University of Kansas in 1949, members have not maintained a house since 1958. 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up SERVICE SALES RENTALS All Kinds Office Equipment Printing, Mimeographing and Duplicating Pick up — Delivery Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers HERE'S 80c worth of FREE COUPONS! CLIP THESE OUT AND BRING THEM TO DILLON'S "KWIK-SHOP" AT 1714 West 23rd St. COUPONS ARE VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 6, '62 LIMIT—ONE OF EACH PER CUSTOMER! THIS COUPON WORTH - On Any FROZEN FOOD ITEM 10t at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" Limit One To A Customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 6, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - On Any CANNED GOODS ITEM 10c at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" Limit One To A Customer VOID AFTER SAT, OCT. 6, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - On Any Carton of Six 10t Limit One To A Customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 6, '62 BOTTLED BEVERAGE at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" THIS COUPON WORTH On Any Item of Dillon's 10c BREAD or PASTRY at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" Limit One To A Customer VOID AFTER S., OCT. 6, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10¢ On Any 10t DAIRY ITEM at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" Limit One To A Customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 6, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - On 5 Lbs. or 10 Lbs. 10t POTATOES at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" Limit One To A Customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 6, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10t On Any Brand LB. COFFEE at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" 10c Limit One To A Customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 6, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - On Any Package or CANNED SOUP at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" Limit One To A Customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 6, '62 10c -OPEN- WEEK DAYS 7 till 11 Kwik- Try- SHOP 1714 West 23rd Tuesday, Oct. 2, 1962 University Daily Kansan Space Race Is Psychological Page 5 That butterfly - in - the - cosmic - stomach feeling which some Americans experience over Soviet space flight breakthroughs is shakily founded, says the American Economic Foundation (AEF). Bv Dale Morsch In a recent report, AEF said the idea of catching up with the Russians is largely psychological and emotional. - Scrap two out of every three of our hydro-electric plants and eliminate 95 per cent of our electric motor output. - Abandon three-fifths of our steel capacity and two-thirds of our petroleum capacity. - Bulldoze away 14 of every 15 miles of paved highway and junk 19 of every 20 cars. - Slash paychecks of all American citizens by three-fourths. - Completely ignore more than 90 per cent of our natural gas. - Transfer 60 million Americans back to the farms and tear down seven of every 10 homes. - Rip out nine of every 10 telephones and destroy 40 million television sets. - Researchers compiled figures showing what this country would have to do to "catch up" with Soviet Russia; - Destroy two-thirds of all railroad track mileage and scuttle eight of every nine ocean-going ships. Zeroing in on the comparison, AEF said we would have to eliminate all freedom, voluntary action and personal dignity on the part of citizens. Season Tickets Still Available Until Friday Season football tickets will be available at Allen Field House until 4:00 p.m. Friday, according to Monte Johnson, director of public relations for the University athletic department. Johnson said students must present their fee receipt and ID card to obtain the tickets. Starting salary offers to nontechnical college seniors averaged $24 higher this year than in 1960-61, according to a survey by the College Placement Council. Non-Technical Salaries Climb The increase boosted the monthly dollar value of beginning offers from $452 to $476. Technical graduates received the same gain in 1961-62, going from $546 to $570. The Council's report, released to some 2,000 major employers and over 1,000 college placement officers, was based on a study of 20,525 actual beginning salary offers to male, bachelor's-degree candidates. Most dramatic increases were made by public accounting firms which jumped their beginning offers $25 to $496. Following closely was the banking and finance field, going from $412 to $433. FIGURES SHOWED aircraft manufacturers lead among employers in both dollar average ($579) and volume of offers. Electronics firms rebounded from third to second place in both volume and dollar value with an average offer for the year of $576. Vying for first place for top dollar among curricula throughout the year were aeronautical engineering and electrical engineering, $584 and $583, respectively. French Ph.D. reading exam: 9:30-11:30, French books to Miss Craig, 120 Fraser by Oct. 3. By curriculum, liberal arts had the greatest increase, with a boost from $444 to $464. Accounting majors, whose average offers during the year rose from $474 to $494, were second. TODAY Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. KU Soccer Team, 4 p.m. Practice, Soc- Official Bulletin TOMORROW KU Soccer Team, 4 p.m. Practice, Soccer Field. TOMORROW ATTENTION Le Corée Français se réunira mercédiç de Fraser Hall. Tous ceux qui s'intéressent au français sont cordialement invites. CHEERLEADERS and FROSH-HAWKS and other team supporters... "Look Your Best as you SUPPORT YOUR TEAM Let us help you look your best with our cleaning services REPAIRING - REWEAVING - ALTERATIONS NewYork Cleaners VI 3-0501 VI 3-0501 NewYork Cleaners 926 Mass. Merchants of Good Appearance "Serving KU for 50 Years" S.U.A. CLASSICAL FILM SERIES 1962-1963 FORUM ROOM-7 P.M.-WEDNESDAYS Date Movie Oct. 3 . . The Story of Gosta Berling (Garbo) Oct. 17 . . . Philadelphia Story (Hepburn) Oct. 31 . . . The Wild One (Brando) Nov.14. . . Blood and Sand (Valentino) Nov.28 . . . She Done Him Wrong (Mae West) Dec. 12 . . . Three Musketeers (Douglas Fairbanks) Jan. 9 . . . The Maltese Falcon (Humphrey Bogart) Season Tickets Are NOW on Sale at the Kansas Union. Buy Yours Today! Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 2, 1962 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Cornhuskers Atop League Statistics KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) -- Nebraska's dangerous Cornhuskers, surprise winners over Michigan last week, currently lead the Big Eight conference in rushing and total of-ense. The "Huskers, with 78 points in two winning outings, have gained 535 yards rushing and 261 passing for a total of 796. COLORADO holds the No. 2 total offense post with 622, and the Buffaloes lead the league in passing with 301 yards in two games. Iowa State, last week's total offense leader, slipped to third after an open date with 582. Missouri is fourth with 522 yards. Nebraska also has been the Big Eight's stingiest team, giving up only 19 first downs and a total of 356 yards. Kansas is next with 23 first downs and 382 yards. A pair of sophomores and Iowa State's Dave Hoppmann, candidate for All America are setting the Big Eight rushing pace. Missouri halfback John Roland leads with 218 yards in 37 carries. Hoppmann, who is tied with Roland for the scoring lead at 18 points each, is second in rushing with 188 yards on 38 runs Kansas speedster Gale Sayers i. No. 3 with 187 yards on 38 runs. COLORADO quarterback Frank Cesarek is the No. 1 passer with 14 completions in 31 attempts for 188 yards. Larry Ethridge, his understudy, is second with 11 of 20 for 119 yards. Iowa State's Dick Limerick continued to lead in pass reception with six for 136 yards. Ken Blair of Colorado is second with nine catches for 104 yards. National Rankings NEW YORK — (UPI) — The first weekly 1962 United Press International Major College Football Ratings (with first-place votes and won-lost records in parentheses). Team Points 1. Ohio State (20) (1-0) 318 2. Alabama (12) (2-0) 287 3. Texas (1) (2-0) 235 4. Penn State (2-0) 202 5. Georgia Tech (1) (2-0) 133 6. Southern California (2-0) 104 7. Mississippi (2-0) 87 8. Washington (1-0-1) 74 9. Army (2-0) 61 10. Miami, Fla. (2-0) 58 Second 10 — 11. Arkansas 55; 12. Iowa 52; 13. Notre Dame 36; 14. Purdue 33; 15. Louisiana State 26; 16. NEBRASKA 23; 17. (Tie) Wisconsin and Northwestern, 21 each; 19. Georgia (1) 15; 20. (Tie) MISSOURI and Minnesota, 14 each. LOS ANGELES — (UPI)—Husky Jack Sanford carries a heavy cold and a five-year-old dream to the mound at Dodger Stadium today in hopes of clinching the National League pennant for the San Francisco Giants. Sanford's Dream Near "It's hard to believe we're so close," said the fire-balling New Englander with the calm blue eyes and the bright red nose. "I've dreamed of this ever since I had a smell in 1957." THEN HE WAS with the Phillies, a rookie who led their surprise charge into first place in July only to have the team fall back into second division miseries by October. "We thought we might make it that year," explained the brown-haired 33-year-old who won 19 games and rookie pitcher of the year honors in 1957. "But we were too young, I guess, and the pressure might have gotten to us." It's different this time. FOR THE 190-pound six footer caught fire this season, after three mediocre years in Giant livery, and goes against the bruised and reeling Dodgers today with a record of 24 victories against only seven defeats. "It's kind of hard to explain what happened to me this season," said Sanford, who in compiling his brilliant mark also ran off 16 victories in a row. "I guess in the final analysis it's merely a matter of better control." Yet he also feels that he is "more of a pitcher and less of a thrower." "They used to sit back and wait for my fast ball," he added. "Now I can move the ball around on them. The fast ball still is my best pitch but I've got control over my slider and curve ball to go with it. They always told me I had enough stuff to be a 2-game winner but I never did until I got the control." A NATIVE of Welleslev, Mass., Sanford was a high school pitcher when he drew the attention of scouts. VARSITY NOW SHOWING! Ends Tonight Herk Harvey's "CARNIVAL OF SOULS" Actually Filmed in Lawrence Adults 90c, Kids 50c SUNSET MOW SHOWINGI Ends Tonight Marlon Brando Karl Malden in “ONE EYED JACKS” GRANADA NOW SHOWING! 7:00 & 9:10 See The Wildest Party Ever Filmed— “THE INTERNS” The Smash Best Seller Comes To Life! COMING NEXT THE BATTLE OF THERMOPYLAE... A HANDFUL OF MEN FORMING AN INCREDIBLE "FLYING WEDGE"! 20 COMING NEXT TO FILM THE 300 SPARTANS STARRING RICHARD SIR RALPH DIANE EGAN • RICHARDSON • BAKER BARNY DAVID DONALD COE • FARRAR HOUSTON and introducing ANNA RUDOLPH MATÉ and SYNODINOU • GEORGE ST. GEORGE produced by RUDOLPH MATÉ • GEORGE ST. GEORGE CINEMASCOPE COLOR BY DE LUXE WED. THRU SAT. 20 CAMPAIGN BOW FESTIVAL THE 300 SPARTANS COMING NEXT THE BATTLE OF THERMOPYLAE... A HANDFUL OF MEN FORMING AN INCREDIBLE "FLYING WEDGE"! 20th CENTURY FOX ADVANCE THE 300 SPARTANS STARRING RICHARD SIR DALPH DIAM EGAN • RICHARDSON • BAKER EARLY COE • FARRAR ALSO STARRING HOUSTON WITH PRODUCTIONS BY ANNA RUDOLPH MATE AND SYNODINOU GEORGE ST. GEORGE DIRECTED BY RUDOLPH MATE • GEORGE ST. GEORGE CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUXE GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788 WED. THRU SAT. Paramount presents DANNY KAYE DANA WYNTER ON THE DOUBLE Chase away your troubles with MR. FUN ON THE RUN! — AND — WRITTEN BY THE MASTER SUSPENSE AUTHOR OF 'PSYCHO'! THE COUCH WATCH OUT FOR THE MAN WITH THE ICEPICK! Come Out Early Enjoy The Privacy of Your Own Car SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE ... West on Highway 40 GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5780 Paramount presents DANNY KAYE DANA WYNTER ON THE DOUBLE Chase away your troubles with MR. FUN ON THE RUN! Paramount presents DANNY KAYE DANA WYNTER ON THE DOUBLE Chase away your troubles with MR. FUN ON THE RUN! — AND — WRITTEN BY THE MASTER SUSPENSE AUTHOR OF 'PSYCHO'! THE COUCH WATCH OUT FOR THE MAN WITH THE ICEPICK! Come Out Early Enjoy The Privacy of Your Own Car SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE ... West on Highway 4 WRITTEN BY THE MASTER SUSPENSE AUTHOR OF 'PSYCHO'I THE COUCH WATCH OUT FOR THE MAN WITH THE ICEPICK! Come Out Early Enjoy The Privacy of Your Own Car SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE...West on Highway 40 SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE --- West on Highway 40 "But both the Braves and the Red Sox turned me down because they thought I was too small," he sniffled over a grin. "I had a tryout with the Braves and a Phillies' scout who happened to be there asked me where I lived. He said I'd hear from him later. Well, a couple of months later the Phillies sent me a contract and I signed with them." the international League, and Syrracuse, plus a year in military service before he arrived with the Phillies in 1957. Sanford served the usual minor league servitude, seven years at Bradford, Fa.; Dover, Del.; Americus, Ga.; Wilmington, Del.; Schenectady, Baltimore when it was in THAT SEASON, in addition to winning 19 games against eight defeats. Sanford also led the National League in wild pitches. "Control," he remembers, "I guess I didn't have too much of it then." At the end of 1958 he was traded to the Giants in a deal which sent pitcher Ruben Gomez and catcher Valmey Thomas to the Phillies. we all make mistakes... we are made in Israel Now personal letters can be typed on EATON'S ERASABLE CORRASABLE new social edition for modern letter writers Once Paris took Helen, there was no way out. Today it's easy to correct your errors—at the typewriter, anyway—when you use Eaton's erasable Corrissauce Bond. It erases with just a flick of an ordinary pencil eraser! That's why it is such a boon to busy college people. Since etiquette authorities agree that it's correct to type personal letters, Eaton now makes Corrāsable available in a new, handsome (laid patterned) social edition. In carefully edited colors: White, Grey, Blue; in letter sizes correct for men and women. Only Eaton makes erasable Corrāsable. 7 THE FOLKS' BOOK A BIBLE FOR THE NEW YEAR NEW YORK BIBLE GROUP A Berkshire Typewriter Paper. EATON PAPER CORPORATION E BATON LUCKY MADE IN FRANCE STARTS TOMORROW! STARTS TOMORROW EVERYONE IS FLIPPING THE MAGIC WORD FOR FUN!!! ZOTZ! starring TOM POSTON an absent-minded professor! JULIA MEADE • JIM BACKUS • FRED CLARK • CECIL KELLAWAY Screenplay by RAY RUSSELL • Based on the novel by WALTER MARIS • Produced and directed by WILLIAM CASTLE A WILLIAM CASTLE PRODUCTION • A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE — AND — ASTRO•NUTS vs MARTIANS! Their Newest and Nuttiest! THE THREE STOOGES IN ORBIT CAROL CHRISTENSEN • STROLL EDSON A NORMANDY PRODUCTION • A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE EARTH EVERYONE IS FLIPPING THE MAGIC WORD FOR FUN!!! ZOTZ! TOM POSTON as an absent-minded professor JULIA MEADE • JIM BACKUS • FRED CLARK • CECIL KELLAWAY Screenplay by PAH RUSSELL • Based on the novel by WALTER KARO • Produced and Directed by WILLIAM CASTLE A WILLIAM CASTLE PRODUCTION • A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE ASTRO·NUTS vs MARTIANS! Their Newest and Nuttiest! THE THREE STOOGES IN ORBIT CAROL CHRISTENSEN • STROLL A NORMANDY PRODUCTION • A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE EARTH Loads of Laughs and Free Zotz Coins to the First 100 VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-1065 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 2, 1962 Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terns cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day of publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. WANTED Wanted: A male student to share apart- ment with a lock from the 16- Phone VI 3-2855. Wanted to buy--A used baby bed, which fits infant to 3-year-old. Phone 8519 8519 10-5 BABYSITTING, nice house, large yard. BABYSITTING, if desired. $8 per week. CALL VI 3-7828. BUSINESS SERVICES Wanted: To do ironing in my home. Phone VI 3-2615. 10.9 DRESS MAKING AND alterations. For- more information, see Ola Smith 9391; Mass. Call: VI 3-5263. BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard, BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard, $8 per week. Phone VI-37-8288. $8 per week. Phone VI-37-8288. Tutor for Math courses numbered A.B.2. Responsive relational database Phone Neil Wood, VI 3-6866. LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tf LOST Pi Phi sorority pin — arrow shaped. Lost on the walk between the Pi Phi house and Bailey at 8:30 a.m. — a friend offered. Phone Mary Clark, VI 3-10-391. FOR SALE Bicycle — Girl's, 26", Western Flyer. Call I-2-1888. 10-4 1961 Volkswagen. 2-door sedan. Call 1961 3-4016 after 5:30 p.m. for inquiry. 1961 3-4016 after 5:30 p.m. for inquiry. 1660 Volkswagen with sun roof and in- side rearview mirror. the day or VI 3-8313 after 5:00 p.m. 10-8 1950 Ford, V-8. stick. Only $120. Contact Tennessee new transmission and clutch. 10-8 UNICYCLES provide prestige & campus transportation. See September 14, 2015 issue of bicycle parts. Send $1.00 for illustrated plans to Unicycle, Box 252, Worthington, Ohio. 1954 Buick with automatic transmission, power steering and brakes, 59,000 miles, 219 Park Ave. or phone Weeer Hudton at VI 3-4964 or VI 3-4220. $495. Have some personal photographic equipment. 1. iPhone 2. iPad 2. i24x24⁴. Auto Reflex. 35 mm slide projector, professional semi automatic. 2. Phone Extension 367. March 10. 10-2 Beautiful Stromberg-Carlson console Hi-Fi with FM-AM radio. 2 inch, 14-inch contemporary cabinet. New warranty, just $95 at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. For lowest prices on new and used speed diesels, visit www.chevrolet.com. Miss. after 5 p.m.; VI 2-0085. 10-3 TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental. electronics, Royal, Olympia, Sky Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond Mass, Phone VI 3-3644. Typewriter, 79. Tire! Tires! 1000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes—most foreign sizes—extra low prices on Snow Tires until Oct. 1st! 600-150 new style tires; 625-150, 650-150, 2 for $28; 750-14, 2 for $29 plus tax Free installation at rear, Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Massachusetts, VI 3-4170. 10-11 GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Study Notes Completely revised and extremely com- prehensive. $4. Phone VI 3-8246 for free delivery Need transportation? 1 owner car, runs nightly, daytime, VI 3-1530- Nights, VI 3-6975. HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in town. West-Pet phone VI3-2836 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. weekdays. Classified Display Rates One time ----$1.25/inch Monthly Rate Every day ---- $1.00/inch No art work or engraving allowed Call KU-376 or bring your ads to 111 Flint Hall Complete novice station station. Halli- crafters SX-99, Heath DX-20, Tr-switch, antenna 24-hour clock, and etc. will cell individually. Larry 10-2 616 JRP. Printed Biology Study Notes; 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tf TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: White, green or blue bond. $1.25 ream. Pink newsprint, only 85c ream. Scratch pads galore, all sizes, 35c lb. The Lawrence Outlook, 1005 Massachusetts. VI 3-3666. open all day Saturday. tff GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized birds, monsters, chameleons, turtles, and penguins; plus complete lists pet supplies. tf MEN: You can average $2.65 an hour doing part time work while in school. Apply at 1245 W. Campus, Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m. 10-2 HELP WANTED Delivery boy 2 nights a week. Walters- part time. Also wanted, female cashier for delivery person at the Campus Hidesay or call VI 3-9111. Ask for Gene Durham. 10-3 New 2 bedroom furnished duplex at 1816 house at 528 Indiana, $85 a month, 3 room furnished apartment at 121 W. 14th. Phone VI 3-3902 for 10-8 Hemphill. FOR RENT 3-bedroom house for rent at 827 Ken- ney. Phone 3-5182 or 3-6193 10:45 5 p.m. For rent or sale, a 35 ft. x 8 ft. mobile phone, completely furnished. Phone 10-4- 9199 Spacious newly decorated 1-bedroom apartment with stove and a refrigerator. Located in a quiet, conditioning. Close to town and KU. A garage is available. 800 Indiana. 10-5 10-12 For Rent: A large room furnished for either single or double. Only three blocks from Massachusetts and only four blocks from Massachusetts and 11th Street. PHONE VI 3-1909. 10-4 Comfortable, two-room suite; bedroom comfortable, two-room suite; or call Wm. O. Scott, VI 3-4752 10-2 Rent furnished — new 1 and 2 bedroom T. A. Phenom, Phone II 3-3902, 10-4 One large room available for three boys. See at 1005 Indiana. 10-2 1. room apartment, private bath. 1 block apartment. Called. Paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. .tf call. Called. Called. Called. Called. Called. Called. ROOMS FOR MEN: Doubles only, private entrance, private b a t h, telephone and utilities paid. One block from Union. Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tf Jack Nichols, KU student, 2417 Ohio, is looking for 1 or 2 roommates to share furnished apartment. Stove, refrigerator, private bath, linens furnished. 10-2 Woman graduate student wanted to share lovely, large 2 room apartment. Private bath, entrance, parking, furnished. See at 1215 Oread, Apt. No. 1, after 5 p.m. Wanted: Male student to share apartment. Phone VI 3-2346. 10-3 Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. $ _{13} $ block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice and clean, see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. Knitting class starts October 16. Meeting Fee of $5. Phone VI T3-5219. 10-4 MISCELLANEOUS TYPING Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work, Reasonable rates Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1748. HOMES Want to Rent A House? Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. ff Typing done in my home. 3 years ex- cellence. Job is work guard. guar- ment. Phone VI 3-5630. Read the Classified Ads YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 Typing reasonable rates, neat and acce- tuality. M.S. Bodin, 825 Greener Terr. Typing - 6 years experience, theses, term papers, documents, manuscripts. All work and correctly completed on a Macintosh Electric typewriter. Call VI 2-1457 anytime. 10-3 24 Hour Service Radio Controlled Experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Ms. Bartow. 408 W. 1st. VI 2-1648. Efficient typist. Would like typing in her notes, letters, books. Call me at jm17-9 52613. Owner Ward Thompson Experienced typist wants typing—thesis —term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Phone VI 3-7211 after 5:30 p.m. tf TRANSPORTATION Want to join car pool. K.C., K. 6:30 a.m. return K.C., K. 11:30 am. Monday thru Saturday. Ave. 48, Avenida Ave. cinity. G. L. Zalewski, School of Business or phone MA(1)-2645. 10-5 Only $1 FAST FINISHED Laundry Service RISK'S 613 Vermont KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE a must in every wardrobe— The Village dresses $18 to $30 shirts $5.95 The Alley Shop at diebolt's Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 2, 1962 Pearson Hall Joins UP- (Continued from page 1) Wohlford added. "But I think if the scholarship halls would ban together they could be a real force." DOUTHART'S DISAFFILIATION with Vox means that Vox will probably not be represented by bloc membership in the women's small dormitory section. The other houses — Watkins, Miller, and Sellards Halls — were affiliated with UP last year. Watkins and Sellards have not decided on either party yet, but house members indicated both would probably go UP. "The change from Vox to UP is significant," said Tom Hardy, Hoisington senior and last year's independent co-chairman of UP. "LAST YEAR, the Vox candidate in the small men's dormitory district won by only a few votes," he explained. "Now the switch of Pearson to UP will mean less competition for UP in the general elections." Last year, in the small men's dormitory district, the houses were divided evenly. Vox houses were Foster, Battenfeld, and Pearson. UP houses included Grace Pearson, Lolliffe, and Stephenson. Weather Break Favors 'Man-In-Space' Attempt CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) — A break in threatening weather today gave man-in-space officials what they called a "good chance" of sending Astronaut Walter M. Schirra Jr., off into space tomorrow as planned. The word on the more favorable forecasts came shortly after technicians loaded Schirra's silvery Atlas rocket with 63,000 pounds of rocket fuel. PROJECT MERCURY officials said that tropical storm Daisy, which had posed a major menace only yesterday, took an abrupt turn which apparently cleared nearly all of the planned emergency landing areas in the Atlantic Ocean. "You can call this a break for us." one elated official said. "Things look good for a launch tomorrow morning." Space agency officials said the fueling of the Atlas booster rocket —one of the last key steps before beginning the eight-hour countdown—went off without a hitch. ASTRONAUT Schirra himself ran through a late-hour engineering review with scientists at Cape Canaveral as man, machine and weather reported ready for a planned launching tomorrow between 6 and 8 a.m. Lawrence time Mercury chiefs said the only possible threat that storm Daisy now posed was to the emergency landing area at the end of orbit No. 2 — roughly 375 miles south-southeast of Bermuda. The weather forecast for that point tomorrow was called "marginal." Some cloudiness was expected over Cape Canavalal during the two-hour launching "window" but "it is not expected to be prohibitive," one official said. Elsewhere, Atlantic and Pacific ocean weather was reported good. U.S. Requests Russian Spies Leave Country NEW YORK — (UPI) — The two Russian United Nations diplomats who were nabbed by the FBI in an espionage case involving a U.S. sailor left for home last night. Their removal from this country had been requested by the State Department. One of them, in a parting shot, commented sarcastically on U.S. legal procedure just before boarding the Moscow-bound plane at Idlewild international airport. "I am rather happy to leave this country where there is no law," said Evgeni N. Prokhorov. His companion, Ivan Y. Vyrodov, maintained a glum silence. About the same time the two Soviet diplomats were making their departure, Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn., was urging the State Department to seek a United Nations vote of censure against Russia for espionage activities by members of its U.N. delegation. The diplomats were taken into custody by the FBI last Friday and charged with procuring secret information from Navy Yoeman First Class Nelson Cornelius Drummond. Drummond now is being held in $100,000 bail on an espionage charge. Pie-in-Sky Seen In USSR Future By Phil Newsom UPI Journal New York For years the people of the Soviet Union have been torn between the pie-in-the-sky promises of Soviet leaders and the hard realities of life short on everything but Sputniks. Auto Wrecking and Junk Another of those hard realities hit them recently with the announcement that promised income tax cuts had been postponed "until further notice." THESE CUTS, first announced in May, 1960, were to have been carried out over a five-year period until all personal income tax was to have been abolished. In July, 1961, the Communist party newspaper Pravda published a new program. It promised: "In the current decade (1961-70) the Soviet Union will surpass the strongest and richest capitalist country, the United States, in production per head of population; the people's standard of living and their cultural and technical standards will improve substantially; everyone will live in easy circumstances; all collective and state farms will become highly productive and profitable enterprises; the demand of Soviet people for well-appointed housing will, in the main, be satisfied; hard physical work will disappear; the USSR will become the country with the shortest work day." East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 New and Used Parts and Tires STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 KU SPORTS on DIAL KLWN 1320 7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts 5:15 Today Sports Outdoors 5:35 Tom Hedrick Sports When a cigarette means a lot... get Lots More from L&M Cigarette more body in the blend more flavor in the smoke more taste through the filter THE MIRACLE TIP L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. M TERS MYERS TOBACCO CO. It's the rich-flavor leaf that does it! Among L&M's choice tobaccos there's more of this longer-aged, extra-cured leaf than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. And with L&M's modern filter—the Miracle Tip—only pure white touches your lips. Get lots more from L&M — the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke. Daily hansan 60th Year, No.14 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1962 Schirra Bucking for Six Orbits Schirra's Flight In Brief SPACE AT A GLANCE By United Press International THE MAN THE MISSION Walter M. Schirra Jr., 39-year-old Navy commander, roared into space today from Cape Canaveral in a Mercury capsule boosted by an Atlas rocket. America's fifth space man, and third to fly an orbital mission, went into orbit at 6:21 a.m. CST, reported his two-ton Sigma 7 spacecraft was "flying beautifully." Six orbits planned, three more than the previous flights by U.S. Astronauts John Glenn and Scott Carpenter but far short of the 64 orbits by Soviet Cosmonaut Andrian Nikolavev. HEIGHT - SPEED Schirra became the highest-flying American to date when his capsule reached a maximum distance of 176 miles from earth on its first orbit. Traveling 17,560 miles an hour, he was circling the earth every 89 minutes. LANDING Schirra's landing zone will be in the Pacific about 3:26 p.m. CST. AUDIENCE The nation's newest spaceman lifted off at 6:15 a.m. CST in a blaze of publicity — live television coverage across America, followed by taped transmissions to Europe via Telstar minutes later. REPORT FROM SPACE "I feel real good. I have beads of perspiration on my lips but that's about all." SOVIET REACTION Tass, the official Soviet news agency, reported Schirra faced dangers ranging from "foundering for hours in the ocean" to possible radiation from atomic tests. Tass announced the space flight shortly after it started, something the Russians hadn't done for previous U.S. efforts. BULLETIN With nearly two-thirds of his 96-orbit flight completed, the Astronaut reported that he had 90 per cent of his fuel left. Soaring over the U.S. West Coast, he reported a haze over the continent and said he was "drifting and dreaming." * * By Stan Hall CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) — Shouting "Hallelujah," Astronaut Walter M. Schirra Jr. flashed around the earth on America's longest space flight today. Once he reported everything was going so well that a chimp could fly his spacecraft. At 10:47, the 39-year-old Navy commander shot into his fourth orbit, surpassing the three-orbit feats of previous U.S. Astronauts. The happy and confident spaceman headed toward a Pacific landing after a hoped-for six circles of the globe. GIVEN THE go-ahead for six orbits just after he started the fourth, the jubilant Astronaut responded with a shout of "Hallelujah." Ground observers reported at this point that the Schirra flight appeared to be the finest orbital performance in the history of the U.S. man-in-space program even better than the smooth flight of John H. Glenn. But the New Jersey-born Astronaut was a busy man. He carried out experiments to build up knowledge for 24-hour orbital flights next year, two-man orbital trips and journeys to the moon sometime between 1967 and 1970. PEERING FROM THE window of his capsule, he saw the city lights of Perth, Australia, the moon hanging to his left, and a "block of light" thrown up by a high-intensity flare fired from Woomera, Australia. During the third orbit, a tracking ship in the Indian Ocean reported that his spaceship was visible in the rays of the sun, a rare occurrence. The vessel said the craft was "almost as bright as the planet Venus." Schirra was hurled aloft from Cape Canaveral at 6:15 am. atop a 10-story high Atlas rocket. It was the smoothest launch in U.S. space history and came just one day shy of the fifth anniversary of the Space Age. Russia launched its Sputnik I on Oct. 4, 1957. THE TELSTAR Communications Satellite relayed pictures of Schirra's preparations and the near-perfect launch of his rocket and space capsule for distribution in 17 Western and nine Eastern European nations. Six minutes after launch, Schirra shot into an orbit that carried him to a maximum height of 176 miles. Racial Tension Clouds 'Ole Miss' Homecoming OXFORD, Miss. — (UPI) — University of Mississippi officials debated today whether to call off Saturday's homecoming football game as a threat to the shaky peace on the riot-shattered campus. A university official said homecoming plans still are in force but a Justice Department official said a firm decision whether to go ahead will not be made until tomorrow morning. EDWIN GUTHMAN, a Justice Department official, said 14 men were taken into custody last night after the disturbance. He said two of them were students and the others outsiders. A group of students threw rocks and bottles and exploded firecrackers near the dormitory housing James Meredith, (the university's first Negro student) early today but were quickly dispersed by soldiers. An army spokesman said the "small demonstration" occurred about 1 a.m. EDT several hours before Meredith was to begin his third day of classes at the strife-torn university. There were no arrests, the army official said, and relatively few youths were involved. NO DAMAGE OR injuries were reported. The students also tossed exploding firecrackers into the air before soldiers, stationed on the campus to prevent further rioting, broke up the gathering. The incident broke only briefly the uneasy calm which has settled over the "Ole Miss" campus and the small town of Oxford since federal troops moved in to quell rioting and restore order early Monday. ARMED SENTRIES remained on campus and in downtown Oxford to back the administration in its determination that Mississippi would comply with the court-ordered integration. The army moved 3,600 paratroopers out of Oxford last night in what was described as a "regrouping of forces." The maneuver left about 11,000 soldiers in the area to watch the tense situation surrounding Meredith's enrollment. Meredith, a 29-year-old Air Force veteran, was hanged in effigy last night from the third floor window of a dormitory next to his. "We'll be glad when you're gone," read a cardboard placard hanging from the straw dummy's neck. and a low point of 100 miles. Shortly afterward, the Astronaut messaged back: "She's flying beautifully." The previous U.S. height record was held by Astronaut M. Scott Carpenter who reached a distance of 167 miles. The world's record is held by Soviet Cosmonaut Yuri A. Gagarian, the first man to orbit the earth. He reached a peak of 187.75 miles. Whirling around the globe once every hour and a half at 17,560 miles an hour, Schirra reported seeing (Continued on page 12) Mrs. Schirra Keeps Vigil Her mother, Mrs. James L. Holloway of Philadelphia, also was with her. In this Gulf Coast village near Houston, where wives wait for fishermen husbands to come home from the sea, all was quiet in the hand-some brick home of the Schirra family. SEABROOK, Tex. — (UPI) — Mrs. Josephine Schirra, elated and proud of her husband's "beautiful liftoff" into space, kept vigil in her home today with her children and the wife of Astronaut Virgil I. Grissom for company. Once during the morning, son Walter, 12, who is called "Marty," came out of the house and played peek-a-boo with photographers. He scooted back inside with a grin on his face when a passing school girl teased him and called him a "big ham." MRS. GRISSOM, a next-door neighbor, took her two children to school and then went to the Schirra house where the family was gathered in the den, hearing reports on the flight. Once during the wait, daughter Suzanne, 5, put on a ballet costume and high-heeled shoes and did a little dance for Roy Wallack, a public relations official of the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston, who was staving with the family. He relayed comments of the family to newsmen waiting outside the house. "It was a beautiful liftoff. We are very happy it came off so well," Mrs. Schirra said. Political Issues Absent On Campus If political action in September is any indication, KU is becoming a school without an issue. Several campus organizations that aroused controversy last year, so far have remained on the sidelines. Vox Populi and the University Party have been back-biting over a decentralization of polls proposal necessitated by the University's traffic plan. In the past, both political parties organized motor pools to bring students to the polls at Strong Hall. Since student cars are no longer allowed on campus during school hours, motor pools cannot be used. Each party is now trying to establish polls that are most accessible to their members. Weather Sunshine and warmer temperatures seemed to be on the way for Kansas today as drier air moved in from the north. Cloudiness and resulting drizzle appeared but forecasts called for sunny skies and rising temperatures and more settled weather over the next 48 hours. Highs today will range in the upper 60s east and 70-75 west. Overnight lows will be from 50 to 55. KU-Y Asks $6,000 Support For Programs The KU-Y, the University of Kansas' oldest and largest student organization, is looking to friends and alumni for $6,000 to continue its program. "We feel confident that if we let people know what our need is, we can raise the money," Thomas Moore, executive secretary of KU-Y, said. A PRIVATE. atonomous organization, the KU-Y this year lost 40 per cent of its income when its annual University subsidy was terminated in February. This termination came after Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe questioned whether state funds legally could go to the KU-Y, a primarily religious but nondenominational organization. It was the opinion of Atty. Gen. William Ferguson not to allocate the KU-Y funds after the school year of 1961-62. Moore said the decision to stop the subsidy was not surprising in view of the issue on separation of the church and state. He said the subsidy was renewable each year with no procedure for a stopping date. "So there was no betrayal of promises," Mr. Moore said. The KU-Y is a program of the YWCA and the YMCA,merged in 1956 when the University granted aid. MOORE SAID HE FELT the funds could be raised if the KU-Y could put out the effort needed to contact its alumni. He said the KU-Y has received about $1,000 in donations in recent years, but there would have to be an increase to include the amount of the subsidy, $5,665. This means the KU-Y will have to raise about $6,500 from KU-Y alumni. board members and friends. (Continued on page 12) - ACTION, A THIRD political group, which last semester raised controversy in its bid for deletion of fraternity discrimination clauses apparently is now trying to shed its "radical" image. Action officials will discuss tomorrow night whether the group will continue in its attempt to establish itself as a political party, or to act as a sounding board for liberal opinion. In other areas, at least three other campus organizations have indicated they will continue last year's policies despite accusations of extremism. THE CIVIL RIGHTS COUNCIL, Young Americans for Freedom and the Student Peace Union are meeting at the Kansas Union tonight to formulate their policies for the semester. "We've made some gains, but no giant step has been taken as far as integration is concerned here," Don Warner, Topeka senior and CRC co-chairman, said. Warner said last spring's housing ruling which provides that the university list only apartments accepting persons of all races was the major accomplishment in civil rights at KU last year. He added that two fraternities had made attempts to remove discriminatory clauses from their constitutions at national conventions this summer. Neither of the unidentified Greek houses announced the outcome of the action. WARNER LISTED barber shops and women's dormitories as likely issues on the CRC's investigation list. "Although a survey last year found barbers much more willing to cut Negroes' hair, there's still a problem," he noted. Warner said integration in women's dormitories could be accelerated. "The policy in women's dorms is that white and Negro women are not placed together unless they specifically request it," Warner said. "In the men's dormitories and the scholarship halls such a policy is not enforced since they haven't had any problems." Warner pointed out that some Negroes prefer to join a Negro fraternity, but they would like to know that they have the right to join a white fraternity and be judged on their own merits. The CRC official said he has considered the value of a white man pledging a Negro fraternity. (Continued on page 12) Wescoe to Advisory Post TOPEKA — (UPI) — Gov. John Anderson today announced the appointments of Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe, Chancellor of the University of Kansas, and Dr. A. L. Olsen, director of the Winter Veterans Administration Hospital, to the advisory commission on Institutional Management. They will serve four-year terms on the advisory group. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 3. 1962 LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Students Losing Out There are choice seats left for the University Theatre's production of "J. B." this week, but they're not for students. Unless they pay money in addition to their identification card, students are now segregated in their very own section—the balcony. Last year all theatre seats were distributed on a first-come, first-served basis. This year's policy change was unannounced. MEMORIAL STADIUM soon will be enlarged by 6,500 choice seats, but students won't be sitting in these seats either. Two isolated incidents, perhaps, but they make you wonder: Are KU students becoming second-class citizens at their own university? Who decided, and for what reasons, that students should be automatically relegated to the poorest seats in the University Theatre? Why does the University use the exploding student population as a device for drumming up support for the expansion of the alumni section of the stadium? Who will benefit from these two University decisions? THE ANSWER IS obvious: the alumni and townspeople. The implications are frightening. The University, in its concern for its public relations, seems to be forgetting its students. This is not to cast the alumni as the "bad guys," of course. KU could not function and could not have reached its present stature without its alumni. Alumni contributions provide scholarships, help build classrooms, and furnish many other benefits seldom fully appreciated by students. Alumni funds, in fact, will cover one-third of the cost of the stadium expansion. The point is that the University, in its desire to retain alumni and public good will, seems to be losing its perspective and forgetting its primary reason for being—the student. INCLUDED IN EACH STUDENT'S semester fees is a $34 campus privilege fee. This fee is obligatory; except in the rarest of cases there is no way around it. The campus privilege fee entitles the student to hospital services, cultural and athletic activities, and other benefits. Since the University obliges each student to pay the fee, it would seem that the University, in turn, is itself obliged to inform the students about new policies which affect the "purchasing power" of the fee. This was not done in the case of the University Theatre. And because the expanding student population is an acute problem, it would seem that the University should consider student seating space in Memorial Stadium as part of this problem. AT THE OPENING CONVOCATION two weeks ago, KU students were called a "driving force." It is a high tribute, but one which may seem a bit paradoxical to students watching "J. B." from the distance of their balcony seats. Right now, it's a little hard to determine if KU students are driving—or being driven. —Dennis Farney Editor: Against Recognition I was disgusted with your obvious lack of insight and information in Thursday's editorial "Communist China." Would you please elaborate as to how such recognition would benefit the United States? Establishment of the diplomatic apparatus might make relations more convenient but it certainly would not be practical and advantageous for us. Recognition would of course open Red China as a vast market for U.S. products, but we have made the sacrifice so far and we certainly can afford to continue refusing Red China the benefits of our trade. SURELY THE FATE of the U.S. and that of the free world does not hinge upon our recognition of Red China, for such a faux pas would indeed aid the Communist world cause and would open the gates to years of fruitless negotiations, broken agreements and contracts, shattered at the whim of the Communists. Morally or legally Red China is not entitled to our recognition and its attendant dignity. Refusal to recognize is not equivalent to ignoring Red China or denying her existence as a world power, it is simply withholding the benefits she would receive if we were to accept her as a legal power. Lacking diplomatic relations certainly hurts Red China more than it does us, and her power is held in check because she cannot make demands at the conference table, and cannot force compromises and agreements compliant with her wishes. Daily hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became bweekly 1094, triviewday 1088, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, New York 21 N.Y. N.Y. news service; United States International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University except Saturday and Sunday and theamination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Scott Payne Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Clayton Keller and Will Sheldon Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinez Business Manager Daniel Sinclair Sales Manager Farmer, Circulation Manager; Gene Spalding, National Advertising Man- ager; John Turner Classified Adve- tion Manager; Jack Cannon, Promo- tion Manager. USINESS DEPARTMENT ...Letters ... IF ADMITTED TO the United Nations, Red China would provide another voice to veto all policy not conducive to communist goals. "We have made our point clear to the world," so why should we take the opposite stand now? Is the United States so humble recently that we must take up relations with murderers and criminal governments? No! We can and we should continue to treat such forces as evil and as enemies dedicated to the termination of our way of life. The more opportunity we give these enemies toward their goals, the sooner we fall at their hands. Recognition of Red China would certainly be a step in their direction, and would indirectly pave the road to our "eventual" and "inevitable" downfall. Terry M. Wood Junction City junior Cuba is a hot issue. Everyone is talking about it. Bull sessions with their heated passion and frightful ignorance cover the campus. But KU is not the only place guilty of sophisticated stupidity—one might look at Washington or Ole Miss or Wichita. Last week in Wichita our honorable Senator Carlson made a proposal regarding Cuba. He said the Organization of American States should reaffirm the Monroe Doctrine and the U.S.A. itself should endorse a Formosan-type "Cuban government in exile." Against Blind Orthodoxy Editor; Carlson added courageously, "Then we must help this government supply itself with overwhelming force — not merely three old boats — but hundreds of the latest vessels, fighters and bombers." His noble motive for such a stand must rise directly from our own Declaration of Independence; "... That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government..." HE DOESN'T SAY IT, but I would assume that Mr. Carlson would want this new government nurtured in the "Free, democratic, good ol' American way of life." that is with color television sets and cocktail parties, with exploitive businessmen and greedy labor unions, with outer space technology and racial discrimination. And logically following, I would assume conversely that Mr. Carlson would not want America to foster this government in any unamerican, communistic fashion. Forbid it! He would not want the Cuban liberation movement trained in innermereful, subversive, guerrilla-type warfare (for that would tend toward Mao-tse Tung, the Viet Cong, and Castro himself). He would not want their new economy structured by disciplined, mutually co-operative businessmen and laborers (for that would tend toward socialism, communism, and Castroism itself). Carlson's proposal and the logical assumptions drawn therefrom have one very familiar and abominable weakness — their blind orthodoxy. Surely in America where personal ingenuity is not thwarted (in principle, at least: maybe this is our first delusion) — surely in American universities where great minds have academic freedom, here for sure, traditional orthodoxy can be examined to its roots and radical reappraisals can be made. WHY NOT? Should not only the ROTC and the aerospace engineers be interested in war, but also the political scientists, the historians, the economists, the philosophers, and the so-called "Christians" on this campus? Mulford Sibley of the University of Minnesota is interested in War. He has challenged the very root of our military policy, the idea of Deterrence, and has written a booklet, "Unilateral Initiatives and Disarmament." Here is an excerpt dealing with Cuba: "During the First Phase the government (U.S.A.) might well express regret for the invasion of Cuba and publicly recognize that this had been a grave violation of the rule of law in international affairs. The government could furthermore offer to pay damages to Cuba. Nothing could do more to demonstrate genuine devotion to the rule of law" (p. 29). Our conclusions may or may not correspond to his, but an honest willingness to break loose from our dulled sensitivity, our blind orthodoxy, and our mental delusions formed by Madison Avenue and Hollywood could bring about some real answers. Philip S. Rhoads Overland Park sophomore MISS FITT A TEST? SO WHAT! WITH SO ME HELP FUL HINTS UNDER MY STOCKING --A MEMO IN MY SHOE A FEW QUICK NOTES ON A HANK---- w-44 MY COLORED GLASSES AND I'M READY! AS THE PROF SAID ~ HOW DO YOU EXPECT TO PASS A TEST UNLESS YOU PREPARE FOR IT! Thanks to the munificence of wealthy alumni, some reserves in the athletic fund, and an advance from the endowment association, the University of Kansas is to have another 6,500 seats in its stadium and a press box containing all the comforts necessary to insure the most favorable publicity. The cost will run close to a million. Such a sum would endow at least three new professorships. But at the same time the additional 6,500 seats will contribute even less to higher education than would a 50-foot statue of the late Marilyn Monroe, gleaming in the sun on some conspicuous site atop Mt. Oread. And before the varnish has worn off them, they will have become a white elephant of amazing size. THE ENLARGED STADIUM will be most valuable to the University as a status symbol. Because it will be bigger than the stands of most other members of the Conference, it will furnish tangible proof of how much more advanced KU is. Further, it will prove that in football there is a booming business, even if the chess team and the anthropology department are operating in the red. Prior to that time, the 6.500 new stadium seats will be occupied six hours a year during seasons when KU happens to have a team which wins more of its games than not. Afterward the occupancy will be nil. Who in the Kansas City area will want to buck the crowds down to Lawrence and back on weekends when the Green Bay Packers are in town? A White Elephant IT IS STILL QUESTIONABLE whether Kansas City, so few miles away from the KU campus, can support a major league baseball team. The experience of other cities of comparable size, however, indicates that it could profitably house a professional football squad. This being the case, it is only a matter of a relatively short time before Kansas City offers this sport. (From The Hutchinson News) the took world "The Fountainhead" is not as incredible as "Atlas Shrugged." But it is fantastic. Its hero is the architect Howard Roark, who fights all the forces of conformity in the twenties and thirties and succeeds in maintaining his individuality (like blowing up a building which he sees as a desecration of his art). Its heroine is Dominique Franon, as sturdily individualistic as Roark (she returns in "Atlas Shrugged" as Dagny Taggart). One reads some books to see what the opposition is thinking about. Ayn Rand has become such a cult, so adored by people who call themselves conservatives and some who call themselves liberals, that it is well to see what makes her tick. THE FOUNTAINHEAD, by Ayn Rand (Signet, 95 cents). The trouble with "The Fountainhead" is that many give to it the wrong interpretations. Ayn Rand has not yet conceived of the possibility of democratic individualism. Her individualism is anarchy, and in "Atlas Shrugged" it becomes a kind of Daddy Warbucks fascism. It seems important to note that two modern architects of the Howard Roark stripe, Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright, were individualists, and democratically so, and that their "form follows function" was closely related to the democratic dream of America.—CMP Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3 The Crisis in Dixie The case of James Meredith, notwithstanding the violence and bloodshed, is closed. The question of whether a Negro has a right to attend a federally subsidized university has been answered with tear gas and guts. The question of who has control of the nation—has been answered with troops and terror. As President Kennedy so succinctly put it: "Americans are free to disagree with the law but not to disobey it." It is too early to tell what effect the Meredith story will have on future race relations in this country. Perhaps the race hatred and demagoguery of warped minds will not be tolerated any longer in 20th Century America. And if they are tolerated, then the Meredith case will have had no meaning. Yet the side issues of the "Ole Miss" episode may, in the long run, have greater significance than the integration of the 114-year-old "all-white" school. With open, pre-meditated defiance, Gov. Ross Barnett refused to obey the law, several times placing himself in contempt of the courts. The fact that Meredith finally was able to register at the university does not erase the mockery Barnett made of the law. His crime has been committed, and he has been found guilty in our legal chambers. Barnett now must pay for that offense or his example will lead to greater mockery and defiance of the courts. Other remnants of debased mentality lay open in their nakedness, and the nature of the pseudomartyrs and "do-anthing-for-votes" politicians frightens the imagination. Perched on the statue of a "Rebel," ex-General Edwin A. Walker told the mob of students and "non- students" that their militancy is pointed in the wrong direction. He is greeted with jeers and bends to the will of the mass. He praises their courage and sounds the attack. Walker, a self-proclaimed John Bircher, spent his pre-Mississippi days warning the nation of the "Socialist-Communist" elements in Washington and how the government is selling out to the Reds. Yet in this one act—when he urged the rioters forward—he did as admirable a job as Khrushchev could ever dream of doing to win support among uncommitted nations in Africa and Latin America for the Communist bloc. Sitting somewhat distant from the prejudices of the United States, perhaps Europeans can rightfully look down and observe the Meredith case as "an outburst from another age." —Arthur C. Miller '... Cannot Wipe Out Social Stigma ...' Students rioted at the University of Mississippi Sunday night. Two bystanders were killed and 75 people were injured. Why? Is it simply because these students don't want to go to school with a Negro? Is it because their PARKER parents don't want their children to go to school with a Negro? James Meredith HISTORICALLY THE PROBLEM can be traced back further than Sunday night. A trait that becomes ingrained in the American way of life — especially if it is the basis of a sectional economic structure — is hard to dismiss with the snap of a finger, the Emancipation Proclamation, or a Civil War. The economic dispute was, in fact, settled by the Civil War. Slave labor was outlawed, and the Negroes were out on their own. However, a four-year-long war cannot overnight wipe out a social stigma that has been developing in the United States since Dutch traders first brought slaves into the country in 1721. But the authority of the federal government cannot really help James Meredith overcome this social stigma. He is a taxpaying resident of the State of Mississippi; he is giving financial support to the University of Mississippi in his payment of taxes; he has a high school diploma and his discharge papers from the Air Force. Why shouldn't he attend the University? If one Negro wants to swim in a sea of white faces in the Deep South, he should at least be given the opportunity to trv. Ben Marshall The image provided is too blurry and low-resolution to accurately recognize any text or graphics. It appears to be a black-and-white photograph of a building with a large, triangular roof featuring a patterned design. There are also flags visible on the roof. However, no clear text can be extracted from this image due to the poor quality. Photos Courtesy United Press International Which Is Subservient? '... Not Just a Political Affair . . . ' There is a feeling by some that the Civil War resolved forever the issue of states' rights. These observers dismiss the Mississippi crisis as nothing more than an attempt by Gov. Ross Barnett to glean votes from the Mississippi populace. It is true that Barnett will lose nothing politically by his actions at the University of Mississippi, but to dismiss the whole affair as a political move is a dangerous premise. of a century, took the earlier writings of Madison and Jefferson and declared that the individual states could nullify and declare void any action of the federal government. In the middle of the 19th century, not satisfied with nullification, states' righters carried their struggle to its bloodiest phase: secession. The result of this struggle cost 500.000 lives and left the South a smoldering ruin — but it changed little. It proved only that the road to states' rights supremacy did not lie with secession. REGARDLESS OF Gov. Barnett's motives, one fact remains: he has hit upon a feeling that supposedly died with the Civil War 100 years ago — a feeling that the federal government is subservient to the will of the states. THE STRUGGLE has continued on until today. One hundred years have changed little — there is still the feeling that the federal government is subservient to the states. The Mississippi crisis cannot be dismissed as a vote-scheme by Gov. Barnett. The crisis is the continuation of a battle to decide what the nature of these United States is to be — a battle not likely to be decided in our lifetime. Zoe Winkworth -Zeke Wigglesworth Fighting Battle On Own Terms' Mississippi Gov. Ross Barnett slowly but inevitably lost his battle to keep the University of Mississippi a school for whites only. In the eyes of many Mississippians he fought the good fight, but he lost before he began. He lost at Little Rock five years ago. Perhaps he had forgotten the precedents set in Little Rock. Perhaps he thought he could overwhelm those precedents and set new ones. The Kennedys might not have been as firm as Eisenhower. Or Barnett simply may have been a fool. These are just a few possible explanations. BUT BARNETT DID not forget Little Rock and the precedents set there. He knew that because of these precedents the Kennedys were even less likely to back down than Eisenhower. They could not back down even if they would. Many in the North and probably some. in the South have labeled Barnett a fool. These same people labeled Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus a fool when he tried to re-introduce the doctrine of forceful nullification five years ago. Surely no one but a fool would begin a fight with no hope for victory. Only fools and heroes fight such battles with so much vigor. Ross Barnett is not a fool. He is a hero. And his cause is not segregation at "Ole Miss." He is the hero of the "Ross Barnett for governor forever and ever" movement. Barnett remembers precedents besides those set at Central High School in Little Rock. He remembers precedents set in the Arkansas governor's mansion. He knows that one man has been in that mansion for four terms and un-doubtedly will be there for a fifth. ROSS BARNETT IS NOT a fool with no chance to win, because his is not the battle of the racists. His is the battle to perpetuate his term as governor. He is going to win this battle just as Faubus won the same battle in Little To examine the struggle that has surrounded states' rights — a struggle, incidentally, born with this nation — one must begin with this basic fact: the issue has always remained basically the same. Rock. Ross Barnett knows precisely what he is doing. He chose his windmill wisely. Faubus is still governor of Arkansas even though Negroes are graduating from Central High School in Little Rock. And Barnett will be governor of Mississippi long after James Meredith has graduated from the University of Mississippi. Thomas Jefferson and James Madison were among the first to come up with the idea of "nullification." In the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions of 1799, the two statesmen enunciated the proposition that the federal government was no more than an "agent" of the individual states, and therefore was responsible to them. Gov. Ross Barnett Ross Barnett is a master of southern politics of the old school. He knows how to win and how to keep on winning. He is not fighting the same battle that the Kennedy's are fighting. He is fighting his own battle on his own terms and he will win his own victory. James Meredith will win his victory, too. But he will not defeat Ross Barnett because the two are on different battlefields. EARLY IN THE 19TH century, John C. Calhoun of South Carolina, destined to be a leader in the states' rights struggle for a quarter —Dennis Branstiter 'How Far Can a Man Go ... ' How far can a man go in opposing the federal government? This is the primary question which must be answered concerning former Army Gen. Edwin Walker's violent involvement in the Mississippi desegregation crisis. Gen. Edwin Walker When James Meredith was escorted to an apartment on the all-white University of Mississippi campus by about 400 federal marshals, it seemed the end of a tense situation and the end of one of the Constitution's severest tests. BUT IT WAS NOT the end. Violence erupted and before it was over two men were dead and many others were wounded. Gen. Walked led a charge of 1,000 students against the Army trucks carrying the marshals. After his attack was beaten off by tear gas bombs, Gen. Walker said he would regroup his forces and charge again. Gen. Walker had indicated his opposition to the government before. He is an avowed member of the John Birch Society. He believes that the government is giving the country to the Russians and this may be his battlefield to awaken American to "the conspirary from within." GOV. BARNETT believes he had legal basis for his opposition in the doctrine of nullification. He also claims Biblical support of segregation. Gen. Walker had no legal basis for his attack. He was an outsider who deliberately precipitated an attack on government officials. Freedom of speech is guaranteed under the Constitution, and Gen. Walker has the right to speak on any subject that suits him so long as he observes the law against slander. But he has no constitutional guarantees to attack federal officers and to incite others to do so. He will now face the consequences for violating federal law the same as any other citizen. Jerrv Musil Page 4 University Daily Kansa Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1962 U.S. Behind in Testing SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) — Famed physicist Dr. Edward Teller said yesterday that nuclear testing must continue until some supranational authority is created to keep peace — and warned that "lack of consistent testing" is likely to make the United States "a second-rate power." "It is my guess, and it's only a guess, that the Russians are ahead of us in nuclear weapons today," he said in a speech before the National Conference of United Press International publishers and editors. TELLER, A pioneer in the development of the hydrogen bomb and presently associate director of the University of California's Livermore Radiation Laboratory, said that the U.S. tests in the Pacific this year "have not been quite satisfactory." Teller said one of the essential reasons for this was the fact that during the test moratorium "we were not allowed to make thorough Owl Society Selects Five The Owl Society, junior men's honorary group, has chosen five new initiates, raising the club's membership to 25. Robert Cathey, Shawnee Mission junior and president of the organization, said its purpose is to recognize and promote friendship and service among junior class men. The new members were selected on the basis of leadership, activities, character and a grade point average of 1.5 or above, from applicants suggested by house presidents, deans and counselors. Final selection was made on the basis of the applications and personal appraisals of the candidates by club members. The new members are Jerald Pullins, Council Grove; Robert Swan, Topeka; F. Alan Stamper, Plainville; John Magill, Shawnee Mission, and David White, Prairie Village. preparations for the eventuality that we might have to resume training." Teller said he was unable to give many details about test results because of security regulations, but he did say they accomplished "quite a bit." "We have improved the effectiveness of our explosives," he said. THUS. THE physicist said, the United States has now tested nuclear weapons which are more powerful, cheaper, more easily transported and more easily concealed. The "Ole Mise" riots will be discussed at the first Civil Rights Council meeting at 7 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union. CRC Will Discuss Mississippi Rioting Don Warner, Topeka senior and Council chairman, said Council membership qualifications will also be discussed. Warner also said members will be selected to represent KU at the fourth annual Kansas conference on civil rights Saturday, Oct. 13, in the Kansas Union. The theme of the all-day program is "New Thresholds to Equal Opportunities." Virgil Godfrey, who plays Nickles in "J. B..." is leaving a devil of a time this week. The Archibald McLeish play opens tonight at 8 o'clock in the University Theatre for a four-performance run. By Tom Winston Godfrey Has Devil of a Time With Role in McLeish Play Prof. Godfrey, an assistant professor of speech and drama, has been the set designer and consultant for the University Theatre the past six years. THE DEVIL is a part Prof. Godfrey is "eminently qualified to play," says William Reardon, associate professor of speech and drama and director of the current production. Prof. Reardon was referring to Prof. Godfrey's flair for playing devils. In his own defense, Prof. Godfrey protested: "Contrary to popular belief, this (Nickles) is the first fully developed devil's role I've ever played in my life." But Prof. Godfrey has played a pseudo-devil twice before, in "Don Juan in Hell" from George Bernard Shaw's "Man and Superman." The first time was during the 1958-59 University Theatre session and the other time was last March. He played Nickles last summer here. "YOU HAVE to maintain the tension in the character, yet not intrude on the scene." Prof. Godfrey's performance as Nickles initiates a new University Theatre practice. Members of the department of speech and drama will appear in three productions this year, "J. B.," "The Egg" and "Cyrano de Bergerac," to give students the chance to work with seasoned actors and to enable members of the faculty to practice their art. ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass. BROWSERS... WELCOME The BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. SPECTACULAR WATCH OVERHAUL VALUE! Now Only $688 including all LABOR and MATERIALS • Watch disassembled • Cleaned, oiled, adjusted, repaired • Worn parts replaced • Watch case polished • Work Guaranteed for 1 full year • Genuine factory parts used • Chronographs and rusted watches excluded BRING THIS AD FOR THIS SPECIAL! CREDIT TERMS Now Only $ 688 including all LABOR and MATERIALS BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mass. St. VI 3-4366 Read and Use Kansan Classifieds S.U.A. CLASSICAL FILM SERIES 1962-1963 FORUM ROOM-7 P.M.-WEDNESDAYS Date Movie Oct. 3 . . The Story of Gosta Berling (Garbo) Oct.17 . . Philadelphia Story (Hepburn) Oct. 31 . . . The Wild One (Brando) Nov. 14 . . Blood and Sand (Valentino) Nov.28 . . . She Done Him Wrong (Mae West) Dec. 12 . . . Three Musketeers (Douglas Fairbanks) Jan. 9 . . . The Maltese Falcon (Humphrey Bogart) Season Tickets Are NOW on Sale at the Kansas Union. Buy Yours Today! SUA Carnival Chooses 'Looney Too' Theme Theme for this year's Student Union Activities Carnival will be "Looney Too," featuring cartoon characters. The carnival will be held from 7 to 11 p.m. Oct. 26, in the Union. Preparations for the 42-year-old event are well underway and will eventually involve an estimated 500 students. Juliana Parrott, Hutchinson senior and chairman of the production committee, said last night she was pleased with the cooperation she was receiving. Sororities elected queen candidates Monday. They will be announced next week, with final voting the night of the Carnival. A ballot comes with the price of an 85-cent ticket which can be purchased in advance this year. Plans for a parade in downtown Lawrence the morning of the Carnival are nearing completion. FIVE FRATERNITIES and four sororities have turned in rough drafts of skits they intend to present at the Carnival. Thirty other living units will have booths. The first carnival was held in Robinson Gymnasium in 1920 with a "Patriotism" theme—a motif with national significance as a wave of "good feeling" swept the country. A record crowd of 1,500 persons turned out. The carnival has been shifted from building to building through the years. In 1930 it was moved from the gymnasium to the Union. In 1931 the booths were in the stadium and the skits were held in Fraser Theater. In 1932 the use of blue material in some of the skits caused KU administrator's to withdraw support and financial difficulties assailed the carnival. An intramural tourney was combined with booths and skits in the stadium in 1935 but despite the athletic help the carnival fizzled. Then, after a five-year absence, a joint effort by SUA and YWCA members revived the tradition. From the Hoch Auditorium stage the skits moved in 1944 to the Military Science Building where they remained until 1953. After that year the carnival journeyed to its present home in the Union. New Staff Additions To AFROTC on Job Two new staff members have moved into the AFROTC hanger this year. Col. Hallas was formerly in Seoul, Korea, where he was an adviser to the Republic of Korea Air Force. He was born in Nebraska. Capt. Wagner was a C-124 transport pilot in Honolulu, Hawaii, before coming to KU. He is from Tulsa, Okaa. Lt. Col. G. E. Hallas, professor of air science and chairman of the department, and Capt. Arthur L Wagner, instructor of air science and commandant of cadets. French Club Meets Todav Le Cercle Francais will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in room 11 of Fraser Hall. Officers of the club are Borden Elhiff, president; Sonja Halverson, vice-president; Pamela Biggar, secretary-treasurer, and Janet Frey, chairman of the refreshment committee. The meeting is open to all interested persons. The Most Popular Shoe For Campus Wear A THE Taylor-Made SHOE The classic slip-on, genuine hand-sewn front, single leather sole and heel. In rich Burgundy or Black $14.95 COME IN AND WATCH THE WORLD SERIES WITH US ON OUR TV. the university shop ON THE HILL School to Compete In Film Production AL HACK Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5 The department of Radio and Television of the School of Journalism has been invited to compete in the production of a full length television film concerning blindness. Gregor Ziemer, director of public education for the American Foundation for the Blind, said that the data for the film would be found by the competing departments of radio and television throughout the nation. "There are unlimited sources from which the colleges can draw material for their shows: local agencies, state or federal bureaus for the blind, or from the foundation," he said. The four categories in the competition are fifteen minute and half hour dramas and documentaries. All productions must concern some aspect of blindness. Action Meets Tonight Parliament members of Action party will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Cottonwood room of the Kansas Union. Discussion will center on whether Action will continue as a political party. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results DANCE at OLD LOG CABIN located at OAK LODGE 15 Miles South on Highway 59 FRIDAY NIGHT — Good Music $1.00 Per Couple SATURDAY NIGHT—Only $2.00 Dance to the — CONTINENTALS THE DINE-A-MITE PRESENTS: JAZZ ON SUN Enjoy Fine Jazz Sounds by the Jazz-Mite Trio With the New Dine-A-Mite Sunday Buffet 6:30----9:30 PENNEY'S 60th ANNIVERSARY make your mark as a young elegant in '62'S NEW SWEATERS AND SKIRTS The looks, the couturier touches usually found only in expensive hand knits are yours in these luxurious Intarsia patterned Lam - Furs (lambswool, angora rabbit hair and nylon). Full fashioned, of course. 34 to 42. At their best with a simple wool skirt. Seat lined, stalk slim version is proportioned petite, average, tall. Pleated flannel fashion in petite and average lengths. Both boast trim French waistbands, Talon zephyr zippers. Sizes 8 to 20. All in the colors most likely to succeed on campus. $ 6^{95} $ to $ 9^{95} $ Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1962 Judging Changes Eyed for Revue The audience which annually packs Hoch Auditorium for the Rock Chalk Revue may be a factor this year in skit judging. Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission junior and producer of the revue, said the staff will discuss new systems of judging at a meeting Oct.14. PREVIOUSLY, WHITMAN said, judges have used only their own opinions in selecting winning skits. The suggestion to change the judging system was voiced at a staff dinner Sunday evening. Among other "gripes" brought up then was the use of extremely large casts in the past by organized houses. Several of those at the dinner, who said large casts were attempts to stage "spectaculars," suggested that casts be limited to 40 or 50 persons. Theme of this year's Rock Chalk is "Historical Hysteria." Themes are to be based on historical events. "Literary quality may be emphasized more this year than in the past." Whitman added. THREE FRATERNITIES will have the chance this year to retire the first place trophy. The trophy, which normally "travels" to each succeeding first place winner, is now awarded to any house which wins first place three times. Two years ago Pi Beta Phi sorority retired the first place trophy. Beta Theta Pi, Alpha Tau Omega, and Delta Upsilon fraternities have won first places in Rock Chalk twice. Two years ago Pi Beta Phi sorority retired the first place trophy. Fraternities and sororities known to be preparing scripts to submit this year are Alpha Tau Omega and Kappa Alpha Theta, Sigma Chi and Chi Omega, Phi Kappa Psi and Delta Gamma, Beta Theta Pi and Pi Beta Phi, and Sigma Nu and Alpha Chi Omega. ON THE 1963 Rock Chalk staff are: Production—Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission junior, producer; Sherri Dobbins, Lawrence senior, assistant producer; David White, Prairie Village junior, house manager; Prent Roth, junior, stage manager; Glen Bickle, shop foreman, University Theatre, lighting director; Marcia Spicer, Phillipsburg freshman, assistant stage manager; Christine Smith, Independence, Mo., senior, technical adviser; Tom Snyder, Kansas City junior, mid-acts manager; Bill Boulware and George Green, Prairie Village freshmen, house advisers. Business—John Bumgarner, Tulsa, Okla., junior, business manager; Larry Gamble, Pittsburg junior, assistant business manager for sales; Scott Linscott, Topeka sophomore, assistant business manager for advertising; Tom Staebler, Topeka sophomore, program editor; Richard Flood, Phelps, N. Y., junior, publicity chairman; John Atkinson, Topeka sophomore, and Gary Gradinger, Shawnee Mission sophomore, assistant sales managers; Naomi Olsen, Hinsdale, Ill., senior, and Barbara Huston, Tulsa, Okla., junior, staff secretaries. Record Discount AT KIEF'S RECORD Wed., Thurs. and Fri. $ 2^{89} $ WEST SIDE STORY'S DYNAMIC WEST SIDE STORY'S DYNAMIC GEORGE CHAKIRIS $ 2^{89} $ A BRILLIANT FIRST RECORDING BY THE "WEST SIDE STORY" OSCAR-WINNING STAR! (S)T-1750 ROUTE 66 THEME AND OTHERS GREAT TV THEMES NATIONAL RIDDLE CHAMPION SINCE 1940, THE ROUTE 66 MUSIC FESTIVAL HAS BEEN A SUCCESSFUL EXPERIENCE FOR YEAR AND FOR THOSE WHO WANT TO BUST UP THE HOOPS ROUTE 66 THEME ROUTE 66 THEME AND OTHER GREAT TV THEMES NELSON RIDDLE AND NO ORCHESTRA PRINTED BY KIEF'S RECORD FOR USE IN MALLS SHOPPING CENTRE THE JOURNEYMEN KIEF'S RECORD Malls Shopping Center Open Every Evening IN HAND FOOTING A HILL MUSIC BRANCH BY MARY WILLIAMS, JACK WATERS AND THE JOURNEYMEN Dean Gorton described the Van Cliburn competition as the largest such event ever held. The winners of $20,000 in prizes, including a $10,000 first prize, will be announced tonight. The pressure of competition is no new experience for Prof. Perry, who joined the University of Kansas faculty in 1960. He won two international piano contests in Europe in 1959—the Busoni Piano Competition at Bolzano, Italy, and the Viotti International competition at Vercelli, Italy. He plays his semi-final numbers today. Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said that Prof. Perry had to prepare for $4\frac{1}{2}$ hours of performance, which is equal to about four concerts. John Perry a Semi-Finalist In the Van Cliburn Contest John Perry, assistant professor of piano, is among the 16 semifinalists in the Van Cliburn Quadrennial International Piano competition in Forth Worth, Tex. In this country, Prof. Perry twice won the first artist prize in the National Guild Recording competition and a first in the annual contest sponsored by the American Guild of Piano Teachers. Chinese Club Picnic Is Set for Saturday The Chinese Club is having a picnic this Saturday at Leavenworth County State Park, Tonganoxie. Members requiring information and reservations should call VI 3-1505 after 5 p.m. no later than tomorrow. Having a Party? Kansan Classified Ads Get Results! Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales - Rental Service LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 the best dressed girls in school buy their clothes here... Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Pooped . . . but must carry on? Snap right back and keep going! Take Verv' continuous action alertness capsules. Effective, safe, not habit-forming. The Alley Shop at diebolt's 843 Mass. diebolt's 843 Mass. Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Alpha Omicron Pi Announces Initiation Alpha Omicron Pi announces the initiation of the 16 members of the 1962 spring pledge class. The new initiates are: Sherry Allen, Glen Ellyn, Ill., sophomore; Judith Allison, Clearwater sophomore; Janet Bowman, Lared sophomore; Janet Buckmaster, Baxter Springs sophomore; Carol Sue Busch, Olathe sophomore; Carol Childers, Wamego sophomore. Sally Engel, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore; Janet Fry, Topeka junior; Eleanor Goodson, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Martha Hodges, Wichita sophomore; Linda Kramer, Kansas City, Mo. junior. Martilyn Lehew, Lawrence junior; Judith Lind, Clay Center sophomore; Nancy Verburg, Lawrence sophomore; Cynthia Watts, Mission sophomore, and Kay Weber, Wichita sophomore. Martha Hodges was elected outstanding pledge. Cynthia Watts was chosen honor initiate. (1) IVA RUTH LINDQUIST Lindquist-Karban Mr. and Mrs. Ural Lindquist announce the engagement of their daughter, Iva Ruth, Wilsey junior, to Fred P. Karban III, Wilson senior, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred P. Karban, J. Miss Lindquist, a member of Watkins Hall, is majoring in education. Karban is a pharmacy major. He is a member of the American Pharmaceutical Association. The couple plan a June wedding. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER TRADING POST 704½ Mass. Ph. VI 3-2012 Located 1 door South of K.P. & L. in basement. 5 pc. Metal Dinette Set ... $19.95 6 pc. Drop-leaf Dinett set $14.58 Portable Stereo Hi-Fi 4 sp. record player with twin extension speakers . $49.95 Philco 17" Table Model TV $22.50 Roll-away Bed with $17.50 Mattress ... $17.50 Bookcases ... $7.95 (up) New Early American Sofa (slightly damaged) ... $109.95 New 4-drawer Chest (unfinished) ... $18.50 9 x 12 Rugs ... $7.50 Nice Big Desk ... $14.88 Twin Sized Bed with New Mattress ... $34.50 Big 5-drawer Chest ... $14.50 We also have a good selection of tables, radios, settees, tamps, rockers, end tables and throw rugs. We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings. FALL 1963 Mr. and Mrs. Wendell A. Niswonger announce the engagement of their daughter Lynn, Overland Park senior, to Jerry A. Burge, Kansas City senior. Miss Niswonger is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi. Burge attended Kansas City Junior College and expects to graduate from the University of Kansas in January. LYNN NISWONGER Niswonger-Burge Tweeds will prove the most practical for the KU coed's suit and coat collection, however, checks and plaids will compete with tweeds for first place in coat and suit styling. Both tweeds and plaids will be bold and bright. KU Cwens Assist With Third Freshman Women's Orientation By Leta Cathecart Cwens, a national sophomore women's honorary society, is beginning its third year at the University of Kansas. Members of Cwens are chosen in the spring of their freshman year. Membership is based on campus activities and scholarship and leadership in the freshman residence halls. KU Cwens began their duties this fall. The orientation of freshman women is one of their most important responsibilities. They accompany them to University functions and attend the residence hall floor meetings. They also serve as hostesses at University functions, such as the Chancellor's tea. The Cwens will be hostesses at the following functions: the Towle silver display, Wednesday, Oct. 10, in the Kansas Union, the Cwen Founders' Day breakfast, Sunday, Nov. 14, and the freshman dormitory floor officers party. The National Society of Cwens was founded in 1922 by Thyrsa W. Amos, Dean of Women at the University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. Since then Cwens has grown to 19 chapters, most of which are located in the east. Emily Taylor, dean of women, and The Tau chapter of KU was founded in 1960, when the Jay Sisters, a sophomore women's organization in charge of freshman orientation, were granted their charter from the National Cwen Society. national Cwen adviser, and Mrs. J. B. Stroup, assistant dean of women, are advisers to the Tau chapter. Cwens, the Anglo-Saxon word for queen or lady, work to attain the dignity and poise of the Cwen of old England. FREE DELIVERY Call before 4, Delivered after 5 $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 COOPER DRUG Campus Society D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell Now is the time For Your Child's Christmas Portrait Children are our speciality Call now for an appointment Burch Higgins Photographer RANCH HOUSE STUDIO 780 Lincoln VI-3-4575 11 Vintage tobaccos grown, aged, and blended mild...made to taste even milder through the longer length of Chesterfield King. CHESTERFIELD KING TOBACCOS TOO MILD TO FILTER, PLEASURE TOO GOOD TO MISS 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! Tastes Great because the tobaccos are! Chesterfield KING CIGARETTES FOR A GENTLER, SMOOTHER YASTE ORDINARY CIGARETTES ENJOY THE LONGER LENGTH OF CHESTERFIELD KING CHESTERFIELD KING The smoke of a Chesterfield King mellows and softens as it flows through longer length . . . becomes smooth and gentle to your taste. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1962 Journalistic 'Myths' Scored By Salinger SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) — Presidential Press Secretary Pierre Salinger says there are three "journalistic myths" about the Kennedy Administration. Speaking before the closing session of the National Conference of United Press International editors and publishers last night, Salinger listed these "myths" as; - "The President has had a terrible time with congress and none of his legislation has been passed. - "The President and the members of his administration spend many of their waking hours trying to harass business and businessmen. - "The President and those around him are sensitive about the press." On Congress, Salinger said that "only two weeks ago one of our great weekly organs of public opinion stated flatly that about all the President had been able to get through Congress had been appropriations for state and defense." Salinger said that by the time Congress adjourns it will have passed almost 70 per cent of the President's requested legislation. He said accomplishments of Congress included the first major Housing Bill in 11 years, the Trade Bill, establishment of the Peace Corps, authorization of the Alliance for Pregress, passage of the United Nations bond issue and creation of the Communications Satellite Corporation. REFERRING TO THE "myth of the anti-business administration," Salinger said that "even at the height of all the stories about how the administration was abusing business, a Gallup poll showed that only 16 per cent of businessmen themselves believed it. "President Kennedy," he said, "believes that a healthy climate for business is good for the entire country. We have attempted to create that climate." Salinger said that "perhaps the press is getting too sensitive for its own good." Farm Tour Takes Nikita to Tashkent MOSCOW—(UPI)—Premier Nikita Khrushchev arrived today in Tashkent, capital of the Uzbek Republic, his latest stop on an agricultural tour of Soviet Central Asia. The Soviet news agency Tass reported he was met by local party and government figures. The Communist organ Pravda reported today that Khrushchev made "a big speech" yesterday to party officials in Dusanbe, the capital of Tadjikistan. Pravda gave no details of the speech. Veteran Power Plant The nickel-iron storage battery, which is still used extensively today, was invented in 1901 by Thomas A. Edison. McCoy's Sbicca OFF BEATS ANIL'...Soft Antique Leathers, Luscious Colors Cable Stitching HUTCHINSON — (UPI) — There may have been a stool pigeon among the mourning doves an alleged member of Chicago's underworld is accused of taking out of Kansas. He was released under $1,000 bond when his case was continued yesterday at Chicago until Oct. 15. "We couldn't have done it alone, I'll tell you that." a federal agent said, discussing the case of Joseph (Joey) Aiuppa. But the agent would not elaborate. A. J. Robinson, U.S. game management agent for Kansas, said "Aluppa and his party had been under surveillance for some time during their hunting in the Pittsburg area of southeast Kansas. Catch of Mourning Doves May Have Held Stool Pigeon Ailupa was arrested yesterday at his home in the Chicago suburb of Elmhurst, Ill., charged with possession of 450 mourning doves from Kansas. Possession limit is 24. "How long, I cannot say because the case is still pending. We know that two men left Pittsburgh the other day with a big batch of mourning doves, but we can't say how many men were in Aiuppa's party. Federal agents said they found the VI 3-2091 Meanwhile, Kansas fish and game commission officials appeared skeptical about Aiupua's prowess as a gamesman. A spokesman said he would have had to "bring an army and stay a long time" to bag the number of doves he is charged with taking. bodies of at least 450 doves in four coolers in Aiupa's car yesterday. Kansan Classifieds Get Results 813 Mass. But Robinson said "this has been a (U.S.) fish and wildlife case all the way." The coat suit, combining a skirt with a full-length coat rather than a jacket, will be ideal for church and dress dinner wear for the KU coed this fall and winter. The skirts usually hang just a sliver below the coat. State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 530 W 23rd. Lawrence, Kan. 一 LIBRARY Don't be at a loss for words... Buy the largest, most up-to-date paperback dictionary available. Over 50,000 entries in your pocket WEBSTER'S NEW WORLD DICTIONARY AUTHENTICATED REFERENCE BY THE EDITORS AT THE HOME OF JOHN WEBSTER 1902-1985 NEW YORK, N.Y. HARPER AND CO. 45th ST. PUBLICATIONS, INC. 327-361 PO BOX 1313 HARPER AND CO. 45TH ST. PUBLICATIONS, INC. 327-361 at all times— only 50c at the bookstore. While you're there pick up the Pulitzer Prize Winner To Kill A Mockingbird—60c (4) POPULAR Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers 63 KJ Senior Beverage Blast 10-12 Saturday Morning at the Big Barn See: Jim Clement and the A whole truckload of your favorite beverage from Milwaukee! Disciples Senior ID's or $1 per person All the Swingers Will Be There! ...are you TRAPPED? Take a Short Study Break and Head for the Swift and Thrift Drive-in U SANDY'S HAMBURGERS 15c FRENCH FRIES 10c ACROSS FROM HILLCREST Mao's Popularity Is Untarnished In Face of Mounting Troubles University Daily Kansan Page 9 By Phil Newsom If nothing succeeds like success, then consider the case of Red China's spiritual and physical leader, Mao Tse-Tung. As the Chinese Reds wind up their 13th year in control of the mainland, three successive years of crop failures and mismanagement have left the Chinese people hungrier than ever, the great leap forward in industry is at a standstill, there is an estrangement with the Soviet Union, and a threat of war with India. The Chinese press and radio still refer to him as "like the sun . . . the Chinese champion, whose thoughts are the supreme combination of Marxist-Leninist universal truth and the Chinese revolution . . . the pioneer of natural science . . . the superlative politician, philosopher, economist and military expert." Most of these can be laid directly on Mao's doorstep. YET THE IMAGE of Mao remains unnarrished, his leadership so long as he lives apparently secure and the cult of Mao still growing. Yet those who have known Mao describe him as almost totally ignorant of science, poor at mathematics, possessing only a second-hand knowledge of the world outside China, and a bad administrator. MAO APPEARS in public infrequently now, and,reportedly, his speech has lost some of its coherence. And, although he shuffled millions of Chinese as helpless pawns in his determination for the "great leap forward" in Chinese industry and agriculture, he so far has escaped public blame for its failure. His years as a guerrilla fighter and the "long march" of 1934 in which his armies retraited 6,000 miles to escape encirclement by the forces of Chiang Kai Shek have taken their toll on his health. But Mao has been the undisputed leader of Chinese communism since 1927. Gone are the grandiose plans which called for complete industrialization in less than 20 years, production gains in some industries of more than 100 per cent in less than five. He crossed with Stalin when he ignored the latter's advice to seek his support among the workers of the city, and went instead to the peasantry of the countryside. AND HE BATTLES now with Nikita Khrushchev for the role as chief interpreter and spokesman for Marxist-Leninist theory. The giant communes which, be- Contact Aids Understanding A student from Southern Rhodesia says lack of understanding is the reason for many of the world's problems. "I went to Kansas City over the weekend with some international students. We saw a play and stayed with a family there. It was a very good experience," Jonathan Mahlamza, a freshman in the College, said. "It helped us better understand not only the American people, but also ourselves. You understand people better when you actually live with them. 'IT'S PATHETIC. There's so much trouble in many lands because people don't understand one another. "It's unfortunate that my experiences can't be multiplied." Mahlamza, 32, is majoring in history, with a minor in math. He lives with his wife, Margaret, and their 2-year-old son, at Stouffer Place. The recipient of a scholarship sponsored by the KU Wesley Foundation and the Methodist Board of Missions, Mahlamza plans to return to his native country to teach. BY TEACHING, he hopes to promote understanding. He taught both grade and high school for eight years before coming to KU. "I like KU very much," he said. "I'm still feeling my way around, but I'm sure I won't regret coming here." Mahlamza's expenses of about $1500 yearly are being paid by the Board of Missions and the Wesley Foundation at KU. Linkugel, Osborn To Plan Conference Two assistant professors of speech and drama have been appointed to a new statewide committee of the Kansas State Teachers Association. Wilmer Linkugel and Lynn R. Osborn will be among the planners for a conference next spring for secondary and college teachers in the language arts. The aim is for better coordination of the efforts of English and speech and drama teachers in the high schools and the higher education institutions in Kansas. JAZZ Every Sunday 6:30-9:30 by THE JAZZ-MITE TRIO AND AS THE daily rice ration in the communes fell from 12 ounces per day to four or five, peasants are being allowed small plots for their own use. ginning in 1958, took over the lives of more than 500 million Chinese, have been broken down into village brigades. Listen to modern and progressive jazz by this versatile trio while enjoying the new Dine-A-Mite Sunday buffet. Industry has been told that it must make do with machinery and manpower now available, without new investment. Any new gains must come from the workers themselves. Some 20 million city workers have been shuffled back to the farms. Dine-a-mite THE NEW The growing cult of Mao may be indicative of division within party ranks of such a nature that only Mao can serve as a unifying factor. It may also be that other party leaders feel that someday they may need a scapegoat. A statement by Moses, released last night, attributed the situation to a "mistunderstanding." A spokesman for Moses said the Soviet withdrawal was based on the alleged insistence of the State Department that the United States be permitted to hold an exhibition in the Soviet Union in the next few years. "O March 2, 1962." Moses' statement said, "the World's Fair of 1964-65 Corp, and the All-Union Chamber of Commerce of the USSR signed a contract for a Soviet pavilion. 23rd & La. Wednesday. Oct. 3, 1962 VI 3-2942 NEW YORK—(UPI)—The Soviet Union has canned New York's World Fair president Robert Moses expressing its intention of withdrawing from the 1964-65 fair. "We are confident that this misunderstanding will be removed and there will be a Soviet pavilion at the World's Fair 1964 and 1965." Russians Out Of U.S. Fair KU SPORTS DIAL KLWN on DIAL KLWN 7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts 5:15 Today Football Forecast 5:35 Tom Hedrick Sports Man is the only animal that blushes. Or needs to. —Mark Twain 24 Hour Service Owner Radio Controlled Ward Thompson YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 We Rent Most Anything Anderson Rental 812 N. H. M. H. C. Stay bright. Fight drowsiness and be at your brilliant best with Verv continuous action alertness capsules, Effective, safe, not habit-forming. Weaver Our 105th Year of Service the latest! the greatest! ROYALON U.S. Eskiloos® Cavallier, $12.95 Frostguard, $11.95 new "cold-weather flats" to wear rain, snow or shine! Brand-new and light as a shoe! You'll wear your Eskiloos everywhere—you'll fall in love with their handsome shoe texture and their marvelous easy-care ways. Because new Eskiloos are made of Royalon, the miraculous, soft and comfortable new "U.S." material that doesn't crack in the cold or stain in the slush and wipes clean as new with water! So get ready, get set, go everywhere this winter in Eskiloos. Come in for your pair today! Warmly lined. Ivory or black, sizes to 10. Second Floor Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1962 Along the JAY HAWKER trail By Steve Clark The Big Eight conference fared well against non-conference opposition this past weekend winning two, tying one and losing one. In the Big Eight's first league game Colorado managed a 6-0 win over Kansas State, even though the Wildcats about won the game several times. THIS WEEK four teams are in conference action, one is idle and three meet non-conference foes. All Big Eight teams will be in league action on Oct. 13. Last week, this prognosticator broke even with two wins, two losses and one tie, bringing our season's average to a dismal .583. We won't quit, here's another round. KANSAS OVER COLORADO: CU coach Bud Davis picked up his first Big Eight win Saturday against Kansas State. He's prime to pick up his first Big Eight loss against the Jayhawkers. Colorado could be tough. The Jayhawkers remember last year's fourth quarter uprising by the Buffalooes that sent KU to a 20-19 defeat. Hope the turf is dry for this one. Kansas by two touchdowns. NEBRASKA OVER IOWA STATE: This game's being played at Lincoln which gives the Cornhuskers a home field edge. Nebraska looked great against Michigan. They are leading the conference in rushing and total offense. Iowa State did not play last weekend so will be rested. However, they have not looked good thus far this year. Another selling point for NU: Thunder Thornton will be in the lineup. The Cornhuskers by three touchdowns. MISSOURI OVER ARIZONA: The Tigers take on an easier foe this week. They were lucky to come out of their Minnesota encounter with a tie. We don't think Mizzou has lived up to its potential so far. They should get by Arizona, however. This one by three touchdowns. WASHINGTON OVER KANSAS STATE: The Wildcats are still looking for their first victory. They won't find it this week. The Huskies are strong. This one is being played at Washington. While we do believe the 'Cats will furnish some surprises this year, they won't surprise anyone this week unless they hold the Huskies under three touchdowns. OKLAHOMA STATE OVER TULSA: This is going to be a close one. Coach Cliff Speedle's crew got upended at the hands of Arkansas in their season opener. Last week, they were idle. Tulsa is supposed to be strong this year too. We like the Big Eight team. Oklahoma State by three points. Oklahoma is idle. Giants, Dodgers To Decide Pennant LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — Was it Wills or was it Walls? Walt Alston claims it was both. Alston couldn't tell you if shortstop Maury Wills or pinch hitter Lee Walls was the hero of yesterday's Los Angeles Dodger victory over San Francisco that tied their pennant playoff at one game each. AND WHAT'S MORE, Walt didn't care who it was. He praised both Dodger players — and several others. Walls came through with a pinch double in the sixth inning that drove in three runs as Los Angeles—held scoreless for 35 consecutive innings—exploded for seven. The instant the bat hit the ball the frustrated Dodgers turned the dugout into a riot scene. Later in the dressing room they mobbed Walls, just as they did Wills after the little speedster flew home on Ron Fairly's sacrifice fly with the run that gave Los Angeles an 8-7 win. "HE'S DONE it before so many times," said Alston about Walls. "Sometimes he even comes over to me and volunteers to pinch hit. That's the kind of pinch hitters you like to have." Walls also is the kind of pinch hitter Alston likes to have because the 29-year-old player has successfully hit in 13 of 26 pinch appearances. Walls, third consecutive pinch hitter employed by Alston in the Dodger's sixth, said he hit a high fast ball. Lee went to third on the throw to the plate. He took off for home on Wills' high bouncer and appeared out — but Giant catcher Tom Haller was spiked on the play and dropped the ball. "AFTER HE DROPPED the ball, I kicked it into the open so the umpire would be sure to see it," Walls said Wills also came sliding home — three innings later. He had to race a throw by Willie Mays to the plate. "I had no doubts at all," Wills said about his chances of beating Mays' throw from center. However, Fairly held a different opinion. "I DIDN'T HAVE a good cut at the ball," the flame-haired onetime University of Southern California star said. "When I hit it, though, I felt it was hit well enough, but I wasn't at all sure. As I ran down the first base line, I kept yelling for Maury to score." Wills, naturally, was caught in the middle of his ecstatic teammates. They literally carried him down the runway leading to the locker room and the shortstop was so terrified he broke away and ran for the trainer's room. "Those guys are crazy," he laughed, "they're liable to kill me." WILLS CALMED down a bit and said he knew it would take a "perfect throw" from Mays to catch him at home. Intramurals in Full Swing; Sigma Chis, Delts Romp Intramural football is in full swing as 13 games have been played thus far. SIGMA CHI and Delta Tau Delta "A" teams registered the most lopsided wins in opening play. Sigma Chi defeated Lambda Chi Alpha 46-0 while Delta Tau Delta handled Tau Kappa Epsilon 45-6. The season opened last Thursday. Four to five games are held daily at 4 p.m. Forfeits are levied after 4:15 p.m. Beta Theta Pi opened the defense of their hill championship with a meager 20-7 win over Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Phi Gamma Delta, a team prophesied to be a strong contender this year, opened with a convincing win over Alpha Tau Omega 32-0. Other scores in Fraternity A play are: Delta Upsilon 27, Delta Chi 0- Theta Chi 14, Sigma Ph Epsilon 12. In Fraternity B action, Sigma Phi Epsilon eked by Acacia 6-0, Beta Theta Pi No. 1 managed a 21-0 win over a crappy Chi Sigma Chi 2 team, Sigma Alpha Epsilon defeated Tau Kappa Epsilon 13-0 and Phi Gamma Delta won by forfeit from Pi Kappa Alpha. IN INDEPENDENT A action, Jim Beam handled Joliffe 25-0 and the Hot Dogs defeated C & O 21-0. Fraternity B: Triangle vs. Delta Upsilon; Kappa Sigma vs. Delta Tau Delta; Phi Kappa Sigma vs. Beta Theta Pi No. 2. Today Independent A: Foster vs. C & O; Jim Beam vs. Hot Dogs. Fraternity A; Beta Theta Pi vs. Lambda Chi Alpha; Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Tau Kappa Epsilon; Sigma Chi vs. Delta Tau Delta. Thursday "Mays knows I can run, so he had to hurry his throw," explained Wills. "I had counted on that and I thought I could beat his throw to the plate." Independent B: Navy vs. Newman; Liahona vs. Stephenson. Another Dodger hero was winning pitcher Stan Williams—who came in with one out in the eighth inning. Williams said he was nervous when he came on the mound "but I was the happiest person in the ball park when Wills came home." Norm Majors, 1962 Rockhurst College graduate, will be graduate assistant for the basketball coaching staff during the coming season. Maiors New Basketball Aide At Rockhurst Majors led the Hawks in scoring through 1960 and 1961. He was the Hawks top rebounder for three years. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers NOW THRU SATURDAY! Paramount presents DAKNY KAYE DANA WYNTER in ON THE DOUBLE. Stapleton's a Prophet MINGWILFRID MARGARET HYDE WHITE - RUTHERFORD and MISS DIANA DORS Produced by JACK ROSE - Divided MEVILLE SHAVLISON Written by JACK ROSE and MEVILLE SHAVLISON - New Songs by SYLVIA FINE - A DENA CAMP Production - TECHNICOLOR' and PANAVISION' AMES, Iowa (Special) - Looks like Clay Stapleton is a better forecaster than sportswriters are willing to admit. With — So startling it had to be made in secret with the doors bolted with the public kept out! THE COUCH THE COUCH Written by the master suspense author of PSYCHOI "Nebraska is my pick for the Big Eight title," Stapleton has said since last spring. "Nebraska was the best physical team we played all last year. We were lucky to lose by the margin of a field goal. For 1962 the Nebraska team will be my choice." GRANT SHIRELY ONSLW WIILLIAMS KNIGHT STEVENS Presented by WARNER BROS. Most writers tossed off this prediction by pointing out that Nebraska "had" to be that tough for Iowa State since the Cyclones opened with them on Oct. 6 in the Big Eight race. One of these days the writers are going to learn that Clay Stapleton rarely means anything but what he says. Nebraska certainly demonstrated that last Saturday when it walloped Michigan at Ann Arbor. Coach Arch Steel, who scouted the game, SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE . . . West on Highway 40 is normally a semi-optimist in his reports, a fact that makes his gloomy forecast all the worse for the Cyclones. GRANADA NOW SHOWING! 7:00 & 9:05 The Smash Best Seller Comes To Life! "THE INTERNS" See The Wildest Party Ever Filmed! Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers 20 Century Fox present THE 300 SPARTANS CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUXE COMING SATURDAY! GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788 NOW SHOWING! DOUBLE FEATURE THE MAGIC WORD FOR FUN! ZOTZ! TOM JULIA POSTON·MEADE starring JIM FRED CECIL BACKUS·CLARK·KELLAWAY NEWEST! NUTTIEST! THE THREE STOOGES IN ORBIT A NORMANDY PRODUCTION A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE THE CRY IS"MUTINY!" DAMN THE DEFIANT! starring ALEC GUINNESS DIRK BOGARDE ANTHONY QUAYLE A G.W. FILM Production A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE Eastman COLOR and CinemaScope One INT! **Serenity** by NOEL KNEALE and HENRY H. NORTH; **Based on the book** by RANKO 10,589 **Produced by JOHN AND BRADBURN**; **Directed by LEVIS GILBERT** COMING SUNDAY! VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephono VIKING 3-1065 Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not re-positive for errors not reported before second insertion. WANTED Wanted: A male student to share apart- ment with a class clock from the Phone VI 3-2858. 10-4 Wanted to buy—A used baby bed, which infant to infant to 3-year-old. Phone 5916 10-5 BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard. BABYSITTING, if desired. $8 per week. CAL VI 3-7828. FOR SALE '59 Thunderbird in good shape. It's a pint. At $1600, Phone VI 3-6768 10-11 3-speed lightweight Royce Union bikes cut to $73.50 in men's or ladies. New 2-speed automatic Schwinn, $48.88. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mason, VI V-3147. 10-16 1859 Austin Healy. 4 seater, wire wheels. 2650 Jay Wilson. Jay Wilson at W-10- 555. 1100 Indiana. Boys' Western Flyer English bicycle. 3 Boys' Western Flyer English bicycle. 3 baskets used only one week. Also, engineer- ing drawing set — Dietz gen. 12 Phone VI 3-9140. Excellent condition. 10-9 TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper. 85c per rennel. Yellow paper. 100c per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Massachusetts, open all day. Thrift店. tf Bicycle — Girl's, 26", Western Flyer. Call V-1 2-1888. 10-4 1961 Volkswagen. 2-door sedan. Call 3 I-4016 after 5:30 p.m. for inquiry. 10 in-4. 1860 Volkswagen with roof and in door of car. 24-30 gallons day or day or VI S-8313 after 5:00 p.m. 10-8 1950 Ford, V-8. stick. Only $100. Contact Brad Kaufman at 1645 Tennessee. Has new transmission and clutch. 10-8 UNICYCLES provide prestige *ampus* transportation. See September 10. Send $1.00 for bicycle parts. Send $1.00 for illustrated plans to Unicycle, Box 252, Worthington, Ohio. Beautiful Stromberg-Carlson console Hi-Fi with FM-AM radio 2 inch, 8 inch speaker 2 inch contemporary cabinet. New warranty, just $5 at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. For lowest prices on new and used speed diesels, call the Shop. Miss, after 5 p.m., VI 2-06051 10-3 TYPEWHTERS — Sales, service, rental. New and used portables, standards and electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. tt Tires! Tires! 1000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes—most foreign sizes—extra low prices on Snow Tires until Oct. 1st! 600-13 new style new price! 85-24 for $19.24 for $28; 750-14.2 for $29 plus tax. Free installation at rear, Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Massachusetts, VI 3-4170. 10-11 GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Study Notes. Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. Phone VI 3-8246 for free delivery. 10-8 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 pm. week days. Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tf FOR RENT GRANT'S Drive-In, Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service - sectionalized hall stairs, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs etc., plus complete pet supplies. **tf** Classified Display Rates One time ----$1.25/inch Monthly Rate Every day ---- $1.00/inch No art work or engraving allowed Call KU-376 or bring your ads to 111 Flint Hall New 2 bedroom furnished duplex at 1816 Mo. $100 a month. Furnished 3 room house at $28 Indiana, $85 a month. 3 room furnished apartment at 121 W. 14th, $75 a month. Phone VI 3-3902 for T. A. Hemphill. 10-8 bedroom duplex and also a large 2 bed apartment (3111 Ferry, or phone IV 3-2281) (5111 Ferry, or phone VI 3-2281) A 3-bedroom house for rent at 827 Ken- phone VI 3-5182 or VI 3-6103 5 p.m. 10-4 For rent or sale, a 35 ft. x 8 ft. mobile completely furnished. Phone 10-4 9199 For Rent: A large room furnished for either single or double. Only three blocks from Massachusetts and only four blocks from Massachusetts and 11th Street. PHONE VI 3-1909. 10-4 Rent furnished — new 1 and 2 bedroom T. A. Phenilh, Phone 3 i-3902, 10-4 Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice and clean, see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. 3 room apartment, private bath, 1 block distance from campus. Utilize paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana, Iowa. Wanted: Male student to share apartment. Phone VI 3-2346. 10-3 ROOOMS FOR MEN; Doubles only, private entrance, private b a t h, telephone and utilities paid. One block from Union. Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tf HELP WANTED Want to join car pool, K.C., K. 6:30 a.m. return K.C., K. 11:30 a.m. Monday thru midnight. Ave. Avera. Civinity. G. L. Zalewski. School of Business or phone MA1-(2)645-10-5 10-5 Delivery boy 2 nights a week. Walters—part time. Also wanted, female cashier for delivery to campus. Please contact person at the Campus Hideaway or call VI 3-911. Ask for Gene Durham. 10-3 TRANSPORTATION Pi Phi sorbitry pin — arrow shaped. Lost on the walk between the Pi Phi house and a balley at 8:30 am. Thursday. Reward offered. Phone Mary Clark, V1-5-3910. LOST BUSINESS SERVICES Experienced math tutor will take students in all undergraduate algebra and calculus courses. Phone VI 3-5212 at p.m. 10- Trouble with Calculus? Daily tutoring sessions for Math 21 now being organized at reasonable rates. For details, phone VI 3-3447 between 11:00 and 12:00 p.m. Wanted: To do ironing in my home. Phone VI 3-2615. 10-8 Tutor for Math courses numbered A.B.2. Instructor for Robustly偿偿able Phone Neil Wood, VI 3-6866. 10-3 LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. ff DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, $ 9319/ $ 3263. tf TYPING BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard, BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard, $8 per week. Phone VICT7-7828. Knitting class starts October 16. Meeting Fee of $5. Phone VI YL 3-5219. 10-4 MISCELLANEOUS Manuscripts, theses, and. Also dissertations typed on typewriter MS Experientiae 35 Messiae Gilbert, MI Susanne Mugnen Gilbert, VI term papers. wide carriage. special keys, and sciences. 2-1546. if Secretary will do typing in home. Fast. accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 2-1749. ff T typing done in my home. 3 years ex- change work. 4 year work. guard wanagement. Phone VI 3-5630. 10-4 Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tf Typing reasonable rates, nest and ac- cidents. MRS. Bodin, 825 Creever Ter. VI 3-3188. Mrs. Bodin, 825 Creever Ter. VI 3-3188. *Typing - 6 years experience, theses, term papers, documents, manuscripts. All work neatly and correctly completed on time. Typewriter. Call VI 2-1467 10-3 time.* Experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI 2-16. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI 2-16. Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651. $ ^{46} $ Experienced typist wants typing—thasis —term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Phone VI 3-7211 after 5:30 p.m. tt Dave Brubeck I'm in a Dancing Mood Day Conniff The Way You Look Tonight Miles Davis If I Were a Beil The Brothers Four Marianne André Previn Like Love Duke Ellington Perdido Garmen McRae Paradiddle Joe Roy Hamilton Angel Eyes Gerry Mulligan What Is There To Say The Hi-Lo's! Everything's Coming Up Roses Lambert, Hendricks & Ross Cloudburst Buddy Greco The Lady Is a Tramp Swingin' Sound! COLUMBIA SPECIAL PRODUCTS A Service of Columbia Records Great new record offer ($3.98 value)...just $1.00 when you buy Sheaffer's back-to-school special! PENKEND Now when you buy your Sheafer Cartridge Pen for school, you get 98¢ worth of $2.95. Look for Sheafer's back-to-school special now at stores everywhere. On the back of the package, there's a bonus for you... a coupon good for a $3.98 value Columbia limited-edition record. It's "Swingin' Sound", twelve top artists playing top hits for the first time on a 12" L.P. This double-value back-to-school offer good only while they last! So hurry, choose your Sheafer Cartridge Pen from five smart colors... and mail your "Swingin' Sound" record coupon today. SHEAFFER'S BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL! New cartridge pen with 98¢ worth of cartridges FREE. $3.93 VALUE FOR $2.95 THE SHEAFERS AND CARTOUSES MARCELA BRUNER MADE IN BRAZIL SHEAFFER'S © 1982, W. A. BLAFFER FUN COMPANY, FORT MADISON, IOWA. Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1962 Schirra Orbit- (Continued from page 1) the "fireflies" first observed by Glenn. Reporting to Glenn, who was stationed at point Arguello, Calif., for the third U.S. orbital flight, Schirra said: "I have a delightful report for one John Glenn—I too see 'fireflies.' They're white. They look like ice crystals." "GOOD BOY," replied Glenn "They'll be whiter as you go along." Schirra said he produced the "fireflies" by banging on the side of his capsule, substantiating the theory that they are part of a moisture coating on the capsule's skin. Much of the time Schirra just drifted in space, with no attempt to control Sigma 7s orientation. By doing so he conserved previous fuel for the times it would be greatly needed in later orbits. At one point the temperature in his 20-pound space suit rose too high and perspiration beaded his lips. But soon he reported everything under control and said he was comfortable. ON EACH ORBIT, the Astronaut flew through alternating day and night. Each lasted about 45 minutes. It was during one "daytime" that he reported seeing the Sun and one "nighttime" that he observed the Moon. In starting on his third orbit, Schirra told Capeanaal that he was unable to spot America's big Echo balloon satellite as he had hoped. He said he was too busy with other things, including a determination of his fuel supply, and "did not feel it appropriate" to take time away from those tasks. Shortly afterward he reached into his food supply and pulled out specially prepared tubes of nourishment He ate the food and drank some water. Political Issues Are Missing (Continued from page 1) "WE DECIDED there was no test here," he said. "Negroes accept whites as equals." Another organization vying for campus attention is the Young Americans for Freedom, Sen. Barry Goldwater's conservative youth group, organized on the KU campus last year. "We just got our foot in the door for acceptance of the idea that there is conservative opinion on the campus." Jay Deane, Kansas City junior and YAF vice chairman, said. Deane said the group's publication "The Standard" became so successful that it was formally removed from the local YAF organization this summer and placed under a board of directors. The staff includes Dave Jackman, Wichita sophomore, editor; Tom McGivern, Highland Park, Ill., sophomore, circulation manager; Gerald Sullins, Ottawa graduate student, manager; Wint Smith, former Congressman from Mankato, and Dwight Payton, Ellsworth, publisher. THE YAF WILL MEET at 8:00 p.m. tonight in Alcove C of the cafeteria in the Kansas Union. One of the most highly criticized groups on the campus is the Student Peace Union (SPU). Before it could celebrate its first anniversary SPU was tagged "radical" because of student picketing on other campuses. "Everyone seems to be in favor of peace, yet anyone who belongs to a peace organization is a radical," Mike McCabe, Topeka senior and SPU councilman, said. McCabe said the KU group has not participated in any demonstrations or picketing. Their main function is circulating petitions and acting as an educational organ. When the United States resumed nuclear testing the SPU handed out 2,500 protest pamphlets. THE GROUP WILL meet with four KU instructors — Harry G. Shaffer, assistant professor of economics; Kenneth Harris, assistant instructor of political science; Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science and Arnold Strasenburg, associate professor of physics, for a panel discussion of "The Nuclear War and World Peace" at 8:15 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. American scientists were highly pleased with the perfection of the countdown that preceded Schirra's flight. There was only one unplanned "hold," a 15-minute delay while a tracking station radar was repaired. There was one "built-in" hold of an hour, a period set aside in advance for checking. SCHIRRA also spent far less time in his capsule than either Glenn or Carpenter. Grinning and poised, he climbed into Sigma 7 at 4:30 a.m. (CST) and was hurled aloft 2 hours and 35 minutes later. Glenn, America's first orbital spaceman, spent 3 hours and 2 minutes awaiting launch last May 24. Two minutes and 10 seconds after take off the booster cut off as scheduled. Twenty-three seconds later the emergency escape tower was jetisoned and the Astronaut was on the edge of space. Less than two minutes later, Schirra reported all systems were "Green," or "Go," and the flight was proceeding satisfactorily. Dean Anderson on Road Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, was in Chicago yesterday for a meeting of the executive committee of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. KU-Y Asks $6,000 to Aid Programs The anticipated spending for the KU-Y for 1962-63 is $13,972. This money comes from the Henley House endowment fund, $1,200; chrysanthemum sales, about $700; the self-supporting Model United Nations, (Continued from page 1) Official Bulletin French Ph.D. reading exam: 10:39-11:30 170 Foster to books to Miss Craig, 170 Foster by OLt. International Students: The first Peo- lace to attend is on Saturday, October 13. Interested students should sign up in the Student Union. The trip will be to Kansas City. TODAY Episcopal Holy Communion: 9:30 p.m. Danforth, Chapel. Le Cercle Français se réunira mercédié le 3 octobre à 16 h. 30 dans la salle one de Fraser Hall. Tous ceux qui s'intèrent au français sont cordialement invites. Organic Chemistry Colloquium: 4 p.m. sayee Jom Lewis 'Optically Active Conditions' TOMORROW Der deutsche Stammtisch, 5 Uhr Donnerstag, den 5 Oktober, Student Union Cafeteria. Kommens Sie wenn Sie Zett Wenn Sie später kommen, macht's nicht. Baby Elephant Is First in 43 Years PORTLAND — (UPI) — Packy, the first baby elephant born in this country in more than 43 years, got a playmate today. A female elephant was born at 7:25 a.m. Zoo director Jack Marks said all seemed to be going well. $600; possible donations, $6,500; Rock Chalk Revue, about $5,000; membership dues and a possible concert. THE EXPENSES of the KU-Y are the salaries of three staff members, $11,300, and the financing of its various programs and projects, $2.672. Moore outlined several solutions if the KU-Y should fall short of its anticipated income. These include reducing the size of the staff, eliminating the part-time office help, borrowing from the Henley House endowment fund, making an emergency appeal to friends, draw from reserve operating funds, or sponsor a fund-raising program. "The solution would depend on how much the budget was short," he said. The lack of subsidy and the turning toward fund-raising has led to a reorganization of staff responsibilities in the KU-Y. A larger proportion of staff time this year will go toward raising funds and a smaller proportion to working with students. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY "But," Moore said, "the staff can operate more effectively since there has been no change in staff members from last year. Moore said the budget would have to be increased next year. "We will need to increase next year the amount we raise now to compete for personnel, to offer more in salaries. However, we don't want to divert students to mostly fund-raising because that's not what the KU-Y is for." Portraits of Distinction Photographer HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL CAMEL CHOICE QUALITY TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND Richard Bertram OCEAN RACER AND YACHT BROKER The best tobacco CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES ©1962 R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C. Daily Hansan LAWRENCE. KANSAS 60th Year, No.15 Thursday, Oct. 4, 1962 CRC Urges Action On HRC Survey The Civil Rights Council last night returned the fraternity discriminatory clause issue to the campus. The CRC urged that the report made last spring by the Human Rights Committee (HRC) of the All Student Council be referred back to the HRC for reconsideration and evaluation The proposal will be presented to the All Student Council Tuesday. Last spring, the ASC tabled the HRC report which was presented by Brian Grace, Lawrence junior, then HRC president. The report was compiled from HRC questionnaires distributed among KU students. AT THAT TIME the HRC turned down a CRC suggestion to have two University professors, experienced in poll-taking, word the question-naire. The CRC objection centers on alternatives offered in answer to the question "... which of the following do you feel would be the best organization to accomplish this removal (of clauses from fraternity constitutions)." The alternatives were the University administration, the ASC or the Inter-Fraternity Council and/or the fraternities and sororites themselves. Don Warner, Topeka senior and CRC president, said CRC members believe that the wording of the question assumes only one of the alternatives is possible. He termed the wording of the questionnaire "loaded." "WE BELIEVE all three are responsible for clause removal — the administration, the ASC and the fraternities and sororites," he said. Warner said the Council does not necessarily disagree on the conclusions of the HRC, but it does object to the means by which the conclusions were reached. In other action, the CRC decided to send a letter to Attorney General Robert Kennedy, urging that the Justice Department continue protection of James Meredith at the University. The letter urged "immediate action be taken against Governor Ross Barnett to insure that his example will offer no encouragement to other segregation leaders." The letter said: "The crisis assured James Mere-dith and literally, the whole world, that our nation considers its racial prejudice a disease which must be conquered rather than neglected." TURNING to other matters Council members accepted Warner's new membership plan. New members will sign a loyalty statement and buy 25c membership cards. The fee entitles students to membership during their entire stay at the University. Warner said that previously it was assumed that a student was a member if he were regularly enrolled at the University and had attended two CRC meetings. In part, the proposed loyalty statement says: "WE, THE undersigned, support through our membership of the CRC of KU in its struggle to obtain equal rights for all persons . . . through legal and non violent procedures. Plans for the fourth annual Kansas conference on civil liberties were discussed. The all-day meeting will be held in the Kansas Union, Oct. 13. Miss Frances Levenson, director of the national committee against discrimination in housing, and Kansas Atty. Gen. William M. Ferguson, will be guest speakers. Plan Model UN Interviews Today Interviews for the Model United Nations Steering committee will be held from 7-11 p.m. today in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. The UN steering committee is a policy-forming body for the University of Kansas mock UN conference. This year's conference will be held March 29 and 30. Betty Reynolds, Wellington senior and steering committee chairman said previous experience in the Model UN is the only committee qualification. The annual mock UN has a long history on the campus. The meeting grew out of an International Relations club convention in Emporia in 1946. The first UN conference at KU was held in May, 1946, and was sponsored by the International Relations club, Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, and Pi Sigma Alpha, national political science society, and the University Forenics league. WATERPROOFING—The trench in front of Watson Library has been dug so the building's foundation may be waterproofed. This is part of the construction project involving the new addition to the library. Noted Kansas Editor To Be Honored Here The 1962 addition to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame will be announced during Kansas Editors' Day here Saturday. The Hall of Fame is an honor roll of Kansas editors who have made outstanding contributions to their profession and state. Each year one new member is elected from a list of Kansas editors deceased at least three years. THE ANNUAL election was started in 1931 by the then Department of Journalism. Among the Hall of Famers is William Allen White, for whom the KU School of Journalism is named. White was entered as a member in 1944. The 1961 Hall of Fame winner, Frank Motz, was a graduate of KU and began his career as a reporter for the Kansas City Star. Motz was the late founder and publisher of the Hays Daily News. The editor of the Abilene Reflector-Chronicle, Henry B. Jameson, will address Kansas newspaper editors at the general session of the conference. Jameson will make his address, "We Shook Hell Out of the Community," immediately following the announcement of the 1962 addition to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame. JAMESON WILL speak on the opportunities of a small-city editor to stimulate interest in his newspaper by giving detailed and analytical coverage of local government. He will describe his coverage of the Dickinson County budget last July, particularly of the county's provisions for welfare expenditures. Ballots for the Hall of Fame are sent each year to editors of all daily and weekly Kansas newspapers. Editors who have been in the newspaper business in Kansas 25 years or more are members of the Quarter Century Club and their votes count toward the election. Votes cast by other editors are counted in the nominations for the following year's holdover list. The announcement of the 1962 winner will be made by Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism. Theatre Denies UDK Charges On Price Policy The University Theatre yesterday denied University Daily Kansan editorial charges that its new prices and seating policy were unannounced and that it was forgetting the students. Gordon Beck, instructor of speech and drama and head of ticket sales and publicity for the University Theatre, said the seating plan had been published widely in Daily Kansan advertisements, Lawrence Journal-World, Alumni Magazine, the new fine arts bulletin magazine "Intermission," and other newspapers and publications in this area. BECK ATTRIBUTED the change in seating policy to rising costs. "With every increase in price from royalties right on down to nails, things cost more money," he said. "The public, including the university campus, wants to see bright, lively, and necessarily expensive productions." "We went back and made a very careful survey of the last five years to discover the number of student tickets used at each production. We have not scaled (the ticket prices) to deny any student admission to the University Theatre. Nearly half the house is student sectioned," Mr. Beck added. "We want students to come to the theater." "We planned an extra production for 'Paint Your Wagon' because of student demand," Mr. Beck said. "Student demands far exceed the number of seats available for the previous November shows." THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE tries to be self sufficient from its box office revenue, and last year's ticket prices were inadequate. Mr. Beck said. This year the University Theatre thought it best to adopt a graduated price scale to meet its expenses better. "We have essentially followed the same plan as the University Concert Course in which there is a high- (Continued on page 12) Weather Clear to partly cloudy this afternoon, tonight and Friday. Few showers possible extreme southeast this afternoon and evening. Scattered showers or thunderstorms extreme west tomorrow. Warmer this afternoon and tonight. Low tonight in the 50s. Come-From-Behind Giants Open Series With Yanks Today SAN FRANCISCO—(UPI) The dog-tired but dead-game Giants, riding the impetus of the wackiest pennant finish in baseball history, went out today to dispose of another old foe in the first game of the world series. Two outs away from defeat, they ripped a page out of the past to down the Los Angeles Dodgers in the third and final game of their error-ridden dog fight for the National League flag. Then, 11 years ago to the day, a home run swept them to victory over these same arch rivals. This time it was a walk and an error. BACK THEN, after Bobby Thomson's pennant winning homer, the Yankees beat the Giants four games to two. It was just as good. And now, as in 1951, it sends them against the well-rested Yankees—but this time they hope the outcome is different. This is the seventh time the Giants and Yankees have met in the series with the Yankees the victors in four of the previous six. Manager Alvin Dark, still a little stunned, said it probably would be southpaw Billy O'Dell or right hander Jack Sanford as the Giant starter. Hoping to get them off to a winning start, manager Ralph Houk of the Yankees, nominated his clutch southpaw ace, Whitey Ford, to open the series. "I GUESS FLL have to talk to all my pitchers before I make up my mind," he said. "I expect to pitch," said O'Dell, who won 19 games for the Giants this year. If O'Dell goes today, it will be Sanford, a 24-game winner, to-morrow. "I want to save (Billy) Pierce for the first game at Yankee stadium or. Sunday." Dark said. The Giants still were so thrilled over their playoff triumph that they weren't looking to the future. "The important thing was to beat the Dodgers," says Mays. "That's the only thing that counted." MAYS WAS ONE of the key players in the Giants come-from-behind triumph over the Dodgers at Los Angeles yesterday. His hard smash off relief pitcher Ed Poebuck's glove scored the first run in the big four-run Giant ninth inning and he also tallied the final run. "Who ever thought we'd do it?" Mays kept asking over and over. "We were two runs down and we usually don't do very well against Roebuck." But they did yesterday and won with a last ditch rally—just as they did 11 years ago. THE DODGERS, who had come off the floor to win the second play-off game Tuesday, in front 4-2 going into the ninth, thanks to the spectacular base running of Maury Wills and the big bat of their bating and runs-batted-in champion, Tommy Davis. Roebuck. who had come on in the sixth inning in relief of starter Johnny Podres and got out of a bases-loaded jam with no one out, yielded a single to pinch-hitter Matty Alou to start the Giants ninth. But he got Harvey Kuenn to ground into a force play and the Dodgers looked like they might be home free. It was not to be. For Willie McCovey, batting for Hiller, walked and the panic was on. Roebuck also walked Felipe Alou and up came Mays. Stan Williams, who won Tuesday's second game, then came in and retired Cepeda on a fly ball to right, the tying run scoring after the catch. HE HIT A hard grounder that bounced off Roebuck's glove—Roe-buck said "I never saw the ball"—and the Giants closed their deficit to one run with the bases still loaded. With Bailey at bat, a runner on third and Mays on first. Williams uncorked a wild pitch. It wasn't wild enough to permit the runner from third to score, but Mays went to second on it. SO MANAGER Walt Alston of the Dodgers ordered Williams to walk Bailey. That strategy back-fired when Williams, with a three and one count, walked Davenport, forcing in what proved to be the winning run. Then came the fourth Dodger error of the game and the Giants had an insurance run. That made it four for the inning — the same number the Giants scored in the ninth when they beat the Dodgers in that 1951 playoff. The big ones back on that day in the Polo Grounds came on Thomson's home run. Yesterday they came on four walks, two hits and an error. Dark and his players were glad that playoff history repeated itself. But they do hope that 1951 history won't continue into the series. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 4, 1962 Rebuff to Atkins A Colorado Board of Regents candidate recently disclaimed the editorial stand of the University of Colorado student newspaper (reprinted at the far right) for its position on the CU football situation. The candidate, Dr. Dale Atkins, voiced loud and severe criticism of the student newspaper situation at CU and how this was reflected in the editorial in question. (See center column.) The points which were suggested by the writer of the editorial (who is the editor of the Colorado Daily, Gary Althen) are definitely moot ones. The entire scope of the question of intercollegiate athletics is constantly under analysis. There is almost always some party taking issue with the principles and issues involved with intercollegiate athletics. Unfortunate circumstances such as those at CU last spring only add to the distastefulness of the situation. BUT THE QUESTION HERE is not that of intercollegiate athletics. The argument is with Dr. Atkins' attack on the Colorado Daily. This should be immediately qualified by stating that there is need for comment on what is happening at CU not because of a parallel arrangement here. This is, fortunately, not of primary importance. What is of concern are the charges which were made against the Daily in light of their reflection on student newspapers throughout the nation in defining a position, purpose, control, direction, and scope. Dr. Atkins took strong issue with the Daily's not maintaining adamant support for university sponsored functions—such as a football team or game. He contended that the football team "deserved" support like that of any other activity within the realm of the University. He mired himself further in the muck of embarrassment and lack of knowledge of what a newspaper (whether it be student or commercial) is and does by criticizing the Daily for not serving as a public relations organ for the University. It is within the concepts manhandled in this area—of the place and function of a student newspaper—where Dr. Atkins stomped most harmfully upon not only what the CU Daily may be trying to accomplish but also upon what the University Daily Kansan has developed into probably the finest tradition of purpose on campus anywhere. THE FUNCTION OF ANY NEWSPAPER is not to reproduce only the favorable aspects of the community it serves. The function of a newspaper also encompasses that of being a watchdog, a leader of opinion, an investigator, and of providing an outlet for community thought. Dr. Atkins has allowed room for none of the positive functions of a newspaper just mentioned. He seems to consider a newspaper to be nothing more than an organized propaganda sheet authorized by a single aspect of the community by which it is therefore mandated to protect and deal with sacrosanctly. In the same breath Dr. Atkins commented he was for freedom of the press and voiced sharp doubt in the right which the CU Daily has accepted to undercut a University function. Dr. Atkins did not feel the paper had the privilege to "take off" on something which operates under University sanction. This represents nothing short of bordering on hypocrisy. How can there be freedom of the press, expression, speech—anything—if a subordinate body cannot exercise the right of criticizing any other body, whether this criticism be leveled at a superior body or not? The next area of discussion is that which deals with the content of a student newspaper. Dr. Atkins contended that the students at CU did not want to be subjected to great amounts of political news. He thought the student body would be much more appreciative and be getting more for its money if the Daily were to offer a "bright, newsy issue of news of campus events." DR. ATKINS LAMBASTED THE POLITICAL bias and prevalence of editor opinion. This cannot be commented upon here because a content analysis of the Daily has not been attempted. But the general tone and content of a student daily newspaper, whether it be at Colorado, Harvard, or Kansas, can be mentioned. It is the consensus that college, almost universally, is becoming continually more difficult, that universities are attracting more outstanding people and that the general attitude on campuses throughout the nation has become one of a more serious, scholastic, mature nature. Certainly then it must be the place of the student newspaper to not only stay abreast and meet this changing attitude but to lead it. Another function of any newspaper which is disclaimed by Dr. Atkins is that of education of the readership. Newspapers have always served an important educational function in any society and this is the entire basis for a newspaper. A newspaper's purpose is to inform. What is education if it is not the act of being informed? TWO OTHER MAJOR CONCEPTS in regard to student newspapers are mentioned in the Atkins' blast. He commented upon the student tuition subsidization of the Daily and the absence of a faculty adviser for the paper. A student newspaper's advertising revenue will undoubtedly not cover expenses. Therefore it must solicit funds from its readers, as does any newspaper. The CU Daily may be unique in its position of not having a faculty adviser. This position is not entirely enviable. The Kansan has an adviser and the relationship between him and the policy of the Kansan is directed toward freedom of student opinion. The idea of a faculty adviser is good, if he were to act only as one who catches errors after they have been committed. Therefore Dr. Atkins' "suggestions" and criticisms are taken from this quarter with considerably more than a grain of salt. His right to hold such contentions cannot be contended. But the accuracy and effect of such claims should be considered in their proper perspective. Bill Sheldon (Editor's note: The following article and the one appearing on the right (How You Play) are reprinted from the Colorado Daily, student newspaper of the University of Colorado. Both are concerned with the charges made by a Board of Regent candidate to the editorial in the Daily which dealt sharply with the situation of inter-collegiate football at that university.) CU Daily Attacked Dr. Dale Atkins, regent candidate, recently urged the end of student subsidization of the Daily, called for the establishment of an editorial advisor position and promised an investigation of the Daily if he were elected regent. In calling for the end of subsidization of the Daily, Dr. Atkins said: "THE MONEY is derived from the student tuition, and I can think of many ways it can be better spent. Certainly, our college students shouldn't be required to spend money that comes hard to a great many of them for such tripe as they're finding in their own paper. "I think it is tripe not to support a university sponsored function such as the football team. As such it deserves as much support as any other university-supported function, such as the debating team. "I would like to know why an article like that (the editorial) would be published. I would like to know if the editor is receiving counsel, and if he isn't, why not. "I AM FOR FREEDOM of the press but I don't believe it gives license to take off on University sponsored functions." Dr. Atkins, a former baseball star at the University, noted, "If I am elected, I will investigate the student newspaper policy, its organization, its advisors and counsellors as well as its political bias and incomplete coverage." The Daily should be "more of a news organ than an opinion sheet," he said. "I can't believe the kids up there enjoy reading all this news about politics-I think they would rather have a bright,newsy issue of news on campus events. "THE PAPER SHOULD reflect the views of the campus majority—and it hasn't. I don't think it should try to educate them (students) politically—it should be objective." The function of an editor is not to point out his own personal dislikes, Dr. Atkins said. It would be better to be more objective. "IT WOULD BE better if the editors didn't get out on a limb and take issues so much. Let people form their own opinion," he noted. "The Colorado Daily is missing a great bet by not being a good public relations thing for the University. One of the University's faults is poor public relations—the public image is bad." He then blamed the University administration and the present board of regents for permitting the Daily to be handled in a "haphazard manner." Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, trifweekly 1908, dally Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., Chicago, IL 60611. Published by United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University's summer holidays. University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Scott Payne Managing Editor EDITORIAL MENT Clayton Keller and Bill Schroeder-Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinez Business Manager Dennis Robinson Marketing Doug Farmer, Circulation Manager; Gene Spalding, National Advertising Manager; Carolyn Clarke Client-developed Manager; Jack Cannon, Promotion Manager. DICK FLOOD COLORADO - LOST - OCT 6,1962 The vanishing buffalo. How You Play Tomorrow night should see the first in a series of losses for the University of Colorado Golden Buffaloes, termed as the "vanishing herd" by sports columnists. Thirty-five bison have been felled since last spring, and the encounter with the Redskins (Utah) is yet to come. GONE IS the coach who engaged in illegal financial practices to secure outstanding players. Gone are the outstanding players who accepted illegal aid for their weekly services. Gone are several outstanding players who were not able to meet the minimal scholastic standards established by the Big Eight Conference. ALL THAT REMAINS is a coach untried in college play and a team which, the experts say, will not win a single game all season. We hope the experts are correct. We hope the Buffs lose tomorrow's game and lose all those to follow. Only then, when the glory of Jerry Hillebrand and the conference championship has been lost in a string of inglorious defeats, will those who are concerned with the well-being of the University see the idiocy of supporting an exorbitant weekly circus in the name of an institution of higher education. When a college football team purged of its dishonest and scholastically inept elements is previewed as contender without hope, one can only wonder what sort of standards of honesty and scholastic fitness prevail on teams previewed as winners. WHEN PLAYERS ARE scholastically ineligible in spite of lowered standards, correspondence courses and special tutors, one wonders how much a university must prostitute itself in order to maintain a winning team. These anomalies arise because present-day intercollegiate football is a professional game played under amateur rules. But the amateur rules are enforced only on occasion and the rest of the time the hypocrisy prevails. Now that the University finds itself a victim of the system—an amateur team competing with professionals—it should be in the mood to consider a change. As we see it, it has three alternatives: 1. THE UNIVERSITY COULD take the lead in making intercollegiate football strictly amateur. There would be no football scholarships, no recruiting junkets and fewer new uniforms. 2. THE UNIVERSITY COULD take the lead in making intercollegiate football strictly professional. The football program would be self-supporting. Players would be paid for playing without having to sneak to the local apothecary; class attendance would be optional. There would be no selastic eligibility rules. 3. IF NEITHER of the preceding courses proves desirable or successful, the University should abandon intercollegiate football and turn its attention from Folsom Field and Anderson's Drug to Hellems Annex and the Chemistry Building where it properly belongs. (From the Colorado Daily) University Daily Kansan 'J.B.': A Puzzle to Ponder Page 3 By Robert Scott Phillips An amalgam of three parts theatrical hokum, four parts dramatic dynamite, and one part Biblical evocation was blended last night on the stage of the University Theatre. Archibald MacLeish's "J.B." under the masterful direction of William Reardon, associate professor of speech and drama, opened a four-day run to a first-night audience which seemed largely unprepared and unready for the dramatic fare served them. The audience is always something of a key factor on opening night, and this particular group was restless and inattentive during much of the performance—a true rapport between actors and spectators was seldom achieved. Also, for the players, the cough brigade was out in full force and thoroughly drowned out a number of good lines. The three roles (sadly enough, major ones) which failed substantially to come through to this reviewer in a concrete, fully-realized manner were those of Mr. Zuss, J.B., and Sarah. None of these characters seems to have understood what his portrayal was really all about, and that vagueness obviously makes rather tough sledding for the audience. The problem need not be solely the fault of the players in question, all of whom enacted their roles with admirable finesse, but may simply refer back to MacLeish and his original conception of the characters, which appears to have been a bit fuzzy at times. JERRY DAVIS, of Kansas City, as Mr. Zuss, MacLeish's Godfigure, unfortunately lacks the voice quality and dramatic intensity for the part, but he brings to it, nevertheless, much conviction and dignity which occasionally approach power, but usually fall somewhat short. Miles Coiner, a Lawrence graduate student, plays J. B., the modern businessman Job, with a great deal of histrionic skill. Nevertheless, one is left with the impression that this is precisely the sum total of his interpretation — not heart and guts, but histrionic skill. His torment, in a word, seems superficial. J. B. is, of course, a difficult part to create, since until the last five minutes of the play, he is little more than a dupe for the two puppet-masters, Zuss and Nickles. Coiner's J. B. is an emotional character, but not an emotional experience for the audience. Lightweight Power A recently developed, four cylinder, nickel stainless steel engine supplies 175 horsepower although it weighs only 175 pounds. It is being tested in sports cars and boats. Carol Strickland, Kansas City junior, fails somehow to present a coherent and sustained interpretation of Sarah, the tortured wife, throughout the performance. Her degree of emotional involvement also seems rather superficial, and unequal to the complexities of the part. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers FOR THE GREATEST part of the evening, the stage virtually belongs to Virgil Godfrey, assistant professor of speech and drama, portraying MacLeish's most successful character realization — Nickles, the Satan-fiure. Prof. Godfrey has, of course, the juiciest role of the play, and he makes the most of it to an extent which makes his performance almost incomparable with the others. The direction of Prof. Reardon is sensitive and powerful — his conception of the work as shown in this production, his synthesis of the two major versions (the original Yale and the Broadway of Kazan), is big enough to contain a ruling pattern and yet to accommodate many diverse notions of interpretation arising from the cast itself. THE SETTINGS, designed by James Hawes are imaginative and highly adaptable to the movement of the play. The lighting and special effects by Donald Redmore and Burton Meisel are extremely dramatic and well-conceived, particularly during the spectacular bomb scene. The sound, created by Carl Bentz is always splendidly executed and germane to the action on stage. To sum up, theatrical hokum seems to be the ingredient in the amalgam whose essence most dominates the entire mixture. KANSAS 100 Years Separate These Buffalo Hunters... But just like Buffalo Bill the Jayhawks will whip the Buffaloes this Saturday CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. 8th and New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 Open Thursday Till 8:30 p.m. 63 KI Senior Beverage Blast 10-12 Saturday Morning at the Big Barn Jim Clement See: Senior ID's or $1 per person and the Disciples A whole truckload of your favorite beverage from Milwaukee! Thursday, Oct. 4, 1962 All the Swingers Will Be There! GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES Having a Party? LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 MIXU Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION THE PLACE TO TAKE A DATE For a Convenient, Pleasant and Inexpensive evening, take your date bowling at the Jay Bowl. Jay Bowl! The place the college student goes for real fun. Open Daily—8 a.m.-11:30 p.m. Sunday—1 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Jay SHOPPE This Sale Exclusively at The Downtown Store! 835 Mass. SALE of FALL COTTONS DRESSES SUITS CAPRIS - BERMUDAS BIG 30% AND 40% REDUCTIONS While There is Still Time to Wear Them! Page 4 University Daily Kansar Thursday, Oct. 4, 1962 Senate, House to Pass Trade Expansion Act WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Congress planned to hand President Kennedy today the unprecedented power he requested to lead Americans into a "trading partnership" with the 170 million people in Europe's Common Market countries. The President's trade-expansion program—in substantially the form he proposed—was called up in the House for final approval. The Senate was expected to complete congressional action before nightfall. The measure would: - SET UP permanent new federal programs to help American workers who lose their jobs and business firms which suffer financially as a result of competition from foreign goods. - Give Kennedy greater power than ever has been delegated to a chief executive to tear down tariff walls against foreign goods. The powers would lapse unless used within five years. Kennedy plans to use them to negotiate better access for American products in world markets, particularly the sixnation Common Market. With final passage assured, today's votes provided an anti-climactic finish to the greatest legislative victory scored by the President since he entered the White House. The decisive battles were fought and won by the administration forces when they managed in the House last June and in the Senate last month to beat down all crippling amendments. THE FINAL BILL was a compromise between these somewhat differing Senate and House bills. All further amendments were barred. The trade program has topped Kennedy's list of "must" legislation ever since he sent it to congress last Jan. 25. Repeatedly, he has stressed that its enactment is "vital to the future of this country." Only one significant setback marred the administration's victory. Over the President's objections the final version included a provision that would force him as soon as practicable to raise U.S. tariffs against Communist Poland and Yugoslavia to the same discriminatory levels imposed against other Communist nations. THE LEGISLATION would allow Kennedy to reduce all U.S. tariffs by 50 per cent—and, in some cases, abolish them altogether—in exchange for trade concessions from foreign countries. The tariff-eliminating authority would apply to items for which the United States and the Common Market jointly account for 80 percent of the free world's exports. If Britain enters the Common Market, this authority will cover a wide range of products. If not, it will be limited to aircraft and little else. U. S. workers displaced from jobs because of imports would be entitled to seek cash subsidies equal to 65 per cent of their previous wages up to a maximum of about $61 a week. The payments could run for 52 weeks for all such jobless persons. They would be extended to 65 weeks for persons 60 and older and run for 78 weeks for workers being retrained for new jobs. WAKE UP! General Electric CLOCK WAKE UP! General Electric CLOCK OUR LOW DISCOUNT PRICE $2.88 Plus Fed. Tax WAKE UP! There is a Store in Lawrence That Beats the DISCOUNT Houses — On Appliances, Radios, TV, Stereo, FM, Tires, Bicycles, Seat Covers . . . etc. RAY STONEBACK'S 929 Mass. VI 3-4170 11 12 1 10 2 9 3 8 4 7 5 Coming Monday! KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers PRIZE WINNERS At The COACH HOUSE REGISTER FOR DRAW TRUST THANK YOU Drawn by Trudy Meserve, Vice-Chairman of ASC and Jo Snyder, Secretary of ASC. The winners and prizes are VILLAGER DRESS—Judy Koeppe, Hashinger SHETLAND CARDIGAN—Pam Tennyson, GSP SHORTY SKIRT—Kitten Baker, GSP CORDUROY PANTS—Cynthia Thompson, Corbin GLOVES—Pat Liscum, GSP BRACELET—Mrs. Frank Dance, 902 W. 25th HANDBAG—Ann Baker, Corbin VILLAGER SHIRT—Marsha Dutton, Lewis Hall SKIRT/BLOUSE SET—Judy Stanton, Stouffer Pl. COACH HOUSE University Daily Kansan Page 5 Ole Miss Homecoming Moved OXFORD, Miss. — (UPI) — University of Mississippi officials, fearful of having a football crowd on the campus during a time of racial tension, said today the Saturday game with the University of Houston would be played at Jackson, Miss., instead of Oxford. The University of Houston had previously expressed a desire not to play the game at Oxford because of the unrest there. The announcement, confirmed by Memorial Stadium officials in Jackson, capped a confusing series of announcements and reports that first had reported the game would be played at Oxford, and then named Houston as the site. Thursday, Oct. 4, 1962 School officials had announced earlier today that the game would be played at Oxford as scheduled, but the Justice Department strongly opposed it, fearing what could happen when 35,000 persons, charged with the emotionalism of football, homecoming and racial unrest, crowded onto a campus still guarded by federal troops. The team had been alerted early today to stand by for a trip to Houston. U. S. Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy had been reported considering cancellation of the game altogether. Last night two Justice Department officials flew to Washington to confer with Atty. Gen. Kennedy about the matter. They were due back at Oxford during the day. The Mississippi football team, ranked seventh in the nation this year and no. 5 last year, has been practicing at times with troops only a few hundred yards from their playing field. The announcement came as Negro James Meredith, focal point of the unrest that broke out in bloody rioting Sunday night, was allowed to go to classes alone for the first time today. Up to now, he has been accompanied on his rounds by a handful of Deputy U.S. Marshals and a truckload of troops. The campus was quiet again last night under the scrutiny of Army troops. There were no incidents as Meredith, who does not plan to be on campus this weekend whether or not there is a game here, walked to his first class in solitude. Some fraternity members engaged in some horse play, firing small firecrackers and then standing with hands behind their necks But the MPs quickly noticed this was a joke and passed it off without any arrests. in an attitude of surrender and arrest when Military Police came on the scene. The game was to be the focal point for a gala homecoming weekend which traditionally includes a freshman pajama parade, huge bonfires on the campus, dances, and parties in the fraternity and sorority houses on this "Country Club" University campaand band contests for the high schools of the state. It was announced on the floor of the Mississippi Legislature that the game would be played in Oxford and legislators were urged to help get out the crowds. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers KU SPORTS on 1320 KLWN 7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts 5:15 Today Jayhawk Locker Room 5:35 Tom Hedrick Sports 819 Mass. ARENSBERG'S VI 3-3470 Fall Footwear Black or Antiqued Brown Calf $10.95 For campus or your leisure hours soft, flexible hand sewn slip-ONS are a girls' best friend. Squared or tapered toes to please any whim Black or Antiqued Brown Calf $10.95 Otter Calf $10.95 Coach & Four Charge Accounts Invited Coach + Four GAS-TOONS 52 "He thinks it's a SLOW LEAK . . I'm waitin' to see!" We like to see you around ..but we won't keep you waiting for service! LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE Telephone VI 3-9830 706 W. 9th I you're off & winging Wear the natural-shouldered jacket, reversible vest and traditional PostGrad Slacks in a single solid combination. For an entirely different look, flip the vest over to a muted plaid that matches the beltless,cuffless Piper Slacks. Just ad-lib as you go along and man, you've got it made at any session! The 4 pieces in understated colorings; $39.95 at swingin' stores. h.i.s M 4-Piece Combo Suit A N G Open Every Evening Safeway CENTER Key Rexall Drugs T. G. & Y. Ronnie's Beauty Salon Malls Barber Shop Little Banquet Count Down House N ACME Laundry & Cleaners Speed-Wash Peggy's Gifts & Cards Western Auto T Elms Sinclair Service R Maupintour Travel Kief's Record & Hi-Fi Shop Evenings Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 4, 1962 Arabian Student Heads Study Club The Arab-American Club, organized to promote better relations between Arab countries and America, will hold its second meeting of the year Oct. 10 in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union. Ed Murrow III in Tehran The club, open to all interested students and faculty members, elected Ahmad Hamdani, Aden, Arabia, graduate student, its president at the initial meeting Monday night. Two other graduate students, Qmniya Souleem of the United Arab Republic and Salwa Haddad of Brummana, Lebanon, were elected secretary and treasurer. TEHRAN, Iran—(UPI)—U.S. Information Agency Director Edward R. Murrow has been hospitalized with suspected pneumonia. FREE DELIVERY Call before 4. Delivered after $ $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 COOPER DRUG Murrow suffered from breathing trouble when he arrived here Tuesday on his tour of the agency's information centers. Club officers said they would like to encourage students to study the problems of Arab countries and "learn the truth" about the Arab people — their history, culture, problems and aspirations. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd. Res. Ph. VI 3-5984 Lawrence, Kan. How Does Chicken Come? Baskets-Tubs-Barrels BIG BUY 23rd & Iowa in October REDBOOK on sale now SEX ON THE CAMPUS: THE NEW MORALITY Dr. Margaret Mead writes of A Tasty Kraut-Burger only 44c K' PANCAKE GRILL & SUNDRIES 14th & Mass. Open 24 Hours a day LARRY CRUM - Suggests - M. J. HARRISON 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 BELL'S Peter, Paul & Mary On LP Records SPACE, MISSILE & JET PROJECTS AT DOUGLAS have created outstanding career opportunities for SCIENTISTS and ENGINEERS B. S. degrees or better Assignments include the following areas: Servo-Mechanisms - relating to all types of control problems Electronic Systems—relating to all types of guidance, detection control and communications Propulsion -relating to fluidmechanics, thermodynamics dynamics, internal aerodynamics Environmental - relating to air conditioning, pressurization and oxygen systems Human Factors-analysis of environment affecting pilot and space crews, design of cockpit consoles, instrument panels and pilot equipment Heat Transfer—relating to missile and space vehicle structures Structures relating to cyclic loads, temperature effects, and the investigation of new materials methods, products, etc. Aerodynamics—relating to wind tunnel, research, stability and control Space vehicle and weapon system studies-of all types involving a vast range of scientific and engineering skills Solid State Physics relating to metal surfaces and fatigue Get full information at INDIVIDUAL ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS with a Douglas representative with a Douglas representative We urge you to make an appointment with Mr. Donald Metzler, Associate Dean, School of Engineering & Architecture. Thursday, October 18 S. A. Amestoy, Staff Assistant to VP Engineering 41 you cannot, please write to DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT COMPANY, INC. 3000 Ocean Park Blvd., Santa Monica, California An equal opportunity employer JACK LEMMON ERNIE KOVACS KATHRYN GRANT The FRIDAY FLICKS move to FRASER THEATER tomorrow night Same times but new place! 4 OPERATION MAD BALL Shows at 7 and 9:30 the FRIDAY FLICKS FRASER THEATER 35c Admission—tickets for both shows on sale at Union on Friday or at the door Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers HIV PREVENTION SERVICE FREEMAR LOOK FOR THE GOLDEN CREST FREEMAN Hand-Sewn "Bunny Blacks" Hand sewn vamps are fashioned by master craftsmans in the art as they swiftly detail the guantone stitch. The vamp is leather lined, the sole genuine leather rubber. The price Rise! A B 8-12 & 13 & 14; B 12 & 13 & 14; A 6-12 & 13 & 14; E 6%-12. $14.95 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. Thursday, Oct. 4, 1862 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Square Dance to Join The Twist on Campus The twist, locomotion and other native rites may soon be joined on the KU campus by an older but no less vigorous dance form. If all goes as planned, KU will have a square dance group after 7 p.m. Friday when the first meeting of the group will be held in Robinson gym. EDWARDS EMPHASIZED that the purpose of the group will be for instruction as well as dancing, and that students are invited to come whether they can square dance or not. But, if you're thinking in terms of jug, fiddle, and jeal's-harp—don't. "Nor do many people realize what a variety of different activities and steps are possible in square dancing," he added. "We hope to give students the instruction that will allow them to execute the advanced patterns of modern square dancing." "Ordinarily," Edwards said, "we have trouble getting enough boys. The women usually come out, but boys seem to think that there is something 'wrong' with square dancing." "MODERN SQUARE DANCING is quite different from what most people visualize and from what is seen on television," Dr. Karl Edwards, professor of education said. (Edwards is president of the Northeast Kansas Callers' Association, and the caller for the KU group.) "Some of the music is old-time Western." Edwards said. "But some of the music is quite modern. The main interest in the group so far has come from those students that participated in the Summer Language Institute in Germany this summer. ALLEN GAMMON, Leawood sophomore, said that the students who went to Germany were given a lesson in square dancing before they left. This was so the students could demonstrate American folk dancing to their German hosts. The German students reciprocated with the Schuhlpatter, a German folk dance. the KU-Y is sponsoring the group EARL'S PIZZA AMERICA'S NO. ONE PIZZA Pizza Palace GET PIZZACATED Take Out Orders Are Our Specialty Phone VI 3-0753 NEW FALL SHOES! 729 Mass. Lawrence, Kansas SERVED DAILY FROM 4:00 P.M. UNTIL 12 P.M. Friday and Saturday—Open until 2:00 p.m. HARVEY'S DISCOUNT SHOE STORE 1302 W. 23rd Sun.: noon-5 Mon.-Sat.: 9-9 | | 12 inch MEDIUM | 14 inch LARGE | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | CHEESE | $1.10 | $1.50 | | ONION | 1.10 | 1.50 | PEPPERONI | 1.35 | 2.00 | SAUSAGE | 1.35 | 2.00 | KOSHER SALAMI | 1.35 | 2.00 | BEEF | 1.35 | 2.00 | EARL'S SPECIAL | 1.45 | 2.15 | MUSHROOM | 1.50 | 2.25 | TUNA FISH | 1.50 | 2.25 | ANCHOVIE | 1.50 | 2.25 | SHRIMP | 1.50 | 2.25 | GREEN PEPPER | 1.50 | 2.25 | HOUSE SPECIAL | 2.00 | 3.00 | Flats, mocs, booties oxfords, ties! Suedes, pigskins. Brown, black, otter beige, or red in all sizes. We not only advertise the world's best pizza, we serve it. Misses' Sports and Flats $2.87 - $3.87 $4.87 NEW! PRO-ELECTRIC ROLL-ON FIRST! 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Sets up your beard for the cleanest, closest, most comfortable shave ever! 1.00 SHULTON Old Spice PRO-ELECTRIC ROLL-ON LOTION Old Spice PROELECTRIC ROLL-ON LOTION ONE HOUR "MARTINIZING" the most in DRY CLEANING ONE HOUR MARTINIZING PRICES Suits ... 1.20 Pants ... 6.0 Sweaters ... 6.0 Sport Shirts ... 6.0 Sport Coats ... 7.0 Jackets ... 7.5 Top Jackets ... 1.35 Dress (plain) ...1.20 Skirts ...60 Sweaters ...60 Blouses ...60 Short Coats ...1.10 Medium Coats ...1.25 Long Coats ...1.35 STILL TIME (BEFORE THE WEEKEND) at 14th and Mass. across from Central Jr. High New 1-Hour Dry Cleaning No Extra Charge ONE HOUR MARTINIZING . . . the most in quality dry cleaning is in the "PERFECTED" one-hour process . . . by using the newest, most modern equipment, and applying our own spotting techniques, deepcleaning methods and carefully finishing your garments, ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING ASSURES YOU: ★ Odorless Cleaning ★ Garments Stay Fresh Longer ★ ★ Sanitary Clothes ★ ★ Cleaner, Brighter Garments ★ SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c One Hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING 1407 MASS. — FREE PARKING — ★ Gentle, Individual Treatment for Your Fine Fabrics One hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEARING SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c 1407 MASS. FREE PARKING ONE HOUR MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 4, 1962 VOX, UP Discuss Council Elections Vox Populi and University Party meetings in the Kansas Union tonight will cover the upcoming All Student Council elections. John Grothusen, Ellsworth junior and Vox Greek vice-chairman, said that petitions for ASC seats will be collected from all living groups at the Vox general assembly meeting. Vox members who petitioned for ASC seats will be interviewed by the Vox executive committee next week. The executive committee will recommend candidates to the general assembly either Oct. 11 or 18. Grothusen added that the assembly will discuss possible platform planks and the proposed traffic control amendment brought up at the last ASC meeting. The University Party independent co-chairman Nancy Lane, Hoisington junior, said UP's executive committee will discuss candidates, party membership and arguments for decentralization of the polls The meeting is at 7:30 in the Meadowlark Room. "UP did not circulate petitions this year," said Miss Lane. "However, on committee applications, members were asked if they wanted to run for office." Students who wish to run in the BIT O' SCOTCH Care for a bit o' Scotch? Just step this way — in our buckled kilt that's so smart with casual clothes. $8.99 McCoy's 813 Mass. KILTIE maineaires UP primary must submit their names to a nomination committee which checks the candidacy-seeker's qualifications. Black suede, black leather and antiqued brown leather. Sizes to 10 "Nearly all the names of students who wish to run will appear on the UP primary ballot," said Hollace Cross, Kansas City, Mo., senior and UP vice-chairman. Primary elections for both parties will be held Nov. 6 and 7, followed by general elections Nov. 13 and 14 Over 250 students are expected to attend the orientation meeting of the University of Kansas Peace Corps tonight. Crowd Expected at Peace Corps Meeting The meeting will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Robert Swan, Topeka junior and chairman of the KU Corps, said committee progress reports and a film will be given. Official Bulletin International Students: The first People will be on Saturday. Oct. 13. Interested students should sign up in the P-1-P-office, Union. The trip will to Kansas City. Organic Chemistry Colloquium: 4:00 Active Carbons, Jon Lewis, "Optically Active Carbons," jon.wholesale.com TODAY Der deutsche Stammtisch: 5 Uhr Donnerstag, den 5. Oktober, Student Union Cafeteria. Kommen Sie wenn Sie Zeit haben. Wenn Sie spacer kommen, macht nicht. TOMORROW Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: Inter-Varsity Christian Appreciation: *Authority of the Sacred Journals.* International Club: 7:30, Big 8 Room, social discussions, lunch and refreshments, hourdaies and refreshments. International students are invited to a joint Happy Hour and picnic at 5 p.m. at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, 1301 West Campus Road. SATURDAY French Ph.D. Reading Exam: 9:30- 11:30, 11 Fraser. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results Attention, all witty, urbane college students: Get Lucky! MAKE $25 (or would you like to try for $50? ENTER LUCKY STRIKES' ZANY NEW "Crazy Questions" Contest MAKE $25 50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE'S HOW: First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up with a nutty, surprising question for it, and you've done a "Crazy Question." It's the easy new way for students to make loot. Study the examples below, then do your own. Send them, with your name, address, college and class, to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y. Winning entries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries submitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a $25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now! RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries on the basis of humor (up to $ \frac{1}{3} $ ), clarity and freshness (up to $ \frac{1}{3} $ ) and appropriateness (up to $ \frac{1}{3} $ ), and their decisions will be final. Duplicate prizes will be awarded in the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the entrants and must be submitted in the entrant's own name. There will be 50 awards every month, October through April. Entries received during each month will be considered for that month's awards. Any entry received after April 30, 1963, will not be eligible, and all become the property of The American Tobacco Company. Any college student may enter the contest, except employees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising agencies and Reuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees. Winners will be notified by mail. Contest subject to all federal, state, and local regulations. THE ANSWER: A MONKEY WRENCH THE QUESTION: What would you use to titten a loose monkey? THE ANSWER: Alma Mater THE QUESTION: What is Pete Mater's sister's name? THE ANSWER: G.B.S. THE QUESTION: Can you name three letters besides DECFHIJKLMNOPQR TUVWXYZ? THE ANSWER: Night after night in that log cabin he studied by firelight THE QUESTION: Why is Abe's eyesight so poor? THE ANSWER: One Hamburger, One Frankfurter THE QUESTION: Where in Germany are your two friends from? THE ANSWER: a four-bagger THE QUESTION: What would you call a really strong cup of tea? The answer is: Get Get Lucky the taste to start with...the taste to stay with Lucky The question is: WHAT CIGARETTE SLOGAN HAS THE INITIALS GL tttsw . . . tttsw? No question about it, the taste of a Lucky spoils you for other cigarettes. This taste is the best reason to start with Luckies...the big reason Lucky smokers stay Lucky smokers. This taste makes Luckies the favorite regular cigarette of college students. Try a pack today. Get Lucky. Product of The American Tobacco Company LUCKY STRIKE IT'S ROASTED CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. "Blaeese is our middle name" Thursday, Oct. 4, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Watkins Director Says Few Have 'Insurance' Immunization shots against Asian flu are being ignored by the majority of KU students, the director of Watkins Memorial Hospital said yesterday. I. Caputeson, director, emphasized that these shots are Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, direct the only protection against flu. "We should be having twice the turnout we are having," he said. "In the last nine days we have had only 2,500 students take shots." ASIAN FLU occurs in three-year cycles. This is the third year of the latest cycle. "THAT ISN'T too far away in today's world of fast transportation," Dr. Canuteson added. The director said persons in close contact with each other are particularly susceptible to Asian flu. He said local epidemics have already broken out in the Far East this year. "Yet, if we can get half of the students to take the shots we will have beaten any possible epidemic," continued Dr. Canuteson. "The shots are not good after an epidemic starts because they build up immunity too slowly." An influenza epidemic would not be a new thing to KU. In 1918, about 1,000 students were sick with Spanish influenza. Watkins Hospital had to open two new wards to handle the 86 students sick with flu in 1936 and Flu shots provide immunity to all three types of flu virus after two weeks. in 1557 the first Asian flu epidemic struck. Innoculations began three weeks ago and will end next Wednesday. Residence houses wanting shots given at the houses should sign up immediately at the hospital. Today, nurses will be at Sigma Alpha Epsilon from 4 until 5 o'clock, at Delta Chi from 5 until 6 and at Grace Pearson Hall from 5 until 5:45. Tomorrow they will be at Jolliffe Hall from 11:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. and at Pl Beta Phi from 5 until 5:30. British Consider Cuba Trade Move The American request was made through the British embassy in Washington on Tuesday. A spokesman said that "consultations will continue" on this issue. LONDON — (UPI)— The British government is "considering" a request from the United States for restrictions on shipping in trade to Cuba, the foreign office said today. Indications are the British make no immediate moves to impose limitations on the shipping. DANCE at OLD LOG CABIN located at OAK LODGE 15 Miles South on Highway 59 DO-IT-YOURSELF CAR WASH 50c FRIDAY NIGHT — Good Music $1.00 Per Couple All Washing Materials Furnished JERRY ALSO FEATURES FOR THE COMING WINTER MONTHS— - High Quality Dunlop Tires SATURDAY NIGHT—Only $2.00 Dance to the — CONTINENTALS Student Special - Guaranteed Anti-Freeze - Hottest Brand Going - Conoco Products JERRY'S CONOCO "Student Owned and Operated" 9th & INDIANA When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds ANOTHER DIXON SPECIAL In Order to Introduce You to Our Outstanding QUALITY SERVICE Dixon's are serving their famous mouth-watering Cheesecake-reg.35c Thurs. - Fri.- Sat. only Come Out and Try Some Tonight 15c Other Specialties--- ● CHILI ● BAR-B-Q BEEF ● PORK TENDERLOIN ● FRIED CHICKEN (now only 7 min.) DIXON'S DIXON'S DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT 2500 W. 6th VI3-7446 New! TATOR TOTS FRENCH FRIED POTATO DELITE Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Oct. 4, 1962 Algeria Future Seems Clouded By Joseph W. Grigg United Press International PARIS—The new nation of Algeria is facing up to the reality of independence with 75 per cent of its Moslem workers out of a job and the country's economy almost at a standstill. The nationalist leaders who headed the fight against the French for more than seven years had nursed ideas that independence automatically would confer on Algeria the role of dominant power in North Africa. Instead, they have found that unless they can put their own house in order, Algeria faces disaster as grim as that which hit the Congo. ALGERIA'S present plight can be traced to two body blows which struck it even as the nation celebrated its independence from 122 years of French rule. The first was a wide-open split between the nationalist leaders, who hitherto had maintained a solid front of unity to the outside world. The second was the mass flight of more than 600,000 of the one million Europeans in Algeria in less than three months. The leadership struggle drove the nation more than once to the brink of civil war. Ahmed Ben Bella, the left-leaning strong man who had the backing of most of the army, came out on top of the pile. But only after a three-months-long fight which brought the nation's economy and political life to a dead stop. IT WAS THE chaotic economic and political conditions which stemmed from the leadership battle that were largely responsible for the mass flight of Europeans. The French government had figured on about 70,000 emigrating to France each year over a five-year period. Instead, the human torrent of 600,000 which poured across the Mediterranean into France in three months created a critical problem for the French and a major disaster for Algeria. The Europeans held the key to Algeria's economy. More than 60 per cent of all business activity was in their hands. They provided employment and furnished the skilled workers, the civil servants, teachers, doctors, lawyers and engineers who ran the country. Without them Algeria has found its economy cannot function. Both the French and Algerians have attempted alternatively to cajole and threaten the Europeans into returning, but with little success so far. Businesses remain closed, European-owned stores barred and shuttered with notices that they are "closed for the summer." Millions of Algerians are workless and seeking relief which the nearly empty state coffers cannot provide. WITH THE departure of the Europeans the shortage of trained personnel is acute. Here is just one example: The Dine-A-Mite presents: JAZZ on SUN. Enjoy fine jazz sounds by the Jazz-Mite Trio with the new Dine-A-Mite Sunday buffet 6:30 - 9:30 Coming! The explosive true story of the only mutiny in British naval history! DAMN THE DEFIANT! DAMN THE DEFIANT! ALEC GUINNESS DIRK BOGARDE ANTHONY QUAYLE A new explosion from the maker of 'Sink the Bismarck'... in Eastman The nationalists are trying to set up an Algerian news agency. But they are unable to find trained newsmen, teleprinter operators, accountants or even secretaries for it. COLOR and CinemaScopeI In present-day Algeria a secretary can get twice the salary she would be paid in France. Under the Evian cease-fire agreement last March, the French promised independent Algeria sweeping economic, financial and technical aid. But they have held off so far until they see whether normal conditions are restored. STARTS SUNDAY! YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 VARSITY THEATRE ··· Telephone VIKING 3-1065 24 Hour Service Owner Radio Controlled Ward Thompson FAST FINISHED Laundry Service RISK'S 613 Vermont ZOTZ!!! MAGIC WORD FOR FUN! Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY COLLEGE THE INTERN'S GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788 Ends Friday 7:00 & 9:05 SEE THE WILDEST PARTY EVER FILMED THE INTERNS Varsity THEATRE ... telephone VI 3-1065 Now Thru Sat.! ZOTZ!! ... MAGIC WORD FOR FUN!! A WILLIAM CASTLE PRODUCTION - A COLUMBA PICTURES RELEASE — AND — THE THREE STOOGES IN ORBIT SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE ... West on Highway 40 Now Thru Sat.! DANNY KAYE WYNTER ON THE DOUBLE — PLUS — THE COUCH Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Now Thru Sat.! ZOTZ!! ... MAGIC WORD FOR FUN!! A WILLIAM CASTLE PRODUCTION - A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE THE THREE STOOGES IN ORBIT THE THREE STOOGES IN ORBIT SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE ... West on Highway 40 Now Thru Sat.! DANNY KAYE DANA WYNTER ON THE DOUBLE — PLUS — THE COUCH By the author of "Psycho" R PACIFIC PRESENTS DANNY DANA KAYE WYNTER ON THE DOUBLE THE COUCH MIGHTY EPIC OF THE HANDFUL OF MEN... WHO FORMED THE INCREDIBLE "FLYING WEDGE" AT THE BATTLE OF THERMOPYLAE 20th Century Fox THE 300 SPARTANS CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUXE STARRING RICHARD SIR RALPH DIANE BARRY DAVID ALSO STARRING EGAN • RICHARDSON • BAKER • COE • FARRAR • HOUSTON COMING SATURDAY! GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788 DU PONT BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING...THROUGH CHEMISTRY The sculptured knit: very in, very "Orlon Sayelle" MARCEL FUER HUNTINGDON'S smashing ski-county sweater, a rich, soft, big-stitched knit of 100% "Orlon Sayelle"*...DuPont's newest luxury sweat-seat fiber. Which makes it rugged, but lightweight, full of bounce. And unusually good-looking, Easyto machine-wash, machine-dry, Orwash it by hand and lay on a flat surface to dry, "Mont Blanc" in steel green, curry, nickel, blue, white, Sizes S.M.L. and XL. About $16.00. *Du Pont's registered trademark for its bi-compartment acrylic fiber. Du Pont makes fibers, not fabrics or clothes. Enjoy the "Du Pont Show of the Week" Sunday nights, NBC-TV. MAILLIARD'S SQUIRE SHOP PRAIRIE VILLAGE LAWRENCE, KANSAS Thursday, Oct. 4, 1962 University Daily Kansan SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Ternas cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint in 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported second insertion. Page 11 FOR SALE Continental — 1946 Lincoln Continental convertible, black with white tires and top. Red and white interior. Original V-12 engine just rebuilt. See R. Mofet at 1225 Kentucky or phone VI 3-9334 after six p.m. 10-10 '50 Olds, hydra-matic, heater, heater, sharp, clean. Recent valve job, new electrical system. See at 1725 Indiana or VI 3-1957. Ask for Bob or Wilur. 10-8 '59 Thunderbird in good shape. It's a steal at $1600. Phone VI 3-6768 on phone 212-444-4444. 3-speed lightweight Royce Union bikes cut to $77.50 in men's or ladies. New 2-speed automatic Schwinn, $48.88. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass, V 3-1470. 10-16 Boys' Western Flyer English bicycle. 3 speed generator, head and tail light, twin baskets; used only one set. Also, engineering drawing set — Dietz gen, 12 pieces stainless steel. Excellent condition. Phone VI 3-9140. 10-9 1959 Austin Healy, 4 seater, wire wheels. 2655 1100 Indiana. Jay Wilson at UW-10-5 2655 1100 Indiana. Jay Wilson at UW-10-5 TYPING PAPER BARGAINS. Pink typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow typing paper 120c per ream. per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1065 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday, tt Bicycle — Girl's, 26", Western Flyer. Call 91-2-1888. 10-4 1961 Volkswagen. 2-door. sedan. Call V 3-4016 after 5:30 p.m. for inquired 10-4 1860 Volkswagen with sun roof and in. for the day or VI 3:23 after 5:00 p.m. 10-8 1950 Ford, V-8, stick Only $100. Contact north carolina state university in Tennessee. New transmission and 10-8 UNICYCLES provide prestige campus transportation. See September 17 Newsletter, for details about parts. Send $1.00 for illustrated plans to Unicycle, Box 252, Worthington, Ohio. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental. New and used portables, standards and electronics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. tf Printed Biology Study Notes; 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tf Tirest Tires! 1000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes—most foreign sizes—extra low prices on Snow Tires until Oct. 1st. lst! 600-13 new style new tubeless tires for $29; 650-15, 700-$28; 750-14, 2 for $29; Free installation at rear, Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Massachusetts, VI 3-4170. 10-11 GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Study Notes. Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. Phone VI 3-8246 for free delivery. 10-8 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized furniture, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, etc., plus complete lions' pet supplies. Karman Chia white convertible, best 316 Mississippi. 5500 miles. PH. VI. S-10- 8-10 Western Civilization Notes: Yes, we will have them again. Extremely comprehensive, completely revised, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. We will go on sale on Oct. 8. First on the delivery list, call VI 2-1901 Now! Experienced math tutor will take students in all undergraduate algebra and calculus courses. Phone VI 3-5212 at 5 p.m. 10-9 BUSINESS SERVICES Trouble with Calculus? Daily tutoring sessions for Math 21 now being organized at reasonable rates. For details, phone VI 3-3447 between 11.00 and 12.00 p.m. Wanted: To do ironing in my home. Phone VI 3-2615. 10-8 LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tf DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentation. Ola Sultn 9394's. Mass. Call VI 32-563. BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard, desired 8 per week. Phone VI3-7828. $8 per week. Knitting class starts October 16. Meeting address: 307 N. Washington Ave, 5 of 10- 4 fee of $5. Phone VI 3-5219. MISCELLANEOUS Man with experience on adding machine or cash register to work evenings, Monday through Friday. Write Post Office box 412, Lawrence, Kansas. 10-8 HELP WANTED FOR RENT Very spacious 3 room apartment, completely furnished, first floor. 10 minute UU. Very reasonable rent to responsible students. For appointment I 3-6696. 10-8 furnished bachelor apartment with large living room, studio bed, kitchen and balcony. Also, a private bath and jacuzzi. Phone VI 3-6255 or see at 646 W. 23. Second floor furnished apartment for 2 students. Private bath and entrance. Utilities are paid. 1400 Ohio or phone VI 3-2464. 10-10 FOR RENT: extra nice furnished room for men, 123 blocks from campus, two rooms, 346. Ohio. Phone: 2346 or VI 3-2322. After 6 p.m. phone: 21-1031. 10-10 Large furnished apartment with large closets, private bath and entrance. Newly decorated. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-3263. 10-10 2 bedroom duplex and also a large 2 bedroom apartment for 3 or 4 boys. See at 1511 W. 22 St. Terr., or phone VI 3-2281. 10-9 New 2 bedroom furnished duplex at 1816 Mo. $10 a month. Furnished 3 room house at $28 Indiana, $85 a week. 3 room furnished apartment at 121 W. 14th. $75 a month. Phone VI 3-3902 for T. A. Hemphill. 10-8 A 3-bedroom house for rent at 827 Ken- phone VI 3-5182 or 8182 10:44 5 p.m. For rent or sale, a 35 ft. x 8 ft. mobile phone, completely furnished. Phone 10- 942-8188 BIPH For Rent: A large room furnished for either single or double. Only three blocks from Massachusetts and only four blocks from Massachusetts and 11th Street. PHONE VI 3-1909. 10-4 Rent furnished — new 1 and 2 bedroom house and duplex. $55 to $100 per month. T. A. Hemphil, Phone VI 3-3902. 10-4 3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block room campus. 2 blocks. All other classrooms and see. 1142 Indiana. fth Why walk up the hill, when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. ½ block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice and clean, see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. ROOMS FOR MEN: Doubles only, private entrance, public b a t h, telephone and utilities paid. One block from Union. Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tf TYPING Manuscripts, theses, and term papers. Also dissertations typed on wide carriage. Also pewr. in many keys. Experience education and science. Mrs. Suzanne Giulietta. VI 2-1346. if Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749. ff Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tt Typing done in my home. 3 years exp. Prep and prepare work. guard Phone VI 3-5630 10-4 Typing — reasonable rates, meet and accep- tance requirements. 3-3/18M Mrs. Bodin, S25 Greeter Terr. VI. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Resonance rates. Barw. Bowrow. 408 W. 15th. VI-216. 1M48. Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651. tt Experienced typist wants typing—thesis —term papers, etc. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Phone VI 3-7211 after 5:30 p.m. tf WANTED 3-45 yard line football tickets for the Colorado game. Phone VI 2-1876. 10-4 Wanted: A male student to share apat- titude with the lock from the cam- phone VI 3-2885. Wanted to buoy—A used baby bed, which infant to 3-year-old. Phone 919 10-5 919 LOST BABYSITTING, nlc home, large yard. BABYSITTING, nlc home, large yard. If desired, 88 per week. Call VI51-7828. TRANSPORTATION Pi Phi sorority pln — arrow shaped. Lost on the walk between the Pi Phi house at Holley at 8:30 a.m. Thursday ward offered. Phone Mary Clark, VI 1-3910. Want to Join car pool, K.C., K. 6:30 a.m. return K.C., K. 11:30 a.m. Monday thru Tuesday, K.C., K. 11:30 a.m. Ave. Ave. cimity, G. L, Zalewski, School of Business or phone MA(1)-2645. 10-5 STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd BIRD TV-RADIO VI 3-8855 STEREO 908 Mass. - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service FOOTBALL SPECIALS KU JAYHAWKERS LITTLE JAYHAWKER $1.00 JOE QUARTERBANK $2.95 UNION BOOK STORE "KU JAYHAWKS" Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 4, 1962 Charges Denied- (Continued from page 1) priced orchestra section, a second-priced first balcony section, and a lower-priced second balcony," Mr. Beck said. Ticket prices last year were $1.50 for any seat in the University Theatre. Students were entitled to one free ticket to each production. With a graduated price scale, there had to be some changes made, he said. **TICKET PRICES** this year are $1.20 for the 438 seats in the balcony rows E through P and for the 50 seats in rows T and U on the lower floor, a total of 514 seats. The 145 seats in rows A through D in the balcony and the 176 seats in rows N through S on the lower floor, a total of 321 seats, cost $1.80 each. There are 353 seats, which cost $2.40 each, in rows A through M on the lower floor. The 514 seats in the $1.20 sections were designated for direct ID card exchange, Beck said. Students may pay the difference and get better seats, a resulting 66 2/3 per cent discount on the $1.80 seats and 50 per cent discount on $2.40 seats. In other words, students would not have to pay over $1.20 for the best seats in the house. "STUDENTS WILL NOT be denied admission on any night for which there are any seats available, no matter what the price," Mr. Beck said. "In addition to the 514 seats and the seats remaining from coupon holders' exchanges, students are always admitted free to the 40 extra chairs placed in the auditorium when the full 1,188 seats are sold out." Beck said the box office would fill the student sections ($1.20) first, then it would issue seats in the next higher priced section ($1.80). He said the box office would issue tickets to the higher priced sections free as soon as the student sections were sold out, even if the sellout occurred a full three weeks before the show. The student may wait for this to happen if he wants, Mr. Beck said. "Before the University Theatre made these changes, we checked with Chancellor Wescoe, comptroller Keith Nitcher and Vice Chancellor Ray Nichols," he added. BOWLING is FUN! BOWLING is FUN! Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 32 AUTOMATIC LANES PRE GAME KICK-OFF ROCK and ROLL Band 9-11:30 a.m. Rock and Roll Twist and Cuddle Blast Those Jayhawks Out of the Huddle PURPLE PIG KEN COLEMAN—FULLBACK 810 N. Hampshire Read and Use Kansan Classifieds ANSA PLAYER OF THE WEEK Ken Coleman for being one of the top ground gainers in the KU-BU game Why not try the tops in cleaning and refinishing by the one that leads them all. . . . 1-HOUR 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE Acme Acme LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Downtown 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 Daily hansan 60th Year, No.16 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, Oct. 5, 1962 Gamma Phi Beta Joins Vox Forces Vox Populi added Gamma Phi Beta sorority to its ranks last night, but party officials stressed that Vox is not an all-Greek party. At a general assembly meeting, Vox representatives and office unanimously accepted Gamma Phi Beta after a motion by John E. Stuckey, Pittsburg junior. Stuckey reported that the sorority voted Action Favors Moving Slowly Action is still alive, but barely breathing. Ten interested students met behind closed doors in the Kansas Union last night in hopes of pumping new life into the organization. The lone holdover officer from last year Harold Johnson, Leavenworth graduate student, presided. ACTION WILL MOVE slowly this year, Johnson said after the meeting. "We are not going for broke," he said. "Last year one of our primary objects was recognition by the All Student Council. This year we are not as much concerned with recognition as we are with issues. "We are going to seek out persons sympathetic to our views and run them for office." Next week there will be a steering committee meeting to discuss the organization's leadership problems. Action, however, is not a political party, and its candidates will have to run as independents. In two weeks there will be a general membership meeting and election of officers. Membership totaled 200 last year. Action candidates received 471 votes. It takes 1000 students before it may become a campus political party sanctioned by the All Student Council. Action faces a big barrier in that it does not have ASC sanction and Johnson knows this. "We would be able to seek more membership if we had sanction. Our prime concern at the moment is still issues, not how many members we have. Action plans to support the same issues it had last year. Included in these were a five-cent cup of coffee at the Union, reaffiliation with the National Student Association and the asking of fraternities to remove their white clauses by Feb. 1, 1965. Johnson said the group was considering removing the date, but continuing its stand against segregation. Johnson quelched rumors that the organization would be conservative. "We are still left wing, but how far, I don't know." at a Wednesday night house meeting to seek Vox membership. "BY ADMITTING GAMMA Phi" Roger Wilson, Wichita senior and Vox president, said, "we're afraid that we will add to the false image that Vox is an all-Greek party. This is not true. Vox is a Greek-Independent party interested in working for all students, not only Greeks." "It would be hard to close our doors to Gamma Phi," he continued. "There is room for just as many independents in Vox. These girls sincerely want to work for Vox and that is what we want—workers." James A. Cline, Rockford, Ill., sophomore and Vox Independent vice president, expressed concern about the party's "false image." He read excerpts from an article in the "Templin Observer," dormitory newsletter which he said misrepresented Vox as an all-Greek party. Cline said the article, written by Greg Swartz, Overland Park sophomore and UP member, claims if UP's proposal, decentralization of the polls (DOP) is adopted, the Independents will be able to elect one more representative per large dormitory to the All Student Council. "This is probably true," said Cline, "but the same thing is probably true if Vox's poll program is adopted." UP HAS PROPOSED that polling districts be put in Lewis, Corbin and JRP dormitories and Fraser. Vox proposed Murphy Hall, the Kansas Union, and Strong Hall. Wilson said UP's voting districts defeat the purpose of poll expansion which is accessibility of the polls. Under UP's proposal, he said, each student has only one place where he can vote. "Under Vox's proposal," Wilson said, "a student can vote in any one of three polls on campus. They're going to pass places on their way to class, anyway." Wilson said Fraser Hall as a polling district would be severely overcrowded. He said UP proposes that 4,500 unmanned and unorganized students, scholarship hall residents, members of professional fraternities and cooperative houses, and all Greeks living east of Missouri Street would vote in Fraser. Thirdly, Wilson said UP's plan is too confusing and requires an extensive explanation informing students where they are required to vote. "THIS WOULD CAUSE TOO much congestion." Wilson added. (Continued on page 12) KU Professors Offer to Support Ole Miss Faculty Seven KU professors today telegraphed an offer to help "Ole Miss" faculty members who have taken a stand against blaming U.S. marshals for the Mississippi riots. The seven professors represent the executive committee of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AA-UP). "THEY HAVE TAKEN a pretty brave stand down there," Prof. Seaver said, "and Mississippi government officials may seek reprisals against them." Dr. James E. Seaver, KU chapter president, said the offer of help was contained in a statement telegraphed to Oxford this morning. He said the AAU statement undoubtedly will be approved later by the KU chapter membership, which is about 700. The KU statement called for an open expression of ideas and said that unless a free society's educational institutions "stand at the battlements . . . to keep the society open, the experiment in democracy may fail." THE STATEMENT said the Ole Miss resolution "reflects a resolve to accept its responsibilities for freedom, and its members must be commended for their great courage. . ." Dr. Seaver said a copy of the KU statement also was sent to the national AAUP office in Washington, D.C. The statement was in response to a resolution adopted by fifty members of the "Ole Miss" faculty yesterday. Their resolution charged it is "unfair and reprehensible" to blame the start of the riots on U.S. marshals. Factions opposed to Meredith's admission have charged this was the case. "IT IS OBVIOUS that errors in judgment were made by those in authority," on the campus Sunday night, the resolution maintained. "We have evidence that the attempt of men in prominent positions to place the blame for the riots on the United States marshals is not only unfair and reprehensible but almost completely false. "We encourage an investigation by the proper authorities," the professors added. Weather Fair today with increasing cloudiness tonight. Scattered thunderstorms are predicted for to-morrow. Highs today in the 70s. Low tonight in the 50s. High to-morrow in the 60s. JONATHAN BURKE TOP SENIORS-Allan Wicker, Independence, and Gail Eberhardt, Wichita, received the Lawson award at the Watkins-Summerfield scholarship banquet last night. (See story lower left.) UP President Denies Gerrymandering Label The president of the University Party said last night UP will back its poll proposal all the way at the next All Student Council meeting. Chuck Anderson, Osage City senior and UP President, disputed a claim by a member of Vox Populi that the "UP proposal was the greatest attempt at 'gerrymandering' in the history of the University." John Stuckey, Pittsburg junior, made the statement at a recent Vox meeting. "OBVIOUSLY STUCKKEY has a misconception of the term 'gerry-mandering,'" commented Anderson in a Daily Kansan interview. "The standard definition refers to a geographical redistricting, not poll placement." During a committee session preceding the UP meeting, Hollace Cross, Kansas City, Mo., senior and All Student Council member, suggested University Party circulate a petition if the decentralization bill Lawson Award to Wicker. Eberhardt Allan Wicker, Independence, and Cail Eberhardt, Wichita, received the Lawson award in honor of Paul E. Lawson, deceased dean of the college of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the annual fall Watkins and Summerfield banquet last night in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. One ten-thousandth of a grade point separates the University of Kansas' two top seniors scholastically. BOTH HAD A 2.9 grade point average. The two grade averages differed by a ten-thousandth. Wicker is a transfer from Independence Junior College. Six sophomore scholars with a 3.0 GPA received the Veta Lear award, instituted this year to honor a deceased university secretary, Recipients were Dudley Dean Allen, Lawrence; George Barisas, Kansas City, Mo.; Terry Mills Baxter Springs; Sharon Nelson, Larned; and Bob Olander, Salina. The award is Kansas Union book store credits to enable students to build a personal library. DR. ESTHER RAUSCENBUSH, former dean of Sara Lawrence College in Bronxville, NY., told the 115 Watkins and Summerfield scholars that there is a great deal of concern about the trend toward non-intellectual interest in college today. "Do students ever really get educated in college," Mrs. Rauscenbush asked the scholars. To answer her own question, Mrs. Rauscenbush said she had interviewed 150 students throughout the country. MRS. RAUSCENBUSH discussed five main points which she felt contributed to non-intellectual interest. 1. To do his best work the student has to form an alliance with something; he has to belong. Many students find their place in athletics, a fraternity or on the school paper. 2. Good grades have been over-emphasized. Students have a tendency to steer towards courses in which they will do well and refrain from studying things that will help them. "It irritates me when I have to take a course not in my field," one student remarked. "The thought of not being able to do well discourages me." 3. Students are more interested in personal advancement than in poli- itics and the world. Some students seek a college degree for what it will mean in the business world, rather than for the intellectual pursuit. Mrs. Rauscenbush said this is the time a student acquires direction to intellectual concern that may be lost if not gained then. 5. Colleges can solve the difficulties of numbers by giving opportunity to only the brightest people. 4. Students who have a really dynamic freshman year do better in later college life. "Perhaps we should reconsider the decision of higher education for large numbers." Mrs. Rauscenbush said, because "non-intellectual interest would not prevail in such an atmosphere." was defeated. No definite step was taken during the meeting. Anderson commented that several UP Greek members told him they felt the party power was shifting to the independents. The UP president expressed no concern over the incident which he termed "normal dissention." IN OTHER BUSINESS, UP announced it would not run a primary election this fall in any district except the scholarship halls. Anderson explained there was no competition within the houses. A decision on whether to affiliate with a campus political party is pending at Miller, Douthart, Battenfeld and Sellards Scholarship Halls. Anderson said Miller Hall, which recently voted not to affiliate with any party, is planning to vote again this Monday. In other business, William Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla. sophomore and campaign chairman, said University Party would stress unmarried, unorganized housing, co-operative groups and professional fraternities in the fall election campaign. Meredith May Have Taken KU Courses Records in the registrar's office show that a James H. Meredith was enrolled in extension classes here while serving with the 321st Bomb Squadron at Forbes Air Force Base, Topeka. The name sounds familiar and now people wonder if Meredith is the same student who just enrolled at Oxford, Miss. James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions, said Meredidih completed two courses, fundamentals of speech (in 1953) and composition and literature (in 1954). Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Oct. 5, 1962 LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Study Room Needed The All Student Council recently recommended to KU officials that campus classrooms be left open during the evening to furnish students with additional studying facilities. University officials answered the proposal by challenging the ASC to prove the need for leaving classrooms open. IT SEEMS UNIVERSITY officials should consider the students' "proof." KU is cramped with a mushrooming enrollment. Living quarters are too crowded for all members to study there so students need additional space to study in the evening and it is then that they turn to the University facilities for accommodations. They find few. Watson Library, with a seating capacity of about 600, cannot handle KU's enrollment of nearly 11,000. Many department libraries do keep evening hours. Where then can the students study? Art majors are displeased with the late afternoon shutdown of classrooms, and thus denial of the use of equipment, on the third floor of Strong Hall. Because the third floor of Strong is closed in the evening, art majors must lug paints, pencils, t-squares, chalks, brushes, poster paper, matting boards and exacto knives home with them. When they arrive home they are forced to work on the floor of their room, which is often poorly lighted and always cramped. In Strong, lighting is adequate, equipment is available and not makeshift. But students cannot get into Strong. OTHER STUDENTS COMPLAIN of the noise encountered in Watson and their living quarters. For this reason they would like private rooms to study in so they could have peace and quiet without the "non-student" and the socialites to bother them. Other students, especially math, chemistry and physics majors, as well as Speech I students, enjoy the availability of a chalkboard which they can find only in a classroom. Therefore it is hoped that there will be some positive action taken in this area for the benefit of the student body. -Margaret Cathcart Purchase Cuba? Before we go to war over Cuba we should at least offer to buy the remainder of it from Castro. In addition to what the Bay of Pigs flaseo has cost us, last week the Senate Appropriations Committee voted $70,110,000 for the assistance of Cuban refugees in the United States. This figure alone is more than we paid for the Louisiana Purchase, the Gadsden Purchase, Florida, Alaska, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippine Islands, and we still don't have title to Cuba—all we are buying is another economic problem in the form of displaced humanity. In spite of his purported hatred of capitalism, Castro seems to have an affinity for money—he is always demanding ransom money or tractors. Even Castro must realize that he has had it. An offer to purchase Cuba would give him a lucrative way out of his lost cause. We could make millionaires out of his power elite and throw in an offer to haul his people to Russia. No doubt the Russians would welcome the members of the Cuban agrarian reform-indications are that even the Cubans are better farmers than the Russians. Under such a plan Castro could retire in wealth to practice his speeches, his followers could live in Russia under the "Communist Freedom" they seek, and, best of all, we would have a new frontier for our two million excess farmers and our five million unemployed. Before laughing at this preposterous idea, consider that any idea which places us at an advantage is better than nuclear war. So far no one has come up with a better one. Bob Hoyt Wants Action Editor: Life in the East is certainly interesting, ACTION is the key word in Washington, D.C. The President took ACTION in Mississippi because all Americans have failed to fulfill their duties. The Civil Rights Council wants ACTION to end housing bias, The American Nazi Party wants ACTION in the form of troops to invade Cuba, not Mississippi. In fact, almost everyone wants some kind of ACTION. I was sorry to learn that at KU no one wants ACTION, not even Action. I, therefore, suggest that Action's name should be changed and its constitution torn up. It is a disgrace to the people who supported that party last spring to use the same name without the same devotion to justice and equality. Charles A. Menghini Charles A. Menghini George Washington University School of Law (1962 KU alumnus) Identification Wanted Editor: I ask the person that wrote the letter why he or she requested the name be withheld. If you have a legitimate complaint, why don't you want your name to be associated with it. This is in reply to a letter in Tuesday's Daily Kansan criticizing Kappa Alpha Theta sorority for songstests on their front lawn at wee hours in the morning. Editor: I am a member of one of the fraternities on Tennessee Street. I also am a member of the Daily Kansan staff. Since your letter appeared, I have been accused of writing the letter about 100 times by Thetas, my fraternity brothers, and other members of the Greek system. Why don't you let your identity be known in future letters? Take the consequences for your actions, ... Letters ... instead of leaving the door open for other to take them. Thanks in advance. Steve Clark Coffeyville junior Kansan Sports Editor Song Words Needed Editor: Last evening, I was compiling a songsheet for our hall to use when serenading the women's residence halls. When I came to our Alma Mater, I was not certain my words were correct, as far as the University and tradition were concerned, so I called the library of the University to confirm them. Following a rather lengthy period, I was told by some young girl that Watson Library personnel are far too busy to handle such things. She then returned the telephone to the receiver before I had time to continue with my questions. One wishes that the University might be a place where ideas are respected—where ideas are accepted or rejected on the basis of the logic supporting them, not because they are popular or unpopular or because one is emotionally attracted or repelled by them. That such is not always the case has seldom been better proved than by CMP's review of the novel "The Fountainhead" by Ayn Rand, published in Wednesday's Kansan. I ask you, is it too much to ask that our library have on hand a copy of the words to the Alma Mater of our own university? If this is any indication of our school's willingness to encourage the student's support, then I have no questions as to why the spirit of KU is so low. Criticizes Book Review Editor: This review is most remarkable for what it does not contain: (1) Paul Young Shawnee senior * * * any criticism of literary style and (2) any significant criticism of content. There is one statement worthy of an intellectual response, the rest is mere name-calling — "fascism," "anarchy," "cult," etc. Miss Rand writes in an extraordinarily vigorous manner about extremely radical ideas, and it is to be expected that she will arouse strong emotional responses from her readers. However, it is part of the discipline of the scholar that he reacts with his mind, not his "heart." Unfortunately, the one statement of "thought" in the review seems to contain a self-contradiction. It expresses the opinion that "Ayn Rand has not yet conceived of democratic individualism." What does this mean? Democratic government is rule by the majority. An individualistic government would be just that, individual government or self-government. We find it impossible to conceive of an amalgamation of these two states which would leave both concepts intact, and, therefore, be a state of "democratic individualism." In the interest of gaining enlightenment, we invite and would appreciate a serious discourse by CMP on "demonocratic individualism" or objectivism, Miss Rand's philosophy. The Committee for the Politically Disenchanted Marick Payton, chairman Short Ones All that is human must retrograde if it does not advance.—Edward Gibbon. If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous, he will not bite you. That is the principal difference between a dog and a man. —Mark Twain N-16 $ ^{ \textcircled{9}} $HOW CAN YOU BE SO ATTENTIVE TO LECTURES AND FLUNK ALL MY TESTS? $ ^{2 1} $ the took world THE IRON HEEL, by Jack London (American Century. $1.45). Since this book appeared in 1906 it has been the novel that has carried the name and reputation of Jack London throughout the world. In Soviet Russia, especially, it has been popular. It is difficult to see why "The Iron Heel" is so frequently passed over in dealing with either the utopian or the proletarian tradition. It is a landmark in either. "The Iron Heel" is ostensibly the story, uncovered centuries later, of how a fascist oligarchy stamped out a rising socialist movement in America early in the 20th century. London's story is frightening; his predictions are uncanny, for he forsees something akin to Nazism, and he even has an incident comparable to the Reichstag fire. The hero, Ernest Everhard, young socialist firebrand who has majestic dash and superman tendencies, must be London himself. The story is told by Ernest's wife, Avis, daughter of a University of California professor; the setting is chiefly San Francisco, except for a brutal and vastly overdone depiction of blood and violence in the "Chicago Commune." "The Iron Heel" also should be read as a social commentary on life in turn-of-the-century America. Reformers all over the land were uncovering incidents similar to those depicted.—CMP It is interesting that her most un-representative novel should stand today as Edith Wharton's best. "Ethan Frome" may be one of the best-known of American novels. It is certainly one of the grimmiest and unhappiest. Miss Wharton must have been influenced by the drama or "Wuthering Heights": people living together and loathing each other and being unable to leave each other except through death. "Ethan Frome" has few tender moments. It is mainly a novel that suggests cold and unfriendliness and the gloom of endless New England winters. ETHAN FROME, by Edith Wharton (Scribner Library. $1.25). And it is a true classic. No one can really know American literature without knowing this remarkable novel, which is short and crisp and little more than a long short story.—CMP Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Vlkong 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor Scott Payne Managing Editor Richard Bonett, Dennis Farney, Zeke Wigglesworth, and Bill Mullins, assistant Managing editors; Mike Miller, City Editor; Steve Clark, Sports Editor; Margaret Cathcart, Society Editor. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Shadow Clayton Keller and Bill Shieldon ... Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache Business Manager Dan Meek, Advertising Manager; Doug Farmer, Circulation Manager; Gene Spaulding, National Advertising Manager; Bill Woodburn, Classified Advertising Manager; Jack Cannon, Promotion Manager. University Daily Kansan Page 3 Students Urged To Boost Image Of U.S. Abroad A University of Kansas Peace Corps official last night urged students to participate in improving the American image abroad. "THE VOLUNTEERS overseas are doing useful work," he said. "The people in foreign countries eagerly await the arrival of the Corps workers. It is stimulating to know that your generation of young people is serving a need. You, also, can play a part." Thomas M. Gale, associate professor of history and director of the KU Peace Corps program in Costa Rica, spoke at the Corps orientation meeting in the Kansas Union. The volunteers will leave the United States Dec. 21 and travel to Puerto Rico for further training. Following an orientation at the University of Costa Rica in San Jose, the Corpsmen will begin their assignments in Costa Rican secondary and higher education. Prof. Gale explained the volunteer training program for Costa Rica project, which will get underway Oct. 26. The eight-week program will bring 41 college and university graduates to KU for "intensive" training. John Middleton, Kansas City, Mo, junior and chairman of the Corps special events committee, announced plans for a KU Peace Corps week Oct. 29-Nov. 2. Tentative plans include a University convocation, an English style debate, forums and other special events. THE CORPS SPEAKERS' bureau announced plans to send speakers to Kansas clubs to speak about the Corps program. John P. Atkinson, Topeka sophomore and new distribution chairman reported that pamphlets about the Corps program will be placed in the Lawrence High School, court house and library and in Haskell Institute. Reading centers have been established in Marvin and Bailey halls and Watson library, he said. Other plans include a KU foreign language seminar for prospective Corpsmen and a drive to collect items, such as books and clothing, which volunteers abroad may need. Kansas Teachers Open Conference Four KU faculty members presented a panel discussion today for the Kansas Association of Childhood Education and the Annual Reading Conference joint meeting being held here today and tomorrow. Speaking on "Creativity in Elementary Education" were: Frank E. X. Dance, assistant professor of speech and drama; Eink L. Jorgensen, professor of music education; Phil Reuschoff, associate professor of education, and Joie Stapleton, professor of education. De Gaulle Rebuffed, Government Is Toppled PARIS—(UPI)—The French National Assembly revolted against the growing power of President Charles De Gaulle today and toppled Premier George Pompidou's government by a crushing vote. But De Gaulle ignored the crisis and went off to watch army maneuvers. The angry assembly, haunted by the ghost of Napoleon III, sent the government to humiliating defeat in a censure motion shortly before dawn. The assembly revolt was primarily directed against De Gaulle although the President himself could not be ousted from office by such a vote. Instead of remaining in Paris to deal with the crisis, De Gaulle took a train to Rheims this morning to observe France's biggest postwar army maneuvers being held in the champagne country of eastern France. THE BEATEN and exhausted Pompidou was left behind in Paris. He could not even hand in his formal resignation—as required by law after the parliamentary defeat—until De Gaulle returned to Paris, probably iate tonight. De Gaulle did not even stay up to hear the results of the vote. He was sleeping soundly at the Elysse Palace and was informed only when he awoke that the government had fallen. The spectacular rebuff to De Gaulle came on a censure motion over the president's plan to bypass parliament and ask the people in a nationwide referendum to approve his plan to have future presidents elected by direct popular vote. The Assembly vote was 280 in favor of the censure motion--39 more than needed to get it through the 480-member chamber. All parties from Communists to the extreme right joined forces against the deputies of the Gaullist Union for the New Republic (UNR). Three UNR deputies even voted for the censure motion and were promptly expelled from the party ranks. Pompidou will be asked to stay on in caretaker status until an acceptable compromise candidate can be found to form a new government pending new national elections. Just before the debate began yesterday, De Gaulle appeared on television to speak on behalf of the forthcoming referendum. He did not once mention the censure motion in parliament but delivered a clear warning that if the national referendum went against him he would resign. DE GAULLE apparently expected the National Assembly vote would go against him. Highlight of the debate which dragged on until 3:40 a.m. today was the opening speech by Paul Reynaud, former World War II premier who now is 84. "Your answers on Oct. 28 will tell me whether I can and should pursue my task in the service of France," he declared. "He has wanted to be George VI and Churchill," snapped the dapper Reynaud. "He has not accepted the republican concept according to which France exists in its Parliament. He has slid toward personal power . . . "THE CONSTITUTION has been violated. Parliament has been despolved." One result of the present crisis may be to crystallize political groupings in this country into two clearly defined blocs. Friday, Oct. 5, 1962 JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY Kirsten's Hillcrest Shopping Center Sportswear • Majestic • Jr. • White Stag • Helen Harper • Open 9th & Walnut (No. Lawrence) The Flamingo Proudly Presents the Music of the Fabulous Checkmates (Rock and Roll and Twist) Every Saturday for your dining and dancing pleasure Now Serving Your Favorite Beverages Featuring - Sandwiches (TGIF Every Friday Afternoon) Open at Noon Fully Air Conditioned Large Parking Area Club Available for Private Parties - U. S. Choice Grade A Broiled Steaks - Sea foods - Sandwiches 2.3.5 R North across Kaw River to the first street (Elm St.). Turn Right on Elm, follow Elm to end of road (Ninth St.). Turn Right one block. Time, Place Changed For AWS Exam The time and place of the Associated Women Students (AWS) quiz to be given Tuesday, Oct. 9, has been changed. The test will be given at 6 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, instead of 6:30 in the Pan American Room, as was announced. Freshmen women who are running for two seats in the AWS Senate and two in the House of Representatives are required to take the test. Mating Deer 'Roar' Like Lions LONDON — (UPI) The forestry commission assured campers in England's new forest today that the lion-like roars they have been hearing at night were the mating calls of deer. We Rent Most Anything Anderson Rental 812 N. H. ART KERBY SERVICE Mobilgas OFFERS YOU - Tune-up - Wheel Balancing - Brake Service - Complete Lubrication - Mobil Tires & Batteries CALL VI3-9608 9th & Kentucky Pick-up and Delivery Kansan Classified Ads Get Results terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS Lawrence's Largest Selection Imported and Domestic WOOLENS $2.98 to $5.95 a yard 54-inch woolens . . . coatings, suitings, or dresses, and all are sponged & shrunk, ready-to-sew! 22 colors worsted flannels, worsted dress crepe, tweeds and textured novelty woolens. Vogue-Simplicity-McCalls Patterns You'll find more to sew at terriI's LAWRENCE KANSAS 803 Mass. Page 4 University Daily Kansar Friday. Oct. 5. 1962 KU Nuclear Reactor May Hold Many Secrets of Better Living A silent, blue glow deep within a 30-foot tank of water may hold the secrets to better living in Kansas. The state dedicates its first nuclear reactor center Saturday at the University of Kansas. The glow will result when scientists turn on a sustained fission reaction in the center's nuclear reactor. Dr. Harry Hanson, assistant surgeon general of the U.S., will be the main speaker at dedication ceremonies open to the public at 10 a.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Senator Frank Carlson and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe also will speak. They will help dedicate a half million-dollar facility built with a combination of private and government financing. The center has a host of practical uses, including the training of future nuclear scientists, research into radiation safety, and improvement of the state's future water supply. THE MODERN, white limestone building actually houses three units; the nuclear reactor, the department of radiation biophysics, and the Environmental Health Center. All three sections are interrelated, and use nuclear science in their studies. The public is invited to tour the nuclear research center from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday. The "star of the show," of course, will be the reactor itself. A silent, mysterious mechanism, it operates within the tank of command of University technicians licensed by the Atomic Energy Commission. VISITORS WILL BE able to look into the tank and see the control rods and unit of enriched uranium 235 which activate the fission reaction. The reactor is the "swimming pool" type, in which there is no danger of radiation. The water in the deep tank serves as a protective shield, as a reflector of neutrons emitted by the reaction, and a cooling agent for the reactor. When operating, the 10-kilowatt reactor generates about one-third the heat of a household furnace. Dr. Russell Mesler and Dr. Harold Rosson are in charge of the reactor's operations and the training of qualified technicians. Actually, the reactor has been in operation since February. Many of its preliminary operations have been training exercises and tests of its performance. Now that this work is virtually completed, the center is prepared to delve into cooperative research with other departments of the University and to continue technician training. "THE REACTOR has two uses." Dr. Rosson said. "It's primarily a training instrument for nuclear engineering students. It's also a research tool used primarily for the production of neutrons and gamma radiation." The reactor is also useful in providing isotopes of short half-life for use on the campus," Prof. William J. Argersinger, director of research administration said. "It would be impossible to bring isotopes here from Argon Laboratories (Chicago), Brookhaven (Long Island, New York), or Oak Ridge (Tennessee)." Prof. Argersinger said the nuclear reactor is a necessary instrument for graduate study. The University now offers an M.S degree in nuclear engineering. A legislative appropriation of $269,852 was granted to construct the building, and a grant of $100,000 came from the Atomic Energy Commission to purchase the 10-kilowatt reactor from the Bendix Corporation. The U.S. Public Health Service provided $70,453 in a grant for environmental health facilities and equipment. Peanuts Threat To Adjournment WASHINGTON — (UPI) — A House-Senate conference committee agreed today on a compromise $3.93 billion foreign aid money bill, but disputes over pensions and peanuts threatened hopes for adjournment of congress this weekend. While the aid bill was regarded as one of the chief remaining obstacles to adjournment, a possible pocket veto by President Kennedy of a pension bill for the self-employed brought on a threat of delaying tactics by Sen. George A. Smathers, D.-Fla. Smathers indicated he would try to keep congress in session past midnight next Wednesday in order to enact the pension bill if President Kennedy fails to sign it or announce a veto by tomorrow. The term pocket veto is used where the President refuses to sign a bill and it dies after congress goes home. A dispute over an agriculture money bill also clouded adjournment plans. Sen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga, won Senate support for delaying action on a $5 billion "must" Agriculture Department money bill, in a continuing House-Senate wrangle over funds for farm research projects, including peanut research. The House - Senate confeeres agreed on foreign aid appropriations totaling $825 million less than President Kennedy requested. The agreement came after a compromise was reached on aid to Communist countries and nations trading with Cuba. The agreement would ban all military assistance or strategic aid to Iron Curtain countries but would allow the President economic assistance, such as food and medicine. The house bill would have blocked all aid while the Senate bill contained virtually no restrictions. The cut in Kennedy's cash request for the aid program was the biggest in the 15-year history of the program. The $3.93 billion actually approved was about $300 million more than the House voted previously but $500 million less than the Senate authorization. Rep. Otto Passman, D.-La., the leader of House aid slushers, said the compromise was "another great victory" for the taxpayers. ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass. Egypt Sending Troops By Liner to Yemen ADEN — (UPI) — Egypt was reported moving troops toward embattled Yemen today to support that country's 9-day-old revolutionary regime against counterattack by tribesmen loyal to the royal family. Informed sources in Cairo said the troop-loaded Egyptian liner Sudan sailed south from Suez Wednesday, under reported orders to lie off the Yemenite coast in readiness to supply any necessary aid to the rebels. Unconfirmed reports said other Egyptian forces in the Red Sea area had been alerted for possible movement toward Yemen. The Cairo government promised its support Wednesday to the military revolutionaries who apparently killed Yemen's Imam (King) Mohammed last month and seized control of at least part of the country. Imam Hassan, Mohammed's self-proclaimed successor, is in Saudi Arabia trying to organize a tribal uprising like those that defeated the Yemenite rebellions of 1948 and 1955. Saudi authorities have been reported flying arms to the border for use by the tribesmen. FREE DELIVERY Call before 4, Delivered after 5 $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 COOPER DRUG SAD TO HAVE YOU FALLING 跳跃 Everybody falls for delicious Happy Dance! You'll really take a tumble for this half 'n half taste treat... half chocolate, half creamy marshmallow over delicious Dairy Queen. Served fresh from the freezer, Dairy Queen is better tasting, better for you. Less tasting, too! Jack'n Jill sundae Come in for a treat TODAY! COOKING TIPS AND GUIDES FOR DRIED QUEEN 1835 Mass. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 9th & Vermont Worship 9:00 & 11:00 a.m. Church School ___ 9:45 a.m. PETER GRAVES A Cordial Welcome to All K.U. Students and Personnel Rev. Harold M. Mallet, D.D. "Rev. Hal" Minister Official Bulletin Teaching Interviews: in Montgomery County, Maryland (near Washington, D.C.) at Jim Early, Tuesday, Oct. 9, 8-12 a.m., Teacher Appointment Bureau, 117 Bailey. International Students: The first People-to-People Industrial Tour of the Year will be on Saturday, Oct. 13. Interested students should sign up in the PTP office in the Kansas Union. The trip will be to Kansas City. October 5,1962 Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. TODAY Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship Inter-Varsity Christian Ministry Amstutz "Authority of the Scriptures." International Club, 7:30 p.m., Big. 8 Room, Kansas Union, Panel Discussion followed by a social hour, dancing and refreshments. International students are invited to a joint Happy Hour and picnic at 5:00 p.m. at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, 1301 West Campus Road. TOMORROW K.U. Soccer Team, 4:00 p.m. (punctual), Game vs. St. Benedict's College SUNDAY French Ph.D. Reading Exam, 9:30-11:30 a.m., 11 Fraser. International Students: Special tour of Watson Library, 1 p.m. Students should make an appointment to the Library. Tour will conclude in time for attending the Museum Art Open House. Alpha Omicron Pi Hosts Tea The members of Alpha Omicron Pi will hold a tea honoring members of the various '62 sorority pledge classes Sunday from 3-4:30 p.m., at the chapter house. New Record in Sales For the third consecutive season, Kansas has established a new record of season ticket sales. Official figures from athletic business manager Earl Falkenstien disclose the Jayhawker front office sold 13,780 season tickets for 1962. This exceeds by more than 1000, the former high of 12,667 established last season. The 35,000 fans who witnessed the opener against Texas Christian here September 22 is the largest opening-day home crowd in Kansas history and the highest at either site for the 20-year Jayhawker-Horned Frog series. Upwards of 30,000 are expected here Saturday for the Big Eight opener against Colorado. Both clubs carry records of 1-1-0. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts. Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W.14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Now is the time For Your Child's Christmas Portrait Children are our speciality Call now for an appointment Burch Higgins, Photographer RANCH HOUSE STUDIO 780 Lincoln VI-3-4575 ANNOUNCING Opening of Baldwin ART THEATER All Showings 7:30 p.m. Gem Theater, Baldwin, Kansas Tickets available at 103 Fraser, 106 Strong and Gem Theater at Baldwin TICKETS $8-SEASON $1-AT DOOR Oct. 9, 10, 11—THE HORSE'S MOUTH Oct. 23, 24, 25—THE MAGICIAN Oct. 30, 31, Nov. 1—THE CRUEL SEA Nov. 6,7,8—ROCCO AND HIS BROTHERS Nov. 27, 28, 29—LUST FOR LIFE Dec.18,19,20—THE RED BALLOON Jan. 8,9,10—SATURDAY NIGHT AND SUNDAY MORNING Jan. 29,30,31—THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN Feb. 5,6,7—THE400BLOWS Feb. 19,20,21—THE CRANES ARE FLYING March 5,6,7—THE LITTLE WORLD OF DON CAMILLO March 19,20,21—MACARIO April 2,3,4—HE WHO MUST DIE April 16, 17, 18—BREATHLESS April 30, May 1, 2—VIRIDIANA Alpha Phi Initiates 36 Alpha Phi sorority initiated 36 pledges last Sunday. The new initiates are: Evelyn Beightel, Holton sophomore; Judi Boelling, Belleville sophomore; Mary Bowden, Salina sophomore; Elizabeth Burns, Aurora, Colo. sophomore; Leta Cathecart, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore. Linda Coleman, Holton sophomore; Cheryl Cook, Evansville, Ind., sophomore; Patricia Culbertson, Wichita junior; Carol Dombaugh, El Dorado sophomore; Barbara Gill, Sterling sophomore; Karen Gillig, Great Bend, sophomore. Susan Green, Pratt sophomore; Isla Griffith, Arkansas City sophomore; Nancy Hayes, Leawood junior; Lucinda Heinz, Kansas City, Mo, sophomore; Judy Hineman, Dighton sophomore; Mary Beth Jones, Emporia senior; Barbara Woodruff Johnson, Cedarvale senior; Helen Jorgenson, Sidney, Neb., sophomore. sophomore Deanna Kerr, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Juanita King, Law- rence sophomore; Mary Kline, Wichita sophomore; Patricia Koos, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Carolyn Kruse, Prairie Village sophomore; Tracey Love, Wichita sophomore; Helen Nott, Evanston, Ill. sophomore; Carolyn Power, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore. Lyn Rambo, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Sharon Roy, Joplin, Mo. sophomore; Nancy Schroeter; Shawne Mission sophomore; Betty Schultz, O'Neill, Neb., senior; Carolyn Sterling, Minneapolis sophomore; Lana Turner, Concordia sophomore; Gail Williams, Pratt sophomore; Kathleen Wingert, Leawood sophomore; Joan Wohlgemuth, Cummings junior. TAKEA TAKEA BIG B IG TAKE A BIG STEP CLOSER TO YOUR FUTURE FRIDAY OCTOBER 26 Page 5 University Daily Kansan If you are a qualified engineering student who feels your future lies in research or applied engineering, be sure to see the Linde Company representative when he is interviewing on campus. The LINDE Laboratories provide an ideal growth environment for the scientific-minded. Significant is the fact that, in only 15 years, LINDE research and applied engineering people have created products and facilities which now account for more than half of the company's total sales volume. You can grow as LINDE grows. Contact your engineering placement office now for an appointment. LINDE COMPANY Have you noticed the number of girls who wear tennis shoes or loafers to class without socks? Have you noticed the short culotte skirts on campus? Who notices these trends? Linda Company, Division of Union Carbide Corporation UNION CARBIDE Campus fashion trends are the concern of the Associated Women Students (AWS) College Fashion Board. These women are united "... to provide a working group of girls who have both experience and a sincere interest in merchandising, advertising, and general fashion education for the University of Kansas campus, with a purpose of promoting such interest and education in all women on campus." AWS College Fashion Board Notes Campus Style Trends Last year two clothing retailers came to a fashion board meeting, dumped a suitcase of new warm mittens with or without thumbs in 21 colors, on the table and asked for the "Yeas" or "Nays" of the board. Retailers are interested in what the coed likes to wear and what she will buy. Therefore, they often call upon the board for approval of new fashion ideas. Fashion Board members also recently were declared the official representatives of a popular sportswear company on the KU campus. AN EQUAL-OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER The AWS College Board was established on the KU campus two years ago. The board was originally affiliated with the Mademoiselle magazine as the KU Mademoiselle College Board. Last year the board set up independent status to work more closely with KU women. Fashion Board membership applications are circulated each spring. The board seeks women with fashion experience, willingness to work, time and an interest in the board's activities and purposes. Members write, coordinate, narrate and model in fashion shows. Members of the board include: Marsha Myers, Topeka senior, chairman; Sandra Bornholdt, Topeka junior; Dixie Dunaway, Topeka senior; Judith Gattin, Wichita sophomore; Peggy Jo Johnson, Hutchinson junior; Karen McCarty, Wichita junior; Susan Olson, Topeka senior. Carolyn Parkinson, Scott City senior; Pamela Rice, Wichita junior; Judith Scroggin, Kansas City, Mo. senior; Geraldine Thorp, St. Louis, Mo., junior; Dianne Turner, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and Jackie Wash, Bartlesville, Okla., senior. The AWS Fashion Board is not represented on the AWS Senate or House of Representatives; however, the fashion board chairman must report on the board's activities twice a semester. Miller Hall Plans Open House The members of Miller Scholarship hall will hold an open house tonight from 9-12. The reception will be in honor of new Miller residents. Fridav. Oct. 5. 1962 State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd. Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan. YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hour Service Owner Radio Controlled Ward Thompson One Hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING STILL TIME (Before the Weekend) at 14th & Mass. ONE HOUR MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING It's Fast - It's Safe - It's Thrifty ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING "Fresh as a Flower in Just 1-Hour" Hungry for flavor? Tareyton's got it! Tareyton "Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!" Says Romulus (Alley-Oop) Antonius, agile acrobatic ace of the amphitheater, while enjoying a Tareyton. "Tempus sure does fly when you smoke Tareyton," says Alley-Oop. "Marcus my words, one Tareyton's worth all the Julius in Rome. Because Tareyton brings you de gustibus you never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette." Dual Filter makes the difference --- [ ] DUAL FILTER Tareyton Product of The American Delace Company - Delace is our middle name Tareyton Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, Oct. 5, 1962 REPEAT of a SELLOUT GIANT COLOR PRINTS $100 • OCTOBER 8-13 • HUNDREDS OF PRINTS Germany PFALSGRAFENSTEIN ON THE RIHINE Germany PFALSGRAFENSTEIN ON THE RIHINE - TRAVEL POSTERS - HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS - OLD AND MODERN PAINTERS Kansas Union Book Store KU Receives Research Grants Grants totaling more than $100,000 have been awarded to the KU pharmaceutical chemistry department, with nearly half the amount designated for anti-cancer research. Page 7 Edward Smissman, professor of pharmacy, and Mathias P. Mertes, assistant professor of pharmacy, together have been awarded more than $42,000 for separate projects aimed at synthesizing anti-cancer drugs. IN ADDITION Prof. Smissman was granted renewal support for projects dealing with depressants of the nervous system and biosynthesis studies. The U.S. Public Health Service awarded Prof. Mertes $9,333 for one year's study of cancer treatment at the enzymal level. Funds totaling about $18,000 have been allocated for two more years on the new project The National Science Foundation has given Prof. Smissman a renewal grant of $15,000. It will support the fourth and fifth years of his work to synthesize podophyllatoxin, thought to be an active component in tumor regression. RENEWAL SUPPORT for other research of Prof. Smissman was also announced by the Public Health Service. He will receive more than $10,500 this year to continue research on plant compounds, called pyrones, in an effort to synthesize tranquilizers which do not have harmful side-effects. Nearly $33,000 has been allocated for another three years of the study. The Public Health Service also has granted renewal support of $13,000 for Prof. Smissman's three-year-old study of aromatic biosynthesis. The same amount has been allocated for an additional year on the project. Dance Lessons To Be Given International Club members with a yen for the cha-cha can sign up for the club's dance lessons at 7:30 next Wednesday in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union. The course is designed primarily for foreign students to learn the American steps, but many of the American students find it a perfect opportunity to brush up on their dancing. The club will teach whatever the group wants—cha-cha, waltz, tango or twist. Next week the emphasis is on the cha-cha. "Our big problem every year is a shortage of girls," Fatsy Price, Bartlesville, Okla., junior and club secretary, said. "For the first few lessons everyone just walks around the room to the music. Then we have boys dancing with boys." Despite the shortage of the fair sex, students seem to be having a ball. Moonshine No Remedy JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — (UPI)—Sallie Williams, 65, explained yesterday the jug of 100-proof moonshine found by state beverage agents was prescribed by a "herb doctor" for her aching feet. The woman said thrice daily soaking didn't seem to help her much. So state beverage director Thomas Lee Either prescribed a one-year suspended sentence for illegal possession of moonshine. Portraits of Distinction Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 HIXON STUDIO Watson Library is suffering growing pains. For the couple holding hands in the east corner of the reference room, their privacy is invaded. For the freshman woman, her chances are lessened for meeting a tail, handsome stranger. Over a half a million books are stored in the library, which Director Thomas R. Buckman said is "splitting at the seams." New Addition Will Ease Library 'Growing Pains' But what about the person who really comes to study? He is hampered by his fellow classmate whose books he scattered an elbow's-length from his own. He becomes easily distracted by the murmur of whispers which echo throughout the crowded room. And his frustration mounts as he waits in line to check out a book. By Jackie Stern Fortunately, the situation is short-lived. A $1,600,000 addition to Watson Library is underway and scheduled for completion by the summer of 1964, according to Buckman. Behind the scene are the student librarians who must execute an unusual amount of flexibility as they strain for books in out-of-the-way places. The added stack levels will accommodate 1,350,000 volumes when completed. The new stacks also will necessitate the enlargement of the present circulation desk on second floor. The project involves two separate structures, a stack tower eight levels high, and an entirely new subbasement floor on the east wing. The basement level, extending eastward from the present undergraduate and periodicals reading area will provide for a department of special collections, with space for books, readers and staff. A special feature will be a bookstore to be operated by the Kansas Union. Paperbacks and second hand or duplicate books will be sold. The first floor, opening to the east from the front entrance, will be converted into an open stack reading room, the largest reading room in the building. The present educational room will be converted into administrative offices. Opening to the east from the present reference room on second floor will be, in addition to extra reading space, a new centralized work area for staff members involved in the acquisition and cataloging of books. On the same floor a mezzanine will be built for additional reading and book space. D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell The entire top floor of the building will be devoted to a graduate reading room with assigned private desks, seminar rooms and an area designated for faculty members. University Daily Kansan The expansion will provide space for about 1,200 more readers and storage for about 85,000 more volumes. "We are terribly crowded now," said Buckman. "Books that should be in Watson are being stored in the basement of Memorial Stadium and in other campus libraries," he said. Friday, Oct. 5, 1962 "The process of adding-on will be difficult for everyone. But it will mean a significant improvement in the service, with a promise for future student convenience," Buckman said. Library hours will remain the same after the addition is completed. Watson is open from 7:45 a.m. — 11 p.m. on weekdays, from 8 a.m. — 5 p.m. on Saturdays and from 2 — 11 p.m. on Sundays. Nine students in the KU Air Force ROTC have been appointed "Distinguished Air Force ROTC Cadets," according to Lt. Col. Gerald E, Hallas, professor of air science. The appointments recognize outstanding performance in academic achievement and leadership. A "distinguished cadet" may qualify as a "distinguished Air Force ROTC graduate," which in turn makes him eligible for regular commissions in the Air Force. AFROTC Names Nine Honor Cadets The nine are: Robert P. Ash Jr., Lawrence junior; Ted E. Lawson, Lawrence senior; Frank J. Gasperich, Sand Springs, Okla., senior; Michael C. Clem, Lawrence senior; Ronald L. Mastin, Beliot senior; Jon P. Morris, Kansas City senior; James R. Lewis, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Billy F. Lucas, Mapleton senior, and Richard W. Bryant, Merriam senior. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers The Dine-A-Mite presents: JAZZ on SUN. Enjoy fine jazz sounds by the Jazz-Mite Trio with the new Dine-A-Mite Sunday buffet 6:30 - 9:30 are you TRAPPED? Take a Short Study Break and Head for the Swift and Thrift Drive-in U SANDY'S HAMBURGERS 15c FRENCH FRIES 10c ACROSS FROM HILLCREST 842 Mass. A You'll Be Debonair At House and Dorm Dances This Fall in Your Handsome Tux from Sir Knight FORMAL WEAR You'll Be Fit Perfectly Whether You Rent Or Buy Your Sir Knight Formal Wear VI 3-9594 University Daily Kansan Friday. Oct. 5. 1962 Defending Champion Looks for Second Win 27 SIDE-STEPPER—Leon Mavity, Colorado junior left halfback, is second in individual rushing this year. He has carried 19 times for 76 yards, a 4.0 average. KU and CU meet in Memorial Stadium tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. CU Is Tough On Offense Big Eight defending champion Colorado moves into Memorial Stadium at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in defense of its crown. The Buffaloes currently lead the Big Eight, since they and Kansas State are the only two schools to have played a conference game. COLORADO DEFEATED Kansas State 6-0 last Saturday for its first win of the season. In CU's opener, Utah defeated them 37-21. There is only one other Big Eight league game scheduled, that being Nebraska and Iowa State at Lincoln, Neb. Missouri hosts Arizona, Kansas State travels to Washington and Oklahoma State plays at Tulsa in non-league games. Oklahoma is idle. Colorado will throw an explosive offensive machine against the Jayhawkers. The Buffaloes total offense was over 300 yards in each of their previous encounters. IN THE OPENER Utah compiled 429 yards total offense but the Buffs held Kansas State to 186 last week. Leading the Colorado attack is junior fullback Bill Harris. Harris last week set a new school record as he carried the ball 35 times for 156 yards, breaking Zack Jordan's record of 167 yards against Missouri in 1950. Harris leads the Buffers in rushing with 168 yards in 38 carries for a 44 average. Halfback Leon Mavity is second with 19 carries for 76 yards, a 40 average. SOPHOMORE QUARTERBACK Frank Cesarek leads the Buffalo aerial attack with 13 passes in 30 at- temps for 176 yards. Larry Ethridge is second with 11-20 and 119 yards. Their favorite receiver is Capt. Ken Blair who has caught nine passes for 104 yards. Four CU players are injured for tomorrow's game. Center Dale Christensen sprained an ankle Saturday and has been limping badly. Blair suffered a rib bruise last week, but has continued to practice. Full-back Ben Howe re-injured a leg muscle bruise and will be below top form. Right halfback Ted Somerville was released from the hospital the first of this week, but will be side-lined another two weeks. "It's great to win that first one, but what a time we had," said CU coach Bud Davis after the Kansas State game. "KANSAS STATE was a well-coached aggressive team which plays up to its physical capacity. I was pleased with our defensive improvement which was considerable. Our interior line again did a fine job. Intramurals Sigma Chi Hands Delts 27-19 Loss A scrappy Sigma Chi A team scored four tou-hdowns after trailing 19-0 at halftime to shellshock Delta Tau Delta 27-19 in fraternity A intramural play yesterday. Spearheading the Sig attack was the Bob Benz to John Hornung pass-receiver combination which accounted for three of the four Sigma Chi touchdowns. BENZ. A beachball-like quarterback, hit his favorite receiver Hornung, a 6-5, 200 pound medical student, with pinpoint accuracy throughout the afternoon. It did not take the Sigs long to start their second half machine rolling as they scored on a 40-yard Benz-Hornung pass on the first play of the half. The Sigs scored twice more during the third quarter and led 20-19 going into the final stanza. EOTH TEAMS had routed their opening opponents, Sigma Chi defeating Lambda Chi Alpha 46-0 while Delta Tau Delta won over Tau Kappa Epsilon 45-6. The Delts appeared as if they had the game in the bag as quarterback Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Steve Lunsford connected with Jim Christian twice and Dave Culp once for their halftime lead. Independent B: Newman over Navy in double overtime, by three yards penetration; Stephenson by forfeit from Liahona. It was Culp, however, who next to Benz and Hormung, stole the show. He penetrated deeply into the Sig defense, snared Leuford's passes and elusive moved up field. THE SIGMA CHI line charged vehemently during the second half with Lee Ayres, Chris Whitenight, Phil Troutwine and Dave Barrier leading the attack. The Sigs winning touchdown came on a 30-yard pass from Benz to Rod Rogers who fleeted into the end zone like a coyote. Sigma Chi ahead after it scored its third touchdown. Benz connected on three of three PAT attempts. It was Benz's magic toe which put Yesterday's game left Sigma Chi the only remaining undefeated team in division I besides defending champion Beta Theta Pi who fared poorly in its opener but managed a 21-0 win over Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Fraternity A: Sigma Alpha Epsilon 20, Tau Kappa Epsilon 8; Beta Theta Pi 55. Lambda Chi Alpha 0. Other intramural scores. The KU cross country team opens its 1962 season Saturday against Southern Illinois, a team which may well prove to be the Jayhawkers' toughest opponent of the year. The two schools meet in a dual at Carbondale. Ill. "THEY HAVE A terrific group of men." KU Coach Bill Easton said of the Saluskis. "We are meeting one of our toughest opponents in our first meet. Our only hope is to be in top condition." FRIDAY FLICKS Shows at 7 and 9:30 FRASER THEATER "I wonder if the men at the Mad Ball tonight will recognize me out of uniform!" Southern Illinois returns all but three from last year's distance crew which placed fourth in the NCAA meet. Heading this group is Bill Cornell, an English runner. Cornell beat KU's Bill Dotson in the mile at the NCAA track meet in 4:00.5 last year. Other SI team members are Jim Dupree, Don Trowbridge, John Saunders and Alan Gelso. Dupree is the current NCAA half-mile outdoor champion, owning a 1:47.4 clocking. Cross Country Team Opens '62 Slate at Southern Illinois MAD BALL TONITE! A COLUMBIA PICTURE STARRING JACK LEMMON ERNIE KOVASS KATHRYN GRANT ARTHUR O'CONNELL and MICKEY ROONEY OPERATION MAD BALL FILMED ENTIRELY WITHOUT ARMY COOPERATION! "I wonder if the men at the Mad Ball tonight will recognize me out of uniform!" WHILE KU LOST its number one distance man of last year, Bill Dotson, Southern Illinois is without the services of Joe Thomas, John Flemar and Lee King from last year's team. OPERATION MAD BALL FILMED ENTIRELY WITHOUT ARMY COOPERATION! Leading KU's hopes in Saturday's meet will be George Cabrera. Cabrera has been somewhat of a surprise, finishing ahead of Charlie Hayward, senior captain, in both time trials for the season's opener. Hayward is presently bothered by a groin injury and occupies the number two position. 35c admission—tickets for both shows on sale at Union Now or at the door. Other Jayhawker team members are Herald Hadley, Mike Fulghum, Paul Acevedo, Bill Cottle and Paul Fero. Hadley and Cottle are sophomores. In competition with Southern Illinois last year, KU placed first ahead of the Salukis and Missouri in a triangular meet. In that meet, Dotson placed first for Kansas with Hayward in the second spot. Dupree and Thomas held down the next two slots for SI. Fulghum placed ninth in the triangular and Cabrera was tenth, the last Jayhawker in the top 15. CROSS COUNTRY NOTES: John Lawson, a freshman, finished first in 10:11.2 on a two-mile course Tuesday in a time trial for the sixth and seventh positions for the varsity meet Saturday. Lawson is a former Wyandotte High School cross country and track athlete. "If we can get these three men in shape for the conference championship, we have a chance to regain the title." Easton said. According to Coach Easton, Kirk Hagan, Tonnie Coane and Ted Reisinger, all members of last year's distance squad, returned to school out of condition and have been running behind freshmen in the time trials. "If they aren't," he added, "we'll be real vulnerable for Colorado which returns all of its team." See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales — Rental Service LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 ROBERT EDMISTON STORES, INC. 845 Massachusetts VI 3-5533 --- Edmiston's THE FUR COAT casual elegance . . . beautifully tailored full length all weather coats in lustrous tackle twill with fluffy real racoon collars $39.50 Also available in three-quarter length . . $29.99 See our complete selection of dress and casual coats USE EDMISTON'S OPTIONAL REVOLVING CREDIT PLAN! University Daily Kansan 1 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Steve Clark The KU student body could learn a lesson from 11-year-old Jay Barrier of Wichita. It is apropos that this lad's name is Jay, because he is an avid Kansas Jayhawker fan. Jay, and it is his real name, not a nickname, stands behind the Jayhawkers win or lose. He is disappointed, but not discouraged when his team loses to TCU or barely defeats Boston. The KU student body however is the opposite. Pessimistic comments emit from over the campus that the Jayhawkers are mediocre. There is no optimism, which is sometimes referred to as school spirit. College students are much too mature for that. They look at everything realistically, which is usually pessimistic. Besides being a Jayhawker fan, Jay roots for the Milwaukee Braves in the National League. When Jay's mother visited Lawrence last week to see her son Dave, a KU student, she reported that Jay was still pulling hard for his Braves. Jay is not very old and has a long way to go in formal education, but the boy is a sports wizard. In his small head he has many facts and figures about his Kansas Jayhawkers. "I think he thinks they still a chance," Mrs. Barrier said. The Braves were 16 games out of first place and mathematically eliminated from the title. Tomorrow afternoon Jay will be beside his radio cheering every exciting play the Jayhawkers make. The KU student body however, will probably be grumbling because the Jayhawkers did not execute a play perfectly. This world needs more Jay Barriers who look at the bright side of life and stick behind their beliefs come rain or shine. - * * We are still hoping to see the Kansas Jayhawkers play on a dry field. With speedy Gale Sayers at T-back, quarterback Rodger McFarland instead of calling his signals "One, two, three" will probably have to say "Runners to your mark, get set, go." Our hopes might have to wait, however, since rain is forecast for tonight and tomorrow in Lawrence. Perhaps new swimming coach Dick Reamon should be added to the football coaching staff. He could instruct the Jayhawkers in using fins. The Intramural Leagues had its first casualty last Friday afternoon, namely "ye olde UDK sports editor." This writer, turned athlete, soared into the air, deflected a pass and ran into a teammate whose elbow penetrated deeply into the right thigh. THOUGH FEELING a twinge of pain, this scribe abounded from the turf just as real football players do. Stiffness did not set in until that evening. Along with stiffness, excruciating pain was there too. Since then this sportswriter has decided to leave the playing to the younger fellows. Coach Anderson has been informed that his defensive specialist will be sidelined for the year. He disagrees but Giants Tired; But Ready to Retaliate An amusing incident happened the other day. A waitress asked this wounded gridman if he would be unable to play in the Colorado game. The reply "yes." He often had trouble beating the New York Yankees when he was in the American League. And now as a fugitive from their power but a big winner in the National League, he discovered that things haven't changed a bit. SAN FRANCISCO—(UPI)—For Billy O'Dell it was another day, another dollar—and the same old story. "WHILE I WAS over there, I hoped that I could even my record against them." O'Dell said after he and San Francisco were beaten, 6-2, in yesterday's opening game of the World Series. "Now I hope that I get another chance against them before this is over. We're 'in it.' all doing our best, O'Dell is tired but he didn't gripe. He pitched real good." O'Dell announced last winter that he wanted to work more or be traded. He got his wish this year, pitching more than 263 innings. And when he faced New York yesterday, he was making his fourth appearance in seven days. The Yanks took him again, although he struck out eight batters and usually was tough in the clutchs. "Boyer hit a real good pitch," O'Dell said afterward in his matter of fact way. "It was a fast ball, low and away. But Boyer was a better hitter than the pitch." BUT HE OPENED the seventh inning by delivering a home run ball to Clete Boyer that put the Yankees ahead, 3-2. The Giants never caught up. "WILLIE McCOVEY will be at first base," said Giant Manager Alvin Dark, sitting behind his desk with his hands interlaced on top of his head. "Cepeda has played about 260 games this year, including winter ball. That is too much for anyone." "I'm not tired; I feel pretty good." Cepeda said. "Well . . . I feel so-so." The long arm of winter baseball finally caught up with Orlando Cepeda, a legend in Puerto Rico, who was not expected to start today against Yankee right-hander Ralph Terry. Big Orlando, a power hitter last season, went hitless against Whitey Ford yesterday and grounded into a double play to end a third inning rally. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS WHILE CEPEDA claimed to feel okay, Willie Mays pulled no punches about his own exhaustion. "Me, I'm dead," Mays answered while being congratulated for rapping three singles off Ford in four trips. "I think there is no doubt that there is fatigue on this club. We were tired when we went into the playoff against Los Angeles. We're Need a Ride? Read the Classified Ads Jack Sanford, scheduled to start against Terry, also has his troubles. "TM READY TO go although I've got a hell of a cold." Sanford said, his blue eyes a trifle dim from the virus. "I'm takin' pills that help. I've had this thing for a long time and can't seem to shake it." Dark brushed off a suggestion that losing the opener on home grounds was a death blow. "This club has bounced back all season," he said, strolling toward some of his players. "Today's loss doesn't mean a thing." Its name is Public Opinion. It is held in reverence. It settles everything. Some think it is the voice of God. —Mark Twain PARK PLAZA SO. INC. APARTMENTS - Couples - Singles - Furnished - Unfurnished we all make mistakes... - 20 Days Free Rent With 1-year Lease - Wall to Wall Closet Space That's why it is such a boon to busy college people. Since etiquette authorities agree that it's correct to type personal letters, Eaton now makes Corräsable available in a new, handsome (laid patterned) social edition. In carefully edited colors: White, Grey, Blue; in letter sizes correct for men and women. Only Eaton makes erasable. Corräsable. - Carpeting - Garbage Disposa! - Individual Controlled Heating MICHAEL J. GREENWOOD - Lighted Off Street Parking Once Paris tock Helen, there was no way out. Today it's easy to correct your errors—at the typewriter, anyway—when you use Eaton's erasable Corrissable Bond. It erases with just a flick of an ordinary pencil eraser! - Water Paid A Berkshire Typewriter Paper. Now personal letters can be typed on EATON'S ERASABLE CORRASABLE new social edition for modern letter writers EATON PAPER CORPORATION Ph. VI 2-3416 or VI 2-1537 Office — 1912 W. 25th PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS E STORAGE LA Loses, Wrists Slashed LOS ANGELES—(UPI) —Ruben Paul Watkins, 30, a dishwasher, told police he slashed his wrists yesterday because he lost so much money betting on the Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League pennant playoff. STUDENTS Grease Jobs . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd "TURTLENECKS" by Duofold 'TURTLENECKS" by Duofold They started on the ski slopes of $ 350 Vermont. Now wear them on campus under a dress shirt or sweater. Also ideal for walking your dog, riding horseback or in your sports car, skiing, skating, fall-golfing. The turtle-neck is a pullover long-sleeve shirt made of specially treated cotton with "Kashmere" finish, elasticized "non-sag" neck and cuffs. White, black, olive, scarlet, powder blue, gold, Austrian blue, canary. Male Sizes: S, M, L, XL Female Sizes: S, M, L SHEPARD & HAMELLE BURLINGTON, VERMONT SHEPARD & HAMELLE. 32 Church St. Burlington, VT. Turtlenecks $3.50 postpaid Sex Quantity Size Color | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | | | CHECK C. O.D. Pizza and Me by Edgar, Al & Moe WANTED It was many and many a year ago In a kingdom by the sea; That I ate my first pizza and it disagreed with me. But now I eat at the Pizza HUT And they no longer disagree with me. BEcause They are made with choice ingredients and taste just heavenly. Pizza Hut Free Delivery In Campus Area 14th & Tenn. VI 3-0563 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, Oct. 5, 1962 Wisconsin 'Meter Mite' And Associates Caught MADISON, Wis. — (UPI) — A pretty University of Wisconsin student majoring in correctional administration for a career as a parole officer, has been charged with masterminding a student gang of parking meter thieves. Nancy Griffith, 20. Sheboygan, Wis., and two youthful cohorts pleaded guilty yesterday to a wave of parking meter thefts totaling about $1,000. Miss Griffith, dubbed the "Meter Mite" by officers, majored in correctional administration at the university. She wanted to be a parole officer. Police identified the two who pleaded guilty with her as Robert Koppponhauer, 19, and Gregory Skuldt, 21, both university students from Madison. Pre-sentence investigations were ordered for the three. FOUR OTHER gang members were in custody, two of them seized yesterday. Police said three are juveniles and will appear in juvenile court later. The fourth was to appear today in court. Police said the "Meter Mite" admitted fashioning keys in the basement of her apartment and directing the gang on its forays. The investigation of parking meter thefts, which have cost the city an estimated $3,000 recently, broadened to include possible new gangs at the university, police said. Miss Griffith told police "half the campus" knew of the use of homemade keys to open meters. POLICE SAID much of the gang's loot was probably spent during evenings at boisterous "18-year-old" beer halls. The gang was so successful that the city at one time considered spending $3,500 to change the locks on the meters most often looted. This idea was dropped when city traffic engineer John Bunch received a package that contained a key and a note advising Madison to save its money because keys for the new locks could be made easily. Bunch said the key he received opened meters at a city parking lot. The case broke open Tuesday night with the arrest of a 17-yearold boy seen tampering with a meter. The youth steered police to other members of the gang. Betting Brisk On 'The Rock' SAN FRANCISCO —(UPI) - Alcatraz prison officials reported that wagering was brisk yesterday among their 250 convicts on the first World Series game in San Francisco's history. But since money is not permitted to circulate on "the rock," the inmates paid off their bets with push-ups. LONDON — (UPI) — Music hall singer "Two-Ton Tessie" O'Shea said yesterday she would like to be the first woman in space. Wants to Orbit "If I could get out of the earth's gravitational pull." Tess said, "I would weigh less than Audrey Hepburn." GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Ends Tonight 7:00 & 9:05 The Wildest Party Ever Filmed! “THE INTERNS” VARSITY NOW SHOWING! Tonight & Saturday Double Feature "ZOTZ" and "The Three Stooges In Orbit" Mat. Sat. 2 p.m. THE 300 SPARTANS STARTING TOMORROW! MIGHTY EPIC OF THE HANDFUL OF MEN...WHO FORMED THE INCREDIBLE "FLYING WEDGE" AT THE BATTLE OF THERMOPYLAE! THE 300 SPARTANS Against an army five million strong they plotted the cleverest strategy in the history of warfare! STARRING SIR RALPH DIANE BARRY DAVID AND INTRODUCING DONALD STARRING RICHARD EGAN / RICHARDSON / SIR RALPH DIANE BAKER / BARRY COE / DAYID FARRAR ALSO STARRING DONALD HOUSTON / ANNA SYNODINOU MATinee Saturday 2 p.m. Evening 7:00 & 9 p.m. Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Sunday Continuous From 2:30 Granada THEATRE • Telephone VI 3-5788 Two KU Women Attend Convention Joan Felt, Prairie Village sophomore, and Donna Gould, Shawnee Mission junior, are attending the national convention of Cwens, national women's honorary society, today and tomorrow in Meadville, Pa. Miss Felt is the president of the KU Cwens chapter. Miss Gould is the immediate past president of the chapter. Emily Taylor, dean of women, is accompanying them. TONIGHT AND SATURDAY! THE COUCH DANNY DANA KAYE WYNTER ON THE DOUBLE Plus Two Bonus Features Saturday THE COUCH STARTS SUNDAY! KIRK DOUGLAS LAURENCE OLIVIER JEAN SIMMONS CHARLES LAUGHTON PETER USTINOV JOHN GAVIN TONY CURTIS ALANTONINUS KIRK DOUGLAS LAURENCE OLIVIER JEAN SIMMONS CHARLES LAUGHTON PETER USTINOV JOHN GAVIN TONY CURTIS AT ANTONINUS WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY AWARDS SPARTACUS TECHNICOLOR® WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY AWARDS PARTACUS TECHNICOLOR® One Showing Only At 7 p.m. SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE . . . West on Highway 40 Read and Use Kansan Classifieds STARTS SUNDAY! The explosive true story of the only mutiny in British naval history! DAMN THE DEFIANT! A new explosion from the maker of Sink the Bismarck $^{-}$ in Festman. COLOR and CinemaScopel ALEC GUINNESS DIRK BOGARDE ANTHONY QUAYLE Continuous One Continuou From 2:30 VARSITY THEATRE . . . . . . . Telephone VKKMG 3-1065 Adults 90c Children 50c Friday, Oct. 5, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansen Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. FOR RENT Furnished apartment. 4 rooms. Private bathroom. Utilities. Quiet. Close to KU and downstreet. Couple preferred. $75 per month. Phone VI 3-7257. 10-11 Very spacious 3 room apartment, completely furnished, first floor, 10 minute walk to UY. Very reasonable rent to sponsale students. For appointment call 3-6896. 10-8 Second floor furnished apartment for 2 students. Private bath and entrance. Utilities are paid. 1400 Ohio or phone VI.3-2464. 10-10 Furnished bachelor apartment with large living room, studio bed, kitchen and dinette area. Also, a private bath and entrance. Phone VI 3-6255 or 10-10 FOR RENT: extra nice furnished room for men, $1_{2} blocks from campus, two doors from cafe. 1346 Ohio. Phone: (718) 530-9818; phone: 3-2222. After 6 p.m. phone V2-10313. 10-10 Large furnished apartment with large closets, private bath and entrance. Newly decorated. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-3263. 10-10 2 bedroom duplex and also a large 2 bedroom apartment for 3 or 4 boys. See at 1511 W. 22 St. Terr., or phone VI 3-2281. 10-9 New 2 bedroom furnished duplex at 1816 Mo. $10 a month. Furnished 3 room house at $28 Indiana, $85 a room. 3 room furnished apartment at 121 W. 14th, $75 a month. Phone VI 3-3902 for T. A. Hemphill. 10-8 5 room apartment, private bath. I block the entry to the front of the building. paid. Come and see. I142 Indiana. If you have any questions, call 714-823-6029. Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. $ _{1/2} $ block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice and clean, see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. ROOMS FOR MEN: Doubles only, private entrance, public b a t h, telephone and utilities paid. One block from Union. Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tf Wanted to buy--A used baby bed, which infant to infant to 3-year-old. Book 9b19. 10-5 WANTED BABYSITTING, nice house, large yard. BABYSITTING, if desired. $8 per week. Call VI 3-7828. TRANSPORTATION Want to join car pool, K.C., K. 6:30 a.m. return K.C., K. 11:30 a.m. Monday thru April 25. Return to Avera Ave. on cityity, G. L. Zawelski, School of Business or phone MA(1)-26455. 10-5 FOR SALE ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANER New machines and a few rebuilts. All parts available and machines serviced. Established locally 24 years. F. V. Cox. Local Manager, 1904 Barker, Lawrence Kansas. Phone VI 3-3277. 10-25 Royal Standard typewriter for sale. It has pica type and in good condition. To see phone Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409. 10-11 Karman Ghia white convertible, best 2316. Mississippi 5000 miles. PH. VI 3-10 10-8 '50 Olds, hydra-matic, radio, heater, sharp, clean. Recent valve job, new electrical system. See at 1725 Indiana or call VI 3-1957. Ask for Bob or Wilur. Tires! Tires! 1000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes—most foreign sizes—extra low prices on Snow Tires until Oct. 1st! 600-13 new style new tubeless snow tires; 2 for $25; 650-15; or for $28,999. Free installation at Roy Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Massachusetts, VI3-4170. 10-11 '59 Thunderbird in good shape. It's a p.m. at $1600. Phone VI 3-6768 on phone. * 3-speed lightweight Royce Union bikes cut to $73.50 in men's or ladies. New 2-speed automatic Schwinn, $48.88. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass., V3-1 4170-4. Ray UNICYCLES provide prestige campus transportation. See September 17 News- letter. Send $10 for parts. Send $1.00 for illustrated plans to Unicycle, Box 252, Worthington, Ohio. TYFEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental, electronics, Royal, Olympia, Sierra Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond Typewriter, Typewriter 7, Mass. Phone VI 3-3641. Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, covering extensive diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Davies Library. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. L894. GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Study Notes. Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. Phone VI 3-8246 for free delivery. 10-8 1950 Ford, V-8. stick. Only $100. Contact new transmission and clutch. 10-8 1659 Austin Healey, 4 seater, wheel wires, 2655 John Jay Wilson at Walton 1655 1100 Indiana 10-5 Boys' Western Flyer English bicycle. 3 speed generator, head and tail light, twin baskets; used only one week. Also, engineering drawing set — Dietz gen. 12 pieces stainless steel. Excellent condition. Phone VI 3-9140. 10-9 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in the west-Pet phone VI-31-293. Modern self-service. Enorm 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. 10-5 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized dog restraints, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, etc., plus complete pet supplies. tf TYPING PAPER BARGAINS. Pink typing paper . 85c per ream. Yellow printing paper . 85c per ream. per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1065 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. tt 1650 Volkswagen with sun roof and in and out front windows. On the day or VI 3-8213 after 5:00 p.m. 10-8 Continental — 1946 Lincoln Continental convertible, black with white tires and top. Red and white interior. Original V-12 engine just rebuilt. See R. Mofet at 1225 Kentucky or phone VI 3-9334 after six p.m. 10-10 BUSINESS SERVICES Let us plan your party—from hello to good-bye. We furnished everything, refreshments, favors, entertainment. Just turn your next party over to us and be our guest. Call the Party House, VI 3-7787 and speak to Alda McProsser. 10-11 Want washing and ironing in my home Want boys Reasonable rates. Phone I 3-911 Western Civilization Notes: Yes, we will have them again. Extremely comprehensive, completely revised, mineographed and bound or $400 per copy. We will go on sale on, call VI 1-2901 Now! Wanted: To do ironing in my home. Phone VI 3-2615. 10-8 Experienced math tutor will take students in all undergraduate algebra and calculus courses. Phone VI 3-5212 at 5 p.m. 10-9 Trouble with Calculus? Daily tutoring sessions for Math 21 now being organized at reasonable rates. For details, phone VI 3-3447 between 11:00 and 12:00 p.m. LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tt English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Nelissande Jones, VI 3-5267. 11-15 DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentation. Ola Snufi 31993; Mass. Call VI-32-5633. Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 2-1749. tf BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard desired $8 per week. Phone VI3-7828. TYPING Typhist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service and reasonable rates. I have an electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409. fax Manuscripts, these and Also dissertations typed on papers written by pennw. Experience in education Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert, I V Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tt term papers. wide carriage. special keys. attendance. 2-1546. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow, Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI 2-1648. Mrs. Typing reasonable rates, meet and ac- cede reasonableness. VI 3-1818; Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greever Terre Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2851. HELP WANTED Man with experience on adding machine or cash register to work evenings, Monday through Friday. Write Post Office box 412, Lawrence, Kansas. 10-8 BROWSERS . . . ... WELCOME The BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT! Go steady with T & C's fun-loving flats "Bunny Blacks" PICCOLO $9.95 Black Sweet Kid Vicuna Sweet Kid MARQUEE $9.95 Black Bucks Brown Bucks PULLOVER $9.95 Town & Country Shoes Royal College Shop 837 Mass. Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, Oct. 5, 1962 Ticket Deadline Is 4 p.m. Today Students have until 4 p.m. today to pick up their season football tickets. The tickets are being distributed in Allen Field House. Students should bring their identification cards when they come to pick up the tickets. No tickets will be given out after today, according to the ASC athletic seating committee. Moscow Expells Naval Attache Ey Nicholas Daniloff MOSCOW — (UPI) — The Soviet Foreign Ministry today ordered the immediate expulsion of the U.S. Assistant Naval Attache, charging he was engaged in espionage. Cmdr. Raymond Smith was accused of making observations on an unspecified military object while on a trip to Leningrad Tuesday. It was understood he plans to leave the Soviet Union Monday. THE SOVIET ACTION followed last week's expulsion by the United States of two Soviet officials at United Nations headquarters in New York who were accused of bribing a U.S. sailor for American defense secrets. Moscow radio said the foreign ministry summoned U.S. Minister-Counsellor John M. McSweeney to issue a protest and demand Smith's "immediate departure from the Soviet Union." The protest statement, issued by a foreign ministry official said: "SMITH HAD ON HIM a detailed map, notes, and special apparatus, the character of which leaves no doubt that he was occupied with espionage." Smith, who speaks Russian, traveled to Leningrad alone on one of the regular trips which embassy personnel make around the country. It was understood that McSweeney had rejected any suggestions that Smith had been behaving improperly. Hot and Cold Grass DRONFIELD, England — (UPI)— A petition was circulated by local residents recently asking officials to see that new filters are placed on the village water tanks. Grass currently is pouring from faucets, they complained. JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W.9th VI3-4720 Need A Deepsea Diver? M Government To Defend Walker's Confinement SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — (UPI) The United States government yesterday was ordered to show cause for keeping former Army Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker confined at a Federal prisoner's hospital. Read the Classified Ads U. S. Dist. Judge John Oliver set a hearing for next Tuesday on his order. The session will deal only with why Walker was denied bond. Walker was committed to the prison hospital here Monday following his arrest during the University of Mississippi integration riots. He was ordered held for psychiatric examination after charges of rebellion, insurrection and seditious conspiracy were lodged. Reports that pickets would protest Walker's confinement continued, but none appeared at the Federal institution. An authoritative source said hospital guards probably would take no action against pickets unless Federal property or rights were violated. A petition also was filed in Federal District Court seeking a writ of habeas corpus. The government was given 10 days to answer in that matter. A judge in Mississippi ordered the resigned general confined. Walker's imprisonment brought threats of pickets from a church group of St. Louis and one stranger in town asked local police for the right to picket because he feared Walker's brain would be "operated on because he is a member of a right wing group." Gamma Phi- (Continued from page 1) UP's plan would involve splitting up of the Deans Cards which are required to vote in any campus election. VOX'S PLAN WOULD require three sets of deans cards enabling each student to vote in any poll he desires. Other business of the meeting included collection of the petitions for ASC seats. Brian Grace, Lawrence junior, and Vox executive vicepresident, said candidate interviews would begin at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union. "We will try to present candidates for approval of the general assembly by Oct. 25," Grace said, "and finish the publication by Oct. 18." Former KU Swimmer Killed in Fighter Crash Lt. Keith Bras, a former member of the KU varsity swimming team, was killed yesterday when his jet fighter plane crashed on a practice bombing run at Luke Air Force Base, Phoenix, Ariz. Funeral services will be at noon Saturday at the Newcomer Funeral Home in Kansas City, Mo. Burial with military honors will be at Mt. Menorah Cemetery. BRAS. 22, ATTENDED KU from 1958 to 1961. A member of the Kansas Air National Guard, he had been serving on a six-month tour of active duty since August. According to relatives, he intended to return to KU next semester as a pre-medical student. He lettered as a sophomore in 1961. He placed sixth in the Big Eight one-meter diving competition. Director Reardon To Discuss 'J.B.' The University Players will present William Reardon, associate professor of speech and drama and director of the current production of "J.B." in a discussion of the play at 4:30 p.m. today in the University Theatre. The purpose of these discussions will be for students, faculty and the public to meet the directors, actors and designers of each production and to discuss the play. Prof. Reardon's discussion will institute a series of five discussions by the directors of the major University Theatre plays. Similar discussions for "Paint Your Wagon," "The Cherry Orchard," "Albert Herring" and "Cyrano de Bergerac" will be held the Friday afternoon of the run of each in the University Theatre. The discussions will be held on the set of each play, the stage of the University Theatre. Mrs. FDR's Health 'A Matter of Concern' NEW YORK — (UPI) — The condition of Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, who is suffering from an infectious lung condition, deteriorated somewhat today, according to medical reports from Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center. Doctors attending the 77-year-old former first lady announced at midday that she has "a recurrence of a slight temperature today after several days of satisfactory progress." MAKE GRIFF'S GOOD EATS A WEEKLY TREAT! 1618 W. 23rd LOOK FOR THE DRIVE-IN WITH THE RAINBOW COLORS! only 100% U.S. INSPECTED PURE BEEF HAMBURGERS 12¢ TASTY! NUTRITIOUS! SERVED PIPING HOT! TRIPLE TREAT FAVORITE HAMBURGER — FRENCH FRIES SHAKE — only 42¢ And Don't Forget CRISPY GOLDEN BROWN FRENCH FRIES only 10¢ DELICIOUS TRIBLE THICK MALTS and SHAKES 15¢ and 20¢ FOUNDRY DRINK COFFEE MILK MAKE GRIFF'S GOOD EATS A WEEKLY TREAT! 1618 W. 23rd LOOK FOR THE DRIVE-IN WITH THE RAINBOW COLORS! only 100% U.S. INSPECTED PURE BEEF HAMBURGERS 12c TASTY! NUTRITIOUS! SERVED PIPING HOT! TRIPLE TREAT FAVORITE HAMBURGER — FRENCH FRIES SHAKE — only 42c And Don't Forget CRISPY GOLDEN BROWN FRENCH FRIES only 10c DELICIOUS TRIBLE THICK MALTS and SHAKES 15c and 20c DUNTON DRAINES COFFEE MILKS Reading Meeting Here Bras, whose home was at 2325 W. 65th St., Prairie Village, was graduated from Shawnee Mission North High School. When he was 15 he won the AAU diving championship for the 16 and under age group. HE IS SURVIVED by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Bras, and a sister, Susan, all of the home; another sister, Mrs. Jason Ott, of Prairie Village, and a paternal grandfather, O. D. Bras, of Okemah. Okla. Relatives said the exact cause of the plane crash was not determined. Bras was flying an F-100C in formation with two other planes when the crash occurred. A reading conference for elementary and junior high school teachers will be held all day Saturday in Murphy Hall. Helen M. Robinson, director of the reading clinic at the University of Chicago, will speak on "Critical and Creative Reading" and "Developing Independence in Reading." KU Soccer Team Plays Tomorrow The KU soccer team is again ready for kicks. Tomorrow, following the football game, the boys in red and blue will meet St. Benedict's College. The latter, although a strong side, will be in for a tough time. Captain is Al Feinstein. Returning lettermen include Peter Ling (right inside). L. Gonzalo Umerez (left inside), Leo Brito (left back), Tomas Palmitesta (left half), Robert Leemann (right half), and Chu-Kwok Lo (right wing). The center - forward position, which spearheads the five-man line of attack, will be occupied by Joe Echelle, formerly of Notre Dame. Remaining positions will be filled by other former KU players and by new arrivals. As replacements are allowed under NCAA rules, the match should provide an opportunity for all the KU players to demonstrate their potentials. It should also provide potential spectators with the opportunity to cheer for the KU team. As usual, the match will take place at the soccer field, across from the Allen Field House. The time is 4:00 p.m. Rain or not. KU SPORTS DIAL KLWN on KLWN 7:30 a.m. ___ Daily Sports Shorts 5:15 Today ___ In the Enemy Camp 5:35 ___ Tom Hedrick Sports LARRY CRUM Breakfast Served Any Hour of Day or Night - Suggests - 'K' PANCAKE GRILL & SUNDRIES 14th & Mass. PETER L. MURPHY Open 24 Hours a day Win IN THE COLLEGE BRAND ROUND-UP 1st Prize—Admiral Balboa stereo high fidelity with unified AM/FM stereo multiplex radio. 2nd Prize—Webcor compact deluxe high-fidelity tape recorder. Rules: Must be in bundles of one hundred. Contest closes Dec. 6, 1962. Philip Morris Commanders or Regulars=2 points, Marlboro, Parliament or Alpine=1 point. Group or individual with the highest no. of points wins 1st and 2nd respectfully. Drawing in case of tie. CONTACT DALE SHAMBAUGH, V1 3-7404 Get on the BRANDWAGON ...it's lots of fun! MARLBORO PARLIAMENT ALPINE PHILIP MORRIS Philip Morris BAR BAR BAR 0107786 Daily Hansan LAWRENCE. KANSAS youth Year, No. 17 Monday, Oct. 8, 1962 102325 RESEARCH IS THE KEY—Dr. Harry Hanson (left), assistant Surgeon General of the United States, is shown touring KU's Nuclear Reactor Center with Ross McKinney, professor of civil engineering. Hanson Stresses Role of Research Research is the key to control of today's health problems, U.S. Assistant Surgeon General Harry Hanson said Saturday, speaking at the dedication of KU's Nuclear Reactor Center for research. "We now deal with health problems of radically different orders of magnitude from those of former eras," he said. Hanson said the hazards of a new environment have been added to the bacteriological concerns of the past. "We live in a nuclear-chemical environment." These hazards are more subtle and act more slowly, and are much more difficult to diagnose, Hanson commented. "THROUGH RESEARCH we seek to unravel the mystery of the single or combined effect of these micro-forces." Citing the Environmental Health Letter, Hanson said thalidomide is symbolic of our new environment. "It is a prescribed chemical, but who knows how many unprescribed chemicals make up our daily environment?" Hanson said the new synthetic chemicals—plastics, detergents, and pesticides—are examples. Hanson said the KU center is operated by scientists dedicated to developing the full power of modern science to analyze and combat modern health hazards. "IT IS GRATIFYING to anticipate the effect of the center on water purification, stream sanitation, air pollution control and radiation itself." Kansas will benefit from this Center in another important way. Continued on page 12). Continued on page 12) Large Scale Public Outbreaks May Have Erupted In Russia According to word sifting out of Russia, officials said, the rioting began after butter and meat prices were raised June 1. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — U.S. officials said today they have received reports of "large-scale" public disturbances in a southern industrial section of the Soviet Union. There were unconfirmed reports that between several dozen and several hundred people were killed in the most serious outbreak, in the industrial city of Novocherkassk, near Rostov. The State Department, asked for public comment on the violence, said only that. "We have had reports there were disturbances in the Rostov area this summer." Privately, U.S. officials said two facts appeared to bear out the rumors: U. S. officials noted, however, that the "epidemic" did not interfere with the 8th all-union Spartakiada labor meeting in Rostov in August. Nor did it interfere with the Rostov soccer team playing in Moscow Aug. 10. - During large parts of the summer the area was closed to foreigners, including Western diplomats. Soviet officials at one point attributed this to a "cholera epidemic." - A curfew was imposed in the area July 12 to keep youngsters under 16 off the streets at night. Cuban Goes Before UN; Asks For Censure of U.S. According to some reports, Soviet army units were called in to restore order. U.S. officials said they had no definite information on the number of people killed or wounded. Weather The weather bureau forecasts mostly fair weather today and tomorrow for the Lawrence vicinity. The high today will be near 76, with a low tonight in the 50s. The high tomorrow will be in the 70s. Britain Asks For Quick Entry In Trade Group BRUSSELS — (UPI) — Britain resumed full-dress negotiations with the six Common Market nations today and asked "fastest possible bargaining of terms for its entry into the European trade group. Lord Privy Seal Edward Heath, the British chief negotiator, also appealed for better terms for Commonwealth nations to ease their anxieties over their economic future. Heath and ministers of the European Community met here after a two-month recess in talks on Britain's entrance bid. He told the conference in private session that Britain has decided to resume negotiations "with renewed determination" and with hopes for successful conclusion, informed sources said. But the signs were that hard bargaining lies ahead, with France maintaining its stuff position. British entry terms are not expected to be fixed before April of next year, or later. British parliamentary approval of the terms is not expected until late in 1963. It was French insistence on special financial arrangements for agriculture which led to the recess in Common Market negotiations two months ago. SINCE THEN the Commonwealth prime ministers, at a meeting in London last month, voiced strong reservations against British entry. But they did not tie Britain's hand at the Brussels conference table. However, at home, British Labor Party leader Hugh Gaitskell has rallied opposition to Common Market entry unless much better conditions can be obtained. Heath underlined "the need to press on as fast as possible." He said there is "harmful uncertainty" in the political and economic fields in Britain, the Commonwealth and other countries. HEATH DID NOT propose reopening of agreements already negotiated in the 11 months since the talks began. But he asked the European community to take these actions to benefit the common-wealth nations: - Consult on possible alternative economic arrangements for Ghana, Nigeria and Tanganyika, which have rejected association with the Community. - Suspend application of the Common Market tariff against India, Pakistan and Ceylon for a "reasonable" (as vet undefined) period. - "Do its best" to meet requests of Canada, Australia and New Zealand when dealing with tariffs on their industrial products, processed agricultural foodstuffs and temperate foodstuffs. - Permit association of the dependent territories with the Community. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.—(UPI)—Cuban President Osvaldo Dorticos asked the General Assembly today to condemn President Kennedy's plan to deny U.S. ports to any country whose ships carry cargoes to Cuba. He called it an act of war. Dorticos, in an hour and 45 minute speech interrupted at the start by shouts from the packed public gallery, denounced the joint Congressional resolution giving Kennedy power to use force to prevent Cuba from subverting its hemispheric neighbors. Dorticos devoted most of his speech to castigation of the United States. Taking the floor on a "point of order," U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson accused Dorticos of abusing the courtesy that denies the right of reply to a chief of state after an assembly speech. "HE HAS SEEN fit to use this rostrum to attack my country with unparalleled slander." Stevenson said. "Yet I will not claim the right of reply this morning. I shall answer him outside this hall, and at once, and have my response distributed in printed form today." Allies Protest Red Shooting BERLIN — (UPI) — The Western allies today protested to the Soviet ambassador in East Berlin against the Communist refusal to allow a British ambulance to enter East Berlin Saturday to tend to a youth wounded by Red gunfire. The Western allies feel the East German action violated the four-power accords under which unarmed vehicles of all four occupying powers have the right of free access to all parts of the isolated city. English Pro Exam Set for Thursday The English Proficiency examination will be given at 7.30 p.m. Thursday. About 1200 students have enrolled for the test. Registration closed Saturday. James E. Seaver, professor of history and chairman of the English Proficiency examination committee, said the tests should be graded in about a month. He said "about 100" members of the faculty would grade the papers. - Stevenson's reply was expected at a news conference this afternoon. "Cuba is not a hemispheric problem," Dorticos told the assembly. "The United States is a hemispheric problem. . . "We are armed because Cuba has a legitimate right, given by history, to defend its sovereign decisions and to lead its country down the historic road it has chosen for itself in exercise of that sovereignty." DORTICO'S gave assurances that Fidel Castro's government would not attempt to seize the huge U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay by force but would lay claim to it by legal means. At the same time, he said he wished "to denounce from this rostrum any effort to use as a pretext for aggression any self-provocation or aggression coming from Guantanamo." He derided Secretary of State Dean Rusk and the conference of Latin American leaders he called last week and said criticism of Cuba's agreement for Russia to build a fishing port on the island's north shore was "raising to the level of a threat of war the use of codfish and herring." Although he pleaded for peace and called for anti-invasion guarantees by the U.S. "in deeds, not words," Dorticos told the assembly; "If we are attacked they shall find the resistance of our weapons and at the same time will meet the resistance of our patriotism." Four Panelists Discuss U.S. Traits, Customs Four panelists discussed the American way of life at the International Club meeting Friday. They are Charles E. Patterson, Rockford, Ill., senior; Robert V. Mollan, instructor of political science; Bob Thomas, class of '62 and European manager of People-to-People (P-t-P) in Brussels, Belgium and Reuben R. McCornack, Abilene junior and campus P-t-P co-ordinator. Luis E. Mayor Placecus, Cuban senior, was moderator. Patterson named a desire for equality, achievement and a search for security as typical American traits. He said the American is burdened sometimes with a fear of overgenerosity—of being a soft touch. "I know prejudice exists in this country and all over the world, and I'm proud that our government is doing something about it in Mississippi." Patterson added. Mollan said America is a nation with a high degree of personal freedom for the individual. He said the book "The Ugly American" and its picture of the United States overseas has been criticized highly, but it carries a message. While working with the Peace Corps at the University of Minnesota this summer, Mollan said he discovered the government is trying to correct the handicaps described in the book. Mollan said other countries no longer associate the U.S. with lofty idealistic motives. "The foreigner cannot look to America as the land to start life anew because immigration has been deliberately restricted," Mollan said. "America is now engaged in an international game of politics, pursuing her interests. "We are forced to use whatever means at our hands to achieve our own self-interests. Other countries don't like it. Americans don't like it." Mollan said. Thomas said Americans are efficient and industrious, but uncertain that their way of life could or should apply to the rest of the world. He said America is the country where a man had a desire to get in and work against his neighbor for a common goal. McCormack told of the American economic situation. students work in the summer, (Continued on page 12) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 8, 1963 LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler If the first four weeks of classes are any indication, this should be a pleasant year for those who believe KU students should not be exposed to any ideas which might conflict with the ideas of the "average" Kansas resident. Debates, Forums Absent The year should be equally pleasant for those who believe that a university is merely a trade school, giving out tickets to a high-paying job following graduation. SO FAR THIS YEAR, there have been no indications that KU students will have the opportunity to participate in the discussions and forums which provided a number of stimulating and thought-provoking sessions at KU last year. One of the highlights last year was the opening Minority Opinion Forum, which featured a talk on the John Birch Society by Robert Love of Wichita. A crowd of KU students and Lawrence residents packed the Kansas Union Forum Room to hear the talk and the question period which followed. One week later, the Minority Opinion Forum presented Edwin H. Wilson, executive director of the American Humanist Association, who spoke on "Rights of the Non-Conformist." LOCAL SPEAKERS also provided a number of interesting sessions. The Presidential Forum presented four KU students debating the House Un-American Activities Committee, the Current Events Forum presented a debate on "Religion in a Modern Society" and a talk on "Speech and Public Control," and a student group sponsored the showing of the film "Operation Correction," followed by a debate. In addition, students spent a day discussing international issues on "World Crisis Day," which opened with an all-school convocation featuring talks by Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., assistant to President Kennedy, and Alexander Fomin, counselor to the Soviet embassy in Washington. Two highlights of 1960-61—in addition to the Current Events and Minority Opinion Forums—were the showing of "Operation Abolition" and a talk by Edward Shaw, representative of the "Fair Play for Cuba" committee. ONLY ONE SUCH discussion has been held so far this year-a debate on "The Nuclear War and World Peace" at the last meeting of the Student Peace Union. Other than this, there have been no all-University debates on national and international issues. We can't believe that KU students have been exposed to all minority opinions and have discussed all important issues. —Clayton Keller Campanile On Time Again Editor: Your editorial of September 26 ("The Correct Time Is...") is slightly "behind the times." The campanile clock was synchronized on Monday last with the University whistle system, which is indeed, as you stated, always right. It does happen to be in accord also with the time as given by local radio stations. That the various parts of the University have not yet submitted their local autonomy in the matter of time to the whistle is a matter about which I do not concern myself. In addition, the campanile clock was regulated during the summer so that it now keeps perfect time, even though for a while it was three minutes ahead of the University whistle system. As chief student carillonneur, I personally guarantee that the campanile clock will be kept accurate this year, thus breaking (if it ever existed) the "tradition" of "being five minutes off". Carl Scott Zimmerman Hartford, Conn., graduate student, and student carillonne Having been present at the two lectures by British architect Cedric Price and the interview he held with a Daily Kansan reporter, I feel qualified to comment on the article "KU Architecture is a Flop," printed in the Sept. 28 Kansan. Kansan Story Criticized Editor: The entire tone of this article and its title present an impression of Mr. Price and his lectures that is completely erroneous. The mood of the article and many of the hastily inserted quotations lead the reader to believe that Mr. Price came here solely for the purpose of discussing and criticizing KU architecture. This, of course, is completely false, and the only comments he made ... Letters ... about our architecture were forced out of him by students in attendance and your "ace reporter." Actually, Mr. Price offered an extremely interesting look at several contemporary English buildings, including several of his own structures. Realizing his place as a guest, he refused comment on the dubious conglomeration of KU buildings as much as possible, and complemented us whenever he felt he could. And in lieu of his good manners as a guest, I think it is even more of a shame that this slanted and erroneous account of his talks was published. The article was not only a piece of dishonest reporting, but a rather poor example of the publication principles of the public spokesman on a university campus that supports People-to-Feople programs and supposedly welcomes foreign visitors. Donald E. Hunter 5th year architecture student * * * Ticket Policy Hit The action of the University Theatre management in limiting the number and location of seats available to KU students by ID card exchange calls into question the function of a campus theater organization. A CAMPUS THEATER should fulfill two functions: (1) it should provide an outlet for students to test the principles and techniques that they have learned in their drama classes; and (2) it should provide for interested students the opportunity to augment their education by viewing selections from the world's drama. A university theater should not only provide this opportunity but it should also encourage the student community to take advantage of it. At its best, the first responsibility of the University Theatre is to the students. Indeed, this is the first responsibility of the entire University. Faculty, alumni, legislators and Lawrencians must, perform, come second. THE NEW POLICY on student theater tickets that has been established this year by the management of the University Theatre suggests either (1) that sufficient funds for theater activities are not available from student activity fees or, (2) that faculty, alumni, legislators and Lawrencians do, in fact, make up the audience that the Theatre is attempting to reach. If, out of charity, we place confidence in the first of the above alternatives and the Theater funds are insufficient, additional funds should come from a general increase in student activity fees. This would be in keeping with the levying of the Union Annex fee, charged to all students whether or not they make use of the Kansas Union. David Bardack Richard C. Fox Abbot S. Gaunt Lawrence graduate students * * * Justice Is Fickle Editor: It ceases to amaze me that here in the good ole United States of America justice can be so fickle. Not long ago last summer, Negroes in Albany, Ga., sincerely believing in what they were doing, admittedly broke certain laws of the state of Georgia, creating something short of a crisis as we now have in Oxford, Miss. The Attorney General, the President, and the United States Army did not intervene, as they could have done (they intervene in local matters so frequently these days), to support those men who were trying to uphold the law. Instead, they gave aid and comfort to those men who were breaking the law. Daily Transan 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. Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Town hall NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor Clayton Keller and Bill Sheldon ... Co-Editorial Editors EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache ... Business Manager Yet, not more than two months later, a white man in the person of the Governor of Mississippi, again sincerely believing in what he was doing, again broke certain laws. And laws are laws, gentlemen; be they state or federal, they must be obeyed and upheld. This time, however, the entire wrath of the executive and judicial branches of our federal government, which were so hesitant to stand up for law and order in Albany, Ga, were brought to bear in the person of 11,000 troops in Oxford, Miss. At the risk of being smeared and labeled as a racist, and recalling the "equal protection" of the 14th amendment, I believe, my friends, that something is amiss. And we accuse Gov. Barnett of making a grandstand play for votes. Can justice be so fickle? Brent K. Mandry Ferguson, Mo.. 5th year student It Looks This Way 'COME ON NOW-WHICH ONE OF YOU GUYS HAVE OUR "CLASSIC COMICS"?~WE GOTTA STUDY FOR A LIT TEST TOMORROW.' Add. P.O. Box 4 Elkhart, Kent. M. J. FREER Armchair Psychiatrists Lovelorn columnists—from Dorothy Dix to "Dear Abby" to Ann Landers—have been pouring forth advice to the delight of their avid readers for over half a century. Here are revealed the woeful plight of the neglected wife, the misunderstood teenager, the baffled husband. For all their popular appeal, however, these columns have been viewed with scorn by psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers. Many of the rest of us just never took the whole thing seriously. The writers, he found, often were middle-class teenagers who didn't know where to go for help. Or, many times, they were adults from the lower socio-economic class where community facilities for counseling were apt to be either unheard of or rejected. BUT A CALIFORNIA journalism professor, after reading and analyzing nearly 550 letters written to one advice columnist, has decided that such columns just might be meeting a real social need. Some of these were potential victims of fake "psychologists" who were only after their money. At least, the columnist's services only cost them the price of a postage stamp. It's a really dangerous matter for a columnist to outline a detailed course of action when she doesn't know the writer's history thoroughly. But if she stays away from specific, detailed advice, the danger is lessened. A clinical psychologist commented that if the columnist offers sympathy and temporary support she can help "persons who for one reason or another are not ready for professional counseling." Her advice can do more good than harm, if it is pragmatic and "not overly given to sanctimonious preachment." Recognizing the limits of his study, the professor readily admitted that much more research would be needed to support his theories. One wouldn't want to suggest that the lovelorn column is by any means the best place to look for advice. But then again, it might not be the worst. With all the anxious, muddled people in our nation of organization men, automation and lonely crowds, it may be possible that the columnist is providing a real social service for those who can't or won't turn to anyone else. Instead they seemed confused, perhaps out of contact with the community and the outside world, and in need of support and direction. TRUE, THE COLUMNIST sometimes may give unqualified advice. But this also can happen with ministers, marriage counselors and others who try to deal with mental problems. THERE IS NO denying that there is a certain danger in this sight-unseen counseling. Yet most of the problems revealed in the letters weren't too serious, and the writers didn't appear on the verge of "psychic disintegration." —Elaine Blaylock the took world LES LIAISONS DANGEREUSES, by Roger Vadim, translated by Bernard Shir-Cliff. (Ballantine, 75 cents). This is the screen play of the movie of the same name. Somehow movie dialogue loses quite a bit when read. This book is improved, however, by the inclusion of 200 photos from the movie. The story, as might be expected, is one of seduction, adultery and corruption of the innocent. The pictures, like the story, are quite frank. The wordage is quite simple. ya LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 8, 1962 Page 3 Vatican Prepares For World Council ROME—(UPI)—Delegates to the historical Ecumencial Council opening in St. Peter's Basilica Thursday flocked into the city by plane, train and auto today, from the United States and all over the world. AT THE SAME time, the preparation of the huge St. Peters Basilica for the meeting was almost completed, although finishing touches would be going on until the night before the council. The building of the bleacher-like stands that will seat the close to 3,000 delegates began May 24. Although the 2,850 religious leaders expected to attend the council have been arriving for some two weeks,the flow increased to a new peak today as hundreds of bishops, archbishops, and other prelates arrived. THE COUNCIL, opening at 8:30 a.m. Thursday in the splendor of the Basilica, has been called by Pope John XXIII to bring the church, as he put it "into step with modern times" and try to narrow the gap between Roman Catholicism and other Christian religions. Rome Fiucimino International Airport, normally one of the busiest airports in Europe, set up special facilities to handle the arriving delegates. For the second time in nearly two weeks the Basilica will be briefly opened—this time for newsmen and photographers covering the council. The Basilica, the largest church in Christiandom, was closed to the public Sept. 27 because of two bombing attempts and to allow the workmen to continue preparations without interference from the thousands of visitors that daily flock to the Basilica. A Vatican "VIP" lounge was set up at the airport with monsignori from the secretariat of state on hand to greet all arrivals and escort them to limousines bearing the special red-and-white license plates of tiny Vatican State. Bass to Talk to African Group The African Study Group, recently organized to acquaint KU students with all aspects of Africa, will hold its first meeting tomorrow at 7 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. William M. Bass, professor of anthropology, will speak on the anthropological background of the African people. The group, sponsored by the KU-Y, will first study the background of the continent and eventually cover the political aspects. It is the first time that any study group such as this has been attempted on the campus in the area of African studies. Susan Sandberg, co-chairman of the African Study Group, believes much can be done with the new organization. Miss Sandberg, a junior from Sheppard AFB, Texas, said a number of professors and African students will aid the group. Charles K. Warriner, professor of sociology, will act as faculty adviser. Miss Sandberg said the group has been organized "to acquaint us with the continent of Africa, which is becoming more important than most Americans realize." Since the study group is a new one, co-chairman Sandberg and Dave Kirkman, Oklahoma City, Okla., senior, said they would appreciate all information and suggestions offered. Fraternity Jewelry Badges; Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts. Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Business Fares III in U.S. Fiction The businessman has fared poorly in American fiction, says William R. Reardon, associate professor of speech and drama, in an article for the current "Kansas Business Review," monthly publication of the KU Center for Research in Business. He says three problems help explain the businessman's unhappy fictional position: Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 Just as the businessman patronizes the artist for his lack of common sense, so the businessman is viewed by the writer as basically uninteresting, preoccupied with the making of money, and almost totally lacking in aesthetic qualities. He is presented in fiction in a caustic stereotype or in a comic vein. Machines for reading instruction were demonstrated to teachers here Saturday at the sixth annual Conference on Reading. Approximately 60 students in the University of Kansas School of Education and 400 instructors from Kansas and western Missouri attended the sessions. New Reading Machines Shown at Conference "The machines don't perform magic," Robert W. Ridgway, professor of education, said, "They just help the reader to use his talents and skills more effectively. "MOST PEOPLE can at least double their reading speed," said Prof. Ridgway, who demonstrated the machines. He explained three types: (1) a machine which flashes words on a screen for 1/100th of a second, teaching the student to concentrate more effectively; (2) another in which words are covered after they appear on the screen, forcing the student to go ahead; and (3) one in which a light flashes across the "ALL THESE devices force the student to read more rapidly." Prof. Ridgway said. "They help him to increase his recognition span." reading matter on a screen, enabling a student to read only the lighted material. Most of the teachers attending this session were junior and senior high school teachers interested in helping college-bound students read faster. These same machines are part of the equipment used in the reading and study skills lab, which at least 1,000 students at KU use annually. The non-credit course is offered twice each semester. Approximately 350 are enrolled now. Enrollment is somewhat less during the 2nd and 4th quarters. The conference was sponsored by the Kansas Council of the International Reading Association, the American Childhood Reading Association, the KU School of Education, and University Extension. Perry Reservoir to Furnish Student Recreation Facilities A new $30 million reservoir project will be competing with Lone Star Lake soon for recreation-minded KU students. The mammoth Perry Reservoir will be 18 miles northwest of Lawrence and may feature the most modern and complete recreational facilities anywhere. Lone Star Lake is 12 miles from Lawrence. EMIL HECK, Kaw Basin Water Management Association head and Lawrence resident, said last night that although the plans are not yet complete, he believed the recreational facilities would be unparalleled. Heck said that the boating, camping, and other facilities are receiving close attention. "Our first consideration was flood control. Now, however, water conservation and recreation seem to be the most important things and I don't know but what recreation isn't first." A $750,000 allocation for planning and construction of the Perry project is included in a current joint House-Senate report to Congress and there is indication of prompt approval, according to U.S. Representative Robert F. Ellsworth. Under present plans, the pool for the reservoir would be 12,200 surface acres of water as compared with Tuttle Creek's 15,800. Heck, long concerned about Kansas water problems, emphasized the flood control advantages the Perry Reservoir would bring. "I DON'T KNOW just how much camping ground there will be." Heck said, "but it will be sizable." He said that Perry, along with Tuttle Creek and Milford would virtually end the difficulties of flood control. The learned are seldom pretty fellows, and in many cases their appearance tends to discourage a love of study in the young. — H. L. Mencken The Villager VILLAGER'S ubiquitous basic Oxford cloth shirt, so widely loved that women call it, affectionately, by its style number . . . 583. Roll sleeves, pan collar. $5.95 The Alley Shop at diebolt's 843 Mass. The 583 The 583 The Villager M A Open Every Evening Safeway Key Rexall Drugs ACME Laundry & Cleaners T. G. & Y. Western Auto Speed-Wash Ronnie's Beauty Salon Malls ___ Barber Shop Little Banquet Count Down House Peggy's Gifts & Cards Elms Sinclair Service Maupintour Travel Kief's Record & Hi-Fi Shop Evenings Page 4 University Daily Kansar Monday, Oct. 8, 1962 Report Says Red China May Not Get Food Aid Practical considerations make it highly improbable that the United States will offer wheat to Red China in 1962, claims a recent report by the KU Governmental Research Center. Notwithstanding the persuasiveness of many of the often-heard political, economic and humanitarian arguments for or against sending wheat, practical considerations make shipping wheat extremely unlikely, the report says. The single and most important obstacle to an American initiative is the boastful and defiant attitude of the Chinese Communists themselves. They would be almost certain to turn down an American offer of aid. It would probably be impossible to control the distribution of wheat, were wheat actually shipped, according to the report. Thus only members of the Communist Party and the army might benefit. Or the Chinese could even re-export the grain in exchange for industrial commodities or other goods bearing no relation to the food shortage. IT IS ALSO unlikely that the Chinese Communists will request aid in the near future, the report says. To make such a request they would have to admit defeat and failure. Purchases from Canada, Australia and France have been made in the amounts the Chinese government feels it is able to pay for. As her balance of payments position continues to decline, she would probably be forced to beg for an outright gift of several million tons of American wheat. THE REPORT points out that some predictions indicate a poor to indifferent crop in Communist China this year for the fourth year in a row. The present food shortage is estimated to have reduced the Chinese population to a diet-level of 1500 calories or less per person daily. Such an aggravation of her serious food shortage might force Red China to seek assistance from the West. Since her need may exceed 10 million tons, Canada, Australia and France, who have supplied her in the past, would be unable to supply the needed amounts. The United States would thus be the only remaining source. THE KENNEDY administration so far has turned down requests of American wheat growers and exporters to ship grain to Red Chinna. The administration has pointed out that in the absence of a request from the Chinese Communist government, the U.S. government will not take an official position in regard to the granting of export licenses for this purpose. Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales — Rental Service LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 The Kennedy administration appears to be somewhat flexible regarding the issue, the report says, neither ruling out any possibility of shipping grain to China, nor standing ready to ship wheat the moment a request from Peking is received. Kansan Advertisers Patronize Your Yet, the matter will never be ar entirely dead issue, the report maintains. Americans are not likely to abandon their practice of Christian principles of ethics and charity, which have made them quick to forget resentments and differences. This was amply demonstrated by America's generous aid to Germany and Japan following World War II Visiting Professor Is KU Graduate D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 $\frac{1}{2}$ blk. E. 12th & Haskell Carl O. Dunbar, professor emeritus of geology at Yale University and a recipient of the University of Kansas Alumni Association citation for distinguished service, has returned to KU as a visiting professor for the 1962-63 year. Famous as a paleontologist and for many years director of the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale, Prof. Dunbar is familiar to many as the author of one of the most widely used college textbooks in historical geology. At KU Prof. Dunbar is teaching courses in paleontology and stratigraphy. Prof. Dunbar was graduated from KU in 1914. He received the Ph.D. degree from Yale in 1917 and has been associated with Yale since 1920. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Treat Your Girl to a Coke Date at the BIG BUY 23rd & Iowa Herold Regier and Vernon Troxel, assistant professors of education, will attend a zone school in Leavenworth tomorrow and Wednesday that will draw delegates from a 10-county area. Educators to Hold Meetings The Zone School is sponsored by the Kansas State Teachers Association (KSTA). Officers and delegates from the various high schools, colleges and universities in the 10-county area will attend. Prof. Regier feels that the Zone School is "a way for the state association to get a pretty good idea as to what the general thinking is around the state." Some of the objectives of the Zone School are to strengthen local association programs, to develop greater professional unity, acquaint members with each other, to develop and promote the KSTA program of school legislation, to acquaint the delegates and officers with the larger aspects of teaching, and to improve teaching throughout the state. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Now is the time For Your Child's Christmas Portrait Burch Higgins, Photographer Children are our speciality Call now for an appointment 780 Lincoln RANCH HOUSE STUDIO WHAT KIND OF MAN HANDLES A BUSINESS VENTURE BEST? VI-3-4575 A midwestern college audience recently heard this answer in a talk by A.T. & T.Board Chairman, Frederick R.Kappel "As a group, the scholars won handily. Of the men who stood among the top third in salary for their level of experience, more than half were also in the top third of their college class. Only a quarter were in the bottom third. "To us this is an important question because we hire nearly 3000 college graduates yearly. To get an answer we went to our own files and examined the records of nearly 17,000 people. We checked each man's comparative success against what he achieved in college. "And contrary to age-old beliefs, extracurricular activities proved a lesser indicator unless the individual had an outstanding achievement. Mere 'joining' was not enough. "The study indicates, at least as far as the Bell System goes, that there's little opportunity for college students who practice 'diplomaship'—the belief that a diploma automatically leads to job success. Such thinking will not make telephone service what we know it can be. "The men we want are men with intelligence plus those other attributes that give you the feel, the sense that they will make things move and move well—men who want to excel and are determined to work at it. "Nothing short of excellence will do." FREDERICK R. KAPPEL, Chairman of the Board American Telephone and Telegraph Company MATERIAL LANDING & MARKETING BELL SYSTEM BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES 41 - Monday, Oct. 8, 1962 Air Force ROTC Staff For This Year Chosen Captain Arthur L. Wagner, commandant of cadets for Air Force ROTC, has announced the cadet officers and group staff for the year 1962-63. They are as follows: Page 5 University Daily Kansan Group Commander . . . Cadet Lt. Col. Robert P. Ash Deputy Group C.O. . . " Major Paul D. Stone Personnel Officer . . " Capt. Richard Bryant Information Officer . . " Capt. Ted E. Lawson Administrative Officer . . " Capt. Gene W. Jackson Operations Officer . . " Capt. Daniel L. Patz Inspector . . " Capt. David G. Vincent Materiel Officer . . " Capt. J. Murray Sloan Special Training School & Make Up Drill Commander . . " Capt. Frank J. Gasperich Special Projects Officer . . " Capt. David A. Kirkman Drill Team Commander . . " Capt. James R. Lewis Squadron I Commander . . " Capt. Michael C. Clem Squadron II Commander . . " Capt. Jon P. Morris Squadron III Commander . . " Capt. Donald R. Shearer Squadron IV Commander . . " Capt. Max C. Schooley Asst. Personnel Off. . . " 1st Lt. Gary L. Williamsor " Administrative Off. . . " 1st Lt. John P. Rader " Operations Off. . . " 1st Lt. James L. Hayes " Information Off. . . " 1st Lt. Harold B. White Materiel Officer . . " 1st Lt. Billy F. Lucas Flight A Commander . . " 1st Lt. Richard T. Jones " B Commander . . " 1st Lt. Scott G. Senne " C Commander . . " 1st Lt. Edward H. Abbott " D Commander . . " 1st Lt. Ronald L. Mastin " E Commander . . " 1st Lt. Jerry H. Plenert " F Commander . . " 1st Lt. Ralph B. Praeger Asst. Make Up Drill . . . . . 1st Lt. Bart Barteldes Notes From Foreign Cables By Phil Newsom FRENCH officials see hopeful signs of what could be the beginnings of a drift back to Algeria by the 600,000 Europeans who fled to France. For the first time since last June, the numbers of returnees has exceeded the numbers of those still fleeing to France by boat and plane. Algeria desperately needs French technicians and French know-how. UPI Foreign News Analyst Notes from the Foreign News Cable President Charles De Gaulle remains supremely confident that the French people will back him again solidly in the Oct. 28 constitutional referendum. De Gaulle is demanding changes to make the French president elected directly by the people. He is opposed by politicians who see in his plan for a strong presidency the end of the parliamentarian system. De Gaulle's confidence is not reflected by some political experts who believe he might obtain no more than, and possibly less than, 60 per cent of the vote. In such an event, De Gaulle BRITAIN and France square off again this week in renewal of Brussels negotiations over the British application for membership in the European Common Market. Britain's desire for a decision before the end of the year will be pressed by Lord Privy Seal Edward Heath. Strongly favoring British entry are Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and Italy. But De Gaulle still counts on support from West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and intends to make the terms as tough as possible. might decide to quit. It is the dull man who is always sure, and the sure man who is always dull. — H. L. Mencken State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off, Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd. Res, Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan. STOP HERE for expert WATCH REPAIR - Finest Quality Work KU Extension to Hold Institutes Canadian to Speak On Archaeology FINE SELECTION OF CHARMS - Reasonable Prices - Watches and Jewelry Daniels Jewelry 914 Mass. (Across From Woolworths) Fh. VI 3-2572 Studies of deep well drilling and gas measurement techniques will be the subjects of two KU Southwest Extension Center institutes in Liberal, Kansas this month. KU-COLORADO GAME MOVIES (Prompt Engraving) The Deep Well Drilling and Completion institute will be held Oct. 17-18, and the Gas Measurement Institute will be held Oct. 30-31. Both institutes will be held in the National Guard Armory at Liberal. Film of game narrated by coach and player — UNION FORUM ROOM TUESDAY — 7:00 p.m. William J. Mayer-Oakes, head of the department of anthropology and sociology at the University of Manitoba, will speak Thursday at the opening lecture of the Kansas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America. Bubb Re-elected IUBS Post the Southwest Center of University of Kansas Extension. FREE ADMISSION SUA QUARTERBACK CLUB The institutes are sponsored by the State Board for Vocational Education, the Southwest Kansas Petroleum Industry, the KU department of petroleum engineering and WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Henry A. Bubb, president of a Topeka, Kan., savings association, was re-elected vice president of the International Union of Building Societies during the annual convention which closed here last Friday. Bubb, a past president of the U.S. Savings and Loan League, was first elected to the vice presidency of the building societies in 1956 at a meeting in Bournemouth, England. Prof. Mayer-Oakes will speak on "The Archaeology of Complex Societies" at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. He is a recognized authority on American archaeology and anthropology and has conducted excavations in the field in the United States, Canada and Mexico. Save Again at Kwik-Shop with 80c in FREE COUPONS CLIP THESE OUT AND BRING THEM TO DILLON'S "KWIK-SHOP" AT 1714 WEST 23rd, AND SAVE 80c! COUPONS ARE VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 13, '62. LIMIT—ONE OF EACH PER CUSTOMER! THESE COUPONS GOOD ONLY AT DILLON'S KWIK-SHOP. 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Bag SUGAR at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 13, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10c On Any Box of CRACKERS at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 13, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10c On Any of Dillon's BREADS or PASTRY at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 13, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10c On Any "Fresh" FRUIT or VEGETABLE at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 13, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10c On Any FROZEN FOOD ITEM at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 13, '62 OPEN WEEK DAYS Try- THIS COUPON WORTH. 10c 10c 10c THIS COUPON WORTH - 10c On Any Bottle of 10c THIS COUPON WORTH - 10c On Any Box of 10c 10c 10¢ 10c -OPEN- WEEK DAYS 7 till 11 Kwik- Try- SHOP 1714 West 23rd Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 8, 1962 [Illustration of a modern library building with large windows and trees in the foreground.] LIBRARY ADDITION—The architect's drawing of Watson Library shows the addition (left) which will provide room for 1250 more readers, office and book-processing space. The major part of the $1,800,000 program is expected to be completed in late 1963. Oxford Calm and Troops Move Out United Press International OXFORD, Miss. (UPI) — Negro James Meredith began his second week of classes at the University of Mississippi without incident today and the Army announced it was pulling out a number of the troops that have stood by in case of trouble. In Washington, Army Secretary Cyrus R. Vance said 5,400 of the Army troops moved to Memphis, Tenn., and Columbus, Miss., and held in reserve after riots greeted Meredith's arrival on the campus Sept. 30 were being pulled out immediately and sent back to their home bases. The action still left on duty at Oxford about 3,000 federalized Mississippi national guardmen and several thousand other regular Army troops. TROOPS ON DUTY in Oxford and on call at Memphis and Columbus included more than 15,000 men at the height of the mobilization early last week. However, about 3,500 Mississippi guardsmen have been released and another 4,500 were allowed to return to their jobs. Meredith, who spent the weekend off campus, walked to history class in the graduate building at 9 a.m., accompanied by four U.S. deputy marshals. Three of the marshals waited on the front steps during the class and one sat just outside the classroom door. Meredith still is driven to his classes by a handful of marshals but he no longer is followed by a truckload of troops although soldiers are spotted about the campus and his dormitory is closely guarded. All gates of he University are guarded by troops and guards are set up about the town of Oxford. YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hour Service Owner Radio Controlled Ward Thompson MEREDITH DID not eat breakfast at the University cafeteria but ate there last night and received an unaccustomed overture of friendship from a white male student who sat with him. Another student shook the Negro's hand as he was about to leave. J. R. Miller Gets Weibley Prize Jeep patrols run constantly about the town and through the campus. Approximately 17,000 troops still are on duty in Mississippi. This includes elements from the 82nd and 101st airborne divisions and the 2nd infantry division. Also present are three battalions of military police, totaling about 1,800 men, from Ft. Bragg, N.C., Ft. Dix, N.J., and Ft. Hood, Tex., plus 3,000 Mississippi national guardsmen. But outside the cafeteria a group of students jeered Meredith last night as he started back to his dormitory. James Robert Miller, Baldwin third year pharmacy student, has received the $208 William D. Weibley scholarship for the 1962-63 year. The award was set up by Mr. Weibley for students of pharmacy. Recipients are approved by J. Allen Reese, dean of the School of Pharmacy and Mr. W. J. Cleland of Wa-Keeney, trustee of the Weibley estate. STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Kansan Classifieds Get Results Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd on KU SPORTS DIAL KLWN 7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts 5:15 Today Calling the Coaches 5:35 Tom Hedrick Sports 5:35 Tom Hedrick Sports Official Bulletin TODAY KU Dames: 7:30 p.m. Kansas Room, Kansas Union. Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. International Students: Students with a dark background should see Dr. Coan, 25 Stirling Street. Interviews for teaching positions in Montgomery County, Maryland (near Benton D C) by Dr. William Early, 8-12 a Teacher Appointment Bureau, 117 Bailey. TOMORROW Kappa Phi, 7:00 p.m., Danforth Chapel. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS SPORTING GOODS HEADQUARTERS On Balls, Shoes, Apparel Table Tennis Equipment To Organizations and Intramural Teams Special Discounts - Also - Your Sporting Center for Models, Hunting,Fishing,Athletic and Outdoor Fun Supplies We Trade Guns We Trade Guns The Sportsman's Shop 715 Mass. VI 3-6106 Read and Use Kansan Classifieds ATTENTION Students & Faculty The Douglas County Young Democrats are holding a rally featuring the Democratic candidate for State Attorney General JULES V. DOTY TEEPEE-Tues., Oct. 9-7:30 p.m. Free Refreshments and Music THE DEMOCRATS ARE ON THE MOVE Monday, Oct. 8, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 Around the Campus Navy Plans YAF Will Conduct Coed Course Membership Drive The Navy Coed Orientation Course, designed to equip prospective naval officers' wives with knowledge helpful in military life, begins at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Military Science building. The course is open to KU women who plan to marry naval officer candidates. Lectures and discussions will be given on the mission of the Navy in the nuclear age, ranks and uniforms, pay and allowances, medical care, duty and leave, and the military wedding. Other lectures and discussions will be scheduled as time permits. A December tour of the Naval Air Station at Olathe, Kansas, is planned. Women who are interested should contact Lt. Cmdr. Robert Dodd, assistant professor of Naval science, at KU phone extension 341, or attend the first session of the course. The KU Teacher Placement Bureau will hold a series of four informative meetings starting today for students seeking employment in education by September, 1963, or sooner. Teacher Placement Sessions Scheduled The prospective teachers who will begin their careers next year will attend one of the four meetings to receive registration forms and information. The bureau will prepare their credentials, and will help them find suitable positions. The schedule of meetings are today, 7:30 p.m.; Thursday, 4:30 p.m.; Tuesday, Nov. 13, 4:30 p.m., and Wednesday, Nov. 14, 7:30 p.m. All will be held in Bailey Hall Auditorium. Law Student Wins Lauterbach Award Leon E. Roulier, Colby second year law student, has received the August and Sophia Lauterbach Fellowship for the second straight year. The award, $500 annually, is to be used for graduate study by students from Thomas County and is renewable up to three years. Roulier is a 1959 KU School of Business graduate who entered the School of Law last year. He served in the U.S. Army and was employed in the financial section of General Electric in New York. The Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) last week disclosed plans for a membership drive. A committee, selected at the first YAF meeting of the semester, will canvass the campus in search of new members among old and new students. Officers will be elected and dues will be paid at the next meeting. Oct.17. YAF is a student organization that tries to provide a common meeting ground and opportunity for students to promote conservative views, acting chairman Jay Dean, Kansas City senior, said. Schmidt To Sing At Recital Tonight Bass baritone Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, will sing the Schumann "Dichterliebe" and the Bach solo cantata "Ich habe genug" on the first Faculty Series recital at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall. The University String Quartet and oboist John McEldowney will accompany Prof. Schmidt in the Bach cantata. Marian Jarsild Lott, associate professor of piano, will accompany him for the rest of the program. The University String Quartet members are: In addition to the Bach cantata and the Schumann pieces, Prof. Schmidt will sing "Four Sacred Sonnets of John Donne" by William Wordsworth. Raymond Cerf, professor of strings, first violin; Theodore Johnson, assistant professor of organ and theory, second violin; Karel Blaas, associate professor of strings, viola, and Raymond Stuhl, associate professor of strings, cello. Mr. McEldowney is an instructor of wind and percussion. Lt. Col. G. E. Hallas and Capt. Arthur L. Wagner have begun four year tours of duty with the Air Force ROTC at KU. New Commander Assigned AFROTC Col. Hallas is head of the air science department. He replaces Lt. Col. Robert P. Ash, re-assigned to flying duty in the Orient after four years at KU. Col. Hallas had been USAF adviser to the Republic of Korea Air Force. Captain Wagner is a replacement for Major Elbert H. Austin, also reassigned to flying duty. Captain Wagner is commandant of cadets and assistant professor of air science. VITALIS® KEEPS YOUR HAIR NEAT ALL DAY WITHOUT GREASE! Greatest discovery since the comb! Vitalis with V-7$\textcircled{7}$, the greaseless grooming discovery. 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Pickup and Delivery Call us for Complete Wardrobe Care The Sanitone process is exclusive at: "Quality Guaranteed" LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 8, 1962 Kansas Scores Upset Over Southern Illinois Our team's win was a testament to the dedication and hard work of our athletes. We are proud to be part of this inspiring journey. TOP FINISHER—George Cabrera, Kansas City, Mo., junior, led the Kansas cross country team in its upset victory over Southern Illinois at Carbondale Saturday. KU's next action will be against the Chicago Track Club this weekend. Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Steve Clark Nebraska appears the team to beat in the 1962 Big Eight Conference race. The Cornhuskers remained the only league team yet to suffer defeat as they clobbered Iowa State 36-22 at Lincoln. THE CORNHUSKERS two other wins came at the expense of South Dakota, 53-0, and Michigan, 25-13, which soundly defeated Army 17-7 Saturday. Nebraska whipped Iowa State in every aspect of the game Saturday. At one time, the Cornhuskers lead 28-0 before Coach Bob Devaney started substituting extensively. Iowa State which was a pre-season powerhouse pick, has not fared up to expectations thus far. The Cyclones barely defeated Drake 14-7 and lost to Oregon State 39-35. THE BIG EIGHT, however, remains a four team race with Missouri, Oklahoma and Kansas all having excellent chances for a league crown. It is doubtful that the league champion will go undefeated with the conference so strongly balanced. Kansas has the best schedule as far as the big four are concerned. The Jayhawkers meet Oklahoma in two weeks and then have supposed breathers in Oklahoma State and Kansas State before meeting Nebraska in the homecoming game, which should certainly get the Jayhawkers up for this one. They then have a non-league affair with California before meeting Missouri in the season finale. THE CORNHUSKERS meet OU, MU and KU in three of their last four games. They host Mizzou at Lincoln, Nov. 3, then play the Jayhawkers here Nov. 10 and finish with Oklahoma on Nov. 24 at Norman. The Tigers also meet the other three contenders in three of their last four games. The Tigers travel to Lincoln for Nebraska, take a breather against Colorado and then meet Oklahoma at Norman, and end at home against Kansas. Oklahoma meets Kansas here in two weeks but its next to last two games are against Missouri and Nebraska both at Norman which gives them a home field edge. Oklahoma is the last of the contenders to complete its Big Eight schedule finishing at Oklahoma State on Dec. 1. IF OKLAHOMA should be on top after Nov. 24th games, it would be interesting as the other three's fate would not be determined until the following week. The title is far away. There are still three teams that have yet to play a conference game. The team that wins, however, is the team that will concentrate on one game at a time and not look ahead. For the Jayhawkers it is Iowa State which will be in a revengeful mood after being humiliated at the hands of Nebraska Saturday. The Cyclones are tough, and they might prove it this weekend. Led by George Cabrera, KU's cross country team opened its 1962 season with an upset victory at Southern Illinois Saturday. First Place To Cabrera For Cabrera, who covered the three-mile distance in 15.25, it was the first major victory and best time of his career. SIX KU RUNNERS placed among the first 10 finishers in the meet. Although the Jayhawkers defeated Southern Illinois in a dual here last year, KU went into the meet Saturday as an underdog. SI placed fourth in the NCAA cross country meet last year, a notch ahead of KU. And, too, Southern Illinois did not lose a sub-four-minute miler, as did KU. Instead, the team gained a near-sub-four-minute-miler. Cabrera placed ahead of Bill Cornell, Southern Illinois' top distance runner, Cornell, an English product, has a 4:01.6 mile, posted this summer in England, to his credit. In a dual track meet last year between Kansas and Southern Illinois, Cornell beat Bill Dotson, the first sub-four-minute-miler in Kansas history, in 4:02.5. In Saturday's meet, Cornell finished in 15:32. Another SI English ace, Brian Turner, placed third in 15:40. Turner is a miler and half-miler during track season. "THEY'RE BOTH excellent competitors." KU Coach Bill Easton said of the pair. "We thought we could win if we could break up their monopoly." Herald Hadley, a sophomore, placed third in 15:41 and Charlie Hayward finished fourth in 15:46. Paul Acevedo finished in 15:46 with Hayward, and Mike Fulghum placed eighth in 15:58. SI's Jim DuPree, NCAA champion in the half-mile last year, covered the distance in 15:58, as did KU's Chick Fero. Cottle, KU sophomore, placed 10th in 16:31. Last year, in the dual with Southern Illinois here, Cabrera placed 10th in 15:58. Hayward's time in the meet last year was 15:17, 10 seconds behind first place Dotson. In that meet a year ago, Dotson had a 15:07.8 clocking. Dupree of Southern Illinois placed third in 15:30. BROWSERS . . . . WELCOME The BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. We Rent Most Anything Anderson Rental 812 N. H. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds Open Letter to Students Due to your overwhelming and welcome response to our ad of last Monday, we have been swamped with laundry. As much as we appreciate your fine patronage and business we would like to ask a small favor of you. Will you 'SLEEPY HEADS' please bring your laundry in Friday afternoon or Saturday morning? We ask this favor because we need ample time to do the excellent job you expect from GRAVITT'S LAUNDRY and in the quickest time possible. We thank you sincerely for any effort on your part. Appreciatively Yours GRAVITT'S AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY 913 New Hampshire VI 3-6844 P. S. As a suggestion, maybe several of you could combine your jeans and sweatshirts into one load. This is helpful because dark materials cannot be washed with white clothes. REMEMBER: 5 pair equal 1 load. 70 SANDY'S... is having a big Anniversary Oct.13 Begin registering Wednesday,Oct.10 At Sandy's For BIG PRIZES SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN SANDY'S HAMBURGERS 15c FRENCH FRIES 10c ACROSS FROM HILLCREST Monday, Oct. 8.1962 University Daily Kansan Page 9 Big Eight Opener Successful Offense Shines as KU Humbles Colorado 35-8 By Steve Clark It's one down and six to go for the Kansas Jayhawkers in Big Eight conference play. Saturday, the Jayhawkers opened league action against defending champion Colorado and ended a Buffalo 10-game consecutive league win streak. THE BUFFALOES who went undefeated in Big Eight play last year, were no match for KU's depth. power, and speed, bowing 35-8. line ending a 55-yard KU drive "I don't know if we clicked so well, as Colorado just got tired," said KU Coach Jack Mitchell following the game. Colorado was able to contain the Jayhawkers in the first half allowing but six points. The Jayhawkers came back strong in the second half scoring twice in both the third and fourth quarters. KU'S SECOND HALF offensive machine started operation early. Colorado reliquished the ball in four plays on its first series in the second half. With the ball on the 50-yard line, it took the Jayhawkers four minutes and ten seconds and seven plays to score. Leading the KU scoring march was Gale Sayers who picked up 28 yards on two carries. With the ball on the three yard line, Rodger McFarland carried on a quarterback keeper and ran untouched into the end zone. On KU's next series of plays, it took even less time and effort to score. A hard-charging KU line forced CU'S Bill Symons to hurry his pout on a fourth down and four situation and the ball went high into the air, hit about the 50-yard line and bounced back to the Colorado 39. SAYERS RAN 18 yards to the CU 21. Baughman carried four yards and Leiker three, before Sayers ran 14 yards to score. The drive took one minute and thirty-two seconds. Colorado, known as a passing team, used its passing attack more than usual and attempted 40 passes, a new record for a KU opponent. The old record was 38 attempted by Oklahoma A&M in a 55-14 losing cause in 1949. The Buffaloes completed four of six passes on their lone touchdown march of the afternoon. Taking the ball on its own 28 yard line, CU used 12 plays with Bill Harris scoring from the one-yard line with 9:13 remaining to play. THE BUFFALOES were aided by two KU penalties, one for a personal foul and the other for pass interference. The Jayhawkers first score came with one minute and thirty-seven seconds remaining in the first quarter. Fullback Ken Coleman dived into the end zone from the two-yard The drive started when CU's Harris carried on a fourth and one situation but was stopped by the Jayhawker forward wall, and KU took over on downs. McFARLAND AND Baughman shared the load on this drive. McFarland carried the ball once for eight yards and connected with end Mike Shinn on a 24-yard pass play on a third and nine situation. Baughman carried for seven and two yards respectively. KU's fourth touchdown came with 36 seconds elapsed in the fourth quarter. McFarland connected with end Jay Roberts who was all alone down field on a pass play that covered 47-vards. The fifth touchdown was the result of a 51-vard run by tiny Dave Crandall, a 5-10, 160-pound sophomore from Topeka. Crandall skirted the left end, received a block by Baughman and ran untouched into the end zone. Sayers was the game's leading rusher carrying the ball 14 times for 122 yards for a 8.7 yard average per carry. Coleman carried 13 times for 57 yards. Symons led Colorado, picking up 41 yards in eight carries. Colo. 17 FIRST DOWNS 14 18 Rushing 16 2 Passing 3 3 Penalties 0 -77-75 NET THRUSSING 49-34 169 YARDS PASSING 104 40-18 PASSING 103-4 0-00 Intercepted By 2-17 5 RUNTS 1-19 Yards Returned 3-46 4-2 FUMBLES—LOST 3-1 1-15 PENALTIES 1-15 0-04 Yds. K-Off. Ret 2-21 KANSAS COLORADO 0 0 15 14--35 0 0 8 0--3 JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY LARRY CRUM - Suggests - T-Bone Steak only 99c C. L. HARRIS Downtown Call us at VI 3-2141 'K' PANCAKE GRILL & SUNDRIES 14th & Mass. Open 24 Hours a day Girls: WESTERN AUTO How would you like to save the 50c- 80c you spend a day on the bus? 8 9 ROAD BLOCK—It appears as if KU fullback Ken Coleman's path is blocked by the Colorado forward wall. Coleman, however, did not take a detour. He crashed head-on with the Colorado line and carried for a six-yard gain. The Jayhawkers who defeated Colorado 35-8 here Saturday, meet Iowa State this weekend at Ames. Other Big 8 Scores Nebraska 36, Iowa State 22. Oklahoma State, 17. Tulsa 7. Missouri 17, Arizona 7. Washington U. 41, Kansas State 9. Soap and education are not as sudden as a massacre, but they are more deadly in the long run.-Mark Twain Training is everything. The peach was once a bitter almond; cauliflower is nothing but cabbage with a college education. — Mark Twain Hadl Leads Chargers The Chargers compiled 371 offensive yards while holding the Texans to 74. John Hadl threw two touchdown passes and ran for another as the San Diego Chargers ended the Dallas Faxans three-game winning streak yesterday, 32-28. For what end, then, has this world been formed? . . . To plague us to death. — Voltaire Friday's Intramurals Fraternity B: Beta Theta Pi No. 1 34, Sigma Phi Epsilon 0; Phi Gamma Delta 8, Sigma Chi No. 2 6. Independent B: Templin 13, Oread 0; Battenfeld won by forfeit from Foster. You are not permitted to kill a woman who has injured you, but nothing forbids you to reflect that she is growing older every minute. You are avenged 1440 times a day. — Ambrose Bierce LAWRENCE TIRE & OIL 1000 MASS. VI 2-0247 Jayhawk Headquarters for - U.S. ROYAL TIRES - ALIGNMENT - WHEEL BALANCE - CONOCO OIL PRODUCTS - ELECTRICAL SYSTEM Repair and Servicing COMPLETE MECHANICAL SERVICE VISIT US TODAY FOR FAST DEPENDABLE SERVICE OPEN 4:30 A.M. to 1 A.M.—7 DAYS A WEEK Page 10 University Daily Kansan 2301.2 JO vehcol Monday, Oct. 8, 1962 Former Atchison Editor Elected to Hall of Fame Rv Patti Behen The election of Gene Howe to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame was announced Saturday at the annual Kansas Editors' Day sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism. Howe is the 46th editor to be added to the Hall of Fame. His father, E. W. (Ed) Howe, nationally known as the "Sage of Potato Hill," was among those elected in previous years. Gene Howe was born in Atchison in 1886. In 1911, at the age of 25, he succeeded his father as publisher of The Atchison Globe and was publisher of that newspaper until 1951. In 1924 he founded the Amarillo (Tex) Globe which he published until his death in 1952. DEAN BURTON W. MARVIN told of Howe's contributions to his profession and community as a reporter, publisher and supporter of causes. He became best known for his simple and warmly humorous writing, most of which appeared in his column "The Tactless Texan." Dean Marvin announced that Howe's picture will be placed, along with those of former Hall of Fame electees, in a new Hall of Fame area in Flint Hall, the School of Journalism building. About 275 persons were present for the annual Editors' Day proceedings. John A. Boyer, president of the Kansas Press Association, traditionally led the discussion at the "wrangle session," an open discussion of topics previously submitted by the editors. THE GENERAL session was opened with the announcement of Gene Howe's election to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame. Following the announcement, Henry B. Jameson, editor and publisher of the Abilene Reflector-Chronicle, addressed his fellow editors on his experiences as a small city editor, and gave an explanation of his unusual topic "We Shook Hell Out of the Community." Romans and TWA Had Same Problem Lanaquae Banks Formed While digging they uncovered an ancient plaque in Latin which, loosely translated, was an admonition to Roman workmen from their supervisor instructing them to dig gravel for ballast for Roman ships from one central pit rather than marring the area with a multitude of holes. Jameson spoke of a series of articles he wrote last July about the startling rise in welfare costs in his county, and several other incidents which his paper covered "in considerably more depth than the small paper is accustomed to doing." NEW YORK — (UPI) — Several years ago Trans World Airlines workmen in Rome were under instructions to dig gravel for ballast for piston-engine Constellations from one central pit in an effort to stop spoiling the site with a multitude of holes. BALTIMORE—(UPI)—"Language banks" have become popular in hotels here. Foreign guests get telephone calls within the hour from a local resident who speaks his language. HE WAS ARRESTED for allegedly urging on rioters opposing the admission to Negro James Meredith to the school. Walker was arrested a week ago during the rioting on the University of Mississippi campus at Oxford. He is charged with rebellion, insurrection and seditious conspiracy. Walker flew to Dallas accompanied by his mother, Mrs. Charlotte Walker of Center Point, Tex., and Canyon, Tex., rancher J. Evetts Haley, like Walker a onetime unsuccessful candidate for governor "I intended to make only a short trip to Mississippi," he said. "However, it got to be quite extended." Edible: good to eat, and whole- some to digest, as a worm to a toad, a snake to a pig, a pig to a man, and a man to a worm. — Ambrose Bierce The airport crowd waved "Walker for President" signs and cheered when he said he only went to Mississippi "to see a football game." HE IS FREE ON a reduced bond of $50,0000 from a U.S. hospital for federal prisoners at Springfield, Mo. He agreed to a mental checkup before being released. DALLAS — (UPI) — Former Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker waited today for his "eleventh hour" meeting with two psychiatrists. Walker said the residents of Oxford were "sincere, anxious and worried-yet determined to avoid violence." Walker said attorneys Morris, and retired Army Gen. Clyde Watts of Oklahoma City had advised him not to answer questions that might prejudice his trial. of Texas, and head of an organization called "Texans for America." Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Walker returned home yesterday, gleefully waving a big western hat at some 200 followers who met him at the Dallas airport. Walker must appear for a psychiatric examination by Dr. R. L. Stubblefield of the Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas and a private psychiatrist selected by the government before Thursday. He said he was two miles away from the "Ole Miss" campus when arrested. He denied being driven away from the campus at bayonet point. An attorney for the 53-year-old Walker, Dr. Robert Morris of Dallas, said the federal government must prove eight points before Walker can be tried on the charges against him. They add up to this: Walker must understand what is happening, know he is in court and is mentally able to tell his attorney all the facts concerning the case. COMING RING-A- DING RHYTHM An AMCOL production A COLUMBIA PICTURES Release Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 WALKER SAID yesterday he could not understand how the question of his sanity got into the case. Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 Backs JFK On Cuba Walker Must Undergo Tests On Sanity By Thursday COLUMBIA, Mo. — (UPI) — U.S. Sen. Stuart Symington, D-Mo., today urged the Kennedy administration to take a firm stand regarding its Cuban policy and said retaliation should be taken against the Castro government only when the Soviet buildup becomes offensive rather than defensive. Symington said a nuclear war would be horrifying, and noted that even if the United States were the first to launch an attack this nation could expect to lose nearly 75 million people. "The Monroe Doctrine works both ways," Missouri's senator said. "The administration is worried about what Khrushchev would do regarding Turkey and other allies near Soviet nations if we attack Cuba." Stockpiling of relatively short range ground to air missiles would be defensive; going to ground to ground weapons of from 300 to several thousand mile range, would be offensive. Speaking on a panel show over a local television station (KOMUTV), Symington defined the differences between offensive and defensive measures as follows: GRANADA THEATRE ---- Telephone VIKING 3-5788 7:00 & 9 p.m. 20 THE 300 SPARTANS CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUXE VARSITY THEATRE ---- Telephone VIKING 3-1065 Alec Guinness in DAMN THE DEFIANT! A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE 1 edition of COLOR and CinemaScope 20 THE 300 SPARTANS CINEMASCORE COLOR BY DELUXE COMING A DARRYL F ZANJUCK PRODUCTION The Chapman Report TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS. Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788 7:00 & 9 p.m. 20 THE 300 SPARTANS CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUXE VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-1065 Alec Guinness in DAMN THE DEFIANT! A SENIOR FILM PRODUCTION A COLUMN PICTURES RELEASE COLOR Find Cinema Struggle SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE ... West on Highway 40 NOW SHOWING WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY AWARDS HAVE YOU SEEN "ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST!" -TIME SPARTACUS TECHNICOLOR® One Showing Only 7 p.m. Granada TREATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY AWARDS HAVE YOU SEEN "ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST!" -TIME SPARTACUS TECHNICOLOR® One Showing Only 7 p.m. DAMN THE DEFIANT! A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE Limited Edition COLOR and CinemaSigma DAMN THE DEFIANT! BY J. SMITH A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE ELEVENTH COLOR and Cinema Studio SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE ··· West on Highway 40 NOW SHOWING WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY AWARDS HAVE YOU SEEN "ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST!" —TIME SPARTACUS TECHNICOLOR® One Showing Only 7 p.m. IBM WILL INTERVIEW OCTOBER 17-18 IBM Candidates for Bachelor's or Master's Degrees are invited to discuss opportunities in: Science and Engineering This is a unique opportunity to find out about the many career opportunities at IBM. The IBM representative can discuss with you typical jobs, various training programs, chances for advanced education, financial rewards, and company benefits—all important factors that affect your future. SOME FACTS ABOUT IBM An Unusual Growth Story: IBM has had one of the exceptional growth rates in industry. It has been a planned growth, based on ideas and products having an almost infinite application in our modern economy. Diverse and Important Products: IBM develops, manufactures and markets a wide range of products in the data processing field. IBM computers and allied products play a vital role in the operations of business, industry, science, and government. Across-the-Country Operations: Laboratory and manufacturing facilities are located in Endicott, Kingston, Owego, Poughkeepsie, Vestal, Yorktown, N. Y.; Burlington, Vermont; Lexington, Ky.; San Jose, Calif.; Bethesda, Md.; and Rochester, Minn. Headquarters is located in New York City with sales and service offices in 180 major cities throughout the United States. The Accent is on the Individual: No matter what type of work a person does at IBM, he is given all the responsibility he is able to handle, and all the support he needs to do his job. Advancement is by merit. The areas in which IBM is engaged have an unlimited future. This is your opportunity to find out what that future has to offer you. All qualified applicants will be considered for employment without regard to race, creed, color or national origin. Your placement officer can help you to learn more about IBM. He can give you literature describing the many career fields at IBM. He will arrange an appointment for you with the IBM representative. If you cannot attend an interview, write or call the manager of the nearest IBM office: One W. H. Jennings, Branch Manager IBM Corporation, 1400 Baltimore Ave. Kansas City 41, Mo. Phone: BA 1-0575 IBM Monday, Oct. 8, 1962 University Daily Kansan SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall b. 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. FOR RENT Entire second floor furnished apartment with kitchen, living room, bedroom, private bath, clothes closet, wall storage, and air conditioning Close to KU and town. Available now. For showing call VI 3-9868. 10-12 Furnished apartment. 4 rooms. Private bathroom. Utilities. Quiet. Close to KU and downtown. Couple preferred. $75 per month. Phone VI 3-7257. 10-11 Very spacious 3 room apartment, completely furnished, first floor. 10 minute walk to Very reasonable rent to responsible students. For appointment VI 3-6666. 10-8 Furnished bachelor apartment with large living room, studio bed, kitchen and dineet area. Also, a private bath and trance. Phone VI 3-6255 or交 at 646 10-10 Second floor furnished apartment for 2 students. Private bath and entrance. Utilities are paid. 1400 Ohio or phone VI 3-2464. 10-10 FOR RENT: extra nite furnished room for men, 1½ blocks from campus, two doors from cafe. 1346 Ohio. Phone: 714-523-8291. Village 3-2322. After 6 p.m. phone: VII 1-2013. 10-10 Large furnished apartment with large closets, private bath and entrance. Newly decorated. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-3268. 10-10 New 2 bedroom furnished duplex at 1816 Mo. $100 a month. Furnished 3 room house at $28 Indiana. $85 a month. 3 room furnished apartment at 121 W. 14th, $75 a month. Phone VI 3-3902 for T. A. Hemphill. 10-8 Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice and clean. see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. 3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block from campus, for 3 or 4 boys. Utilities paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. tf FOR SALE ROOMS FOR MEN: Doubles only, private entrance, private bath, telephone and utilities paid. One block from Union. Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tf 10-19 FM Radios! FM Stereo! Stereo! Largest stock in Lawrence all at discount prices. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. VI 3-4170. Tire! Tires! 1,000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes—most foreign brands. Tire Center, until Oct. 1st; 600-13 new style new tubeless snow tires. for $2,255; 650-15, 2,750-4,000. Tire Center, installation at rear, Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. V 3-1470 ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS — New machines and a few rebuilt. All parts available and machines serviced. Established locally 24 years. F. V. Cox, Local Manager, 1904 Barker, Lawrence, Kansas. Phone VI 3-3277. 10-25 Royal Standard typewriter for sale. It has pica type and in good condition. To see phone Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409. 10-11 Karman Gbla white convertible, best 316 Mississippi 5500 miles. PH. VI 3-16 10-8 '50 Olds, hydra-matic, radio, heater, sharp, clean. Recent valve job, new electrical system. See at 1725 Indiana or call V 3-1857. Ask for Bob or Wilbur. 10-8 '59 Thunderbird in good shape. It's a steal at $1600. Phone VI 3-6768 after 5 p.m. 10-11 3-speed lightweight Royce Union bikes cut to $37.50 in men's or ladies. New 2-speed automatic Schwinn, $48.88. Rockshack's, 929 Mass. VI. 3-147. 10-16 TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper 85c per cup. Yellow paper 85c per cup. Green paper per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. tf PARK PLAZA SO. INC. APARTMENTS - Furnished - Unfurnished - Couples - Singles - 20 Days Free Rent With 1-year Lease - Wall to Wall Closet Space 1960 Volkswagen with sun roof and in- dustrial cabling. 225cc. the day or VI 3-8313 after 5:00 p.m. 10-8 or VI 3-8314 after 7:00 p.m. Boys' Western Flyer English bicycle. 3 speed generator, head and tail light, twin baskets; used only one week. Also, engineering drawing set — Dietz gen, 12 pieces stainless steel. Excellent condition. Phone VI 3-9140. 10-9 1950 Ford, V-8. stick. Only $100. Contact Joyce Schroeder for parts. New transmission and clutch. 10-8 New and used portables, standards and electronics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, box typing papers, Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. - Carpeting TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and annotations; revised notes; formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. **tf** - Garbage Disposal! GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I Study Notes. Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. Phone VI 3-8246 for free delivery. 10-8 - Individual Controlled Heating HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in town! Newest = Port phone VI.123-805 Modern self-service. Port 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. - Lighted Off Street Parking GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized birds, mammals, chameleons, turtles, and pigeons etc., plus complete lines pet supplies. tf - Water Paid Ph. VI 2-3416 or VI 2-1537 Office — 1912 W. 25th Continental — 1946 Lincoln Continental convertible, black with white tires and top. Red and white interior. Original V-12 engine just rebuilt. See R. Mofet at 1225 Kentucky or phone VI 3-9334 after six p.m. 10-10 BUSINESS SERVICES Want washing and ironing in my home 9-31959. boys. Reasonable rates. Phone 3-91-599 LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tt Let us plan your party—from hello to good-by. We furnished everything, refreshments, favors, entertainment. Just turn your next party over to us and be our guest. Call the Party House, VI 3-7787 and speak to the Alda McProsser. 10-11 Wanted: To do ironing in my home. Phone VI 3-2615. 10-8 English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Nelsande Jones, VI 3-5267. 11-15 Western Civilization Notes: Yes, we will have them again. Extremely comprehensive, completely revised, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Wisdom will go on sale on Oct. 8. First on the delivery call, call VI 2-1901 10-8 Experienced math tutor will take students in all undergraduate algebra and calculus courses. Phone VI 3-5212 at 5 p.m. 10-9 Trouble with Calculus? Daily tutoring sessions for Math 21 now being organized at reasonable rates. For details, phone VI 3-4347 between 11:00 and 12:00 p.m. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentation. Clo Smits 939% M89%. Call: MWI 9-2623. HELP WANTED Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service and reasonable rates. I have an electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409 t Man with experience on adding machine or cash register to work evenings, Monday through Friday. Write Post Office box 412, Lawrence, Kansas. 10-8 Married student to work part time in college. Bachelor's degree courteous. Liberal commission and guaranteed plan. Write, giving age, work his/hers. 111 Flint Hall, university of Kansas. 10-10 TYPING Experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Responsible rate. Barlow, Baryow. 408 W. 13th. V1 - 21648. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Manuscripts, theses and Also dissertations typed on these materials 35 Experience in education Susanne Guzilin BGLI. VI term papers: wide carriage: special keys: and sciences: 2-1546. tf Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 2-1749. tt Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tf Ttyping reasonable rates, meat and ac- tivities. Borden, 318-2750 V-3-1584, Mrs. Bodin, 825 Grover Terr. Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651. WANTED BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard. BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard. if desire, 88 hr. week, Call T-73-8283 or email: babysitting@sunshine.com PENNINGTON Every Monday 75c JAYHAWK CAFE 1340 Ohio -nite ONE HOUR "MARTINIZING" the most in DRY CLEANING ONE HOUR MARTINIZING PRICES SUDDEN SERVICE LADIES' Suits ... 1.20 Pants ... 6.0 Sweaters ... 6.0 Sport Shirts ... 6.0 Sport Coats ... 7.0 Jackets ... 7.5 Top Jackets ... 1.35 Dress (plain) ... 1.20 Skirts ... .60 Sweaters ... .60 Blouses ... .60 Short Coats ... 1.10 Medium Coats ... 1.25 Long Coats ... 1.35 14th and Mass. at across from Central Jr. High SHIRT SERVICE New 1-Hour Dry Cleaning No Extra Charge ONE HOUR MARTINIZING . . . the most in quality dry cleaning is in the "PERFECTED" one-hour process . . by using the newest, most modern equipment, and applying our own spotting techniques, deep-cleaning methods and carefully finishing your garments. ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING ASSURES YOU: ★ Odorless Cleaning ★ Garments Stay Fresh Longer Sanitary Clothes ★ Cleaner, Brighter Garments SHIRT SERVICE SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c One hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING 1407 MASS. — FREE PARKING — One Hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING ★ Gentle, Individual Treatment for Your Fine Fabrics SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c 1407 MASS. FREE PARKING. ONE HOUR MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 8, 1962 Four Panelists - (Continued from page 1) McCornack said. "Americans are striving to get ahead at any cost." A student from England questioned the panel about freedom in an educational system where so many courses are required. He explained that in Europe the student was allowed to pick his own courses. "In Europe the mental discipline is higher," Thomas said. "This is an attempt to regimentalize the non-intellectuals and guide them toward a liberal education." "Many Europeans said they enjoy the right to criticize the professor in the classroom," Thomas said. "In Europe, the professor is the master of the classroom." The rapid growth in international programs at KU has spawned a new periodical—the International Campus. Magazine Created For Foreign Students The magazine is edited by Clark Coan, international student adviser and secretary of the University committee on international affairs. The magazine is directed toward international students and visiting scholars from abroad and to the KU students and staff concerned with foreign programs. Coan noted in the first issue this fall that the tentative count of international students at KU is 365 from 65 nations, an increase of more than 60 over 1961. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results! ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass. FREE DELIVERY Call before 4, Delivered after 5 $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 COOPER DRUG FAST FINISHED Laundry Service RISK'S 613 Vermont MAKE YOUR BUDGET --- TOE THE MARK with a low-cost ThriftiCheck (Continued from page 1) PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT Your checkbook always gives you a running record of your personal expenses—and it's so much easier to pay bills by check. Try it and see! he added. "The Center works with new industries coming into the state, and with industries already here, to insure that their operations will be compatible with preservation of the resources and a living environment important to the future of its people." Citing the accomplishments of the University and its professors, Hanson mentioned Dwight Metzler, professor of civil engineering, who was appointed to the Gross Committee on environmental health by the U.S. surgeon general in 1961. Hanson Stresses - CHANCELLOR W. Clarke Wescoe introduced Hanson and Sen Frank Carlson, R-Kan., to a crowd of about 200. Chancellor Wescoe termed the Center "the beginning of a new era of collaboration in research among state and federal government, industry, and higher education." The chancellor praised the $153,000 in private gifts which helped make the center a reality. Wescoe named the Issac Scammahorn estate, the Solon E. Summerfield fund, and Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Burt of Hutchinson as the major contributors. Sen. Carlson called the center the "supporting facilities which will tremendously enhance the opportunities of our students and faculty to broaden their scope of activities." DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 9th & Kentucky — VI 3-7474 Sen. Carlson said the center proved that "we have been blessed with men and women of vision in this state." Read and Use Kansan Classifieds Reserve officers can earn credits for retirement and a chance for promotion by taking career courses now being offered in the artillery, infantry, judge advocate general, signal and medical branches of the army. The courses are being offered at the Army Reserve Center, 21st and Washington St., Topeka, Kan. Reserve Officer Courses Offered For branch-qualified officers, the one, three, and four year phases of the Command and General Staff Course are available. Interested officers should call Lt. Col. Frank Burge VI 3-8384 or Lt. Col. Charles Leone VI 3-8935 in the evening. for enrollment. Nurse and WAC officers are also invited to inquire. Officers on active duty, those in the National Guard and officers of the Navy and Air Force may qualify Kansan Classified Ads Get Results! JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W.9th VI 3-4720 BIRD TV-RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. STEREO - Guaranteed - Expert Service - Quality Parts Delta Chi Presents - IN PERSON IN PERSON JERRY LEE LEWIS This Friday Oct. 12 AT THE BIG BARN 8-12 p.m. $1.50 per person BIG BIG BARN Daily hansan Tuesday, Oct. 9, 1962 LAWRENCE. KANSAS 60th Year, No.18 Students Indifferent About Bloc Voting By Linda Machin "I don't know anything about campus politics, and I couldn't care less," replied a Kansas City, Mo., senior when asked whether he preferred individual or bloc membership in campus political parties. "Don't ask me. Ask the party leader in our house, he can probably tell you how our house feels about membership," he continued. This indifferent reply seemed to typify the majority of attitudes expressed by University of Kansas students in a survey by the University Daily Kansan. THE QUESTION OF INDIVIDUAL or bloc membership was raised recently when two organized living groups, Douthart and Miller Halls, dropped their membership in Vox Populi and University Party. Presidents of the halls said that the groups did not plan to join either party as blocs, but members could join as individuals if they wished. Jay Rumberger, Prairie Village junior said, "I probably wouldn't know how to vote anyway if we had individual membership. I don't think the majority of students know that much about campus politics. Bloc membership is best because it informs the students." ROBERT WILSON, HUTCHINSON freshman, said, "If we were living in a city permanently or for ten years or more and were voting in national elections, I think individual membership would be more important. But with the constant influx of students and the relatively short time—four years—that we'll be here, bloc voting is OK." Some students feel that individual membership is a matter of democracy. (Continued on page 8) Jerry Dickson Predicts ASC Will Defeat DOP Student body president Jerry Dickson, Newton senior, predicted the defeat of the voting poll proposal at tonight's All Student Council general session. Dickson indicated a compromise proposal on the decentralization of polls would be worked out by the council. "Obviously, the voting poll proposal is unfair because it does not give every living group an equal opportunity to have polls in their own location." explained Dickson. The bill presented to ASC last session by the University Party has been under consideration by the Committee on Committees. No decision had been made at press time. GREGORY TURNER. SEATTLE, Wash., junior and College representative, will propose some action be taken on the Mississippi controversy. His recommendation will be in the form of a letter to the University of Mississippi, Oxford, Miss, from the KU All Student Council. Jack Metusak, Wellington senior, will be present for the meeting at the request of several ASC members. Metusak's appointment to the Human Rights committee was tabled at the last ASC session. I Jerry Dickson Flag Theft Solved Two University of Iowa students who took the KU flag, which flies above Fraser Hall, were apprehended Friday night by campus police. The two men are here with 19 other students who are pledges of Sigma Alpha Epsilon at the University of Iowa. Police said the two students climbed through a hole in one of the doors on the top floor of Fraser and forced the door open to the roof. The students ran from the building, followed by the two suspicious teachers who took down the license On the way down the stairs the pair was confronted by George Wedge, instructor in English, and Edward Ruhe, assistant professor of English, who were talking at the bottom of the stairs. Later with the help of Mr. Wedge and Prof. Ruhe the two students were caught on campus and brought in for questioning. The pair said the prank was part of their fraternity initiation and that they would pay for any damage. number of the car as they drove away. In 1958 the KU flag was stolen from Fraser. The flag was later slipped through an open window in the Kansan office with this note attached. "To whom it may concern: We are satisfied at last. The flag now flying on Fraser is equal to the superior quality of the University of Kansas. Please do not fly the ratty thing again. — The Frustrated Alpinists." A group of KU students will be arraigned Saturday in Jefferson County Court on charges of vandalism. KU Students Face Vandalism Charges More than 19 KU students are suspected of wrecking a vacant house near Perry, Sept. 29. James Fwoyer, Jefferson County attorney, said the exact number of persons involved in the vandalism has not been determined. Fwoyer said this group of more than 19 students was at the house for a beer party. He said he believed part of the group left about 9 p.m. He said the remaining persons allegedly wrecked the house The Jefferson County Sheriff's office reported posts were torn from the house porch and used to punch holes in the roof and walls. The report stated all windows and doors were broken. YR Will Have Busy Schedule For This Year By Joanne Prim Activities for the University of Kansas Young Republicans will start Saturday with a beer party from 2 to 5 p.m. at Holcom Grove, 2 miles south of Lawrence. All members are invited to attend. "There has been a criticism in the past that we haven't done too much," Reuben R. McCornack. Abilene junior and president of the KU group, said. "We hope to change this." He outlined plans for a campaign caravan, a politician opinion poll, meetings, and conventions. Two bus loads of students will participate in a campaign caravan Oct. 27 for James Pearson, candidate for U.S. Senator, and Robert Dole, candidate for U.S. House of Representatives, first district. After starting in Lawrence, one bus will go through Topeka and Manhattan to pick up students at Washburn and K-State and the other will go to Emporia and Wichita, McCornack explained. Both buses will meet in Salina for a rally, Smaller rallies (about 15 minutes long) will be held in towns along the wav. A luncheon will be served in Salina by the Saline County Republicans. After a dinner in Hutchinson, a major rally and addresses will be held in the evening. Student delegations will return to their schools Sunday. The maximum cost is $5. McCormack said. Transportation is free. Their major project will be a student opinion poll on political issues. Members of Froshawks, freshman women's pep club, will telephone around 200 students for "yes" or "no" answers to five political questions. The questions will be selected by a faculty committee. Results of the survey will be announced in the University Daily Kansan before Political Emphasis Week. The Young Republicans will work with the Young Democrats and the political science department prior to the November election during Political Emphasis Week. "We are working on plans for a debate between Dale Saffels (Democratic candidate for governor) and John Anderson Jr. (Republican candidate for governor), but there is nothing definite on this." McCornack commented. After elections, the group will hear speakers as part of a political education program. Conventions this year include the State Collegiate Young Republican meeting and the Midwest Federation of Young Republicans convention, both to be held next semester. English Pro Committee Says: One Out Of Five To Fail English Proficiency At least one out of five students will fail the English proficiency examination. This is based on figures from the last five examinations compiled by the English proficiency committee. Eighteen per cent of 177 students failed the exam last summer. About 1200 juniors and seniors have enrolled for the essay examination given at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. James E. Seaver, professor of history and chairman of the English proficiency examination committee said: "The purpose of the two-hour exam is to make certain that students who graduate from the University of Kansas can write legible, intelligent and grammatical prose. It is insurance that our students can achieve a reasonable competence in written English before graduation." Prof. Seaver said the need for a comparable test arose in the 1940's when employers complained that 300 Hear Reinhold Schmidt Give First Faculty Recital some KU graduates could not spell or write simple English sentences. If an instructor considers a paper satisfactory, the essay passes. If he is in doubt about the paper or if it is unsatisfactory, another grader will read the theme and make a final decision. The examination is a prerequisite for graduation from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the School of Business, School of Education, School of Fine Arts, William Allen White School of Journalism, School of Medicine (nursing) and the department of architecture and architectural engineering. Students who fail the examination are referred to the writing clinic to correct composition faults. To qualify for degrees, students must take the examination until they pass it satisfactorily. He said about 100 faculty members will grade the essays on the basis of content, organization, paragraph and sentence structure, grammar, punctuation and spelling. By Tom Winston Reinhold Schmidt, bass baritone, presented the first recital of the Faculty Recital Series to over 300 persons last night in Swarthout Recital Hall. Schmidt, professor of voice, presented three works: one classical, the Cantata 82, "Ich habe genug," by J. S. Bach, one romantic, "Dichterliebe" (Poet's Love) by Robert Schumann, and one modern, "Four Sacred Sonnets of John Donne," by William Wordsworth. The program opened with one view of death and closed with another The Faculty String Quartet, John McEldowney, oboe, instructor of wind and percussion; and Marian Jersild Lott, associate professor of piano, accompanied Prof. Schmidt in the cantata. The quartet members are Raymond Cerf, professor of strings, first violin; Theodore Johnson, assistant professor of organ and theory, second violin; Karel Blaas, associate professor of strings, viola, and Raymond Stuhl, associate professor of strings, cello. The first view was the Bach cantata which begins with "It is enough" and concludes with a joyous shout that death has released the singer from all his earthly work and trouble. Powerhouse Panic Is Presumptuous The geysers of steam from the power station are the result of two new boilers now being tested. There will be no explosion. Nothing is wrong. Relax. The boilers were purchased last October and installation has just been completed. Before they can be used full-time, they must be fired and the automatic equipment regulating them must be tested. "They're like a new car," said Eldon Ulrich, foreman of the 11-man crew which operates the plant. "You have to check them out." Ulrich said the plant supplies the University with one million pounds of steam pressure a day. It takes 175 pounds to blow the whistle at the end of each class, he said. The whistle is automatically triggered by a time clock which is regularly adjusted to Arlington time. U.S. Army Units Are Segregated, Meredith Says OXFORD, Miss. — (UPI) — Negro James Meredith said today that Army units here have been resegregated. In a three-page handwritten statement Meredith also denied that he had been "picked or selected" by Negro leaders to enter the school. "Certainly no price is too high to pay for the rights of enjoying full American citizenship. Yet when it comes to forfeiting one particular right or privilege in order to receive another right or privilege, it is quite possible to get the bad end of the bargain," Meredith said. "The first two days of my stay at the University of Mississippi, the military units looked like American units. Since that time the units have been re-segregated," he said. "Negroes have been purged from their position in the ranks. I brought this to the attention of the proper authorities." Meredith also said in his statement that he resented charges "I was picked, selected or chosen" to integrate the school. Weather Fair skies will remain in the Kansas area throughout tomorrow. Not much change in temperature is expected this afternoon, tonight, and Wednesday. The low tonight will be in the 40s in the Northwest and in the 50s in the Southeast. Highs tomorrow will range from the mid 70s to the mid 80s. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 9, 1962 Student Trip Good What does the recent trip taken by the KU student body president and head cheerleader have to do with the student body on campus? At first glance there may be no correlation between three appearances by this pair in Eastern cities and what the students in Lawrence are doing. But closer observation should show that such a trip has great benefits for the individual student on campus. THE TRIP REFERRED to was that taken by Jerry Dickson, student body president, and Tim Hammill, hear cheerleader, somewhat over a week ago which included stops at Boston, Cleveland, and Detroit. This excursion was sponsored by the Alumni Association and the appearances which the pair made were before alumni groups in the three cities. This was the first time undergraduates had been invited to participate in such an effort and, according to reports, it was a great success. The KU representatives informed the alums about the changes on campus physically and generally brought the post grads up to date on such things as campus politics, student feelings and activities throughout the University. The interest The conception of the idea of this closer student-alumni relationship on the basis tried a week ago should be continued for it appears to be an extremely successful way to bring alums, no matter how far they may have scattered, closer to the instant situations on campus and thus have them express a further interest in other ways. shown not only by Dickson and Hammill but by the alums is one of the encouraging facets of the idea. Good crowds were out in all three cities and the groups appeared vitally interested in what is happening here. Bill Sheldon ALTHOUGH THESE MANY ALUMS live at such a great distance from the University, this lasting interest and concern is of great value to, especially, the student body. When everything is boiled down to its final purpose, anything beneficial for the University is done in the best interests of the students. Thus this burst of excitement which was witnessed in the East about the current problems facing KU can be viewed as an air of progressiveness which can lead to better educational conditions for the individual. Barnett Logic Hard to Buy It Looks This Way Blood has been spilled in the Ole Miss integration effort. There may be more bloodshed before the crisis is resolved. Two states remain absolutely unintegrated—if one can call what has been achieved in Mississippi "integration." And Gov. Ross Barnett, who anchors his belief in the superiority of white skin over black in the Bible, has cast the accusing finger at the federal government. That same federal government has given Barnett 10 days' grace in his contempt case, on the assumption, in part, that Barnett may water down his charges in the meantime and may try to achieve peace at the University of Mississippi. But the governor has levied a nationwide television blast at the government, and many Americans no doubt are still considering the validity—and the logic—of Barnett's contention. situation, but that death resulted to two persons after federal officers were in control. Rather, the federal marshals seem to have exercised prudent restraint in dealing with the Mississippi mobs protesting the admission to the University of 29-year-old Negro James Meredith. With less restraint, many more deaths might have occurred. IT IS HARD TO BUY the governor's logic in this case; that no one was hurt while Mississippi state police were in command of the But the Mississippi governor's charge comes as no surprise. It is a predictable action of a mediocre politician who has abdicated the role of a responsible leader to bask in the brilliant light of emotionally charged popularity. Good conscience is not enough to justify insurrection—the less when the only legal basis that can be blamed is the long discredited concept of "state sovereignty." The argument that "state sovereignty" is the issue here is a shabby cover-up. The only issue here is the right of a citizen of a free nation to equal opportunity without prejudice because of the color of his skin, the shape of his nose, or orthodoxy of his views. This is GOV. BARNETT HAS ASKED that Meredith be transferred to another school. Thus can more bloodshed be averted, the governor argues. He pleads for a "cooling off" period and argues that Mississippi can "solve its own problems." the question on which the federal courts ruled when they ordered "Ole Miss" to accept Meredith. The governor of Mississippi is patently and pathetically wrong. For the only solution he sees, along with his supporters in the White Citizens Council, is outside the framework of the concept which gives the United States its claim to being a free society. Such a solution will not prevent more blood-shed but merely forestall it. Recriminations, accusations, emotional harangues, and sham appeals to "state sovereignty" can only plunge the state of Mississippi and the people of the South into further agony, an agony which the majority in that area neither wants nor deserves. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler C-29 "I'm SO GLAD FREDA FINALLY GOT A DATE — SHE SEEMS SO INTERESTED IN BOYS." THE QUESTION OF whether Mississippi must suffer future torment rests largely on whether such leadership will emerge, not only from the politicians but from among other citizens of influence, including educators, the clergy, and members of the press. Such leadership no doubt would find a considerable force of moderate voices in their support. The federal government has no choice but to enforce federal law. Anarchy would result from the lack of enforcement. It is the people and the leaders of Mississippi on whom the choice has fallen—whether to follow the racist White Citizens Council to more agony and torment or a more moderate path to stability and progress. To follow a more enlightened path, such as that on which the once equally strong anti-segregationist state of Georgia has already taken the first steps, requires statesmanship and leadership of the highest quality. Short Ones —Richard Bonett Little things affect little minds. —Benjamin Disraeli The secret of being a bore is to tell everything—Voltaire We give advice by the bucket, but take it by the grain.—W. R. Alger Our true nationality is mankind. —H.G. Wells COMMENT Venusians Infiltrate You are in the 21st century. The world is full of wonder and awe: the Venusians have landed—not to conquer, but to befriend. They bring with them the cure for disease, for hunger and for war. Everywhere they are met by crying humans—humans who fall on their knees in thanks for the blessing of the Venusians. A toy company brings out a new line of Venusian toys—"Guaranteed to laugh and wet their pants . . . just like Venusians." DELEGATIONS FROM every country on Earth come to the Venusian headquarters, seeking the cures for their ills. The cure is given gladly, smilingly. Twenty-one days pass. The world is enjoying a freshness it has not known since Creation. Then, an arms manufacturer in Gary, Ind., gives an interview to the Gary papers. He is bitter. He pounds his fist on his desk as he gives his speech. His business is gone; it will take him billions to convert to peace-time manufacture. A DOCTOR IN DENVER writes a dramatic, vindictive letter to the American Medical Association. The Venusians, he says, are really government stooges. Their purpose? Socialized medicine. The medical community listens with interest. It agrees to stop treating anyone who has done medical business with the Venusians. The Russians interrupt a peaceful meeting of the United Nations General Assembly, pounding their shoes on a table. Their minister rises and tells the assembled delegates that the Venusians are capitalist spies and war-mongers. As proof they offer the cae of the underdeveloped country which refused a shipment of Soviet wheat. "How," the minister asks, "can this be? There is capitalist skul-duggy afoot." A businessman in Wichita writes a letter to a friend, a letter which later becomes public and rallies the witch-hunters. In the letter, the businessman offers proof that the Venusians are Comsymps. Anyone who would give the Russians the same powers as the United States is a dirty Commie, he says. His friends rally, begin agitating and raise the hue and cry. POLICE ARE SENT into a dusty South Carolina town where rioting has broken out. A Venusian stopped at a roadside cafe for a glass of water and was refused service. Angry mobs of women gather around him, spit at him, jeer at him. Teen-age boys carry signs reading, "If you ain't white, you ain't right." The Venusian, blood spattered all over his green skin, is taken to a hospital 200 miles to the north. The Venusians, amazed and hurt, pack up their cures and leave. High above Earth, they watch Polaris submarines set out for the Baltic. They see Russian troops moving back into Hungary, Czechoslovakia, East Berlin. They see India re-enter Goa. They see the manufacturer in Gary push his plants back to full speed. AS THEY TURN toward home, they see the first mushroom cloud rise from the Atlantic seaboard. They see another cloud rise from the Ural mountains. They see Earth begin to slowly dissolve into a fiery molten slug and see it crumble into dust before their eyes A Venusian turns to his friend, lights a Venusian cigarette. Angry letters are sent to every head of government in the world. They claim that Venusian activities have spoiled their crops, ruined their daughters, made their lives a shamble. "Well, buddy," he says, looking out the porthole at the glowing remains, "there's another month shot to Hell." The Indian government sends an angry protest to the United Nations. The Venusians have made India leave Goa. "We are not warlike," says the Indian note, "but if this outrage is not obliterated, we shall act." A proposal is made in the United Nations. All members rapidly sign it. It calls for the immediate removal of the green troublemakers from the Earth. THE JAPANESE SEND letters saying that the Venusians are ruining their trade. The Congolese cry that the green creatures are interfering with their nationalism. —Zeke Wigglesworth Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3*2700 Telephone VIKing 3-2706 Extention 711 news room 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. Page 3 OSEI JAIO F. G. Friedmann German Philosopher to Open Humanities Lecture Series University Daily Kansan A German philosopher-anthropologist will open the 1962-63 Humanities Lecture Series at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 16 in Fraser Theater. F. G. Friedmann, director of the American Institute in Munich, Germany, will draw upon his extensive field studies when he lectures on "The Concept of Alienation in the Comparison of Cultures." An informal reception by the Faculty Club will follow. During his three-day visit to the KU campus, the visiting scholar will speak at two forum programs and will meet with classes in German, English, anthropology, history, and sociology. On his American tour, he will visit UCLA, the University of Chicago, Harvard, and Brandeis universities. The Humanities lecture by Carl Sandburg, announced for Friday. Oct. 12, has been canceled. ON MONDAY, Oct. 15, at 4:30 p.m., Prof. Friedmann will speak at an open meeting in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union on the topic: "A Philosopher's Approach to the Comparison of Cultures." The program is being sponsored jointly by the Philosophy Club, Western Civilization, and Student Union Activities; William Underwood, president of the Philosophy Club, has charge of arrangements. At noon, Wednesday, Oct. 17, in the Kansas Union, he will speak at the Faculty Forum on "The Philosophy of Peasants in Italy," reporting on his years of field study in Southern Italy. At 3:30 p.m., Monday, Oct. 15, he will speak in Fraser Theater to English department students and faculty on "A Philosopher Looks at 'Moby Dick'"; visitors will be welcome. PROF. FRIEDMANN has had several Fulbright and Rockefeller grants since 1950 to study the philosophy of peasants in Italy and Mexico; he is founder and director of the Matera Community Study, a pilot study by a group of Italian scholars within the framework of land reform in Southern Italy. The findings and methods developed there formed the nucleus for the planning of the model village of La Martella. Since 1960, he has been professor of American Studies at the University of Munich and director of the American Institute there. Besides having published many essays and articles in American, Italian, German, and Mexican journals, he is author of "The Hoe and the Book" published by Cornell University Press in 1960. We all make mistakes... ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE ON EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND Touch-type, hunt-and-peek, type with one hand tied behind your back—it's easy to turn out perfect papers on Corräsable. Because you can erase without a trace. Typing errors disappear like magic with just the flick of an ordinary pencil eraser. There's never a telltale erasure mark on Corräsable's special surface. Corrassable is available in light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin. In convenient 100-sheet packets and 500-sheet ream boxes. Only Eaton makes Corrassable. mark on Corräsable's special surface. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper Fine Arts Ticket Sales Combined EATON'S CORNASABLE TYPEWRITER PAPER EATON PAPER CORPORATION Ticket sales for all events in the Chamber Music Series, Concert Course, Major Theater Series, Experimental Theatre Series and the Children's Theatre Series have been consolidated this fall in the University Theatre box office, third floor, Murphy Hall. E REATÓNDIA BEM VINDO PITTSFIELD, MASS. In the past, Chamber Music and Concert Course ticket sales were handled by the Fine Arts office and the theater ticket sales were handled through the Kansas Union. Bell's Music Company and the University Theatre. ID cards admit students free to the Major Theatre Series and Concert Course. ID cards and 50 cents will admit students to the Experimental Theatre Series events. Tickets to Children's Theatre plays cost 50 cents. Students may purchase season tickets to the five-event Chamber Music Series for $4.10. Regular price is $5.13. Single events cost $1.79 each. John C. Wilkie Jr., of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics in Kansas City, Mo., will speak at the first meeting of the KU branch of American Pharmaceutical Association. KC Narcotics Agent To Speak Thursday The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 324 Malott. All pharmacy students and interested pre-pharmacy students are invited. The following School of Pharmacy class officers have been elected: Senior Class — Mason Ormsby, Gardner, president; David Rankin, Lawrence, vice president; and Eva Roeder, Lawrence, secretary. Junior Class — Otto Beck, Lawrence, president; Charles Berry, Chanute, vice president; and Mary Ann Warburton, Coffeyville, secretary. Sophomore Class — Douglas Young, McPherson, president; Robert King, Olsburg, vice president; and Karla Toothaker, Westmoreland, secretary. Tuesday, Oct. 9, 1962 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers "Bottles USA" Exhibit Displays American Glassware Articles American glassware was exhibited from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday at a Museum of Art open house. The display, entitled "Bottles USA." will include many items from the collection of Mrs. William Thayer Jr., Redlands, Calif. Other gifts of Mrs. Thayer to the museum include American furniture and Sevres porcelain. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Bernstein, Miss Erica Bernstein, Miss Nancy Corwin, and Miss Jane Kliewer will welcome visitors. The Gallery Guild, recently organized by Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe and Mrs. James Surface, will assist at the reception. Members of the Gallery Guild are Mrs. Jane Barber, Mrs. Jane Dykes, Mrs. Nancy Hambleton, Mrs. Barbara Wagoner, Mrs. Phyllis Lawton, Mrs. Meriam McNown, Mrs. Pam Simons, Mrs. Mary Surface, Mrs. Barbara Wescoe, Mrs. Jonell Williams, and Mrs. Eleanor Youngberg. One member of this group will greet and assist museum guests each afternoon this year. Women interested in joining the Guild should contact Mrs. Wescoe, Mrs. Surface, or Marilyn Stokstad, professor of art and acting museum director. Prof. Stokstad will not be present at the open house. She will represent the University of Kansas at the opening of the Tilmann Riemenschneider Exhibition in Raleigh, N. C."Madonna and Child," a sculpture from KU, will be presented in the exhibition. Joan Baez In Concert New LP Record Peter, Paul & Mary LP Malls Shopping Center Kief's Record & Hi-Fi CAMPUS CLASSIC CORDOVAN BY FREEMAN BOOTMAKER GUILD CLASSIC ... Cherry Cordovan with black Cordovan saddle. Double leather sole and luxury leather lined. Try your size today! A 9-12 & 13; B 8-12 & 13: C 7-12 & 13; D 6½-12 & 13. $24.95 Royal College Shop 837 MASS. Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 9, 1962 KU Official Cites Loan Exhaustion A KU Endowment Association official said Saturday greater resources for student loan scholarship funds is an urgent need of the University of Kansas in the area of private support. The official, Jerry Lewis, speaking to 70 persons at the fall meeting of the Greater University Fund advisory board, reported last month for the first time all loan funds were exhausted. The pace of student aid for 1962-63 is ahead of last year when KU handled nearly 1,500 scholarships of more than $644,000 and made more than 3,600 loans totaling $849,000. Lewis said the September budge of $80,000 for short-term, emergency students loans was overdrawn by $11,000. He said this month's allotment would be used by October 20. Setting up of monthly budgets became necessary to insure some funds available during the entire school year. By 1975, the KU Endowment Association will need capital of $3 million in its loan funds for needs of an expected 22,000 students. Lewis said. Using these rooms as a study area is a tentative program set up by the All Student Council and $ ^{d} $ approved by Vice Chancellor James P. Surface. If the program works successfully, the rooms may stay open for the semester. The ASC warns that the rooms are to be used only for study and any violation of this rule may cause the rooms to be closed. The ASC also stresses that students must be out of the rooms by 10 p.m. Students will monitor the basement until all persons have left for the evening. Rooms Will Open On Trial In Strong Du Pont Chemist to Visit KU The basement rooms in Strong Hall will be left open on a trial basis until 10 p.m. tomorrow for students wishing to study there. Harold L. Jackson, visiting professor of chemistry from Wilmington, Del., will discuss "Industrial Research" at the first meeting of the undergraduate chemistry seminar at 7:30 tonight in Room 122 of Malott. YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 Jackson is senior research chemist at E. I. du Pont de Nemours' Jackson laboratories in Wilmington. 24 Hour Service Owner Radio Controlled Ward Thompson JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 miss pat RED & TARTAN FLANNEL $19.95 -- $27.95 BLOUSES $5.00 Three members of the KU history department will attend the 87th annual meeting of the Kansas State Historical Society next Tuesday in Topeka. KU History Profs To Attend Meeting The three are George L. Anderson, professor of history; James C. Malin, professor of history; and Donald R. McCov, associate professor of history. The program for the society meeting includes a paper on "Locating and Investigating Kansas Archaeological Sites" by Thomas Witty, staff archaeologist of the State Historical Society. An address by Emory K. Lindquist, president of the society, on "The Swedish Immigrant and Life in Kansas," will be featured and a speech on "Presidential Papers and Presidential Libraries" by Robert Bolton, director of the Eisenhower Library, will be given. FREE DELIVERY Call before 4, Delivered after $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 COOPER DRUG State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd. Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan. KU SPORTS on DIAL KLWN 1320 7:30 a.m. __ Daily Sports Shorts 5:15 Today __ Sports Outdoors 5:35 __ Tom Hedrick Sports Read and Use Kansan Classifieds ARENSBERG'S WINTHROP ON CAMPUS CAMPUS ER INDU VAST A: Copper or Black Calf $1495 B: Black or Dark Brown Calf LUXURY INDUSTRIES OF AMERICA AMERICAN SHOE DESIGNER AWARD 1982 Designs for campus living and campus dress. Selected from our Modern Living Wardrobe by Winthrop...the Style Award Winner for 1962. AMERICA DE NER RD Interest High In J-School Page 5 Interest in journalism at the University of Kansas is rising again. Enrollment in the junior-senior level in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information is 97, highest since the veteran-swollen student bodies after World War II, Dean Burton W. Marvin reports. Last year 80 students were enrolled. The advertising curriculum is the most popular, having 39 majors. There are 37 news-editorial majors, 20 in the radio-television sequence and 1 in home economics journalism. The 1962 total in the school is 108, including 4 special students and 7 graduate students in residence. KU Radar Trails Storms University of Kansas research radar assists local Civil Defense Director Howard Lindley in finding and tracking severe thunderstorms and tornadoes. The radar system is on loan to the KU Department of Mechanics and Aerospace Engineering from the United States Weather Bureau for research on severe thunderstorms and tornadoes. The peculiar talent of the radar, from Lindley's standpoint, is it can "see" these storms moving into and through the area within 60 miles of Lawrence. Often there are patterns on the radar, "echoes," from these storms that tell a tornado is likely. The relative intensity of the storm also can be deduced from the echoes. Storms can be tracked and their direction and speed computed so closely that mobile ground observers can move to positions to observe them best as they approach Lawrence. Young Democrats To Meet for Rally The University of Kansas Young Democrats will meet with the Douglas County Young Democrats for a rally at 7:30 this evening at the Teepee. President Peter G. Aylward, Ellsworth senior, said that plans for the coming year are indefinite. Members may help with the Nov. 6 elections in Douglas County by operating car pools and serving as baby-sitters. A beer party will be announced at a later date. The Collegiate Council of Young Democrats will meet Oct. 20 in Topeka. Collister Named APA Fellow E. Gordon Colliser, professor of education and director of the Guidance Bureau at the University of Kansas, has been elected a fellow of the American Psychological Association (APA). The distinction of "fellow" is conferred upon only a few members for the contribution of significant research or service to the field. Voted by the Council of Representatives of the APA, the election becomes effective January 1, 1963. Kentucky FRIED CHICKEN only at the BIG BUY 23rd & Iowa Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd $6,000 Grant Aids Museum These assistants are Gary Lee Phillips, Minneapolis, Minn., graduate student; David Bardack, Lawrence graduate student; and Charles Cole, Leonia, N. J., graduate student. A $6,000 National Science Foundation grant has enabled the Museum of Natural History to hire three curatorial assistants to improve the collection here. The assistants were selected on scholarship, aptitude and interest, and are engaged in processing study-collections of reptiles, vertebrate fossils and mammals. Three University of Kansas women arrived in Aix-en-Provence, France, where they will be students this year at the Institute for American Universities. KU Women Begin French Studies Jane Albrecht, Lawrence junior; Victoria Kimbrough, Lawrence junior; and Joyce Voth, Kansas City sophomore, are participating in this university-abroad program now operating for its fifth year under the auspices of the University of Aix-Marseilles. The students will have the benefit of a faculty which includes American professors and scholars from famous European universities. The purpose of the Institute is to make a year of education in Europe available to more American students. University Daily Kansan Legalized abortion will be the subject for a four-member panel at the annual KU-Y English Style Debate to be held at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Panel Will Debate Legal Abortion The faculty members and the physician who will participate have been assigned their topics, and therefore, do not necessarily believe what they will be arguing for. The audience will be asked to sit on the side with which they agree — pro or con — at first, and then as they are persuaded from one side to another, they can move to that side of the room. The panelists having the most students sitting on their side at the end, wins the debate. The International Club has been invited to attend the debate, and has accepted as a group. Tuesday, Oct. 9, 1962 600 Tickets Available For Jerry Lee Lewis Six hundred tickets will be available for the Delta Chi barn party Friday night. The social fraternity is bringing Jerry Lee Lewis, rock n' roll recording star, and his band to the Big Barn, west of Lawrence, to provide the music. New and Used Parts and Tires William Anderson, jr., Park Ridge, Ill., junior and Delta Chi ticket chairman, said that no more than 30 tickets will be available to any one fraternity. A larger number will be available to the men's dormitories. Auto Wrecking and Junk East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 Individuals can purchase tickets at the Delta Chi house or phone in their reservations. "We want to make this as fair as possible." Anderson said. "We're trying to enlarge the Big Barn and we've even considered getting a tent." Lewis has been barnstorming the midwest and drawing "unbelievable" crowds, according to Anderson. Last weekend the singer played in Chicago. Lewis has recorded "Great Balls of Fire," "A Whole Lot of Shakin'" and other pop tunes. PATRONIZE YOUR `ADVERTISERS` New Winter Shipment of men's wash and wear CONTINENTAL PANTS $3.98 to $5.90 LITWINS 831 Mass. NOW YOU KNOW why more people smoke Winston than any other filter cigarette. Flavor does it every time-rich, golden tobaccos specially selected and specially processed for filter smoking! Winston FILTER CIGARETTES KING STER PURE WHITE, MODERN FILTER PLUS FILTER - BLEND UP FRONT Winston tastes good like a cigarette should! © 1992 B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 9, 1962 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Steve Clark Nebraska is the team to beat. One major item of business was solved in last weekend's Big Eight conference action. THE CORNHUSKERS answered many questions concerning how good they were, and how good Iowa State was by soundly defeating the Cyclones, 36-22. The Missouri Tigers again did not live up to expectations as they defeated Arizona (which incidentally is not among the nation's top teams) 17-7. The Tigers have yet to stage an offensive show of their capabilities. The Jayhawkers proved little by wearing Colorado down and then soundly whipping them in the second half. This prognosticator picked up perfect slate last week raising his season average to .705. With a win string going, here's another round. KANSAS OVER IOWA STATE: This is the biggest game of the year for the Cyclones. With a win, they remain in contention for the Big Eight title. With a loss, they are out. Nebraska soundly defeated them and Iowa State will be revengeful because of this. To add to the misery of the Jayhawkers, this game is homecoming at Ames, which should put the Cyclones higher than a kite, KU, while soundly defeating Colorado, did it in the second half after the Buffers were tired. Iowa State has much more depth than Colorado, therefore, this method will not be practical. This game is important for the Jayhawkers. If KU can win against Iowa State and Oklahoma, the Jayhawkers will be a sound title contender. Apprehension prevails, but KU by one touchdown. TEXAS OVER OKLAHOMA: The Sooners and the Longhorns square off again before a television audience. The Sooners were idle last week, while the Longhorns handled Tulane 25-6. Texas has a 3-0 record and is the nation's number one team this week. Old rivalries are always upset prone, but the Sooners don't have a smell in this one. Texas by three touchdowns. NEBRASKA OVER NORTH Carolina State. Nebraska is worn and tattered after their two games with Michigan and Iowa State. This game is designed for a breather, which the Cornhuskers need. Thunder Thornton will probably sit this one out. Dennis Claridge will play only on offense. State has a strong defensive team, so this one will be Nebraska by two touchdowns. MISSOURI OVER Kansas State: This one is a match between the tortoise and the hare. We have anticipated an offensive explosion by Missouri all season. This week, we will get our wish. You see, everybody has an offensive field day against Kansas State. The Wildcats, however, will hold Missouri to five touchdowns. OKLAHOMA STATE over Colorado: This league encounter is being played at Stillwater which gives the Cowboys an edge. Colorado came out of the Kansas game without physical injury, but worn down. The Cowboys defeated a strong Tulsa team 17-7. The Buffaloes will battle them in the first half, but lose it in the second by one touchdown. NEW VORK — (UPI) — The United Press International major college football ratings with first-place votes and won-lost records in parentheses: National Rankings Team Points 1. Texas (6) (3-0) 296 2. Alabama (18) (3-0) 291 3. Penn State (5) (3-0) 208 4. Southern California (2) (3-0) 190 5. Mississippi (1) (3-0) 168 6. Washington (2-0-1) 107 7. Arkansas (1) (3-0) 98 8. UCLA (1) (1-0) 97 9. Purdue (1-0-1) 85 10. Northwestern (1) (2-0) 80 Texas, Alabama Top UPI Rankings NEW YORK (UPI) Alabama drew the first place votes but Texas had the better overall point total today to gain the No.1 spot in the weekly United Press International major college football ratings. Eighteen of the 35 coaches who comprise the UPI rating board named the Crimson Tide, unbeaten in three straight games this year and 20 in-a-row, to the top spot while only six picked Texas No. 1. But the Longhorns, also unbeaten in three games this season, drew second place support from 14 coaches and third from nine others to replace Ohio State as the nation's top team. With points awarded on a basis of 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 for votes from first through 10th places, Texas had 296 to 291 for Alabama in one of the closest races ever in the UPI ratings. Alabama is the defending national champion. Haller and Hiller Are Yank Killers By Oscar Fraley UPI Sports Writer First it was Haller. Then it was Hiller. One started the pallor, The last was the killer. The Jingle boys of the San Francisco Giants—catcher Tom Haller and second baseman Charles (Chuck) Hiller—often this season have been the object, source and sometime butt of the jinglers. Even Danny Kaye has a comic song about them. BUT YOU CAN take it from the New York Yankees, there's very little humor about the manner in which these two similarly named young gents flogged the Bronx Bombers with their own home run weapon yesterday to square the World Series. Haller, not Hiller, smote a second inning home run with a man on which gave the Giants a 2-0 lead. Local Cricket Team Defeats KSU Squad Hiller, not Haller, walloped the first National League grand slam in series history—the Yankees owning six of the seven previously written into the record books—to stow away a 7-3 victory. YOU MIGHT EXPECT it from Haller, if not from Hiller. Haller is a six foot, four inch 195-pound out of Lockport, Ill., who was a University of Illinois quarterback on the same grid team with the great Bobby Mitchell. He already had walloped 18 home runs this year so another wasn't to be considered too remote a possibility. But while you could look for such heroics from Haller, it seemed unlikely from Haller when he trudged to the plate with the sacks full of Giants in the seventh inning. For Hiller, not Haller, had hit only three home runs during this entire wacky baseball season in which the Giants collared the Los Angeles Dodgers, beat them out of the National League pennant in a three-game playoff and as of today were no worse than in a flat-footed tie at two games each with the mighty Yankees. Hiller and Haller both started as regulars with the Giants last year and it was Haller, not Hiller, who on his first time at bat in the major leagues struck a home run. But eventually both of them were sent down to the farm. HILLER, NOT HALLER. is built on a smaller scale than his teammate. The second baseman, who hails from Johnsburg, Ill., a town of about 1,000 people, is five feet, 10 inches tall and goes but 170 pounds. He studied business administration at St. Thomas, Minn., College and admits to arriving "very late" in the majors. Hiller was 26 when he stuck while Haller was 25. "It's all very confusing," says Hiller of his relations with Haller. "We get mixed up a lot. People call me Tom Hiller and call him Chuck Haller when really it's Chuck Hiller and Tom Haller, as you probably know. Then I get mail addressed to Tom Haller and he gets mail addressed to Chuck Hiller, and it's really for one or the other of us, although sometimes we're not too sure, at that." The Lawrence Cricket team defeated the Kansas State University Cricket team with a lead of 74 runs last Sunday on K-State ROTC grounds. The Lawrence Cricket team batted first, and made 121 runs. Ramesh Doshi and Ali Hassan scored 19 and 51 runs respectively. Both were retired. Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 STARTS THURSDAY The BLOOD-AND-GUTS GUYS of the 7th Army! "ARMORED COMMAND" STARRING HOWARD KEEL · TINA LOUISE AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE — AND — DOROTHY DANDRIDGE is tawny dynamite in MALACA PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 The BLOOD-AND-GUTS GUYS of the 7th Army! "ARMORED COMMAND" 613 Vermont RISK'S MALAGA PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. DOROTHY DANORIDGE is tawny dynamite in MALAGA PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 FAST FINISHED Laundry Service Coming Saturday! PETER JONES The Chapman Report The personal story behind a sex survey...from the controversial best selling novel. TECHNICOLOR® From WARNER BROS. No one under 16 will be admitted unless accompanied by an adult. GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788 Kinsten's Hillcrest Shopping Center Sports Wear • Majestic • Jr. House of • White Stag Milwaukee • Helen Harper • Petty Woodard TOMORROW M.G.M presents The funniest foursome that ever-fouled up Der Führer! "INVASION QUARTET" starring BILL TRAVERS • SPIKE MILLIGAN GREGOIRE ASLAN GRANADA IT'S GOT THAT MAD JAZZ BEAT! RING-A- DING RHYTHM CHUBBY CHECKER • GARY (U.S.) BONDS • JOHN LEYTON • CRAIG DOUGLAS ... ACKER BILK plus many more stars AND INTRODUCTION HELEN SHAPIRO An AMCUS Production A COLUMBIA PICTURES Release STARTS THURSDAY AT THE Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065 THE WILD WESTERNERS One Wednesday Night CHICKEN SPECIAL All You Can Eat ONLY $1 drink and dessert extra Little Banquet FOR room phon $55 a coupl Ample free parking on the Malls --- GRANADA NOW SHOWING! ENDS TONIGHT! 7:00 & 9 p.m. 20 THE 300 SPARTANS CINEMASCOPE COLOR BY DELUXE VARSITY NOW SHOWING! Tonight and Wednesday 7:00 & 9 p.m. DAMN THE DEFIANT! A WEEKLY A COLUMBIA PICTURE'S RELEASE COLOR and CINEMASOURCE SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Ends Tomorrow One Show 7:00 Winner of 4 ACADEMY AWARDS "SPARTACUS" ADULTS 85c CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE Tuesday, Oct. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint 1. 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. FOR RENT FOR RENT: Nicely furnished clean 3 room apartment. Private entrance and parking from the campus. $5 a month with all bill payments. Couple. Phone VI 3-7830. Bid. 10-55 A modern garage apartment for 1 or 2 men. Very private with a snack bar. Has an office for $50 per month. Utilities paid. Phone VI 3-3019. Also 2 lovely rooms vacant November. A furnished house for couple with two someone else. Mrs Carter at 3229 for parties 10-15 Entire second floor furnished apartment with kitchen, living room, bedroom, private bath, clothes closet, wall storage, and air conditioning Close to KU and town. Available now. For showing call VI 3-9868. 10-12 Furnished apartment. 4 rooms. Private bathroom. Utilities. Quiet. Close to KU and downtown. Couple preferred. $75 per month. Phone VI 3-7257. 10-11 Second floor furnished apartment for 2 students. Private bath and entrance. Utilities are paid. 1400 Ohio or phone VI 3-2464. 10-10 Furnished bachelor apartment with large living room, studio bed, kitchen and entrance. Area VI. A private bath and entrance. Phone VI. 3-6235 or see at W. 23. 10-10 FOR RENT: extra nice furnished room for men, 123 blocks from campus, two rooms, casa 1346 Ohio. Phone 9-2346 or 3-2522. After 6 p.m. phone VI 2-1631. 10-10 Large furnished apartment with large closets, private bath and entrance. Newly decorated. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-3263. 10-10 2 bedroom duplex and also a large 2 bed- room apartment. 1911 W, 32 St. Terr., or phone VI 3-2281 1911 W, 32 St. Terr., or phone VI 3-2281 Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. $ _{12} $ block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice and clean, see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. 3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block away. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. **tf** paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. **tf** ROOMS FOR MEN: Doubles only, private entrance, private bath bath, telephone and utilities paid. One block from Union. Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tf TYPING Experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Barlow, 408 W. 15th VI, 21-1648. Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tf Typing reasonable rates, nest and accep- tance. Mrs. Besson VI. VI 3-18ft. Mrs. Besson, 825 Grever Ter. Manuscripts, theses, and term papers. Also dissertations typed on wide carriage. Also pewn in special keys. Experience in education and adjunct Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert . VI 2-1546 English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Nelsande Jones, VI 3-5267. 11-15 Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service and reasonable rates. I have an electric typewriter, Call Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409 Secretary will do typing in home. Fast. accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 2-1749. tt Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651. Married student to work part time in route sales work. Must be neat and courteous. Liberal commission and guaranteed plan. Write, give age, work history and phone, to 111 Flint Hall, University of Kansas. 10-10 HELP WANTED WANTED BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard. BABYSITTING, if desired. $8 per week. CALL VI 3-7828 Wanted: an old cheap car that will run. Phone Jeff Mellitch at MIT 3-0064. 10-11 LOST Lost: a black Shaefe fountain pen between Summerfield Hawklet and Fraser Hall on Monday morning, Oct. 8. Phone VI 3-8153. 10-15 Want washing and ironing in my home Wipe dishes. Reasonable rates. Phone VI 3-9159. BUSINESS SERVICES LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tf Let us plan your party—from hello to good-bye. We furnish everything, refreshments, favors, entertainment. Just turn your next party over to us and be our guest. Call the Party House. VI 3-7787 and speak to Alda M. Prosser. 10-11 PARK PLAZA SO. INC. APARTMENTS Experienced math tutor will take students in all undergraduate algebra and calculus courses. Phone VI 3-5212 at 5 p.m. 10-9 Trouble with Calculus? Daily tutoring sessions for Math 21 now being organized at reasonable rates. For details, phone VI 3-3447 between 11:00 and 12:00 p.m. DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentation. Ola Smith 9391; Mass. Call VT 3-5263. - Couples - Singles - Furnished - Unfurnished PETS; Three Sealpoint Stimanee kittens, priced to sell. They are gentle, lovable and house-broken. Phone Mr. Hyde at VI 3-0148. 10-15 BABYSITTING, nice home, large yard, on quiet street. References if desired. $8 per week. Phone VI3-7828. tf 1959 Perpetu in good operating condition. 15-1702 after 6 p.m. on weekends. 10-15 FOR SALE Tirest! Tires! 1,000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes—most foreign brands. Get all tires until Oct. 1st! 600-13 new style new tubeless snow tires for $25; 600-15; 2,100-$3,000 for installation at rear, Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. VIII 3-4170. '59 Thunderbird in good shape. It's a steal at $1600. Phone VI 3-5768. 10-11 FM Radios! FM Stereos! Stereos! Largest stock in Lawrence all at discount prices. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. VI 3-4170. 10.10 - 20 Days Free Rent With 1-year Lease ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS — New machines and a few rebuilt. All parts available and machines serviced. Established locally 24 years. F. V. Cox, Local Manager, 1904 Barker, Lawrence, Kansas. Phone VI 3-3277. 10-25 TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper — 85c per ream. Yellow mat pad pads only 25c Scratched. The Locker Outlook, 105 Massachusetts, ognall every day. ff - Wall to Wall Closet Space Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. - Carpeting HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop Modern self-service-Pet phone VI52863 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 13:00 p.m. week days. - Individual Controlled Heating Boys' Western Flyer English bicycle. 3 Boys' Western Flyer English bicycle. baskets; used only one week. Also, engineering drawing set — Dietz gen. 12 Phone VI 3-9140. Excellent condition. 10-9 - Water Paid NATIONAL BANK 7th & Mass. VI 3-0260 - Lighted Off Street Parking Royal Standard typewriter for sale. It has pica type and in good condition. To see phone Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409. 10-11 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Comm. Personal service—sectionalized guinea pig tanks, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs etc., plus complete pet supplies. **if** Continental — 1946 Lincoln Continental convertible, black with white tires and top. Red and white interior. Original V-12 engine just rebuilt. See R. Mofet at 1225 Kentucky or phone VI 3-9334 after six p.m. 10-10 The LAWRENCE ESTABLISHED 1863 3-speed lightweight Royce Union bikes cut to $37.50 in men's or ladies. New 2-speed automatic Schwinns. $48.88. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. VI 3-4170. 10-16 Ph. VI 2-3416 or VI 2-1537 Office — 1912 W. 25th HOW CAN YOU LOSE? A Being able to do all your banking safely and conveniently in one place is really something to cheer about. Think of the time saved making one stop instead of several! Come in and enjoy our full-scale banking service HOW TO INCREASE YOUR BICYCLE'S HILL CLIMBING POWER! IVH210 It's easy! Simply convert your 3-speed lightweight bike to a 6-speed bike by installing a Cyclo conversion kit. You will be able to climb hills up to 25% easier, even the 14th Street hill, and yet increase your bike's top speed. The Cyclo conversion kit increases your speed and power by doubling your bike's gear capacity. The Cyclo conversion kit is available only at Downtown Western Auto. Come in and take a trial ride on one of our demonstrators. DOWNTOWN WESTERN AUTO Most Complete Line Of Accessories in Town Western Auto DOWNTOWN VI 3-2141 910 Mass. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 9, 1962 Students Indifferent (Continued from page 1) Marilyn Miller, Larned junior, said, "It's not democratic to force membership in one party simply because the rest of the house belongs. However, I question whether as many people would vote under the individual membership system. Houses that belong in blocs usually require their entire membership to vote. Would as many people bother to get out and vote if membership were individual?" ROXANN CREITZ. Highland, Ill., junior, replied, "It's probably true that if a person does not belong to an organized house with bloc membership, he may not find out about candidates, and he may not have enough interest to vote. But if this person is not interested enough in the first place, he should not vote anyway. I think bloc membership is an artificial stimulus to vote." Patricia Ann Koos, Mission sophomore, said, "I think bloc membership is all right as long as there is no coercion involved. It's not too democratic for any student to be forced into joining a political party because of bloc affiliation. However, I know of two specific cases in houses in the West Hills that were allowed to keep their individual membership in the other party." Sharon Scott, Kansas City, Mo., junior, agreed that to vote one way just because the whole house does is not a good idea. All members don't have the same ideas, she said. "However," she warned, "I think individual membership is better and more democratic only if the individual will take a personal interest in finding out about the qualifications of the candidates. I think many individual voters would vote blindly, and this isn't good." Official Bulletin International Students If you are interested in international education, and the UNESCO banquet there on the evening of Oct. 26, see Clark Coan, international student adviser, 228 Strong TODAY Kappa Phi, Danforth Chapel, 7:00 p.m. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Methodist Community Worship. 9:15 p.m., Wesley Foundation. Tau Sigma, 7 p.m., Robinson Gym. TOMORROW Radio Production Center, 7:30 p.m. 25th Hall, executive committee meeting THURSDAY **Students interested in Medical Technology are invited to the meeting of the prevalence of STDs.** 8:30 p.m., in the Watkins Hospital Nurses Home. Dr. Dale Clinton. Douglas County Health Officer, will preside the program. Refreshments will be served. Interviews for teaching positions in Montgomery County, Maryland, near Washington D.C. by Dr William Early, Appointment Bureau, 117 Bailey Hall. History Club Meets Tomorrow The KU History Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. The topic of discussion will be anthropology, economics and geology as related to historical methodology. MONTANA OXFORDONIAN INSPIRATION Arrow presents a shirt with an Oxford accent...the "Gordon Dover Club." Smooth softly rolled, button-down collar and placket front looks good all day. Comfortable soft cotton Oxford cloth, in white and solid colors. "Sanforized" labeled for lasting fit. $5.00 Weaver MEN'S STORE JOHNSON & CO. A SHIRT WITH AN OXFORD ACCENT British inspired, all-American admired . . . Arrow's "Gordon Dover Club." Medium-point, button-down collar is softly rolled for unstilted shaping and fit. Tailored with traditional placket front, plaited back in cool cotton Oxford. All- American trimly tailored to look clean-cut, to feel really comfortable.."Sanforized".labeled keeps it that way. $5.00. ARROW FOUNDED 1851 Traditionally the Finest for Discriminating Men S.U.A. PICTURE-LENDING LIBRARY RENT FRAMED PRINTS FOR 50c A SEMESTER THIS WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY ONLY at the CRAFT SHOP IN THE UNION 8:30 - 5:00 WEDNESDAY, OCT.10 THURSDAY, OCT.11 Daily hansan 60th Year, No.19 Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1962 LAWRENCE. KANSAS A Reluctant Congress Begins to Move Faster WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Democratic leaders, who are having trouble keeping enough lawmakers on hand to transact business, managed for the first time this week to prod a dawdling Congress into faster action. THE HOUSE approved a speed-up procedure which cleared the way for immediate negotiations to resolve a Senate-House dispute over terms of a "pork barrel" public works bill. COMPROMISE agreement on the multi-billion-dollar measure is one of the chief roadblocks to final adjournment of the first Kennedy Congress. It already is the longest election-year session since World War II. House leaders had indicated earlier they had little hope of getting out before Saturday. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield, who had set Thursday night as a target, urged all Senators still in town to stay here. With elections less than a month away, many lawmakers already have gone home to campaign. The growing absenteeism raised fears among Congressional leaders that they might have difficulty keeping a quorum on hand unless the 87th adjourns quickly. Unless a quorum is present, an objection by a single member can block transaction of any business. ONE ROADBLOCK towards adjournment is an agriculture appropriations measure. House and Senate leaders called another behind-the-scenes huddle today to try to break a deadlock over the bill. The two key figures in the tug-of-war, Sen. Richard B. Russell D-Ga., and Rep. Jamie Whitten D-Miss., were expected to attend along with other legislative leaders Officials of both houses admitted that the agriculture money deadlock was the main block to long-awaited Congressional adjournment. But they would not predict how — or how soon — it could be solved. Meantime, the nation's doctors lawyers and other self-employed P-T-P Fall Program Set The University of Kansas People-to-People begins its fall semester program with an industrial tour and picnic this weekend. Reuben McCornack, Abilene junior and co-chairman of the University group, said the picnic is the first all-campus function this year and is the "official kick-off" for all P-t-P programs this semester. P-t-P and the Lawrence International Friendship Enterprise (LIFE) are sponsoring the picnic from 5-7 p.m., Saturday at Potter Lake, American and foreign students and Lawrence residents are invited. In case of bad weather, the picnic will be held in Allen Field House. LIFE was started last year to welcome foreign students to Lawrence and to the University. Reilly Burcham, president, explained that the organization's duties include locating housing with area families for foreign students and arranging dinner dates between international students and area residents. In other weekend plans, a busload of American and foreign students will be in Kansas City. Mo., Saturday to tour a manufacturing company and attend the American Royal Livestock and Horse Show. A BUS will leave the Kansas Union at 10 a.m. for Kansas City Saturday and will return to Lawrence in time for students to attend the P-t-P and LIFE picnic Saturday evening. Students interested in taking the industrial tour should contact the P-t-P office in the Kansas Union. persons watched the White House for President Kennedy's action, if any, on a bill to let them set up tax deductible private pension funds. Congress finally passed the bill this year after 11 years of effort by its backers. UNLESS KENNEDY vetoes it by midnight, it will become law. If he vetoes it, both houses were set to override the veto and write the measure into law over his objections. In another development, legislation that would require employers to provide equal pay for male and female workers was scuttled in the House after previously winning approval both there and in the Senate. After the Senate Labor Committee pigeonholed a House-passed bill to provide "equal pay" for women, the Senate sought to revive it by tacking it on to another House-passed bill. World Series NEW YORK — (UPI)— A home run by Tom Tresh in the last half of the 5th inning scored Kubek and Richardson, to put the New York Yankees ahead of the San Francisco Giants, 5-2. The two teams were tied at two games each going into today's game. WUS Executive To Talk Tomorrow Victor E. Johnson of Dallas, Tex. regional executive of the World University Service, will be here tomorrow and Friday for talks with University of Kansas faculty members and religious groups. Johnson will speak at a luncheon at 11:30 a.m., tomorrow in the Meadowlark and Cottonwood Rooms of the Kansas Union. His subject is "What is WUS, and What Can it Mean to KU?" Presidents of campus religious groups, the Student Religious Council and the campus chest committee are urged to attend. Johnson has traveled in Asia and has taught in Japanese universities. He was the assistant foreign student adviser at the University of California in Berkeley where he taught American government and comparative government classes. Controversial Topics Slated for KU Forums Speakers from several controversial organizations—including the Communist and Socialist Parties, Citizens for Educational Freedom, and Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)—have accepted invitations to speak at KU this year. Breon Mitchell, vice president of Student Union Activities, said these speakers are scheduled to appear in SUA Minority Opinion Forums in the near future. In addition, the national director of the American Civil Liberties Union will speak on the Supreme Court prayer case in an SUA Current Events Forum. Oct. 26, Mitchell said. Mitchell announced the plans in a letter to the Daily Kansan, answering an editorial in Monday's Kansan which criticized the lack of forums so far this year. The letter appears in the "Letter's column on page 2 of today's Daily Kansan. Power Off At Watson Watson Library experienced a day-long power shutdown today as construction men began installing electrical wiring for the new addition. The power was shut off at 8:30 a.m. and will probably be restored by 5 p.m. today. Stuart Forth, associate director of libraries, said that if power is not restored by 5 p.m., the building will close for the night. Toilet facilities have been closed. Water fountains, electric fans, copy machines and electric typewriters are out of order. STACKS REMAIN open at those levels where windows provide some natural light, but two of the lower stacks have been closed. Students needing to use library facilities frequented the main reading room with its large windows. The undergraduate and education libraries were also in full use. All work was suspended at the photographic bureau located in the basement of the building. Women's Scholarship Halls Reaffirm UP Membership "This will not be the last time during the next several months that we will be inconvenienced," Forth said. "I hope everyone continues to remain as cooperative as they have been." Two women's scholarship halls, Miller Hall and Sellards Hall reaffirmed their memberships in the University Party (UP) Monday night. ROGER WILSON. Wichita senior and Vox president, said the UP affiliation was no surprise to him. "They were UP last year. We were just grateful to go in and talk to them. We heard the vote was very close, so Vox can expect some votes from the hall." Wilson commented. Members of Miller Hall announced earlier they would remain independent of party affiliation this year, but reconsidered and reaffiliated with UP Monday night. Both campus political parties sent representatives to the halls after members of Miller Hall had announced their plans to remain independent this year. "I THINK the women knew that Phyllis Brown, Humboldt senior, wants to run for an office and that we could support her better by joining UP," Martha Yonally, Shawnee Mission junior and Miller Hall treasurer, said. The revote Monday night was unplanned and came as a motion from the floor. MEMBERS OF Sellards Hall also voted to continue their affiliation with UP. Members of Watkins Hall, another women's scholarship hall, will vote Tuesday. Douthart Hall will remain independent. In the men's scholarship halls Stephenson Hall, Jolliffe Hall and Pearson Hall are UP members. Foster Hall and Battenfeld Hall are affiliated with Vox. Council Resolution Will Go to Ole Miss 'Ole Miss' Letter Disrupts ASC By Jackie Stern Tempers flared last night when the All Student Council adopted the resolution supporting James Meredith's admission at the University of Mississippi. Jo Ann Snyder, Bethesda, Md., senior and ASC secretary, submitted the resolution which will be sent to the student council of the University of Mississippi at Oxford. This resolution was accepted over one presented by Gregory Turner, Seattle, Wash., junior. In his proposed letter Turner criticized the breakdown in Ole Miss student government in dealing with the Meredith problem. IRONICALLY, the only objection to Turner's resolution was that it seemed too critical of the University of Mississippi. Yet the ASC accepted Miss Snyder's resolution which took a considerably stronger stand. After the meeting, ASC members continued to discuss their views on the resolution. Following are reactions of several ASC members to the issue: "Of course, I was disappointed," Turner said in commenting on the rejection of his resolution. "But the major disappointment was the fact the other ASC members felt it wasn't within their jurisdiction as council members to do anything about it." Turner said he felt that anything affecting any American students (Continued on page 10) Meredith Is Harassed OXFORD, Miss. — (UPI)—White students harassed James Meredith at just about every step the Negro took yesterday on the University of Mississippi campus. A stocky youth even pushed a U.S. Marshal walking with Meredith and shook his finger in Meredith's face. "Nigger, you better watch out," he said. NO EFFORT WAS made to physically harm the 29-year-old Air Force veteran whose forced admission touched off bloody rioting Sept. 30 and a rowdy demonstration Monday night. The campus was relatively quiet last night, many of the students attending a performance of "Mark Twain Tonight" featuring broadway actor Hal Holbrook. Meredith had indicated he might attend the performance but he did not put in an appearance. The Army announced in Washington that another 5,900 troops in the Oxford area were being sent back to their home bases and about 900 National Guardsm们 were released. This left a force of about 7,000 soldiers and 2,000 National Guardsm in the area. IN CLARKSDALE, Miss., the state president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) denied that Meredith was hand picked by the NAACP to crack racial barriers at the University. Aaron Henry said the NAACP came to Meredith's aid "only after he requested it" and the organization's state board determined "he had gone as far as he could on his own." The All Student Council last night passed a resolution written by the chairman of the Civil Rights Council supporting the integration of the University of Mississippi. The resolution will be sent to the University of Mississippi student council. The resolution reads: Whereas we believe that all qualified candidates should be admitted to the colleges of their choice, without regard to race or religion, he it resolved that the associated students of the University of Kansas support the admission of James Meredith to the University of Mississippi. Furthermore, we urge the student government of the University of Mississippi to assist in welcoming James Meredith into the student body and into campus life, to work for non-violent solutions to problems of racial unrest, and to consider disciplinary action against those few students who subvert democratic process by taking part in violence or mob action. The resolution passed 12-11, with one abstention, after heated debate among ASC members. The controversy was over the propriety of sending such a resolution to the University of Mississippi student council — not over the sentiments expressed in the resolution. THE RESOLUTION was proposed by Jo Ann Snyder, Bethesda, Md., senior and ASC secretary. It followed a similar resolution by Greg Turner, Seattle, Wash., junior and College representative. Turner's resolution was defeated. Miss Snyder said the resolution was not written by her but by a member of the student body. She later identified the author of the letter as Don Warner, Topeka senior and chairman of the Civil Rights Council. Phyllis Wertzberger, Lawrence fifth year pharmacy student and School of Pharmacy representative, was one of those who objected to the proposal. "It is impossible," she said, "for us to realize the situation in the South because most of us were raised in Kansas." Miss Wertzberger said the resolution might only offend the Mississippi students instead of having any constructive effects. Council members favoring the sending of the resolution argued that KU merely would be showing concern for the situation and would encourage Mississippi students to solve their problems peacefully. IN OTHER ACTION THE ASC revamped the election poll decentralization legislation proposed at the last meeting by Hollace Cross, Kansas City senior and large men's dormitory representative. John Stuckey, Pittsburgh junior and men's scholarship hall representative, proposed an amendment changing the polling places proposed by Cross. Stuckey designated Strong Hall, Murphy Hall and the Kansas Union as the new polling places. Three complete sets of IBM voting permits would be used so any student could vote at any one of the three polls. Stuckey said duplicate ballots would be thrown out by the IBM machines, thereby minimizing the chance of successful cheating. Voting on Stuckey's amendment (Continued on page 10) Weather Generally fair skies will remain in the Kansas area throughout tomorrow. Not much change in temperature is expected. The low tonight will be in the 40s in the extreme Northwest and in the mid 60s in the Southeast. Highs tomorrow will range from 85 to 90. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1962 LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler To A Darker Friend You are angry, and justly so. You have earned the right to talk of revolution in any sense of the word. But remember, friend, it is not the overcoming of the Barnetts and the Faubuses of this Union, nor their methods, which will resolve the racial issue. The federal government has proved that they are only demagogues, vainly trying to repeal the 20th century after it is half past. And neither will the rabble prevail—those who carry bricks, and bottles and shout "State Sovereignty!" as if the slogan had meaning or relevance. The contention, friend, is between you and me, and in our own souls. In most manners of existence we live beyond the influence of the pedantic negotiators and the cries of the crowd baiters. They draw up grandiose plans and make wild sounds in the night, too often excluding the practical things we live by in the light of day. LET US HOPE that the joiners of our respective races remain only peripheral influences—the answers are not to be found in the members of your race who preach black supremacy, nor in the members of my race who will take up any controversy for the self-righteous comfort it affords them. Their voices are loud but their souls are hollow. Whether they care or understand what it is all about is immaterial to them—they are leeches who live on pseudo-guilt and shallowness. You have seen both hatred and fear in a white man's eyes, and idiocy running from his mouth. You have been spat on and called "Nigger," with no comfort in your frustration but hope and your own bitter tears. BUT YOU DON'T hate me for this, or because of this—mistrust me, yes, but hate, no. Perhaps I bear watching because I seem callous. But consider that I too perhaps have reason for distrusting the entity of your race and the power you seek. I cannot honestly look only at the best of your race and the worst of mine. I have heard the voice of your people, singing cadence in a misty Kentucky dawn. It is a strange feeling, friend, and not too remote from the sound of a jungle—the beauty of perfect rhythm, with violence running just below the surface. The singing awed me, but that strange current behind it made me wonder what power might become in the hands of black men driven by a cause. It's simple to join a cause, but accepting the responsibility which comes with it is more difficult. Too many of your people live in inexcusable squalor, for which they are not responsible, but I have also seen your wealthy ones who are inexcusably arrogant—for this they are responsible. And I have heard your swivelers cry "Race Prejudice!" to cover their own personal laziness. And one of your brothers in color once contemplated me over the point of a switchblade, wondering if it was worthwhile to try to cut my throat merely because it was white and I represented authority. I DON'T HATE YOU for your people's faults any more than you hate me for the misfits of my race—but I remain watchful. Ours is a two-way street, and we both have many things to prove. Mistrust is the essence of this generation—indeed of the contemporary world. This is one heritage we have in common, and something which was imposed upon us without our consent. It remains to be seen whether or not we will pass on anything better. But let's spare each other the slogans and platitudes. Perhaps we could even smile at times. If we learn to live with mistrust for a time there's an outside chance we may learn to call each other "brother" and really mean it. Bob Hoyt Doctrine Not Applicable Editor: May I remind Mr. Murphy ("Limited Blockade for Cuba," Daily Kansan, Sept. 27) that the Monroe Doctrine is not applicable to the present dilemma in Cuba? As Walter Lippmann and others have written, the Cuban government has voluntarily asked for Soviet military aid. The Monroe Doctrine, on the other hand, stipulates that a foreign power shall not intrude into the affairs of an American country, or use coercive methods to bring an American country under its domination. The U.S.S.R. has not forced arms upon Casto; he asked for them. AND NO WONDER that he has done so. For if Castro is uneasy about the future stability of his government, the United States has done much to confirm his disquietude, i.e., trade embargoes, exclusion from the OAS and the abortive invasion. It is precisely because of Castro's uneasiness about U.S. intentions that any aggressive action, such as a blockade of any sort, would be detrimental not only to the eventual removal of the Soviet Union from Cuba, but to the hopes of Inter-American partnership. Castro, if given time, may yet spurn the Kremlin once his regime is prospering, and the rest of Latin America will certainly disapprove of United States intervention in Cuba. FURTHERMORE. AS LIPPmann again writes, an aggressive action by the United States against Cuba would establish a discomforting precedent. Namely, that if the United States may protect its contiguous borders from Soviet military bases with aggressive actions, the Soviet Union has a corresponding right to do the same in Iran where a U.S. base points menacingly at Russia. One only hopes that President Kennedy does not capitulate to the "war party" in Congress, thereby engendering catastrophic results for our efforts in Latin America. Richard Currie, Ozone Park, N. Y., senior ... Letters ... Forums Coming Soon Edition I am writing this letter in an attempt to assuage the fears of Mr. Clayton Keller expressed in his editorial "Debates, Forums Absent" (Daily Kansan, Oct, 8). I hope to accomplish this before he transfers to some other campus where his intellect will supposedly be more adequately stimulated and provoked. Last year I supervised the Minority Opinion Forum as well as the Current Events for SUA. In addition we offered Modern Book Review (Tropic of Cancer, etc.), Poetry Hour, Humanities Forum and Last Lecture. I'm pleased to find Mr. Keller was satisfied with what we provided. (Edward Shaw—"Fair Play for Cuba" was also a Minority Opinion Forum speaker.) This year, as in every year, the SUA will provide the same type programs. But this year, as every year, it has required some time (usually about a month) to get the various committees chosen and functioning. This first "slack" month is nothing new—it is the rule, not the exception. As for Minority Opinion speakers we schedule our programs to suit them, not them to suit us. They are not always able (as Mr. Love was) to speak during the first few weeks of school. Lest Mr. Keier think we have been neglecting our "duties" (voluntarily accepted) the following comprise some of the programs already determined: Minority Opinion speakers representing the following groups — the Communist Party (Nov.-Dec.), the Congress Of Racial Equality (Oct.-Nov.), the Socialist Party, The Citizens for Educational Freedom (Nov.) and others. The Current Events Forum on Oct. 26 is presenting John Pemberton, National Director of the American Civil Liberties Union, speaking on the Supreme Court Prayer Case. The groups mentioned above have already accepted invitations to speak. Reading the bulletin board reveals a KU-Y English style debate on legalized abortion this week, as well as other interesting topics. I trust Mr. Keller will attend these forums and also that he might remain calm in awaiting those of the SUA. They will be back-on schedule. Breon Mitchell Salina junior SUA vice president * * * Can't Succeed Himself Editors We Americans seem prone to condemn everyone who opposes us as insincere. I would not try to give a reason for Gov. Barnett's actions, but I do believe that he, and the majority of the white citizens of Mississippi, believe very sincerely in segregation. Let us recognize this sincerity and hope that in time we will be able to convince them that all people are equal and that all are entitled to the same in educational opportunity. I feel compelled to write a reply to the article in the Oct. 3 Daily Kansan entitled "Fighting Battle on Own Terms." In the article, Gov. Ross Barnett of Mississippi is accused of fighting against the entrance of James Merethid to the university because he wanted to continue as governor of Mississippi. If the author had taken the trouble to look into the matter he would have found that the governor of Mississippi cannot succeed himself. Bob Strevey Norcatur junior KU Needs Sundial I think it's a dirty shame that a multi-million dollar university like KU does not possess even one (1) functionable sundial. For several years now I have been frustrated in my attempts to tell the time by the sundial located near Dyche Hall, due to its state of ill-repair. As a result, I have a rather severe sundial complex; and even worse, I seldom know what time it is. In my opinion, which is shared by a great many other KU students, the sundial should be fixed and restored to its rightful place in the sun. Dennis Jackman Prairie Village senior C-32 PAT PILLER "THE HOUSE MOTHER IS SORRY SHE ASKED YOU TO CALL FOR LOUISE AT THE POOR---JUST DRIVE BACK TO THE CLUB AN HONK!" It Looks This Way Cape Canaveral and the entire man-in-space complex have done it again. Navy Commander Walter M. Schirra went farther up for a longer time than any American had ever gone before. And most important—he came back to tell about it. Schirra, like previous U.S. space travelers blasted off the launching pad at Cape Canaveral and floated gently back into the sea under the watchful eyes of a vast telemetry network and an almost equally vast television network. An Astronaut Will Die What will happen when the retrorockets do not fire properly and the manned vehicle turns into a molten blob during re-entry into the earth's atmosphere? What will happen when a manned space vehicle sinks like a rock into the sea before the astronaut has time to escape? But complete safety can never be assured in any situation. The reason for an astronaut's death should be determined and eliminated before the next flight, if possible. But it may not be possible to determine the reason because there may be no pieces to reconstruct and study. WHAT WILL happen when the first manned missile lifts gently a few feet off the launching pad and disintegrates into a ball of fire? What will happen when the first manned space craft is pushed a little too hard by its thundering rockets and sails off haphazardly to orbit the sun or perhaps some other star? "WHEN" INSTEAD OF "if" was used in these questions because "when" is the correct word. An astronaut is going to die during one of his flights. Sooner or later some precaution will be overlooked, or perhaps some tiny part will malfunction through no fault of those who prepared it for flight. Whatever the cause, one thing is certain: the calculated risk in any kind of flight will take an astronaut to his death. How will the nation react to such a death? No attempt has been made to prepare the public for such an event. No doubt some people will clamor for the grounding of all manned space flights until complete safety can be assured. Military jet pilots die every week. They do not become national heroes—but they are just as dead and their wives and children are just as lonely as if the jet pilot had died the glorious death of an astronaut. THE PEOPLE OF THE United States must realize now that a certain degree of risk must be assumed. It can be minimized but never eliminated. The inevitable fatal accident must not be allowed to block further experimentation. An astronaut is just another pilot—better than most, but just as mortal. He may not look mortal in that full-color picture in a national magazine or in the four-column picture under the eight-column banner headline in the newspaper. Only when he dies in flight will everyone know he is mortal. —Dennis Branstiter Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extention No. Extension 11, news room Extension 276, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Page 3 Citizen Ike Gets Tough On the New Frontier DENVER—(UPI)—Private citizen Dwight D. Eisenhower, campaigning across the country on behalf of Republican candidates, still has the grin. But he's balancing it off these days with some sharply-worded hard talk about the new frontier. EISENHOWER told a cheering crowd of 8,000 persons here last night the "far frontier" was spewing "brassy and boastful words," failing to react to real crises and manufacturing false ones, regimenting farmers, and lacking the courage "to distinguish between the necessary and the merely convenient." Eisenhower leaves for Omaha, Neb., today after launching two of the most vigorous attacks on the Kennedy administration of his current political tour yesterday at Cheyenne, Wyo., and Denver. "The Washington record of these past 20 months presents a picture of political connivance instead of statesmanship; of selfish grabs for power instead of respect for our concepts of balance in government; of arrogant assertion of Washington infallibility instead of readiness to trust in the wisdom of the American people," he said. He said he would probably never see eye-to-eye with the Kennedy administration. To the new frontiersmen, he said, "I am nothing but a backward-looking, a backward-thinking, a backward-minded has-been. "FOR MY PART, I am tired—terribly tired—of hearing America run down by them, of hearing their brassy and boastful words and watching their bumbling actions. "Especially, I am tired of their sluggishness in real crisis that may peril the nation and their frantic haste to make votes out of manufactured crises; of their hysterical efforts to substitute, for the deliberative processes of a congress that we elect to represent us, the pronouncements and edicts of a tiny, self-assertive clique that represents little of experience and less of wisdom." Eisenhower flew to Denver from Cheyenne, where he told a crowd of 1,500 that while the administration was constantly enlarging its power, Congress was abdicating some of its own in important areas. "No evidence of this superior over-powering wisdom makes it justifiable to put our destinies in one place," he said. Adult Education Leaders to Meet Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1962 University Daily Kansan The growing role of universities in higher adult education will be examined by top university officials from a 15-state mid-continent area in a meeting here Oct.21-22. Donald R. McNeil, author, historian and co-director of the Carnegie study on the role of universities in higher adult education, will be the featured speaker. He is expected to speak on findings of the Carnegie study which surveyed adult education in more than 75 universities. William A. Conboy, chairman of the KU department of speech and drama, will moderate a panel discussion after Prof. McNeill's talk. Other KU panel participants will be James R. Surface, vice chancellor, George B. Smith, vice chancellor for institutional planning and Dean George R. Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The conference is a National University Extension Association regional event. It is sponsored by extension divisions at KU and Kansas State University, in cooperation with the Center for the Study of Liberal Education for Adults. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS CRC to Consider City Discrimination The Civil Rights Council tonight will discuss complaints that several Lawrence taverns have been discriminating against Negroes. The group, which will meet at 7 in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union, also will choose delegates to the Saturday conference here of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights. The CRC also will discuss a resolution and a proposal for a student body petition on the "Ole Miss" riots. British Specimens Lost LONDON — (UPI) — Sir Vivian Fuchs, head of Britain's Antarctic Survey, disclosed today that three crates of valuable geological specimens have been lost somewhere in Britain. He said the specimens were brought back to Britain safely 9,000 miles from the Antarctic and then lost by a truck driver in the 135 miles between Southampton and Birmingham. "I am very annoyed," Sir Vivian said. Kansan Classifieds Get Results BUSINESS MACHINES CO. 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up SERVICE SALES RENTALS All Kinds Office Equipment Printing, Mimeographing and Duplicating Pick up — Delivery TRANSISTOR RADIOS FREE! Register Today Thru Friday for Sandy's Anniversary Drawing This Saturday. Winners Will Be Announced Monday. REGISTER AT SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN Hamburgers 15c Across from Hillcrest French Fries 10c S. U.A. PICTURE-LENDING LIBRARY Today & Tomorrow Only! RENT FRAMED PRINTS FOR ONLY 50c per semester at the CRAFT SHOP IN THE UNION 8:30-5:00 WED., OCT. 10 THUR.,OCT.11 Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1962 Tito's Position Clear And Still Independent A UPI Foreign News Analysis As a Communist, Yugoslavia's Marshal Tito always has made it clear that in case of a war between East and West, he would be on the side of the Soviet Union. It was this bit of independence which induced the United States to extend to Tito over the years aid totalling around a billion dollars. It also led Congress in the most recently passed foreign aid bill to continue President Kennedy's discretionary powers to give him more aid in the form of food, medicine and clothing. But as a Yugoslav he also has insisted that Yugoslavia would attain the Communist utopia by its own path, independent of Moscow. AS FOR THE Kremlin, it expelled Tito from the Cominform in 1948 and he remained in the deep freeze until the Bulganin-Khrushchev visit to Belgrade in 1955. In that visit the Kremlin leaders apologized for past treatment. Things seemed better for awhile but then came 1956 and Soviet intervention in the Hungarian revolt. Tito denounced the action as a "fatal error" and joined the United States in backing a resolution in the United Nations demanding immediate evacuation of Soviet troops from Hungary. Back he went into the Kremlin freezer. THERE THE situation remained until about a year ago when Khrushchev's quarrel with Peiping apparently led him to decide on a new effort to consolidate European Communist nations in an economic and political bloc. The result was last week's visit to Belgrade of Soviet President Lonid I. Brezhnew. Advance reports said one of Brezhnev's assignments would be to line up Yugoslav support for the Kremlin's announced plan to sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany. The final communique indicated failure, not only on this assignment but on others as well. It called for a German peace treaty but made no mention of a separate treaty with East Germany. Peace Officers Meet for Seminar The second annual Burglary and Larceny Seminar for Kansas peace officers began here today and will continue through Friday. Officers who will attend the meeting were chosen by a special committee from applicants throughout the state. The committee tries to choose officers from different geographical parts of the state. The seminar will be limited to regular participants and selected "observers." The seminar is being sponsored by the KU Governmental Research Center, Kansas Bureau of Investigation, Kansas Peace Officers Assn., KU Law School and the University Extension Service. Earthquakes Rock Italy SIENA, Italy—(UPI)—A series of earthquakes, one of them violent enough to send people running into the streets, rumbled through this Tuscan Hill area yesterday but there were no reports of damage or injuries. The quakes were centered in an area about five miles northwest of Siena. Portraits of Distinction Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 摄影 TITO FREQUENTLY has denounced the rearming of West Germany, but he also has declared that any treaty should be signed by all the parties of World War II. The communique also called for an improvement in United Nations "activity" but made no mention of Khrushev's three-headed troika plan to reorganize the office of Secretary General. In this, Tito apparently retained his previous position that he could not agree to "create chaos inside the United Nations." If Brezhnev's trip was designed as another apology to Tito, it does not seem to have been accepted too whole-heartedly. Sbicca CALIFORNIANS "As Seen in Seventeen" MR. MAGOO 2 Straps in Black Sweet Kid $9.99 PANDORA A Low T Strap — Soft and so draggy 89.99 HI NOTE Another Sbiice Softy for all occasions $9.99 McCoy's 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 OPEN THURS. NIGHT TILL 8:30 OUR 60th PENNEY DAYS O OUR 60th PENNEY DAYS PENNEY'S 60TH ANNIVERSARY PENNEY'S 60th ANNIVERSARY OVER 450 MEN'S SPORT COATS GO ON SALE! - Wool Blends - Checks, Stripes, Plaids, - Year Round Weights $ 26^{88} SHOP AT PENNEY'S AND SAVE! Page 5 Visiting KU Professor Terms Moon Trip a 'Pipe Dream' By Phil Magers Carl O. Dunbar is a professor emeritus of Yale University, a distinguished alumnus of KU, recognized authority in the field of paleontology, and a scientist who thinks putting a man on the moon is a "pipe dream." Prof. Dunbar is a visiting professor of geology at KU this year. He retired from Yale last year after 29 years of teaching. In a recent interview he said, "I think that KU is one of the two or three best universities in the country. It has grown quite a lot since I was here in 1909," he said. ASKED WHETHER geologists will ever get to explore the surface of the moon he said, "I don't think geologists nor anyone else will even set foot on the moon." He said he believed that the environment of the moon will make life for a man miserable even in a pressure suit. The moon also has a rugged surface in many regions and deep dust layers into which a man could easily sink. The recent flights of astronauts are great achievements, he said, but they are quite different than a flight to the moon and back. He also said he thought the other planets were out of the reach of man forever. Prof. Dunbar grew up on a farm in Cherokee County, Kan., and received his Ph.D. from Yale in 1917. He has written 12 books about his field and they are still widely read in universities. HIS TWO MOST important books are "Historical Paleontology" and FREE DELIVERY Call before 4, Delivered after $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 COOPER DRUG Carl O. Dunbar “Principles of Stratigraphy” which he co-authored. Both of these works have also been "pirated" by the Russians, Dr Dunbar said. "The Russians have no copyright laws and they think that they honor a person when they print his book," he explained. "The main source of information for my books has been my years of teaching. I had taught twenty years before I wrote my first book," the professor said. 838 Mass. FOR 17 YEARS Prof. Dunbar was director of the Peabody Museum at Yale, along with his regular teaching chores." I was a very busy man in those days," he recalls. JIM'S CAFE OPEN 24 hrs. a day At KU in 1960 he was among eight men who were cited for distinguished service. BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY Presently, besides teaching at KU Prof. Dunbar is an assistant editor of the American Journal of Science. He also belongs to many organizations connected with his field. "I love my work and teaching has made a very happy life for me," he says. "The field of geology is a wide open field for those who are interested, but I would not recommend it to everybody." IN THE LAST FEW years the fields of geophysics and geology on the ocean floor have opened new frontiers, he added. About future plans, Prof. Dunbar said, "I am now in the process of writing the first of a 15 volume series." In the first book he plans to write about the earth and how life developed. He plans to title the book "This is Our World." STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd Kansan Classified Ads Get Results! NEW DIRECTION IN INTARSIA James Kenrob by DALTON Arrows cross the closing of our newest intarsia cardigan. It's a precious fur blend — soft and elegant with just enough dash in the color-contrasted trim. With it, a slender skirt of our finest 100% wool flannel. EXCLUSIVELY The Campus Jay SHOPPE 12th & Oread sweater sizes 36 to 40 $14.98 skirt sizes 8 to 16 $14.98 University Daily Kansan Jay SHOPPE 12th & Oread Wednesday. Oct. 10, 1962 KU Math and Science Day May Attract 4,000 Sunday Addresses by an eminent University of Chicago astrophysicist and a KU Watkins distinguished professor of entomology will highlight the eleventh University of Kansas Science and Mathematics Day Saturday. About 4,000 junior and senior high school students and teachers from a 250-mile radius of Lawrence — 800 more than last year — are expected to attend, Chairman L. Worth Seagondollar, professor of physics, said. The speakers will be S. Chandrasekhar, distinguished professor of astrophysics at the University of Chicago, and Charles Michener, professor of entomology. PROF. CHANDRASEKHAR holds the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society and similar awards. He will speak on the rotation of cosmic bodies, both at the Saturday convention and at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Lindley Hall. Prof. Michener has been a Guggenheim fellow in Brazil and a Fulbright scholar in Australia. His special field is the study of bees. Some 42 exhibits and demonstrations will be on display all over the campus. They will include; A demonstration of neutron activation with the nuclear reactor, at the Nuclear Reactor center; a mass spectrometer, an $85,000 machine which shows the molecular weight of gaseous molecules, in Malbott Hall; a series of exhibits demonstrating how plants move, spread and/or react to their environment; an exhibit featuring mathematical games and brain teasers, and a model of a distorted room and a movie showing some effects of visual perception, sponsored by the department of psychology. Silverware Contest Held Today in Union Cwens, sophomore women's honorary society, is sponsoring a silverware opinion contest today in the Pan American Room of the Kansas Union for college women. Towle Silver Company pays the Cwens a dollar for each person who participates in the contest. whatever the weather... the right coat is Cruiser by LONDON FOG Natural and Olive Tailored of fine cotton poplin, the Cruiser is handsome, comfortable to wear, and boasts exclusive 3rd Barrier construction for assured rain protection. With fly front, center vent, brightened by a smart tartan lining and matching tartan under pocket flaps, the Cruiser is the one coat you need for any weather . . . it's a Maincoat $^{20}$ by London Fog. 34-44 Reg. & Long $25.95 THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN THE University Shop ON THE HILL Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1962 Queen Candidates Named Last Night The candidates for queen of the 1963 SUA Carnival were announced last night. The announcement was made at an orientation meeting for the candidates. The chairman of the queen contest, John McArtor, Webster Groves, Mo., sophomore, spoke to the group on their roles in the contest. The queen will be chosen at the carnival Oct. 20. Candidates nominated from sororities are: Barbara Zupan, St. Louis, Mo sophomore, Alpha Omicron Pi; Pa Ponte, Wichita sophomore, Delta Delta Delta; Mary Louise St. Clair Independence sophomore, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kay Lammers, St. Louis, Mo., junior, Alpha Phi; Mary Lynn Cooper, Prairie Village junior, Kappa Alpha Theta; Sandy Plas- kett, Raytown, Mo., senior, Sigma Kappa; Mickey Sue Blaine, Mission sophomore, Gamma Phi Beta; Anne Leavitt, La Grange, III, junior, Chi Omega; Anne Garlinghouse, Topeka sophomore, Alpha Delta Pi, and Barbara Higginbottom, Winfield junior, Delta Gamma. Candidates from women's dormitories are: Dani Goering, Moundridge freshman, Miller Hall; Susie Caple, Nedesha freshman, Watkins Hall; Tina Barnes, Hugoton freshman, Sellards Hall; Joan Davis, Salina sophomore, Douthart Hall; Pam Allen, Salina sophomore, Susan Merrick, Prairie Village sophomore, and Lin Shultz, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore, Hashinger Hall; Joan Stromberg, Wichita sophomore, Camille Storey, Overland Park freshman, Gretchen Lawrence, Wichita freshman, and Sherry Koch, Mission Hills freshman, Corbin; Carol Eyman, Atchison freshman, Pat Culea, La Grange, Ill., freshman, and Tracy Thomas, Joplin, Mo., freshman, Gertrude Sellars Pearson; and Tove Gulbrandsen, Granta Soslo, Norway, sophomore, Pat Wilson, Kansas City senior, and Jan Stegman, Wichita college, Lewis Hall. Friday night before the carnival details of Saturday's events will be explained. Photographs of the candidates will be posted in the trophy case in the Kansas Union and on bulletin boards around campus this week. Saturday the candidates will be in a parade in downtown Lawrence. SUA has made tentative arrangements for the KU Pershing Rifles and the Lawrence High School band to march in the parade. to marshal in the park During half time at the Oklahoma football game, candidates will be driven around the track. The people who attend the carnival will elect the 1962 queen. Each person who attends the game will be given a ballot. The deadline for balloting will be 10 p.m. Later in the evening Hoite Caston, Independence senior and master of ceremonies, will introduce the candidates. The queen will be announced at that time and the two runner-ups will be her attendants. P-T-P Will Conduct Sports Interviews Interviews for the People-to-People sports committee will be held Sunday in the Kansas Union. Sharon Foster, Birmingham, Mich., senior and chairman of the P-t-P hospitality committee, said the sports committee organizes instruction and competition including both American and foreign students. Students interested in the committee may get committee applications today through Friday in the P-t-P office in the Union. Venus Shot Still Short WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Scientists disclosed today that the Mariner II Venus probe will miss the bright planet by 20,900 miles instead of 9,000 miles as previously estimated. The scientists told a news conference, however, that the wider miss will not spoil the scientific value for instruments designed to study the atmosphere and surface of Venus. AS THE TRAJECTORY is now calculated, the scientists said, the 447-pound spacecraft will pass "well within the region where the scientific planetary experiments are expected to be very effective." After Mariner II was launched Aug. 27 it embarked on a course that would have carried it 233,000 miles away from Venus if its path had not been corrected. On Sept. 4, nine days after launch, a course changing rocket aboard the craft was fired by radio command from the earth. At first the scientists thought the course change would carry Mariner II to a point about 9,000 miles from Venus cn State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd. Res. Ph. III 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan. Dec. 14 after a 109-day flight of 180.2 million miles. MORE PRECISIETracking in the days since then, however, disclosed that the mid-course rocket had added two miles an hour too much to the craft's velocity. The cause of this over-correction is not known. MOSCOW — (UPI) — The United States today "categorically" rejected spy allegations against ousted U.S. Assistant Naval Attachie Lt. Cmdr. Raymond Smith and "vigorously" protested "manifold violations" by Soviet authorities of his diplomatic immunity. U.S. Denies Soviet Charges The U.S. move was made in a note delivered today to the foreign ministry. Badges, Rings, Novelties. Sweatshirts. Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Fraternity Jewelry Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Now is the time For Your Child's Christmas Portrait Burch Higgins, Photographer Children are our speciality Call now for an appointment RANCH HOUSE STUDIO 780 Lincoln VI-3-4575 DETROIT — (UPI)— Proposals to cure traffic congestion by forbidding people to use their cars would mean sure death for a city, an auto industry executive said today. Executive Hits Car Ban Idea John Dykstra, president of the Ford Motor Co., said critics' suggestions to limit severely or to forbid motor traffic in cities have serious flaws. "Every time public transportation has been disrupted and people have been forced to drive, fewer have returned to the buses and commuter trains. The fact is that the great majority of people seem to find it more satisfactory to roll their own wheels." THESE CRITICS, Dykstra said, "ignore the more than obvious fact that people want to drive their cars. They like the personal freedom to come and go whenever and wherever they want to. Dykstra, addressing a convention of the American Automobile Association, said that to effectively bar traffic from the city "is like effectively barring blood from the heart. "THE CITY lives on traffic, as any retail merchant can tell you. I have yet to hear a merchant complain because the aisles of his store are crowded with customers. YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hour Service Owner Radio Controlled Ward Thompson 20% BONUS Air Force Fires Missile "Of course, traffic and congestion are not the same thing. But any cure for congestion based on eliminating personal motor traffic is sure death for the city." 20% BONUS Having a Party? 20% BONUS 20% BONUS 20% BONUS 20% BONUS VANDENBURG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif.—(UPI)—A secret satellite employing a Thor-Agena booster complex was launched from this West Coast missile facility yesterday by the Air Force. Mrs. Ruth McNair, assistant professor of biology, attended the annual meeting of the Association of Midwestern College Biology Teachers over the weekend at Marquette University. Prof. McNair is secretary-treasurer of the organization.] The Air Force refused to identify the satellite and declined to confirm that the vehicle attained orbit. Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES Kansan Classified Ads Get Results! The satellite was believed to be of the Discoverer series. The Thor-Agena booster combination had previously been used to launch Discoverer vehicles before a security crackdown prevented the Air Force from releasing information on satellite launchings. Prof. McNair Attends Meet LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 20% BONUS LARRY CRUM - Suggests - T-Bone Steak only 99c PETER M. HAWKINS K' PANCAKE GRILL & SUNDRIES 14th & Mass. Open 24 Hours a day 20% BONUS Wed., Thur., Fri. Only! Student Discount Card Holders Bonus 20% Reg. Discount .. 10% Total Discount .. 30% Don't Have a Card? Come In And Apply For Yours (You will get the discount for signing up) Discount Card Good for Formal Rental by Sir Knight 842 Mass. NA Alterations and Tailoring One Hour Service Till 4 p.m. 1 HOUR Fast DRY CLEANING VI 3-9594 An part of th a w. It that $300 tool rise and swe B with ing tree drea A otia his bee of alw B Am con shi j cap --- Page 7 Misplaced Hope Seen As US Fault in Laos By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst It had been the American belief that, given the aid (approximately $300 million since 1955) and proper tools, the Laotians themselves would rise up in defense of their freedoms and turn back a Communist tide sweeping down from the north. American military advisers departed from Laos this week, victims of their own high ideals, defeated by a way, of life understood too late. A GUN in his hand gave the Laotian no will to kill, nor to defend his land, of which there always had been plenty, nor to preserve a way of life which always had existed and always would. American advisers were convinced that man-for-man the American-trained Laotian forces were the equal of the Pathet Lao led by the Red Laotian Prince Souphanouvong. But it was a belief that reckoned without the people of this lotus-eating land of Buddhist temples, flame trees, palms, rice-paddies and day dreams. But with disaster closing in, the Americans could advise but not command. The Communist leadership operated under no such handicap. Communist North Viet Nam poured in 10,000 hardened and trained Viet Minh troops to support the Pathet Lao. And, if defense of freedom would not induce a man to fight, the Communists had other arguments vouchered for by Americans who saw them in action. The Vietminh permitted the Pathet Lao no retreat. An advance involved the risk of being shot. Retreat made it a certainty. IN THE final days of frustration, just before the Geneva agreement which declared Laos neutral, this correspondent talked with American military men in Laos, as well as with Foreign Minister Thanat Khoman of Thailand said it was only a lesser of evils, and that if neutrality worked at all, it only would be because the United States and Russia guaranteed it. Of this, too, he expressed grave doubts. ambassadors and government officials of neighboring Thailand. Orcially, there was guarded optimism that Laos would become truly neutral. Privately, most expressed grave doubts. Only Russia, he said, could guarantee withdrawal of the 10.000 Viet Minh troops, and he doubted that Russia could force its will upon Red China. OTHERS believed the Soviet Union at least would make the attempt. To fail, they said, would mean Russia would forfeit the chance of agreement on other bigger issues, nuclear testing, disarmament and Berlin. Avtar Singh, Indian chairman of the International Control Commission, believed the United States was taking a necessary but calculated risk. The Control Commission has recorded the departure of more than 800 Americans from Laos. It has no similar record of the Vietminh who now are free to join the fight in South Vietnam Nam or move against the border of Thailand for a new campaign of subversion and infiltration. D & G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Diamond Bridal Duettes designed with the Younger Set in mind! [Illustration of two women wearing gold rings, show detail] The 4 most popular shape diamonds . . in exclusive new thrilling settings of 14 Karat gold. Every diamond is completely full cut with 58 facets. 50 18K 10.25 Your Choice $249.50 for the set Convenient Budget Terms! Your KU "ID" is your pass to credit . . . open an account in 3 minutes BRIMAN'S leading jewelers Ralph Wolfson, Mgr.—Vernie Wilson, Asst. Mgr. 743 Mass. VI 3-4366 BONN—(UPI)—An old question swirled around 86-year-old West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer today because he did not mention retirement during a major policy speech to Parliament. Successor Omitted In Adenauer Report Wednesday. Oct. 10, 1962 University Daily Kansan Adenauer went before Parliament yesterday and discussed the German economy, rejected the idea of German initiatives to solve the Berlin crisis and praised western determination to stand up for German freedom. But both his supporters and opponents noticed most what he left unsaid—when he plans to step down and make way for a younger man. "Churchill left the political stage when new situations demanded new and unused strength. Great Britain and the Commonwealth survived this change. It is De Gaulle's and Adenauer's tragic mistake that they bind state and nation to their persons." The radio station "Deutschland-funk" added: "Unfortunately, we must expect the debate on retirement and the question of a successor to continue as long as a decision is not made. . . It would be desirable for the Chancellor to say something to clear the matter up." India First Topic Of Travel Series India was the topic last night of the first Travel-Adventure Series sponsored by the Lawrence Kiwanis Club. The program, held in the Lawrence High School Auditorium, featured Russ Potter, noted radio script writer and announcer for NEC, who presented a film on India. Potter, who directed and narrated the film, described India as a land of the spectacular and of contrast. He said India, as we know it today, has not changed much from the past. Potter more specifically explained some of the social and religious aspects of India during an intermission period. The program was the first in a series of travelogues presented by the local Kiwanis Club in conjunction with the Lawrence Adult Education Program. The professional military mind is by necessity an inferior and unimaginative mind; no man of high intellectual quality would willingly imprison his gifts in such a calling. —H. G. Wells KU SPORTS on DIAL KLWN 7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts 5:15 Today Football Forecast 5:35 Tom Hedrick Sports Now a clean-filling, smooth-writing money-saving Parker cartridge pen...only $395 New PARKER ARROW © 1952 THE PARKER PEN COMPANY JANESVILLE, WISCONSIN, U.S. You can buy an ordinary cartridge pen for a dollar and even get a couple of cartridges thrown in free. But, then you pay and pay and pay. This pen can save you up to 20¢ every time you buy cartridges. You get five BIG Parker Quink cartridges for only 29¢. But, even if you didn't save a dime, this pen would be worth the extra price. It's a Parker. And only Parker gives you a solid 14K gold point tipped with plathenium—one of the hardest, smoothest alloys ever developed. It should last you for years no matter how much you use it. The pen won't leak the way the cheap ones do. It has a built-in safety reservoir, and it must meet most of the tough specifications we set for our $10 pens. If you have trouble saying it, say it with a Parker. If you're a little shy and have difficulty saying "I love you" or even "I like you very much"-say it with a Parker. The new Parker Arrow makes a beautifully expressive gift and looks as if you paid a small fortune for it. The new Parker Arrow comes in black, dark blue, light blue, light gray, and bright red, with a choice of tour instantly replaceable solid 14K gold points. Gift-boxed with live free cartridges. 会 PARKER Maker of the world's most wanted pens Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1962 University Daily Kansan SPORTS KANS LINEMAN INJURED—Guard Ken Tiger injured a knee last night and is not expected to be able to play in the KU-Iowa State game Saturday. Two other guards have been on the injured list, senior Duke Collins and junior Mickey Walker. Collins did not play against Colorado, but is expected to play against Iowa State. Claridge Into Spotlight Dennis Claridge, Nebraska's much-improved quarterback, climbed into the statistical spotlight in the Big Eight Conference this week. Claridge, who authored a tremendous performance in leading the Huskers to a convincing 36-22 triumph over Iowa State Saturday, took over the conference lead in scoring and passing. THE 6-3 JUNIOR scored three touchdowns to vault into the No. 1 spot in point production with a total of 30. Iowa State's Dave Hopmann scored once to boost his total to 24. MU's Johnny Roland and Dick Limerick of the Cyclones have 18 each. Claridge also forged ahead of Colorado's passing pair, Larry Ethridge and Frank Cesarek, as he increased his completions to 18 in 32 tries for 269 yards. Ethridge, who hit 13 of 32 against Kansas, is runner-up with 262 yards on 24 of 52. Cesarek dropped to third with 18 of 38 for 208, and Hoppmann, still the total offense leader, is fourth with 180 yards on 15 of 28. Nebraska continued its offensive rampage as it won its third straight game. The Huskers rolled for 234 yards rushing and added 153 in the air against the Cyclones, boosting their season mark to 769 and 414 for a total of 1,183. KU is second with 872, and Colorado third with 869. TWO OF THE league's outstanding rookies, Roland and KU's Gale Sayers, moved past the 300 mark in rushing gains. Roland tops the list at 310 gained on 55 assignments, and Sayers has 309 on 52 trips. Hopmann is third at 259 on 58 carries, and Colorado's Bill Harris has 205 on 51 tries, with everyone else under 200. Limerick continues to lead in pass receiving with 11 catches for 150 yards. Colorado's Ken Blair is run-uper-with 15 for 162, and Nebraska's Jim Huge climbed into the picture with seven for 144. Tony Leiker of Kansas remains No. 1 in punting with a 41.5 average on 16 boots but has a challenger in Oklahoma State's Dave Hannah, who has kicked eight times for a 40.9 mark. Kansas State's Doug Dusenbury is third at 38.6 on five punts. Ron Oelschlager of the Jayhawkers tops the punt returners with three for 51 and a 17-yard average. Nebraska's Dave Theisen has a 15.3 mark on three for 46. NEW YORK—(UPI) -Ralph Terry had the same breakfast today that he always eats on the day he pitches. Juice, one egg, toast and milk. Juice, One Egg, Toast, Milk Prepares Terry for Pitching IT GOES DOWN more easily over the lump in his throat. This is not to allude that Terry is a choke-up guy. The six foot, three inch right hander of the Yankees won 23 games this season and he has the full quota of equipment—including heart. BUT IN THE World Series, where he makes a postponed start today, it has to be a little different despite his denials. Sitting in the locker room at Yankee Stadium yesterday after his second 1962 series start against Giant Jack Sanford had been postponed until today, he shrugged off the fact that four times he has hung up a victory. "Ive never thought too much about winning a series game, or not winning one, maybe," he said with a boyish smile. "I do the best I can and that's all I can do." BUT THAT JUICE, egg, toast and milk had to go down a little harder than usual this morning regardless of the nonchalant facade the 26-year-old from Big Cabin, Okla., presents to the eagle-eved world. For the six foot, three inch Terry, who now resides in Larned, Kans., with his wife, Tanya, and their two sons, Reif, and Frank, who was born Friday night, already has lost one game in this series which he pitched well enough to win. The chunky Sanford, once again his pitching foe today, beat him in TRADING POST 704 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Ph.VI 3-2012 Located 1 door South of K.P. & L. in basement. 21" console T.V. $39.50 8-drawer chest $12.50 Baby bed with mattress $19.95 Desks from $11.00 3-piece luggage set $8.00 Bookcases from $6.50 3-piece bedroom suite $88.00 5-piece drop leaf dinette set $12.00 Walnut drop leaf dining room table $29.95 2—twin sized head- boards $3.50 each the second game at San Francisco with a 2-0 three-hitter. Terry allowed only five hits in the seven innings he pitched before being lifted for a pinch hitter but it was his annoying penchant of always being too close to the plate which beat him again. We also have a good selection of tables, radios, settees, lamps, rockers, end tables and throw rugs. THE HITTERS know he has good control and they can dig in against him. That's one of the reasons that this year the 185-pound Terry set a Yankee record by throwing 40 home run pitches during the regular season—and fed Willie McCovey a home run pitch in the seventh at Frisco which put the icing on Sanford's 2-0 cake. We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings. The Villager Now he tries again. The Village the mark of fashion — The Alley Shop at diebolt's 843 Mass. M The Alley Shop at diebolt's "I MAY BE BETTER tomorrow, or maybe not." Terry shrugged philosophically after yesterday's game had been washed out. "Certainly it's better to have an extra day of rest" And that front he presents to the people around him might be of great interest to a psychologist, if to nobody else. diebolt's Big Ralph, a fine golfer who can have a job as an assistant to Arnold Palmer at the latter's country club of Miami just about any time he wants it, rubbed his long jaw. than one too few. But frankly, I don't see how it can make much difference." Intramural Results "A postponement might help some other guys, but I don't believe it will matter much, one way or the other to me," he mused. "At least, I hope not." THE HOPE, quite naturally, is there. The big fellow, who speaks in a low, deep voice, is proud of his pitching ability and his record. "I was ready to go today, and I'll be ready tomorrow," he said. ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass. Fraternity A: Phi Delta Theta 38, Phi Kappa Theta 0; Sigma Nu 13, Phi Kappa Psi 12; Phi Gamma Delta 33, Sigma Phi Epsilon 0; Delta Upsilon 29, Alpha Tau Omega, 7. Independent A: Hot Dogs 18, Templin 12: JRPF 27, C&O 0; Foster 18, Jim Beam 6. Fraternity B: Pi Kappa Alpha 6, Acacia 0; Phi Gamma Delta No. 1 30, Phi Kappa Psi 0; Sigma Alpha Epsilon 13, Phi Delta Theta No. 1 0. DELTA CHI presents IN PERSON JERRY LEE LEWIS Come on out to the Big Barn Friday nite. You'll see Jerry Lee Lewis and his six piece combo with two drummers. There will be plenty of room for you to dance and EVERYTHING. Pick up your ticket at your Dorms or Houses or the Delta Chi house B RING YOUR O WN B ABE YOUR OWN BABE Page 9 Toure-JFK Discuss Aid WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Kennedy confers at the White House today with President Sekou Toure of Guinea, who appears increasingly eager for U.S. aid and increasingly wary of Soviet aims. The cordial atmosphere prevailing for Toure's scheduled arrival was in sharp contrast to the mutual suspicion which marked U.S.-Guinean relations during the first three of Guinea's four years of independence. Toure, the 14th African chief of government to visit Kennedy, first met him in 1960 at Disneyland when Kennedy was campaigning for the presidency. Today, according to informed sources, he seeks among other things on his one-day visit an acceleration of U.S. aid which so far has amounted to $16,000,000 in commitments compared with more than $100,000,-000 from the Soviet bloe. IN 1960, Toure branded the United States a supporter "of the enemies of African emancipation." It was disclosed in advance of Toure's arrival that he had asked for U.S. Peace Corps teachers. U.S. officials, hailing this as further evidence that Toure is opening the door to the West, immediately dispatched a Peace Corps representative to Conakry to make arrangements. El Ateneo Observes Columbus Day Today El Ateneo will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in room 11 of Fraser Hall. The program will consist of a celebration of El Dia de la Raza, Columbus Day. Natives from the following countries will tell how they celebrate Columbus Day in their country: Argentina, Ana Herzfeld; Brazil, Jelile Ghosis; Bilgin; Carlos Bibargen; Venezuela, Peter Pagazani; Costa Rica, Jaime Mejia; El Salvador, Mary Cristina Escher; and Mexico, Mary DeMendez. BROWSERS . . ... WELCOME The BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results! According to this publisher, anyone, regardless of his present reading skill, can use this simple technique to improve his reading ability to a remarkable degree. Whether reading stories, textbooks, technical matter, it becomes possible to read sentences at a glance and entire pages in seconds by following this method. Can You Read Fast? A noted publisher in Chicago reports there is a simple technique of rapid reading which should enable you to double your reading speed and yet retain much more. Most people do not realize how much they could increase their pleasure, success and income by reading faster and more accurately. To acquaint the readers of this newspaper with the easy rules for developing rapid reading, the company has printed full details of its interesting self-training method in a new book, "Adventures In Reading Improvement," which will be mailed free to anyone who requests it. No obligation. Simply send your request to: Reading Program, 835 Diversev Pkwy., Dept. 2987, Chicago 14, Ill. A postcard will do. NEW YORK—(UPI)—From the ocean bottom scientists recorded miscellaneous moos, honks, knocks, roars, "tubas" and "horns" which originated from fish and other denizens of the watery depths. Presumably they were "saving" things to one another. Ocean 'Honks' Studied It was the beginning of a long-term project to expose the communication systems of marine animals. Scientists know dolphins, whales and other sea mammals seem to communicate with one another vocally, they wonder if fish do, too and in what "languages" or codes. TWO MICROPHONES have been put on the bottom of the eastern side of the Florida Straits and connected by cable to tape-recording instruments in a laboratory on the island of Bimini in the Bahamas. One is at a depth of 100 feet, the other at 1200 feet. They have been recording for some six months and already 25 categories of sounds have been picked up often enough to permit classifications. Television cameras are now being installed alongside the microphones to identify the animals which moo, honk, knock or sound as though they had built-in tubas and horns. In telling the Acoustical Society of America about their work so far and their plans, John C. Steinberg, Morton Kronengold and William C. Cummings of the University of Miami (Florida) reminded this is something science knows next to nothing about. THAT IS, the sounds marine animals make and why they make them in their natural environment, the sea depth. The very little science knows has been gained in the main from captive marine animals. As with land animals, there probably is a world of difference between the behavior of the free and the imprisoned. FROM CAPTIVE marine animals, scientists have learned what single weakfish was noisiest at dawn and not noisy again until sunset. Another experiment showed a doubling of "snapping shrimp activity" at sunset. "Repetitive patterns of behavior are common phenomena in the life of many animals," the scientists said. "Most of us are familiar with daily rhythms in acoustic behavior such as the rooster crowing at sunrise, choruses of frogs at dusk or the characteristic chirp of birds at dawn." University Daily Kansan Of the sounds already recorded frequently enough to classify, the scientists have identified the sources positively only for those of the dolphin. Read and Use Kansan Classifieds "Bunny Blocks" cats are alley Persian tiger "Bunny Blocks" cats are alley Persian tiger only Capezios are Capezio® Capezios, instead of pussy-footing around are sure and spirited, parading the primrose paths of Spring in shapes as new as the cat's muu muu. Maple Glove Leather, $11.95 black only Capezios are Capezio Capezios, instead of pussy-footing around are sure and spirited, parading the primrose paths of Spring in shapes as new as the cat's muu muu. Royal College Shop Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1962 837 Mass. Official Bulletin International Students—if you are interested in signing up for a trip to Chanute, Kansas, and the UNESCO banquet there on the evening of Oct. 26, see Dr. R TODAY International Students: International students with a rural-farm background Achievement Banquet should see Dr. Conn, 228 Strong Hall, by Friday noon. Radio Production Center, 7:30 p.m. Rm. 220 Flint, Executive Comm. Meet- Episcopal Holy Communion; 9:30 p.m. Dunforth Chapel Arab-American Club will meet today at 10 p.m. in Parlor A of the Student Uniplog International Club, Dance Lessons for the members 7:00 pm. Trail Rm. the members, 7:00 p.m. Trail Rm. to elect the new officers will be held in Room 201 of the E.E. Lab. at 7:30 p.m. Also, there will be theory classes. Everyone welcome. AR TOMORROW Kansas Society, Archaeological Institute of America, Dr. William J. Mayer-Oakes, University of Manitoba, speaks on "The Archaeology of Complex Societies" (illustrated). Forum Room, Kansas Union. All are welcome. Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich Donnerstag den 11. Oktober um 5 Uhr in der Amerikanische Studien, die im Ausland studiert haben, werden das Leben des Students in Amerika und Europa vergleichen. Die Leder singen und auch Fertility schreiten. Students interested in Medical Technology are invited to the meeting of the award committee for the 2017 school day, 7:30 am, in the Watkins Hospital Nurses Home. Dr. Dale Clinton. Douglas County Health Officer, will prepare a refreshment program; refreshtments will be served. Interviews for teaching positions in Montgomery County, Maryland, near Washington, D. C., by Dr. William Early, Teacher Appointment Bureau, 117 Bailey. JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 terri's LAWRENCE, KANSAS terri LAWRENCE. 10 TOMORROW® . . . adjusts to each side of you separately. White or black cotton with French-stitched undercups. 23-34: A, B, C, $2.50 (D, $3.50). Elastic nylon and Lycra (DuPont's spanDEX fiber.) In our slimwear department. Tomorrow, the bra with the perfect fit will keep its fit: each cup is set in elastic mesh of Warner's UNCOVERED Lycra terriill's LAWRENCE KANSAS 803 MASS. Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Oct. 10. 1962 Spellman Says Christian Unity Chances Good Vatican City — (UPI) — Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York said today that prospects are good for Christian unity arising from the 21st Ecumenical Council, the highest assembly of the Roman Catholic Church, which opens tomorrow. "There are good prospects and everybody is tremendously interested," Cardinal Spellman told newsmen at the airport when he arrived this morning to complete the 225-member American delegation to the council. "I'm hoping and praying for the success of the council." NEARLY 3,000 Catholic prelates and 50 non-Catholic "observer" and "guests" from all parts of the earth were on hand for the colorful opening ceremonies in the Basilica of St. Peter's, Mother Church of Christendom and largest in the world. Historically, this gathering will be known as the second Vatican Council, the first to be held in almost a century. The purpose of the great council, as stated by Pope John XXIII, is to get his own church of a half billion members to "bring itself into step with modern times." In line with this, he extended a "gentle invitation" to other Christians to join with the Church of Rome, with the eventual aim of restoring universal Christian unity. There was little hope of bringing this about immediately, but it is a long-range goal. Bishop Fred P. Corson, president of the World Council of Methodists and bishop for the Philadelphia area, made this clear when he commented that "we are here simply as observers, not as negotiators." THE STATEMENT reflects feelings among many of the 50-odd non-Catholic observers and guests who accepted invitations to enter historic St. Peter's Basilica to watch the conclave of Catholics. One task of the council is to discuss future possible ties among all Christian churches. Several protestors polled have said they came here in a spirit of "peaceful coexistence," but determined to maintain the independence they took 400 years ago. Non-Catholic observers furthermore will not present any united front at the council. Corson said. Latin Student Tops Teachers It is one thing to be good in a language but still another to make a better grade in it than the teacher. Jack D. Worley, Wichita senior and Latin major, did just that this summer during a six-week Latin study tour in Italy. He received one of two A's given for the course, besting 28 Latin teachers and graduate students. Worley obtained his preliminary study in Latin at Wichita North High School. He plans to teach in the Kansas City area next fall. We Rent Most Anything Anderson Rental 812 N. H. See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales - Rental Service LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER (Continued from page 1) must necessarily affect the ASC, unless KU is to ignore such situations "WHAT I did like was that discussion hinging on my letter prompted the passage of a stronger resolution." Miss Snyder said she thought it was good that the ASC had decided to communicate with the University of Mississippi. "However, despite the fact that I introduced this resolution, I think it is a shame and certainly regrettable we decided to send it in place of the letter written by Turner." Phyllis Wertzberger, Lawrence graduate student, opposed both resolutions. ASC Tempers Ignite - Two KU Cwens Attend Meeting Two KU Cwens, national honorary society for sophomore women, attended the national Cwen convention last Friday and Saturday at Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa. 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 Joan Felt, Prairie Village sophomore, and Donna Gould, Shawnee Mission junior, were among the 125 national delegates to the convention. Emily Taylor, dean of women and national Cwen adviser, accompanied them. "It is impossible for people in the All convention delegates lived in campus residence halls while attending the convention. The KU Cwens help in the orientation of freshman women in the fall and serve as hostesses at numerous University functions throughout the year. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Starts Tomorrow! THE BLOOD AND GUTS GUYS OF the 7th Army! ARMORED COMMAND STARRING HOWARD TINA KEEL • LOUISE AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE 'liberal' north to understand the situation in the South, and most of us have not been brought up with these kind of prejudices instilled in us since we were children," Miss Wertzberger said. ARMORED COMMAND "IT IS not up to a group of Northerners to tell a group of Southerners how to run their lives or to give approval on something they have done," she continued. Another ASC member, Rab Malik, Pakistan graduate student, said he was quite surprised the council did not adopt Turner's letter, which he described as "excellently written and moderate in tone." AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE — AND — "However, the second resolution," he conceded, "was better than nothing." DOROTHY DANDRIDGE is tawny dynamite! MALAGA TOM JULIUS HOWARD PURDOM Trudy Meserve, Abilene junior and vice-chairman, said: "WHEN A body of student 'leaders' refuses a proposal because it may be objectionable to Southern people and then accepts a more stringent idea, there is evidently a lack of serious consideration. "The whole discussion distorted my impression of a supposed 'thinking' group." Miss Meserve added. SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE . . . West on Highway 40 to Cross's original proposal was on strict party lines. (Continued from page 1) Resolution to Go STUCKKEY'S Vox Populi amendment was passed and the council voted to refer the issue to the Committee on Committees for further consideration. Cross's original proposal was opposed by the Committee on Committees because it placed polls in the houses of organized living groups. The Committee on Committees' report on Cross's proposal said locating polls in some organized houses and not in others would give candidates from the houses with polls unfair advantages. The ASC also decided to return to the Human Rights Committee a report submitted last year on fraternity discriminatory clauses. The committee was directed to submit an outline of its plans for further investigation into racial discrimination. In other action, the council ratified the appointment of Jack Metusak, Wellington senior, to the Human Rights Committee. Time is a great legalizer, even in the field of morals. —H. L. Mencken A JAZZED-UP, MIXED-UP MUSICAL THAT'S GOT TRAD, DAD! RING-A- DING RHYTHM CHUBBY CHECKER GARY (U.S.) BONDS JOHN LEYTON CRAIG DOUGLAS ACKER BILK plus many more stars HELEN SHAPIRO AA AMICUS Production - A COLUMBIA PICTURES license WILD WESTERNERS Staring JAMES PHILBROOK/NANCY KOVACK/DUANE EDDY/GUY MITCHELL Starts Tomorrow! VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VKBKG 3-1065 Starts TODAY! METRO- GOLDWYN- MAYER presents INVASION QUARTET The funniest foursome that ever fouled up Der Fulrer starring BILL TRAVERS SPIKE MILLIGAN GREGOIRE ASIAN Directed by AACH TREYOR STORY and JOHN BRILEY Based on the story by NORMAN COLLINS RONALD KINNOCH JAY LENIS OPEN 6:45 SHOWS AT 7:00 & 9 p.m. GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VKING 3-5783 French Elections to be Held PARIS—(UPI)—The French government announced today that parliamentary general elections will be held Nov. 18 and 25. The elections are being held a year before they were due because of a national assembly censure vote last week which topped the government of Premier Georges Pompidou. President Charles De Gaulle issued a formal decree dissolving the assembly yesterday. GRANADA NOW SHOWING! Tonight, Thurs., Fri. 7:00 & 9 p.m. The funniest foursome that ever fouled up Der Fuhrer! M-G-M presents INVASION QUARTET VARSITY NOW SHOWING! Ends Tonight! 7:00 & 9 p.m. DAMN THE DEFIANT! A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE Exhibit COLOR and CinemaScreen SUNSET NOW SHOWING! "SPARTACUS" Ends Tonight! One Show 7 p.m. Only Winner of 4 ACADEMY AWARDS ADULTS 85c CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE Starts Saturday! A DARRYL FZAMUCK PRODUCTION The Chapman Report THE WORLD'S BEST TREASURES The personal story behind a sex survey... from the controversial best-selling novel. SHELEY WINTERS JANE FONDA EFREM ZIMBALIST CLAIRE BLOOM GLYNIS JOHN'S Music by Leprella Roonman Based on the novel by MIRACLE HALL WYATT COOPER-DOEN M MANKEWIIGZ-RICHARD D ZANJUK TECHNICOLOR From WARNER BROS. No one under 16 will be admitted unless accompanied by an adult. GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIKHG 3-5788 Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1962 University Daily Kansan SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Page 11 One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Once in... 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second issuance. FOR RENT For rent, a lovely modern apartment parking Phone VI 3-7819 after 5 p.m. 3 room furnished modern apartment. Utilities paid. For one person $50 a month or $60 a month for 2 persons. Phone VI 3-2462. 10-16 Excellent location only. $1_2$ block from campus. Spit level apartment completed furnished. Paneled living room, bedrooms for 3 residents.教室 for 3 responsible students. Graduates preferred. Reasonable rent. $30 a month. Call for appointment at VI 3-6969. 10-12 FOR RENT: Nicely furnished clean 3 room apartment. Private entrance in home. Phone month with all bills paid. Boys or couple. Phone VI 3-7830. 10-15 1 double and 1 single room with board in new home. Close to campus. Transportation furnished. Phone VI 3-7642 after 5 p.m. 10-16 Second floor furnished apartment for 2 students. Private bath and entrance. Utilities are paid. 1400 Ohio or phone VI 3-2464. 10-10 Entire second floor furnished apartment with kitchen, living room, bedroom, private bath, clothes closet, wall storage, and air conditioning Close to KU and town. Available now. For showing call VI 3-9868. 10-12 A modern garage apartment for 1 or 2 men. Very private with a mask the day of use. For $50 a month. Utilities paid. Phone VI 3-3019. Also 2 lovely rooms vacant November. A furnished house for couple with two bedrooms. Phone Mrs. Carter at VI 2- 3229 for particulars. 10-15 Furnished apartment. 4 rooms. Private bathroom. Utilities. Quiet. Close to KU and downtown. Couple preferred. $75 per month. Phone VI 3-7257. 10-11 Furnished bachelor apartment with large living room, studio bed, dinette area. Also, a private bath and entrance. Phone VI. 3-6225 or see at 646 10-10 FOR RENT: extra nice furnished room for men, 1½ blocks from campus. doors from cafe. 340 Mac. Phone VI 3- 523. VI 3-2022. After 6 p.m. phone VI 2-1031. 10-10 Large furnished apartment with large closets, private bath and entrance. Newly decorated. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-3263 Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. $ _{1/2} $ block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice and clean, see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. 3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block from campus, for 3 or 4 boys. Utilities paid Come and see. 1142 Indiana. tf ROOMS FOR MEN: Doubles only, private entrance, private bath h. telephone and utilities paid. One block from Union. Call III 3-4082 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tt FOR SALE Professor selling '57 Karman Ghia (sports Volkswagen). Spotless throughout. Phone VI 3-1804. 10-16 '53 MG TD in fine condition. New tires. High to low mileage. Phone Extension 357 1-800-246-8111 1959 Peugot in good operating condition. 17-3102 after 6 p.m. bickens. 10-15 FM Radio! FM Stereo! Stereo! Largest Roy Stoneback's 929, Mass. Vi. 3-4160 PETS: Three Sealpoint Siamese kittens, priced to sell. They are gentle, lovable and house-broken. Phone Mr. Hyde at VI 3-0148. ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS — parts available and machines serviced Established locally 24 years. F. V. Cox. Kansas, Phone VI 3-3277. 10-25 Kansas, Phone VI 3-3277. 10-25 Tire! Tires! 1,000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes. Free delivery on Snow Tires until Oct 1st! 600-13 new style new tubeless snow tires. 2 or 3 x450-650-liter installation free installation at rear. Rev Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. V: 3-147-100 PARK PLAZA SO. INC. APARTMENTS - Couples - Singles - Furnished - Unfurnished TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper $8c per sheet. Yellow printing paper $5c per sheet or per pound. The Lawrence Outlook, 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday, tt '59 Thunderbird in good shape. It's a phone at $1600. Phone VI 3-6788 p.m. 10-11 Royal Standard typewriter for sale. It has pica type and in good condition. To see phone Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409. 10-11 3-speed lightweight Royce Union bikes cut to $37.50 in men's or ladies. New 2-speed automatic Schwinn, $48.88. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mast, VIII - 3,417. 10-16 Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, bensive diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the "Biology Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery." $4.50. - 20 Days Free Rent With 1-year Lease HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in the nearest-Pet phone VI-3-29 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. - Wall to Wall Closet Space Continental 1946 Lincoln Continenta- tion Midland Maxwell top, Red and white interior. Original V-12 engine just rebuilt. See R. Moffett at Kentucky or phone VI 3-934-10 8:15 p.m. - Carpeting - Individual Controlled Heating - Lighted Off Street Parking - Garbage Disposal Ph. VI 2-3416 or VI 2-1537 Office — 1912 W. 25th Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tf LOST Experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonablenames. Barlow, Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI2- 1648. Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 2-1749. Water Paid Typing reasonable rates, nest and ac- count. Matern, Bodin, 825 Greener Terr. Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlenger at VI 3-4409. tf English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Nelisande Jones, VI 3-5267. 11-15 Lost wallet Friday night. Brown leather, contains ID, drives license and important papers. Return to Mohamed 002 Summerfield Hall or call 1V-2516. Lost: a black Shaffer fountain pen between Summerfire Hawklet and Fraser Hall on Monday morning, Oct. 8. Phone VI 3-8153. 10-15 TYPING Efficient typist. Would like typing in her homes, letters. Call anytime at Y-1 S-2651. Manuscripts, theses, and term papers. Also dissertations typed on wide carriage. Ypswern typewriter 35 special keys. Experience in education of Mrs. Mrs. Suzanne Gilman VI 2-1546 Let us plan your party—from hello to good-buy. We furnish everything, refreshments, favors, entertainment. Just turn your next party over to us and be our guest. Call the Party House, VI 3-7787 and speak to Alda M. Prosser. 10-11 DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- mentation of ocular injuries. Ola Smith 1921$^a$ Mass. Call V1-3283. HELP WANTED LARRY. CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 98c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"*Pancake Grill and Sundrids. 14th and Mass. tt Part time shoe salesman, experienced died immediately. Call Weaver.VI 32 0860. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental. New and used portables, standards and electrics. Royal, Olympia. Smith Corona, Olivettiv and Remington portables. Bond typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. tf Married student to work part time in the office of the college's courteous. Liberal commission and guaranteed plan. Write give-age, work his-ist, or write to 111 Fulton Hall, university of Kansas. 10-10 GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized pups, mistresses, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, etc., plus complete lists pet supplies. **tf** WANTED Wanted: an old cheap car that will run Phone Jeff Mitchell at VI 3-2064. 10-11 Want washing and ironing in my home for student boys. Reasonable rates. Phone VI 3-9159. tf BUSINESS SERVICES Kansan Classified Ads Get Results D ANCE at OLD LOG CABIN located at OAK LODGE 15 Miles South on Highway 59 FRIDAY NIGHT — Good Music $1.00 Per Couple SATURDAY NIGHT—Only $2.00 Dance to the — CONTINENTALS Tastes Great because the tobaccos are! 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! Vintage tobaccos grown, aged, and blended mild...made to taste even milder through the longer length of Chesterfield King. CHESTERFIELD KING TOBACCOS TOO MILD TO FILTER, PLEASURE TOO GOOD TO MISS Chesterfield KING CIGARETTES FOR A GENTLER, SMOOTHER TASTE ORDINARY CIGARETTES ENJOY THE LONGER LENGTH OF CHESTERFIELD KING CHESTERFIELD KING The smoke of a Chesterfield King melts and softens as it flows through longer length . . . becomes smooth and gentle to your taste. Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Oct. 10, 1962 SAVE 20% to 50% on all Anniversary Items Fabulous Savings on Quality Merchandise in All Departments! T sale! famous name BLOUSE CLASSICS You know the name . . . it means fashion and quality on beautiful cotton blouses and shirts. Long wearing and beautifully tailored . . . in thrilling new fabrics to add beauty to your wardrobe. In the popular roll-up sleeve. Sizes 10 to 16. Values to $5.95 $299 Second Floor Coffee & Cookies Served Daily on our Third Floor Weaver Lawrence's Own Store Since 1857 105TH ANNIVERSARY SALE SHOP THURSDAYS TIL' 8:30 P.M. sportswear extravaganza! 105 Valuable Door Prizes famous name. full-fashioned SWEATERS fur blends Lamb's wool blends 100% wools 12 smart styles to choose from in intarsies, bulkies and novelty knits. An outstanding sale of famous fullfashioned and cut and sewn sweaters in a wonderful range of new fall colors. Sizes 36-40. values to $10.95 $699 values to $12.95 Register for Names Drawn Daily — No Purchase Needed! values to $14.95 $799 $899 indispensable. all wool SKIRTS tweeds plaids solids Included are imported and domestic fabrics in tweeds, plaids and solids . . pastels and new dark fall shades. Sizes 10 to 18. values to $10.95 $699 values to $15.00 $799 you want wood SMART PA ● Toast ● Capri ● Lilac ● Turquoise ● Sizes 8 to 18 ● Black ● Camel ● Loder ● Red ● Grey ● Brown ● Plaids ● Sizes 10 to 18 you want them . . . we have them wool and velveteen SMART PANTS — SALE PRICE ● Toast ● Capri ● Lilac ● Turquoise ● Sizes 8 to 18 Washable Velveteens $3.99 Values to $5.95 ● Black ● Camel ● Loder ● Red ● Grey ● Brown ● Plaids ● Sizes 10 to 18 100% Wools $5.99 Values to $10.95 ...one of our most exciting fashion finds! dress and costume DOUBLE KNIT WOOLS! at spectacular savings! $ 2 2^{8 5} $ reg. $39.95 Knits have a knack for setting the fall fashion trend. Rich-looking flat knit dresses and costumes in your choice of banana, black, bone, illac, spruce, white and black or brown tweed. A fashionable "steal" at our special low anniversary price. Sizes 10 to 18. Second Floor Daily Hansan 60th Year, No. 20 LAWRENCE. KANSAS Thursday, Oct. 11, 1962 Pope Makes Plea For Unity of Man VATICAN CITY—(UPI)—Pope John XXIII today opened a momentous Ecumenical Council of nearly 3.000 Roman Catholic prelate and said it might pave the way toward the "unity of mankind." "In the present stage of things $ good providence is leading us toward a new order of human relations which, through the work of men and often beyond their expectations turns toward the achievement of its superior and unexpected designs," the Pope said. SPEAKING IN the ancient Latin language of the church, Pope John said this first council in nearly a century "is almost paving and consolidating the way toward that unity of mankind which is required . . ." Cardinals, bishops, abbots, patriarchs and other clergymen from the world over prayed and listened attentively as the church went through the ceremonial opening of a council that will last more than a year. The Pope said this council was being launched "under happy circumstances" but he expressed sorrow at those who were prevented by Communist rulers from attending. "WE CONFESS to you that we feel a most acute sorrow over the fact that very many bishops, so dear to us, make their absences felt here because they are imprisoned for their faithfulness to Christ, or held at home by other impediments," the Pope said. "The thought of them impels us to raise most fervent prayers to God." Television cameras carried the Pope's image to 15 European countries and a space relay bounced off the American "Telstar" satellite carried the signals to the United States and Canada. JUST BEFORE he spoke the Russian Orthodox Church announced in Moscow that it would send two observers-Vitali Borovoi, its representative in Geneva, and Vladimir Kotliarov, deputy head of a church mission in Jerusalem. A handful of churchmen from some of the other Communist countries also were able to attend. Pope John spoke in an obviously optimistic mood. "WE FEEL WE must disagree with those prophets of gloom who are always forecasting disaster, as though the end of the world was at hand," he said. "Divine providence is leading us to a new order of human relations." "Our duty is not only to guard this precious treasure (Christian doctrine), as if it were concerned only with antiquity, but to dedicate ourselves with an earnest will and without fear to that work which our era demands of us, pursuing thus the path which the church has followed for 20 centuries," Pope John said. "THE SALIENT POINT of this council is not, therefore, a discussion of one article or another of the fundamental doctrine of the church, which has repeatedly been taught by the fathers and the ancient and modern theologians, and which is presumed to be well known and familiar to all. "For this a council was not necessary. But from the renewed, serene and tranquil adhesion to all the teaching of this church in its entirety and preciseness . . . the whole world expects a step forward towards a doctrinal penetration and authentic doctrine which however should be studied and expounded through the methods of research and through the literary forms of modern thought." Weather The weather will be partly cloudy this afternoon, tonight and Friday. There will be little temperature change. Low temperatures tonight will range from the 40s in northwest Kansas to the upper 60s in the southeast. The high temperature Friday will be in the 80s. Watkins Tests Lewis Hall Food Tests of all allegedly "bad" food specimens from Lewis Hall will be completed soon at Watkins Hospital, a member of the staff said today. Samples were brought to the hospital after about 100 women became sick Wednesday morning. Dr. Raymond A. Schwegler Jr., staff physician, said that a nurse went over to Lewis in the afternoon and saw about 30 residents. No one was brought to the hospital. Several women became disturbed, blaming the sudden sweep of sickness on improperly cooked food. "This same type of thing has been happening in a scattered way all over the campus for the last two weeks," Dr. Schwegler said. "There is not necessarily any relationship with the food at all. There is no evidence that anything is out of kilter. "We are not certain what type of organism was involved. It could easily be a virus, but often we find absolutely nothing. "Even the employees in the hospital are getting sick. The illness is probably an epidemic sweeping the area." Dr. Schwegler offered little hope of avoiding it, except good luck and cleanliness. Campus Parties Ready Platforms Roger Wilson, Wichita senior and Vox president, set October 18 as the official deadline for the Vox platform. UP Greek chairman Charles Anderson, Osage City graduate student, said it would be at least two more weeks before the UP platform is ready. University of Kansas political parties are taking a long look at the campus to find issues for the 1962-63 election campaigns. Vox Populi (Vox) and University Party (UP) members plans to release their platforms within the next two weeks. - To propose a system of senior pre-enrollment. Many seniors are unable to complete their major because classes are closed and they cannot obtain certain courses. - Anderson said the UP platform will include three major points: - To expand the college bowl to the Big Eight. The University question and answer match between organized houses was so successful last spring that UP would like to take the Bowl to other campuses. Missouri University is the only other college in the Big Eight that has the Bowl at the present time. - To allocate funds through the All Student Council (ASC) to the freshman, sophomore and junior classes for class projects. These could be service projects or social functions. 895 STANDING IN THE SHADE between Green Hall and Dyche Hall is the broken sundial that has inspired several students to write letters of protest to the University Daily Kansan. The sundial was given to the University by the senior class of 1899. Activities Veep Retracts Statement on Program The Student Union Activities Forums Committee today retracted a statement that representatives from the Communist and Socialist Parties might speak at the Minority Opinion Forums. CORRECTION Abortion Is Debate Topic "Legalized Abortion" will be discussed in an English-style debate at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The audience will participate in the debate with the four panelists, as in the English tradition. The Ballroom will be divided into pro and con sides, with the audience sitting in the section which it supports. Members of the audience may speak if they feel the panel has overlooked a point. During the debate, members of the audience may change sides if they wish to switch their support to the opposite side. The side having the largest audience at the conclusion of the debate is declared the winner. The Daily Kansan omitted the names of two SUA Carnival queen candidates in yesterday's edition of the paper. Leslie Freeze, Overland Park senior, will represent Alpha Chi Omega. Joan Stromberg, Wichita sophomore, will represent Pi Beta Phi. Panelists on the affirmative side will be L. R. C. Agnew, chairman of the department of medical history, and C. Dale Johnson, instructor of sociology. Taking the negative side will be Dr. Howard Wilcox, Lawrence obstetrician and member of the KU Medical Center staff, and Mrs. Hermia Kaplan, who has done special research on the legal aspects of abortion. The question of legalizing abortion received widespread attention this summer when Sherry Finkbine, Arizona housewife, sought a legal abortion after taking thalidomide, the drug linked to the birth of thousands of deformed babies in Europe. Hoite Caston, Independence senior, will moderate the debate. Hubert (Skip) Granger, Leawood junior, is debate chairman. - Breon Mitchell, Salina junior and SUA vice-president said yesterday in a letter to the Daily Kansan that representatives of "...the Communist Party, the Congress of Racial Equality, the Socialist Party, and the Citizens for Educational Freedom ... have already accepted invitations to speak." HOWEVER, in a statement issued today, Mitchell said that although the Communist Party headquarters in New York City had been contacted last summer by the Minority Opinions Committee, they were not officially invited. Mitchell said: "On Tuesday, Oct. 9, Dr. Ketzel faculty adviser, met with the Forums Committee and, after reviewing the group of potential speakers, discouraged extending an official invitation and setting a date for the Communist speaker. He did encourage the use of a speaker from the Citizens for Educational Freedom and the Congress of Racial Equality. "AT THIS DATE no action has been taken that could in any way be construed as an official commitment for the speaker from the Communist party." Sandra Ewald, Kansas City, Mo. senior and chairman of the SUA Forums Committee, said the forums schedule was too full to include more than two or three Minority Opinion Forums during this semester. "We try to have Current Events Forums weekly, and we usually substitute one Minority Opinion Forum per month," she said. "We can't schedule any more forums in a week." MISS EWALD SAID the weekly Poetry Hour, monthly Modern Book Forums and Humanities Lectures, and two Last Lecture Forums during the semester, "fill up the schedule tightly. "I in addition," she said, "the replies we received from the Communist and Socialist parties were vague although they did sav they might be (Continued on page 12) University Says No Peace Corps Convention The University of Kansas, a Peace Corps training center, will not have a student Peace Corps convocation during Peace Corps Week-Oct. 29 to Nov. 2. MICHAEL SWINK, Prairie Village junior, and William Getz, Newton sophomore, student committee members, abstained from voting. The KU committee on convocations and lectures took the action at a meeting yesterday. The committee is composed of faculty members, appointed by the University Senate, and two students, appointed by the All Student Council. Robert Swan, Topeka senior and chairman of the KU Peace Corps, and Jerry Harper, Wichita junior and Corps publicity chairman, also attended the meeting. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University and chairman of the convocation committee said in a telephone conversation last night: "It would be very embarrassing for the University to hold a convocation and then have only 1,000 students attend. "We would authorize a University convocation if Sergent Shriver, director of the Peace Corps, would come. Since Shriver cannot come, the committee ruled there is insufficient student and faculty interest in the substitute speaker to warrant a convocation," he said. Nichols referred to Warren W. Wiggins who plained to speak at the KU convocation in the absence of Shriver who will be in Africa in late October and November. Wiggins, associate Corps director for program development and operations in Washington, D.C., will be acting director in Shriver's absence. ARVID SHULENBERGER, associate professor of English and a convocations committee member, said: "The committee doubted an unknown speaker could attract a large audience. In no sense, was the action against the Peace Corps movement. Rather our committee favors support of the Corps group." Swan, KU Corps chairman, said: "My committee was both surprised and disappointed at the convocation committee's ruling. We expected their active endorsement of the convocation. "With 41 volunteers coming to this University to prepare for service in a country where their talents are urgently needed, with 65 KU faculty members directing the volunteer training program at KU and with the interest of University individuals and organizations in the Peace Corps program and its Costa Rican project, my committee cannot understand the convocation committee's ruling," he said. THOMAS M. GALE, assistant professor of history and director of the KU Corps Costa Rican project, said: fessor of history and director of the KU Corps Costa Rican project, said: "From all the enthusiasm of Swan and his Corps committee, one could hope for an attendance of 3,000 at a convocation. However, the convocation committee has given much thought to their decision. There are other ways in which the KU Peace Corps can recognize the volunteers after they arrive." The University convocation would have climaxed the Peace Corps Week activities. Other events planned for the week are films, displays, forums, debates and speeches. The week's programs center around 41 volunteers, graduates of U.S. colleges and universities, who arrive at KU Oct. 26 for an eight-week training session. After receiving instruction here, the Corpsmen will begin work as teachers in Costa Rica. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Oct. 11, 1962 LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Fiscal Responsibility? With the present session of Congress due to close out at any moment, many lawmakers who hope to return to Washington in January are priming for the campaigns. Money matters promise to be one of the biggest subjects for campaign oratory. Predictably, Republicans will scold the Kennedy administration for spending so much money and forcing still another increase in the national debt ceiling. Some Democrats, notably Sen. Harry F. Byrd of Virginia, have similar views about the Kennedy team but will probably be less vocal. CURRENT ESTIMATES ARE that the present fiscal budget will top 95 billion dollars, leaving a budget deficit of about seven billion dollars. In the face of these figures—incomprehensible to the average voter—the cry for "fiscal responsibility" on the part of the executive branch will make an impressive rallying point. But it is a safe bet that the campaign orators will be "pointing with alarm" to only one side of the government expenditure coin. The other side of that coin does not stand much light. It shows that it is costing the U.S. taxpayer something like $275,000 a year to support each lawmaker. According to information gleaned this past summer from the federal budget, congressional costs since 1953 have risen six times as fast as expenditures in other areas—from $60,849,479 to $147,595,000. While this figure is not astronomical in comparison with the total budget, neither does it represent any great concern on the part of U.S. lawmakers to keep their own expenses in line. U. S. CONGRESSMEN ARE PAID a salary of $22,500 a year. Staff salaries are a big item of expense, and numerous members of Congress carry relatives on their payroll. Other government-subsidized facilities further inflate the cost of Congress. In 1961, franking privileges (free mail service) alone cost U.S. taxpayers nearly four million dollars. In a similar vein, the U.S. Congress is the best housed deliberative body in the world. Unable to find working space in the four office buildings they had, a fifth is now being constructed. Two of the buildings are used solely for the offices of U.S. senators. The argument has always been made that it is necessary to pay high salaries and add extra inducements to attract worthy men to politics. If this assumption is true then the British Parliament must be filled with many mean and crass persons. These men get only $4,900 a year for salary and all expenses, and the rank-and-file members have no offices at all. While no one has yet suggested that members of Congress be deprived of their salary, expense allotments, office space, and other special privileges, the least that is demanded is that they justify the increases in their own accounts if they are going to stump for "fiscal responsibility" by the executive branch. Campaign oratory being what it is in this country, there is little likelihood that this will be done. The poor voter can expect nothing more than the "goodie vs. badie" version of why the federal budget keeps climbing. —Richard Bonett Editor: Justice Not Fickle I am not an American citizen, so perhaps I may not be in a position to write anything concerning American justice; but nevertheless, I can't see an unreasonable letter in the Daily Kansan and let it pass without comments. Whatever Brent K. Mandry meant in his letter which appeared in the issue of Oct. 8 still remains a puzzle to me. His letter entitled "Justice Is Fickle" tried to show that the U.S. government takes sides with the American Negro. I don't think that Mr. Mandry is a racist, but the way he put forward his argument was quite childish and devoid of any sensible reasoning. What motivated him to write it beats my imagination, because such a letter was quite unwarranted and uncalled-for. Mr. Mandry compared two things, the Mississippi trouble and the Georgia disturbance, and tried to draw a parallel between them. He thought that the two incidents were of the same gravity and therefore demanded the same action by the U.S. government in the Mississippi crisis. He therefore saw no reason why the federal government, which had not intervened in the Georgia issue which was caused by the American Negroes, should then enter the latest crisis, caused by a white man. ... Letters ... I presume that Mr. Mandry does not know that when a person in the highest office refuses to carry out the orders of a law court, this is tantamount to a virtual breakdown of law and order; that when the Governor of a state does not bow down to justice, it's a test of the power of the law court. Also, in comparing the two issues, Mr. Mandry thought only of himself and those around him; he did not realize that while about half of the U.S. people might not have been aware of the Georgia incidents, nearly every person in the world was watching the Mississippi crisis with a keen interest. He did not realize that this Mississippi trouble, caused by the Governor's refusal to obey the orders of the court, put the federal government into ridicule in the face of Communist competition and in the diplomatic world. This was a trying moment for the federal government and my congratulations go to them for doing the only possible thing under the circumstances. I know the damage the Little Rock troubles did to the good name of the U.S. government and who knows how much this one has also done? Finally, I wish to make it clear that this is not an attack on racism, but rather a reply to Mr. Mandry to inform him that I do not share his views on these issues. My primary reason of being here is to learn, but it does not, however, stop me in giving my candid opinions and I hope that Mr. Mandry does not take it as a personal attack. Gregs G. Thomopulos Benin city, Nigeria, sophomore e* the took world Gregs G. Thomopulos THE SEA AND THE JUNGLE, by H. M. Tomlinson (Signet Classics, 60 cents). Before last Saturday's football game an incident occurred which I believe could have been avoided or at least an adjustment could have been made somewhere. Long Lines at Stadium Editor: At the main gate leading to the senior section, two lines of extreme length developed. It seems as though several sections were being ushered through this one gate (Gates 39-40). The two gates north of the gate in question were closed for some unknown reason. To top this, only one person was assigned to take tickets at this gate. To be more correct I should say that only one person was taking tickets at this gate. Travel literature like this memorable book is rare. "The Sea and the Jungle" is a fascinating story of a trip on a tramp steamer from England to 2,000 miles up the Rio Madeira. But it is more than travel. Tomlinson wrote with poetic feeling, and his humor was always close to the surface. Asea, the book has the quality of sections of "Moby Dick." It is a marvelously evocative tale, as it describes shipboard monotony, storms and the quiet that follows. Ashore, it makes the reader feel he is being pressed in on by the tropics, the eternal green, the insects, the savage beasts. Tomlinson's trip aboard the tramp came on a bet. It was, for him, the casting aside of a life of dull routine for an adventure he could cherish into his old age (and Tomlinson lived to be an old man). The deskbound, homebound reader can do as Tomlinson did for a brief time, ignore convention and take a fascinating trip into dark and mysterious parts of the earth.—CMP NATURALLY THE LINES moved slowly with the two lines formed trying to get in while others just crowded in at the front anyway. Many who had arrived at the stadium while the two teams were still on the field warming up did not get into the stadium until after the game had started. One of the more pertinent reasons for the passing of the seating rule that made it mandatory that students purchase reserved seats to see the games was the fact that the lines in the past before the games were enormous. Thus people had to come quite early to get a good seat, and oftentimes the shoving and pushing became quite violent. Now that the new seating rule is in effect, it seems that steps should be taken before the next game to eliminate a repetition of the past. IF SEVERAL SECTION gates are to be closed, it would seem only right that people should be allowed to enter any of the other open section gates. This was not allowed Saturday. After all, a student has a reserved seat in a particular section, and he can get to that seat just as easy by going to the track and around, especially if a line like the one that formed Saturday should occur again. Another alternate to speed things up would be the posting of more than one man at the open gates which one is restricted to enter, especially during rush periods. Lorrence A. Mahaffy Jr. Colfevville senior Coffeyville senior COACH c-16 1 THINK WE'RE TRAINING THE NUMBER ONE TRACK TEAM IN THIS NATION, COACH. " It Looks This Way Hi, Yo, LOPE It has been suggested that the contemporary campus political situation is stagnant. Vox Populi and the University Party are worried that the voters won't come to the polls if they have to walk. Action is trying to unmuddy its image as a radical faction. The Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) is still trying to yaff some life into the Goldwater cause. The Student Peace Union (SPU) is still wringing its hands, and the Civil Rights Council (CRC) still hasn't gotten out of the barber shop. NOW IS THE TIME for a student political opportunist to strike. Some aspiring young politico will be missing a bet if he doesn't take up the handle bars and establish himself as the leader of the cyclists. Such a party could be called LOPE (Legion of Pedalers Equality). There are some pumping good issues here, and since the cyclists are the only ones who have vehicular access to the campus proper during class hours, they would have the advantage of getting their propaganda banners before the electorate where and when it does the most good. AND LOPE is fraught with excellent slogan material: "Why should we be subjected to the verbal abuse of a freshly run-down pedestrian, or forced to breathe the stifling fumes of the internal combustion engines?" "WE SHALL HAVE our wheels!" "LOPERS arise—you have nothing to lose but your saddles!" - Bicycle freeways connecting the campus with all sections of the city, completely fenced in to bar pedestrians, and constructed with overpasses and underpasses to avoid the automobile nuisance. - A bicycle lift up the 14th Street hill, patterned after a ski lift and operated by the guard on the 14th Street checkpoint. After all, what good is a bicycle if you have to push it over the most difficult part of the trip? LOPERS arise--you have nothing to lose but your saudables. "You who are as unwelcome in the streets as on the sidewalks, unite! We will win a path of our own!" SLOGAN MATERIAL is almost inexhaustible, but should it be necessary to build a platform, these two planks could serve as the foundation: —Bob Hoyt UNIVERSITY Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1804, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $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. Extension 41.1, new room Extension 376, business office NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor Scott Payne ... Managing Editor Richard Bonett, Dennis Farney, Zeke Wiggleworth, and Bill Mullins, assistant Managing editors; Mike Miller, City Editor; Steve Clark, Sports Edit; Margaret Cathcart, Society Editor. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Bill Shielden Clayton Keller and Bill Sheldon ... Co-Editorial Ec BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache Business Manager Dan Meek, Advertising Manager; Doug Farmer, Circulation Manager; Gene Spaulding, National Advertising Manager; Bill Woodburn, Classified Advertising Manager; Jack Cannon, Promotion Manager. Page 3 OXFORD, Miss. — (UPI) — The University of Mississippi faculty senate was unable to agree last night on a resolution demanding disciplinary action against students heckling Negro James H. Meredith. University Daily Kansan A number of firecrackers was exploded by students during the meeting of the 28-member body. The fireworks were set off in the vicinity of the male dormitories where Meredith is quartered. Ole Miss Senate Disagrees on Action KINABREW SAID THAT two resolutions were presented and referred to a special committee for possible consolidation. The president of the senate, Dr. Randolph Kinabrew, refused to comment on the resolution, but denied there was any "major disagreement" during the two-hour meeting. It was learned that one resolution called for the university officials to take all necessary steps to bring the student body "under the discipline proper to an institution of higher learning, including, if necessary, the expulsion from the University of all students participating in future disorders." The other resolution was believed critical of the University's handling of unruly students. Earlier in the night, about 100 students gathered in front of the University cafeteria and jeered Meredith when he came out with his escort of U.S. marshals after dinner. "Go back to the cotton patch, you nigger," shouted one student. The taunts continued until the Meredith party disappeared from view. DEPUTY U.S. ATTY. GEN. Nicholas Katzenbach, yesterday turned over to Dean of Students L. L. Love a list of seven students that the government accused of participating in the bloody rioting which followed Meredith's admission Sept. 30. Katzenbach said "we have competent evidence" of the group's involvement, but the University later said that one of the persons listed "had no connection" with the University. versity did not preclude court action against the students. The Justice Department official said that other names probably would be turned over to school authorities later. He emphasized that the releasing of evidence to the Uni- "We don't plan to limit the names to those involved in the Sept. 30 rioting," a federal spokesman said. He said an effort is being made to get the names of students involved in a rowdy demonstration in front of the cafeteria Monday night. "WE ARE HOPING THE University is making its own inquiry and will take appropriate action," he said. George Street, assistant director of development at "Ole Miss," said the University was considering the Justice Department's information and any serious offenses would be turned over to the Judicial Council of the Associated Student Body for appropriate action. John F. Lynch III, chairman of the council, which can recommend expulsion or other punishment, said the six students on the Justice Department list would be notified by letter to appear before the council. He said they are entitled to legal counsel. The University is not bound to follow the Judicial Council's recommendation, but the student government group has been overruled only once in more than 1,200 cases it has handled since its inception in 1951. NEW YORK — (UPI) — James Meredith was reported yesterday to have said he was prepared to die to achieve his enrollment in the University of Mississippi. Jack Greenberg, director of the legal defense fund of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), said Meredith previously wrote for public statement that "If I must die to achieve an education in Mississippi, then I am the same as dead. And of what use is life to a dead man?" Thursday, Oct. 11, 1962 Call VI 3-0563 For Speedy Delivery The PIZZA HUT MADHURY HERMAN Where Quality Reigns Supreme Free Delivery in Campus Area 9-19thMass.-Iowa 14th & Tenn. Planning A Fall Party? Let Us Help With Floral Decorations Call OWENS flower shop and greenhouse VI 3-6111 Official Bulletin 15th. and New York Just Charge It TODAY Students interested in Medical Technology are invited to the meeting of the Medical Technology Institute, 7:30 p.m. in the Watkins Hospital Nurses Home, Dr. Dale Clinton, Douglas County Health Officer, will present an interesting program. Refreshments will be Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich Donnerstag den 11 Oktober um 5 Uhr in 502 am Amerikanische Studenten, die im Ausland studiert haben, werden das Leben des Studien in Amerika und Europa verstärkt sind. Sie singen und es gibt auch Erfrischungen. Kansas Society, Archaeological Institute, Mayer-Oukes, University of Manitoba, speaks on "The Archaeology of Complex Rooms," Room, Kansas Union, All are welcome. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Teacher Placement Meetings, 4:30 p.m. Bailey Hall Auditorium. SATURDAY Read and Use Kansan Classifieds International Students: The first People will be on Saturday, Oct. 13. The trip will be to Kansas City. Interested students in the F-I-P office in the Kansas Union Arensberg's 819 MASS. FLORSHEIM Black or Perfect Ca hand sewn fronts In ordinary shoes ornamental "skin stitching:" is a matter of seconds-by machine! Florsheim demands it be done by hand! Costs more to make costs less to wear-because this touch of quality keeps Florsheims looking In ordinary shoes or stitching? is a ma machine! Florsheim de by hand! Costs m costs less to this touch Flors bet Black Smooth Calf or Perfecto Brown Cashmere Calf $24.95 Other Florsheim Styles from $19.95 CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 11, 1962 Few of'Iron Curtain' Clergy Are Expected in the Vatican VATICAN CITY — (UPI) — The "Church of Silence," they call it. Only a handful of its bishops — the pastors struggling to keep Catholicism alive behind the iron curtain — have been allowed to cross the boundary into the free world to make their voices heard in the second Vatican council. Their words will have to be soft and measured — regardless of their feelings — if they are to be allowed to go back to their flocks. To many more, who have not been granted exit visas, the council will be an event of a distant world. They will read about it in the Communist-censored press and in rare, cautious direct reports from the Vatican. "Impeded," "in prison for the faith," "fate unknown" read the listing in the Vatican annuary. STILL OTHERS may not even know that a council has been called. They are in Communist prisons or concentration camps — or perhaps they are dead. The Vatican does not know. For other once famous and thriving bishoprics, no name is listed, only a cross and five dots. The cross means "bishop." The dots mean that the bishop has not been replaced. The number of participants in the council almost exactly reflects the position of the Catholic church in each Communist country. There are none from Russia and Red China, where the hierarchy has been virtually wiped out; probably none from Albania and Romania; possibly one from Bulgaria; perhaps two from Czechoslovakia; three from Hungary; three from East Germany. EEST OFF ARE the bishops of the two most independent Communist countries, Yugoslavia and Poland. Most of the 28 Yugoslav prelates eligible to attend the council already have arrived or are expected. They had no trouble getting permission from the government. Poland is represented by 13 of the 64 eligible prelates, including Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, the highest and most remarkable active church leader behind the iron curtain. The only other iron curtain cardinal, Hungarian Primate Josef Cardinal Mindszenty, has been in the U.S. legation in Budapest since Russian tanks crushed the 1958 Hungarian revolt. The government has said that he would be arrested if he left the building. There are 16 Hungarian prelates eligible to attend the council but all except three were prevented from leaving. In Czechoslovakia, all but three of the 14 eligible prelates are in jail or otherwise prevented from carrying out their duties. THE MOST PROMINENT church leader imprisoned in Czechoslovakia is Prague Archbishop Josef Beran, who was arrested by Communist authorities in 1951 and has since disappeared from view. There have A Three-time Winner Walter Brennan, star of "The Real McCoys" on the CBS Television Network, is the only motion picture actor ever to win three Academy Awards. Government a Big Printer The world's largest printer is the U.S. Government Printing Office in Washington, which operates 160 presses on $32^{2}$ acres of floor space. FAST FINISHED Laundry Service RISK'S 613 Vermont been insistent reports Beran is one of three unnamed cardinals "in pectorite" (in the breast) whom Pope John XXIII appointed in 1960. In Romania, four prelates are eligible to attend, but two of them are impeded. The Vatican has asked Msgr. Aaron Marton, archbishop of Alba Julia, to reapply for an exit visa, but so far the government is not known to have given him one. RISK'S 613 Vermont In the Soviet Union, all of the Catholic prelates in Lithuania, Latvia, Russia and Siberia are either in exile or impeded, with the one possible exception of Vincentas Sladkevicius, 42-year-old titular bishop of Abora. In Red China, there are 21 bishops and two archbishops eligible to attend the council. But 14 are in prison and two "under permanent observation." None of those still technically free is coming to Rome. In Albania, only one bishop is eligible, and he is not expected to come. Among the prisoners is Msgr James Edward Walsh, of Cumberland, Md., former bishop of Maishang and the only foreign missionary still left in China out of 3,000 who were in the country in 1946. Msgr Walsh, 71, is serving a 20-year sentence in Shanghai. Repairs & Servicing MARKS JEWELERS Watches Jewelry Electric Razors 817 Mass. VI 3-4266 1320 KU SPORTS DIAL KLWN 7:30 a.m. ------------ Daily Sports Shorts 5:00 Today ---------------- Jayhawk Locker Room 5:20 ---------------- Tom Hedrick Sports Peter, Paul & Mary On LP Records LADIES' BELL'S 925 Mass. 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Speakers from both parties talked with us Monday night. Watkins Hall is the third women's scholarship hall to rejoin University Party (UP) this week. Miss Fowler reported that 38 women cast votes for UP, eight for Vox, and three for affiliation with neither party. Two other women's scholarship balls, Miller and Sellards, reaffirmed University Party membership Monday night. "Watkins was a member of UP last year," she continued. "In fact we have been affiliated with UP since the party was first started." Nancy Lane, Hoisington junior and UP independent co-chairman explained, "Since Douthart Hall dropped affiliation with Vox there will be only UP bloc representation in the small women's dormitory district." UP and Vox will both hold general assembly meetings in the Kansas Union tonight at 7:30. P-t-P Tour Time Changed to 8:30 a.m. A People-to-People industrial tour group to Kansas City, Mo., will leave at 8:30 a.m. Saturday from in front of the Kansas Union instead of at 10:00 a.m. as previously announced. Students making the tour are asked to bring sack lunches. The group will visit the WDAF radio and television station. Jules LaPidus, assistant professor of pharmaceutical chemistry at Ohio State University, will lecture at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in 238 L malott on "Conformational Aspects of Drug Action." Visiting Lecturer Will Discuss Drugs Prof. LaPidus has worked in studies of central nervous system drugs and in the isolation of physiologically active natural products from plants. He was a student of Edward E. Smissman, professor and chairman of pharmaceutical chemistry, when Prof. Smissman was at the University of Wisconsin. Two KU students will vacation in Las Vegas this weekend for being among the top 50 Vita Craft Corporation salesmen in the nation this summer. KU Salesmen Earn Las Vegas Trip The pair, Ken Robb, ShawneeMission sophomore, and Chuck Griffin, Kansas City junior, will attend several sales meetings and will enjoy the Las Vegas atmosphere. Vita Craft, a cookware company employs a number of college students each summer. All organizations which have not yet received their requests for appropriations should pick them up at the information desk at the Union. These have to be returned to All Student Council office by Monday, Oct. 15. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results! BULLETIN Regardless of Where You Go —to see the Iowa State game Home for the weekend —or just around town Let Us SAFETY CHECK Your Car FREE For Safer Driving CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. 8th and New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 Open Thursday Till 8:30 p.m. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds Now Is the Time to Get to Work Use College Outlines for Aid to Study By Barnes & Noble Littlefield Outlines of... Economics Accounting History Chemistry Physics Psychology ...and Many Other Subjects KU By Schaums Theory and Sample Worked Problems in . . . Chemistry Physics Calculus Trigonometry Algebra Analytic Geometry Kansas Union Book Store Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 11, 1962 Details Stall Cuban Prisoner Release HAVANA—(UPI)—Negotiations for the release of 1,113 captured Cuban invaders bogged down last night in discussion of undisclosed "details," and it appeared the talks might continue for some time to come. New York attorney James B. Donovan spent about four hours in conference with Premier Fidel Castro without announced result "The negotiations did not end today as expected." Mrs. Berti at end today as expected," Mrs. Berta "The Rotation of Cosmical Bodies" will be the subject of a special lecture Friday at 7:30 p.m. in Lindley Hall. Cosmic Body Talk Set Tomorrow S. Chandrasekhar, distinguished astrophysics professor at the University of Chicago, will give the lecture. He is also the special invited speaker for the KU Science and Math Day, which is to be held Saturday for Kansas high school students. The negotiations have been cloaked in secrecy from the start, and nothing is known about the terms Donovan is offering. IN EIGHT days here, Donovan has seen Castro only twice. They conferred for about 7 hours Friday at Varadero Beach, and met here late yesterday. In both cases, Castro called Donovan and set the place and hour of the meeting. These sources gave no estimate on exactly how much federal money might be used. In Washington, sharp opposition developed in Congress today to any plan for the U.S. government to pay part of the ransom. CONGRESSIONAL sources said they understood that the United States was prepared to put up "lots of money" to help free the Cubans. Rep. John J. Rhodes, R-Ariz., in a telegram to the White House quoted Charles C. Pinckney, U.S. minister to France, who said in 1797 "millions for defense but not one cent for tribute." Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del., urged President Kennedy yesterday to deny reports that federal funds would be involved. The State Department and White House declined comment. Rep. A. S. Herlong, D-Fla., wired the President that a taxpayers' ransom would be "repugnant" to our traditions. The technical lecture will deal with the classical problems of rotating fluids for which Chandrasekhar has devised a new treatment. Rep. William Cramer, R-Fla., declared: "It is time to let the people of the country know what this deal is. This whole deal smells, which is obvious because of its secret nature." The Congressional sources said they were informed U.S. funds would be made available by the Central Intelligence Agency, whose budget is secret. CASTRO'S last announced demand for the release of the prisoners taken in last year's abortive invasion was for $82 million. Donovan is believed to be offering food and medicines in exchange for the prisoners, and perhaps some payment in cash as well. Donovan told his New York office by telephone yesterday that he was "highly optimistic" about the prospects of working out a settlement. The New Yorker, who arranged the exchange of Soviet spy Rudolf Abel for U2 pilot Francis G. Powers, is running for the Senate in this fall's election. BEST PICTURE 9 ACADEMY AWARDS! The new screen musical by the composers of My Fair Lady GIGI LESLIE CARON MAURICE CHEVALIER LOUIS JOURDAN CinemaScore and METROCOLOR FRIDAY FLICKS Shows at 7 and 9:30 FRASER THEATER BEST PICTURE 9 ACADEMY AWARDS! The new screen musical by the composers of 'My Fair Lady' LESLIE CARON MAURICE CHEVALIER LOUIS JOUDAN Cinemabette and METROCOLOR 35c admission — tickets for both shows on sale at Union on Friday till 6 p.m. and then at the door. The Look That Is Authentically Ski FOR THE REST OF OCTOBER JERRY'S CONOCO ANTI-FREEZE SPECIAL BEGINNING THIS WEEKEND A reversible ski jacket, quilted on one side, smooth on the other. The jacket that is completely washable, and will remain waterproof. Available in blue, olive, and black. Both the jacket and hideaway hood are made of 100% nylon. 9th & Indiana Only $14.98 quilted the other. completely re- vail- e, and Gibbs Gibbs 811 Mass. Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters. Hungry for flavor? Tareyton's got it! Tareyton "Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!" says Romulus (Alley-Oop) Antonius, agile acrobatic ace of the amphitheater, while enjoying a Tareyton. "Tempus sure does fly when you smoke Tareyton," says Alley-Oop. "Marcus my words, one Tareyton's worth all the Julius in Rome. Because Tareyton brings you de gustibus you never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette." Dual Filter makes the difference --- DUAL FILTER Tareyton Thursday, Oct. 11, 1962 University Daily Kansam Page 7 Plans Underway For Model UN The Model UN steering committee, policy forming body of the Model UN, has filled its vacancies and begun work on the Model UN scheduled March 29-30. Model UN bloc advisers are Robert Enberg, McPherson sophomore; Robert Strevey, Clayton junior; Stan Walton, Kansas City senior; Charles Marvin, Lawrence sophomore; John Danenbarger, Concordia junior; and Walter Chappell, Wichita senior. Bloc advisers assign research to delegates in their area of representation and direct action on the floor during the two-day conference. Betty Reynolds, Wellington senior and Model UN steering committee chairman announced the following new appointments: The steering committee will meet next Thursday to organize and formulate this year's policies. David Kirkman, Tulsa, Okla. senior, high school UN chairman; Beatty Hunter, Huthinson sophomore, special projects co-chairman; Diane Lane, Kansas City, Mo. senior, Karen Stevenson, Wichita junior, Barbara Bauerle, Harlan, Ia., sophomore, secretaries; Richard Epps, Topeka junior, physical ar- rangements. WASHINGTON — (UPI)— Democratic Congressional leaders, hard pressed to find a quorum in either House or Senate, hoped today to wind up the longest session in 11 years by tomorrow night. House, Senate Ready for End The major stumbling block was the effort to get a compromise on the agriculture appropriations bill. But Senate Democratic whip Hubert H. Humphrey, Minn., said "things are looking much better" for a quick solution. The two principal combatants over the bill, Sen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., and Rep. Jamie Whitten, D-Miss., planned another conference today. The House had trouble all day yesterday getting up the necessary 219 members for a quorum. The biggest vote recorded showed 253 members, one of whom spent most of his time in a back row of the chamber with a transistor radio earphone stuck in his ear, presumably listening to the World Series. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield, Mont., warned that missing Senators would be ordered back if necessary, but it did not slow down the exodus noticeably. The Senate didn't even risk a quorum call. Leaders were hoping to get through to adjournment without having to come to a roll call. For weeks now, the lawmakers campaigning for reelection in next month's election have been slipping away for three or four days at a stretch, hoping not to miss major roll calls. 51 GAS-TOONS SHORTY'S sick... so I am taking over for a few days. You can always depend on our experienced attendants. LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE Telephone VI 3-9830 706 W.9th Plans for a speakers bureau were made at the first meeting of the Current Events Committee last night. Joy Bullis, Davenport, Iowa, sophomore and publicity chairman, said the bureau would serve as a liaison between faculty and living groups who want faculty members as speakers. Committee Plans Speakers Bureau The committee will draw up a list of faculty members and topics on which they will be prepared to speak. Interested persons should contact Cynthia Childers, Merriam sophomore, or Patrick Henry, Fort Scott junior, who is the committee chairman. NEW YORK-(UPI)—Sea water-activated batteries may some day supply the power to propel large cargo vessels across the oceans. According to the Yardney Electric Corporation here, such a promise—though years off—may come about with new developments in battery technology. The water-activated batteries will be light in weight, long-lasting and capable of running motors at high speed the corporation claims. Battery-Operated Ships GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 Having a Party? Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 You Can Ride to Class On A Bicycle Yes, University regulations state you can ride your bicycle right to the buildings on campus. Downtown Western Auto bikes are easier to ride. You'll find you will be saving time through the day because you can ride almost anywhere on campus in 5 minutes. Downtown Western Auto bikes are quicker to ride. Why wait for the bus? Why hurry? Ride a bike. Take a ride on one of our demonstrators. Call us at VI 3-2141. Downtown WESTERN AUTO 910 MASS. When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds EAGLE SHIRT MAKER SINCE 1853 ENDOW THE AFFLERBACH COLLECTION OR Nobody ever lost an Eagle Tabsnap under the dresser MANY men who would like to wear tab collar shirts do not do so because they object to the tyranny of collar buttons. It is not just that collar buttons are hard to find when you need them. (Contrary to popular belief collar buttons do not always roll under furniture. The only sure way of finding a collar button is to walk around barefoot in the dark until you step on it. Now there is an experience.) No, there is something else: some men are simply not built for collar buttons. Their Adam's apples are in the wrong place. Or their hands are not the right shape for wrestling with all those empty collar button holes. So they end up wilty and out of sorts before they ever hit the street. It is the haberdashery equivalent of cutting yourself shaving. But that is a thing of the past. An Eagle Tabsnap Shirt is secured by one simple, inaudible click. As you can see from the illustration, it lies inconspicuously flat and neat. The snap enclosure is covered by the same material as the shirting itself. Eagle Tabsnaps are available in a wide range of colors and patterns, with short sleeves or regular. Yes, it appears that the collar button will join the button fly in the museum of clothing antiquities. Say, that is a good idea. If you can find your collar button please send it to us and we will start one (The Afflerbach Collection) right here in Quakertown. In return we will tell you where in your town you can find Eagle Shirts. Otherwise how would you know? [COLLAR BUTTON COUPON] Miss Afflerbach, Eagle Shirtmakers, Quakertown, Pennsylvania Dear Miss Afflerbach: □ Here is my collar button. □ I couldn't find it but please write anyway. O *Yours very truly, Name___ Address___ City___ State ___ $ \textcircled{1} $ 1962 EAGLE SHIRTMAKERS, QUAKERTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA Page 8 University Daily Kansan Thursday. Oct. 11. 1962 Gasoline War Poses Survival Problem By Terry Murphy The more business he does, the more money he loses. That is the problem facing the service station operator who must compete for business in Lawrence during the gasoline price war. This was the story told by a station operator in a recent interview. He leases a station from a major oil company. "There are times when I feel like tossing it in." he said. "Every time I sell a gallon of gas, I lose half-a cent. "It works like this — I sell gaso-line for 21.9 (cents) a gallon, and I buy it for 21.4." He then explained that he pays the oil company a cent a gallon for rent of the station and equipment. Thus for every gallon of gasoline he sells, he loses a half-cent. Why does a man stay in a business where the more he sells, the more he loses? Why doesn't he quit? "SOME of the cut-rate distributors will stand behind their station operators — they tell their boys to meet the competition and they guarantee them a profit." "I've thought about it plenty of times, but how do you get out? I've got a couple a thousand bucks tied up in stock." He pointed toward the racks of tires, auto accessories and car polishes. "The only way I can keep the doors open is to sell lube jobs, oil changes and wash jobs. And occasionally I get a wax job — there's some money in that. "AND THERE USED to be a time when you could count on making some profit selling sales, but everybody and his dog are selling them now. If you can't make more than a dollar of a $20 sale about all you're doing is swapping dollars. "Why don't you get out of the business then?" was the next question. "Well, young stud, I'll ask you somethin' . . . do you want to buy it? Half the operators in town would gladly sell out if they could find someone to buy the stock." How long will the gas price war last? "I don't know . . . about as long as the little guy will put up with it, I guess." Women to Register For Rush Tuesday Women who will participate in spring rush may register from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 16, in the Dean of Women's office. A fee of $5 is to be paid at that time. To participate in rush, women must have a 1. grade average. The 13 sororities will hold their rush between the fall and spring semesters. The sororites are Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Phi, Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Pi Beta Phi, and Sigma Kappa. FREE DELIVERY Call before 4, Delivered after 5 $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 COOPER DRUG two in Love $32.50 $39.50 $125. $39.50 $49.50 $35. $42.50 COLUMBIA ... Two hearts that beat as one, two rings that symbolize that love. Down through the years Columbia Imperial Wedding Rings have been commemorating happy marriages. Today they are still the finest your money can buy. In 14K Gold—White, Yellow, Florentine and Tu-Tone. Ray Christian JEWELERS 809 Mass. FORMERLY GUSTAFSON'S Howard F. Stettler, KU professor of business, has been elected to the Association of Certified Public Accountant Examiners' board of directors. Stettler Is Elected To CPA Assn. Board Prof. Stettler recently returned from New York City where he terminated his office as president of the association and assumed a position on the board. Prof. Stettler is also secretary of the Kansas Board of Accountancy and vice-president of the American Accounting Association. He obtained his B.A. and M.A. degrees in business at the University of Illinois. He is the author of "Accounting Principles." BIRD TV-RADIO VI 3-8855 908 Mass. STEREO - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service Patronize Kansan Advertisers When a cigarette means a lot... get Lots More from L&M more body in the blend more flavor in the smoke more taste through the filter THE MIRACLE TIP L&M FILTERS LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. It's the rich-flavor leaf that does it! Among L&M's choice tobaccos there's more of this longer-aged, extra-cured leaf than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. And with L&M's modern filter—the Miracle Tip--only pure white touches your lips. Get lots more from L&M-the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke. Thursday. Oct. 11, 1962 University Daily Kansan Rights Conference Set Page 9 Kansas Attorney General William M. Ferguson will be one of two featured speakers at the upcoming conference on civil rights. Frances Levenson, director of National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing, will also speak at the Saturday, Oct. 13, session. The theme for the fourth annual conference to be held in the Union will be "New Thresholds to Equal Opportunities." Miss Levenson's address that afternoon will deal with housing and public accommodations. She has said that if the whole housing field were opened—"nobody's property would be cheapened, nobody's community would be disrupted." Ferguson, who will comment on Kansas' public accommodations statute at the conference, has pointed out that "since 1874 it has been a misdemeanor in Kansas for the owner or manager of places of public accommodations, entertainment, or transportation to make a distinction on account of race or color." Reservations for—and further information on—the conference can be obtained by writing to the Kansas Advisory Council on Civil Rights, Room 1155W, State Office Building, Topeka. Registration will be in the Kansas Union. Patronize Kansan Advertisers-They Are Loyal Supporters. LOOK FOR THE GOLDEN CREST FREEMAN FREEMAN Hand-Sewn Hand sewn vamps are fashioned by master craftsmen in the art as they swiftly detail the guantone stitch. The vamp is leather and the sole gear is rubber. The rubber is rubber; it is Right; B 8-12 & 13 & 14; C 7-12 & 13 & 14; D 6-12 & 13 & 14; E 6½-12. $14.95 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. BOWLING is FUN! Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa 32 AUTOMATIC LANES Read and Use Kansan Classifieds take the spring semester in Europe SOPHOMORES AND JUNIORS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA Take liberal arts, general studies, intensive German. Sophomores broaden their backgrounds. Juniors pursue their majors. Courses in English or German. Students live in Viennese homes. Prequelites: Sophomore or junior standing. Cplus average (no language prerequisite). JUNIORS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF FREIBURG, WEST GERMANY Intensive specialization with deeper immersion in an ancient university. Courses (in German only) stressing political science, philosophy and literature. Students live in German homes. Frequentisites: Junior standing, Cplus average, and proficiency in German. Fees Include: Tuition, field-study trips, round-trip sailing from New York, room, most meals. Vienna: $1,530. Freiburg: $1,450. Credits earned abroad with the Institute of European Studies now accepted by over 200 U. S. colleges and universities. Institute Application deadline: Dec. 10, 1962. For additional information, mail coupon now. of European Studies (a non-profit educational organization) Department A, 35 E. Wacker Drive. Chicago 1, III. College___Year___ City ___ Zone ___ State___ M A Open Every Evening Safeway N Key Rexall Drugs T. G. & Y. G Speed-Wash ACME Laundry & Cleaners Western Auto Malls Barber Shop Ronnie's Beauty Salon Little Banquet Count Down House Peggy's Gifts & Cards Elms Sinclair Service R Maupintour Travel Kief's Record & Hi-Fi Shop Evenings Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 11, 1962 Mike Tresh Proud Of Son's Home Run NEW YORK—(UPI)—The burly, heavy-set man blinked his eyes rapidly to keep back the tears of happiness. "This," said Mike Tresh, "is the proudest moment of my life." ONE BIG ARM, the one that used to make the throw to second base for the Chicago White Sox a decade and more ago, tightened convulsively around the tail, lean young man standing laughingly at his side. "I never had any great moments myself," confessed the chunky man with the broad, flat face. "My greatest thrill was just being in the major leagues." It was easy to understand the emotions which battled inside the 48-year-old former White Sox catcher as he stood there with his arm around his 24-year-old son, Tom. A SHORT WHILE earlier, Mike's kid had walloped a three-run homer for the New York Yankees which beat the San Francisco Giants, 5-3, and gave the Yanks a three to two game edge in the World Series. "I was sitting behind home plate and I jumped straight up out of my seat," said Mike, now a security guard at an automobile plant near Detroit. "I knew it was gone the moment he hit it." "Holy smoke," Mike added, his voice rising excited at the thought of that moment, "Imagine, I hit only two home runs in my whole major league career, only two in 13 years, and the boy not only hit 20 this season but now he wins a series game with another." MIKE CAN DEPRECIATE his own years when he wore the catcher's garb known as "the tools of ignorance," but there is no denying the part he played in preparing his strapping son for this hour of triumph. "I only hit .249 in my major league career," said big Mike, "and I figured out early that if Tom wanted to be a ball player he'd be a lot better off as a switch-hitter; that it would give him an edge I never had." So it was that, when Tom, the latest pride of the Yankees and undoubtedly the rookie of the year, was a toddler of three the old man began to teach him to swing a bat from either side. "HE WAS A NATURAL righthander," the father remembered. "But I kept him at it and when he got to be about seven or eight years old I really made him concentrate on it." That was toward the end of Mike's tenure with the White Sox, where he played from 1938 through 1949. After that, Mike managed Daytona Beach in 1951, where Rocky Colavito was on his team, and at Wausau, Wis., in 1952. By that time, young Tom already had made up his mind that he wanted to become a ball player. "I never pushed the boy," Mike asserted. "He wanted it and he had a natural talent and I just did everything I could to help him." TEACHING HIM TO switch hit was a great part of that tutoring. Because it was as a left-hander that young Tom delivered that winning home run yesterday in Yankee Stadium. "So I feel," grinned Mike with another fond look at his son, "that I had a little part in this series. "Never even came close myself," he said. "One year we thought we had a chance, but that was the year Monte Stratton shot himself in the leg and it had to be amputated. That ended our hopes. "But this," he laughed, "is even better." TRADING POST 704 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Ph.VI 3-2012 Located 1 door South of K.P. & L. in basement. 21" console T.V. ... $39.50 8-drawer chest ... $12.50 Baby bed with mattress ... $19.95 Desks from ... $11.00 3-piece luggage set ... $8.00 Bookcases from ... $6.50 3-piece bedroom suite ... $88.00 5-piece drop leaf dinetec set $12.00 Walnut drop leaf dining room table ... $29.95 2—twirl sized headboards $3.50 each We also have a good selection of tables, radios, settees, lamps, rockers, end tables and throw rugs. We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings. DOING IT THE HARD WAY by hoff (GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!) Men, get rid of embarrassing dandruff use as 1-2-3 with FITCH! In just 3 minutes (one rubbing, one lathering, one rinsing), every trace of dandruff, grime, gummy old hair tonic goes right down the drain! Your hair looks hand- easier 3-minute way for men: FITCH FITCH LEADING MAN'S SHAMPOO somer, healthier. Your scalp tingles, feels so refreshed. Use FITCH Dandrruf Remover SHAMPOO every week for positive dandruff control. Keep your hair and scalp really clean, dandruff-free! FITCH HAND WASH & MILK SHAMPOO Special blend Formula Intramural Standings Fraternity A Division I Sigma Chi 2-0 Beta Theta Pi 2-0 Delta Tau Delta 1-1 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 1-1 Tau Kappa Epsilon 0-2 Lambda Chi Alpha 0-2 Phi Gamma Delta 2-0 Theta Chi 2-0 Delta Upsilon 2-0 Probable Lineup San Francisco — (UPI) — The probable lineups for the sixth game of the World Series tomorrow: YANKEES GIANTS Kubek ss Kuenn lf Richardson 2b Hiller 2b Tresh lf F. Alou rf Mantle cf Mays cs Maris rf Cepeda 1b Howard c Davenport 3b Skowron 1b Haller c Boyer 3b Pagan ss Ford p Pierce p Umpires — Berry (AL) plate, Landes (NL) 1b, Honochick (AL) 2b, Barlick (NL) 3b, Burkhart (NL) left field foul line, Soar (AL) right field foul line. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Delta Chi 0-1 Alpha Tau Omega 0-2 Sigma Mia Epsilon 0-3 Division III Phi Delta Theta 1-0 Sigma Nu 1-0 Phi Kappa Psi 0-1 Phi Kappa Theta 0-1 Kappa Sigma 0-0 Division III Independent JRPF 2-0 Hot Dogs 2-0 Foster 1-1 Jim Beam 1-1 Jolliffe 0-1 Templin 0-1 C & O 0-2 JOE'S BAKERY JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 MIGHTIEST ADVENTURER OF THEM ALL! 24 Hour Service Owner Radio Controlled Ward Thompson MIGHTIEST ADVENTURER OF THE AGE! AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL presents STARRING RORY CALHOUN AND YOKO TANI Music by LES BAXTER MARCO POLO IN CINEMASCOPE AND COLOR COMING SUNDAY! Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 STARTS SATURDAY! A DARRYL F. ZANUCK PRODUCTION The Chapman Report The personal story behind a sex survey... from the controversial best-selling novel. 1970 a sex survey... SHELLEY WINTERS JANE FONDA EFREM ZIMBALIST CLAIRE BLOOM GLYNNS JOHNHS WYATT COOPER DION W MANNENZI2 RICHARD D ZANUCK Music by Lecyon Leaved on the book Based on the book by WINHLAM WALE George CUMOR TECHNICOLOR* from WARNER BROS. two one under 16 will be admitted unless accompanied by an adult. GRANADA THEATRE - - Telephone VIKING 3-5788 STUDENTS Grease Jobs . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd Kansan Classifieds Get Results GRANADA NOW SHOWINGI 7:00 & 9 p.m. Tonight and Friday only! The funniest foursome that ever exists M-G-M presents INVASION QUARTET — Coming Soon — "The Miracle Worker" "Two Weeks in Another Town" "Pigeons That Took Rome" VARSITY NOW SHOWINGI RING-RIDING RHYTHM An AMC Corporation A COLUMN PICTURE Release Now Thru Sat. See A Complete Show From 7:00 On As Late As 8:20 — WITH — A FOUR LEAF PRODUCTION/A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE EASTMAN COLOR THE WILD WESTERNERS — Coming Soon — “World of Comedy” “I Think A Fool” “Lisa” “Lady & The Tramp” and “Almost Angels” SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Now Thru Sat. TRUE...UNTOLD TILL NOW! 'ARMORED COMMAND' AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE DOROTHY DANBURGE is tandy dynamite in BURKETTE-DANCOUSE IS LAWY DYNAMIC IN MALAGA PRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. - Coming Sunday - "THE SEARCHERS" — Soon — “Mein Kampf” “Pleasure Of His Company” “Summer And Smoke” Thursday, Oct. 11, 1962 University Daily Kansan CLASSIFIED ADS Page 11 One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall 2 p.m on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. FOR RENT Large furnished apartment with large closets. 19 block from campus. Private bath and entrance. Newly decorated. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-2263. 10-17 For rent, a lovely modern apartment Phone VI 3-7819 by 5 p.m. 10-46 3. room furnished modern apartment. Utilities paid. For one person $50 a month or $60 a month for 2 persons. Phone VI 3-2402. 10-16 Excelent location only $\frac{1}{2}$ block from campus. Split level apartment completely furnished. Paneled living room 2 bedrooms, showered to ceiling for 2 rooms, 3 middle students. Graduates preferred. Reasonable rent $30 a month. Call for appointment at VI 3-6696. 10-17 1 double and 1 single room with board in new home. Close to campus. Transportation furnished. Phone VI 3-7642 after 5 p.m. 10-16 FOR RENT: Nicely furnished clean 3 room apartment. Private entrance and phone. Only two bedrooms on the campus. Two baths, all bills paid. Bedroom, couch. PHONE VI 3-7830. 10-15 A modern garage apartment for 1 or 2 men. Very private parking in a quiet street parking for $50 a month. Utilities paid. Phone VI 3-3019. Also 2 lovely rooms vacant November. $400. A furnished house for couple with two ten-room apartments. Carter at 1200 for particulars. 10-15 Entire second floor furnished apartment with kitchen, living room, bedroom, private bath, clothes closet, wall storage, air conditioning Close to KU and town. Available now. For showing call VI 3-9868. 10-12 3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block away. Mail in proof of residence. paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. tf Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. 1/4 block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice and clean, see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. ROOMS FOR MEN: Doubles only, private entrance, private bath h, telephone and utilities paid. One block from Union. Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tf 3 bedroom house with a full basement Low interest G.I. loan. Phone VI 3-7568 FOR SALE Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery, t Good 1960 Cushman motor scooter. See at 1522 Harper. 10-17 POST VERSALOG slide rule. Like new. Also a Norelco floating head electric shaver. Phone VI 3-0483 after 5 p.m. 10-17 Professor selling '57 Karman Ghia (sports Volkswagen). Spotless throughout. Phone VI 3-1804. 10-16 '53 MG TD in fine condition. New tires, new top, side wings, maintenance manual, low mileage. Phone Extension 357. 10-16 PETS; Three Sealpoint Slimese kittens, priced to sell. They are gentle, lovable and house-broken. Phone Mr. Hyde at VI 3-0148. 10-15 1959 Peugeot in good operating condition. 2-1702 after 6 p.m. weekends. 10-43 Tire! Tires! 1,000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes—most foreign sizes—extra low prices on Snow Tires until Oct. 1st! 600-13 new style new tubeless snow tires, 2 for $25; 650-15, 2 for $28; T50-14, 2 for $29 plus tax. Free installation at rear, Ray Stonebuck's count Tire Tower, 929 Mass. VI 347-170 Royal Standard typewriter for sale. It has pica type and in good condition. To see phone Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409. 10-11 FM Radios! FM Stereo! Stereo! Largest stock in Lawnery all at discount prices. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. VI 3-4170. 10/19 3-speed lightweight Royce Union bikes cut to $37.50 in men's or ladies. New 2-speed automatic Schwinn, $48.88. Rockey backshell, 929 Mass. VI 3-4170. 10-16 ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS — New machines and a few rebuilt. All parts available and machines serviced. Established locally 24 years. F. V. Cox. Local Manager. 1904 Barker, Lawrence, Kansas. Phone VI 3-3277. 10-25 Printed Biology Study Notes; 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tf *TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink* *typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow* *paper 85c per ream. Yellow per pound. The Lawrence Outlook.* 100% Massachusetts, open all day Tuesday, *tt* '59 Thunderbird in good shape. It's a steal at $1600 Phone VI 3-6768 after 11:30am. HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop location. -Pet phone V1-3-285 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. TYPING Selling - Buying Need Help For best results, use the University Daily Kansan Classified Page Phone Ext. 376 Experienced secretary with electric type- phone. Nancy Coin at VI 3-2084. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI 21-68 Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tf Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749. tf Typing reasonable rates, nest and accueil Mrs. Bodin, B25 Greever Terr. V1r. 3-3188 Mrs. Bodin, B25 Greever Terr. V1r. English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Nellisande Jones, VI 3-5267. 11-15 Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlinger at VI 3-4409. tf Efficient typist. Would like typing in her notes. Send letters. Call at time at 1 Y-2681- 3490. Manuscripts, theses, and term papers. Also dissertations typed on wide carriage. All courses in mathematics and sciences. Experience in education and sciences. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. tf New Highway Market located in base- line of Windsor Avenue and Junction. Fresh fruit, vegetables, meats, bread, milk, eggs, cigarettes at $2c a pack 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Open 7 days a week. 10-17 BUSINESS SERVICES Ironing in my home. 10c a piece. 928 La. 10-17 Baby sitting, 1; block east of campus, $2 enricements. Phone MI 3-2263. 10-17 Want washing and ironing in my home Want teen boys. Reasonable rates. Phone 3-915-8142 LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundrives. 14th and Mass. tf Let us plan your party—from hello to greetings, dinner and refreshments, favors, entertainment. Just turn your next party over to us and be ready. It's 7:30, 7:45, 7:55, 8:00, 7:18, and sweep to Ala M. Prosser. 10-11 DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- more details, call Ola Snitt 9391-8391; Mass. Call VI 32-5263. NYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental selections. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond Typewriter, Typewriter 752. Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. GRAN'T'S Drive-In. Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized girds, chambers, chameleons, turtles, puppets, plush, plus complete lists. pet supplies. **tf** LOST Lost wallet Friday night. Brown leather, contains ID, drivers license and important papers — Return to Mehmed Fatez 102 Summerfield Hall or Call 2516. HELP WANTED Lost: a black Shaeffer fountain pen between Summerfield, Hawklet and Fraser Hall on Monday morning, Oct. 8. Phone VI 3-8153. 10-15 Statistics tutor wanted. Please call after 5 p.m. at VI 2-3698. 10-15 Part time job salesman experienced immediately. Call Walker, vii, SI &co. WANTED Immediate vacancy for an ASCP registered medical technologist, 40 hour week, with paid vacation and sick leave. Watkins Memorial Hospital, VI 3-4455. 10-18 Wanted: an old cheap car that will run. Phone Jeff Mitchell at VI 3-0064. 10-11 Kansan Classified Ads Get Results State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 530 W 23rd. Lawrence, Kau Save Brubeck in a Dancing Mood Ray Conniff The Way You Look Tonight Miles Davis If I Were a Bell The Brothers Four Marianne André Previn Like Love Duke Ellington Perdido Carmen McRae Paradiddle Joe Roy Hamilton Anger Lily Gerry Mulligan What Is There To Say Hi-Lo's! Swing Up Roses , Hendricks & Ross Dy Greco A Tramp Swingin' Sound! COLUMBIA SPECIAL PRODUCTS A Service of Columbia Records Great new record offer ( $3.98 value)...just $1.00 when you buy Sheaffer's back-to-school special! PILOT PEN Now when you buy your Sheaffer Cartridge Pen for school, you get 98¢ worth of Skrip cartridges FREE...a $3.93 value for just $2.95. Look for Sheaffer's back-to-school special now at stores everywhere. On the back of the package, there's a bonus for you ...a coupon good for a $3.98 value Columbia limited-edition record. It's "Swingin' Sound", twelve top artists playing top hits for the first time on a 12" L.P. This double-value back-to-school offer good only while they last! So hurry, choose your Sheaffer Cartridge Pen from five smart colors...and mail your "Swingin' Sound" record coupon today. FIVE SHEAFERS FOR CAMBRIDGE MARKETING PROGRAMME WILLIAM F. BURTON MILLER & CO. 1028 WEST STREET LONDON, UK 1013 979 753 3366 www.sheaffers.com SHEAFFER'S BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIAL! New cartridge pen with 98¢ worth of cartridges FREE. $3.93 VALUE FOR $2.95 SHEAFFER'S ©1982 W.A. SHEAFFER PEN COMPANY, FORT MADISON, IOWA. Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 11, 1962 CRC Plans Investigation Of Lawrence Tavern KU's Civil Rights Council (CRC) decided last night to explore alleged discriminatory policies of a Lawrence tavern. The tavern to be investigated reportedly refused service to a Negro earlier this week The Negro involved asked that his name be withheld. A committee composed of Marsha Dutton, Colby junior, Nolen Ellison, Lawrence senior, Ivory Nelson, Lawrence graduate student, and Don Warner, Topeka senior and CRC chairman, will consider an investigation of the situation. In other action, CRC members dismissed a suggestion to circulate a petition among students that would ask the University of Mississippi student council to assist in orientating James Meredith to campus life and call on the administration there to take disciplinary action against those inciting disorder. THE PETITION was CRC's alternative step, Warner said, if the All Student Council here had not passed a resolution Tuesday night with similar wording. After the meeting, Warner reviewed his role in bringing before the ASC the resolution concerning integration at Mississippi, which he authored with the help of Richard Burke, assistant professor of human relations. "It would be in order to commend the ASC." Warner said, "but it sounds like we are commending ourselves." Warner said that this was really not the case and that his praise of the ASC referred to the Council's willingness to act. "OF COURSE WE would have liked to have seen the resolution pass with greater support, but we anticipated the 12 to 11 vote." Warner said after the meeting. Warner said he asked Jo Ann Snyder, Bethesda, Md., senior and ASC secretary, to introduce the resolution at the regular Tuesday night session of the Student Council and she did so. "Any student may ask a ASC member to present the Student Council with a resolution and that is just what I did," Warner said. Miss Snyder was the only ASC member I knew and I asked her to merely introduce the resolution for discussion and vote." Warner said that there was nothing irregular about his name not being attached to the resolution at the time it was being discussed by ASC members. He said that a resolution introduced by an ASC member—even if authorized by a nonASC member—was considered the responsibility of the person making the original introduction. "MISS SNYDER was just doing her job by bringing my resolution to the attention of the other Student Council people," he said. He said the matter had drawn needless criticism and there was some feeling that something unethical had taken place. interested in providing a speaker sometime in November. Activities - (Continued from page 1) "MOST OF ALL," we didn't feel that the Communist lecturer would be as timely as one from the Congress of Racial Equality and the Citizens for Educational Freedom," she said. The Forums Committee announced yesterday that Dr. H. Curtis Wood Jr. will speak on the value of voluntary sterilization at the Minority Opinions Forum, Nov. 19. Dr. Wood, an obstetrician who has been in active practice for 30 years, is the medical field consultant for the Human Betterment Association of America, Inc. HIS CONTENTION IS that many children are being brought into the world and reared today in an atmosphere of moral and economic irresponsibility and that one practical solution to this situation is voluntary sterilization. He has performed sterilizations for socio-economic reasons and for medical research. He is an authority on the medical, social, economic, and legal aspects of sterilization. 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Open Daily 8 a.m.-11:30 p.m. Sunday----1 p.m.-11:30 p.m. maine aires VILLAGE SQUARE VILLAGE BELLE Belle of every village (and a classroom leader, too) — our boldly buckled moccasin with the sweetly squared toe. $9.00 VILLAGE SQUARE VILLA BE Belle of o lage land room lea our buckled with the squared SPACE, MISSILE & JET PROJECTS AT DOUGLAS have created outstanding career opportunities for SCIENTISTS and ENGINEERS B. S. degrees or better Assignments include the following areas: Servo-Mechanisms -relating to all types of control problems Electronic Systems—relating to all types of guidance, detection control and communications Propulsion -relating to fluid mechanics, thermodynamics, dynamics, internal aerodynamics Human Factors-analysis of environment affecting pilot and space crews, design of cockpit consoles, instrument panels and pilot equipment Environmental - relating to air conditioning, pressurization and oxygen systems Heat Transfer—relating to missile and space vehicle structures Structures-relating to cyclic loads, temperature effects, and the investigation of new materials methods, products, etc. Aerodynamics relating to wind tunnel, research, stability and control Solid State Physics relating to metal surfaces and fatigue Space vehicle and weapon system studies-of all types involving a vast range of scientific and engineering skills Get full information at INDIVIDUAL ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS with a Douglas representative Thursday, October 18 We urge you to make an appointment with Mr. Donald Metzler, Associate Dean, School of Engineering & Architecture. If you cannot, please write to S. A. Amestoy, Staff Assistant to VP Engineering DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT COMPANY, INC. 3000 Ocean Park Blvd., Santa Monica, California An equal opportunity employer Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 60th Year, No. 21 Friday, Oct. 12, 1962 NEW UP GREEK BOSS—Bob Stewart (left), Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, the new Greek co-chairman of the University Party, checks over party plans with Independent co-chairman Nancy Lane. Stewart replaces Charles Anderson, who resigned last night. Graduate Work Forces Anderson To Quit UP Charles Anderson, Osage City graduate student, resigned as Greek co-chairman of the University Party last night and Bob Stewart, Bartlesville sophomore, was unanimously chosen his successor. "My decision to resign as Greek co-chairman has been prompted by my inability to devote the necessary amount of time to the party, my research grant and my graduate work," Anderson said. "THE WORK LOAD of the latter is more than I anticipated last spring when I accepted the cochairmanship. Therefore, I feel that my obligation to the University must take precedence over my obligation to the party." He is a research assistant to the Kansas Commission on Constitutional Revision and works under W. E. Sandelius, professor of political science. Anderson said the position requires 20 hours per week. Stewart, his successor, is also chairman of the Speakers Bureau of the Peace Corps Committee and a member of the All-Student Council public relations committee. Last year he was freshman class president. "I AM VERY honored and humble that I have been entrusted with the responsibilities of Greek co-chairman," Stewart said. "It is a privilege to be able to work with as capable an independent co-chairman as Nancy Lane." KU Center Prints Voter's Handbook The 1962 Kansas Voter's Guide has been published by the KU Governmental Research Center. The 75-page publication in the Citizen's Pamphlet series can be obtained upon request at the Center. The author is Earl J. Reeves Jr., former political science instructor and KU graduate student. Miss Lane expressed "regret, but not concern" over Anderson's resignation. "I regret Chuck's resignation because of the time that he will have to devote to his research grant," she said. "However, I have the utmost confidence in Bob's experience and ability in becoming our new Greek co-chairman." ANDERSON, in a speech before the general assembly, reaffirmed his confidence in the University Party. "My confidence in UP—its people and program—has not been lessened. I am certain that the results of the fall elections will support my contention that UP has the most competent candidates for student public office and a sincere desire to build a sound, practical and intelligent student government which makes policy from some of the best minds on campus." Vox Challenges UP to Debates "We are willing to speak to anyone, anywhere on any criterion about campus politics," said Roger Wilson, Wichita senior and Vox president at a party meeting in the Kansas Union. Vox Populi last night challenged the University Party to debate campus politics. "If the students objectively compare the two parties we'll come out best," he added. Vox is still hoping to release its party platform next Thursday, he said. Wilson said this policy of debate is new and that Vox intends to stress it this year. "There will be new and surprising innovations in the platform," he said, but declined to mention the specific innovations he had in mind. Peace Corps Tries Convocation Again The KU Peace Corps committee is circulating petitions which may reverse a decision of the University committee on convocations and lectures. The petitions are in opposition to a convocations committee decision which Wednesday ruled out an all student convocation during Peace Corps Week, Oct. 29 to Nov. 2. Raymond Nichols, vice chancellor of finance and chairman of the convocations committee, said: "As chairman, I would be willing to hold a meeting to reconsider the issue if a significant number of names are on the petition. These students who sign the petition must seriously plan to attend such a convocation." "The petitions will show there is definite student and faculty interest in the Corps program—enough to warrant a University convocation with a large attendance." Jerry Harper, Wichita junior and Peace Corps publicity chairman, said: Harper said his committee is distributing petitions to all organized living groups and University organizations. Petitions were given to the Associated Women Students' council at an AWS meeting yesterday. Burton W. Marvin, Dean of the School of Journalism and a convocations committee member, said: "Our committee felt that the crowds that would turn out for the convocation would be inadequate to justify a convocation. However, there may be a good reason to reconsider our decision if there is a way to insure an adequate audience." James R. Surface, vice chancellor and a convocations committee member, declined comment. The petition says; "Due to our interest in learning more about the part played by the University of Kansas in the Peace Corps, and the role of 'the Peace Corps in American international policy, we, the undersigned, would like the opportunity to attend a convocation featuring the acting director of the Peace Corps, and concluding the Peace Corps Week..." Warren W. Wiggins, the invited Peace Corps speaker, is the Corps' director for program development and operations in Washington, D.C. He will become acting director of the Corps' program in late October when Sargent Shriver, Corps' director, travels to Africa. In recommending Wiggins for a government award which he won, Shriver said Wiggins' ideas were "responsible for the miracle of planning and organization that has brought the Peace Corps into being." Wiggins is the author of "The Towering Task," credited as the basis for the Corps movement. Cricket Team Plays Tomorrow This will be the first game in Lawrence this year. The Lawrence Cricket team will play the Kansas City Cricket team tomorrow afternoon east of Memorial Stadium. Freshman Women To Elect AWS Representatives Soon Two freshman representatives for the Associated Women Students (AWS) Senate and two representatives for the AWS House will be elected Thursday, Oct. 18. The freshman elections will be from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., in Corbin, and Gertrude Sellards Pearson dormitories and Watkins scholarship hall. Iowa; Beth L. Beamer and Lynette Berg, Topeka; Carol L. Masters, Olathe; Claudia G. Reeder, Overland Park; and Jewelda J. Devore, Belleville. Candidates for the AWS Senate are: Kav R. Lutien, Des Moines, Running for seats in the House are Robin J. Bruner, Newton; Nancy L. Razak, Wichita; Paula L. Eliott, Bartlesville, Okla.; Jonni Watson, Kirkwood, Wood; Judith G. Liebman, Overland Park; and Martha Mettner of Topeka. Weather Partly cloudy today through toorrow with occasional showers likely Saturday. Highs today and tomorrow in the 80s. Lows tonight in the 60s. Refugee Halted At Berlin Sector BERLIN — (UPI) — Communist bullets drove a refugee back from the border of West Berlin last night, but he may have escaped capture, West Berlin police reported today. Red police sighted the refugee when he tried to cross the cleared "death-strip" behind the barbed wire marking the border north of the city. THE COMMUNIST guards sent up flares and fired at least three shots at the man, who doubled back into a thickly-wooded area. West Berlin police said they did not see the Communists capture him. The Communists sent a 100-man working party today to dig trenches behind the many-layered barbed wire along the border of the American sector. A YOUNG West Berliner who refused to give his name to police today began a silent protest vigil on the bank of the Spree River near the place where several swimming refugees have been shot by the Reds. The demonstrator carried a placard lettered "we can be strong without using force." Three thousand U.S. troops paraded through the American sector today in a demonstration of their readiness to defend the city. The parade drew thousands of West Berliners to sidewalks and windows. Humanities Series To Begin Tuesday The 1962-63 Kansas Humanities Lecture series will begin at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Fraser Theater with a talk by Dr. F. C. Friedmann, director of the American Institute in Munich, Germany. Dr. Friedmann will speak on "The Concept of Alienation in the Comparison of Cultures." The lecture is open to the public without charge. AWS CANDIDATES — Two freshman representatives each for the AWS Senate and House will be elected Thursday from these 12 candidates. From left, they are Judy Liebman, Jonni Watson, Paula Elliott, Robin Bruner, Nancy Razak, Marty Mettner, Beth Beamer, Claudia Reeder, Kay Lutjen, Jewelda Devore, Lynette Berg and Carol Masters. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Friday, Oct. 12, 1962 JFK Forgets Breeding President Kennedy has been bearing down hard in recent weeks on his "Elect More (Liberal) Democrats to Congress" theme, but he may be missing the boat in Kansas. Out in western Kansas' vast First District, an administration faithful, Congressman J. Floyd Breeding, is fighting for his political life against an opponent who embodies almost everything that makes beleaguered New Frontiersmen cringe. BREEDING. AN almost liberal Democrat who has backed the administration down the line on almost all domestic issues, is the kind of congressman the President wants more of. His opponent, Congressman Robert Dole, is the kind of conservative Republican the administration thinks it could very well do without. Like most conservatives these days, Dole is against a lot of things: New Frontiersmen, higher taxes and the increasing power of the federal government—things like that. But so far the administration has done nothing to help Breeding. He's also for a few things: such as higher wheat prices for the farmer (to somehow be achieved by a voluntary wheat program) and some sort of naval blockade of Cuba. ALL THINGS considered. Dole's conservative pitch figures to go over well in the big district which stretches over nearly the western two-thirds of the state. In last August's primary election, Dole polled nearly twice the votes as did Breeding—which means that registered Republicans heavily outnumber registered Democrats in the district. Then too, even the Democrats are conservative in Kansas. BUT THE BIG district does have one built-in advantage for Breeding. It is brand new, created when Kansas had to reapportion itself after the 1960 census. At that time, the State Legislature simply combined Breeding's old Fifth District with Dole's Sixth. BREEDING'S ADVANTAGE is that his old Fifth District is more heavily populated than Dole's old Sixth. In the 1960 election, for example, more than 30,000 more voters voted in the Fifth District than in the Sixth. A similar pattern resulted in the 1956 and 1958 elections. So far the President has announced no plans to come to Kansas to give him a hand, but it now appears that he may send Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman into the fray. But Breeding needs help to draw out the voters and make this numerical advantage work for him. It is somewhat doubtful whether Freeman commands the respect and prestige necessary to lead Republicans across party lines to vote for Breeding. HOWEVER, THE PRESIDENT'S personal magnetism, his speaking ability, and the prestige of his office just might provide a Sunday punch for the end of Breeding's campaign. It would seem that Breeding, a loyal administration backer if there ever was one, deserves at least this much from his boss. Dennis Farney European's View This is a European's point of view on America's problem of discrimination in connection with Meredith's enrollment. Many of us do not believe in an ideal democracy and we don't believe in any other ideal political system. There is no ideal system at all as long as the human element is involved. To make the best of it, the choice of a system for a country should depend on the nation's maturity, just as the method of education should depend on the maturity of the person to be educated. One certainly needs a great deal of maturity to make a democratic system function, if not other values as well. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler I ONCE WAS TOLD that America claims to be the first functioning democracy in the world. I know that America also claims to be a Christian country. The Christian belief is surely a fine value to support democracy. How is it possible now that a high official takes the right to stand for discrimination? How is it possible that any public or private institution still has discriminatory clauses? I try to see the problem fully, starting with the landlady who will not take a tenant who is a Negro (but does not mind having a Negress for cleaning and cooking) up to the President, who wants to eliminate discrimination completely but knows, because too many Negroes still lack maturity, it would create a problem for their white fellow citizens. SEEING THE WHOLE affair from a more international point of view, it is certainly unfortunate and dangerous, considering the present political situation in the world, that there are still Americans who give striking examples in acting against democratic and Christian beliefs. This concerns the riots in Oxford, Miss., institutions with discriminatory clauses, and the landlady mentioned above. One could get the feeling that people enjoy living in a democratic and Christian country but are not inclined to take the drawbacks and hardships as well. It is to be hoped that each American will try actively to solve this national problem — which is personal as well as political — in a democratic and Christian manner before greater problems come from outside. It might be too late one day. Siegrun Heinecke Gera, Germany, graduate student ... Letters ... In recent discussions with friends on this campus, two ideological terms have cropped up with astonishing regularity. These two terms, as the reader may have guessed, are "socialism" and "communism." And almost inevitably, as the conversation proceeds, I am asked this question: "Well, what's the wrong with socialism, anyhow?" What's Wrong with Communism? Editor: I usually reply by reciting a long list of the failings which I believe to be inherent in socialism as a political and economic system. Invariably a lively discussion ensues, but it soon becomes apparent that my fellow-conversationist has something else on his mind. By this time — as is reasonable to expect — the ideologies of socialism and communism have become quite closely associated in his thinking, and sooner or later my friend gets around to the $64 question. "So," he demands, "just what's wrong with communism?" the metaphor is valid. There exists a clearly recognizable type of collectivism among the birds and beasts: probably no reasonable student of natural history would deny this. In the animal world, we may agree, communism works admirably well. WHAT'S WRONG with communism? Nothing . . . if you're an animal. However, we are concerned here with the world of men. The communist system would have every man, the world over, "produce according to his ability and receive according to his needs." This has a deceptively simple ring to it — and it looks positively delightful on paper. But let's scrutinize this slogan — and the politico-economic system which it presages — a little more carefully. If such a system were indeed adopted in this country, what would happen to that intangible but价riceless quality of men which we call initiative? Where would then be the burning desire to excel which has produced a Goethe, an Einstein, and the other giants of Western culture? If a man's needs were automatically gratified by the State, what would happen to his self-respect? His dignity? His very honor? If he suddenly found himself prey to the dictates of an atheistic ideology, what would happen to his conscience? In short, would not all the attributes which ennoble a man and set him apart from the animals be stripped from him, one by one, under such A PRICELESS aspect of our way of life is the spirit of adventure and individual achievement which it nurtures. Until recently, at least, the craving for "security" (which is the polar opposite of this spirit) has been regarded by Western man as cowardly and effeminate. If communism should ever triumph, the culture that has produced a Theodore Roosevelt and an Abraham Lincoln would be supplanted by the culture that has produced a Mao Tse-tung and a Joseph Stalin. "Security" — not adventure — would be the order of the day. I pray God that day never comes. Mankind has required countless millennia to evolve from the beasts — God forbid that any ruthless conspiracy should ever force us into such a humiliating retrogression. But if it should, the sweet taste of such high-sounding phrases as "dialectical materialism" — which Marxist "intellectuals" savor so contentedly now — would turn to wormwood in their mouths. For they would be the first to fall prey to their own monumental folly. a system? Of course they would. It would be inevitable. Mission Hills senior Richard Garnett The Russian Government appears to think that Soviet decrees can change the laws of genetics; the Vatican apparently believes that ecclesiastical decrees could secure adequate nourishment for us all, even if there were only standing room on the planet. Such opinions, to my mind, represent a form of insane megalomania entirely alien to the scientific spirit. — Bertrand Russell Short Ones God is an idol, man's own image, and human reverence is the fatuous awe of the ape with the mirror. —Philip Wylie --- We only speak of faith when we wish to substitute emotion for evidence.—Bertrand Russell *** - * * No one is such a liar as the indignant man. —Friedrich Nietzsche THE 'ALUM' AS SEEN BY: BIG DEAL HIMSELF HIS FORMER ADVISOR PROSATION OFFICE HIS CLASSMATES THE ROOTING SECTION C-13 HIS WIFE The Unquotable Man By Terry Murphy The worries of those in places of authority have bogged down into a helpless mire that presents endless frustrations to those responsible for finding out their views, stands, opinions and treatises. The problem is simple. Nobody wants to be held responsible for nothin', no how. " TAKE THE EXAMPLE of explaining a simple policy. Let us suppose that a controversy has arisen from nothing more than misinformation or misunderstanding. The interview goes something like this: "Sir, on this matter of putty for the institution's windows." "Now wait just a minute. Before we start I want you to understand that I don't have the final authoritative word on this matter. If you are willing to accept this, I can talk with you." "BUT SIR, IT'S just window putty..." "No buts about it. This has to be considered in the framework of possible ramifications." "OK, sir, we'll consider this matter within the framework of possible ramifications. Returning to the issue, do you think the putty should be put in by the persons living at the place in question? Or should a skilled craftsman be called in to insure a complete and thorough job?" "NOW THAT'S HARD to say. There are a lot of considerations which enter into a situation like this." "I understand this sir; would you mind telling what exactly are the elements which must be taken into consideration?" "See—I knew it would come to this. You're not willing to consider the grand picture—the situation as it is; like within the grand framework." "Sorry, sir, didn't mean to let the framework business slip. But I have a problem: I need this information within eight hours—the boss, you know." "WELL, ALL RIGHT, what seems to be the problem? This thing about putty in the windows seems to be self-evident—hardly a matter for this much confusion." "My point exactly, sir. All I want to know is how the governing fathers stand on this matter." "That is a moot question which cannot be answered flippantly, young man. One forthright statement of our policy when not considered within the framework of ramifications could lead to a sticky situation. Like they would have something they could use to pin me down." "YES, SIR, I realize the putty situation is potentially sticky but we do need to know. The windows are falling out and the nip of fall is in the air. Quickly, sir, with a phrase, tell me who puts the window putty into its proper place . . . that is, within the framework?" "I can see, young man, you don't take the proper tack in approaching serious matters. You refuse to consider the puttywork within its proper frame." BOOK REVIEWS McGUFFEY'S FIFTH ECLECTIC READER (1879 edition, Signet Classics, 75 cents)—the celebrated book for the first time in paperback. It is an exact duplicate, in typography and illustrations, of the 1879 edition. Henry Steele Commager has written an introduction. Of special interest is the continuing controversy over the reader, which was adopted last year by Twin Lakes, Wis., as part of the school curriculum. One school official said the adoption "ignored 50 years of progress in education." 1AM 3.07.20 Friday, Oct. 12, 1962 University Daily Kar Latin America: Page 3 Vast Area Experiences Social Unrest By Bill Mullins Latin America is a vast area laced with both resentment and friendship for the United States and which is in the midst of a dangerous period of social and economic ferment, according to a Latin American expert at KU. But beyond this, generalizations about the various peoples, economies, politics and ideas of Latin America do not hold true, said John Augelli, professor of geography and chairman of the Latin American area program. "I want to stress the tremendous variety in Latin America." AS AN EXAMPLE OF the need to differentiate between the peoples and areas of Latin America, Prof. Augelli pointed out that the Indian masses who live in the Andes are quite different from the European masses who live in Argentina and Southern Brazil. But, returning to the problem of social and economic ferment and citing what he called a real generality. Prof. Augelli said that the peasants are increasingly restless and are "becoming suspicious that there is a better deal to be had." "The question is whether the Alliance for Progress and other instruments for evolution can bring about a large enough change fast enough to avoid revolution," he said. DISCUSSING LATIN AMERICAN support for the United States, Prof. Augelli said he thinks the combination of fear of communism and a belief that for the first time the United States really means to do something positive has produced support from a wide variety of groups. These groups would range from the extreme right to the socialists, he said, adding that this does not mean that all elements of these groups support the United States, but that a substantial number do. Prof. Augelli emphasized that support exists for the United States as a positive force and instigator of progressive social and economic change, not for the United States as a symbol. "IF SOMETHING like the Alliance for Progress had been started and been effective 40 or 50 years ago, then conceivably we might have avoided a Castro and the kind of situation that exists in Northeast Brazil, where hungry peasants simply take over the land and try to hold on by force if necessary," Prof. Augelli said. must depend. He used copper to illustrate this commercial dependency. If copper drops one cent a pound on the U.S. market, this to Americans is the law of supply and demand operating. But to the Chilean this is simply the rich American trying to reduce his income, Prof. Augelli said. There are many other reasons for Latin American resentment, Prof. Augelli said. As examples he cited: Prof. John Augelli Daily Hansan The effectiveness of the Alliance for Progress does not depend on how many dollars can be poured into a country or how many promises of reform can be extracted, but on how many of the promises are actually kept, Prof. Augelli said. "As a Chilean merchant said, 'How can you expect us to legislate against ourselves?'" PATRICK BALLARD PROF. AUGELLI said another factor was envy of the "colossus to the North," which is often the market on which Latin Americans University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Vikling 3-2700 Extension 711, room Extension 376, business office - The tendency of the United States to speak of itself as the symbol of liberty and democracy and yet recognize Latin American dictators. Describing the distrust for the United States that exists among many Latin American groups, Prof. Augelli cited the Monroe Doctrine, "which to many Latin Americans was simply an excuse for the United States to intervene when it wanted to." Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service 88 10 St. New York 24 N.Y. New york United States 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 for publication and amination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. - The tendency to "damn fascism under Hitler in Germany," but not under Franco in Spain. This looks to many Latin American liberals like a policy of expediency. NEWS DEPARTMENT Scott Payne Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Clayton Keller and Bill Sheldon Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache Business Manager Dan Meek, Advertising Manager; Doug Farmer, Circulation Manager; Gene Spalding, National Advertising Manager Hillman Classified Advertising Manager; Jack Cannon, Promotion Manager. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT The feeling of many Latin Americans that commercially their economies are colonial pawns of Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 the U.S. market. This is due to one crop (or product) economies. State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 550 W 23rd. Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan. Prof. Augelli said anti-American resentment is seldom directed at individuals. It is more general unless the individual is a symbol of the country, such as former Vice-President Nixon. Local Agent YET, DESPIE these sources of friction. Prof. Augelli said he believes "anti-American feeling is somewhat less now than it was in the past." Discussing how relations with Latin American countries could be further improved, Prof. Augelli pointed out that the answer depends on "whom we're trying to win over." "If we're genuinely interested in developing democratic processes in Latin America, our policy should not be determined by backing those whose only qualification is opposition to communism," he said. "We should back people who are opposed to certain undesirable elements in their country." PROF. AUGELLI said one thing the United States could do is not to recognize military takeovers such as occurred in Peru and Argentina, even when it hurts. He said we should back people who are for democracy, even if they are not the same people that are in Washington representing the country. Gene Durham Manager The United States also could stabilize the price of the chief exports of some Latin American countries, Prof. Augelli said, possibly by means of a quota system such as we had for sugar. LES GERIG'S CAMPUS STUDENTS HIDEAWAY VI 3-9111 106 N. Parl Grease Jobs . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd Prof. Augelli also said the United States could set up a fund to bring Latin American students to study in the United States, regardless of their political beliefs of the moment. "IT IS PRECISELY those people who are not politically safe who we want to convince," he said. "They are the ones who will cause trouble unless we can sell them democracy." Prof. Augelli said these politically unreliable students are often the ones who do not have the money to come to the United States and study. The Soviet Union does not hesitate to subsidize these people to study in the Soviet Union so that they can be indoctrinated. Prof. Augelli pointed out. The problem is that the Latin American students now coming to study in the United States are usually from families with money who already hold our viewpoint. we all make mistakes... Now personal letters can be typed on EATON'S ERASABLE CORRASABLE new social edition for modern letter writers Once Paris took Helen, there was no way out. Today it's easy to correct your errors—at the typewriter, anyway—when you use Eaton's erasable Corralless Bond. It erases with just a flick of an ordinary pencil eraser! CHARGER BATTERY 25 That's why it is such a boon to busy college people. Since etiquette authorities agree that it's correct to type personal letters, Eaton now makes Corrāsable available in a new, handsome (laid patterned) social edition. In carefully edited colors: White, Grey, Blue; In letter sizes correct for men and women. Only Eaton makes erasable Corrāsable. EATON PAPER CORPORATION A Berkshire Typewriter Paper, E PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS CLASSICAL FILM SERIES SUA presents - The Story of Gosta Berling - starring Greta Garbo TONIGHT 7 O'clock in the Forum Room Season tickets for series of 7 films can be purchased at the information desk in the Union for $3.50 Regular movie night will be Wednesday Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Oct. 12, 1962 Around the Campus KU Receives Math Grant Research in the "new mathematics" necessary in the aerospace age will be conducted at KU under a $44,000 one-year grant from the National Science Foundation. G. Baley Price, chairman of the KU mathematics department, will direct the studies on complex variables and related topics. Four professors and a sizeable group of graduate students will comprise research teams for intensive studies next summer. Prof. Price said some graduate students may be appointed to get work underway in the spring semester. ___ Sterritt Wins $600 Award James A. Sterritt, assistant professor of architecture, has received a $600 cash award for his sculpture entered in an exhibit of Southwestern American art at the Oklahoma Art Center, Oklahoma City. PROF. STERRITTS work, "The Pole," was one of five selected as a "purchase prize" to become part of the center's permanent collection. It was constructed of steel and copper. The exhibit consisted of 106 pieces, selected from 730 entries by artists from Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Colorado, Texas, Louisiana, New Mexico and Arkansas. Dorothy Miller, curator of the New York Museum of Modern Art, also chose three other KU artists to participate in the event. They were John Brewer, Wichita senior, who entered an oil and collage called "N. College"; Jon E. Gierlich, Lawrence sophomore, an oil, "Alert," and Curtis Rhodes, Kansas City graduate student, an oil, "Embryonic Landscape." GUF Issues Ninth Annual Honor Roll The KU Greater University Fund has issued its 9th annual Roll of Honor listing the names of more than 11,000 alumni, students and friends making gifts during the 1961-62 year. Total gifts to the KU Endowment Association during the fiscal year were $1,985,585, an increase of about $500,000 more than the record high of the last fiscal year. The total included $359,862 in gifts to the Greater University Fund and related annual programs of the Endowment Association. Seniors Plan More Study Fifty-eight per cent of the seniors in the KU College of Liberal Arts and Sciences intend to continue their educations in a graduate or professional school. That's what a recent survey conducted by the College Placement Bureau discovered. Among the 420 seniors surveyed, 143 plan to do graduate work while 101 plan to enter professional schools. Medicine is the goal of 49 while 40 intend to study law. Other professional fields represented are: medical technology, 5; theology, 5; and dentistry, 2. Of the seniors surveyed, 125 said they plan to take jobs after graduation, 26 plan to enter the armed forces, 21 are undecided and four say they will be married and not working. Among the 143 planning graduate study, English is the most popular field, attracting 17. Chemistry is the preference of 15, mathematics 13, history 11, psychology 8, philosophy 8, and sociology and anthropology 7. A total of 25 fields of study were mentioned. Law Students Elect 14 to Class Offices Fourteen KU students in the School of Law have been elected to class offices for one-year terms. Third year students elected Gary Cooper, Colby, president; Dan Dreiling, Junction City, vice-president; Stephen Blaes, Wichita, secretary-treasurer; and Tony Morrow, Kansas City, Mo., Student Bar Association (SBA) representative. Second year students elected Alan Endacott, Lawrence, president; Edward Prelock, Abbetsford, Wis., vice-president; Richard Moberly, Wichita, secretary-treasurer; and Henry William Hopp, McPherson, SBA representative. First year students elected John Hoffman Johntz Jr., Wichita, president; Clarence Bender, Lawrence, vice-president; Frederick J. Petzold, Leawood, secretary-treasurer; C. Douglas Miller, Salina, SBA representative; and Marshall Crowther, Salina, alternate SBA representative. Student Bar Association officers are James A. Pusateri, Kansas City, Mo., third year law student, president; Tony Morrow, vice-president; William Hopp, secretary; and Alan Endacott, treasurer. International Club Plans Mexico Tour A Christmas trip to Mexico will be discussed at International Club at 8 p.m. today in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union. Last year during the Christmas holidays approximately 100 club members boarded buses at Lawrence and toured Mexico for 10 days. The club has employed two students to make arrangements for the tour this year. The meeting is to be followed by a dance and refreshments. Ship'n Shore oxford button-down in a beautiful paisley 3.98 All new! Tapered shape, taper tails, and a lovely precision of detail. Easy-care all cotton in vibrant colors. Sizes 28 to 38. terriI's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Mass. Read and Use Kansan Classifieds HURRY - HURRY - HURRY Register Today for SANDY'S Saturday, Oct. 13 Anniversary Drawing. Winners Will be Announced on Monday THE PRIZES ARE Transistor Radios REGISTER AT HAMBURGERS 15c © SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE IN SANDY'S FRK THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE IN OSS FROM HILLCREST S D FRENCH FRIES 10c Page 5 Sorority Discovers WW II Diary in Storeroom Corner By Susan Flood "Knit one, purl two—I'll never get this sweater finished in time for Johnnie's birthday." This might be typical conversation heard over the clicking of knitting needles in any women's residence hall or sorority house today. But let's go back a few years and the conversation might be more like this: "Damn the torpedoes, damn the war, knit one, purl two—hope Johnnie gets a leave before®___Christmas." The above is a quotation from a scorior diary; the year 1944. The diary was started in 1934 and discontinued in 1948. Members of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority discovered the torn, yellowed book in a corner of a storage room and recontinued it two years ago. Although somewhat lacking in literary style, the entries make good use of both humorous anecdotes and serious issues. As near as can be determined, one woman was chosen every year to write and read the diary concerning the previous week's activities. One of the most interesting facets of the diary is the comparisons it draws between the war years and the '60's. One entry, dated Sept. 1945, reads: "Well, life goes on in spite of the cigarette shortage—though it isn't half so pleasant. Mooching has become more difficult now that there is no one to mooch from—but it's tough all over, they tell me." Rabbit Hunting the Hard Way LISKEARD, England — (UPI) — Rabbit hunter Terence Trehane was fined $28 yesterday for starting a fire in a field "so the rabbit couldn't see me." Three fire brigades took three hours to douse the blaze. The rabbit got away. Anyone who has ever tried to mooch cigarettes from their living companions knows it is not always as easy to do as numbers would indicate. Today there often seems to be a shortage of cigarettes on hand, though not on the market. Another war entry speaks of "winging," "anchoring," and "stripping," according to the badges of the various branches of the service. Today it is generally called "lavaliering" or "pinning." Still, some things never seem to really change. In 1936 women were embarrassed about pictures of them in pin-curls appearing in the now-extinct "Sour Owl." Today girls worry about having themselves caught in neck (wrestler-type) pins in the party picture section of the Jayhawker. In the early '40's the diary tells of women being late for various reasons and in the '62's women are still making up similar reasons. All the evidence proves the Kappa diary, or any diary, is never dated-history. Names change, events and circumstances differ, but human nature during college years is pretty basic. YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 University Daily Kansan The Pi Kappa Alpha pledge class elected the following pledge class officers. Pi Kappa Alpha Elects Pledge Class Officers They are: Kenneth Mathiasmeier, Arkansas City freshman; president; James Meisner, Marion freshman, vice-president; Gregory Sipe, San Lorenzo, Calif., freshman, secretary. Owner Ward Thompson 24 Hour Service Radio Controlled Fred Petty, Liberty, Mo., freshman, treasurer; John Chambliss, Overland Park, freshman, social chairman; Walter Warder, Liberty, Mo., freshman, Inter Fraternity Pledge Council (I.F.P.C.) representative, and Samuel Dreher, Salina, I.F.P.C. representative. Theta Chi Initiates 15 Theta Chi announces the initiation of 15 men. They are: Allen Bass, Oklahoma City, Okla, sophomore; Gerald Booth, Winfield sophomore; Don Blevins, Wichita sophomore; James Burns, St Joseph, Mo., sophomore; John Cooper, Emporia sophomore; James Maxwell, Douglass sophomore; Terry Lea, Liberal senior; Leslie Mueller, Belleville, Ill., sophomore. Glen Quaackenbush, Emporia sophomore; Ward Russell, Lawrence sophomore; Martin Seem, Shawnee Mission sophomore; David Smoot, Exceelior Springs, Mo., sophomore; James Summers, Coffeyville sophomore; Ralph Thomas, Lawrence sophomore; Ronald Walters, Salina junior. See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales - Rental Service Sales - Rental Service LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 "YOUR AFTER-SHAVE LOTION,SIR" "Jason, you doit! You know I use only Mennen skin Bracer after-shave lotion." "Of course, sir. And this..." M "I've told you that Skin Bracer cools rather than burns, Because it's made with Menthol-Ice." "Quite, sir. And this...". "Besides, that crisp, long-lasting Bracer aroma has a fantastic effect on girls." "Indeed so, sir. And..." "Tonight I need Skin Bracer. I'm going to the Prom. So take that stuff away and get me some Skin Bracer!" T 1960 "But sir, this is Skin Bracer. They've just changed the bottle. Shall I open it now, sir?" MENNEN skin bracer ARTER SHAVE ACTUALLY, YOU DON'T NEED A VALET TO APPRECIATE MENNEN SKIN BRACER. ALL YOU NEED IS A FACE! MENNEN skin bracer AFTER SHAVE M Pi Beta Phi National President Visits KU's Chaotic Chapter House The national president of Pi Beta Phi sorority visited the University of Kansas chapter's peculiar living conditions early this week. Sue Hardisty, Salina senior and Pi Phi president, explained the national president's visit. "Once two years each Pi Phi chapter is visited by a national officer, who talks with house members, officers and alumni. She makes suggestions and helps with house problems. Miss Hardity said when the national president, Mrs. Alice Weber Mansfield of St. Louis, Mo., decided to visit the KU chapter, chapter members planned to be living in the new house. Firemen Ask Longer Hours TONAWANDA, N.Y. — (UPI) — Firemen in this Buffalo suburb picketed yesterday — for longer hours. They explained a proposed work schedule would cut their hours from 48 to 42 at the same pay, but give them only one Sunday off in 17. They now get two Sundays off every six weeks. However, the Pi Phi's will not move into their new home until next week, so Mrs. Mansfield visited the chapter under trying conditions. Mrs. Mansfield stayed in a local hotel and ate evening meals at the Kansas Union with chapter members. "I was relieved," continued Miss Zimmerman, "because we are not too organized. Much of the furniture from the old house has been sold. Most of the women have no storage space and are still living out of suitcases." Suzanne Zimmerman, Kirkwood, Mo., junior and house manager, said, "Mrs. Mansfield did not take the usual inspection tour of the 'old' house. Instead, she toured the new house." LIVE JAZZ by the Dine-a-Mite by the Mike Peterson Trio — with SUNDAY BUFFET 6:30-9:30 DELTA CHI presents JERRY LEE LEWIS Yes, at last he has come to KU with his six piece combo and two drummers to make your Friday night date a rip-roaring success. Jerry Lee will be at the Big Barn 8 to 12 p.m. tonight. There will be plenty of room and time for you to dance and enjoy the spirits of your own self-transported beverage bottle! You can pick up your tickets at your dorm, house, the Delta Chi House, OR AT THE DOOR. BRING YOUR OWN BABE Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, Oct. 12, 1962 Jayhawkers Target For ISU Homecoming Iowa State's battered football team will be trying for a rare double of back-to-back homecoming victories when it takes on the Kansas Jayhawkers tomorrow before a crowd that is expected to reach a record 23,000 figure. PROBABLE LINEUPS But of greater interest to the 52 young men who'll be on the Cyclone sidelines is the chance to become only the fourth group in Iowa State history to win a pair of homecoming victories in succession. THE CYCLONES of 1917 and 1919 did it (there was no 1918 homecoming game because of the nationwide flu epidemic) the 1926-27-28 teams won and the 1948-49 teams won homecoming games. That accounted for seven of the 15 victories won before the alumi reunion groups. There have been two stretches of four straight years in which Cyclone teams did not lose at homecoming, counting ties: 1925-28, a tie and three wins; and 1933-36, a win and three ties. Only six teams have taken part in homecoming games with the Cyclones with Missouri and Kansas State leading the list with 10 and nine games respectively. Kansas State might be listed as the "favorite" homecoming opponent since the Wildcats have yielded seven victories in the nine games. Only Oklahoma State, a recent entry in the Big Eight, has not appeared on the Cyclone homecoming lists among the conference teams. Recent high points probably were the upset wins over Colorado in 1948 and Missouri in 1953. Low point must be the 63-0 loss to Oklahoma in 1946. Probably the biggest collection of thrills came in the 1949 game when the Cyclones won a 26-21 game from Kansas State. Iowa State's bombed defense has yielded 75 points in the last two Iowa State (1-2) Larry Schreiber (191) LE Don Andersen (271) LT Tim Brown (189) LG Ray Steffy (195) C Dick Walton (228) RG Norm Taylor (227) RT Larry Montre (213) RE Larry Switzer (180) QB Dave Hoppmann (183) LH Dick Limerick (201) RH Tom Vaughn (195) FB Kansas (2-1) Pack St. Clair (199) Fred Eisenman (217) Mickey Walker (205) Pete Quatrochi (197) Ron Marsh (190) Marvin Clothier (214) Jay Roberts (206) Rodger McFarland (194) Gale Sayers (180) Tony Leiker (185) Ken Coleman (202) Average weights—lines: Iowa State, 215; Kansas, 203. backs: Iowa State, 190; Kansas, 190. teams: Iowa State, 206; Kansas, 199. games. Defense has been a by-word all week as Coach Clay Stapleton has tried to tighten the play of his linemen and loosen the action of his secondary. Oregon State whipped in 39 points for a 39-35 win and Nebraska followed last week with a 36-22 production. "Our own offense has been producing points, too." Stapleton said, "but we must do something about the number of touchdowns we've been giving up. At the start of the season I mentioned that I thought we would be able to move the ball against all teams but that we might have trouble stopping the other fellow. I'm getting too good a reputation as a forecaster for my own comfort. I fear." STAPLETON also pointed to Nebraska last spring as the top team in the Big Eight — a prediction that came true last week with stunning effect on the Cyclones. That the defense lessons will be needed is shown by the fact that Kansas is the No.2 offensive team in the Big Eight and Iowa State the No.7 defense team. Iowa State is due for one change in lineup from last week. Tim Brown has battled his way to a starting spot at weak guard. Larry Montre was switched to strong end, trading with Larry Hannahs and will open at that spot. Iowa State's top defensive problems will be provided by Gale Sayers, rated the No. 1 rookie in the league, and the veteran Ken Coleman, the top rushers for Jayhawkers. Sayers ranks No. 2 in the loop with the Cyclone's Dave Hoppmann third. Co-capt. Rodger McFarland's passing is the other main threat to Cyclone hopes. Not to be overlooked, however, is slotback Tony Leiker, a good runner and the loop's top punter. In homecoming competition against the Cyclones the Jayhawkers have won three times, lost once and been held to a 0-0 tie. The last time Kansas played in the reunion game was 1950 when it scored a 33-21 victory. KU brings an undefeated (1-0) conference record into the game, sharing first place with Nebraska. Iowa State is tied for fourth with Kansas State, both teams having 0-1 marks. Sixth Game of Series Doubtful This Morning By United Press International Whether the sixth game of the World Series would be played was doubtful as gusty winds and showers hit San Francisco early this morning. The weather bureau refused to hazard a guess as to whether the Giants and the New York Yankees would be able to play at Candlestick Park, but added a warning that a new storm out in the Pacific was headed for California. IT RAINED IN San Francisco yesterday, and neither team was able to work out. Al Dark, the Giants pilot, who arose early yesterday with the idea of conducting a workout at Candlestick Park and then went back to bed when it appeared obvious that no practice could be held in the rain, insisted that any delay because of bad weather "would neither help nor hinder either club." Probable pitchers for today's game were New York's Whitey Ford who seeks his sixth consecutive World Series triumph, and Bill Pierce who tries for his 13th consecutive victory in Candlestick Park. Ralph Houk, upon learning that the workout was postponed by the weather, conducted a press conference at the downtown hotel where the Yankees are quartered. He was chipper and relaxed as he told a room-full of newsmen that he planned to start Ford in the sixth game "because we are going with our best and let the chips fall where they may." "WELL HAVE our best pitcher going for us and you always have to feel you have a good chance of winning when Whitey is pitching," he said. "I was going to start Ford in the sixth game whether he won or lost in New York on Wednesday," Houk continued. "He will be pitching on the fourth day (after his last start), just as he's done most of the season and last year. He pitches better on the fourth day if he had an extra day's rest." Ford has won a record of 10 World Series games, against four defeats. He won this year's opener, 6-2, and left last Tied Monday's game with the score tied at 2-2 in the sixth inning. Houk said that Bill Stafford, winner of Sunday's game, 3-2, was "well-rested" and would pitch in the seventh game, if that is necessary. THE YANKEE skipper said that Stafford's leg "isn't bothering him at all." Stafford received a severe bruise of the left shin when hit by a line drive from the bat of Felipe Alou Sunday. Now is the time For Your Child's Christmas Portrait Children are our speciality Call now for an appointment Burch Higgins, Photographer RANCH HOUSE STUDIO 780 Lincoln VI-3-4575 KANSAS 48 PLAYER OF THE WEEK Gale Sayers for his outstanding performance against the Buffaloes. for outstanding performance against dirty clothes, let us earn your laundry-of-theweek award. 1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE Acme LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Acme Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928 Downtown 1111 Mass. VI 3-5155 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895 University Daily Kansan Page 7 University Daily Kansan SPORTS SI Win Pleases Easton; Run Chicago Tomorrow Bv Rov Miller Bill Easton, KU cross country coach, is almost as enthusiastic in support of the hill and dale course the Jayhawkers ran on against Southern Illinois Saturday as he is about the Jayhawks' victory over the Salukis. "That was a beautiful place to run on there," Easton said. The course, located at DuQuoin, Ill., a short distance from the Southern Illinois campus at Carbondale, is a strip-mining area converted into a fairgrounds. The area has been seeded with Kentucky bluegrass, providing an all-turf course, and the three-mile run planned to take advantage of the hilly terrain. It was part of that terrain that aided the Jawhaker triumph, too. Although the victory could easily be considered an upset (before the meet Easton said SI could be KU's toughest opponent of the season), Easton did not seem too surprised with the Jayhawkers' performance in the dual. added the Jayhawk, St. Paul, Bill Cornell, SI's English ace who has a 4:01.6 mile to his credit, led the runners at the halfway point in the race. At the end of the second mile though, George Cabrera, eventful first place finisher for KU, took the lead. "Cornell just gave out, I guess," explained Cabrera. A steep grade leading up to the two-mile point contributed to Cornell's falter. "Our one hope was to be in better condition (than SI). By out-conditioning them, we beat them on that last mille." This Saturday KU opens its 1962 home season with a dual against the Chicago Track Club at 10:30 a.m. on the Lawrence Country Club golf course. "They're a tough outfit," Easton said of the group which is composed of college graduates who are presently employed in the Chicago area. Ted Haydan, track coach at the University of Chicago, coaches the group. Team members are Harold Harris, formerly of the University of Illinois; Bill Reyes, of Chicago U.; Larry West, Western Michigan; Ernie Richards, U. of Illinois; Carl Golden, Grinell, and Dave Mellady, Wisconsin. The Jayhawkers will run against Chicago, the same lineup as last week of Cabrera, Herald Hadley, Charlie Hayward, Paul Acevedo, Mike Fulghum, Chick Fero and Bill Cottle. CROSS COUNTRY NOTES AND QUOTES: For the first time in Kansas cross country history, according to Easton, five freshman prospects ran the two-mile time trial on the Memorial Stadium track in under 10 minutes. John Lawson, Kansas City, led the freshmen in the time trial held last Friday. Lawson finished in 9:36. Others finishing in under 10 minutes were: Tom Smith, San Diego, Calif. 9:50; Lowell Paul, Colby, 9:54.0; John Donner, Tucson, Ariz., 9:54.5, and Del Rodrock, Marysville, 9:50.8. "If we can bring up the three lettermen from last year," Coach Easton said this week, "we will be a better than average team." He was referring to Kirk Hagan, Tonni Coan and Ted Riesinger. All three returned to school out of condition and have not been able to qualify in time trials. How confident was Cabrera of victory when he passed Cornell at the two-mile mark? "I was worried towards the end, but it helped a lot when Coach Easton holtered at me and told me I had 45 yards on Cornell." - * * What a difference a year makes. Last year Cabrera finished 15th in the Big Eight cross country meet and usually was the fifth or sixth KU distance man to place in duals. Big 8 Teams Eye Serious Loop Games Big Eight football teams, with their better than .500 average against non-conference opposition, play their most serious weekend of league competition tomorrow. United Press International Six of the teams will be playing conference games and two go against non-loop foes. To date this year, Big Eight teams have an 8-7-1 record out of the conference. The conference headliner Saturday pits darkhorse Iowa State (1-2) against Kansas (2-1), the team picked in pre-season polls to finish No. 2 in the Big Eight. Iowa State's Cyclones will be without wingback Dick Limerick when the Jayhawkers come to town. He is suffering from an unbalancing condition of the middle ear and may be out of action several weeks. LIMERICK'S absence will be doubly mised if All-America candidate Dave Hoppmann continues to be slowed by injuries. The versatile tailback has been plagued with a shoulder injury much of the season. Coach Jack Mitchell of Kansas is not without injury woes for the game. Two first team guards, Ken Tiger and Duke Collins, are hurt. Tiger is definitely supposed to be out against Iowa State and Collins is a doubtful player, although he was named Thursday to the traveling squad. Kansas was to fly out of Kansas City this afternoon and workout briefly at Drake University later today. The Missouri Tigers, top-rated in the conference, take on cellardweller Kansas State tomorrow afternoon at Manhattan. The Missouri team (2-0-1) is expected to have no trouble defeating winless K-State (0-3). Call before 4, Delivered after $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 LARRY CRUM FREE DELIVERY COOPER DRUG - Suggests - A Tasty Krout-Burger only 44c M. S. FERRELL 'K' PANCAKE GRILL & SUNDRIES 14th & Mass. Friday, Oct. 12, 1962 Open 24 Hours a day Theta Chi fell from the undefeated ranks Wednesday afternoon to Delta Chi 26-0. Theta Chi Suffers First Defeat Theta Chi's loss leaves two other undefeated teams in division II and six undefeated teams in fraternity A play. Phi Gamma Delta and Delta Upsilon are undefeated in Division II, Sigma Chi and Beta Theta Pi in Division I and Phil Delta Theta and Sigma Nu in division III. Joy Ray Town led the Delta Chi attack scoring two touchdowns. In other Fraternity A play touchdowns by Jim Stevens and Joe Herring led Phi Kappa Psi to a 12-0 victory over Phi Kappa Theta. Other scores: Fraternity B: Delta Upsilon 18, Alpha Tau Omega 6; Phi Kappa Sigma 39, Kappa Sigma 0; Phi Delta Theta #2 14, Triangle 9; Sigma Chi #1 6, Beta Theta Pi #2 0; Sigma Chi #2 6, Acacia 0; Pi Kappa Alpha 13, Sigma Phi Epsilon 6; Beta Theta Pi #1 33, Phi Gamma Delta 7. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 a ENGINEERS: Which of these Specifications Fit the Future of Your Career? The list below probably contains a number of the things you consider important in selecting the job that will do the most for you. Many companies offer most of them, but to different degrees and in different ways. Check the list and then consider how Emerson Electric meets these specifications. You may decide that an Emerson job is worth investigating. EMERSON ELECTRIC OFFERS SPECIFICATION EMERSON ELECTRIC OFFERS Good company growth Emerson is a medium-size company on the move. 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Good educational facilities Emerson has in-plant training courses as well as subsidized graduate study at Washington and St. Louis Universities. Comfortable location Emerson is located in suburban St. Louis, offering easy access to many housing developments, shopping areas, expressways and recreation. St. Louis itself offers top sports and cultural facilities, as well as a relatively low cost of living. ?????????????????? There are other matters that are important to you as an individual —more information needed concerning the points touched on here. Be sure you get the full story on the outstanding potential for you in this fast-moving organization. EMERSON INVITES YOU TO TALK TO ITS REPRESENTATIVE : October 18 If unable to arrange interview at this time, contact: A. L. Depke, Emerson Electric Co. 8100 West Florissant, St. Louis, Mo. Ask your placement office for location of interview. EMERSON N aerospace EZE defense commercial E industrial ELECTRIC Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday. Oct. 12. 1962 Roman Catholic Pontiff Is a Dynamic Leader By United Press International By United Press International Pope John XXIII, a short, humble swear-smile and a beaming personality, is a man of many surprises. His biggest surprise was the calling of the first Ecumenical Council in nearly a century. With his 81st birthday little more than a month away, the peasant's son who became leader of more than a half billion Catholics is a vigorous man who still enjoys a glass of wine and a good cigar. He has rarely been sick and apparently is in fine health. Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli was born in the village of Sotto II Monte (under the mountain) near Bergamo in Northern Italy, one of 13 children—three died at birth—of a sharecropper, Giovanni Battista Roncalli and his wife, Marianna. He was their third child and eldest son. Because of Pope John's humble origin and his jovial personality it is easy to forget he is an experienced diplomat and has served in many key posts as a representative of the Holy See. WHEN ANGELO GIUSEPPE Cardinal Roncalli was elected pontiff to succeed the late Pope Pius XII on Oct. 28, 1958, he immediately was tabbed an "interim pope" because of his age and the stature of his predecessor. But from the moment he took the name "John XXIII" and donned the white robes of his office he showed little intention of sitting back and letting the world go by. It appeared he was destined to spend his life earning a meager living in the fields. At the age of 11 he announced he wanted to become a priest. His father gave him his blessing and he entered the seminary at Bergamo. FROM THERE HE WENT to Rome to study at the pontifical seminary and was ordained a priest Aug. 10, 1904, officiating his first mass in St. Peter's Basilica that same year. In December, 1944, Pope Pius XII picked him for what was then one of the most difficult assignments in Vatican history—nuncio to postwar Paris. Despite Roncall's protests he was not fit for the job, he went to Paris to hand Premier Charles de Gaulle his credentials on New Year's day, 1945. Using his wit, humor and the wellserved meal as a political opening, he soon became a popular and well-known figure in postwar France. On Jan. 12, 1953, Pope Pius named him a cardinal and three days later BUSHED? Tired STAY AWAKE TAKE VERV ALERTNESS CAPSULES Combat fatigue almost immediately. Keeps you alert and full of pep for hour after hour, after hour. Continuous Action Capsules. Completely safe Non-habit forming WHEN POPE PIUS died Oct. 9, 1958, Roncalli was one of 51 cardinals who met in the Sistine chapel of the Vatican to vote on a successor. The conclave began Oct. 25. Three days and 12 ballots later Roncalli became John XXII. appointed him Fatriarch of Venice. After 27 years Roncalli had returned to his best-loved occupation, that of priest. NO PRESCRIPTION NEEDED In the nearly four years that have passed, Pope John has captured the hearts of Catholics and non-Catholics alike with his simplicity and warm ways. He has left tradition behind to do what he felt was right for the church and for the papacy. With campus temperatures hitting the balmy 70s, summer hardly seems over yet, but the University Extension is already planning next summer's activities. University Extension—which organizes campus institutes and short courses for about 5,000 persons in June, July and August of each year has released the "housekeeping" schedules for three of the 1963 events. The schedules are reservations of the Kansas Union, dormitory and hotel facilities which will be needed for the events. The scheduling includes a Financial Institutions Seminar for high school teachers of economics and social studies, June 4-15; Life Insurance Marketing Institute, June 15-19; and the Kansas Writers Conference, June 25-28. The nation's leading physicists will meet Oct. 21-24 at KU for the national convention of Sigma Pi Sigma, physics honor society. KU Releases Plans For Next Summer Top Physicists to Meet Here The nation's leading physicists Among the scientists attending will be Stanley Ballard, University of Florida physics department chairman and national president of the society, and Elmer Hutchisson, director of the American Institute of Physics, New York City. PROF. BALLARD, who will give the only public address of the meeting, will speak at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday. Oct. 23, in the Kansas Union. His subject is "Infra-red Physics and Its Applications." Others who will attend the meeting include Donald E. Cunningham, director of the student section of the American Institute of Physics; Vincent Parker, deputy director of the American Institute of Physics; Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Oak Ridge National Laboratory Reactor School and former national president of Sigma Pi Sigma, and Marsh W. White, University of Pennsylvania professor emeritus of physics and executive secretary of the society. L. WORTH SEAGONDOLLAR, KU professor of physics and national vice-president of the society, said organizational problems will be the main item on the meeting schedule. The delegates also will take conducted tours of KU research facilities in physics, including the nuclear reactor center. JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 Pall Mall Presents~ GIRL WATCHER'S GUIDE BEAT NO PARKING BATON-TWIRLING HIGH-STEPPER CAMPUS TYPE I The High-Stepper is an ideal choice for Campus Type #1 for two reasons. First, she is a fairly common species and second, she is easy to identify. Just as the bird-watching beginner should concentrate on the Robin, Sparrow and Cardinal before moving on to more exotic species, the girl watching beginner should master the observation and identification of types such as the High-Stepper before progressing to rarer (and usually more difficult to identify) types. As in all fine arts, the mastery of fundamentals is the key to girl watching success. This mastery of fundamentals is just as important in the art of cigarette making. Taste Pall Mall and see what we mean! Pall Mall's natural mildness is so good to your taste! So smooth, so satisfying, so downright smokeable! CLASS A CIGARETTES PALL MALL FAMOUS CIGARETTES IN HOC SIGNO VINCES "WHEREVER PARTICULAR PEOPLE CONGREGATE" PALL MALL A. T. Co. Product of The American Tobacco-Company "Tobacco is our middle name" V F 211 Walker Is 'On Call' For Examination DALLAS—(UPI)—Former Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker today was on "24-hour call" for an examination to determine whether he is mentally competent to stand trial on federal charges that grew out of the integration rioting at the University of Mississippi. It appeared it would be at least this weekend before the psychiatrist examination takes place. Walker arrived last night at the Southwestern Medical School in Dallas to undergo examination. DR. R. L. STUBBLEFIELD, chief of psychiatry at Southwestern, met with Walker and his attorneys. Stubblefield said that he would have to confer with the government - appointed psychiatrist. Dr. Winfred Overholser of Washington, to determine what a "reasonable psychiatric examination would be." It was reported that Overholser might not make it to Texas until early next week. This would delay the examination even further. "When we determine this," Stubblefield said, "we will notify Walker's attorneys and will proceed with the examination 24 hours after that." Walker is charged with rebellion, insurrection and seditious conspiracy. He was taken to the hospital at Springfield after his arrest, but was released in $50,000 reduced bond Saturday night. Attorney Robert B. Morris, who helped work out the agreement for release of Walker from the federal psychiatric hospital at Springfield, Mo., told reporters last night that "General Walker is on 24-hour call to Dr. Stubblefield." HE AND WALKER then walked from the hospital building. Walker was in the building at Southwestern last night about 20 minutes before newsmen found out about it. The resigned army general made no comment to reports later when he walked down the hall. Morris said yesterday that Walker agreed to psychiatric examination to escape confinement "far worse than a prison sentence." He said Walker agreed to the examination to obtain immediate release from the federal prison hospital at Springfield. Morris said that if Walker is held for long mental examination it would be "far worse than a prison sentence" because "at least in prison you are alone with your own mind." "Food was set on the floor in the hall in front of the cell," Walker said. "You had to come out and pick it up. All I had was a bucket and a bunk." WALKER TOLD a news conference yesterday he was held in "solitary confinement" at the hospital. Stubblefield would not indicate what he thought would be the length of the examination. WALKER'S CHIEF ATTORNEY, Gen. Clyde Watts of Oklahoma City, said the examination should be TRADING POST 704 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Ph.VI 3-2012 Page 9 Located 1 door South of K.P. & L. in basement. University Daily Kansan 21" console T.V. ... $39.50 8-drawer chest ... $12.50 Baby bed with mattress ... $19.95 Desks from ... $11.00 3-piece luggage set ... $8.00 Bookcases from ... $6.50 3-piece bedroom suite ... $88.00 5-piece drop leaf dinette set $12.00 Walnut drop leaf dining room table ... $29.95 boards ... $3.50 each brief. It must only "determine if this boy (Walker) has enough sense to go to trial." We also have a good selection of tables, radios, settees, tamps, rockers, end tables and throw rugs. We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings. U. S. Dist. Judge Claud Clayton issued the examination order. The examination must determine if Walker is presently sane; whether he is competent to understand the charges against him, and whether he is competent to assist lawyers in his defense. Walker had spent the days since his release relaxing at Lake Texoma on the Texas-Oklahoma border. Coil Studies Under Grant The U.S. Public Health Service agency has approved a five-year grant of more than $14,000 for the project of William H. Coil, assistant professor of zoology. Thousands of worms are being studied by a University of Kansas professor under a research grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. The worms being studied are parasites taken from animals on Taiwan. They bear the scientific names trematodes and cestodes and are of the same type as the tapeworm. More than 2,500 vials of these worms plus thousands of individual specimens were collected on Taiwan by Dr. R. E. Kuntz, U.S. naval medical research worker. Under Dr. Coil's direction, the worms are being catalogued, cross-indexed and mounted for study. Purpose of the research, Dr. Coil said, is to study the taxonomy, relationships and geographical distribution of the worms in the collection. He expects to find some specimens new to science and may also discover additional animals which serve as hosts for the parasites of humans. Dr. Coil previously made similar studies on parasitic worms in Mexico, Turkey, Egypt, East Pakistan and Lan Yu Island. He came to KU this fall from the University of Nebraska. In the summers he works at Duke Marine Laboratory. Graduate assistant on the research project is Lance Buoen, Minneapolis, Minn., graduate student. Danforth Grants Opened Today Danforth Graduate Fellowships for college teaching careers were opened to interested students today. The fellowships are worth up to $12,000. Francis H. Heller, associate dean of the Liberal Arts College and liaison officer for the program, said today that all interested students must indicate their desire to be considered to him not later than Oct. 20. A faculty committee will then select the students to be nominated to the foundation before Oct. 28. The fellowships are open to male college seniors or recent graduates preparing for a career of teaching, counseling, or administrative work at the college level. Approximately 100 of these fellowships will be awarded to students in American colleges and universities who show intellectual promise and personality, integrity, genuine interest in religion, and high potential for effective college teaching. APPLICANTS must be planning to study in a field related to liberal arts and science. Students already in graduate work are ineligible. Winners can get up to four years of financial assistance. Annual maximum assistance for single men is $1,500 and for married men $2,000, plus tuition and fees. There are 472 Danforth Fellows now in graduate study, and 267 already teaching in 150 colleges in this country and in 20 institutions abroad. FELLOWSHIPS may be held for life. Following completion of graduate study, other financial benefits are offered. Students may hold a Danforth Fellowship concurrently with other appointments, such as Ford, Fulbright, National Science, Rhodes, Woodrow Wilson. The Danforth Foundation is one of the nation's ten largest educational foundations. It was founded in 1927 by the late William H. Danforth, St. Louis, Mo., businessman and philanthropist. The Foundation's primary aim is to strengthen higher education through it own programs of fellowships and workshops, and through grants to colleges, universities and other educational agencies. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers MAKE GRIFF'S GOOD EATS A WEEKLY TREAT! 1618 W. 23rd LOOK FOR THE DRIVE-IN WITH THE RAINBOW COLORS! only 100% U.S. INSPECTED PURE BEEF HAMBURGERS 12¢ TASTY! NUTRITIOUS! SERVED PIPING HOT! MAKE GRIFF'S GOOD EATS A WEEKLY TREAT! 1618 W. 23rd LOOK FOR THE DRIVE-IN WITH THE RAINBOW COLORS! only 100% U.S. INSPECTED PURE BEEF HAMBURGERS 12¢ TASTY! NUTRITIOUS! SERVED PIPING HOT! TRIPLE TREAT FAVORITE HAMBURGER — FRENCH FRIES SHAKE — only 42¢ And Don't Favor GRiff's DOLPHIN BROWN. FRENCH FRIES only 10¢ FETTICIOUS TRIPLE THICK MALTS SHAKES 15¢ and 20¢ FOUNTAIN DRINK COFFEEMILK TRIPLE TREAT FAVORITE HAMBURGER — FRENCH FRIES SHAKE — only 42c And Don't Target CRISPS GOLDEN BROWN FRENCH FRIES and 10c DELICIOUS TRIPLE THICK MALTS and SHAKES 15c and 20c FOUNTAIN DRINK COFFEE MILK Friday, Oct. 12, 1962 Tryouts Next Week For German Play Tryouts for a German-language play will be held next Wednesday and Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in 341 Murphy Hall. The play, "Gesang Im Feuerofen," will be presented the last week of November in the Experimental Theatre. Producers said fluency in German will be more important than acting ability during tryouts. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts. Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER KU SPORTS on 7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts 5:00 Today In the Enemy Camp 5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports 1320 5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports One hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING (Before the Weekend) at 14th & Mass. STILL TIME It's Fast - It's Safe - It's Thrifty ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING THE MOST IN DRY CLEANING "Fresh as a Flower in Just 1-Hour" NOW NOW GUARD YOUR CAR AGAINST WINTER WEATHER GUARD YOUR CAR AGAINST WINTER WEATHER Potter's 66 6th & Michigan VI 3-9891 Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, Oct. 12, 1962 KU Chem Grants Exceed $500,000 KU chemistry department staff members this semester have received grants and fellowships totaling more than $513,711. The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) is the largest source, giving about $290,000. Of this, Paul W. Gilles, professor of chemistry, receives $103,500, the largest single grant in the department. Other sources are: the Air Force, $113,077; The Petroleum Research Fund, $60,850; The National Science Foundation, $61,807; University General Research Funds, $36,200; The National Institute of Arthritic and Metabolic Diseases, $12,211; The Sloan Foundation, $7,000; Smith, Kline and French (drug co.), $5,000; The American Petroleum Institute, $5,000, and Dow Chemical Co., $3.556. Saves Polish As House Burns MEMPHIS, Tenn. — (UPI) — Mrs. Haynes Bronson, fleeing her burning house yesterday, stopped long enough to grab a can of shoe polish. "I figured I had better save something," she said later. Superfluous Cats Irk Judge NEW YORK — (UPI) — Civil Court Justice Maurice Wahl ruled yesterday that Ethel Hunt be evicted from her apartment after Nov. 15 unless she "has disposed of these superfluous cats." The judge said that 25 pet cats in the retired schoolteacher's apartment were "23 cats too many." Coming Soon a mighty motion picture experience touch it...sense it feel it...you can't forget it! the Miracle worker Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 it! the miracle worker forget it! the miracle worker Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 GRANADA MOW SHOWING Ends Tonight 7:00 & 9 p.m. Bill Travers in "INVASION QUARTET" The Funniest Foursome That Ever Fouled Up Der Fuhrer VARSITY MOW SHOWING! Tonight & Saturday! Double Feature 7:00 & 9:20 "RING-A-DING RHYTHM" And At 8:15 Only "The WILD WESTERNERS" STARTS SATURDAY! A DARRYL F. ZANUCK PRODUCTION The Chapman Report The personal story behind a sex survey... The personal story behind a sex survey... from the controversial best-selling novel. STARRING SHELLEY WINTERS · JANE FONDA · EFREM ZIMBALIST, JR. CLAIRE BLOOM · GLYNIS JOHNS · GEORGE CUKOR SCREENPLAY BY PRODUCED BY WYATT COOPER and DON M. MANKIEWICZ RICHARD D. ZANUCK Based on the novel by IRWIN MADEE Music by Leonard Hoerman TECHNICOLOR® WARNER BROS. No one under 16 will be admitted unless accompanied by an adult. Saturday Matinee 2 p.m. Evening 7:00 & 9:15 WB Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 Sunday Continuous From 2:30 Adults 90c TONIGHT & SATURDAY "ARMORED COMMAND" and "MALAGA" Plus Two Bonus Features Saturday WARNER BROS. PRESENT THE C.V.WHITNEY PICTURE STARRING JOHN WAYNE in "THE SEARCHERS" VISTAVISION AND TECHNICOLOR CO-STARRING JEFFREY HUNTER·VERA MILES WARD BOND·NATALIE WOOD SCREEN PLAY BY FRANK S.NUGENT MERIAN C.COOPER PATRICK FORD DIRECTED BY JOHN FORD WB WARNER BROS. STARTS SUNDAY! SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE ... West on Highway 40 STARTS SUNDAY! One MIGHTIEST ADVENTURER OF THEM ALL! AN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL PICTURE IN CINEMASCOPE AND COLOR STARRING RORY CALHOUN YOKO TANI Music by LES BAXTER DIRCICTED BY HUGO FREGONESE A PANDA FILM PRODUCTION Used comp Hoov Pette For steree tablet to st Phor Sunday Cont. From 2:30 Adults 90c Children 50c VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-1065 Friday. Oct. 12. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 3.00.00.00. the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. FOR SALE Used electric vacuum cleaner with a complete set of attachments. $27.50. New Hoover tank for $39.50. Limited offer. Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. 10-18 For sale or trade: a Fairchild SM-1 stereo cartridge, Ked-O-Kut N-33H turn- table, Unconditioned arm. No money down units. Unconditionally guarded. Phone VI 3-8519. 10-12 3 bedroom house with a full basement Low interest GI loan. Phone VI S10- 10-11 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery, tf POST VERSALOG slide rule. Like new. Also a Norelle floating head electric shaver. Phone VI 3-0483 after 5 p.m. 10-17 Good 1860 Cushman motor scooter. See at 1522 Harper. 10-17 Professor selling '75 Karmen Ghia (sports basketball) men). Spotless throughout. VI 5-13 10-16 '53 MG TD in fine condition. New tires. new top, side wings, maintenance manual. low mileage. Phone Extension 357. 10-16 PETS; Three Sealpoint Siamese kittens, priced to sell. They are gentle, lovable and house-broken. Phone Mr. Hyde at VI 3-0148. 10-15 1959 Peugot in good operating condition. 1962 - 1-7022 after 6 p.m. weekends. 10-15 Tire! Tires! 1,000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes—most foreign brands. Tire Sale until Oct. 31st. 600-13 new style new tubeless snow tires. 2 for $25; 650-15. 2 for $39; 750-18. Installation at rear, Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. VI 3-4170 FM Radios! FM Stereos! Stereos! Largest stock in Lawrence all at discount prices. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. VI 3-4170. 10-19 ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS — New machines and a few rebuilt. All parts available and machines serviced. Established locally 24 years. F. V. Cox, Local Manager, 1904 Barker, Lawrence, Kansas. Phone VI 3-3277. 10-25 *TYPING PAPER BARGAINS; Pink* *typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow* *typing paper only 20c per ream.* *per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005* Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. *ff* 3-speed lightweight Royce Union bikes cut to $37.50 in men's or ladies. New 2-speed automatic Schwinns, $48.88. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Magazine, VI. 3-140. 10-16 Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tf HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop closest to lowest-Pet phone VI 52-830 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 16:30 pm week days. LOST from near bookstore — Calculus and Chemistry books and Notes, slide rule and other items. Reward for their return. No questions asked. John Trawler V 3-4711. 10-16 Lost wallet Friday night, Brown leather, contains ID, drivers license and important papers. Return to Mohamed Fati- 2816. Summerheld Hall or Call 10-16 Lost: a black Shaeffer fountain pen between Summerfield Hawklet and Fraser Hall on Monday morning, Oct. 8. Phone VI 3-8153. 10-15 TYPING Experienced secretary with electric type- er, Telecom Inc. in New York, Phone Nancy Coin at 11 Y-30824. fax: 516-749-1874 experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Requires Mrs. Barlow. 408 W. 15th. VI 26-28. Mrs. Bairlow. 408 W. 15th. VI 26-28. Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. V 3-0774. tf Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749. ti English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Nelisande Jones, VI 3-5267. 11-15 Typping reasonable rates, neat and accou- mable. Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greever Terre. Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greever Terre. Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlinger at VI 3-4409. tf Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651. tt Manuscripts, theses, and term papers. Also dissertations typed on wide carriage. Experience in education and sciences. Mrs Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. tt 1115 Mass. ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 2 bedroom ranch house, 2105 Tennessee largely living room with book shelves. Dining "L". Kitchen with disposal. Utility room. $85 a month. 1st six months rent downpayment if buying. Call VI 3- 7431. 10-19 FOR RENT Large furnished apartment with large closets. ½ block from campus. Private bath and entrance. Newly decorated. Phone II 2-3350 or VI 3-2263. 10-17 1 double and 1 single room with board in new home. Close to campus. Transportation furnished. Phone VI 3-7642 after 5 p.m. 10-16 3. room furnished modern apartment. Utilities paid. For one person $50 a month or $80 a month for 2 persons. Phone VI 3-2402. 10-16 Excellent location only $1_{2}$ block from campus. Split level apartment completely furnished. Paneled living room, 2 bedrooms, enclosed patio, 2 or 3 responsible students. Graduates preferred. Reasonable rent. $30 a month. Call for appointment at VI 3-6969. 10-12 Entire second floor furnished apartment with bathroom, fireplace, vaulted vate bath, clothes closet, wall storage, and air conditioning Close to KU and available now. For showing VI 3-9858 10-12 FOR RENT: Nicely furnished clean 3 room apartment. Private entrance and balcony. $80 a month with all bills paid. Bring couple. Phone VI 3-7830. 10-15 A modern garage apartment for 1 or 2 men. Very private with a snack bar in the kitchen and laundry room. A month. Utilities paid. Phone VI 3-3019. Also 2 lovely rooms vacant November 1. PARK PLAZA SO. INC. APARTMENTS - Couples - Singles - Furnished - Unfurnished - 20 Days Free Rent With 1-year Lease - Wall to Wall Closet Space * Carrying - Carpeting - Individual Controlled Heating - Lighted Off Street Parking - Water Paid Ph. VI 2-3416 or VI 2-1537 Office — 1912 W. 25th NEW! PRO-ELECTRIC ROLL-ON FIRST! BEFORE-SHAVE LOTION THAT RO No dripping, no spilling! Covers completely! Old Spice Pro-Electric protects sensitive skin areas from razor pull, burn. Sets up your beard for the cleanest, closest, most comfortable shave ever! 1.00 SHULTON Old Spice PRO-ELECTRIC ROLL-ON LOTION Sweet Taste A furnished house for couple with two children. Carter at age 12. 3229 for particulars. 10-15 Old Spice PRO ELECTRIC ROLL ON LOTION For rent, a lovely modern apartment. Phone VI 3-7819 by birth date. Phone VI S-37819 by 5 km. Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. ½ block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice and clean, see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. 3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block away. Mail resume to Jill Jones, paid. Come and see. 1142 University, if you need it. ROOMS FOR MEN: Doubles only, private entrance, private b a th, telephone and utilities paid. One block from Union. Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tf HELP WANTED Statistics tutor wanted. Please call after 5 p.m. at VI 2-3698. 10-15 Immediate vacancy for an ASCP registered medical technologist, 40 hour week, with vacation and sick leave. Laboratory, Watkins Memorial Hospital, IV: 3-4555. 10-18 Part time salesman, experienced, led immediately. Call Weaver's, VI. 6500 --- BUSINESS SERVICES It's your tapered shape and your hopsacking look that get me... New Highway Market located in base- ment of White School near Tee Pee punction. Fresh fruit, vegetables, meats, bread, milk, eggs, cigarettes at 25c a pack and cold drinks. Open 7 days a week. 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. 10-17 Ironing in my home. 10c a piece. 928 La. 10-17 Baby sitting $ \frac{1} {2} $ block east of campus. $ 2 a day and half price for 2nd child. References. Phone VI 3-2626. 10-17 Want washing and ironing in my home Want kids to be reasonable rates. Phone 3-01199. DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 9391% Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tf LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental. New and used portables, standards and electric. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. tf GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized diamonds, chameleons, channelions, turtles, guinea pigs plus., plus complete lists of pet supplies. PATRONIZE YOUR • ADVERTISERS • The Shoe of Champions --- Mother always told me to look for the blue label* JR Ked's 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 HUBBRA *Both U.S. Keds and the blue label are registered trademarks of United States Rubber Rockefeller Center, New York 20, New York Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday. Oct. 12. 1962 Equip Barn For Lewis The Big Barn, west of Lawrence, has been equipped with $2,500 worth of sound equipment and a $5,000 piano for Jerry Lee Lewis, a rock n' roll singer who will be featured at the Delta Chi barn party tonight. Lewis, his band, and his agent, Don Seat, will arrive in Lawrence from Des Moines, Ia., late this afternoon. Lewis has been on a barnstorming tour of the Midwest. During his shows Lewis has been known to rip the ivory off the piano or tear the carpet off the floors. The singer will give a minimum of three half-hour shows. Lewis' band—two drummers, three guitars and a saxophone—will play for four hours. Doors of the Big Barn will open at 7 p.m. The first performance will be at 8 p.m. Bill Anderson, Delta Chi ticket chairman, said that finding sufficient parking area for the crowd was the fraternity's biggest problem. "We're using a field that has never been used before. No parking will be allowed on the county road," Anderson said. Anderson said the fraternity had received orders for tickets from Pittsburg, Topeka and Kansas City. Approximately 100 tickets will be available at the door for $1.50. Business Student Wins Cash Award The first annual Solon E. Summerfield Senior Award in Business Administration has been awarded to Warren Richard Keller, Prairie Village senior, for his high scholastic achievement. The award, a $250 cash prize, was presented yesterday afternoon by acting Dean Wiley S. Mitchell at an Homors Coffee in the Kansas Union. The award is to be given each year by the Summerfield Foundation to the highest ranking senior in the School of Business, based on his grade point average in professional credit courses. Keller maintains a 2.95 grade average in business courses and a 2.74 overall. He is president of the Business School Council and of Alpha Kappa Psi, the professional business fraternity and was elected to membership in Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary scholastic society, during his junior year. IFC Hears Tape Plan A tentative plan to reach people in an eight state area with facts about KU fraternities was presented to the Interfraternity Council last night by Carl Martinson, IFC public relations chairman. Martinson said he had discussed plans with the new Radio Production Center to prepare an informational tape recording for release to radio stations in Kansas and seven surrounding states. But he emphasized that definite action is still far in the future. THE IFC, in other business, elected four representatives to the National Interfraternity Council convention to be held later this year. The four are James Carr, Carthage, Mo., senior, Delta Chi; Steve Stotts, Prairie Village junior, Beta Theta Pi; Alan Gribben, Parsons junior, Phi Kappa Psi, and David Stinson, Lawrence junior, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, announced a new system of registering pledges with his office. In the past, each pledge has signed a list in the Dean of Men's office. UNDER THE NEW system, fraternities will have a supply of pledge cards, which they will fill out and send to Alderson's office. The IFC also discussed Greek Week and possible changes in the present system of fall rush week. D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell KU-Y to Expand Guidance Program The KU-Y adolescent guidance program will expand to allow two KU students to work with each Lawrence child selected for the program. In the past, only one University student has been assigned to each child. The program is designed to help Foreign Student LIFE Picnic Is Set The Lawrence International Friendship Enterprise (LIFE) will sponsor a picnic for international students at 5 p.m. tomorrow at Potter Lake. The public is invited Riley Burcham, chairman of the LIFE program, said that people may drop in, have a picnic, then leave. All of KU's 366 foreign students have been invited. The picnic will be moved inside Allen Field House in the event of bad weather. LIFE is a Lawrence citizens' program set up last year to help international students attending KU. It has helped to locate housing for them and to introduce them to local residents. junior-high or elementary school students with problems of personal, social or academic nature. The KU student tries to help these children by giving them friendship. Terry Gilbert, Lawrence senior and co-chairman of the program, said that letting two students work with a child would increase the time the child could spend with an older friend. Children for this program are selected by junior high school guidance counselors, Dr. June Smith, director of special education for elementary schools in Lawrence and C. C. Rankin, judge of the Douglas County Court. "The program is not restricted to pre-delinquent children." Gilbert explained. "We have had some requests from parents to just be their child's friend." Gilbert said the KU student's influence on a child is subtle. "The counselor does not make a conscious effort to influence the child," he said. "But he does offer friendship and interest. "The children need someone to take an interest in them. "With perhaps one or two exceptions," Gilbert said, "every child has improved his school standing in either grades or attendance." Kansas Civil Rights Topic of KU Conference Discrimination in public accommodations and housing will be the two major topics of interest at tomorrow's Kansas Advisory Council on Civil Rights (KACCR) Conference. The conference, with registration from 8:30-9:30 a.m., will be held in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Official Bulletin Fulbright program deadline application grant for 1963-64 should be turned in to the Fulbright Adviser, 306 Fraser. Forms are still available at that office. TODAY Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. International Club. 8:00 p.m. Big 8 Room, Kansas Union. Business meeting followed by social hour, dancing and refreshments. TOMORROW International Students: The People-to-People-University sponsored Industrial Tour will leave at 8:15 a.m. today for WDAY Television Station and be americanized at Boston University, the FEMA institute at Potter Lake will be today from 5-7:00 p.m. at no cost to the student. Lutheran Student Association, 5.00 p.m. in the Cottonwood Room in the Kansas University campus. See the Quakers, the Language of Fees. It deals with pacifism. Discussion follows SUNDAY Kansas Attorney General William Ferguson and Frances Levenson, director of the National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing, will keynote the conference with speeches at 9:30 a.m. and 1:15 p.m. respectively. Both speeches will be discussed at an afternoon workshop. The KACCR was formed last May and is composed of various organizations and private citizens. THE REV. MR. Harold Statler, part-time KACCR treasurer and treasurer for the Kansas Council of Churches, said he believes the conference will provide a direction for future actions of the KACCR. One function of the Council, he said, is to recommend action to the state legislature. Mr. Statler said his organization has worked with the state's Commission on Civil Rights. KANSAS GOVERNOR John Anderson Jr., recently called for public support of the KACCR sponsored conference. "It would be my hope that this conference will be well attended by those interested in a fair and equitable solution to the problems of housing and public accommodations throughout the state," he said. For Speedy Delivery Call VI 3-0563 The PIZZA HUT CAROON Where Quality Reigns Supreme Free Delivery in Campus Area 9-19th—Mass.-lowa Here's Your Chance For a Free Vacation 14th & Tenn. Would you enjoy a free trip to Japan, Hawaii and the Philippines? If so, here's your opportunity. THREE MAJOR PARTS. one female and two male, are open for the University Players' production of "The Boy Friend," which will go on an eight-week foreign tour next May 18. Director Sidney Berger, assistant instructor of speech and drama, will hold auditions for these parts at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday and on Oct. 30 in the University Theatre Rehearsal Room in Murphy Hall. ANY KU STUDENT who will be available for the tour next summer is eligible to audition. For the winners, the trip is a certainty, Mr. Berger says. The tour will be sponsored by the United States Overseas (USO) organization. Interested students may contact Mr. Berger in 356 Murphy Hall, or call KU 268. Those who audition should be prepared to sing one song from a Broadway musical. America a 5-cent Nation? COFFEE SHOP Almost 45 per cent of the nickel used by the free world in 1961—about 225 million pounds—was consumed in the United States. The War Did It to Him Jack Benny, CBS Television Network comedy star, changed from violinist to comedian while in a U.S. Navy show during World War I Choose Your Flavor MALT OR SHAKE DAIRY QUEEN Tastes Better! 1835 Mass. DAIRY QUEEN Nationally Advertised → DAIRY QUEEN Nationally Advertised FRIDAY FLICKS Shows at 7 and 9:30 FRASER THEATER BEST PICTURE 9 ACADEMY AWARDS! GIGI in CinemaScope and Metrocolor LESLIE CARON MAURICE CHEVALIER LOUIS JOURDAN 35c admission—tickets for both shows on sale at Union on Friday till 6 p.m. and then at the door What is "The Flamingo?" - The Flamingo is the nicest place in Lawrence to dance and enjoy your favorite beverages. - The Flamingo is the place to have a really good time. Lots of dance area, plenty of room for over 150 people to have a truly "SWINGIN" time. - The Flamingo has the largest dance floor in Lawrence. 60t - The Flamingo is open to serve your favorite beverages till 11:45 p.m., but the band stays until...? - Come on out to The Flamingo, you'll be pleasantly surprised. "The Flamingo" 9th & Walnut features The Checkmates (Rock, Roll and Twist) Every Saturday TGIF on Friday PUSH North across Kaw River to the first street (Elm St.). Turn Right on Elm, follow Elm to end of road (Ninth St.). Turn Right one block. . Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Monday, Oct. 15, 1962 60th Year, No.22 Council Urges Tougher Civil Rights Measures By Bernard Henrie Unanimous adoption of two resolutions dealing with future civil rights legislation capped activities Saturday at a day-long conference on civil rights. Discrimination in public accommodations and housing were the two much discussed issues at the fourth annual conference sponsored by the Kansas Advisory Council on Civil Rights (KACCR) and a resolution was passed concerning each. Nearly 300 persons affirmed a resolution which gives the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights authority to administer the present state fair accommodations statute. Under the present Kansas fair accommodations statute is is a misdemeanor for a restaurant or hotel to refuse service for reasons of race. Enforcement of the statutes is presently in the hands of the county attorneys. The resolution asks that this enforcement policy remain the same, but also asks that the Kansas Civil Rights Commission be given co-enforcement authority. THE SECOND resolution proposes a law that will end discrimination by race, color, and creed in housing. The resolution also asks that a committee study fair housing laws in other states. Prior to adoption of the resolution, William Ferguson, Kansas attorney general, reviewed the civil rights record of Kansas. "Since 1874," Ferguson said, "It has been a misdemeanor in Kansas for the owner or manager of places of public accommodations, entertainment, or transportation to make a distinction because of race or color." Ferguson said Kansas was a pioneer in the area of civil rights and the state has made a great deal of progress but still has a long way to go. "Kansans are not a bigoted people." he said. "They have been doing things one way for a long time and they just need a little push to change." FERGUSON SAID he was still reviewing the statutes to see if taverns were included in the fair accommodations law if they sell consumable items other than beverages. He said a report on this question and the status of key clubs will be issued in the near future. Ferguson said he was not certain about the dividing line between a legitimate private club and one which charged a nominal 25-cent membership fee. He said those with nominal fees were using a subterfuge which should be investigated.' "THE LAW IS not well defined in this area," Ferguson said. "We will soon have some test cases and then I will be able to save more." Later, at a downtown hotel, Ferguson said his function as attorney general was to interpret the law — not make it. "I think most people in Kansas are law abiding," he said. "They just need reminders from time to time." He said direct police action instigated by the county attorney who is charged with enforcing the state's fair accommodations law is not always needed. "Sometimes a phone call to the offending party will take care of the matter," he said. "In all Anglo-Saxon countries," Ferguson said, "Certain individual rights are given up for the good of the whole. THE ROLE OF the county attorney is a key one, he said. If friendly persuasion fails, the attorney must decide whether or not to seek litigation, Ferguson added. "There is no way for one group to expand its civil rights except by placing restrictions of some kind on some other groups." Following Ferguson's talk, Donald O. Cowgill, professor and head of the sociology department at Wichita University, said America's image abroad was blurred by racial disorder. (Continued on page 12) SAMANTHA JACKSON AND JEREMY GILBERT CIVIL RIGHTS—Three principles at the fourth annual Kansas Conference on Civil Rights catch their breath after the Saturday session. From left to right, they are Miss Frances Levenson, keynote speaker; Ernest Russell, educational director Kansas Commission on Civil Rights; and Mrs. Nathan Shechter, chairman of the sponsoring Kansas Advisory Council on Civil Rights. Groups Clash On Wiggins Talk Is Warren W. Wiggins, Peace Corps official, wanted at the University of Kansas for an all student convocation? - The University committee on convocations and lectures says "no." - The University Peace Corps committee says "yes." - The Washington Corps office says "no, unless there is a convocation insuring a sizeable attendance." - Approximately 1500 students say "yes." THE 1500 students have signed petitions which may reverse a decision of the University convocations committee. The petitions are in opposition to a recent convocations committee decision which ruled out an all-student convocation during Peace Corps Week, Oct. 29-Nov. 2. The KU Peace Corps committee invited Wiggins after they received word Sargent Shriver, Peace Corps director would be unable to attend. Robert Swan, Topeka junior and chairman of the KU Peace Corps committee, said: "THUS FAR, the results of the petitions are as favorable as the Corps committee predicted. We have circulated petitions in relatively few organized living groups, but if what we have seen is any sampling, we should have no trouble gaining 3500 more names this week." Swan said International Club members and KUY officers endorsed the convocation. Other students who have signed are mainly dormitory residents and married students. In a Friday telephone conversation with Swan, Sam Babbitt, University division director of the Peace Corps' public affairs office in Washington, said his office is "hesitant" to send Wiggins to KU unless there is an all student convocation. Swan said: "BABBITT SAID neither he nor the Washington office wanted to appear pushy about a convocation. However, Babbitt did feel Wiggins warranted an all-student convocation since Wiggins will be the acting director of the entire Corps program the last of October." Debate Probes Abortion Problem A greater degree of flexibility in abortion laws was favored by Professor L. C. R. Agnew, chairman of the department of medical history, at the English-style debate on "Legalized Abortion" held last Friday. Mrs. Hermia Kaplan, Lawrence senior in law who has done special research on the legal aspects of abortion, argued that abortion should not be legalized since most reasons for wanting an abortion are socio-economic. THE KU-Y sponsored annual debate, moderated by Hoite Caston, Independence senior, brought forth applause, laughter and some hissing at times. Members of the audience changed sides to indicate their preference, pro or con. Prof. Agnew said a therapeutic abortion now can only be given when a doctor believes the condition of pregnancy is detrimental to the mother's health. He said such cases warranting an abortion are a weak heart that might cause death in the stress of labor, diabetes and emotional factors. Explaining emotional factors as a reason for abortion, he gave an example in the case of rape where having the mother would cause the mother extreme mental anguish. "As far as thalidomide is concerned," Prof. Agnew said, "I think most doctors are now in favor of aborting under this condition." She referred to a study which was made in Sweden of 84 women who underwent abortion. MRS. KAPPLAN, arguing against legalized abortion, said the reasons for abortion given by American women are economic. "More than 50 per cent after their abortion were not happy," she said. "Their feelings ranged from those who could not talk about it, to open or suppressed guilt, to a point where the mental health was affected." She asserted that the fault for these problems lies mostly with Mr. Johnson said the debate was really on whether to expand legally permitted abortion, since it is already permitted where the mother's health is endangered. He said that abortion is properly an individual matter, and that the law should stay out. society, but that no society can make the moral judgment to take a legal saving in abortion. He thought the present laws discriminatory, and said the rich can and do get illegal abortions, under much safer conditions than most people can afford. He said that a leading cause of infant deaths is beatings by parents. "This is not restricted to class," Johnson said. "The explanation is that parents are emotionally disturbed. Studies show that most of these children are unwanted in the first place." DR. WILCOX stressed in the discussion after the debate that all women have doubts about whether they want to have their baby. "If a mother has an abortion, she may change her mind later and wish she had her baby. This can cause extreme anguish." He explained some of the medical aspects of abortion, saying that there are two kinds: spontaneous, or natural, and induced. Induced cases are either criminal or legal. He said that the vast majority of mothers are healthy; that if children are not wanted, he would rather sterilize than births. He felt that there are some legitimate reasons for abortion, but that abortions per se should not be legalized. IN THE QUESTION and answer session after the debate, members of the audience expressed concern with the religious problems and moral issues involved. International Club members discussed abortion with the respect to overpopulation in some countries. Debate chairman Hubert Granger, Leawood junior, estimated that 600 persons attended. KU Committee Denies Permission On Singers The University Committee on University Events denied permission Friday for Arnold Air Society and Angel Flight to bring Peter, Paul and Mary, folk singers, to KU for a concert later this year. Emily Taylor, dean of women and chairman of the committee, said permission was refused because of a University policy prohibiting students to use University facilities in money-making projects. John Gasperich, Sand Springs, Okla., senior and commander of Arnold Air Society, said, "I think the University has a basic right to regulate things like this, but I don't think they should set up arbitrary rules. MEMBERS OF THE TWO groups criticized the decision. "Any group that can financially support such a venture should be allowed to do so." Reuben McCornack, Abilene junior and a member of Arnold Air Society, said, "I think it's an unfair decision. SUA shouldn't be allowed to administer all these events. I think any group that wants to sponsor a concert should be allowed to do so. The whole thing should be administered through student government." Carolyn Toews, Inman senior and Commander of Angel Flight, said she did not like the decision, but declined further. DEAN TAYLOR said permission to use University facilities for entertainment events will be granted only if: - The membership of the organization sponsoring the event is open to all students. - The admission prices are as low as possible, consistent with a balanced budget. - All profits, if any, are used for the benefit of the student body as a whole. THE POLICY is an amplification of the policy which had been in effect for years, Dean Taylor said. In the past, all that was necessary was for a group to submit a report to the committee, and to show that the profits would be used for the good of the entire student body. There was no qualification that the group's membership had to be open to everyone. In effect, this gives the University, the KU-Y, and Student Union Activities a virtual monopoly on all entertainment events on campus featuring off-campus performers. DEAN TAYLOR said the University has no objection if the event is held off-campus as when rock 'n roll singer Jerry Lee Lewis appeared at the Big Barn Friday. Lewis was sponsored by Delta Chi fraternity. "We are not trying to stifle anyone's initiative, but there are just too many groups on campus to allow everyone to sponsor events like this. We have to draw the line somewhere," Dean Taylor said. She said, "If any group wishes to sponsor any event, it must request permission from the committee. Arnold Air Society and Angel Flight, the two organizations that wanted to sponsor Peter, Paul and Mary, planned to use the proceeds from the concert to take the members of the two groups to their National Conclave in Buffalo, New York. GASPERICH SAID that the Society's chapter at Oklahoma State University took their membership to Los Angeles last year for the Rose Bowl. The chapter sponsored an appearance by Bob Hope on the O-State campus to help finance the trip. "We want to go to conclave," Gasperich said. "With 40 people from KU there, I'm sure we could al- (Continued on page 12) Page 2 University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 15, 1962 LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler Convicted Without Trial There's an old idea held in great esteem throughout the United States that one is innocent until proven guilty. Apparently this doesn't hold true for KU. Last week, KU students were judged guilty of being so apathetic and so completely wrapped up in themselves that they wouldn't take an hour to hear one of the top Peace Corps officials. THEY WERE JUDGED guilty—without any trial whatsoever—by the KU committee on convocations, which turned down a request by the KU Peace Corps committee for a convocation during the week of Oct. 29 to Nov. 2. This will be the first week of the KU Peace Corps training project. Sixty-five KU faculty members will be directing the training program, which will be attended by 41 Peace Corps volunteers from throughout the United States. These volunteers will be taking their U.S. training at KU before leaving for service in Costa Rica. The proposed convocation would have provided a fitting climax to Peace Corps week, which will include films, displays, forums, debates and speeches. THE SPEAKER would have been Warren W. Wiggins, who will become acting director of the Peace Corps late this month when Director Sargent Shriver will leave for a trip to Africa. Raymond Nichols, KU vice chancellor and chairman of the convocations committee, told the Daily Kansan the committee would have authorized a convocation if Shriver could have been the featured speaker. He said the committee felt that there would be an embarrassingly small turnout to hear Wiggins. We don't agree with this pre-judgment of KU students. The Peace Corps has attracted wide attention throughout the world with the work accomplished in the short time it has been in operation. Many of its volunteers have been collegeage people. It has received the interest of students in universities throughout the nation and has attracted a number of volunteers from KU. THE USUAL INTEREST IN the Peace Corps at KU will be increased during this particular week because of the other Peace Corps week activities, including the start of KU's Peace Corps training project. This project will train volunteers for service in Costa Rica, with which KU has had a study exchange program for years. The KU Peace Corps committee, to its credit, did not accept this pre-judgment of KU students. It immediately began circulating petitions to persuade the convocations committee to reconsider its ruling. Several members of the convocations committee said they will be willing to reconsider the issue if a sufficient number of signatures are on the petition. By yesterday evening, we understand, approximately 1,500 signatures had been collected. The committee plans to try to get at least 4,000. IT WAS STATED that the University would be embarrassed if a convocation were held and only 1.000 students attended. This is true. But the University should be even more embarrassed if it did not allow KU students the opportunity to attend the convocation in the first place. Clayton Keller Justice For An Odd Job Man Down in southeast Kansas, in a town called Chetopa, there was a man named Richard A. Walker. He hadn't committed a crime for 15 years, but he was taken to prison. Walker, an unemployed odd job and farm worker, was convicted of robbing a streetcar of $12 some 20 years ago and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. He served five years and then escaped from a prison work farm. AFTER HIS ESCAPE 15 years ago, Walker lived an inconspicuous life. As the Labette County undersheriff put it, "Walker never caused anybody any trouble." But he was taken back to jail. Walker, a 54-year-old father of seven, hadn't established himself as a leader of the community. In fact, he had done very little except try to provide for his family. The escapee married in 1948 and had one child by that marriage before his wife died. He then married a widow with three children, and the couple had three more children. Everybody around the Chetopa area liked their "odd job man." TO MOST KU STUDENTS, content in their campus security, the question of Richard A. Walker is an unimportant one. But there is a basic question involved: When has a man repaid his debt to society? When has he met the requirements to again become a citizen? We have a penal system which says that when a convicted criminal has served his sentence, he has repaid his debt to society. Yet in many cases the "ex-con" leaves the institution only to return after a short time. This "ex-con" has not been rehabilitated. Perhaps he was never meant to be. Then what is the purpose of our penal institutions? Do they exist to dole out punishment, or do they exist to rehabilitate? If they do not exist for the latter, our society is ill. AND SO BACK to the man we know and care little about, Richard A. Walker. Has he served his debt to society? He has not broken a law for 15 years. He is married and has a family of seven. Commenting on his arrest, his wife Jean can only say, "I still love him." Walker himself says, "I have something that would keep any man straight—my family." If there is such a thing as justice in this nation Walker will not be forced to remain in prison. The decision, however, is not ours; it is that of the courts. But to deny this man the freedom and responsibility he has proved he is willing to accept would be a desecration of the very principles of justice of a free society. Arthur C. Miller Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newsnaner Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Richard Bonett, Dennis Farney, Zeke Wigglesworth, and Bill Mullins, assistant Managing editors; Mike Miller, City Editor; Steve Clark, Sports Editor; Margaret Cathcart, Society Editor. NEWS DEPARTMENT Managing Editor Clayton Keller and Bill Sheldon Co-Editorial Editors BUSINESS DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Charles Martinache...Business Manager Dan Meek, Advertising Manager; Doug Farmer. Circulation Manager; Gene Spaulding, National Advertising Manager; Bill Woodburn, Classified Advertising Manager; Jack Cannon, Promotion Manager. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Short Ones Judging from the number of paddles in evidence, the frats are leaving no stern untoned in their search for conformity from the pledges. —Bob Hoyt It is simply not possible for small oases of prosperity in the world to continue to exist amidst vast deserts of poverty without engendering storms that might engulf those oases. —B. K. Nehru The mind is its own place and of itself can make a hell of heaven, a heaven of hell. —Milton The price of justice is eternal publicity. —Enoch Arnold Bennett America is a land where a citizen will cross the ocean to fight for democracy — and won't cross the street to vote in a national election. Bill Vaughan © COCOOAT AND NORTHEAST CITY "ARE YOU SUPE THIS IS WHAT THEY MEAN BY HIGHER EDUCATION?" It Looks This Way An Expensive Plaything Waste in the United States foreign aid program is something like the weather—everyone talks about it, but no one does anything about it. This may be in for some revision. Last week Congress cut almost a billion dollars from what the President had requested for foreign aid. Foreign aid programs have never been popular with many Americans, and those who oppose them most vociferously have often been accused of being reactionaries or die-hards who fail to realize the importance of this instrument of foreign policy. IN THE HOUSE RECENTLY it was brought out that more than $3 million in foreign aid funds were used to buy an air-conditioned yacht for Emperor Haile Selasse of Ethiopia. No doubt the gift of the yacht had political overtones of some sort which, stripped of euphemism, amounts to blackmail by, or bribery of, a despot. This money came from American taxpayers to buy a plaything for an emperor. If our big taxpayers footed the bill, it cost 300 of them $10,000 each. If it came out of taxes paid by the little man, it took 10,000 paying $300 each to buy this amusing little trinket. This outrage should not be allowed to negate the value of other aid programs in the eyes of the American taxpayers, but it is an insult to the intelligence of the American people if they are expected to overlook such flagrant abuses in the handling of their money. WE HAVE BEEN GENEROUS with our foreign aid. Most Americans realize that in the end we benefit by helping our less fortunate neighbors, and most are realistic enough to realize that we must always tolerate a certain amount of corruption. But it is asking a little too much for the taxpayers to swallow this $3 million pill without some grumbling. We have many places we could use that three million dollars within our own country. Bob Hoyt the took world APE AND ESSENCE, by Aldoux Husley (Bantam Classics, 60 cents). TOMORROW!, by Philip Wylie (Popular Library, 50 cents). These books are herein paired because of their prophetic themes. It is doubtful that the first is a classic, no matter what Bantam wants to call it. And the second—well, it has become outdated by knowledge of fallout. S S Take the Wylie book first. It takes place in an atomic war which destroys the great cities of America, and eventually Russia. There is a lesson here. One city, which believed in Civil Defense, survives. The other (let's say that the two could be Minneapolis and St. Paul), which didn't, is devastated. It's swift-moving and really quite ordinary and not nearly so critical of American society as the younger Wylie was known to be. Now, as for "Ape and Essence," this pretends to be a screenplay by one William Tallis, but a screenplay never produced. It takes place in southern California centuries after atomic warfare has pretty well taken care of everybody except the folks in New Zealand. It is a civilization in which sex is regulated, chiefly because the products of sexual encounters are likely to be six-fingered monstrosities. Those who know Mr. Huxley's fantasies can depend on "Ape and Essence" being horrifying, shocking, and amusing. But great book—no.—CMP Monday. Oct. 15, 1962 University Daily Kansan JAMES MAN Page 3 Social Rules to Be Strictly Enforced The All-Student Council Social committee is asking all organised house social chairmen to adhere closely to the University's social regulations or face fines for violations. Richard Keeler, Bartlesville senior and ASC social committee chairman, said that there have been a number of spontaneous house functions that have not been registered. "From now on, we will treat these spontaneous parties as unregistered," Keeler said. The minimum fine for failure to register a social function is $15. Keeler also said that the committee is interviewing all social chairmen whose organizations have barn parties or parties outside Douglas County planned. He said that emphasis is being placed on not driving under the influence of intoxicating beverages. KEELER CAUTIONED social chairmen to register any house function three days before it is to be held. He said this includes serenades, pinning parties and any other social gathering where two organized houses participate. The ASC social regulations define a function as any function that is not limited to members only, that utilizes the means of the organization (planning, finances, name or any combination of these) and that employs social media (entertainment, refreshments, etc.). - No function may be held past 8:30 p.m. Sunday through Thursday unless authorized by the ASC Social Committee. - OTHER 1962 social regulations include: - Friday and Saturday dances and parties are authorized until closing hours. - Parties held at hours other than those stated above must be authorized by the ASC social committee. - Serenades must be registered in the Dean of Women's office. - Pinning serenades may be registered until 5 p.m. on the day of the serenade in the Dean of Women's office. - Functions held beyond the confines of the county must be specially authorized by the ASC social committee - All registrations must include destinations. - There are no regulations on the number of groups serenading per night unless there is extreme duplication. group to be serenaded should always be notified well in advance. - All serenading must stop at 1 - The resident director of the - For two weeks before Christmas vacation, Christmas parties are authorized on week-days past 8:30 p.m., if they are properly registered in the Dean of Women's office and AWS closing hours are observed. - All functions held during the period beginning seven days prior to the first day of final week must be authorized by the ASC social committee. - Failure to register a social function . . . minimum fine of $15. - Late registration of a social - ● Late registration of a social function . minimum fine of $5. - Other and further action for violation of standards is determined by the Social Committee. - Failure to comply with a decision of the Social Committee will result in loss of social privileges for a length of time to be determined by the committee. - Money collected through these fines shall be used as a scholarship to be awarded at the end of the year. - A house or organization so fined will be notified by the ASC Social Committee. - The organization, through its officers, is responsible for carrying out the above decisions and reporting violations. - If the organization so desires, it may appeal a decision of the Social Committee. Information as to correct procedures can be obtained at the Dean of Women's offices. - The University expects students to abide by commonly accepted standards of social conduct. Failure to comply with these standards will be subject to review by the Social Committee. University conduct standards for social functions are: The University policy on liquor is as follows: "The University of Kansas does not permit the consumption or possession of alcoholic beverages at any University function of whatever nature on the campus; in or on the premise of any organized house; nor in the possession of or consumption by students in their rooms in private residences. "Above all else, the University expects its students to abide by accepted standards of social conduct. Evidence of intoxication will be considered a serious offense." KU Chorale Will Have 25 Members This Year The KU Chorale will be made up of 25 students for the 1962-63 year. ALTOS are Carol Cease, Ogden, Utah, graduate student; Carolyn Parkinson, Scott City senior; Nancy Marcy, Scott City sophomore; Ann Krzetmezier, Liberal senior; Neva J. Brockman, Salina senior, and Jeanne Maxwell, Mission junior. SOPRANOS are Ineta Williams, Wichita sophomore; Joanne Randall, Aberdeen, S.D., senior; Doris Peterson, Reading freshman; Joyce Mitchell, Kansas City city; Martha Shirley, Mankato junior, and Betty Schultz, O'Neill, Neb., senior. Students are chosen through competitive tryouts and are selected for unusual ability. Membership in the group is extracurricular and offers no academic credit. Members are as follows. TENORS are Dingwall Fleary, St. Louis, Mo., senior; F. Paul Young, Jones, M. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Shawnee senior; Marvin Crocker, Lawrence senior; Nelson Stump, McPherson senior; David Holloway, Gas City junior; Thomas L. Winston, Dallas, Tex., senior, and Robert Johnson, Kansas City graduate student. BASSES are Anthony Bengel, Independence junior; Richard Taylor, Leawood junior; Roger Morrison, Salina sophomore; Malcolm Smith, Lawrence sophomore; Donald Grant, Kansas City junior, Tom Schroeder, Ellinon senior. YELLOW CAB CO VI 3-6333 24 Hour Service Owner Radio Controlled Ward Thompson Stay bright. Fight drowsiness and be at your brilliant best with Verv continuous action alertness capsules, Effective, safe, not habit-forming. Weaver Weaver's 105TH ANNIVERSARY SALE REGISTER DAILY for FREE Door Prizes SAVE 20% to 50% on all anniversary items COFFEE and COOKIES Served Daily on our 3rd Floor an amazing 29.95 value! fine fidelity transistor radio 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 Including: - 6-transistor radio, 5" long x $ 3\frac{1}{2} $ "high, easy-read dial. - velvet-lined cowhide carrying case. - dynamic earphone. Street Floor - cowhide earphone case and cord. 100% $17.99 famous name . . . men's sport shirts save 1.96, reg. 5.95 $3.99 Beautifully tailored! Solid shades of Fall and assorted patterns in sizes S, M, L, XL. Street Floor M C men's cardigan sweaters Reg. 12.95 $8.99 Button front or zip front cardigans in solid and novelty weaves. All wool or orlon. S, M, L, XL. A sure investment for every man's campus wardrobe. Street Floor Page 4 University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 15, 1962 MAG PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE—LIFE PICNIC—Conversing over a picnic table (left to right) Reilly Burcham, LIFE president; William Schaefer, Shawnee Mission junior and chairman of KU People-to-People, and Joyce Hall, president of the Hallmark Foundation, discuss the Saturday evening picnic at Potter Lake. Crowd of 325 Attend Picnic Sponsored by LIFE and P-T-P Hot dogs, Joyce Hall of Kansas City, Mo., and the "Beta Balladeers" set the theme for the second annual LIFE and People-to- People picnic Saturday evening. Approximately 325 American and foreign students and Lawrence residents attended the picnic. William Schaefer, Shawnee Mission junior and KU P-t-P chairman, described the turnout as a "pleasant improvement over last year's attendance." THE LAWRENCE International Friendship Enterprise (LIFE) was started last year to welcome foreign students to Lawrence and to the University. Reilly Burcham is president of the organization. Joyce Hall, president of the Hallmark Foundation in Kansas City, Mo., told the group that Lawrence and the University should be proud of their work with foreign students. He said: "THE ENTIRE People-to-People program began at the University of Kansas one year ago. Now mainly KU graduates and former KU students are spreading People-to-People across the nation. "I hope you sense your responsibility, and I hope you give other campuses a program which they cannot duplicate. It's an exciting thing for the University and Lawrence to be so internationally aware." The evening's entertainment was provided by an Alpha Phi singing group and three folk singers, "The Beta Theta Pi Balladeers." Actors Needed for Roles In 'The Boy Friend' The director of last year's University Players production of "The Boy Friend" is looking for fresh new talent to fill vacancies in the cast. "Boy Friend" will make an all-expenses-paid tour to Hawaii, Japan and the Philippines next summer. Auditions for four male roles and one female role will be held at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Rehearsal Room below the stage of the University Theatre. Those interested may call the director, Sidney Berger, at his office, 355 Murphy Hall, KU 268. "THE BOY FRIEND" is a British musical comedy, a spoof of the "tittering twenties" in England. fect young ladies" of the Villa Caprice. The vacancies are for the young male comic lead, Bobby van Husen; two Frenchmen, Alphouse and Marcel, his friends; Lord Brockhurst, father of the male romantic lead and a funny, lecherous old man, and Dulcie, one of the shrieking "per- ALL OF THESE characters must be able to sing, loudly if not necessarily well, the director said, and all except Lord Brockburst must be able to learn dancing routines appropriate to the 20's era. All who audition should come prepared to sing one song from a Broadway musical or a similar-type popular song. Those who have studied dancing should bring dancing clothes, but one need not have studied dancing to audition, Mr. Berger said. ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass. THANKS STUDENTS For Making Our Anniversary the Best Ever! SANDY'S Thrift and Swift Drive-in Hamburgers French Fries 15c 10c ACROSS FROM HILLCREST Bank Shows Work Of KU Painter APPROXIMATELY 200 people, coming from areas as far as Wichita and Kansas City, attended the opening. Rich coloring and scenes with realistic likenesses were received with admiration and appreciation by the visitors. Twenty-four paintings by Raymond Eastwood, professor of drawing and painting and chairman of the KU art department, were presented in the opening of an art exhibit Sunday afternoon in the Kaw Valley State bank at Eudora. By Helen Coburn The bank features a continuing art program, with last year's exhibits showing paintings by Robert Sudlow and Robert Green, associate professors of drawing and painting, and William Wright, Lawrence graduate student. Prof. Eastwood has exhibited at the National Academy of Design, Pennsylvania Water Color Society, New York Worlds Fair, Allied Artists of America, and in all regional shows in this vicinity. The paintings by Prof. Eastwood are a collection of landscapes, sand dunes, marine, desert scenes and still life. Prof. Eastwood, a native of Bridgeport, Conn., is best known for his paintings of Cape Cod sand dunes, which for twenty years he returned to paint. In recent years he has done an increasing number THE ARTIST, who came to teach for one year at KU in 1922, has been here ever since, except for three years in the air force. While serving, he received a diploma in photography. Prof. Eastwood was a student at Yale University and studied with Du Mond, E.C. Taylor, and Ossip Linde. When he came to KU to teach, there were three studios. There are now eight studios. of paintings on Kansas landscapes and deserts of the southwest, with emphasis on cloud formations. Japanese Politician To Talk With Kennedy HIS WORK is represented in permanent collections of the University of Kansas, Wichita Art Association, Kansas State University, Philbrook Art Center, Baker University, University of Tulsa, Pittsburg State College and Cornell University. The art exhibit will be on display at the Eudora bank each day during banking hours until Nov. 10. TOKYO — (UPI) — Eisaku Sato, the man considered most likely to become the next prime minister of Japan, will arrive in the United States tomorrow on a world tour which already has included meetings with West Europe's leaders. Sato, 61, plans to go to Washington for talks with President Kennedy and Secretary of State Dean Rusk. One of the most influential members of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, Sato also is one of its most pro-American and anti-Communist leaders. SATO IS THE younger brother of former Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi (Kishi was adopted by an uncle) and heads the largest faction in the ruling party which is divided into a number of "clubs." The second largest "club" is led by Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda, and the third by Kishi. Sato is on a private world tour. He resigned his post cabinet as minister of international trade and industry last July in protest against Ikeda's policy toward the left-wing opposition. Ikeda has shied away from a head-on battle with the leftists in both his domestic and foreign policies. SATO'S RIVALS have accused him of being too pro-American. But his supporters maintain Sato is primarily a nationalist and recall that he criticized the United States when it tightened restrictions on the import of Japanese goods into America. Sato has made no secret of his belief in close cooperation between the United States and Japan. As finance minister in the Kishi cabinet, he helped push through parliamentary ratification of the controversial U.S.-Japan security treaty over oftenviolent leftist opposition. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers FREE DELIVERY Call before 4. Delivered after 5 $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 POWER-KNIT COOPER DRUG Only Jockey T-shirts are Power-Knit to keep their fit The image is too blurry to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be a close-up of someone sitting on a bench with their back facing the camera. The Jockey Power-Knit T-shirt is *man*-tailored . . . from the exclusive nylon reinforced Seamfree® collar that stays snug and smooth . . . to the extra-long tail that stays tucked in. It's Power-Knit with extra top-grade combed cotton yarn to take the roughest kind of wear a man can give it . . . and still not bag, sag or stretch out of shape. It is a Jockey . . . $150 the man's T-shirt . . . Power-Knit to keep its fit. Jockey BRAND Jockey POWER-KNIT T-SHIRTS © BRAND COPPER'S, INC Technology Technology Technology GOOPER'S, INCORPORATED, KENOSHA, WISE. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers M A Open Every Evening L Safeway S S Key Rexall Drugs H 7 O G C T. G. & Y. ACME Laundry & Cleaners Speed-Wash N Western Auto Malls Barber Shop R Ronnie's Beauty Salon Little Banquet Kief's Record & Hi-Fi Count Down House Maupintour Travel Peggy's Gifts & Cards Elms Sinclair Service Shop Evenings 32. 2 Page 5 HousingCalledKey To Desegregation Residential segregation or desegregation will ultimately decide the problem of race relations, the keynote speaker at the Kansas Conference on Civil Rights said Saturday. "THE ULTIMATE challenge we face." said Miss Frances Levenson, director of the National Committee Against Discrimination in Housing, "is a question of residential segregation or desegregation." She said that unless we can "knock down false barriers" in housing we have no call for optimism concerning future race relations. "OUR REAL GOAL" she said, "is an administration-backed law which would end discrimination in housing." Miss Levenson called upon President Kennedy to use "a stroke of the pen" and issue an executive order denoting a strong moral commitment. Miss Levenson stressed the key role of the government, pointing to covenants in the Federal Housing Agency's (FHA) underwriter's handbook, which told builders to guard against "inharmonious racial uses" but named no actual race group. "Instead," Miss Levenson said, "the handbook said that the racial groups not to mixed varied in different parts of the country." In 1848 the covenants were held unenforceable by the Supreme Court and dropped from the hand-book. "THE PHILOSOPHY of the covenants is what we are trying to break down today," Miss Levenson said. She said that a basic assumption of the covenants was that when Negroes move into an area the property values go down. "THE USE OF PROPERTY determines value," she insister, "not the race of the owner." Miss Levenson noted seven general effects of fair housing laws in - The fair housing laws result in a gradual movement of middle class Negro and other minority families into the mainstream of the housing market and into areas they select and can afford, but previously closed to them. - states where these laws have been in force for at least three years. - Although laws cannot change morals, a statute does provide a framework of public ethic which influences the moral tone of the community. - The law serves as an educational force and gives order and haste to the effort to end housing discrimination. - The law makes it possible for the real estate broker to sell homes to whomever he pleases without risking criticism. Real estate men know, Miss Levenson said, that they can make more money if they do business with everyone, but many are afraid of economic reprisals if they are the first in their community to sell a Negro a home in an all-white neighborhood. - No revolutionary changes in housing patterns take place when states adopt fair housing legislation. There is no inundation of neighborhoods and there is no mass exodus. Dispersion proceeds at a gradual pace. - Broad coverage and efficient enforcement are musts if the fair housing law is to be meaningful. - There is no disruption of the real estate industry. Construction has not declined and values have not dropped. Interest in this problem is growing, she said. And though the picture is not too good she said that there was no reason to abandon hope. "A sizable minority concerned about discrimination and with a desire to do something to end it will transfer that desire into action," he said. Registration For Women's Rush Tomorrow at Strong Plan ahead. That is what freshman women who are considering participation in women's rush must do. ALTHOUGH RUSH will not be held until the end of the semester, those wishing to participate must register between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. tomorrow at the dean of women's office, 212 Strong Hall. In Kansan interviews, sorority members who were "rushed" last spring gave their opinions and observations of rush. "It's just an experience every girl should go through," one member said. "It's very hectic and you get very tired of smiling, but you meet a lot of people and get to know the girls on the hill better." Her opinion was echoed by others. "It's interesting," one said, "because you meet a lot of girls and make friends even if you don't pledge." "YOU DON'T HAVE much opportunity to meet people, except in class," another commented. "Now I meet kids all the time that I got acquainted with during rush." "We had transportation the first day," a sorority pledge explained. "We were grouped alphabetically and went to all the houses with the same group. But after that, we were on our own. On the first day of rush, the rushees will visit each sorority house for about 10 minutes. "THE BIGGEST PROBLEM," she continued, "was getting back and forth. It seems like I went from the Theta and Kappa houses to West Hills and back three or four times. I did a lot of running." she confided, "I thought it (rush) was great, another plea, said enthusiastically. "Before rush, I was nervous. I didn't know what it was like, but the actives (initiated members of the sorority) were real friendly and put us at case. The parties seemed just like 'regular' parties, talking to the other girls. I had a completely good time." Trees, Buildings Shade Sundial ANOTHER WOMAN didn't have very much time to get the litters. How do the rushees feel when they receive their bids? "I JUST SCREAMED and ran out in the hall. I couldn't calm down for quite a while. "I was gone on a ski trip," she said, "and got back just a half hour before I was to go to the first party." Much laughter has been heard around campus lately in the case of the half-rediculous, half-pathetic case of the sundial hidden from the sun. "I don't know how many girls were trying to call out, but I got to a pay phone first. I guess I'm just a fast runner," one member said. "All the girls were calling their parents or boy friends." Yet another said, "Somehow all of us who had 'made' the same house managed to get together at the dorm, and we ran over to the house. Another said, "Everybody asked everybody else what they were going to pledge. There wasn't much disappointment on our floor. Almost everyone pledged." This broken timepiece stands between Dyche and Green Halls, hidden by a healthy growth of shrubs and trees. "The girls sang to each of us as we arrived. We stood on a table top and they all sang and clapped. "I called home, but since I had to wait at the dorm, I went on over to the house and called from the Union." Why, ask students, did anyone brother to build a sundial in the shade? Can this be a monument to the intelligent, clear-thinking mind that four years at the University can develop? The sundial, a gift from the class of 1899, was erected in full view of the sun. The closest building to it was Fraser Hall. But in 1902, Dyche Hall was built and three years later, Green Hall was completed, ending the sundial's days in the sun. Far better to have stocked Potter's Lake with fish and neglected the water. Mrs. A. T. Walker of Lawrence, a member of the class of 1899, commented that the dial has always been in bad repair, despite repeated efforts to keep it in good shape for the annual commencement. Keith Lawton, vice chancellor in charge of grounds, said he didn't know the sundial was broken, but he would get it fixed. Despite the promised repair of the time indicator on the dial, a shadow still hangs over the sundial. It remains, then, to students to restore the half-hidden antique to its place in the sun. Official Bulletin Fulbright program deadline application ment grants for 1963-64 should be turned in to the Fulbright adviser, 206 Fraser, by 17. Forms are still available at that office. International students who would like to discuss home hospitality plans for all or part of the Thanksgiving vacation should see Dr. Coan, 228 Strong Hall. Chemistry Colloquium, 4 p.m. 233 Ma- rket Building, 1506 N. 8th St., New York, *"Studies in Conformational Analysis"* [www.colloquium.org/colloquium/ TODAY Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Le Cerule Français se reunitra mercedri à 16 heures 30 dans la salle one de Fraser. M. Gautipeau fera une causeur; le cerule contemporaire. Tous ceux qui s'interessent en français son cordialement invites. The School of Fine Arts will present Karel Blaas, associate professor of viola and theory, in recital tonight at 8 in Swartout Recital Hall. Prof. Blaas is a violinist with the KU String Quartet. The program will include Sonata in B flat by Vivaldi, Duo for Viola and Harp by Quincy Porter, Sonatina by John Rerrall, and Sonata No. 1 by Darius Milhaud. Admission to all of the Faculty Concerts is open to the public without charge. Have You Visited the "COBWEB" at the BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. University Daily Kansan D D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell Student apathy was dealt a severe blow today. In an effort to boost enthusiasm for Saturday's football game with the Oklahoma Sooners a pep rally dance will be staged at the Big Barn Friday night. The announcement was made by Mike Karr, Girard junior, and chairman of Jay-Sig Productions. Monday, Oct. 15, 1962 LARRY CRUM "Saturday's Iowa State game showed that the Jayhawkers have a good chance to go all the way and win the conference. The Oklahoma game will be the most important game we have played this year. "We are striving to get the student body enthusiastic for this game. KU hasn't defeated OU at home since 1946 when the Jayhawkers won 16-13." - Suggests - Karr said that the rally-dance would start at 9 p.m. and continue until midnight. A rock and roll band, the Disciples, will play for the dance. Tickets will be $1.50 per couple. Soft drinks will be sold. Breakfast Served Any Hour of Day or Night Pep Rally, Dance To Be Friday 'K' PANCAKE GRILL & SUNDRIES "We believe that student enthusiasm has been better this year than it has in recent years. We hope to BROADWAY MANAGER 14th & Mass. Open 24 Hours a day Karr announced that the KU cheerleaders would lead yells at the rally. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS "We think it will be successful. The Jerry Lee Lewis dance last Friday showed us that students are interested in dancing and having a good time on Friday nights. Most of the six-weeks tests will be over and we think everyone will have a good time." He who loves but once in a lifetime can ask no more; he who has never loved has never lived. — Zeke Wigglesworth "If this rally-dance is a success, we plan on staging another before the California game," Karr said. keep it at this peak. We hope Friday's rally-dance will help. "The OU student body is known to be the most enthusiastic in the conference. Many of them will be here for the game. We hope to show them what enthusiasm is." State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 530 W 23rd. Lawrence, Kan. MEN! In plastic! Old Spice DEODORANT Here's deodorant protection YOU CAN TRUST Old Spice Stick Deodorant...fastest, neatest way to all day, every day protection! It's the active deodorant for active men...absolutely dependable. Glides on smoothily, speedily...dries in record time. Old Spice Stick Deodorant most convenient, most economical deodorant money can buy. 1.00 plus tax. Old Spice STICK DEODORANT SHULTON Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday. Oct. 15. 1962 Fourth Quarter TD's Give KU 29-8 Win The Kansas Jayhawkers' forte was depth as they scored two touchdowns in the fourth quarter to defeat the Iowa State Cyclones 29-8 Saturday, at Ames. At the end of the first quarter, the Jayhawkers and the Cyclones were tied 0-0. And, by the end of the first half, the Jayhawks had only accounted for a touchdown and an extra point. Going into the final period, KU held only a 14-0 lead, not a safe margin at all. But, when you look at the final score, you get the impression that it was a one-sided affair. It wasn't — at least for three quarters. The Jayhawkers literally wore down the Cyclones, gaining their third straight win and second Big Eight victory of the season in spoiling Iowa State's 50th annual homecoming. AND, BESIDES depth, KU quarterback Rodger McFarland, aided the Jayhawker cause by netting 105 yards in 22 attempts to finish ahead of ale Sayers, who ran 14 times for 94 yards, as the game's top rusher. In the first half, the Cyclones had six first downs, the Jayhawks only five. Iowa State had the same edge on number of first half drives, once holding the ball for 16 plays and 49 vards. KU had possession of the ball once for 10 plays in the first half. After that spurt, ended by an I-State pass interception, the Cyclones moved the ball three plays before the Jayhawkers regained possession and scored in eight plays. TONY LEIKER TERMINATED the 50-yard drive with an eighty- yard run to the left side aided by a key block from fullback Armand Baughman. A key play in the drive was a 35-yard pass play from Leiker to Ron Oelschlager. In the Cyclones' 16-play drive, spread over the end of the first quarter and the beginning of the second, Dave Hoppmann picked up three first downs for I-State. On a third-and-two situation at the 50-yard line Hoppmann picked up a fumble by quarterback Larry Switzer and ran for a first down. FULLBACK KEN COLEMAN scored on the Jayhawkers' second series in the third quarter on a one-yard run. McFarland set up the score with quarterback keepers of nine, two, six, five and three vards and two first downs. And, it was such displays as this which made McFarland the game's star performer. Following the game KU coach Jack Mitchell called McFarland's signal-calling job "tremendous." "Our offense was a success due to McFarland's check of overshifting," Mitchell said. Mitchell said McFarland checked 90 per cent of the KU plays at the line of scrimmage. "WE RAN RIGHT all day long, that's all we did was run right," Mitchell added. "They kept overshifting us for Sayers. We couldn't run around the end. It hurt us." While Sayers and McFarland picked up yardage consistently, Hoppmann, Iowa State's all-America, covered only 17 yards in 23 carries. Running as a quarterback, Hoppmann made a seven-yard run, was thrown for losses of thirteen and four yards and tossed an extra-point pass after the lone Iowa State score. The Jayhawkers never lost yard-age. WITH KANSAS LEADING 14-0, the Cyclones made their only score early in the last quarter. End Larry Hannahs picked up a McFarland fumble and six plays later, Hopp- mann scored on a one-yard keeper. The key play in the series was a 40 yard reverse-pass. Switzer handed to Hoppmann who gave the ball to Otis Williams on a reverse. Williams returned the ball to Switzer who passed to end Larry Schrieder on the eight. KU's third score covered 70 yards in 11 plays. Leiker broke into FOLLOWING THE SCORE, putting KU ahead 20-8, McFarland tossed to Pack St. Clair, who was all alone in the end zone, for a two-point conversion. open field, slipped by three Cyclone defenders and scored on a 15-yard run. The last scoring was made with 1:09 remaining to play. Sayers, picked up a block from Coleman, skirted left end and scored from the eight. Gary Duff added three extra points to the four KU touchdowns in as many placement attempts. THE ONLY OTHER Cyclone threat besides their touchdown march came at the end of the third quarter. Hoppmann moved the ball from the Iowa State 22 to the Kansas 32 with three straight pass completions. The drive was stopped when KU's Baughman intercepted a Hoppmann pass at the four and ran to the 17. YESTERDAY'S postponement was called shortly after 8 a.m. and both teams sojourned to Modesto, Calif., to work out in the park of the Modesto Colts of the Class D California State league. Sixth Series Game To Be Played Today "I think that pass interception was probably the biggest play of the ball game." Mitchell said afterwards. The coach also praised both fullbacks for their blocking. It was a block by Baughman that freed Leiker for a touchdown and Coleman who set Sayers loose on his touchdown run. It was the first time in series history that both teams worked out at a site away from the scene of the competition. The two teams have not met since Wednesday when the Yankees won in New York 5-3 on Tom Tresh's home run. The sixth game of the World Series was to be played today. The Yankees held batting practice for an hour and 20 minutes. The pitchers loosened up, but none threw batting practice. And it was about time. Rain forced postponement of the game on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. NOTES AND QUOTES — "We played four of the worst defensive downs we've ever played." Mitchell said of the Jayhawker defense when Hoppmann completed those three straight passes, one to the right, one to the left and the last again to the right. The Giants practiced for two hours and employed several of their pitchers for batting practice. The Yankees are favored $6\frac{1}{2}$ to 5 to end the series today. Mitchell called Clay Stapleton's eleven "one of the best football teams we've played. They've got a tremendous team. We're not much better. We stayed with it for 60 minutes and were able to drag it out." If a seventh game is played tomorrow, Ralph Terry is scheduled to start for New York while Jack Sanford will pitch for San Francisco. The Candlestick Park field is in good condition according to Matty Schwab, the Giants groundskeeper. The footing appeared solid early this morning. We Rent Most Anything Anderson Rental 812 N. H. THE YANKEES, who lead 3-2 in the series, will start Whitey Ford on the mound while the San Francisco Giants will pitch Billy Pierce who has not lost this year in Candlestick Park. Now is the time Burch Higgins, Photographer RANCH HOUSE STUDIO 780 Lincoln VI-3-4575 For Your Child's Christmas Portrait Children are our speciality Call now for an appointment Dave Hoppmann, Iowa State's All-American tail back, has been named Iowa Athlete of 1961-62 by the Iowa Association of the Amateur Athletic Union. Hoppmann Named Top Iowa Athlete Hoppmann thus becomes the Iowa entry for the Sullivan award, the AAU honor for the top athlete of the nation. JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 Hoppmann was unanimous All Big Eight last year, led the loop in rushing and total offense and was one of its top scorers. He also led the nation's collegiate players in total offense. PARK PLAZA SO. INC. APARTMENTS - Couples - Singles - Furnished - Unfurnished - 20 Days Free Rent With 1-year Lease - Wall to Wall Closet Space - Individual Controlled Heating - Garbage Disposal - Carpeting - Ph. VI 2-3416 or VI 2-1537 Office — 1912 W. 25th - Lighted Off Street Parking - Water Paid Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers CHEESE KING -nite Every Monday 75c JAYHAWK CAFE 1340 Ohio SPACE, MISSILE & JET PROJECTS AT DOUGLAS have created outstanding career opportunities for SCIENTISTS and ENGINEERS Assignments include the following areas: Propulsion -relating to fluidmechanics, thermodynamics dynamics, internal aerodynamics Servo-Mechanisms—relating to all types of control problems Electronic Systems—relating to all types of guidance, detection control and communications Human Factors analysis of environment affecting pilot and space crews, design of cockpit consoles, instrument panels and pilot equipment Environmental- relating to air conditioning, pressurization and oxygen systems Structures -relating to cyclic loads, temperature effects, and the investigation of new materials, methods, products, etc. Heat Transfer—relating to missile and space vehicle structures Aerodynamics relating to wind tunnel, research, stability and control Space vehicle and weapon system studies-of all types involving a vast range of scientific and engineering skills Solid State Physics-relating to metal surfaces and fatigue Get full information at INDIVIDUAL ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS with a Douglas representative We urge you to make an appointment with Mr. Donald Metzler, Associate Dean, School of Engineering & Architecture. Thursday, October 18 --- If you cannot, please write to S. A. Amestoy, Staff Assistant to VP Engineering DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT COMPANY, INC. 3000 Ocean Park Blvd., Santa Monica, California An equal opportunity employer Monday, Oct. 15, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 University Daily Kansan SPORTS Cross-Country Team Victorious By Arne Richards (Editor's Note: Arne Richards is a member of the University of Chicago Track Club and ran in the meet.) The Kansas Jayhawker cross country team led by vastly improved George Cabrera, easily defeated the University of Chicago Track Club, 20-38. Saturday morning in a three-mile cross-country duel on the Lawrence Country Club golf course. the Lawrence County College, heat ( $ 77^{\circ} \mathrm{C} $ ), sunshine, high humidity, and the numerous hills kept the course record unscathed and left the athletes exhausted and dehydrated. CABRERA CLOCKED 15:22.1, in finishing about 100 yards ahead of the UCTC's 34-year-old Harold Harris, a Chicago school teacher who doesn't just talk about physical fitness! 8—Richards UCTC, 16:17.0 The Jayhawkers first five runners—Cabrera, Paul Acevedo, Herald Hadley, Charlie Hayward, and Bill Cottle—placed 1-3-4-5-7, for a total of 20 points. In cross-country scoring, the place positions of the first five men on each team are totalled, with low score winning. A perfect score is 1-2-3-4-5=15. The sixth and seventh men can, by placing ahead of any of the first five opponents, "displace" them, therefore making their place positions count more. Mike Fulghum, the sixth man, beat the UCTC's fourth man, while Ted Riesinger displaced their fifth man; therefore, the UCTC scored 2-6-8-10-12=38. HARRIS LED the first half mile, but KU's first five passed him on the first big hill of the one and one-half mile loop. At the midpoint a perfect score of 15 looked possible. Harris, the Illinois state titlist in 9 miles, 13 miles, and 19 miles, worked his way back into the runner-up spot but did not threaten Cabrera. Chicago's No. 2 man, Dave Mellady, a graduate student at Loyola University, finished just five seconds ahead of Cottle, the Hawk's fifth man. The University of Chicago Track Club, with whom Kansas has had a home-and-home arrangement for six years, consists largely of college graduates who work in the Chicago area and want to continue participation in track and cross-country. THERE ARE but two membership requirements—residence in Illinois and amateur status. A few of their runners have never completed college or did not go to college. Their ages range from 18 to 43. The UCTC sponsors many open meets and also schedules duels with colleges like KU, Illinois, Loyola and Notre Dame. Kansas' last loss in cross-country duel meets was during the 1959 season, when a powerful UCTC quintet won the 4-mile race in Washington Park, Chicago. In that race the UCTC's Phil Coleman, two-time Olympic steeplecher, and Gar Williams, runner-up in the National AAU marathon, were well under 20:00. In the last nine years of Bill Easton's tenure as coach, the Jayhawkers lost only this one dual meet. RESULTS: 1—Cabrera, KU, 15:22.1 2—Harris, UCTC, 15:35.5 3—Acevedo, KU, 15:41.5 4—Hadley, KU, 15:56.0 5—Hayward-KU, 15:56.5 6—Mellady, UCTC, 16:04.0 7—Cottle, KU, 16:09.0 Portraits of Distinction HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Moss. VI 3-0330 Portraits of Distinction A Man Holding Camera HIXON STUDIO HIXON STUDIO 8—Richards, UCTC, 16:17.0 9—Fulghum, KU, 16:24.5 10—Reyes, UCTC, 16:52.5 11—Riesinger, KU, 17:01 12—Golden, UCTC, 17:13 13—Hayes, UCTC, 17:55.5 JRPF, Hot Dogs Win In Action Friday JRPF (which stands for Joe's Rough Players and Friends) and the Hot Dogs continued their hold on the Independent A intramural football league with wins Friday afternoon. JRPF led by touchdowns by Gilbert and McCabe scored a 13-0 win over Jim Beam. JRPF's record now stands 3-0 while Jim Beam is 1-2. The Hot Dogs handed Joliffe its second consecutive defeat 19-7. Tyron, Stewart and Anderson all scored for the winners. The Hot Dogs are tied with JRPF for first place with a 3-0 record. Cornhuskers Receive Scare, But Win 19-14 All Big Eight teams saw action Saturday, six in conference play and two in non-conference action. The Nebraska Cornhuskers remained the league's only undefeated team as halfback Dennis Stuewe raced 13 yards to score with about a minute remaining to play to give the Cornhuskers a 19-14 win over North Carolina State. THE WOLFPACK staged a last-minute drive, but the Nebraska defense held tight to preserve the victory. It was an uphill battle for the Cornhuskers all the way. North Carolina State scored in the first quarter to take a 6-0 lead which it held at halftime. Nebraska scored in the opening minutes of the second half on Dennis Claridge's four-yard keeper only to relinquish its lead when Joe Scarpati returned the kickoff 91 vards to score. The Wolfpack outplayed the Cornhuskers statistically rolling 154 yards on the ground and 202 yards through the air while holding Nebraska to 130 yards on the ground and 48 through the air. THE OKLAHOMA SOONERS almost won one from Texas, United Press International's second ranked team, but yielded 9-6 in their traditional intersectional rivalry at Dallas, Tex. Two Oklahoma fumbles paved the way for the Longhorns' victory. One set up a 26-yard field boal by Tony Crosby and the other a touchdown when the ball rolled into the end zone and Perry McWilliams recovered it. Oklahoma's touchdown came on a 34-yard pass play from Ronald Fletcher to Lanze Retzel. Texas remains unbeaten in four games. Oklahoma's record is 1-2. THE MISSOURI TIGERS had little trouble in handling Kansas BIRD TV-RADIO VI 3-8855 TV- RADIO - Quality Parts - Guaranteed - Expert Service Erik the Red had no choice—but Vitalis with V-7 will keep your hair neat all day without grease. Naturally, V-7 is the greaseless grooming discovery. Vitalis® with V-7® fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dryness, keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Try Vitalis today! Vitalis v1 CLEANSE AND HEALTHY HAIR FOR ALL HAIR TYPES INSTANT CLEARNESS SHEER, NATURAL LIGHTNESS State 32-0 at Manhattan. The win was Missouri's first conference action. Johnny Roland, Bill and Vince Tobin accounted for all of the Tigers scoring. Roland scored twice from the one-yard line, Bill Tobin twice on passes of eleven and nine yards and Vince Tobin once on a five-yard pass. The Oklahoma State Cowboys won their Big Eight opener handling Colorado its second conference defeat. The Cowboys had a 17-8 lead at halftime and then erupted for three touchdowns in the last half to win 36-16. Accident Prevents Cricket Competition A car wreck prevented a cricket game between the Lawrence and the Kansas City Cricket teams which was to be played Saturday afternoon at KU. Jerry Simon, Kansas City team captain was hospitalized after the accident in Kansas City Friday evening. Simon was to lead the team Saturday. Players of the Kansas City team did not get together and the game was canceled. The Lawrence team, after a long wait, played among themselves. --by the LIVE JAZZ KU SPORTS Dine-a-Mite Mike Peterson Trio — with SUNDAY BUFFET 6:30-9:30 --on DIAL KLWN 1320 KLWN 7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts 5:00 Today Calling the Coaches 5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports PHOTOGRAPHY SORORITIES AND FRATERNITIES CONTACT US FOR YOUR HOUSE PHOTOGRAPHS Our Services Include - Seniors—Call us—Quality Guaranteed - Children—Our studio is a member of the Family Record Plan - Weddings—From $25.00 - Application photos—As low as $3.00 - Copies and Restoration of old photographs - Photo Finishing (Color and Black and White) Studio De Portra 900 Alabama, Lawrence, Kansas VI2-2300 (Just 2 blocks north of Memorial Stadium on the Corner of 9th & Alabama) Plenty of parking for your convenience October Only (children only) 3 (8x10) enlargements $11.95 Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 15, 1962 Steinbeck May Win Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM — (UEI) — American and Japanese authors figure in mounting speculation here on the winner of this year's Nobel Prize for Literature, to be announced Oct. 25. Informed sources said today that between 50 and 60 names have been proposed for consideration by the Swedish Academy of Letters, which awards the literature prize. AMERICAN novelist John Steinbeck, who was considered some years ago, was put back on the list this year in a high position, the sources said. Israeli theologian Martin Buber, who was recommended as a candidate last year by the late United Nations Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold, is another possible top-runner. Some sources said the academy perhaps would consider giving the prize to Buber for his book "I and Thou," which Hammarskjold had planned to translate into Swedish. But others said the book was written too long ago to receive the prize now. JAPANESE writers Jurozaburo Nichiwiak, Janichiro Tanizaki and Yasinari Kawabata also have been mentioned in pre-award speculation, with Tanizaki considered the leading contender among them. Swedish author Harry Martinson caused a sensation when he visited Japan last spring and announced the Swedish Academy had three Japanese candidates on the literature prize list. It was reported here the news was not appreciated by Japanese authors who would consider it a less of prestige to be nominated and then lose. THE SOURCES also gave other possible candidates as Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, William Heinesen of Clark Richert, Wichita senior, was awarded a three-hundred dollar Purchase Award in the 9th Annual Kansas Painters Exhibition, which opened last week at the Wichita Art Museum. Richert's painting was one of four by KU staff and students accepted for exhibition in the annual statewide show. KU Student Wins Award for Painting Robert Green, associate professor of drawing and painting, John Talleur, assistant professor of drawing and painting, and Dave Yust, Wichita senior, also had paintings accepted. The exhibition will be on view through mid-November. Ski Club to Sponsor Trip to Colorado The KU Ski Club will sponsor a four day trip to Colorado this year between semesters. Plans for the trip were announced by Mike Cory, Wichita senior and president of the Sk Club, at the club meeting in Memorial Union. Cory said the trip will cost each student about $60. He also said that a student need not know how to skit to make the trip. Instructions will be available on the slopes from professional skiers. Student Given $200 Award Theodore T. Scott, Manville, N.J. fourth year architecture student, has been awarded a $200 scholarship by the New Jersey chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Scott was one of seven New Jersey students so honored this year. He has received other awards and special recognition, including a $500 award from the New Jersey chapter last year. FAST FINISHED In 1961, Yugoslav novelist Ivo Andric won the literature prize, the Nobel award that usually attracts the greatest attention each year and causes the most speculation. Laundry Service Denmark's Faroe Islands and Britons Lawrence Durrell, Graham Greene Robert Graves and Aldous Huxley For the next few weeks, the name RISK'S 613 Vermont Campus police suspect the message at Murphy was written either late Thursday night or early Friday. They said it could have been students from the university, local sympathizers or just a group of vandals. This year the prize is worth 257,-219 kroner ($50,043), compared with 250.232 kroner ($48.683) last year. of the 1962 winner will be the well-guarded secret of the Nobel committees and the Nobel Foundation. The prize was first awarded in 1901 with bequests under Nobel's will. University of Iowa supporters armed with paint struck the KU campus Friday. Iowa Fans Paint Message A 20 foot message saying "ISU Beats KU" was painted in white, two and one-half foot high letters across the west flag-stone to Murphy Hall. Police later found "ISU" painted on Sunnyside Rd. south of Summerfield Hall. KU played the University of Iowa Saturday at Ames, Ia. Kansan Classifieds Get Results Get Lucky! MAKE $25 or would you like to try for $50? Attention, all witty, urbane college students: Get Lucky! MAKE $25 (or would you like to try for $50?) ENTER LUCKY STRIKES' ZANY NEW "Crazy Questions" Contest MAKE $25 50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE'S HOW: (Based on the hilarious book "The Question Man." First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up with a nutty, surprising question for it, and you've done a "Crazy Question." It's the easy new way for students to make loot. Study the examples below, then do your own. Send them, with your name, address, college and class, to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y. Winning entries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries submitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a $25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now! RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries on the basis of humor (up to $ \frac{1}{3} $), clarity and freshness (up to $ \frac{1}{3} $) and appropriateness (up to $ \frac{1}{3} $), and their decisions will be final. Duplicate prizes will be awarded in the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the entrants and must be submitted in the entrant's own name. There will be 50 awards every month, October through April. Entries received during each month will be considered for that month's awards. Any entry received after April 30, 1963, will not be eligible, and all become the property of The American Tobacco Company. Any college student may enter the contest, except employees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising agencies and Reuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees. Winners will be notified by mail. Contest subject to all federal, state, and local regulations. THE ANSWER: ANCIENT EGYPTIAN MUMMIES THE QUESTION: Who raised ancient Egyptian children? THE ANSWER: TWAIN THE QUESTION: What wuns on a twack? THE ANSWER: WHALE OIL THE QUESTION: What's good for lubricating creamy whales? THE ANSWER: THE QUESTION: Can you give a boy's name and a girl's name both starting with J and having five letters? James Joyce THE ANSWER: Art Appreciation 570951 THE QUESTION: What does Arthur Appreciation like to be called? THE ANSWER: THE QUESTION: How do you get to Grandina's house? Across the river and into the trees The answer is: Get Get Lucky Lucky the taste to start with...the taste to stay with The question is: WHAT IS THE SLOGAN OF THE FAVORITE REGULAR CIGA-RETTE OF TODAY'S COLLEGE STUDENTS? If you missed that one, go to the rear of the class. Everyone should know that fine-tobacco taste is the best reason to start with Luckies, and that taste is the big reason Lucky smokers stay Lucky smokers. Prove it to yourself. Get Lucky today. A. T. Co. LUCKY A CIGARETTES LUCKY STRIKE IT'S TOASTED CIGARETTES L.S./M.F.T. Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name" Monday, Oct. 15, 1962 University Daily Kansar Page 9 Concert Will Feature Original Compositions ENTRANTS are students, professors, housewives and professional musicians. All entrants are considered on the same level. The only requirements are that the music selected is by a well-trained composer, suitable for the occasion and not widely recognized. Plans are now underway for one of the outstanding cultural events of the University of Kansas concert program. Virgil Thomson, former New Yor Herald Tribune music critic and Pulitzer prize winner, will be guest composer at the Fine Arts Department's fifth annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music May 5-7. John Pozdro, associate professor of music theory and chairman of the symposium committee, said they would probably review about 200 scores of music from all parts of the United States and select approximately 20 for performance. THE SYMPOSIUM, a concert of unpublished works, is open to any composer in the United States. Entrants may submit as many as four works in the fields of symphony orchestra, concert choir, chorus- orchestra, chamber ensemble, the cerrillon and solo compositions. Besides Thomson, the Fine Arts Quartet, a string group from Chicago, will be on the program. Several members of the Kansas City Philharmonic will play in the University symposium orchestra. Honor Group To Convene Physicists will meet at the University of Kansas Oct. 21 to 24 for the national convention of Sigma Pi Sigma, physics honor society. Stanley Ballard, University of Florida physics department chairman and national president of the society will speak on "Infra-red Physics and its Application" at 8:30 p.m. Oct. 23, in the Kansas Union. L. Worth Seagondollar, KU professor of physics and national vice-president of the society, said organizational problems will be the main business item. The delegates will also tour KU research facilities in physics, including the nuclear reactor. "Sometimes we include a highlyrecognized work that hasn't been performed in this area," Pozdro said. Other members of the committee are Laurel E. Anderson, professor of organ and theory; Robert Baus汀ian, associate professor of orchestra; Raymond Cerf, professor of string instruments; Thomas Gorton, Dean of the School of Fine Arts; and Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music education. PROF. POZDRO SAID the purpose of the symposium is to encourage the American composer. Until KU initiated its symposium program in 1959 through the support of the endowment association and the Music Performance Trust Funds of the Recording Industries in New York, there was no comparable program in the Midwest. The KU symposium has earned praise for its professional standards. After attending the University's 1960 symposium, Paul Hummel, Washington music critic, remarked that the symposium was "something many schools should attempt to duplicate though few will be able to reach its high level." Prof. Pozdro was optimistic about the symposium's growing reputation. Last year approximately 20 composers came to the campus to hear their works performed in the symposium. The guest composer moderated an open forum and panel discussion. "It's becoming a tradition at KU," he said. "And what more likely place is there for it to be than right in the middle of the United States." 838 Mass. JIM'S CAFE OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY MELANIE LEMONT - RICHARD MAYER MARC ET ANDRE Sunday, Oct. 21, 8:30 p.m. University Theatre, Murphy Hall The University of Kansas Admission $2.40, $1.80, $1.20 Phone Viking 3-2700, Extension 591 Write Murphy Hall Box Office Foreign Students Plan Trip International Club members voted Friday night to pay the transportation expenses of two students who would organize and accompany club members on a trip to Mexico during the Christmas vacation. Approximately 100 students made the trip last year. The club chartered two buses. Transportation and hotel expenses were about $125, according to Bruce Murray, graduate student from Johannesburg, South Africa, and club vice-president. Turning to other business, the club revised their constitution to provide for the election of an auditor and the appointment of a publicity chairman. Members voted honorary membership to Chancellor and Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe, Mr. and Mrs. Clark Coan and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Burzle. Coan is international student adviser and Burzle is director of the University's foreign student orientation program. Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts. Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals Fraternity Jewelry Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER engineers: IS INDIVIDUALITY IMPORTANT TO YOUR FUTURE? At EMERSON ELECTRIC you enjoy individuality without sacrificing security. Emerson believes in individuality, encourages it by working philosophy and attitude. Engineers with ideas are not only provided facilities to pursue those ideas—but are allowed to see the idea through to finish. Consider the actual experience of engineer Don Mertens below and decide whether or not you'd like to know more about Emerson. --aerospace Engineer Don Mertens' experience shows that "Think Freedom" is a reality at Emerson Don Mertens came to Emerson Electric three years ago fresh from college and anxious to explore the challenge of basic research. He was placed in the Special Devices Group. Here he was given problems, rather than tasks to work on. In an atmosphere of individual effort, supported by small-team operation, Don was able almost immediately to demonstrate his abilities and achieve personal recognition. His second challenge—to devise a scoring device for a radar directed fire-control system —proved his talents. He conceived, proposed, developed and brought to successful completion, a magnetic scoring device. Other projects and successes followed quickly. Emerson's policy of allowing engineers to range, to develop their own individual abilities, to carry through projects to the end, has helped Don Mertens achieve an outstanding record. Today, at 25, he is project engineer on a program developing a high-resolution radar involving advanced concepts. Don Mertens wanted the opportunity to explore and demonstrate his personal talents. Emerson provided that opportunity within an atmosphere of "think freedom." Both have benefited. Is this the kind of opportunity you want, too? EMERSON E E defense commercial industrial ELECTRIC AFTER 1950, JOHN F. GUYENETT, DIVISION OF MEDIA AND TELEVISION, WAS THE COO OF BARBERS INC. EMERSON INVITES YOU TO TALK TO ITS REPRESENTATIVE Oct.18,1962 Ask your placement office for location of interview. If unable to arrange interview at this time, contact: A. L. Depke, Emerson Electric Co. 8100 West Florissant, St. Louis, Mo. Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 15, 1962 Students Express Doubts About ASC Resolution Some KU students seem to doubt the effect of the All Student Council resolution approving James Meredith's enrollment at the University of Mississippi. This opinion was expressed by students interviewed Wednesday in a University Daily Kansan poll. A typical reaction was that of Roger Speerschneider, Des Plaines, Ill., sophomore, who favored the resolution. "I like the idea," Speerschneider said, "but it is kind of useless because it is not going to change anything down there." LAURALEE MILLBERG, Arlington, Va., junior, maintained that a proposal such as this is fine, but it lacked sufficient thought before-hand. "It would have been better if the action had been initiated among the student body rather than the ASC members," she added. Mike Harris, Oklahoma City, Okla., senior, rejected the resolution on the grounds he doubted ASC expresses the feelings or represents the student body as a whole. "I imagine the University of Mississippi is getting thousands of letters everyday like the one proposed by ASC" added Harris. Delwin Campbell, Lawrence senior. sided against the action. "I DON'T THINK the Mississippi student cares what Kansas students think," he said. "I just don't think it was a necessity for our student government to take action." A Birmingham, Ala., sophomore rejected the ASC resolution on the basis that most people don't understand how the Southerners feel. "I just don't think we have the right to tell them what to do." Jo De Groot said. "It is an entirely different situation here." Joyce Palmer, Mission sophomore, reiterated Miss Groot's opinion. "I don't think we had a whole lot of business sending the resolution because it is not really our problem," she said. KU STUDENTS IN FAVOR of the ASC action were in the minority of persons contacted by the Daily Kausan. John Clarke, Kansas City, Mo. senior, said he went along with the resolution. Negro Doctors To Be Trained Ten four-year medical scholarships for qualified Negro men are available beginning in the fall of 1963, according to National Medical Fellowships, Inc. and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. To qualify, a student must have demonstrated outstanding achievement in college, been accepted for admission by a medical school, and be a U.S. citizen. INTERESTED Negro college students, planning to enter medical school in the fall of 1963, may obtain registration cards and other information from the College Office, or from the offices of National Medical Fellowships, Inc., 951 East 58th Street, Chicago 37. Ill. Each scholarship is for four years, provided the student maintains required standards. Amounts of the scholarships vary according to students' needs. The deadline for registration is March 1, 1963. No registrations will be accented after that date. This scholarship program is designed to help relieve the critical shortage of Negro physicians and surgeons. See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales - Rental Service Sales - Rental Service LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER "An education is every student's right. If an individual is not given this right, we all have the right to protest it." he stated. Peter Haggart, Lawrence graduate student, took a similar stand. KU Fire School Slated for Oct. 15-18 "It is not the right of anyone to deprive a student of an education just because of the color of his skin," Haggart said. 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 Approximately 350 to 450 Kansas Fire fighters will attend the 33rd annual University of Kansas Fire School. These sessions will run Oct. 15-18 at Convention Hall in Hutchinson. Fire School director for KU Extension, Clyde A. Babb, has arranged a professional program which alternates general sessions with intensive group instruction. Groups include basic firemanship pump operations, fire fighting tactics, officers training, ventilation, forcible entry and salvage, inspections, water safety and recovery, arson detection, and first aid and rescue breathing. Theologian to Speak Prof. Nicholas Arseniev of the St. Vladimir'r Theological Seminar, New York, N.Y., will speak on Russia 19th century culture. Prof. Arseniev's visit to K.U. is sponsored by the department of Slavic languages and literatures and the KU Russian Club. His two lectures, open to the public, will be at 7:30 in the Kansas Union. J. R. Pearson Elects Officers Joseph R. Pearson Hall recently elected the following officers: John J. Kearinnes, Westfield, N. J., junior; president; Hollace H. Cross, Kansas City, Mo., senior, vice-president; Geoffrey W. Donnan, Webster Groves, Mo., freshman, secretary; John J. Trimble, Haverstraw, N.Y., senior, treasurer; and Robert C. Craig, Shawnee Mission sophomore, social chairman. --section of the American Chemical Society. Chess Club Holds First of 2 Contests NOW SHOWING! Now Thru Wed. 7:00 & 9 p.m. VARSITY NOW SNOWING! Chess is a man's game. Or so it seemed, judging from the persons who participated in the first round of the Chess Club tournament, at 2:00 p.m. Sunday in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. COLOR AND CINEMASCOPE STARRING RORY CALHOUN MARCO POLO 10000000000 High point leaders after the first day's contest were Michael Downs, Topeka junior, and Larry Mason, Mich., graduate student. SUNSET NOW SHOWING! Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Open 6:30, Show At 7:00 242 Approximately 14 men vied for the first round lead and a chance for the tournament winner's prizes—chess books and manuals. WARNER BROS. PRESENT THE C.V. WHITNEY PICTURE WARNER BROS. PRESENT THE C.V. WINNIE PICTURE STARRING JOHN WAYNE IN "THE SEARCHERS" IFFEWF HUNTER - VERA MILES VISION/ASTEN WARD BOND - NATALIA WOOD TECHNICOLOR Each player played three games and will play two more games in the second and final round Sunday, Oct. 22 COMING WED. The Petrifying True Story of Hitler's Reich! Chess Club president, James Dukelow, Prairie Village graduate student, expressed hope that the organization might sponsor a campus-wide tournament with larger prizes in the near future. "MEIN KAMPF" COMING SOON! the Miracle worker A FLASH OF AN INSISTENCE PERSONAL DRAMA! THEATRE GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VK1WG 3-5788 GRANADA TMEATRE...Telephone VKING 3-5786 And What Goes On Inside The "HOUSE OF WOMEN" GRANADA NOW SHOWING! 7:00 & 9:15 DARRYLF ZANUCK PRODUCTION The Chapman Report TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS. No one under 16 will be admitted unless accompanied by an adult. COMING THURSDAY! "FUNNY!" - TIME MAGAZINE - PREDROXIC - MACALLS - FARENTY - NEWWEWER - MAZERS B AZAAB THE FUNNIEST SIDE- SPLITTINGEST THING WE SEE IN YEARS! M-CALLS "TRIUMPHS OF FUN!" "..SOME OF THE GREATEST FUN HOLLYWOOD HAS EVER PRODUCED!" - Redbook "COLOSSAL!" --Playboy HAROLD LLOYD'S WORLD OF COMEDY - VARSITY TREATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-1065 Chemists to Sponsor Speech and Dinner THEATRE • • • • Telephone VKING 3-1065 Wayne L. Garrick, of Union Carbide Plastics Co., Bound Brook, N.J., will speak at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in room 122 of Malott Hall on "The Mechanism of Olefin Polymerization by Ziegler-type Catalysts." The talk is sponsored by the KU The talk will be preceded by a society dinner at 6 p.m. at the faculty club. Reservations for the dinner may be made by calling extension 346. The talk is open to the public. Read and Use Kansan Classifieds Serbin Serbin FAMOUS FASHION HOUSE recommends the SANITONE Dry Cleaning Process. K-312 is for Sanitone and Serbin...to keep you looking your best! Leading clothes designers have a special talent for fabric and design...and they know the importance of skillful cleaning care. That's why they recommend nationally-advertised Sanitone—to give clothes that look, feel and fit of newness, cleaning after cleaning. Call on us for this superior service. The sign of Quality Dry Cleaning First IN DRYCLEANING APPROVED SANITONE SERVICE LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. VI 3-3711 "Specialists in Fabric Care" --- NO. 163 Monday, Oct. 15, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 11 1024 CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not re-responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. FOR RENT 2 bedroom ranch house, 2105 Tennessee. Dining "L." Kitchen with disposal. Utility room. $85 a month. 1st six months downpayment if buying. Call 743-769-1018 Large turned apartment with large closets. 1/2 block from campus. Private bath and entrance. Newly decorated. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-2263. 10-17 1 double and 1 single room with board in new home. Close to campus. Transportation furnished. Phone VI 3-7642 after 5 p.m. 10-16 3 room furnished modern apartment. Utilities paid. For one person $50 a month or $60 a month for 2 persons. Phone VI 3-2462. 10-16 FOR RENT: Nicely furnished clean 3 room apartment. Private entrance and parking. The campus with the campus $55 a month with a phone couple. Phone VI 3-7830. 10-15 A modern garage apartment for 1 or 2 men. Very private with a mask in place. Cash advances for $50 monthly. Utilities paid. Phone VI 3-2019. Also 2 lovely rooms vacant November. A furnished house for couple with two children. Carter at 4:30 p.m. 5229 for particulars. 10-15 For rent, a lovely modern apartment. Phone V1 3-7819 by 5 p.m. 10-18 Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. $ _{1/2} $ block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice and clean, see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. TYPING ROOMS FOR MEN: Doubles only, private entrance, private b ath, telephone and utilities paid. One block from Union. Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana. tf Experienced secretary with electric type- er equipment, and telephone, Phone Nancy Colin at VI 3-0284. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow. 408 W. 19th. VI 2-1648. Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tf Secretary will d typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 2-1749. tt Typing — reasonable rates, neat and ac- cident. Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greever Terr. V-3-1848. Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greever Terr. English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Nellsande Jones, VI 3-5267. 11-15 Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlinger at VI 3-4409. tf ASK US ABOUT ThriftiCheck PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT SERVICE LOW-COST - Your name printed FREE on all your checks - NO charge for deposits - NO fixed balance required Manuscripts, theses, and term papers. Also dissertations typed on wide carriage. Special keys. 35 special keys. Experience in education and information. Mrs. Suzanne Gulliver VI. 214-625 tf - ANY amount will open your account Efficient typist. Would like typing in her thesis, thesis, calls. Call anytime at 3-2601- 5798. BUSINESS SERVICES New Highway Market located in basement of White School near Tee Pee junction. Fresh fruit, vegetables, meats, bread, milk, eggs, cigarettes at 25c a pack and cold drinks. Open 7 days a week. 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. 10-17 Ironing in my home. 10c a piece. 928 La. 10-17 Douglas County State Bank Baby sitting $1 block east of campus $2 enquiries. Phone VI 3-2263. 10-17 Want washing and ironing in my home boy's boys. Reasonable rates. Phone 3-916-7452 LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tf 9th & Kentucky VI 3-7474 DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding, gowns, etc. Ola Smith, $931\%$ Mass. Cell VI 3-5263. tf TYPEWRITERS — Sales, sales, rental. electrics, Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond Typewriter, 79. Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized with car hammers, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, etc., plus complete supplies. tf FOR SALE 1962 50'x10' mobile home, like new. Will sacrifice. See at 400 Storey, Topeka, Kansas. Phone CE 2-1042, Topeka. 10-19 Economical car. 1959 Renault Dauphine. 35 m.p.g., low mileage, excellent condition. Call collect, Larry Hickman, M19-126 in Kansas City, Kansas-$150. 10-17 Two Magnavox stereo hi-fi mahogany consoles. These high quality units have been replaced by newer models. Save up to 50% in cost of new models. Come in to Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass, and see why Magnavox is number one in the nation. 10-19 TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic hospitality has year picture urease warranty. Buy it from $199.00 from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass. 1960 Caroelve Renault sports car Phone VI 3-8882 mornings or after 5:00 p.m. 8*x41*, 1558 mobile home. Arkansas at 6th, east side or phone VI 3-2928. 10-19 Used electric vacuum cleaner with a complete set of attachments. $27.50. New Hoover tank for $9.50. Limited offer. Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass. 10-18 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per call. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. If 3 bedroom house with a full basement. Low interest G.I. loan. Phone VI 31-747-17- Printed Biology Study Notes; 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive dingrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-5701. Free delivery. $4.50. tf Good 1960 Cushman motor scooter. See at 1522 Harper. 10-17 Professor selling '5 Karman Ghia (sports Spotless throughout' VI G-1804. 19-16 '53 MG TD in fine condition. New tires, new top, side wings, maintenance manual, low mileage. Phone Extension 357. 15.15 PETS; Three Sealpoint Siamese kittens, priced to sell. They are gentle, lovable and house-broken. Phone Mr. Hyde at VI 3-0148. 10-1f 1839 Peuget in good operating condition 3-1702 after 6 p.m. weekends 10-15 Tires! Tires! 1,000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes—most foreign sizes—extra low prices on Snow Tires until Oct. 31st; 600-13 new style new tubeless snow tires, 2 for $25; 650-15, 2 for $28; 750-14, 2 for $29 plus tax. Free installation at rear, Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass, VIII-3-4170. FM Radios! FM Stereos! Stereos! Largest stock in Lawrence all at discount prices. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. VI 3-4170 10 ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New machines and a few rebuilt. All parts available and machines served. Established locally 24 years. F. W. Cox. Local Manager, 1904 Barker, Lawrence, Kansas. Phone VI 3-3277. 10-25 3-speed lightweight Royce Union bike cut to $37.50 in men's or ladies. New 2-speed automatic Schwinn. $48.88. Rockback stone's, 929 Mass. VIII 3-4170. 10-16 TYPING PAPER BARGAINS Fink typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow paper 65c per ream. Green or purple per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. tt POST VERSALOG slide rule. Like new. Also a Norelceo floating head electric shaver. Phone VI 3-0483 after 5 p.m. 10-17 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop midwest—Pet phone V11-5238 Modern service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. From near, bookstore -- Calculus and Chemistry books and Notes, slide rule other items. Reward for return. No questions asked. John Tulloch, I V 3-4711 LOST Lost wallet Friday night. Brown leather, contains ID, drivers license and important papers. Return to Mohamed 002 Summerfield Hail or call 91-2516. Lost; a black Shaeffer fountain pen between Summerfield Hawklet and Fraser Hall on Monday morning, Oct. 8. Phone VI 3-8153. 10-15 HELP WANTED Saturdays tutor wanted. Please call after 5 p.m. at VI 2-3698. 10-15 Immediate vacancy for an ASCP registered medical technologist, 40 hour week, paid vacation and sick leave. Labourer, Watkins Memorial Hospital, VI 3-4455, 10-12 Part time shoe salesman experienced. Died immediately. Call Weaver's, VI 8350. Classified Display Rates One time ----$1.25/inch Monthly Rate Every day ___ $1.00/inch No art work or engraving allowed Call KU-376 or bring your ads to 111 Flint Hall Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 ONE HOUR "MARTINIZING" the most in DRY CLEANING ONE HOUR MARTINIZING PRICES Suilts ...1.20 Pants ...6.0 Sweaters ...6.0 Sport Shirts ...6.0 Sport Coats ...7.0 Jackets ...7.5 Top Jackets ...1.35 LADIES' Dress (plain) ... 1.20 Skirts ... .60 Sweaters ... .60 Blouses ... .60 Short Coats ... 1.10 Medium Coats ... 1.25 Long Coats ... 1.35 SUDDEN SERVICE at 14th and Mass. across from Central Jr. High across from Central Jr. High New 1-Hour Dry Cleaning No Extra Charge ONE HOUR MARTINIZING . . . the most in quality dry cleaning is in the "PERFECTED" one-hour process . . . by using the newest, most modern equipment, and applying our own spotting techniques, deep-cleaning methods and carefully finishing your garments, ONE-HOUR MARTINIZING ASSURES YOU: ★ Odorless Cleaning ★ Garments Stay Fresh Longer Sanitary Clothes SHIRT SERVICE SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c One Hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING 1407 MASS. — FREE PARKING — ★ Cleaner, Brighter Garments One Hour MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING SPECIAL ONE DAY SHIRT SERVICE 25c each 4 for 88c 1407 MASS. — FREE PARKING — ★ Gentle, Individual Treatment for Your Fine Fabrics ONE HOUR MARTINIZING the most in DRY CLEANING Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 15, 1967 Barnett Faces Possible Fine of $100,000 By Don Swanson NEW ORLEANS — (UPI) — The Justice Department today asked a federal court to fine Mississippi Gov. Ross Barnett $100,000 for failing to purge himself of contempt of court. Attorneys for Negro James Meredith recommended that Barnett be arrested. The Meredith attorney also asked that Lt. Gov. Paul Johnson be taken into custody. Final briefs filed with the U.S Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans demanded heavy penalties against both Barnett and Johnson for refusing to comply with a court order to admit Meredith to the University of Mississippi. ATTORNEYS for Barnett and Johnson planned to file their own briefs in the contempt case later today. The Justice Department asked that Barnett be fined an additional $10,-,000 a day until he takes action to purge himself of contempt of court. The $100,000 recommended as a fine by the department would represent $10,000 a day for the period between Oct. 2 and Oct. 12. The department repeated its earlier position that Barnett should not be imprisoned, on grounds this would serve no useful purpose. Meredith, now a student at the university, continues to attend classes with a federal guard. ATTORNEYS for Meredith called for both imprisonment and stiff fines for the two state officials. The Justice Department told the appeals court that "law and order at the university and the personal protection of Mr. Meredith are still being achieved through a force of federal troops. The government is presently unable to advise when this will cease to be necessary." Council Urges Tougher Civil Rights Measures (Continued from page 1) Prof. Cowgill spent part of the summer in Northern Rhodesia and he said that he was often asked not only about race relations in Little Rock, but about Wichita. A fine, the government said, would be appropriate "to compel" compliance with the court order that Meredith be permitted to enroll and attend classes at "Ole Miss." HE SAID IT was a challenge for the United States to solve its human relations problems and take a firm, unequivocal stand on civil rights. "We must settle these problems immediately." Crutcher said. Crutcher said fear begets fear and fear leads to tragedy. "In the last year and one-half," Mann said, "We have made great strides." Another panelist, Fred Mann director, Kansas Federal Housing Administration, said in the area of housing, significant progress has been made with administration backing. "In five years the whole world will witness Kansas City housing," Sewing said. Donald O. Sewing, Kansas City real estate broker, another panelist, predicted in five years, all Kansas City will have integrated housing. HE SAID ALL the houses taken over by the agency, 2,200 in Kansas, are available to anyone with the means. Sewing said Negroes there are now able to attain financing and will be able to live where they wish. Sewing attributed segregated neighborhoods to two factors: white fears of property devaluation and Negro reluctance to move into possibly hostile neighborhoods. "The only way to find out how KU Committee (Continued from page 1) most anything we wanted. We might even be able to get national headquarters located at KU next year. "We could at least get next year's conclave held in the Midwest." Bob Tieszen, McPherson junior and special projects chairman of Arnold Air Society, said arrangements had nearly been completed for the Peter, Paul and Mary appearance. "Our agent in Kansas City had a verbal agreement with the trio's agent, Hoch Auditorium was reserved, and committees were ready to go. All we needed was the University's approval." Tieszen said. "Of course we're disappointed," he added. GASPERICH said he thought the concert would benefit the entire student body, since they would have a chance to see top-flight performers. "If the students don't think we have a right to a profit, or if they don't want to pay to see Peter, Paul and Mary, they could always stay home," he said. Negroes act is to live next to one." Sewing said after pointing out the myth of property devaluation. "At the same time," he continued. "Negroes must have more determination when seeking housing." Sewing said that Negroes should show courage and move into the neighborhood they like. Panel members agreed that real estate brokers generally favor open occupancy because it means more business for them, but they hesitate to show Negroes homes in all-white neighborhoods for fear that a sale will mean economic reprisals and white castigation. THE TWO RESOLUTIONS passed will now go before the membership of the KACCR for further investigation and vote. The KACCR is composed of various private organizations and individual citizens. Each member has one vote. The resolutions, if approved by the membership, will be brought to the attention of state legislators, Mrs. Nathan Shechter, chairman of the KACCR said. She said the KACCR is interested in informing, promoting and coordinating information on civil rights problems and programs in Kansas. --- Grease Jobs . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Pooped . . but must carry on? Snap right back and keep going! Take Verv' continuous action alertness capsules Effective, safe, not habit-forming. STUDENTS Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. Radio Amman in Jordan, which is supporting the self-proclaimed Imam (King) Hassan, said his forces captured the mountain village of Raseh yesterday and were continuing to drive on the capital of Sanaa. CAIRO — (UPI) — Rival "Republican" and Royalist forces today claimed new victories in the struggle for control in the desert kingdom of Yemen on the Red Sea. Battle Continues in Yemen Amman radio also said that many of Yemen's tribal chieftains were rallying to the support of Hassan, who proclaimed himself Imam when the rebels claimed that Imam Mohammed Badr was killed in the revolt last month. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd But the semi-official Middle East news agency (MENA) of the U.A.R., which is backing the rebel regime, said Badr was still alive. It said Badr escaped from the ruins of his shellled palace by changing uniforms with a palace guard and is currently hiding out with mountain tribesmen. Time Marches Backward OLDHAM, England — (UPI) — Time marched backward today when a fault in the village clock made its hands turn counterclockwise. "At this rate," the city superintendent said, "it will be last Saturday before we can fix it." College Placement Plans Orientation Information on job opportunities and aids for graduating College of Liberal Arts and Science seniors will be supplied at two meetings, Wednesday and Thursday. The College Placement Bureau will hold the meetings at 4:30 p.m. in 112 Strong. How Liberals Get That Way "That's what's the matter with them, I suppose," he added. HARTFORD, Conn. — (UPI) — Poet Robert Frost said last night at Trinity College that "all the liberals have had a liberal education." Save Again at Kwik-Shop with 80¢ in FREE COUPONS CLIP THESE OUT AND BRING THEM TO DILLON'S "KWIK-SHOP" AT 1714 WEST 23rd, AND SAVE 80c! COUPONS ARE VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 20, '62 LIMIT—ONE OF EACH PER CUSTOMER! THESE COUPONS GOOD ONLY AT DILLON'S KWIK-SHOP. THIS COUPON WORTH - 10¢ On Any CANNED GOODS ITEM at Dillon's "Kwik-Shop" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 20, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10¢ On Any Box of CRACKERS at Dillon's "KWIK-Shop" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 20, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10¢ On Any Jar of SALAD DRESSING at Dillon's "Kwik-Shop" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 20, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10¢ On Any Brand LB. COFFEE at Dillon's "Kwik-Shop" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 20, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10¢ On Any of Dillon's BREADS or PASTRY at Dillon's "KWIK-SHOP" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 20, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10¢ On Any Box of KLEENEX or PUFFS Facial Tissue at Dillon's "Kwik-Shop" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 20, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10¢ On Any BREAKFAST CEREAL at Dillon's "Kwik-Shop" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 20, '62 THIS COUPON WORTH - 10¢ On Any FROZEN FOOD ITEM at Dillon's "KWIK-ShOP" Limit one to a customer VOID AFTER SAT., OCT. 20, '62 OPEN WEEK DAYS 7 till 11 Kwik- SHOP 1714 West 23rd Kwik- SHOP 1714 West 23rd 100 Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 60th Year, No.23 Tuesday, Oct. 16, 1962 SUA Carnival Looney Too! Oct. 20. BUBBLE-BLOWERS—Carolyn Hoke, Prairie Village freshman, and Nan Harrington, Chicago, Ill., freshman, blow bubbles to the tune of "Elephant Walk" in front of the information bureau. They are advertising the SUA Carnival Saturday. Cartoon Figures To Take Spotlight At SUA Carnival About 4,500 are expected for the 1962 SUA Carnival in the Kansas Union Ballroom Saturday from 7 to 8 p.m. The theme is "Looney Too." Groups of students from various living areas are practicing skits and building booths this week. Various sororites and fraternities will present skirts. They are "Opps," Alpha Chi Omega; "Scot's Tale," Alpha Omicron Pi; "The Joiner," Delta Upsilon; "McGoo at KU," Kappa Kappa Gamma; "Annie's Dispair," Kappa Sigma; "Mary Worthless Meets Dick Trashy." Phi Kappa Psi; "Robert Rabbit Show," Phi Kappa Theta; "Double Down Slip at Hawpatch U.", Phi Beta Pi and "Dogpatch Quandary." Sigma Nu. Activity will begin with a parade at 10:30 a.m. down Massachusetts Street. Tickets for the carnival will go on sale for 85 cents beginning tomorrow at the information booth in front of Flint Hall and at the information booth in the Kansas Union. Twenty-two queen candidates will ride in convertibles in the parade. The Pershing Rifles and the "Jesters" will escort the candidates. The "Jesters." a student group, will go around to various living areas to promote the carnival. Tickets will be exchanged at the door of the carnival for a ballot. With this ballot, students may vote for the queen candidates. Weather High temperatures below the 66-72 degree high average and low temperatures below the 36-49 low average can be expected. Priests Cast Votes on Italian Influence at Huge Conclave VATICAN CITY—(UPI)—The more than 2,500 "fathers" of the Ecumenical Council voted today for members of 10 commissions that will determine whether the strongly-Italian Vatican administration will dominate the great conclave. Then they adjourned until Saturday. The balloting signaled an end to the deadlock in voting procedure that had marked the opening session last Saturday when a liberal group of cardinals urged a postponement so delegates could become more familiar with candidates. THE COUNCIL, cardinals archbishops, bishops and abbots filed out of St. Peter's Basilica one hour and 20 minutes after they had convened. One of the bishops said, "the work was achieved. The council fathers voted for 10 commissions, filling out 10 separate ballots with 16 names on each. He said he understood the general congregations of the council will be postponed until Saturday to allow time for vote counting. THE NEXT GENERAL congregation originally had been fixed for Thursday. Two Italian cardinals raised a last-minute question about the voting procedure, but this was worked out by the council presidency made up of 10 cardinals including Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Kennedy today arranged a Thursday meeting with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko amid growing U.S. concern about a possible new East-West flareup over Berlin. Berlin Meet Slated The White House said the Russians had "indicated a desire for Mr. Gromyko to see the President," but gave no reason. IT SEEMED CLEAR, however, that the Berlin situation would come up at the meeting. The administration said yesterday it believed the Russians might stir up Meanwhile, there were these other developments: a first-class new crisis over the divided city by Christmas. - Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev conferred for three hours in Moscow with Foy D. Kohler, the new U.S. Ambassador to Russia. A communique on the talks was to be issued later today. - Also in Moscow, informed sources said the central committee of the Soviet Communist Party will convene Nov. 15-20 to discuss domestic and international affairs. The latter probably will include Berlin. The committee is the party's policy-making body. Peace Corps VIP Gets KU Publicity Last week if you had asked a University of Kansas student who Warren W. Wiggins was, he probably would have answered your question with a blank stare. Now Wiggins, the second in command of the national Peace Corps organization, has become a subject of campus-wide interest. He became well-known here when the KU committee on convocations and lectures ruled out a Nov. 2 student body convocation with Wiggins as speaker. Since the convocations committee decision, the KU Peace Corps committee has been circulating petitions protesting the ruling. Jerry Harper, Wichita junior and Peace Corps publicity chairman, said: "The petitions indicate definite student and faculty interest in Wiggins—enough, he said, to warrant a University convocation. THE CORPS COMMITTEE invited Wiggins to KU after they learned Sargent Shriver, Corps director, was unable to come. Wiggins, the Corps' Washington, D. C. director for program development and operations, will become acting director of the Corps program this month when Shriver travels to Africa. In recommending Wiggins for a government award which he won, Shriver said Wiggins' ideas were "responsible for the miracle of planning and organization that has brought the Peace Corps into being." WIGGINS said later he wrote "The Tower Task" strictly on his own initiative and "out of a quickly aroused enthusiasm" for the proposed agency. Wiggins, an Army pilot of World War II, flew over the Hump 36 times. He was graduated from the University of Colorado and received his master's degree in public administration from Harvard. HE ENTERED government service in 1949 to become one of the 15-man missions which administered the Marshall Plan in Norway. Three years later, he began work for Averell Harriman in the office of the President, where he was charged with coordinating U.S. economic programs in Western European nations. Wiggins was sent to the Philippine Islands in 1954 as senior U.S. economic adviser to the island government. Three years later he was transferred to Bolivia as deputy director and later, acting director of the U.S. aid program there. Men's Scholarship Halls Allegiance Goes to Vox Vox Populi emerged last night as the dominant party in the small men's residence hall voting district when Battenfeld and Jolliffe scholarship halls voted to become Vox members. Grace Pearson, another small men's residence hall, voted to break its ties with the University Party and remain politically independent. Football Tickets Are Unclaimed The KU athletic department reports nearly 200 students have not claimed their fall football tickets. Students who have applied or paid for tickets last spring or this fall must obtain their tickets from the south ticket window in the main lobby of Allen Field House before Friday, said Monte Johnson, director of public relations of the Athletic department. The office will be open from 8:30 to noon and 1 to 4:30 p.m. Most of these students picked up their first ticket to the Colorado game, but did not return for the remainder of their tickets. Johnson said. "Over 9,000, including students, students' wives and medical students, have student tickets this year," continued Johnson. "Last year there were 8,200." "We want the rest of the students to have their tickets, but it is impossible for our office to handle them after Thursday," he said. Johnson said the student seating committee of the All Student Council (ASC) will decide what will be done with unclaimed tickets. Johnson said there will be no exchange of student tickets. In the past, some students such as transfer graduate students who were dissatisfied with their tickets, were allowed to trade them for better, unclaimed tickets. Students who wish to claim their tickets must bring their ID cards and student fee receipts to the field house. "Since there are only a handful of those tickets left over," said Johnson, "An exchange would hardly be worthwhile." - Now affiliated with Vox are Foster Battenfeld, and Jolliffe Halls. Pearson and Stephenson Halls are University Party members. David Nowlin, Holton junior and president of Battenfeld, said that his house voted 40-2 to reaffiliate with Vox. "I think the candidates that we have will have a better chance with Vox." Nowlin explained. Jollife, which had previously been a UP house, voted by a slimmer margin to affiliate with Vox. Jolliffe vice-president Dick Lawson, Wichita junior, said that both Roger Wilson, Wichita senior and president of Vox, and Vox executive vice-president Brian Grace, Lawrence junior, spoke to his house, but UP did not send a representative. He explained that UP had planned to send someone, but the visit never materialized. Tom Hardy, Hoisington senior and former independent co-chairman of UP, explained that UP had sent no representatives to Jolliffe, but that they did have several UP committee appointees living in the hall. Dave Madison, McCook, Neb, sophomore and Grace Pearson Hall president, said his hall may vote again in an attempt to affiliate. "One of the boys, a transfer student, wants to run for office," Madison said today. "It is possible that we will take another vote. Nancy Lane, Hoisington junior and UP independent co-chairman, said Jolliffe is not too solid behind Vox. "The vote there was 19-13 in favor of Vox." she said. Leaders of both parties spoke to the halls yesterday evening prior to voting. party leaders will speak to Corbin Hall women tomorrow night at 6:30. The informal, after-dinner meeting, will be sponsored by the All Student Council. Dean Salter, chairman of the ASC, will speak on student government. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 16, 1962 Greeks Allow CRC? The Civil Rights Council has gone on record as demanding that the University force fraternities to remove discriminatory clauses from their constitutions and by-laws. And it has been recommended that fraternities be kicked off campus if they refuse to comply with the edict. Last spring, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe refused to assume the role of dictator, and the de-segregationists are unhappy. BUT BEFORE THEY ASK the Chancellor to assume dictatorial powers, they might examine the demand and consider what would happen if it were carried out. To begin with, what right would the Chancellor have to order fraternities to desegregate under threat of extinction? The fraternities are financially independent of the college and the state. Their houses are built by private funds on land paid for by private contributions. And, as long as the fraternity members abide by the University rules, the Chancellor has no reason nor, for that matter, right to tell them what creed they must live by. CRC BASED ITS DEMAND that the Chancellor act as it desires on the grounds that the state of Kansas has a law against discrimination being practiced by any state agency. And because fraternities must be sanctioned by the University, they argued that this gives the Chancellor power to cram an arbitrary ruling down their collective throat. And what if a church should decide to bar members of minority groups? Would it recommend that the Chancellor tell students they cannot belong to an organization which practices discrimination? If members of the Civil Rights Council want the Constitution and the Bill of Rights rewritten, they should talk to their Congressmen. It may not be to their liking, but a citizen of the United States is guaranteed the right to practice bigotry —in a peaceful manner—if he so desires. AND SINCE THERE IS small chance that the Constitution will be changed to give one man, or minority groups, the powers of a dictator, the CRC should find a better weapon against discrimination and bigotry. But an honest alternative involves more work than lipping self-righteous cries of "Foul Play!" It has long been established that in a fair fight between good and evil, the forces of good fare rather well—even if they do not emerge as total victors. If the CRC master-plan for fraternities is best, let it be proved so in fair competition with the present system which is shot with bigotry and discrimination. Surely anything as rotten as the present fraternity system would not stand the competition of one based on equality. IF THE PRESENT FRATERNITY system is wrong, bad and evil, let it be vanquished by a better system. But let this better system be established by the sweat and toil and devotion which built the present system which the CRC claims is bad because it restricts its membership. NEITHER THE CRC, its members, nor the Chancellor has the right to tell the individuals who comprise a fraternity that they must live by a creed deemed best by another man. The fraternities have the right to remain independent of the whims of others as long as they pay their own way and abide by the rules. But if the CRC is not willing to do the work of establishing the system which they say is superior, then let it be still. The CRC wants to live another group of person's lives by virtue of edict based on moral judgment. An empire built on the ashes of an imperfect institution would not be lacking for starting places. THE FRATERNITIES are not perfect—they do not pretend to be. But what would be left standing if every imperfect institution were doomed to extinction? As long as fraternity members abide by the rules enforced in other students, they can practice discrimination and bigotry to their heart's content. And it is worth noting that the same right which permits bigotry and discrimination allows the CRC to exist against the pleasure of the fraternities. —Terry Murphy Food Situation at Lewis ... Letters .. We, the residents of Lewis Hall, realize that it is hard to cook for a large number of people, and we have tried to understand this problem. We also realize starch is needed in the diet, but not in such abundance as it appears at Lewis. JELLO ALSO IS a good food. However, when we have to eat it twice a day, this is carrying things to extremes. Trying new foods and new combinations also is good — it adds variety. But such concoctions as grilled peanut butter and bacon sandwiches and dill pickles in the ever-present jello are too much for anyone to stand. Dorm fees were raised this year LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler C-87 BOVER PO BOX 123, MONTRÉY DALE 'OH AN ANOTHER THING — SOME OF THESE PROFS DON'T WANT TO BE BOTHERED OTHER THAN SCHEDULED OFFICE HOURS as everyone knows. One would think that with this added money, the dorms could provide better food. SACK LUNCHES are another problem. Last year the variety of dinners failed to appear in the lunches. Every day bologna was found for sandwiches. But, at least, one could have more than one sandwich. This year, even with the increase in dorm fees, sack lunches have gotten worse. This year sack lunches are handed out as one goes through the breakfast line. They are packaged and guarded so well, one would think they really held something worth eating. But alas, no. The sandwich consists of peanut butter on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and cheese on Tuesday and Thursday! We realize food prices have gone up, but they can't have gone up that much! If anyone thinks the above stated comments are exaggerated, come over to Lewis and eat anytime. If anyone agrees with these statements, write more letters and maybe we can start a "Feed KU" campaign! Mary Lou Cooley Mission junior Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16. 1912. Telephone VIkring 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service (NAS) and News service; United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the weekdays of Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. COMMENT Chiang's Dream Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek has led the Nationalist Chinese since 1928. For 13 of those years, he has been on the island of Formosa. He has just asserted, as he has so many times during those 13 years, that he will attack the Chinese Communist mainland, 200 miles away. This has been Chiang's dream since he was pushed from the mainland in 1949. ON THE FACE of it, Chiang's threats would seem similar to an ant-attacking-an-elephant. Formosa has a total land mass of 14,000 square miles and a population of 10 million. The vast mainland is 4 million square miles in area,has a total population of almost 700 million. A closer examination would reveal that the odds are a little more even. Chiang has a standing army of 600,000, many of them highly trained, crack men. He has an air force which, although small, is more combat ready (according to some) than the Communist Chinese. Another factor in his favor is described by newsman Joseph Alsop: "COMMUNIST CHINA is not unlike an outwardly imposing barn full of ill-cured, ill-stored hay, in which the flames of spontaneous combustion may quite suddenly leap out." It is this "spontaneous combustion" of revolt that Chiang most counts on. He feels that if his troops ever launch an attack on the mainland, the people of Red China will rise and fight the Communists. And, as Alsop says, "no one can be sure he is wrong." Chiang stacks another card in his favor when he points to the "rift" between Communist China and the U.S.S.R. It is his feeling that if he ever did attack China, the Russians would not interfere—they would applaud. ALSOP REPORTS that many in Washington feel that Chiang's first point is well-taken, but they regard his second as at best highly hopeful. Regardless of the success or failure of such an attack today, the United States is having no part of it. This country has taken a vow to maintain the status quo in Asia. We have sworn to contain communism in the area—and we have also made it plain that we will contain the Chinese nationalists. It is common knowledge, for example, that the United States 7th fleet sails the Formosan Straits to keep both the Communists and the Nationalists from attacking each other. OUR REASONING is probably sound. If Chiang landed troops in the Fukien province of China, the Russians would do anything but applaud. If a rift exists between the two giant Communist nations, it would be rapidly forgotten in this incident. The Russians would lose no time in coming to the aid of their Chinese brothers. If Chiang attacked, the United States overnight would lose all it has been fighting for in Asia: peace. Chiang Kai-shek is now 76 years old. His dream of once more walking on the mainland of China must die with him. —Zeke Wigglesworth E 7 the took world BARREN GROUND, by Ellen Glasgow (American Century, $1.95). IN THIS OUR LIFE, by Ellen Glasgow, (Avon, 50 cents). It has been said that Ellen Glasgow has written as tellingly of post-Civil War Virginia as Faulkner has written of Mississippi, but without the horror and the degradation. Superficially, this is so. But there is an undercurrent of savagery and despondency in these two novels that is as marked as the horror of the saga of Yoknapatawpha County. "Barren Ground" is the story of Dorinda Oakley and her family of Old Farm, of the unyielding soil and the cruel life of the South at the turn of the century, of her first passionate love for young Dr. Jason Greylock, which turns sour when he gets her pregnant and then marries another girl. Though Dorinda turns sour on love, she does not turn sour on life, and she turns the barren ground into fertile, flourishing land. Meanwhile she achieves a kind of equanimity, though not in any romantic sense. "In This Our Life" is Virginia in the 1930s, and a family of the decaying aristocracy, a bit higher morally than some of Faulkner's folks, but only a bit. The central character is the worn-out, ineffectual, disillusioned father Asa, whose wife Lavinia is a bedridden nag and whose daughters, Stanley and Roy (that's right, Stanley and Roy), are making messes of their lives. The latter novel won the Pulitzer prize for Miss Glasgow. It leaves a bitter taste in the mouth, as it no doubt was mean to do.-CMP Ben Bella, Castro To Confer In Cuba NEW YORK — (UPI) — Algerian Premier Ahmed Ben Bella flew to Havana today for talks with Cuban Premier Fidel Castro amid indications he would play down the political significance of his controversial trip. Ben Bella and a group of aides left New York's Idlewild airport shortly after 6 a.m. aboard a private plane. The non-stop flight is expected to take $4\frac{1}{2}$ hours. THE 44-YEAR-OLD ALGERIAN leader left shortly after the disclosure in well-informed diplomatic circles that he would not play the role of mediator in the U.S.-Cuban conflict. Ben Bella, while anxious to thank Castro for having supported the Algerian revolt against the French, is equally anxious not to let his trip appear as an anti-American gesture, diplomatic sources said. Ben Bella took off without fanfare. He will return to New York tomorrow aboard the same plane. His departure for Algiers has been set for Friday. ASC to Debate Poll Proposal The All Student Council tonight will meet in an emergency session to discuss action on a decentralization of polls proposal. The ASC committee on committees last night declined to make a recommendation on the voting poll amendment proposed by Vox Populi. Trudy Meserve, Abilene junior and ASC vice-chairman and committee chairman, said the decision was not an indication of whether her committee was opposed to the amendment. However, Miss Meserve said the committee would suggest a new bill which places two voting polls in place of one in Strong and the other polls in Murphy and the Kansas Union. Phyllis Wertzberger, Lawrence graduate student in the School of Pharmacy, and member of the committee on committees said the committee based its decision on two points. She said committee members doubted the need for decentralization of polls. "The turnout in voting has been just as good as it was when the polls were placed in the various schools on campus several years ago." Miss Wertzberger explained. A second point was that more workers would be needed if the Vox amendment was accepted. Cuban sources said a contingent headed by Castro and President Osvaldo Dorticos would greet Ben Bella at the Havana airport. They were scheduled to ride into the city in an open convertible. CUBAN CITIZENS WERE EX-horted to line the route to give the Algerian a welcome. Later, Ben Bella was scheduled to place a wreath on the statue in Havana Central Park of Jose Marti, the Cuban liberator. Page 3 Posters bearing a likeness of Ben Bella and the words "Welcome, Ben Bella" in both Spanish and Arabic were placed yesterday in the windows of Havana department stores and on buses. To ease outbursts of American resentment, Ben Bella privately has been playing down the political import of his two-day Cuban visit, especially in the light of his warm welcome in this country. Ben Bella will be the guest of honor tonight at a reception held by Dorticos. The Algerian party will stay in a Cuban government residence. THE ALGERIAN PREMIER'S nine-day visit here culminated yesterday with a 21 gun salute on the White House lawn and a greeting from President Kennedy. Ben Bella was assured of American aid, probably in the form of medical supplies and grain. Mohamed Yazid, former information officer in the provisional government (GPRA) was present yesterday and is due to return to Washington next month with two aides to continue talks on increased American aid. It was certain that Ben Bella's demeanor and statements in Havana would be closely watched by officials here. However, during his United States stay, Ben Bella—in office only a month—stressed the "non-aligned" political posture of his regime and his primary concern was economic advancement of his country. Auto Wrecking and Junk New and Used Parts and Tires East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956 LOONEY TOO! OCT. 20 7:00-11:00 KANSAS UNION BALLROOM Tuesday, Oct. 16, 1962 University Daily Kansan by the Mike Peterson Trio — with SUNDAY BUFFET 6:30-9:30 Dine-a-Mite LIVE JAZZ Got a Bone to Pick? Then try our chicken! at the BIG BUY 23rd & Iowa State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd. Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan. SUA CLASSICAL FILM SERIES Presents - The Philadelphia Story - Starring KATHERN HEPBURN Wednesday 7 P.M. in the FORUM ROOM Season tickets $3.00 60c at the door MUD & SNOW RECAPS 670X15 750X14 $9.95 Exchange plus tax $9.95 Exchange plus tax We have about all sizes in stock including compact and foreign car sizes at comparable low prices LAWRENCE TIRE & OIL 1000 Mass. VI 2-0247 Page 4 University Daily Kansan tuesday, Oct. 16, 1962 Alcoholics Cost a Billion Friedmann to Speak On Culture Groups The first Humanities lecturer of the 1962-63 season divided cultures into three groups yesterday when he spoke on "A Philosopher's Approach to the Comparison of Cultures." F. G. Friedmann, professor of the history of American culture and director of the American Institute at the University of Munich, Germany, discussed "primitive, advanced, and utilitarian" cultures. He talked at a meeting sponsored by the Philosophy Club, Western Civilization department and Student Union Activities. Prof. Friedmann will give the Humanities lecture at 8 p.m. today in Fraser Theater. His topic is "The Concept of Alienation in the Comparison of Cultures." "I try to think of culture as the sum total of human attempts, conscious or subconscious, to find meaning in life," he said. He then presented three "ideal attempts," adding that there can be a good deal of overlapping and fusion. "The motivating force in primitive civilizations is the satisfaction of basic, down-to-earth needs. They are societies of little traditions." "Advanced civilizations have great traditions motivated toward building a culture which goes beyond the satisfaction of basic needs. They are characterized by appreciation of higher ideals. Actions are attracted by the goal of doing good." "In a utilitarian culture, interests of individuals and groups direct the activities of the people. They are not concerned merely with basic needs, but there is no single overall cultural idea. "Utilitarian is also distinguished by a type of mental activity—an attempt on the part of the human mind to gather meaning by consolidating interests in the mind. There is no innate direction." "Civilizations and cultures mediate between the circumstances of life. To make little things meaningful, we must relate them to something which transcends them." Around the Campus Rush Registration Regional Award Slated for Today To Dr. Canuteson Women interested in joining a social sorority have until 5 p.m. today to register for formal spring rush in the dean of women's office, 212 Strong Hall. The Panhellenic Council, which governs and coordinates activities of the 13 sororities, conducts the registration. Rush will be held between the fall and spring semesters. Those participating must have a 1.0 grade average. Student Directory Ready in Two Weeks The 1962-63 edition of the student directory will soon be available. Directory sales will begin Nov. 1 on campus street corners near Bailey Hall. During the week of Nov. 5 they will be sold in the information booth, and after Nov. 9 they will be sold in the Kansas Union Book Store. The directory price is 35 cents. Nicholas Stucky, Buhler senior and directory editor, and Jerry Harper, Wichita senior and business manager, have worked with the Registrar's Office and the Dean of Students office to prepare the directory for printing. Rabbi Myron Meyer To Discuss Judaism A St. Joseph, Mo., rabbi will speak about "What Is a Jew" at 7:30 tomorrow night at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, 917 Highland Drive. Rabbi Myron Meyer's address is sponsored by the Jewish Community Women. A question and answer session will follow the talk. Students, faculty and public are invited. Commuters Schedule Meeting To Reorganize Car-Pools Commuters who are dissatisfied with their present transportation arrangements are invited to a meeting to organize and reorganize car-pools. The meeting will be at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Hawklet at Sumnerfield Hall. Kelleam Childers, Kansas City senior, is in charge. He can be reached at HE 2-0467 in Kansas City. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the Student Health Service, is the 1962 recipient of the Dearholt Medal, awarded by the Mississippi Valley Conference on Tuberculosis for meritorious service in the field of public health and tuberculosis control. The Mississippi Valley Conference encompasses 11 states, extending northward from Kansas and eastward through Ohio. Dr. Canuteson pioneered in the methods of TB detection applicable to students since he came to KU in 1928. He has served as president of the Kansas Tuberculosis and Health Association and on the board of directors and currently the executive committee of the National Tuberculosis and Health Association. He previously received the Samuel J. Crumbine medal given annually to a Kansan for service in the field of public health, and is a former president of the Mississippi Valley Thoracic Society. Professor Performs At Faculty Concert Nearly 300 persons heard Karel Blaas, violist and associate professor of music play at the second faculty concert in Swarthout auditorium last night. Accompanied by Richard Angelletti, pianist and instructor of music and Margaret Ling, harpist and instructor of music, Prof. Blaas played four classical selections: Sonata in B flat major, by Antonio Vivaldi, Duo for viola and harp by Quincy Porter, Sonatina by John Verrall, and Sonata Number One by Darius乳audh. A political refugee from Cuba will give a public address on "Private Enterprise and Communism in Modern Cuba" at 9:15 tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Before joining the KU faculty 13 years ago, Prof. Blaas was staff violinist for a Rochester radio station. Prof. Blaas is also violist for the KU string quartet. Cuban Refugee to Give Talk Lawrence Daniels, now consulting engineer for Black and Veatch, Kansas City, Mo., had his own business under Batista and Castro. His business and personal belongings were confiscated about 10 months ago. The average alcoholic misses 22 days of work every year, costing American industry more than a billion dollars, according to the Yale University Center of Alcoholic Studies. Daniels' appearance is sponsored by Delta Sigma Pi, professional business administration fraternity. FREE DELIVERY Call before 4, Delivered after 5 $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 GOODER DRUG Cranes About Whooped Out There are only about three dozen whooping cranes in the world. COOPER DRUG YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hour Service Owner Radio Controlled Ward Thompson When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds Wednesday Night CHICKEN SPECIAL All You Can Eat ONLY $1 drink and dessert extra Little Banquet Ample free parking on the Malls STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES 819 Mass. LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 ARENSBERG'S VI 3-3470 SLIP-ONS from our WINTHROP MODERN LIVING WARDROBE A (A) Black or Dark Brown Grain (B) Copper or Black Smooth Calf $14.95 This is today's most versatile style...for almost every occasion... every fashion. Slip-ons belong in your wardrobe if you're going places and doing things at the modern pace. WINTHROP SHOES LEATHER INDUSTRIES OF AMERICA AMERICAN SHOE DESIGNER AWARD 1982 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Along the JAYHAWKER trail By Steve Clark Saturday's KU-Oklahoma game promises to be one of the most colorful in years. FIRST, the Sooners, still smarting from give-away losses to Notre Dame and Texas, open Big Eight play. After two losses, the Sooners have one hope to salvage what could be a disappointing season by winning the Big Eight championship. SECOND. the Jayhawkers are unmarried in Big Eight play after resounding victories over Colorado and Iowa State. The OU game could decide the league championship. The winner is in good position to go all the way. THIRD, interest toward Jayhawker football is at an all-time peak. Enthusiasm by the student body is unparalleled by recent years. The cheerleaders report upmost success in directing organized yells. FOURTH, a big pre-game rally- dance is being staged to promote a “Beat OU” school spirit. This is the first pre-game rally-dance to be staged in recent years. It will be held at the Big Barn, west of Lawrence, Friday night from 9-12. The charge is $1.50 per couple. FIFTH. the game can be termed a sellout. There still remain a few bleacher seats but these will be gobbled up in the next few days. SIXTH, the band will stage a half-time-show featuring precision drill. It will be this show that the band will probably perform at Kansas State and Oklahoma State. KU promises to have a "real college football weekend" on its hands. Hawk's Nest and Strong basement talk is already being centered around Saturday's game. Try a barber shop. The local hair surgeons will talk a customer's ear off concerning the Oklahoma game. WHAT ABOUT the prospects of the game? It has to be termed a toss-up. The Jayhawkers have somewhat of a mental block toward the Sooners. The Jayhawkers won at Norman 10-0 last year, but the score should have been much more. KU has not defeated Oklahoma in Memorial Stadium since 1946 when Vince Turner's field goal gave the Jayhawkers a 16-13 victory. This is liable to put the pressure on the Jayhawkers. Sig Alphs Win; Betas in First Beta Theta Pi took over undisputed first place of division one of the Fraternity A intramural football yesterday by soundly defeating Tau Kappa Epsilon 36-0. Sigma Alpha Epsilon knocked Sigma Chi from the unbeaten ranks winning a 26-21 thriller. IN OTHER DIVISION one action. Delta Tau Delta won by forfeit from Lambda Chi Alpha. Beta Theta Pi's record now stands 3-0, while Sigma Chi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Delta Tau Delta are close behind with 2-1 records. Lambda Chi Alpha and Tau Kappa Epsilon are winless in three outings. Don Warner was the Beta's outstanding performer as he snapped five touchdown passes against the TKE's. MIKE MASON and John Williams were Sigma Alpha Epsilon's mainstays in its win over Sigma Chi. The two speedsters riddled the Sigs secondary to snag quarterback Jim Meyer's passes. Both caught two touchdown passes. Penalties were Sigma Chi's downfall. The Sigs were penalized 120 yards compared to Sigma Alpha Epsilon's 15. The Sigs trailed 26-14 midway in the fourth quarter, but a Bob Benz to Norm Schwartzkopf pass made it 26-21. On the last play of the game, Benz connected with Dave Barrier, who played despite a badly injured leg, who was stopped on the two-way line. SCHWARTZKOPF caught two touchdown passes while Dick Rader snagged one. The Sig offense was hampered in the first half, until 6-5, 220-pound end John Hornung arrived from class. The Benz-Hornung combination moved the ball down field only to be set back by numerous penalties. Benz continued his record of PAT's. The Bartlesville, Okla., quarterback has connected on six-of-six. On one PAT, the Sigs were penalized, but Benz sent a 33-yard kick through the uprights. In Independent A action, Foster defeated Templin 20-6. In Independent B play between Oread and Foster, there was a double forfeit. Sign of Success for 'Fair Lady' LONDON — (UPI) — Drury Lane Theater, where "My Fair Lady" is playing, today placed this sign under its marquee: "Urgent-Last Two Years." Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers THE INSTALLED we all make mistakes... Now personal letters can be typed on EATON'S ERASABLE CORRASABLE new social edition for modern letter writers Once Paris took Helen, there was no way out. Today it's easy to correct your errors—at the typewriter, anyway—when you use Eaton's erasable Corrāsable Bond. It erases with just a flick of an ordinary pencil eraser! That's why it is such a boon to busy college people. Since etiquette authorities agree that it's correct to type personal letters, Eaton now makes Corräsable available in a new, handsome (laid patterned) social edition. In carefully edited colors: White, Grey, Blue; in letter sizes correct for men and women. Only Eaton makes erasable Corräsable. BARRICA DE LOS MADRES DE LA REGION TEXAS UNIDAD DE LOS MADRES DE LA REGION TEXAS A Berkshire Typewriter Paper. EATON PAPER CORPORATION PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS E ELECTRONICS CO.,LTD. SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) — Manager Alvin Dark, who is batting 1,000 so far this year on his predictions, was on the spot today with his biggest of the season—that the San Francisco Giants would win the World Series. Dark Predicts SF Victory Every time the Yankees took the lead in the current series, Dark predicted that his forces would "bounce back." BILLY PIERCE helped them do it yesterday, hurling his second three-hitter in two weeks. The first came on Oct. 1 when he blanked the Los Angeles Dodgers, 8-0, in the opening game of their playoff. "The only way to beat the Yankees is in seven games," the soft-spoken "sheriff" said after his Giants had squared things at 3-3 yesterday. "We'll win it in seven. I've got a good ball club." IT WAS LAST January that Dark had told a sports banquet, "I think this team will win the pennant." Then Billy posted another yesterday, sticking mainly with fast balls in a stadium where he never has been beaten. "Yes, I say that this is a wonderful park," the boyish 35-year-old left-hander laughed yesterday when reminded that he had a 12-0 record at Candlestick Park during the regular season. PIERCE TOOK the big win in his brisk stride, and the rest of the Giants seemed almost subdued although they had pulled even in a World Series that they were not expected to reach. "I'll be ready to go tomorrow," Pierce said when told that Dark would load his bullpen with every hurler on the staff. "Heck, I've got nothing to save for this winter." JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 Fierce wobbled only in the fifth inning when Roger Maris powered a curve ball far over the right field fence for a home run and Elston Howard followed by reaching second base on a throwing error by third baseman Jim Davenport. BUT, WITH the bullpen up, Pierce worked his way out of the inning and eventually ended the game by fanning Maris on a fast ball. "I pitched (Mickey) Mantle the same as I did the others." Pierce, who held him hitless in four trips, lowered "The Mick's" series batting mark to .091. But Billy wouldn't disclose just what he was throwing to the fearsome switch-hitter. While the former Chicago White Sox mainstay was keeping to form, Orlando Cepeda regained his by collecting three hits, one of them a booming double off Whitey Ford that brought in a run. "I had to do something," said Cepeda, who went into the game 0-for-12 in the series. "It looks like those rainstouts helped me get some rest. And I went back to a heavier bat—a 35 ounce one that I used to go for five against the Phillies last August." When You Think About BICYCLES Think About Downtown WESTERN AUTO 910 Mass. VI 3-2141 ? Do You Know How to U.T., Uptown, or New Twist? LEARN THESE AND OTHERS 图 Come to the TRAIL ROOM, FRIDAY, OCT. 19th----7:30-9:00 p.m. $1.00 for All 5 weekly lessons. SUA Dance Lessons CAMPUS CLASSIC CORDOVAN BY FREEMAN BOOTMAKER GUILD CLASSIC . . . Cherry Cordovan with black Cordovan saddle. Double leather sole and luxury leather lined. Try your size today! A 9-12 & 13; B 8-12 & 13: C 7-12 & 13; D 6½-12 & 13. $24.95 "Bunny Blacks" Royal College Shop 837 MASS. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 16, 1962 Foreign Student Enrollment Hits New KU Peak The enrollment of foreign students has reached a new high at KU. According to the registrar's office, 366 international students from 65 nations are registered. Over half, 197, are from Asia. The roster includes 276 men and 90 women. Of these, 182 have previously attended KU, while 184 just arrived this fall. They are enrolled in nearly every type of course KU offers. However, the sciences and engineering have the heaviest enrollment. FIFTY-SIX STUDENTS list Taiwan (Formosa) as home while 48 list India. There are 22 from Germany, 14 each from Canada and Venezuela, 12 from Hong Kong, 11 from Great Britain, and 10 each from Greece and the Philippines. Other nations represented are: France 9, 8 each from Iran and Thailand; 7 each from Costa Rica, Iraq, Pakistan and Switzerland; 6 each from Egypt and Turkey; 5 each from Italy and Korea; 4 each from Austria, Brazil, Burma, Japan, Lebanon, The Netherlands and Saudi Arabia. Three each from Afghanistan, Argentina, Cuba, Iceland, Nigeria, Norway, South Africa, Singapore, Spain, Syria and Tunisia; 2 each from Aden, Bolivia, Israel, Panama, Uruguay and Yemen. THERE IS ONE student each from the Bahamas, Brunei, Cambodia, Chile, Cyprus, Ethiopia, Finland, Ghana, Indonesia, Jamaica, Jordan, Kenya, Liberia, Malaya, Morocco, Poland, Sierra Leone, Southern Rhodesia, Sweden, Tanganyika and Yugoslavia. Foreign students who have come to this country on immigrant visas and do not plan to return are not included. Students Jailed Following Burglary Two KU students and one former KU student were in the city jail today after being arrested in connection with the burglary of a Lawrence service station Sunday morning. James Laird, Wichita freshman, one of the three, admitted breaking into three other service stations since school started, according to Lawrence police. The other student is Stephen La- boufe, Stateline, Calif., junior. The former student, William Rohr, Belle Plaine, quit school Thursday. Wesley Norwood, Douglas county attorney, said the boys were being held on a vagrancy charge until burglary and larceny charges can be made. Norwood said the three will be arraigned today. Pancake Race Pits Liberal, Olney Again KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UPI)—The organizer of the international pancake race, Rev. Ronald Collins, Vicar of Olney, England, will leave here tonight for Liberal, Kan., Olney's annual foe. The pancake race, held on Shrove Tuesday each year, pits housewives of Olney against those of Liberal. Official Bulletin Fulbright program deadline application grant grants for 1963-64 should be returned in to the Fulbright adviser, 306 Fraser, by 17. Forms are still available at the office. International students who would like to discuss home hospitality plan for all or part of the Thanksgiving vacation should see Dr. Coan, 288 Strong Hall. TODAY Tau Sigma, 7:00 p.m. Robinson Gym. Methodist, Worship, 9:15 Foundation. p.m. Foundation. Episcopal Enlightening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Dunford Forchman. KU Section of American Chemical Society, Dr. Wayne L. Carrick, Union Carbondale, USA; the Mechanisms of Olefin Ploymerization by Ziegler-type Catalysts." 122 Malott. Five KU faculty members will attend an inter-university seminar on urbanization Oct. 18-20 at the University of Colorado Boulder, Colo. Faculty Members Will Attend Seminar The meeting will be the final one of a series held over a three-year period under Ford Foundation sponsorship. KU is a clearing-house for the inter-disciplinary group that includes representatives of 13 Midwestern universities. KU seminar participants who will attend the Colorado meeting are: Ethan P. Allen, professor and chairman of the political science department and seminar chairman; Richard L. Stauber, instructor of political science and seminar research assistant; Duane Knos, assistant professor of geography; Charles Warriner, associate professor of sociology, and John Grumm, associate professor of political science. We Predict "The Miracle Worker" A WINNING TEAM will win an Academy Award as "Best Picture of the Year!" the miracle worker A FLASH OF INTENSELY PERSONAL DRAMA! THEATRE Coming Soon! GRANADA LIREATRE ··· Telephone VKING 3-5788 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Is Your Raincoat Ready? Use our waterproofing treatment regularly . . . Orange Juice for Eskimos Alterations Repairs Reweaving NewYork Cleaners VI 3-0501 926 Mass. TORONTO—(UPI) —Orange juice may soon become a standard breakfast drink of Eskimos and other far northerners—as one result of the instant-foods trend. Mercants of Good Appearance COSMOPOLITAN GRANADA NOW SHOWING! 7:00 & 9:10 A DARRYN F. ZANUCK PRODUCTION The Chapman Report TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS. No one under 16 will be admitted unless accompanied by an adult. Adults 90c VARSITY HOW SHOWING Tonight & Wed. COLOR AND CINEMASCOPE STARTING RORY CALHOUN MARCO POLO Open 6:30 — Show At 7 Ends Tonight Availability in the near future of consumer-size packages of "instant orange juice" crystals is predicted by a U.S. Food dehydration authority in a recent issue of Food in Canada magazine. SUNSET NOW SHOWING! WARNER BROS. PRESENT THE C.V. WHITEHUE PICTURE "JOHN WAYNE" STARRING "THE SEARCHERS" EFFREY HUNTER-VERA MILES VISTAVISION WARD BOND-NATALIE WOOD TECHNICOLOR "FUNNY! 1925 -TIME MAGAZINE | HAPPINES BLAZAAR -*MICALLS* | -REDBOOK -*NEWSEEK* | -*PARENTS* "THANK YOU, MR. LLOYD!"* "THANK YOU, MR. LLOYD!*" HAROLD LLOYD'S world of Comedy - "You must see this even if you have to stand in line in pouring rain to get a seat...thank you, Mr. Lloyd!" -McCall's Magazine Starts Thurs. For 3 Hilarious Days --on The Terrifying Truth About Hitler's Reich "MEIN KAMPF" Double Feature! STARTS TOMORROW Every Foot of Firm is Real . . . Authentic Film From Secret German Files See— Hitler Eichmann WHAT THE STREETS DON'T TEACH THEM THIS JAIL DOES! HOUSE OF WOMEN WHAT THE STREETS DON'T TEACH THEM THIS JAIL DOES! BIAWAN HOUSEOF WOMEN SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE . . . West on Highway 40 KU SPORTS DIAL KLWN 1320 7:30 a.m. -------------- Daily Sports Shorts 5:00 Today ___ Sports Outdoors 5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports Tuesday, Oct. 16, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terns cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. BUSINESS SERVICES New Highway Market located in basement of White School near Tee Pee junction. Fresh fruit, vegetables, meats bread, milk, eggs, cigarettes at 25c a pack and cold drinks. Open 7 days a week 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. 10-17 Ironing in my home. 10c a piece. 928 La. 10-17 Baby sitting 1$ block east of camp $2 environments. Phone VI 3-2636. 10-17 LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tf TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental. New and used portables, standards and electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. tt DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- more information, Ola Smith. 919's 93; Mass. Call VI3-5263. GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized the monitors, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs etc., plus complete items. pet supplies. **tf** TYPING Experienced secretary with electric type- er equipment, telephone and computer, e.g., Phone Nancy Coin at VI 3-0242. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, first accurate service. Reasonable rate. M.Barrow, 40 W.183, VI 21648. M.Barrow, 40 W.183, VI 21648. Secretary will do typing in home. Fast. accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 2-1743. tf Typing reasonable reasonale, neat and acco- mence. Mrs. Gracey 3-1168; Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greeter Terr. Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409. tt Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651. tt Manuscripts, theses, and term papers. Also dissertations typed on wide carriage. Also spelling 35 special keys. Experience education and management. Mrs. Suzanne Giuliani VI. 21-482. tf FOR SALE Slamsee kittens, $10 each. A. F. Hyde. RR No. 2 or phone V-3-0148. 10-22 All kinds of house plants. Potted . . . including the types pillodendron used for room deckers and in picture windows. Phone VI 3-4207. 10-22 1923 Chevrolet in excellent condition. 2 seat hatchback. At vi 3-3510 after 5-36 p.m. 10-22 1962 x 10'x10" mobile home, like new. Will be delivered by Phone C-2 10424, Topeka. 10-15 Economical car. 1959 Renault Dauphine. 35 m.p.g., low mileage, excellent condition. Call collect, Larry Hickman. M19-126 in Kansas City, Kansas = $550.10. I7 TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. Magnavox also offers an upgrade from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettigrew-Dillas, 723 Mass. Two Magnavox stereo hi-fi mahogany consoles. These high quality units have been replaced by newer models. Save up to $100. Also, good selection of the later Magnavox Peton models 222 Mass, and see why Magnavox is number one in the nation. 10-19 8'x11, 1958 mobile phone. Arkansas at 6th, east side or phone VI 3-92-38. 10-19 1960 Carovile Renault sports car. Phone VI 3-2882 mornings or after 5:00 p.m. Used electric vacuum cleaner with a complete set of attachments. $27.50. New Hoover tank for $39.50. Limited offer. Pettigell-Davis, 723 Mass. 10-18 10-17 Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mincegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery, if 3 bedroom house with a full basement. Low interest G1. loan. Phone VI 3-7568 Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive diagrams and definitions, revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tf Good 1680 Cushman motor scooter. See at 1522 Harper. 10-17 Professor selling '7 Karman Ghia (sports oilmen)'. Spodex throughout P1-10. V1 2-18. P1-16 '53 MG TD in fine condition. New tires, new top, side wings, maintenance manual, low mileage. Phone Extension 357. 10-16 Tire! Tires! 1,000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes—most foreign brands. In stock until Oct. 31st! 600-13 new style new tubeless snow tires, for $25; 650-15, 250-18 tires, for $49; 750-19 tires, for $59 installation at rear, Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass, VI 3-1470 FM Radios! FM Stereo! Stereo! Largest disc stores! discount! Roy Stoneblower 929 MHz 3-417 ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS — New machines and a few rebuilt. All parts available and machines serviced. Established locally 24 years. F. V. Cox. Local Manager, 1904 Barker, Lawrence, Kansas. Phone VI 3-3277. 10-25 TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow paper 125c per ream, reds, yelts, or pand. The Lawrence Outlaw 1069 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. 1099 3-speed lightweight Royce Union bikes cut to $37.50 in men's or ladies. New 2-speed automatic Schwinns, $48.88. Rockback stone's, 929 Mass, VI 3-4170. 10-16 POST VERSALOG slide rule. Like new. Also a Norelco floating head electric shaver. Phone VI 3-0483 after 5 p.m. 10-17 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in the west—Pet phone V13-238 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. large sleeping and study room, single or double for boys. Close and centrally located. See at 1220 La. or phone VI 3-1890. 10-22 FOR RENT Vacancies for young men in contemporary home with swimming pool, shower bath, private entrance, 5 evening meals weekly. $65 a month. Call VI 3-9635, tf Two bedroom houses and duplex furnished, $80 to $100 per month. Also, three room use and apartment furnished from $85 to $80 a month. T. A. Hemingway III 3-3902. 10-22 Large wall wall-to-wall carpeted deluxe campus. 1617 Oxford Rd. evenings. 10-22 2 bedroom ranch house, 2105 Tennessee. Dining "L'", Kitchen with disposal. Utility room. $85 a month. 1st six months downpayment if buying. Call 7431. 10-18 Large furnished apartment with large closets. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from campus. Private bath and entrance. Newly decorated. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-2263. 10-17 1 double and 1 single room with board in new home. Close to campus. Transportation furnished. Phone VI 3-7642 after 5 p.m. 10-16 3 room furnished modern apartment. Utilities paid. For one person $50 a month or $60 a month for 2 persons. Phone VI 3-2402. 10-16 For rent, a lovely, modern apartment. Phone VI 3-7819 by 5 p.m. 10-k Phone VI 3-7819 by 5 p.m. 10-k 3 room apartment, private bath. I block front yard. You can pay. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. if you want to stay. Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from Union. Excellent accommodation for 4 boys. Nice and clean, see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. LOST HELP WANTED Immediate vacancy for an ASCP registered medical technologist, 40 hour week, vacation and sick leave Laboratory, Watkins Memorial Hospital VI 3-4455 10-18 Part time shoe salesman, experienced immediately. Call Weaver's, VI 6360 Alpha Omicron Pi sorority pin lost in Kansas Union or near the stadium around 10:00 Thursday evening. Reward offered. Phone VI 3-60601 10-22 Black straw bag in Union cafeteria. Re- ward. Mary Baumgartner, VI 3-3910. 10-22 From near bookstore -- Calculus and Chemistry books and Notes, slide rule and several other items. Reward for the two questions asked. John Turtles VI 3-4711 10-16 Lost wallet Friday night. Brown leather, contains ID, drivers license and important papers. Return to Mohamed 002 Summerfield Hall or call VI 1-2516. BEAT OU Attend the Big Rally Dance Big Barn, Friday 9-12 p.m. Music by THE DISCIPLES $1.50 per couple Patronize Kansan Advertisers-They Are Loyal Supporters. Menthol Fresh Salem KENTER C. DABETLER Salem refreshes your taste "air-softens"every puff Take a puff... it's Springtime! A refreshing discovery is yours every time you smoke a Salem cigarette...for Salem refreshes your taste just as Springtime refreshes you. Most refreshing, most flavorful, too...that's Salem! - menthol fresh · rich tobacco taste · modern filter, too @ 1962 R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C. Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 16, 1962 [Image of a man in a suit with a tie]. J. Allen Reese Reese Resigns After22 Years Dean J. Allen Reese, for 22 years head of the University of Kansas School of Pharmacy, said he would return to full-time duties as professor of pharmacy and State drug analyst next June. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe announced Dean Reese's resignation today. He said the 57-year-old pharmacy dean had requested fewer administrative duties. Dean Reese was president of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy in 1951. The Rexall Drug Company presented him the Mortar and Pestle trophy for outstanding service in Pharmaceutical education in 1957. Dean Reese has served on the committee of revision for the U.S. Pharmacopoeia for 10 years. She Got $1.8 Million, Then Forgot Her Purse COLUMBUS, Ohio — (UPI) — State Welfare Director Mary Gorman was all smiles when the state board of control granted her department $1.8 million in emergency funds to match new federal grants for old-age pensions. But half an hour later her face was red. An ane returned to the board meeting and explained that Mrs. Gorman, busy getting the money for her department, had forgotten her purse. KU Students Sentenced, Fined on Vandal Charges Nine KU students were sentenced to 30 days in jail yesterday in connection with the wrecking of a vacant house near Perry. The students were later paroled. Saturday, the students pleaded guilty to charges of vandalism at a hearing and spent the weekend in the Jefferson County jail. Yesterday morning they payed their court costs and were put on an eight month parole. Edwin Pence, Jefferson County probate judge, who presided at the Saturday hearing, said the names of the students involved are being withheld. James Swoyer, Jefferson County Study Group Plans Gandhi Discussion The Passive Resistance of Mahatma Gandhi will be the topic of discussion at the Great Men of the 20th Century Study Group at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union. The guest speaker will be Ali Hassan, Hyderabad, India, sophomore. The club, sponsored by the KU-Y, was organized by Lacy Banks Kansas City sophomore. "We wanted to find out what makes great men tick," Lacy said. The club will study Dr. Albert Schweitzer, scientist; Dr. Tom Dooley, missionary doctor in Asia, and Martin Luther King, Negro integration leader. Klaus Pringsheim, political science and East Asia studies instructor, spoke at the club's first meeting last Wednesday. French Theme Woven Through 'The Egg' A Frenchman learns about sex, love and life in "The Egg," University of Kansas Experimental Theatre production which opens Thursday in Swarthout Auditorium. Terry Kovac, Wichita junior, portrays the lead in the French french which enacts a young man's disillusionment with society. F. C. Strickland, visiting professor of speech and drama, described the play as "light and earthy as only the French can be." Tickets are available at the theatre box office in Murphy. attorney, said that the vandals had no explanation for their action other than, "It just developed that way." The vandalism occurred the night of Saturday, Sept. 29 when a group of 21 students had a beer party in the vacant house. Twelve of the students left before the remaining nine wrecked the house. The nine students punched holes in the roof and walls of the house and broke all the windows and doors. The LAWRENCE ESTABLISHED 1865 FAST FINISHED Laundry Service The LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK 7th & Mass. VI 3-0260 Come in and enjoy our full-scale banking service HOW CAN YOU LOSE? RISK'S 613 Vermont Being able to do all your banking safely and conveniently in one place is really something to cheer about. Think of the time saved making one stop instead of several! apologized for not wearing a shirt. "I LIKE TO relax before a show," he explained. Lewis: From Bible School to Night Clubs Jerry Lee Lewis, the 27-year-old rock 'n roll singer who quit Bible school to play in nightclubs, would like to get back into the movies. Lewis described his piano and singing style as frantic rock 'n roll, but added that he has never ripped the carpets off the floor or torn up a piano. A After quitting high school and later Bible school, he auditioned for a record company and began his rise to popularity with "A Whole Lot of Shaking Goin' On." "I made 'High School Confidential' in 1957 and 'Jamboree' in 1958." Lewis said before entertaining the Delta Chi barn party Friday night, "but I don't feel like I've really gotten my chance. I'd like a really good acting part." Dressed in blue jeans and cowboy boots backstage, the singer KU-IOWA STATE GAME MOVIES Guest Player: Ron Oelschlager UNION FORUM ROOM TUESDAY — 7:00 p.m. FREE ADMISSION SUA QUARTERBACK CLUB Now, a clean-filling, smooth-writing Parker cartridge pen...only $ 3^{9 5} $ New PARKER ARROW ©1982 THE PARKEN PEN COMPANY, JANESVILLE, WISCONSIN, U.S.A. You can buy an ordinary cartridge pen for a dollar and even get a couple of cartridges thrown in free. But, then you pay and pay and pay. This pen can save you up to 20¢ every time you buy cartridges. You get five BIG Parker Quink cartridges for only 29¢. But, even if you didn't save a dime, this pen would be worth the extra price. It's a Parker. Only Parker gives you a solid 14K gold point, tipped with plathenium-one of the hardest, smoothest alloys ever developed. It should last you for years no matter how much you use it. This pen won't leak the way the cheap ones do—it has a built-in safety reservoir. It must meet most of the tough specifications we set for $10 pens. The Parker Arrow comes in black, dark blue light blue, light grey and bright red. You get a choice of four instantly replaceable points: extrafine, fine, medium, broad. (Special Introductory offer ends October 15,1962) This coupon good for 5 EXTRA QUINK CARTRIDGES (29¢ value) (29¢ value) Your Arrow pen is packed with 5 FREE cartridges. Present this coupon for 5 more FREE cartridges when you purchase the Arrow pen. Only one coupon redeemable for each Arrow pen purchased. Offer not available where prohibited. PARKER Maker of the world's most wanted pens To the Dealer: You are authorized to redeem the coupon and we will reimburse you for the 5 free cartridges with like goods provided that you and the consumer have complied with the terms of the offer as stated. Lewis Hall Fire Drill Gets Chilly Reception By Joanne Prim Blaaaaa! Blaaaaa! Blaaaaa! Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1962 Silence. Blaaaaa! Blaaaaa! Blaaaaa! Silence. At 11:15 last night, 440 young women suddenly descended their rooms in Lewis Hall and poured into the street. "These damn fire drills always come at just the right time," one woman said. "When I was a freshman, I was caught in the shower both times. I came out stark naked except for a coat, and my hair was dripping wet." The men of Templin graciously came out to mingle with the girls who lolled on the curbs or stood in small huddled groups. In the background, a stereo blasted away. "THEY HAVE THESE (fire drills) once each semester and they always pick the coldest nights," one woman said, hugging herself to keep warm. EACH RESIDENT wore a heavy coat (to keep warm) and carried a towel (to ward off "smoke"). A peek underneath the coats would have revealed baby-dolls, mu-mus, and "cut-offs." Many wore their hair in rollers topped with big, fluffy boudoir caps. What were the residents doing when they were interrupted? "I was reading Richard II," said one. "I was reading Henry V." said another right behind her. "AS I STOOD outside and looked toward the dorm at the extended roof above the door, I thought: 'All we need now is a leader to stand up there and speak to this converging mass of humanity.'" "I was pouring a cup of coffee, so I just took it with me. It cooler a lot more quickly outside than it would have in my room." "I WAS WORKING on a design, and I just threw everything down. I doubt if I'll ever find out where I was." "I was taking a shower, but since I had to check the girls out as they left the floor. I just threw on a robe and got busy." As if by prearranged signal, the women swarmed around the entrance of the hall when the drill was over. As they neared the door, one of them sang out, "1—3—5—9! Who do we think is mighty fine? DOOR OPENERS!" Only two people knew about the fire drill beforehand—the student management chairman and the resident director. The secret was well-kept. Friedmann Contrasts German, American U's A philosopher, examining the ways countries are alienated from their cultures, said last night America serves as a good example. The philosopher, F. G. Friedmann, professor of history of American culture, is director of the American Institute at the University of Munich, Germany. He spoke in Fraser Theater at the first of a series of Humanities lectures. "There is a gap between our beliefs and intentions. Our ideologies are systems of alienation. DISCUSSING "The Concept of Alienation in the Comparison of Cultures," Prof. Friedmann said of America; "If we look at alienation in our own society, we should take a positive view to see to what extent it can be applied usefully. Alienation should be a welcome warning signal against complacency." See interview Page 5 He said that in cultural alienation, forms of worship and works of art hold no valid meaning for us. "We might find these interesting intellectually," he said, "but they have no more meaning for us. It does not solve your basic question — the quest of meaning." THE SPEAKER OUTLINED two kinds of alienation—"ontological" and "cultural." Ontological alienation, he said, was shown in the philosophy of Plato and the account of Genesis. "PLATO BELIEVED reality consists of ideas," Prof. Friedmann said. The human soul or mind was once akin in nature to ideas but it was thrown out and became matter incapable of knowledge," he said. The purpose of life, he added, was to recover the kind of knowledge we once had. "Genesis says that God is the creator of all that is," continued Prof. Friedmann. "When man disobeys God, he becomes estranged from his original home. His purpose is to recover and go back home." He said there are three ideal types of human civilizations: with its sheer necessity of survival. "These people find satisfaction in doing necessary, day-to-day work. It takes on a certain symbolic meaning," he said. - THE PRIMITIVE civilization with its chaotic necessity of survival - THE "GREAT" civilizations. It has great traditions motivated toward a culture which would go beyond the satisfaction of basic needs. This society appreciated higher ideals." In this, he said, people speculate in finding out what life is like. Philosophers, poets and artists are found in this society. DALLAS—(UPI)—An attorney for former Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker said today a federal court motion was filed yesterday to strike from the case a psychiatrist's memorandum he said was based on "rank hearsey." - THE MODERN or utilitarian society characterized by the search for meaning. Dr. Robert Morris, the attorney, said the motion was filed in Oxford, Miss. It does not challenge the court order committing Walker to psychiatric examination but challenges a telegraphed memorandum which was used for the basis of the commitment. The motion also contended Walker's constitutional rights were violated by the commitment order issued after Walker's arrest by soldiers after the Sept. 30 rioting at the University of Mississippi. Prof. Friedmann said that there was no ideal society since all were a mixture of various types. Walker's Attorney Challenges Memo IF THE memorandum is deleted from the pleadings, Morris said, he believes there will be no basis for any kind of psychiatric examination of Walker. Morris said the commitment to a federal hospital was based upon a memorandum that was "scurilous, scandalous and rank hearsay." Daily hansan 60th Year, No.24 '62 Senior Gift To Be Completed By Next Year The 1962 senior class gift, an electrically-illustrated relief map of the KU campus, will be completed in about a year, officials said yesterday. Richard Wintermote, associate secretary of the Alumni Association, said the planning committee has nearly completed its research on the project. He said when final plans have been decided, they will be turned over to an architect for blueprints and then to a specialized company for construction. THE REQUIREMENTS for the gift are presently under study by Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union. The map will be scaled one inch to five-hundred feet. Meant to be a guide to campus visitors, it will also be electrically wired so that buttons can light up paths to any campus area from the Kansas Union. The estimated cost of the map is about $5500. It will hang in the Kansas Union. "So to do it the way we think they want it, we must consider everything from size, location and wiring to construction so it can be periodically revised and updated." WINTERMOTE SAID planning the gift has taken more research and study than most gifts left to the University. The seniors last year, he said, did not research its construction. LAWRENCE, KANSAS He predicted that it would take about six months to design and another six months to construct. Moon Shot Still Possible CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) — The lessening threat posed by tropical storm Ella today sparked scientists into "taking another look" at the possibility of launching a spacecraft to the Moon tomorrow. The Ranger-5 shot was called off last night when Ella appeared to be aiming at South Florida. At that time scientists said the launching would not be attempted until at least next month. Jack King, a spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), said officials decided to review the decision when the storm bent toward a more northerly course this morning. "Our people are in conference on the matter now." he said, "and we might have something definite before long." KING SAID "We are tentatively back on the range schedule just to make sure we have range support in the event we decide to go." H stressed, however, that as of early afternoon no clear cut decision had been made. UNITED NATIONS — (UPI) — The United States, in a letter circulated today, assured the United Nations that its surveillance of shipping and trade with Cuba has no offensive purpose against Fidel Castro's government. US Rebuts Cuba On Trade Charges "The purpose of these measures is the defense of the hemisphere," the note said. The letter, circulated as an official General Assembly document, was U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson's reply to charges made in the general debate on Oct. 8 by Cuban President Osvaldo Dorticos. Three-Poll Plan Approved By ASC KU students may vote in Strong Hall, Murphy Hall or the Kansas Union in the coming All Student Council elections. The ASC last night passed an amendment to the elections bill locating polls in these three buildings. TRUDY MESERVE, Abilene junior, ASC vice-chairman, and chairman of the committee on committees, suggested the new bill include two poll stations in Strong in addition to the other two polls. In earlier action, the Council defeated an amendment to add a polling booth in the main lobby at Lewis Hall. Don Eversmeyer, Wright City, Mo., junior, who introduced the amendment, said a poll should be placed in Lewis because of the concentration of students Student Loan Fund Short The KU Endowment Association student loan fund has run out of money for this month. Robert Billings, director of aids and awards, said student loans have drained the supply of money in the student loan fund. "The increase in the number of students wishing to borrow money to finance their education is outstripping the funds available," Billings said. IN PREVIOUS YEARS aids and awards was able to grant loans indiscriminately. This year, however, a new system was set up to meet growing needs. A month-by-month cash budget system was established, which limits the amount the aids and awards office may lend during a particular month. This system was established so that money would be available for the second semester. Under the new budget, $80,000 was allocated for loans in September, but $91,000 was lent and the $18,000 fund for October ran out two weeks earlier than anticipated. Only extreme emergencies will be taken care of during the rest of this month. The Endowment Association student loan fund lends money on a short-term basis at 3 per cent interest. These loans, ranging from $5 to $600, are used by students to pay fees, meet gaps in funds from home or pay for meals. SOURCE OF money for loans is private contributions through the Endowment Association. Billings said contributions to the University as a whole have increased, but those designated for student loan funds have not kept pace with increasing needs. "Needs are greater because of the larger enrollment," Billings said."and there is also a growing tendency for students at KU, as well as across the nation, to stop working accessive hours and to borrow money instead. These demands have forced budgeting so that all the funds would not be used in the first semester and some would be left for the second semester." As fast as loans are repaid the money is reused. With the depletion of October funds, a limit of $25 per student probably will be placed on emergency loans, the only loans which will be taken care of the rest of the month, he said. BILLINGS urged that students try to anticipate their needs and not wait until the last minute to apply for loans. He added that they ask for only enough money to cover their immediate needs. Billings and Jerry Lewis, administrator for the Endowment Association, said they hope to have $21,000 available for loans by November. BULLETIN Soviets Fire a New Multi-Stage Rocket MOSCOW — (UPI)—The Soviet Union fired a new type of multi-stage carrier rocket more than 7,500 miles into a pre-arranged target area in the Central Pacific yesterday and today, the official Tass News Agency said. ' housing there. "Neither the elections committee members nor other poll workers will be officially excused from classes during the election period," she added. Phyllis Wertzberger, Lawrence graduate student and representative from the School of Pharmacy, pointed out there would be a huge turnover in poll workers if the bill were accepted. A SECOND proposal permitting the printing of sample ballots was passed as an addition to the elections bill. John Stuckey, Pittsburg junior and elections committee chairman, said he felt sample ballots would eliminate a great deal of incorrect voting. The sample ballots will be distributed to large living groups and will be published in the University Daily Kansan. Student Body President Jerry Dickson, Newton senior, commented in an interview on the passage of the elections bill: "Certain students should realize no prejudice was involved in having the polls in organized living groups, but it was not an equitable solution." Dickson added. "I THINK the election bill which passed is the most equitable and fair solution to the problem," Dickson said. Weather High temperatures today expected to range in the 60's with lows tonight in the 40's northwest to 50's elsewhere. Occasional rains expected tonight and tomorrow. KU-Y to Discuss Civil Rights Laws Homer Floyd, former KU football star and now field representative for the Kansas Civil Rights Commission, will discuss "Kansas Civil Rights Laws" tonight with the KU-Y Race Relations Study Group. The public meeting is at 7 o'clock in the Trophy Room of the Kansas Union. FLOYD WILL SPEAK on state civil rights laws regarding employment and public accommodations. The meeting is designed to inform the group of the legal setting in which Kansas is operating, according to Tom Moore, KU-Y executive secretary. Immediately following the study group session the Human Rights Committee (HRC) will meet at 8 p.m. in the Meadowlark Room of the Kansas Union. Purpose of the HRC meeting will be to invite student opinion on campus race relations. POSSIBLE AREAS of discussion include — discriminatory clauses of student living groups and the scope of the Human Rights Committee's responsibility in Lawrence and other areas not directly affecting KU. Cordell Meeks, Kansas City, Mo., junior is co-chairman of the KU-Y study group and chairman of the HRC. Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1962 The Legion Resolutions The American Legion ended its annual convention last week by calling for a series of measures, that, in part at least, seem a throwback to 19th century jingoism and a belief in "Fortress America." The resolutions seem to reflect more frustration than concern about this country's position in a world agitated by an ideological struggle and general upheaval. AMONG OTHER THINGS, the Legion delegates endorsed the overthrow of Fidel Castro by "unilateral military action" if necessary, demanded Russian removal of the Berlin wall, demanded a review of the Latin-American aid program with an eye toward seeing that assistance "be directed to those countries . . . that support our policies," and demanded a federal study of whether it is in "the best interest of the United States to remain a member of the United Nations." Without agreeing with any of these proposals, it can be admitted that there are valid grounds for public debate on the issue they involve. The American Legion is as free as any other group to take a stand on these issues. But one other resolution approved by the Legion seems a key to the frustration felt by the group over the lack of pat answers in the current cold war. This was the call, as reported by the Associated Press, for an investigation of the U.S.State Department. Just what the Legion believes such an investigation would accomplish was not reported. One suggestion, at least, is that such an investigation will demonstrate there are subversive forces at work. If members of the Legion are prepared to come forward with strong evidence to support the need for such an investigation, they will accomplish a service for their country. Lacking such evidence, about all the resolution for a State Department investigation can accomplish is to lay the ground work for another siege of Communist witch-hunting reminiscent of the McCarthy era. To call for the federal investigation of a policy is one thing. To support a blanket investigation of a government department is to inaugurate a search for scapegoats to allay cold war frustrations. ONE CAN SEE HOW, as former members of the armed forces, the Legionnaires would lean toward simple, direct action, backed by military power if need be, as a means of settling America's international disputes. And there are probably few members of the Legion who, during their active service, didn't question the sanity, integrity, or intelligence of the men over them, particularly under the stress of combat. We see no evidence that there is any more reason to question the loyalty or competence of the members and employees of the State Department than the bewildered "Dog Face" has for questioning the motives or loyalty of the Defense Department, however confused he might be by the total defense picture. —Richard Bonett Problems of Cyclists Edition Cyclists Beware!!! The University of Kansas, while it has made a long stride forward in the elimination of those ghastly gasoline gaspers from the campus during the greater part of the day, has not yet recognized the full scope of the preparations it must make to receive the horde of energetic pedal-pumpers now descending on it. I cite, as examples, two points. Firstly, the very streets of the campus are a menace to the unwary cyclist. He (or she, as the case may be) pedals blithely along, only to strike suddenly against a piece of ancient concrete or lithified mud left by a truck which passed two months ago, or assorted fragments of rusty wire, nails, and steel reinforcing bars of even greater antiquity. This is more than disconcerting — it is quite likely to result in puncturing one or more tires, or at the very least denting a rim. That this is not an imaginary menace I myself, as a cyclist of many years, will witness as of 11:41 a.m., Thursday, Oct. 11, when my front tire was punctured by a veritable barrage of this slok in the street behind the new Dyche Hall addition. CERTAINLY WE MUST EXPECT, and be wary of, the occurrence of such situations near all the construction projects now under way on this campus; but when nothing appears to be done to rectify such conditions, we must protest vigorously, or break our financial backs repairing tires. One such protest is hereby lodged. Secondly, the University, recognizing the need for parking spaces for the increasing number of bicycles, has thoughtfully (?) installed uncounted dozens of concrete gopher holes, wherein we cyclists are expected to place the front wheel of our bikes, thereby keeping them all in a nice neat row. Consider for a moment this situation: John Q, Public, the itinerant pedestrian, arrives in the vicinity of one of these gopher-towns and promptly leans on the bicycle nearest the end while talking absorbedly to friend Jane (maybe friend Jane is leaning, too!); under such impetus, the bicycle begins to fall, and in so doing topples all its neighbors like so many bright dominos, each with a neat, unrepairable right-angle bend in its front rim where none was before. THAT THIS HAS NOT happened heretofore is due only to the fact that many of you cyclists are ... Letters ... burdened with great steel behemoths with fat balloon tires and steel rims which withstand this type of accidental shock quite well. (This same construction also makes them difficult to ride up even the slightest grade, as those of you who are cursed with them have undoubtedly found out in this hilly town.) Fortunately the University has not yet required us to register bicycles or to buy parking permits for them. If such a day should ever arrive, I am sure it would be the signal for the greatest civil disturbance in all Kansas history. Carl Scott Zimmerman Carl Scott Zimmerman West Hartford, Conn., graduate student "Vicious Authority" Slammed Editor: Is there only one side to the "Old Miss" problem? I think you are "all wet" in your argument upholding the vicious authority of the federal government. Gov. Barnett is taking the practical, logical course of action, a cooling off period, by taking out the students for awhile. Why do we have to accept as sacred the opinion of nine old fossils of the Supreme Court? It is tragic that federal force was used by our President to enforce an unjust cause. It is fine to be idealistic in upholding human rights; it is another thing to be practical. What would happen to the South if all the ignorant Negroes of the South were forced or allowed to vote? We have overemphasized human rights and forgotten individual responsibilities. A good colored and white college could have been built for what it cost the idiotic government to handle the matter in their chosen way. Read George Sokolsky on the subject ... he approaches the issue realistically. What will be accomplished? Nothing but a point. Are federal marshals going to encourn (sic) Meredith for two years at school? Frank Rosser, principal Delia Rural High School Delia, Kansas Union Cafeteria Criticized Editor: Every now and then irate students express their views that the Kansas Union seems to be more interested in profit than in serving the student. The reaction on the part of the Union officials has the tone of shaming these students for even having questioned, along with a reassurance that Union fund handling is entirely in the student's interest, above board and irreproachable. Yet attitudes of students and common observation indicate lack of satisfaction and the thought that all is not so pure and good. The Union cafeteria is a case in point. It is peculiar that private restaurants can equal cafeteria prices yet not be run under such fortuitous circumstances or with such noble motives. We must remember that private restaurants 1) are run for profit, 2) have only a limited volume of customers in comparison to the cafeteria, and 3) must employ a greater number of personnel per number of people served. Additional factors can probably be thought of. Also, there occurred an event which may well characterize Union motives and attitudes toward its student clientele. At the noon meal recently, an exotically named entree was served in individual bowls (cost: 67 cents). That evening the same item was served with a plain name and not in the fancier bowls (cost: 40 cents). Stephen Goldfarb San Diego, Calif. graduate student Short Ones A poet can survive everything but a misprint. —Oscar Wilde If every politician who has told a lie in his campaigns were barred from office, the entire system of government offices in the United States would be vacant. -Bill Mullins. Daily Hansan University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Represented by National Advertising Services, Inc., New York, 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 holidays. Universities, holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. NEWS DEPARTMENT Scott Payne Managing Editor It Looks This Way Clayton Keller and Co-Editorial Editors Bill Sheldon Vital Debates Needed Last week Võx Populi challenged the University Party to debate campus political issues. Interviews with UP leaders indicate that the party welcomes the idea. Of course, the idea is not exactly new. During the past month, representatives of both parties have appeared before KU dormitories and organized houses to debate issues and explain party goals. But original or not, we think an expanded debate program is a good idea. WHO KNOWS? A series of vigorous party debates might even beat some life into that perennially dead horse: campus politics. It's hard to imagine, but a series of vigorous debates might even make campus politics interesting for more than the handful of students who actually run for office or seek political appointments. But the key word here is vigorous. Vigorous debates—debates based on significant campus issues, debates which bring out clear-cut and differing party stands—might lift campus politics from the mundane to the meaningful. HERE'S WHERE the rank-and-file student comes in. Vigorous debates depend upon significant issues—and the typical student can supply these issues. He can, quite simply, back the party representatives into the corner and force them to take stands on issues which, to him at least, are meaningful. A few well-aimed questions could be electrifying. Take the debate coming up this Wednesday evening in Corbin Hall. What would happen if a Corbin freshman fired this one at a Vox spokesman: "Why all the concern in your Oct. 4 meeting about the 'false image' of Vox as an 'all-Greek' party? Is the image actually false? As an independent, exactly what role could I play in your party?" "Why the emphasis, in your recent proposal before the ASC for decentralization of the polls, on the placing of three of the four polls in independent dormitories: Corbin, Joseph R. Pearson and Lewis? Were these locations selected for purely geographic reasons, or were they a deliberate attempt to place polls inside the centers of your voting strength?" The opportunities for individual issue-making are almost unlimited. Other questions, for example, might concern party stands on: OR THIS ONE at a UP man: - A request by the Civil Rights Council that the report made last spring by the Human Rights Committee for the ASC be referred back to the HRC for reconsideration. - The role, if any, of the ASC in national issues such as the current University of Mississippi integration dispute. - A host of relatively minor issues: the possibility of later closing hours for Watson Library because of the expanded student enrollment and the limited library facilities. The possibility of later (or earlier) women's closing hours on Sunday nights. The desirability of later closing hours for the Kansas Union every night. And so on. This is only a partial list, hastily drawn. We're sure the average student can do a lot better. We hope he tries. —Dennis Farney Worth Repeating A proposal to eliminate material from a curriculum is apt to be met with about the same psychological resistance as a proposal to remove bodies from a graveyard.—Byron S. Hollinshead A straw vote only shows which way the hot air blows. -O. Henry LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler PROBATION BOARD R. BERD © ROXBOX 1975, MONTERRY CORNER B-15 I UNNERSTAN YOU GUYS WANTED TO SEE ME — CAN WE SPEED IT UP? reW iGdT looOk t Bailed at Half Price Vitamin --- Second Thoughts on Walker There have been some second thoughts on the abrupt imprisonment of former Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker under conditions denying him bail. By Lyle C. Wilson United Press International Second thoughts because the conditions were changed. Walker was bailed over the weekend at half price. SO THERE WERE second thoughts in official Washington as well as among editorial writers here and there. The point is raised that Walker waived preliminary hearing when he was arrested in Oxford, Miss. He had been told that he would be tried in that state and reasonably could have expected that he could be Such was not the way it came about. The government put a $100,000 tab on Walker and within 24 hours cooped him in a mental institution where he was ineligible for bail, whatever the amount. Moreover, Walker was committed to a mental institution on the findings of a psychiatrist who never had examined him and by a judge who neved had seen him. Walker's lawyers were winding up to compel the Kennedy administration to defend such arbitrary imprisonment of a U.S. citizen when the question became moot, as the lawyers say, because the bail came down and Walker was released. He still must subject himself to mental examination freed pending trial under reasonable bond. to determine if he is fit to stand trial. But the administration moved fast to prevent Walker from becoming a martyr to slick judicial procedure. ROBERT MORRIS is one of Walker's lawyers. In his syndicated newspaper column, Morris remarks that when a federal judge ordered Walker into the mental institution, the prisoner was not in the judge's jurisdiction. Further, Walker had no lawyer at those proceedings. Page 3 "It was a clear violation." Morris wrote, "not only of the (federal) statute but of General Walker's right under the constitution. Thus General Walker becomes the first political prisoner in the United States. The Walker case involves a dangerous precedent." the took world Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1962___University Daily Kansan What is Dos Passos trying to tell us? It was easy to discern this in "U.S.A." and "Adventures of a Young Man," and the reader recalls the tremendous thrill of discovering Dos Passos, his style, and his point of view. He has become a rightwinger, a virtual spokesman for the NAM and everything else to the right of Senator Goldwater. Some of this comes out in this long, interesting, and somewhat what-the-hell novel. "Chosen Country" takes us through the Gilded Age in America, the nineties, the "good years," World War I, and the twenties. It is chiefly the story of Jay Pignatelli, whose father was a successful Chicago lawyer and who himself gets chiefly involved in pacifism and communism and the like, and Lulie Harrington (the best character in the novel), the daughter of a dreaming professor who probably represents everything Dos Passos most hates today. The writer takes some predictable swipes at wishy-washiness and the far left, but the casual reader would not see that this is a Dos Passos greatly changed from the fiery militance of "U.S.A." Basically, this is just a disappointing novel, about in a class with Edna Ferber.—CMP The burden of Morris' argument is that if it could happen to General Walker, it could happen to you or to me. The answer to that argument, obviously, is that it would not happen to either of us unless our enthusiasm for a given cause very considerably overcame our judgment in supporting it. The courts must decide whether Walker is, in fact, guilty as charged. If he is guilty the government should, and probably will, throw the book at him. There must have been others in and around Oxford, Miss., however, who were insurrectionists and seditionists equally with Walker. Not just the college kids and red-necked hoodlums who rioted but others in the higher echelon of the rebellion. WALKER IS CHARGED on four counts of serious crime related to sedition and insurrection. The General contends that in Oxford he merely was peaceably assembling as the constitution guarantees him the right to do so. The government says it has witnesses who will testify that Walker incited the Oxford mob to riot. 3 DAY FALL Suit Sale Thur., Fri., Sat. Only Group 1. Were $60, Now $3995 Group 2. Were $65, Now $4395 diebolt's 843 Mass. diebolt's 843 Mass. wonderful WOOLENS in new fall colors Special Purchase Novelty Woolens - TWEED - PLAID - STRIPES Reg. $2.98 per yard $1.66 yard 56"/60" wide — Sponged & Shrunk 23 Color Georgia Flannels - 100% WOOL - 54" WIDE $2.98 - SPONGED & SHRUNK yard Imported & Domestic Brocades $1.98 to $4.98 yard Patterns VOGUE - VOGUE PARIS ORIGINALS - VOGUE COUTURIER SIMPLICITY McCALLS - VOGUE SPECIAL DESIGNS terriI's LAWRENCE, KANSAS Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1962 ACA Publishes Voting Aid WASHINGTON — (UPI) Just off the press is a useful publication that offers a hard-nosed conservative analysis of the voting record of your representatives in the 87th Congress. It is published by Americans for Constitutional Action (ACA), ACA is a non-nonsense conservative outfit sponsored by trustees including Admiral Ben Morecill (Rtd.), former governor Charles Edison of New Jersey, Edgar N. Eisenhower, former President Hoover, and Loyd Wright of Los Angeles, a former president of the American Bar Association. ACA analyzes congressional votes deemed to uphold the U.S. Constitution in contrast to votes deemed by ACA to further the socialization of the United States. It abhors the point of view adopted by some important and effective political elements that the Constitution is unsuited to modern conditions. ACA concedes, however, that this point of view has prevailed to a considerable extent in the following developments: - "By tortuous legislative, executive and judicial interpretations of the 'general welfare' and 'commerce' clauses and by various amendments of the Constitution. - "By an ill-advised Constitutional amendment (the 16th for graduated income tax), which empowers Congress to confiscate all of the income from private property and all of the fruits of individual citizens labors, without limitation. - "By abdication by Congress of its constitutional authorities and responsibilities in favor of an all-powerful Chief Executive. "By judicial decisions of questionable jurisdiction rationalized by the so-called New Social Doctrine. "And, by bribery of the sovereign states with handouts from the federal government which are financed by tax extortions from the states' own citizens." ACA is a nonprofit, nonpartisan nationwide political action organization. It encourages conservatives to Integration Conflict Worries Mother of Egyptian at KU An Egyptian mother tried for three days to telephone her son at KU recently. She was worried over the recent Mississippi integration crisis. "Samy," she told him, "I want you to come home." Samy M. Alify, who is doing research in public administration in the Governmental Research Center, was surprised by the call. He understood his mother's reaction, though. It was not unusual for a citizen of the Middle East. Explaining later, Afiff said people in the Middle East regard recent events in Mississippi very seriously, since they are "always against" segregation. "THEY THINK any thing that happens in one state reflects the attitude of the whole country. "In other countries, people don't understand the difference between federal and state authority," Afify explained. "The newspaper headlines say, 'United States student not allowed to enter university because he is colored.' And this is a true statement." A former teacher in Middle East countries, Afify has four college degrees. The most recent was a doctorate in education granted by KU this year. New Organization to Aim For Cultural Understanding The Muslim Society, a newly organized club to promote cultural understanding between races, will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow in room 306 of the Kansas Union. Zafar H. Israeli, India graduate student, said the society was formed to promote a change of ideas through discussions and lectures. Israeli said membership in the club is open to all. Affy, who has traveled in many of the Arab states said people in that part of the world are bewildered about racial problems in the United States. THEY CANNOT understand how the idea of segregation exists in a nation that calls itself democratic and preaches democracy abroad, he said. To the Middle Easterner, he said, the issue very simply is that "any government should enforce its constitution, but what kind of enforcement do you have when a governor openly defies the highest law of the land and still is allowed to retain his position? "When a person lives in a country a long time, maybe he can understand its problems," he said. "But you can't expect the people of the world to come and live in the United States in order to understand your problems." form local ACA chapters to support conservative candidates. In the 1960 election, ACA variously assisted 21 Senate candidates and 159 candidates for the House, 180 in all. Of these, 133 were elected. ACA now is providing 18 professional organizers and campaign specialists to 11 senatorial and 35 congressional candidates. It will endorse and assist a total of 147 conservative candidates in this year's election. ACA IS SUPPORTED entirely by private contributions. Such contributions are not tax-exempt and ACA cautions interested persons that contributions to ACA by tax-exempt foundations and by corporations would be unlawful. Copies of the ACA Index, analysis of congressional votes may be obtained from ACA headquarters in Washington, D.C. CRC Head to Talk On Segregation The Civil Rights Council (CRC) will hear a report tonight at 7:00 in the Kansas Union on a Lawrence tavern which alledgedly refused a Negro service. Don Warner, Topeka senior and CRC chairman, visited the tavern Monday night and will explain his findings. Warner also said he will report on the Kansas Civil Rights Conference which was held on the campus Saturday and which he attended as the CRC official delegate. A third item on the agenda concerns the All Student Council's (ASC) Civil Rights Committee which has asked the CRC for suggestions concerning the Committee's future actions. Warner said a general discussion will be held in which suggestions will be made as to how best the ASC Human Rights Committee might proceed. The meeting will be in the Cottonwood Room. --by the LIVE JAZZ Mike Peterson Trio — with SUNDAY BUFFET 6:30-9:30 Dine-a-Mite --at D DANCE OLD LOG CABIN located at OAK LODGE 5 Miles South on Highway 50 FRIDAY NIGHT — Good Music $1.00 Per Couple SATURDAY NIGHT — Only $2.00 Dance to the — CONTINENTALS Noreleo that works on ordinary flashlight batteries so you can now record anything, anytime, anywhere. Only 7 lbs.—can be worn over your shoulder like a camera. Records and plays back up to 2 hours on one reel. Simple to use? Push two buttons and you're recording . . . push one button and you're playing back. Sound is clear as a bell and as loud as you want it. Ruggedly built, handsomely styled, surpisingly low-priced. 100% transistorized. Continuous precision recording or playback whether carried on shoulder by handle or in stationary bag. Requires a battery for modulation level and battery life. Input for mikke/radio/phoeno. Output for external amplifier. Patchcard assembly included for recording and/or playback through microphone. Power supply range 4-1000 eps. Signal-to-noise ratio—better than—400b. Transistor complement—(3) OCT51, (1) OCT71, (2) 2N281/OCT72, (1) 2N279/OCT79 Dimensions: 1 x 6 x 1 cm. Battery capacity: low cost, 1½ V (D cell) flashlight batteries (well over 20 hours average battery life). Weight: (complete with batteries)—only 8 lbs. A PORTABLE TAPE RECORDER Suggested list price $129.50 Audiotronics Net $99.50 US Offers Atomic Sub to French AUDIOIRONICS RADIO TV PARTS-PA SYSTEMS-HIGH FIDELITY 928 MASS. VI 3-8500 The sources said they had no idea when the reply will be made. They said that France, which has its own atomic program including plans for atomic submarines, was studying the offer. PARIS—(UPI)—The French government is studying an offer by the United States to sell France a Nautillus-type atomic submarine, high government sources said today. Acquiring an atomic submarine at this stage, the sources said, would give France the opportunity to start on actual training of crews in the use of atomic vessels. The offer was made by U.S. deputy defense secretary Roswell L. Gilpatric, the sources said, but France has not yet replied to the offer. Patricia Gardner Wins $500 Award Patricia Mack Gardner, Emporia graduate student, has been awarded a $500 Mead Johnson scholarship for a dietetic internship. The award is from the American Dietetic Association. Miss Gardner, who received the B.S. degree in home economics education from KU in 1957, is now enrolled in the combined master's degree and dietician internship program at the KU Medical Center. We Rent Most Anything Anderson Rental 812 N. H. Read and Use Kansan Classifieds 100 YEARS OF THE WOODS Yes, Downtown Western Auto has a large selection of beautiful, quality-built bicycles, from $37.95 and already assembled. You Can Be Beautiful Too On Your Downtown Western Auto Bike! Come in and take a demonstration ride on: "The Bicycle Built for You" Raleigh Huffy Western Flyer DOWNTOWN Western Auto 910 Mass. — VI 3-2141 0318 6 1v Lecturer Raps Culture Alienation In America At the present time, few people qualify to occupy chairs in American studies. There are 13 in Germany (11 in literature, one in history, and one in culture). The director of the American Institute at the University of Munich, Germany, F. G. Friedmann, discussed differences between American and German universities, yesterday during a private interview. "There are very few associate professors," Prof. Friedmann said. "There are two or three instructors, research personnel, and a secretary in each department. "Students can work toward two goals. About 90 or 95 per cent of them take a state examination after a minimum of eight semesters. If they pass, they get state employment as teachers. "Instructors in German universities are free to teach courses of their own choosing. There is no set curriculum. Each professor does what he feels is competent in his own field." The self-governing teaching staff elects the president and deans. Each faculty (similar to a school) chooses its own dean, or chairman of the faculty, who performs administrative duties for a one-year term. "In Germany, an institute is built around a professor. There is only one full professor in each institute (also known as a seminar and comparable to a department). Courses Prof. Friedmann teaches include a Thoreau seminar and a class on the impact of Puritanism on American civilization. Prof. Friedmann is a member of the philosophy faculty, which roughly corresponds to liberal arts. "Each seminar has its own library. In the American Institute, we have 16,000 books and a microfilm collection. "The other small percentage works toward the Ph.D. degree. "American students spend two or three years in college doing what German students finish in high school. It is much tougher over there." Upon completion of high school, graduates may take an examination given by the state. If they pass it, they are entitled to enter any German college. German youth start college at age 20. Around 21,000 are enrolled at the University of Munich. A naturalized American citizen KU 'Brains' Rate From 2.489 GPA To rank in the upper 10% of the senior class in the University of Kansas College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, you should set your sights for a grade-point average no lower than 24890. That's the average of student No. 53 on the descending ladder. Heading the top 10% is Allan W. Wicker, Independence senior, whose grade-point average is 2.9259 for work done at KU since he transferred from Independence Community College. This is based on a system that gives 3 points for each credit hour of A grade, 2 for a B, and on to a -1 for an F. CLOSE BEHIND at 2.9130 is Gail Eberhardt, Wichita senior. The two were named co-winners of the Dean Paul B. Lawson award to the ranking liberal arts senior. Miss Eberhardt has been at KU three years studying for a triple major in English, history and French. Eight students follow with averaces of 28 or more. Among the top 10% are 30 men and 23 women, giving the coeds a much better showing than their proportion of the KU student body. Although 50 or more students in the College may make all A grades in any one semester, the all-A graduating senior is a rarity. Only three persons have left KU with all-A transcripts in the last 16 years. Having a Party? Going to serve a meal? Let us help you! BIG BUY VI 3-8225 Prof. Friedmann is chairman of the committee which deals with foreign relations of the University and supervises foreign study of German students from the University of Munich. He is an adviser to an organization which awards the top German scholarships. They are similar to the Woodrow Wilson fellowships. Prof. Friedmann studied at universities in Rome and Munich. He taught philosophy at Lambuth College from 1940 to 1943 and at the University of Arkansas from 1946 to 1959. Since 1960, he has been director of the American Institute at Munich. He has received Rockefeller and Fulbright grants to study the philosophy of peasants in Italy. The author of "The Hoe and the Book." Prof. Friedmann has written articles and essays in U.S., Italian, German, and Mexican journals. Richard P. Goldthwait, professor of geology at Ohio State University, will give a public Sigma Xi lecture tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in 411 Summerfield Hall at KU. Prof. Goldthwait will discuss "Glacier Fluctuations Since the Ice Age in Southeast Alaska." Prof. Goldthwait to Give Sigma Xi Geology Lecture The speaker is filling 18 lecture engagements for Sigma Xi, national honorary research society, in the Midwest and Northwest. International Students: Those students who plan to go to Chanute for the October 26th UNESCO banquet should sign up in Dr. Coan's office this week. Official Bulletin TODAY Radio Production Center, 7:30 p.m. Rm. 220 Flint, executive comm. meeting Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Le Carte Francais se réunirà mercédé à 16 heures 30 dans la salle onze de Fraser. M. Gaultpeau fera une causerie; Quelques mots sur la chanson francisée contemplaine." Tous ceux qui d'intérêt en français sont cordialement invités. Fulbright program deadline application grant for 1963-64 should be turned in to the Fulbright adviser, 206 Fraser. Forms are still available at Bait office. The Muslim Society will hold its first party p.m. in Room 306 of the Kaisa tunion TOMORROW United Presbyterian Men, Westminster Center. 1200 Eadden, 7 p.m., Dr. Stroth- Der Deutsche Stammtsmitt trifft sich Donnerstag den 18. Oktober, um 5 Uhr. Student Union Cafeteria. Alle sind herzlich eingeladen. A noted publisher in Chicago reports there is a simple technique for acquiring a powerful memory which can pay you real dividends in both business and social advancement and works like magic to give you added poise, necessary self-confidence and greater popularity. According to this publisher, many people do not realize how much they could influence others simply by remembering accurately everything they see, hear, or read. Whether in business, at social functions or even in casual conversations with new acquaintances, there are ways in which you can dominate each situation by your ability to remember. Why Can't You Remember To acquaint the readers of this paper with the easy-tofollow rules for developing skill in remembering anything you choose to remember, the publishers have printed full details of their self-training methods in a new book, "Adventures in Memory," which will be mailed free to anyone who requests it. No obligation. Simply send your request to: Memory Studies, 835 Diversey Parkway, Dept. 3247 Chicago 14, Ill. A postcard will do. Ben Bella Gets The Red Carpet HAVANA — (UPI) — Premier Ahmed Ben Bella planned to leave Cuba today (1:30 p.m., Lawrence time) after a whirlwind state visit in which he embraced Fidel Castro twice, told him he was going to get Algeria's Medal of Honor and pledged full support of the Cuban Revolution. Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Last night, Ben Bella was the guest of honor at a "family supper" tendered him in the presidential palace by Castro and President and Mrs. Osvaldo Dorticos. Only a handful of "outsiders" attended, including Capt. Emilio Aragones, who commands Castro's militia forces. Also present was Cuban State Minister Raul Roa. The government-controlled press devoted much space to the Algerian nationalist's visit and a tour of the city he carried out shortly after his arrival. An Algerian deputy, Fatima Mechini, who accompanied Ben Bella, was honored by the Cuban Women's Federation. The Arab neutralist got Cuba's biggest welcome ever extended a foreign visitor on his arrival yesterday, just 24 hours after being a guest of President Kennedy at the White House. Castro took advantage of the occasion to lash out at the United States in the bittertest terms he has yet employed against "imperialism." Curtis Besinger, associate professor of architecture and architectural consultant for House Beautiful magazine, is the author of two articles in recent issues. Although there was no official agenda for Ben Bella's visit, the Algerian was expected to go through with the customary formality of laying a wreath at the Jose Marti statue in Central Park and to visit Arab war orphans in their suburban orphanage. KU Prof. Writes Articles Learn to Swing! U. T.-UPTOWN-New Twist and others Friday, Oct.19th—Trail Room 7:30-9:00 $1.00 for all 5 weekly SUA DANCE LESSONS Joan Baez In Concert New LP Record Peter, Paul & Mary LP Kief's Record & Hi-Fi Malls Shopping Center 6 MENNEN QUALITY TRADE MARK NEW MENNEN SPRAY DEODORANT FOR MEN NEW TIME MIST BOTTLE SAVEZZ QUICKLY AND RELEASE MENNEN QUALITY TRADE MARK NEW MENNEN SPRAY DEODORANT FOR MEN * NEW FINEL MIST BOTTLED LONGER QUICKLY AND RELEASE A man with Alopecia Universalis* doesn't need this deodorant He could use a woman's roll-on with impunity. Mennen Spray was made for the man who wants a deodorant he knows will get through to the skin . . . where perspiration starts. Mennen Spray Deodorant does just that. It gets through to the skin. And it works. All day. More men use Menen Spray than any other deodorant. Have you tried it yet? *Complete lack of body hair, including that of the scalp, legs, armpits, face, etc. Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1962 Yankees Finally Win; Terry Series Hero A lean, soft-spoken, Larned, Kan. man brought World Series fame to himself and a championship to his team, the New York Yankees. Ralph Terry squared off against the San Francisco Giants Jack Sanford yesterday afternoon in Candlestick Park and allowed but four hits in going all the way as New York won 1-0. HE HAD A PERFECT GAME for five and two-thirds innings, did not walk a batter and faced only 31 men. The Giants had the tying run on first base in the ninth, but Willie McCovey's line smash to Bobby Richardson ended their try for a miracle. Sanford and Billy O'Dell who relieved him in the eighth inning also pitched stingy. The pair allowed but seven hits. NEW YORK SCORED its lone run in the fifth inning. The Yankees filled the bases with no one out on singles by Bill Skowron and Cletis Boyer and a walk to Terry. Tony Kubek bounced into a double play and Skowron scored with the run giving the Yankees their 20th baseball championship. Sanford pitched his way out of a jam in the seventh when the Yankees put two men on base, but departed in the eighth after New York again filled the bases. Texas Still Number One NEW YORK — (UPI) — Texas well-balanced Longhorns, who begin defense of their Southwest Conference title Saturday, were named the nation's No. 1 major college football team for the second straight week by the United Press International Board of Coaches. Unbeaten in four starts thus far, Texas was the top choice of 11 of the 35 coaches who comprise the UPI rating board. Alabama, which lost out in the fight for the top spot a week ago by only five points, again was second this week, gaining the support of 10 coaches for first place. With points tabulated on a basis of 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 for votes from first through 10th, Texas drew 297 points, one more than a week ago, while Alabama, the No. 1 choice of 18 coaches last week, slipped 25 points for a total of 266. Surprising Northwestern, 10th last week, moved up to third with eight first-place votes and 189 points, while Mississippi advanced one place to fourth, swapping positions with Southern California. Arkansas, Texas' opponent this Saturday and the Longhorns' top challenger for southwest conference honors, also advanced one position, to sixth; Ohio State, rebounding after a disastrous loss to UCLA two weeks ago, moved up from 12th to seventh; Wisconsin advanced from 13th to eighth; Washington dropped from sixth to ninth, and Louisiana State advanced from 11th to 10th to round out the top 10. UCLA, eighth last week, headed the second 10, followed by Michigan State, Georgia Tech, Nebraska, Oregon, Missouri, Duke, Maryland, West Virginia, Iowa and New Mexico. Only five other teams drew votes this week. Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts. Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals O'Dell retired the Yankees as Roger Maris forced Richardson at the plate and Elston Howard bounced into a double play. TERRY'S ONLY weak moments during the game was in the seventh and ninth innings, the last of which was probably the most tense situation during the series. Matty Alou batted for O'Dell in the ninth. With a 2-2 count, Alou bunted the ball toward second base. Terry and Richardson both pursued the ball with Richardson reaching it, but having no time to throw out the speedy Alou. Matty's brother, Felipe, was the next batter. He fouled off a pitch attempting to bunt and then swung and fouled off the ball for strike two. On the next pitch he swung and missed altogether. Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER CHUCK HILLER, who hit a grand slam homer in the fourth game, was the next Giant batter. He fouled off the first pitch and then laid a bunt down the third base line. Had the ball remained fair, Hiller would have beaten it out, but it rolled foul. Hiller fouled off three more pitches, watched a ball bounce in the dirt and then went down swinging. dirt and then went down swinging. Terry was one out away from victory, but the one out represented Willie Mays. Terry threw two inside pitches to Mays, the second almost hitting him. The third pitch was on the outside corner and Mays lashed it to right field for a double. Maris picked the ball out of the WITH MEN ON second and third base. Terry was now faced with the decision of whether to pitch to McCovey, a powerful left-handed batter, or to walk him and bring up Orlando Cepeda, a right hander. muddy turf and threw to his relay man, Richardson. Alou stopped at third base. After a conference with Manager Ralph Houk, Terry decided to pitch to McCovey. McCovey swung at the first pitch and sent a fly ball to right. The wind caught it and carried it into the stands in foul territory. On the next pitch McCovey hit a sinking line drive to Richardson, which the second sacker snagged for the victory. TERRY HAD NEVER won a World Series game until this year. He lost the second game to Sanford 2-0, but came back to win the fifth game 5-3. Yesterday's win made him the only pitcher to win two games in the 1962 series. The winning Yankees will receive about $12,000 apiece while the Giants will share $8,000. Baughman Strong Blocker "Armand Baughman is giving us the best blocking from fullback since Dovle Schick." KU football coach Jack Mitchell admires, "He's improving as a runner too. He's putting the pressure on Ken Coleman, who is running well and playing tremendous defense. This gives us a fine set of backlacks." See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales - Rental Service LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER STUDENTS 735 Mass. VI 3-3644 Grease Jobs . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd The Campus Ship'n Shore slender, graceful, beautiful shirt! 3.98 Jay SHOPPE 12th & 0read Jay SHOPPE 12th & Oread 8 What a lovely triumph of fine-line design! 65% Dacron $ ^{®} $ polyester and 35% cotton. In white rich hues, "denim tones." 28 to 36. Collins Back in Lineup KU will have starting guard Duke Collins back in harness for the 60th battle with Oklahoma here Saturday, but still will be missing his stablemate, Ken Tiger. Collins missed the last two games with a lame knee. Tiger is sidelined with the same ailment. His spot again will be filled by Omaha sophomore Ron Marsh. Kansan Classified Ads Get Results! JOE'E BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W.9th VI 3-4720 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf," "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis," etc.) HAPPINESS CAN'T BUY MONEY This is a question that in recent years has caused much lively debate and several hundred stabbings among American college professors. Some contend that if a student's intellect is sufficiently aroused, happiness will automatically follow. Others say that to concentrate on the intellect and ignore the rest of the personality can only lead to misery. Can education bring happiness? I myself favor the second view, and I offer in evidence the well-known case of Agathe Fusco. Agathe, a forestry major, never got anything less than a straight "A", was awarded her B.T. (Bachelor of Trees) in only two years, her M.S.B. (Master of Sap and Bark) in only three, and her D.B.C. (Doctor of Blight and Cutworms) in only four. Academic glory was hers. Her intellect was the envy of every intellect fan on campus. But was she happy? The answer, alas, was no. Agathe—she knew not why—was miserable, so miserable, in fact, that one day while walking across campus, she was suddenly so overcome with melancholy that she flang herself, weeping, upon the statue of the Founder. By and by a liberal arts major named R. Twinkle Plenty came by with his yoyo. He noted Agathe's condition. "How come you're so unhappy, hey?" said R. Twinkle. "Suppose you tell me, you dumb old liberal arts major," replied Agathe peevishly. Have you ever smoked a Maulboro cigarette? "All right, I will," said R. Twinkle. "You are unhappy for two reasons. First, because you have been so busy stuffing your intellect that you have gone and starved your psyche. I've got nothing against learning, mind you, but a person oughtn't to neglect the pleasant, gentle amenities of life—the fun things. Have you, for instance, ever been to a dance?" Agathe shook her head. Agathe shook her head. "Have you ever watched a sunset? Written a poem? Smoked a Marlboro Cigarette?" Agatine shook her head. "Well, we'll fix that right now!" said R.Twinkle and gave her a Marlboro and struck a match. She puffed, and then for the first time in twelve or fifteen years, she smiled. "Wow!" she cried. "Marlboros are a fun thing! What flavor! What filter! What pack or box! What a lot to like! From now on I will smoke Marlboros, and never have another unhappy day!" "Hold!" said R. Twinkle, "Marlboros alone will not solve your problem—only half of it. Remember I said there were two things making you unhappy?" "Oh, yeah," said Agathe. "What's the other one?" "How long have you had that bear trap on your foot?" said R. Twinkle. "I stepped on it during a field trip in my freshman year," said Agathe. "I keep meaning to have it taken off." "Allow me," said R. Twinkle and removed it. "Land sakes, what a relief!" said Agathe, now totally happy, and took R. Twinkle's hand and led him to a Marlboro vendor's and then to a justice of the peace. Today Agathe is a perfectly fulfilled woman, both intellect-wise and personalitywise. She lives in a darling split-level house with R. Twinkle and their 17 children, and she still keeps busy in the forestry game. Only last month, in fact, she became Consultant on Sawdust to the American Butchers Guild, she was named an Honorary Sequoia by the park commissioner of Las Vegas, and she published a best-selling book called I was a Slippery Elm for the FBI. © 1962 Max Shulman * * The makers of Marlboro are pleased that Agathe is finally out of the woods—and so will you be if your goal is smoking pleasure. Just try a Marlboro. University Daily Kansan Page 7 12 36 14 45 SOONER BACKFIELD—Here's the Oklahoma backfield that started against the Texas Longhorns in its 9-6 heartbreaker loss at Dallas Saturday. The same four are expected to start Along the JAYHAWKER trail against the Jayhawkers in Memorial Stadium this week. (L-R) quarterback Monte Deere, right halfback Paul Lea, left halfback Charles Mayhue and fullback Jim Grisham. By Steve Clark The Big Eight is faring as expected these days. That is, the past two weeks, this prognosticator has scored perfect slates in his pre-game predictions. The season record now stands 17 right, five wrong for a .773 average. With four conference games on tap this weekend, the .800 mark is within reach. KANSAS OVER OKLAHOMA: We would like to call this one a toss-up, but don't like to be thought of as "wishy-washy". As we see it, this decides the Big Eight for the Kansas Jayhawkers. If KU wins, we foresee them capturing a Big Eight championship. For OU, the importance of the game is the same. This is the first league game for the Sooners after losses to Notre Dame and Texas. If the Sooners could get off on the right foot, they too could go all the way. One of the Jayhawkers main problems will be getting too "up" for this game. That's what happened two years ago when the Sooners and the Jayhawkers met in Memorial Stadium. After the 13-13 tie, Coach Jack Mitchell made one of his most memorable quotes, "A nervous hen breeds nervous chickens." Since OU is Mitchell's alma mater, he might have the Jayhawkers "too high" for this game. If KU relaxes, plays the football it's capable, then the Jayhawkers can win. We hesitate, but call it Kansas, by one touchdown. If not, the Sooners could stomp the Javahkers into the turf. NEBRASKA OVER KANSAS STATE: The Cornhusker backfield will look like the Nebraska sprinters in last year's Big Eight indoor track meet. Poor Kansas State, prayers won't even help in this one. To top it all, the game is being played at Lincoln, the Cornhuskers favorite hunting grounds. This score will be something like the South Dakota game. Let's call it Nebraska by five touchdowns. IOWA STATE OVER COLORADO: The Cyclones will hit the win columns this week after losing three straight. Coach Clay Stapleton was hung in effigy after the Jayawaker won Saturday. It was evident that the Cyclones were outmanned. Colorado also has a loss string going at two. The Buffaloes will make it three Saturday. Iowa State by three touchdowns. MISSOURI OVER OKLAHOMA STATE: The Tiger scoring power rolled for the first time last week against Kansas State. This week, the Cowboys will put up a stronger attack. Oklahoma State looked sharp against the Colorado Buffaloes, which isn't saying a whole lot. Surprisingly, this game could be close. Nevertheless, Missouri by two touchdowns. Sayers Rushes at Fast Pace KU halfback Gale Sayers is rushing at a faster pace than any sophomore in Jayhawker history. His league-leading total of 403 net yards figures to an average of 100.7 per game. Charlie Hoag's sophomore figure was 940 in 1950. Have You Visited the "COBWEB" at the BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 $ \frac{1}{2} $ blk. E. 12th & Haskell LARRY CRUM - Suggests - T-Bone Steak Only 99c KU's Lonborg to Be Honored at Halftime KU athletic director Dutch Lonborg will be presented an award from the NCAA at halftime of the Kansas-Oklahoma football game here Saturday. Lonborg will be cited by NCAA Executive Director Walt Byers for his long service to this intercollegiate body. 'K' PANCAKE GRILL & SUNDRIES PETER BERNARD Among other things, Lonborg served 13 years as chairman of the NCAA basketball tournament committee and was chairman of the United States basketball committee for the 1959 Pan-American Games and 1960 Olympic Games. He also was manager of the U.S. Olympic basketball forces. 14th & Mass. Open 24 Hours a day Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1962 Sooners Sport Top Line "Oklahoma has one of the five best lines in the nation." comments Kansas football coach Jack Mitchell, pointing his club to the mid-way game on his 1932 schedule. FREE DELIVERY Call before 4. Delivered after 5 $3.00 or more except cigarettes VI 3-4516 Serving 700,000 readers of college newspapers For rates, write CO/AD 396 Park Ave. San Jose, Calif COOPER DRUG CO/AD CLASSIFIED BOOKS & AUTHORS WRITERS: LITERARY agency sells to 100 markets, $1.00 per 100 words, $5.00 minimum includes expert report, ultimate agenting, Lambert Wimble, Eight GOOD USED Books can be inexpensive and may be available from manad, 1148 Edgehill hills. Abington, Penn. NORMAN, Okla. — (Special) — Oklahoma's frequently injured right halfback Melvin Sandersfeld may be ready to go against KU. MUSIC Sandersfeld May Play GUITAR ARRANGEMENTS as recorded by Laurindo Almeida on Capitol Records. Write Bell's catalogue to: Brazil Music Publishing, C.A., P.O. 5265, Sherman Oak, Calif. Whirlpool, diathermy, infra red, heat packs—Sandersfeld has known them all during seven years of football at Oklahoma and Hobart high school. OPPORTUNITIES EARN MONEY - Your chemical business. Write Tops Lab, Box 7767, Vista, Calif. BOOK CARRIER-New design, stows in books. Write "Lighthouse" Plymouth, Mass. Write "Lighthouse" Plymouth, Mass. The Sooners' rangy, 194-pound senior missed the Syracuse, Notre Dame and Texas games because of a sprained ankle incurred from stumbling over a dummy Sept. 4. CLASSROOM FILMS, 16 mm. Free list, Lobel Productions, 2002A Taraval, San Jose EDUCATIONAL He got a late start last year, too, straining his back going up for a pass and missing the Notre Dame and Iowa State games. Coach Bud Wilkinson played him on defense against Texas and started him against Kansas, but Sandersfeld dislocated a shoulder going in for a tackle and sat out the rest of the year. FREEDOM SCHOOL, boarding, elem. and high, Summerhill inspired. Early Creek School, 2821G Buckeye Rt., Redding, Calif. WINTER IN Mexico: Liberal Arts, Latin American Studies, Spanish, Write for the New York Times. INVESTIGATE AUTO. Accidents—Earn up to $8 an hour, part-time or full-time, investigators furnished; expenses paid. Or start business of your own. Meet interesting people. We train you in spare time. Be located ready to switch. Free information. No obligation. Liberty School, Dept. C.17610, 1139 West Park, Libertyville. His most weird injury occurred midway of spring training his freshman season of 1960. Spring vacation interrupted the football. Sandersfeld spent his in an odd way—plowing on one of his father's farms northeast of Rocky. The tractor he was driving caught fire, EXPERIMENT WITH sleep-learning Fascinating Box, 24-CP, Washable, Box burning his arms and singeing his hair and eyebrows. Sandersfeld somersaulted backwards off the seat. He drove a pick-up truck to Rocky, summoned the volunteer fire department, beat it back to the blaze and pumping water furiously from a nearby well hurled it on the fire. Returning to Norman, he resumed spring practice. Although his arms were covered with scabs. State Farm Insurance Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd. Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Knn. Sandersfeld has enjoyed only two injury-free football seasons in his life. He went unscathed in 1957 as Hobart high's junior tailback. As Oklahoma's sophomore left half in 1960, he averaged 5.6 net yards per rush for the alternates and ran 36 yards to a touchdown against Missouri's Orange Bowl champions. DIAL KLWN on DIAL KLWN 7:30 a.m. ... Daily Sports Shorts 5:00 Today ... Football Forecast 5:20 ... Tom Hedrick Sports SUA CARNIVAL LOONEY TOO! OCT. 20 7:00-11:00 P.M. ADVANCE TICKET SALE AT INFORMATION BOOTH MUMBAI JEWELERS Page 8 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1962 Atonal Piano Gives Out Notes of $9,000 Purity LAFAYETTE, Ind. — (UPI) — The old piano was ugly and cumbersome. It's finish was cracked and checked from age. When you hit a key, it sounded something like a spoon on a battered dishpan. Wilted Tull of Kokomo, Ind., a piano tuner, and Herbert H. Heltzel, manager of a music store, shook their heads in dismay as they started to dismantle the ancient upright to see if it was worth reconditioning. Inside, the piano was dusty. It also was musty, and the felts were frowsy. And there were some parcels that one ordinarily doesn't find in pianos. "Someone left a stale sandwich down here," said Tull as he stopped and picked up a neatly wrapped package. Helizel opened it and out fell a stack of bills. Tull looked again and discovered more packages. All together they yielded $9,090 in currency, some of it issued as long ago as the 1900's, some rare coins and some iowelry. Heltzel took the cache to a bank for saunakeeping, closed his shop for the rest of the day, then contacted the former owner of the piano, a widower. Heltzel learned the money apparently was hidden in the piano by the man's late wife "years ago, over a period of time." "This represented the life savings of these people," Heltzel said today. "He knew the money was hidden somewhere, but he never found it. If we had sold the piano for junk, we would never have found it." Heltzel said the money was turned over to the man because "there was no doubt of ownership." Tull received a reward of undisclosed proportions. Both he and Heltzel abided by the owner's fervent plea to remain unidentified. "You might say that had a happy ending," Heltzel said. "We are happy we were a part of it. But I sure don't want to go through this again." Review Changes Announced Changes in the size of casts, lengths of skits, and judging were announced Sunday at a Rock Chalk policy meeting. Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission junior and Rock Chalk producer, explained the new policies to representatives of living groups interested in participating in Rock this year. The changes include a limit of 40 actors to the cast and a time limit of 18 minutes for each skit. It was decided that if any particular skit lasts more than 20 minutes, it can receive no higher award than an "honorable mention." In previous years there was no limit on the Anti-Subversive Clause Dropped WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Kennedy today approved a bill dropping an anti-subversive affidavit as a requirement for teachers and students who receive loans and grants from the National Science Foundation or under the National Defense Education Act. Previously the law required that any scientist, teacher or student applying for federal loans and grants sign an affidavit declaring he did not believe in, belong to, or support any organization which believed in or taught overthrow of the U.S. government by force or illegal method. The legislation approved by the President dropped this provision. It substituted a new one making it illegal for anyone to apply for or receive such a loan if he is a member of a Communist organization registered under the Subversive Activity Control Act. In a special statement, Kennedy said that the affidavit requirement had led 32 colleges to refuse to participate in the student loan program under the National Defense Education Act. Undesirables Sent North HONG KONG — (UPI) — Communist authorities in Kwangtung Province have sent "thousands" of suspected Nationalist sympathizers, unemployed workmen, former landlords, retired soldiers and wealthy farmers to Manchuria and the Northwestern Provinces, the Tiger Standard newspaper said today. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY size of the casts, but a time limit of 15 minutes has existed for the past three years. Of seven judges, four will be "wild card" judges who will determine if the skit has fulfilled the appetite of the audience in humor and satire. Each of these judges the individual skits on a 70-points-possible basis. The other three judges will observe technical aspects such as choreography, singing, sets, props, lighting, and make-up. These judges will award the skirts up to 15 points on choreography and 15 points on all other aspects of the technical side of the production. Last year there were only three judges. Whitman also noted the Rock Chalk policy on plagiarism. If any part of the skit is borrowed, the writer must receive credit for his work. Whitman said that the technical judgges would be qualified in their areas of judging but that "wild card" judges would not necessarily be qualified in drama since their primary judgement is concerned with audience reaction. "The Egg," KU Experimental Theatre production opens tomorrow in Swarthout Auditorium for a three-night run. Record Collectors Build Your Record Library! DJ BOY & DJ GIRL 'The Egg' to Open Three-Night Stand Collectors The French comedy is directed by F. C. Strickland, visiting professor of speech and drama. Build Your Record Library! PASADENA — (UPI) — Scientists said yesterday data received from America's Ranger 3 lunar spacecraft revealed that intensity of radioactive gamma rays in interplanetary space may be 10 times greater than expected. Tickets may be purchased at the Murphy box office-$1 for single admissions and 50 cents for students with ID cards. No reservations will be taken. The findings of the Ranger 3, launched Jan. 26, were reported by officials at Caltech's jet propulsion laboratory (JPL) just two days before the scheduled launching of Ranger 5 on another exploratory mission to the moon. JPL SCIENTISTS said if the findings of Ranger 3 are verified by Ranger 5—scheduled to be fired from Cape Canaveral tomorrow—it will indicate interplanetary space is permeated by large numbers of gamma rays possessing relatively high energy. Higher Radiation Detected in Space Our special membership plan enables you to buy your records at displays, in Classical, popular, jazz, show hits, folk, etc. - Monaural and Stereo. Discovering the process that originates these gamma rays will be of fundamental importance to understanding the structure of the universe, JPL said. ...INEXPENSIVELY, CONVENIENTLY, NO "AGREE TO PURCHASE" OBLIGATION and CHOOSE THE RECORDS YOU WANT The gamma rays observed by Ranger $ ^3$ could be produced by a variety of processes, including the passage of energetic particles through intersellar matter, intense eruptions on the surface of stars and cataclysmic supernova explosions resulting from destruction of stars. Citadel is a unique kind of record clut that features: - No "agree to purchase" obligations, buy as well as any records as you want, when you want them . . . the choice is yours. QUICKLY - Periodic specials. Outside buys are made available periodically, and again, you are under no obligation to purchase any of these specials. - No "preselected" record list. You choose the records you want from catalog containing virtually all artists and all labels. - No "list price" purchases. You never pay more than the club price. - Prompt service. Many orders are rarely later than the next several days. "The extent to which one or more of these processes are at work will be clarified by further study of intensity, energy and direction of the radiation." JPL scientists said. We invite you to join thousands of other students at our museum are purchasing their records at discount and complete freedom of selection and have complete freedom of selection in any way. For complete details write. CITADEL RECORD CLUE 545 Filth Ave. Dept. CP New York 1N. Y. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara has withheld from Congress since July the results of a critical study of the controversial 2,000-mile-an-hour RS-70 warplane, according to Rep. Leslie C. Arends, R-III. Arends is the top-ranking Republican on the House Armed Services Committee, which unanimously voted early this year to "direct" McNamara to speed development of the plane, but then settled for a compromise calling for a new study. McNamara in Hot Water Over New RS-70 Warplane ARENDS SAYS McNamara now apparently intends to "study" the plane to death. The congressman issued a cuastic statement through his office here yesterday noting that "the distinguished Secretary of Defense has gained a reputation for making fast and firm decisions. "The delaying tactics with respect to the RS-70 have badly tarnished that reputation." Arends said. Maybe, he said, McNamara made too fast a decision in the first place and now intends to stand firm against speeding up the pland regardless of military and congressional opinion. Interviewers Seek Chemistry Ph.D's The chemistry department at the University of Kansas is host to personnel interviewers from five corporations this week. Dr. Calvin A. VanderFerf, department chairman,manuscript the interview pace to continue at the rate of one a day. Each interviewer this week is interested in men and women who are candidates for the FhD. in chemistry. This represents the highest level of graduate study. KU soon will confer about 20 doctorates in chemistry this year. While this is $ 2^{1/2} $ times the number given 10 years ago, it is still small compared to the demand for high level graduates, Dr. VanderWerf said. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE 'BARGAIN DAYS' THURSDAY — FRIDAY — SATURDAY McCoy's Downstairs Store Girls Better Loafers Smooth Leathers and Suedes in Black, Grey, Antiqued Tan and Others "THERE IS NO REASON, except possibly political, why the Secretary of Defense could not have advised Congress in July as to the findings and recommendations" of the Air Force after the new study of the plane was made, Arends contended. He said now that Congress has adjourned "nothing can be done" about the RS-70 program. Values to $9.95.AAA to B Widths Sizes 4 to 10 THESE SHOES ARE ON TABLES IN OUR DOWNSTAIRS STORES. COME IN --- LOCK THEM OVER. President Kennedy asked Congress last winter for $171 million to continue a program calling for three of the planes, then called B70 and envisioned as bombers. Total cost of the program over a period of years will be $1.3 billion. This Sale 2 Groups $4.99 & 5.99 After listening to McNamara's and the Air Force's testimony on the plane's potentialities, the House Armed Services Committee sided 100 per cent with the Air Force and voted to order McNamara to expand and hasten the development program. McCoy's Ph. VI 3-2091 813 Mass. THE COMMITTEE AIM was to build six experimental planes, and more importantly to get set for full production of the plane in a supersonic reconnaissance-strike version. Kennedy intervened with the powerful Committee chairman, Carl Vinson, D-Ga., and forestalled a House vote on "ordering" McNamara to expand the RS-70 program. The Pentagon promised a new study of the complicated electronics equipment the plane would need, which McNamara claimed was too advanced for American technology at present and which the Air Force claimed could be made. Congress meanwhile appropriated $191.6 million more than Kennedy asked for the plane. fl Happy Bride! $225 KU Ar She's wearing... Columbia TRU-FIT The Org annou candid She owns a ring to De Sta She owns a ring to admire and be admired, and hers is the only one made with the built-in comfort and protection of Tru-Fit's self-adjusting spring units. Kara Judith Kappa Delta Hutch Doroth Hall; Mo. ] Patri Watkin City s Craver Hall; pha Cl sophor LIBERTY The Dean re-ele Taylor Priced from $50 to $5000. Rep and schoo day sonne paer bers Cols sente Betha Colle Empo Colle St. J. Wash RAY CHRISTIAN Jewelers Hij peka 809 Mass. Me elect '62-'6 Ec tria, as a Th Ju ior, DeSo dra secre Fore D soph Fricial pas, man Ante more Sh soph Bett soph Mary son gene A.W Kay Inter tativ Mcron Phi vide pon Formerly Gustafson Tl class train Mo. Pra Om T ber and sur the Page 9 ra's on use ded and and ro- KU Queen Candidates Announced for Homecoming Organized women's houses have announced 1962 homecoming queen candidates. They are: Patricia Barnes, Osage City sophomore, Watkins Hall; Barbara Cooke, Kansas City sophomore. Sellards Hall; Carolyn Craven, Baltimore; Md., senior. Lewis Craven, Baltimore; Md., senior. phin Chi Omega, Kathleen Ellott, Topeka sophomore, Hashing Hall. Karen Emel, Colby junior, Chi Omega; Judith Fraser, Larner, Junior, Sigma Mentor; Melissa Smith, Delta, Delta Delta; Constance Hunter, Hutchinson senior, Kappa Alpha Theta; Lewis Halls, senior, Lewis Hall; Sandra McHardy, Dependence, Mo., Junior, Alpha Omicron Pi. Dean Taylor To State Deans Post The Kansas Association of Women Deans and Counselors last weekend re-elected Dean of Women Emily Taylor its president. Representatives from 14 colleges and universities and three high schools met here Friday and Saturday to discuss guidance and personnel work. Panels composed of parents, students, and faculty members also participated. Colleges and universities represented are Baker, Kansas Wesleyan, Bethany, Fort Hays State Teachers College, Emporia State, College of Emporia, Wichita, Kansas State College of Pittsburg, Southwestern, St. John's, Sterling, Kansas State, Washburn, and Kansas. Hashinger Selects New Senate Officers High schools represented are Topeka, Salina, and Leavenworth. Members of Hashinger Hall have elected Senate Hall officers for the '62-'63 school year. The new officers are: Judith Kay Martin, Winfield senior, president; Sharon Coleman, DeSoto junior, vice-president; Sandra Garvey, Evansville, Ind., junior, secretary; Diana Hinder litter, Park Forest, Ill., sophomore, treasurer. Donna Johnson, Leavenworth sophomore, social chairman; Sandra Frere, Baxter Springs junior, special events chairman; Martha Bumpas, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, management chairman; Margo Van Antewerp, Plymouth, Mich., sophomore, publicity chairman. Shanon Feldkamp, Overland Park sophomore, scholarship chairman; Betty Hember, Shawnee Mission sophomore, intramurals chairman; Mary Elizabeth MeGuire, Hutchinson senior, newsletter editor; Ragene Aldrich, Wichita sophomore, A.W.S. representative, and Mary Kay Kennedy, Lyons sophomore, Inter-Residence Council representative. Alpha Omicron Pi Supplies Mermaid Edda Buchberger, Gumenten, Austria, graduate student, masqueraded as a maermaid Tuesday night. Miss Buchberger was Alpha Omicron Pi's answer to a challenge by Phi Kappa Theta fraternity to provide a mermaid for their house fish pond. The plot was hatched when pledge classes of both houses threw pledge trainers Sonja Halverson, St. Joseph, Mo., senior, and Lawrence Toombs, Prairie Village junior, in the Chi Omega fountain. The sorority garbed Miss Buchberger in a green mermaid costume and marched her to the fish pond to surprise the fraternity, only to find there was no water in the pond. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Having a Party? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Sharon Moore, Leavenworth senior, Douthart Hall; Anne Peterson, Clifton senior, Hashinger Hall; Jeannette Ross, Washington, D. C., senior, Alpha Phi; Suzanne Rumells, Greeley Colo., junior, Belle Harper, Bell School; Susan City senior, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Virginia Schubert, Lawrence junior, Pl Beta Phi. Michele Sears, Kansas City sophomore. Alpha Kappa Alpha; Jane Thompson, Michael Crawford; Kyle Thompson; Twaddell, Ioia senior, Alpha Delta Pi; Rickie Wickliff, Mission senior, Delta Gamma, Rebecca Williamson, Wichita Lafayette, Leslie Williamson, Wohlf- loren, Geneseo junior, Miller Hall. After further interviews with the 10 finalists, the judges will select a queen and two attendants Thursday, Nov. 1. Through a series of personal interviews a 10-man judging committee will select and announce 10 finalists Sunday, Oct.28. The judging committee is headed by Dale Scannell, associate professor of education. Alpha Kappa Lambda has elected pledge class officers. Alpha Kappa Lambda Elects Bledge, Class, Officers Earle Dumler, Russell freshman president; Bruce Bikales, Mission Hills freshman, vice-president; Marc Tan Creti, Carroll, Iowa, sophomore, secretary-treasurer; Richard Hinshaw, Wellington freshman, social chairman; David Schoech, Ellis freshman, Inter-Fraternity Pledge Council representative, and Steve Caselman, Beloit freshman, disciplinary council representative. They are: Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1962 University Daily Kansan Sherry Harmon, Topeka freshman, Gertrude Sellards Pearson, to Ralph Praeger, Pratt senior, Pi Kappa Alpha. Ann Aaron, Sacred Heart College, Wichita, to Stephen Maule, Wichita sophomore, Pi Kappa Alpha. Couples Announce Campus Pinnings Constance Clendenin, Shawnee Mission junior, Gamma Phi Beta, to John Oakson, Shawnee Mission junior, Alpha Tau Omega. Susan Salsbury, Topeka sophmore, Gamma Phi Beta, to Donald Smith, Washburn, Topeka, Phi Delta Theta. Mary Fisher, Prairie Village sophomore, Gamma Phi Beta, to John Edgar, Prairie Village sophomore, Lambda Chi Alpha. Patricia Waddell, Junction City junior, Gamma Phi Beta, to Max Fagerquist, University of Kansas Medical Center, Lambda Chi Alpha. Isla Griffith, Arkansas City sophomore, Alpha Phi, to Richard Higgins, Overland Park junior, Pi Kappa Alpha. 1115 Mass. ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies Dames Begin 52nd Year To the extreme displeasure of some men who dislike chattering and tea, KU Dames is beginning its 52nd year at the University. The club is a member organization of the National Association of Dames. Mrs. Theodore Taylor, 942 Mississippi St., president of the organization, said; "When the organization began in 1910, the Dames met in the homes of the members to sew and gossip. Mrs. Tavlor said: Today the organization of about 100 members meets monthly to plan fashion shows, auctions, beauty demonstrations and service projects. "The purpose of the Dames is to promote sociability among wives of KU students." Other programs include special interest groups in which members meet in small groups to play bridge or sew. One interest group, "pocketbook," was formed this year. Women buy paperback books, read them and exchange the books with other club members. Mrs. Taylor said the club emblem is a gold circlet pin, representing a wedding ring, and a pierced arrow, denoting friendship. Mrs. U. G. Mitchell, wife of a former KU mathematics professor, founded the local club to bring married students' wives together for social activities. In 1921, the club became the fifth group to affiliate with the national organization. Officers include Mrs. Taylor, president; Mrs. Gorge A. Froch, Stouffer Place, vice-president; Mrs. Paul D. Stone, 933 Kentucky, vice-president, and Mrs. Jerry E. Sinor, 2435 Redbud Lane, treasurer. WINNERS IN SANDY'S ANNIVERSARY DRAWING 1st—Mrs. Gene Coffman 2nd—Elaine Taylor 3rd—Mr. and Mrs. Jim Metcalf THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN Hamburgers 15c ACROSS FROM HILLCREST French Fries 10c SANDY'S 60 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES! Vintage tobaccos grown, aged, and blended mild...made to taste even milder through the longer length of Chesterfield King. CHESTERFIELD KING Tastes Great because the tobaccos are! TOBACCOS TOO MILD TO FILTER, PLEASURE TOO GOOD TO MISS Chesterfield KING Chesterfield KING CIGARETTES LUDGERT & MYERS TORRADO CO. FOR A GENTLER, SMOOTHER TASTE ORDINARY CIGARETTES ENJOY THE LONGER LENGTH OF CHESTERFIELD KING CHESTERFIELD KING The smoke of a Chesterfield King meltows and softens as it flows through longer length . . . becomes smooth and gentle to your taste. Page 10 University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Oct. 17, 1962 UN Financial Picture Dark Editors Note The financial crisis is expected to be one of the hardest-fought issues before the current session of the General Assembly. By Donald Johnston UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-(UPI) Money problems continue to hamstring the United Nations. The emergency bond issue and the International Court ruling on peace-keeping costs have brought slight hope of improving the organization's shaky financial position, but permanent stability is far from reality. AT PRESENT the total arrears of the 108 members is nearly $150 million. As each month passes, the Congo Operation (ONUC) costs $10 million more and the Middle East emergency force (UNEF) an additional $1.6 million. Caught in the middle is the United States, which contributes almost 50 per cent of the support for all U.N. activities. The seriousness of the situation has been mentioned in almost all general debate policy speeches. Everyone agrees that something must be done. The question—as it has been for two years—is what? The crux of the problem remains the refusal of the 10-nation Soviet bloc, France, South Africa, Portugal and several other members to pay their shares of ONUC and UNEF upkeep. There is little trouble collecting for the regular administrative budget, which this year runs about $74 million and is estimated for 1963 at about $86 million. ONUC and UNEF have been supported by special funds. UNLESS THE assembly can find a formula for making members meet all their financial obligations, the United Nations may be forced to abolish its peace-keeping function and lapse into a debating society. The Congo experience has made delegates wary of more such ventures. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko reiterated Soviet arguments that the Congo Operation is being conducted in the interests of the western "colonial" powers. Russia owes $32,052,762 for ONUC and $14,218,287 for UNEF. France has refused to contribute because of President Charles de Gaulle's aversion to any kind of intervention by the world organization. The opposition of Portugal and South Africa is linked to their desire to keep the United Nations out of their own colonial matters in Africa. Many of the African, Asian and Latin American nations contend they are unable to pay. IF THE ASSEMBLY adopts the World Court opinion on peacekeeping assessments and Russia persists in its refusal to pay, an official has said, the Assembly would be faced with the decision in 1964 of whether Russia should be allowed to vote. This could force an end to the organization, he said. The key to a solution is how to put teeth in the International Court's opinion and therefore subject members to mandatory assessment. The Court's action last summer was an Israeli Neighbors Meet in U.S. ST. LOUISE — (UPI) — Miss Eve Milikowsky and Ruven Feist, who live several blocks apart in Haifa, Israel, never met until they enrolled in a Ladue, Mo., high school near here. Both will return to Israel next summer and enter the Israeli Army. Fish Carry Scales in Pocket Fish scales are formed of bone-like material and are confined in pockets in the skin of a fish. --advisory opinion and requires a follow-up by the Assembly to give it force. The United States and a dozen other nations are behind a plan to have the Assembly adopt a resolution specifically accepting the Court's finding. GRANADA MOW SHOWING! A DARRYL F. ZANUCK PRODUCTION The Chapman Report TECHNICOLOR* FROM WARNER BROS. No one under 16 will be admitted unless accompanied by an adult. 7:00 & 9:10 THERE IS LITTLE doubt that the resolution will get a two-thirds majority for passage. But if 30 or 40 members abstain in the vote, the measure will lose meaning. If the ruling is endorsed, delinquent members could be punished under the charter stipulation that a member shall have no vote in the Assembly if the amount of its arrears equals or exceeds the amount of assessments due from it for the preceding two full years. U. S. sources claim the Communists are nearly isolated on the issue. The large African group and most Asians appear aligned with the United States and most of its Western Allies. The sources say France and India will abstain. The group that can make or break the situation is the Latin Americans. Most of them are reportedly ready to back the Court ruling providing they get assurances for the future. CONDITIONS that have been mentioned include a period of 5 to 10 years to pay up arrears and a scale of assessments different from the regular budget. Most of the 20 Latin countries want an arrangement whereby the major powers would assume nearly all financial as well as political responsibility for peace-keeping operations. The trouble with this argument is that of the five permanent members of the Security Council—which has primary responsibility for keeping the peace—Russia and France refuse to pay and Nationalist China is unable. That leaves the United States and Britain. True! Terrifying! Shattering! "MEIN KAMPF" ALL AUTHENTIC FILMS TAKEN FROM SECRET THIRD REICH FILES! NOW thru SAT. WHAT THE STREETS DON'T TEACH THEM THIS JAIL DOES! HOUSE OF WOMEN SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE --- West on Highway DRIVE IN THEATRE . . . West on Highway 40 Ivo Vazquez Sunday, Oct. 21, 8:30 p.m. University Theatre, Murphy Hall The University of Kansas MARC ET ANDRE Admission $2.40, $1.80, $1.20 Phone Viking 3-27.00, Extension 591 Write Murphy Hall Box Office WANT A BREAK FROM TEXT BOOKS? PLAYBOY ONLY 49c Read KEY REXALL Now is the time For Your Child's Christmas Portrait Children are our speciality Call now for an appointment Burch Higgins, Photographer RANCH HOUSE STUDIO 780 Lincoln VI-3-4575 "FUNNY!" "FUNNY!" THE FUNNIEST SIDE- SPLITTINGEST THING WE'VE SEEN IN YEARS!" --McCALLS "TRIUMPHS OF FUN!" Harper's Bazaar "...SOME OF THE GREATEST FUN HOLLYWOOD HAS EVER PRODUCED!" --Redbook "COLOSSAL!" Playboy HAROLD LLOYD'S world of Comedy For Everyone Who Loves To Laugh! Shows At 7:00 & 9:00 Two Shows Nightly STARTS TONIGHT VARSITY THEATRE ... Telephone VIKIMG 3-1065 A True Miracle! UNANIMOUS PRAISE FROM CRITICS! the Miracle worker a flash of intensely personal drama...a brilliant bolt of bold motion picture entertainment...a film beyond the usual! starring ANNE BANCROFT and introducing PATTY DUKE with VICTOR JORY COMING SATURDAY GRANADA THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788 One d Profes course nique sky, 7 Two conse been to $1 mode Mass one i 1960 VI 3-1 P IN PH Wednesday, Oct. 17. 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 11 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion. BUSINESS SERVICES Professional folk singer offers beginners course in Folk song and guitar technique. Private instruction. Gene Bernosch, 704$^2$ Mass., after 2 p.m. 10-23 New Highway Market located in Base- junction. Fresh fruit, vegetables, meats, bread, milk, eggs, cigarettes at 25c a pack 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. Open 7 days a week 10-9f Ironing in my home. 10c a piece. 928 La. 10-17 Travel-only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday. Baby sitting 1/2 block east of campus $2 enrichments. Phone VI S-2636. 10-17 LARHY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99e. We are open 24 hours a day. "E"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tf Suggest making reservations Now! First National Travel Agency 746 Mass. VI 3-0152 DRESS MAKING and alterations. For- more details, Ola Smith $1999; Mass. Call VI-3-5263. TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental New and used portables, standards and electronics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 755 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. ti GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, pets, toys, plus complete lists. pet supplies. tf FOR SALE 1957 Flymouth 2-door. Radio and heater new tires and paint job. Good condition reasonable price. Call VI 3-4789 or see at 2038 Alabama. 10-7$ Gibson electric twin pick up guitar and harmonica 176. 176 Phone Métzier at I-2 9-0671. 10-25 '61 Karman Ghia (convertible) with 5,700 miles. Excellent condition, recently brought from Germany. 1245 Louisiana St. or phone VI 3-9726. 10-23 Slamse kittens. $10 each. A. F. Hyde. RR No. 2 or phone VI 3-0144. 10-22 1929 Chevrolet in excellent condition. 2 hours at VI-3-3110 after 5:30 p.m. 10-22 Economical car. 1959 Renault Dauphine, 35 m.p., low mileage, excellent condition. Call collect. Larry Hickman. MII-126 in Kansas City, Kansas>-550. 10-17 TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty, which is free. It comes in dozens from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass. Two Magnavox stereo hi-fi mahogany consoles. These high quality units have been replaced by newer models. Save up to 20 percent of the costs of models. Come in to Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass., and see why Magnavox is number one in the nation. 10-15 1960 Caroleve Renault sports car. Phone VI 3-8828 mornings or after 5:00 p.m. 8'x41', 1958 mobile home. Arkansas at 6-10 east side or phone VI 3-9292. 10-15 Used electric vacuum cleaner with a complete set of attachments. $27.50. New Hoover tank for $39.50. Limited offer. Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. 10-18 3 bedroom room with a full basement Low interest G.I. lion, Phone VI 3-7568 PARK PLAZA SO. INC. APARTMENTS - Furnished - Unfurnished - Couples - Singles - 20 Days Free Rent With 1-year Lease - Wall to Wall Closet Space Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, sensitive diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the diagnostic Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery, if - Carpeting Tires! Tires! 1,000 tires at low discount prices—all standard sizes—most foreign brands. The only new tire until Oct. 31st. 600-13 new style tubeless snow tires. for $25; 650-15. 2 tires for $45; 750-19. Installation at rear, Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. VI 3-4170. Good 1960 Cushman motor scooter. See at 1522 Harper. 10-17 - Garbage Disposal FM Radio! FM Stereo! Stereo! Largest stock in Lawrence all at discount prices Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. VI 3-4170. 10/10 ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New machines and a few rebuilt. All parts available and machines serviced. Established locally 24 years. F. V. Cox. Local Manager, 1904 Barker, Lawrence Kansas. Phone VI 3-3277. 10-25 - Individual Controlled Heating - Lighted Off Street Parking - Water Paid Ph. VI 2-3416 or VI 2-1537 Office — 1912 W. 25th TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow paper 85c per sheet. Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook, 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. ff POST VERSALOG, slide rule. Like new. Shaver phone VI 3-0483 after 5 p.m. 10-17 shaver. Phone VI 3-0483 after 5 p.m. 10-17 HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in West-Pet Center. V1.32-298 Modern self-service. Phone 8 to 6.30 p.m. weekdays FOR RENT LOST Black straw bag in Union cafeteria. Reward. Mary Baumgartmier, VI 3-3910. Alpha Omicron Pl sorority pin lost in Kansas Union or near the stadium around 10:00 Thursday evening. Reward offered. Phone VI 3-6060. 10-22 1 bedroom modern furnished, air conditioned house. Utility room, small yard and screened porch. Inquire at 815 Tennessee. 10-23 A large sleeping and study room, single or double for boys. Close and centrally located. See at 1220 La. or phone VI 3-4890. 10-22 Vacancies for young men in contemporary home with swimming pool, shower bath, private entrance, 5 evening meals weekly. $65 a month. Call VI 3-9635.tf when a second seems like a year... Two bedroom houses and duplex furnished. $80 to $100 per month. Also, three room house and apartment furnished $80 to $50 a month. T. A. Hemphill 3-13902. 10-22 Large quiet wait-to-wall carpeted deluxe campus quiet 1617 Oxford Rd. evenings 10-22 2 bedroom ranch house, 2105 Tennessee. Large living room with book shelves. Dining "L". Kitchen with disposal. Utility room. $55 a month. 1st six months rent downpayment if buying. Call VI 3-7431. 10-18 you'd better get your watch fixed! Large furnished apartment with large closets. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from campus. Private bath and entrance. Newly decorated. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-2263. 10-17 Your satisfaction guaranteed on all work done. Come in and see us today. Ralph Wolfson, Manager Vernie Wilson, Asst. Mgr. 743 Mass. BRIMAN'S leading jewellers 3. room apartment, private bath. 1 block away. 2. park across street and see 1142 Indiana, if Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice and clean. see to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m. HELP WANTED Immediate vacancy for an ASCP registered medical technologist, 40 hour week, vacation and sick leave Laboratory, Watkins Memorial Hospital IV 3-1455. 10-18 Part time shop salesman, experienced died immediately. Call Weaver's, VI 315 6360. Men's black umbrella, in Strong basement. Identify at Stouffer Place, bldg. 22. apt. 5, after 5:30 p.m. and pay for this ad for return. 10-23 FOUND Experienced secretary with electric typesetting, phone calls, e-mail, Phone Nancy Coin at V1_3-0264. Experienced typist. 6 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mar. Barlow. 408 W. 13th. VI. *if* 1648. Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tt Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749. ff Typing — reasonable rates, meet and ac- cquire. VI VI III-3188 Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greener Court Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651. Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mellinger at VI 3-4409. tt Manuscripts, theses, and Also dissertations typed on Electric typewriter of 1853; directed Ms. Suzanne Gilbert, VI term papers; wide carriage; special keys; and sciences; 2-1546; tf Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers The image shows two individuals performing a swing. The person in the suit is lying on their back, suspended by a chain, while the other person is sitting on their knees, leaning back slightly with one leg raised and the other bent. Both appear to be enjoying the moment. The background is plain and dark, focusing attention on the performers. THE CLEAN WHITE SOCK He not only wears the clean white sock; he is "clean white sock." It's a kind of confidence that comes from knowing the right thing to do; even if he decides not to do it. His clean white socks are by Adler. His girl is by his side, every bit as "clean white sock" as he is. Naturally they don't always wear white socks, they just act like they do. People who really swing are wearing the Adler SC shrink controlled wool sock. $1.00. ADLER THE ADLER COMPANY, CINGINNATI 14, OHIO Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1962 W. German Hopeful Of JFK-Nikita Talks WASHINGTON — (UPI) — West German Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroeder said after a White House conference today that a meeting between President Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev could be helpful if the Soviet leader is in the right mood. Schroeder made the comment as he left a 90-minute conference with Kennedy which apparently was exclusively devoted to the Berlin crisis. HE SAID that "I would not like to give an opinion as to whether a special meeting of the two leaders on Berlin at this time would be useful. Whether it would be helpful depends on the mood in which Khrushchev comes here. "Certainly talking is better than fighting," the foreign minister added. No announcement has been made that Krushchev will, in fact, come to the United States this fall. But there has been speculation he would attend sessions of the United Nations general assembly in New York Kennedy has expressed a willingness to meet him if this happens. Flu Epidemic To be Severe CHICAGO —(UPI)— There are strong indications that there may be another severe epidemic of Asian flu this winter, the American Medical Association (AMA) said today. No one can predict how serious the outbreak may be, the AMA said in a statement, but physicians have been alerted, public health programs have been outlined, and stocks of anti-influenza vaccine have been built up. Because of the vaccine, AMA spokesmen hoped the disease may not be widespread this winter as in the epidemic of 1957-58. The AMA said in the average healthy person Asian flu means four or five days of weakness and misery. But in older people and those with chronic diseases, the flu virus can be deadly. In the five years since Asian flu first appeared in America it has contributed to the deaths of 90,000 Americans, mostly by weakening the body's defenses against other diseases, the AMA said. Persons with diabetes and with chronic heart, circulatory and kidney diseases are particularly vulnerable. More than half the deaths in previous epidemics were in people with these conditions, according to the AMA. Pneumonia also accompanies influenza frequently. There is no cure for Asian flu once it takes hold, the AMA said, but in many instances it can be prevented by the flu vaccine. The AMA statement said "everyone over the age of 45 needs the vaccine and particularly is it important to those past 65 years." Kansan Classified Ads Get Results! SCHROEDER MET the President today as the high point of a five-day visit here about the Berlin situation. It is in preparation for the Nov. 7 visit of German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. Kennedy and Schroeder exchanged assessments of the future Berlin situation, which American leaders have been predicting may explode into a first class crisis by Christmas. Schroeder said he was not a prophet. He added, "I would not wish to encourage a worsening of the Berlin situation by assuming there will be one." As for his talks with Kennedy, he said. "I am grateful to say that we are in full agreement." Hoecker Directs $27,000 Project A method of measuring strontium 90 and radium deposits in bones is being studied at KU under a two-year, $27,000 research grant from the United States Public Health Service. Frank E. Hoecker, professor of physics and biophysics, is directing the project to determine the smallest amount of radioactive material that can be detected by autoradiographic means. In the autoradiographic process, the specimen is placed on a photographic plate and the radiation in the specimen exposes the plate. The resulting "picture" shows the exact distribution of the radioactive substances. The project reflects 15 years of research by Prof. Hoecker for the Office of Naval Research and the Atomic Energy Commission. Two biophysics students are assisting Prof. Hoecker in the project. They are Paul Ruhter, Burlington senior, and Roger McFadden, Natoma sophomore. YELLOW CAB CO. VI 3-6333 24 Hour Service Owner Radio Controlled Ward Thompson Portraits of Distinction A HIXON STUDIO Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330 KEEP ALERT! SAFE NoDoz TABLETS 15 TABLETS SAFE AS COFFEE THE SAFE WAY to stay alert without harmful stimulants NoDoz keeps you mentally alert with the same safe refresher found in coffee and tea. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Absolutely not habit forming. Next time monotony makes you feel drowsy while driving, working or studying, do as millions do . . . perk up with safe, effective NoDoz tablets. Another fine product of Grove Laboratories. Vox, UP to Discuss Party Views Tonight Representatives from Vox Populi and the University Party will discuss their respective party policies tonight with freshman women in Corbin Hall. The informal, after-dinner meeting will be sponsored by the All Student Council. Vox representatives who are scheduled to attend are Roger Wilson, Wichita senior, and Kenneth Coleman, Wichita junior. Those participating in the program from the University Party are: Pat Wilson, Kansas City senior; Jerry Lee Ayres, St. Joseph junior; Nancy Lane, Hoisington junior, and Robert Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore. We are proud to announce the appointment of Reuben McCornack, Delta Tau Delta and Carl Peck, Phi Delta Theta As Authorized Diamond Consultants at the University of Kansas KIMBERLEY LTD. "Only Diamonds" KIMBERLEY LTD. Only Diamonds" Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters. ENGINEERS: Which of these Specifications Fit the Future of Your Career? The list below probably contains a number of the things you consider important in selecting the job that will do the most for you. Many companies offer most of them, but to different degrees and in different ways. Check the list and then consider how Emerson Electric meets these specifications. You may decide that an Emerson job is worth investigating.
| SPECIFICATIONGood company growth | EMERSON ELECTRIC OFFERSEmerson is a medium-size company on the move. It has grown from a $40 million business to over $200 million in just eight years. |
| Personal growth potential | Because Emerson continues to grow at an accelerated rate, positions continue to open at all levels. And Emerson believes in promotion from within. |
| Personal recognition opportunities | Because Emerson is not a giant, engineers retain their individuality and identity. Projects are assigned to informal small teams. Your work will be recognized and rewarded. |
| Challenging projects | Emerson is involved in many aerospace, defense and commercial projects: Thermo-lag (heat shield for rockets and satellites), Space radar, Honest John, Infra-red reconnaissance systems, Lasers, aerospace ground support equipment, automatic programmers and evaluators, and adaptive control systems are some of the space and military projects. In the commercial area advanced research is being done in electric motors, lighting, heating, cooling and ventilating products. Emerson's living effects laboratory has achieved national recognition. |
| Personal initiative encouragement | This is encouraged at Emerson. Facilities are made available to engineers with ideas. Emerson's sales staff sells whatever good ideas are developed by the engineering staff. At Emerson you follow your originated ideas through to finish. |
| Top salary and benefits | Too much to cover here, but Emerson ranks at the top in both of these categories. Specific information available at interview. |
| Solid company diversification | Though Emerson is strong in both aerospace and defense projects, the company is solidly based in diversified commercial and consumer products. Emerson is a leader in such products as lighting heating, cooling and industrial electronics. |
| Strong corornate vitality | Emerson was founded in 1890. It has a stature that age can bring. But it also has a youthful vitality, vigorous and aggressive—without rigid or restrictive operating procedures. |
| Good educational facilities | Emerson has in-plant training courses as well as subsidized graduate study at Washington and St. Louis Universities. |
| Comfortable location | Emerson is located in suburban St. Louis, offering easy access to many housing developments, shopping areas, expressways and recreation. St. Louis itself offers top sports and cultural facilities, as well as a relatively low cost of living. |
| ?????????????????? | There are other matters that are important to you as an individual more information needed concerning the points touched on here Be sure you get the full story on the outstanding potential for you in this fast moving organization. |